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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65720 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65720)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Place of Animals in Human Thought, by
-Contessa Evelyn Lilian Hazeldine Carrington Martinengo-Cesaresco
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: The Place of Animals in Human Thought
-
-
-Author: Contessa Evelyn Lilian Hazeldine Carrington Martinengo-Cesaresco
-
-
-
-Release Date: June 29, 2021 [eBook #65720]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PLACE OF ANIMALS IN HUMAN
-THOUGHT***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Turgut Dincer, Barry Abrahamsen, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images
-generously made available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 65720-h.htm or 65720-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/65720/65720-h/65720-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/65720/65720-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/cu31924028931629
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
- Text that was in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
-
-
-
-
-
-THE PLACE OF ANIMALS IN HUMAN THOUGHT
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE EMPEROR AKBAR personally directing the tying up of a wild
- Elephant.
- Tempera painting by Abu’l Fazl. (1597-98.)
- Photographed for this work from the original in the India Museum.]
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-THE PLACE OF ANIMALS IN HUMAN THOUGHT
-
-by
-
-THE COUNTESS EVELYN MARTINENGO CESARESCO
-
-
- “On ne connait rien que par bribes.”—M. BERTHELOT
-
-
-
-
-
-
-New York
-Charles Scribner’S Sons
-153-157 Fifth Avenue
-1909
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- “C’est l’éternel secret qui veut être gardé.”
-
-
-
-
- (_All rights reserved._)
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE
-
-
-AT the Congress held at Oxford in September, 1908, those who heard Count
-Goblet d’Alviella’s address on the “Method and Scope of the History of
-Religions” must have felt the thrill which announces the stirring of new
-ideas, when, in a memorable passage, the speaker asked “whether the
-psychology of animals has not equally some relation to the science of
-religions?” At any rate, these words came to me as a confirmation of the
-belief that the study which has engaged my attention for several years,
-is rapidly advancing towards recognition as a branch of the inquiry into
-what man is himself. The following chapters on the different answers
-given to this question when extended from man to animals, were intended,
-from the first, to form a whole, not complete, indeed, but perhaps
-fairly comprehensive. I offer them now to the public with my warmest
-acknowledgments to the scholars whose published works and, in some
-cases, private hints have made my task possible. I also wish to thank
-the Editor of the _Contemporary Review_ for his kindness in allowing me
-to reprint the part of this book which appeared first in that
-periodical.
-
-Some chapters refer rather to practice than to psychology, and others to
-myths and fancies rather than to conscious speculation, but all these
-subjects are so closely connected that it would be difficult to divide
-their treatment by a hard-and-fast line.
-
-With regard to the illustrations, I am glad to bear grateful testimony
-to the facilities afforded me by the Directors of the British Museum,
-the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Hague Gallery, the National Museum
-at Copenhagen, the Egypt Exploration Fund, and by the Secretary of State
-for India. H.E. Monsieur Camille Barrère, French Ambassador at Rome, has
-allowed me to include a photograph of his remarkably fine specimen of a
-bronze cat; and I have obtained the sanction of Monsieur Marcel
-Dieulafoy for the reproduction of one of Madame Dieulafoy’s photographs
-which appeared in his magnificent work on “L’Art Antique de la Perse.”
-Messrs. Macmillan & Co., Limited, and Messrs. Chapman and Hall, Limited,
-have permitted photographs to be taken of two plates in books published
-by them. Finally, Dr. C. Waldstein and Mr. E. B. Havell have been most
-kind in helping me to give the correct description of some of the
-plates.
-
-SALÒ, LAGO DI GARDA.
-
- _February 15, 1909._
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- I
-
- PAGE
- SOUL-WANDERING AS IT CONCERNS ANIMALS 11
-
-
- II
-
- THE GREEK CONCEPTION OF ANIMALS 22
-
-
- III
-
- ANIMALS AT ROME 44
-
-
- IV
-
- PLUTARCH THE HUMANE 62
-
-
- V
-
- MAN AND HIS BROTHER 84
-
-
- VI
-
- THE FAITH OF IRAN 113
-
-
- VII
-
- ZOROASTRIAN ZOOLOGY 141
-
-
- VIII
-
- A RELIGION OF RUTH 166
-
-
- IX
-
- LINES FROM THE ADI GRANTH 201
-
-
- X
-
- THE HEBREW CONCEPTION OF ANIMALS 205
-
-
- XI
-
- “A PEOPLE LIKE UNTO YOU” 221
-
-
- XII
-
- THE FRIEND OF THE CREATURE 245
-
-
- XIII
-
- VERSIPELLES 265
-
-
- XIV
-
- THE HORSE AS HERO 281
-
-
- XV
-
- ANIMALS IN EASTERN FICTION 306
-
-
- XVI
-
- THE GROWTH OF MODERN IDEAS ABOUT ANIMALS 336
-
- INDEX 367
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- THE EMPEROR AKBAR PERSONALLY DIRECTING THE _Frontispiece_
- TYING UP OF A WILD ELEPHANT. Tempera painting
- in the “Akbar Namah,” by Abu’l Fazl (1597-98).
- India Museum. _Photographed for this work._
-
- DEER WORSHIPPING THE WHEEL OF THE LAW. Tope of Sanchi, drawn 11
- by Lieut.-Col. Maisey
- _From Fergusson’s “Tree and Serpent Worship.” By
- permission of the India Office._
-
- THE BUDDHISTIC TIGER 21
- _From a painting on silk by Ko-Tō in the British Museum.
- Photographed for this work.
- In Japanese Buddhism the Tiger is the type of Wisdom._
-
- ORPHEUS 32
- _Fresco found at Pompeii._ (_Sommer._)
-
- STELE WITH CAT AND BIRD 40
- _Athens Museum._
-
- CAPITOLINE SHE-WOLF 44
- (_Bruckmann._) Bronze statue. Early Etruscan style.
- The twins are modern.
-
- LION BEING LED FROM THE ARENA BY A SLAVE 47
- _From the mosaic pavement of a Roman villa at Nennig._
-
- BACCHUS RIDING ON A PANTHER 74
- _Mosaic found at Pompeii._ (_Sommer._)
-
- BRONZE STATUE OF AN EGYPTIAN CAT 82
- _From the Collection of H.E. Monsieur Camille Barrère,
- French Ambassador at Rome_
-
- REINDEER BROWSING. OLDER STONE AGE 86
- _Found in a cave at Thayngen in Switzerland._
-
- HORSE DRAWING DISC OF THE SUN. OLDER BRONZE AGE 86
- _National Museum at Copenhagen._
-
- HATHOR COW 102
- _Found in 1906 by Dr. Édouard Naville at Deir-el-bahari.
- By permission of the Egypt Exploration Fund._
-
- WILD GOATS AND YOUNG 108
- _Assyrian Relief. British Museum._ (_Mansell._)
-
- ASSYRIAN GOD CARRYING ANTELOPE AND WHEAT-EAR 116
- _British Museum._ (_Mansell._)
-
- COUNTING CATTLE 128
- _Egyptian Fresco. British Museum._ (_Mansell._)
-
- KING FIGHTING GRIFFIN (“BAD ANIMAL”) 142
- _Relief in Palace of Darius at Persepolis. Photographed
- by Jane Dieulafoy. From “L’Art Antique de la Perse.” By
- permission of M. Marcel Dieulafoy._
-
- THE REAL DOG OF IRAN 152
- _Bronze Statuette found at Susa. Louvre. From Perrot’s
- “History of Art in Ancient Persia.” By permission of
- Messrs. Chapman & Hall, Ltd._
-
- BUDDHA PACIFYING AN INTOXICATED ELEPHANT WHICH HAD BEEN SENT 188
- TO DESTROY HIM. THE ELEPHANT STOOPS IN ADORATION
- Græco-Buddhist sculpture from a ruined monastery at
- Takt-i-Bahi. _India Museum. Photographed for this work._
-
- RECLINING BULL 192
- _Ancient Southern Indian sculpture. From a photograph in
- the India Museum._
-
- WILD BULLS AND TAMED BULLS 201
- _Reliefs on two gold cups found in a tomb at Vapheio near
- Amyclae. Fifteenth century B.C. (possibly earlier). From
- Schuckhardt’s “Schliemann’s Excavations.” By permission of
- Messrs. Macmillan & Co., Ltd._
-
- THE GARDEN OF EDEN 208
- _By Rubens. Hague Gallery._ (_Bruckmann._)
-
- GENESIS VIII. 212
- _Loggie di Raffaello. In the Vatican. Drawn by N.
- Consoni._
-
- DANIEL AND THE LIONS 216
- _From an early Christian Sarcophagus in S. Vitale,
- Ravenna._ (_Alinari._)
-
- “AN INDIAN ORPHEUS” 222
- _Inlaid marble work panel originally surmounting a doorway
- in the Great Hall of Audience in the Mogul Palace at Delhi
- (about 1650). Photographed for this work from a painting
- by a native artist in the India Museum. Imitated from a
- painting by Raphael._
-
- MOSLEM BEGGAR FEEDING DOGS AT CONSTANTINOPLE 226
- _From life._
-
- ST. JEROME EXTRACTING A THORN FROM THE PAW OF A LION 253
- _By Hubert van Eyck. Naples Museum._ (_Anderson._)
-
- ST. EUSTACE (OR ST. HUBERT) AND THE STAG 256
- _By Vittore Pisano. National Gallery._ (_Hanfstängl._)
-
- “LE MENEUR DES LOUPS” 276
- _Designed and drawn by Maurice Sand._
-
- THE ASSYRIAN HORSE 284
- _From a relief in the British Museum._ (_Mansell._)
-
- ARABIAN HORSE OF THE SAHARA 288
- _From life._
-
- THE BANYAN DEER 328
- _From “Stûpa of Bharhut.” By General Cunningham. By
- permission of the India Office._ (_Griggs._)
-
- EGYPTIAN OFFICIAL, WITH HIS WIFE, ENGAGED IN FOWLING IN THE 330
- PAPYRUS SWAMP. HIS HUNTING CAT HAS SEIZED THREE BIRDS.
- _Mural painting in British Museum._ (_Mansell._)
-
- ASSYRIAN LION AND LIONESS IN PARADISE PARK 336
- _British Museum._ (_Mansell._) The King’s reservations
- for big game were called “paradises.”
-
- LAMBS 338
- _Relief on a fifth century tomb at Ravenna._ (_Alinari._)
-
- “IL BUON PASTORE” 346
- _Mosaic in the Mausoleum of Galla Placidia at Ravenna._
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- LT COL. MAISEY DEL. W. BRIGGS, LITH.
- DEER WORSHIPPING THE WHEEL OF THE LAW.
- Tope of Sanchi.]
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- The Place of Animals in Human Thought
-
-
-
-
- I
-
- SOUL-WANDERING AS IT CONCERNS ANIMALS
-
-
-IN one of these enigmatic sayings which launch the mind on boundless
-seas, Cardinal Newman remarked that we know less of animals than of
-angels. A large part of the human race explains the mystery by what is
-called transmigration, metempsychosis, _Samsara_, _Seelenwanderung_; the
-last a word so compact and picturesque that it is a pity not to imitate
-it in English. The intelligibility of ideas depends much on whether
-words touch the spring of the picture-making wheel of the brain;
-“Soul-wandering” does this.
-
-Ancient as the theory is, we ought to remember what is commonly
-forgotten—that somewhere in the distance we catch sight of a time when
-it was unknown, at least in the sense of a procession of the soul from
-death to life through animal forms. Traces of it are to be found in the
-Sutras and it is thoroughly developed in the Upanishads, but if the
-Sutras belong to the thirteenth century and the Upanishads to about the
-year 700 before Christ, a long road still remains to the Vedas with
-their fabulous antiquity.
-
-In the Vedas it is stated that the soul may wander, even during sleep,
-and that it will surely have a further existence after death, but there
-is nothing to show that in this further existence it will take the form
-of an animal. Man will be substantially man, able to feel the same
-pleasures as his prototype on earth; but if he goes to a good place,
-exempt from the same pains. What, then, was the Vedic opinion of
-animals? On the whole, it is safe to assume that the authors of the
-Vedic chants believed that animals, like men, entered a soul-world in
-which they preserved their identity. The idea of funeral sacrifices, as
-exemplified in these earliest records, was that of sending some one
-before. The horse and the goat that were immolated at a Vedic funeral
-were intended to go and announce the coming of the man’s soul. Wherever
-victims were sacrificed at funerals, they were originally meant to do
-something in the after-life; hence they must have had souls. The origin
-of the Suttee was the wish that the wife should accompany her husband,
-and among primitive peoples animals were sacrificed because the dead man
-might have need of them. Not very long ago an old Irish woman, on being
-remonstrated with for having killed her dead husband’s horse, replied
-with the words, “Do you think I would let my man go on foot in the next
-world?” On visiting that wonderfully emotion-awakening relic, the Viking
-ship at Christiania, I was interested to see the bones of the Chief’s
-horses and dogs as well as his own. Did the Norsemen, passionately
-devoted to the sea as they were, suppose, that not only the animals, but
-also the vessel in which they buried their leader, would have a ghostly
-second existence? I have no doubt that they did. Apart from what hints
-may be gleaned from the Vedas, there is an inherent probability against
-the early Aryans, any more than the modern Hindu, believing that the
-soul of man or beast comes suddenly to a full stop. To destroy spirit
-seems to the Asiatic mind as impossible as to destroy matter seems to
-the biologist.
-
-Leaving the Vedas and coming down to the Sutras and Upanishads, we
-discover the transmigration of souls at first suggested and then clearly
-defined. Whence came it? Was it the belief of those less civilised
-nations whom the Aryans conquered, and did they, in accepting it from
-them, give it a moral complexion by investing it with the highly ethical
-significance of an upward or downward progress occasioned by the merits
-or demerits of the soul in a previous state of being?
-
-A large portion of mankind finds it as difficult to conceive a sudden
-beginning as a sudden end of spirit. We forget difficulties which we
-are not in the habit of facing; those who have tried to face this one
-have generally stumbled over it. Even Dante with his subtle
-psychophysiological reasoning hardly persuades. The ramifications of a
-life before stretched far: “Whosoever believes in the fabled prior
-existence of souls, let him be anathema,” thundered the Council of
-Constantinople, A.D. 543. Which shows that many Christians shared
-Origen’s views on this subject.
-
-From the moment that soul-wandering became, in India, a well-established
-doctrine, some three thousand years ago, the conception of the status of
-animals was perfectly clear. “Wise people,” says the Bhagavad Gita, “see
-the same soul (Atman) in the Brahman, in worms and insects, in the
-outcasts, in the dog and the elephant, in beasts, cows, gadflies, and
-gnats.” Here we have the doctrine succinctly expounded, and in spite of
-subtleties introduced by later philosophers (such as that of the
-outstanding self) the exposition holds good to this day as a statement
-of the faith of India. It also described the doctrine of Pythagoras,
-which ancient traditions asserted that he brought from Egypt, where no
-such doctrine ever existed. Pythagoras is still commonly supposed to
-have borrowed from Egypt; but it is strange that a single person should
-continue to hold an opinion against which so much evidence has been
-produced; especially as it is surely very easy to explain the tradition
-by interpreting Egypt to have stood for “the East” in common parlance,
-exactly as in Europe a tribe of low caste Indians came to be called
-gypsies or Egyptians. Pythagoras believed that he had been one of the
-Trojan heroes, whose shield he knew at a glance in the Temple of Juno
-where it was hung up. After him, Empedocles thought that he had passed
-through many forms, amongst others those of a bird and a fish.
-Pythagoras and his fire-spent disciple belong to times which seem almost
-near if judged by Indian computations: yet they are nebulous figures;
-they seem to us, and perhaps they seemed to men who lived soon after
-them, more like mysterious, half Divine bearers of a word than men of
-flesh and blood. But Plato, who is real to us and who has influenced so
-profoundly modern thought, Plato took their theory and displayed it to
-the Western world as the most logical explanation of the mystery of
-being.
-
-The theory of transmigration did not commend itself to Roman thinkers,
-though it was admirably stated by a Roman poet:—
-
- “Omnia mutantur: nihil interit. Errat, et illinc
- Huc venit, hinc illuc, et quoslibet occupat artus
- Spiritus, eque feris, humana in corpora transit,
- Inque feras noster, nec tempore deperit ullo.
- Utque novis facilis signatur cera figuris,
- Nec manet ut fuerat, nec formas servat easdem,
- Sed tamen ipsa eadem est: animam sic semper eandem
- Esse.”
-
-This description is as accurate as it is elegant; but it remains a
-question whether Ovid had anything deeper than a folk-lorist’s interest
-in transmigration joined to a certain sympathy which it often inspires
-in those who are fond of animals. The enthusiastic folk-lorist finds
-himself believing in all sorts of things at odd times. Lucian’s admirers
-at Rome doubtless enjoyed his ridiculous story of a Pythagorean cock
-which had been a man, a woman, a prince, a subject, a fish, a horse and
-a frog, and which summed up its varied experience in the judgment that
-man was the most wretched and deplorable of all creatures, all others
-patiently grazing within the enclosures of Nature while man alone breaks
-out and strays beyond those safe limits. This story was retold with
-great gusto by Erasmus. The Romans were a people with inclusive
-prejudices, and they were not likely to welcome a narrowing of the gulf
-between themselves and the beasts of the field. Cicero’s dictum that,
-while man looks before and after, analysing the past and forecasting the
-future, animals have only the perception of the present, does not go to
-the excess of those later theorists who, like Descartes, reduced animals
-to automata, but it goes farther than scientific writers on the subject
-would now allow to be justified.
-
-It is worth while asking, what was it that so powerfully attracted Plato
-in the theory of transmigration? I think that Plato, who made a science
-of the moral training of the mind, was attracted by soul-wandering as a
-scheme of soul-evolution. Instead of looking at it as a matter of fact
-which presupposed an ethical root (which is the Indian view), he looked
-upon it as an ethical root which presupposed a matter of fact. He was
-influenced a little, no doubt, by the desire to get rid of Hades, “an
-unpleasant place,” as he says, “and not true,” for which he felt a
-peculiar antipathy, but he was influenced far more by seeing in
-soul-wandering a rational theory of the ascent of the soul, a Darwinism
-of the spirit. “We are plants,” he said, “not of earth but of heaven,”
-but it takes the plants of heaven a long time to grow.
-
-We ought to admire the Indian mind, which first seized the idea of time
-in relation to development and soared out of the cage of history
-(veritable or imaginary) into liberal æons to account for one perfect
-soul, one plant that had accomplished its heavenly destiny. But though
-the Indian seer argues with Plato that virtue has its own reward (not so
-much an outward reward of improved environment as an inward reward of
-approximation to perfection), he disagrees with the Greek philosopher
-with regard to the practical result of all this as it affects any of us
-personally. Plato found the theory of transmigration entirely consoling;
-the Indian finds it entirely the reverse. Can the reason be that Plato
-took the theory as a beautiful symbol while the Indian takes it as a
-dire reality?
-
-The Hindu is as much convinced that the soul is re-born in different
-animals as we are that children are born of women. He is convinced of
-it, but he is not consoled by it. Let us reflect a little: does not one
-life give us time to get somewhat tired of it; how should we feel after
-fifteen hundred lives? The wandering Jew has never been thought an
-object of envy, but the wandering soul has a wearier lot; it knows the
-sorrows of all creation.
-
- “How many births are past I cannot tell,
- How many yet may be no man may say,
- But this alone I know and know full well,
- That pain and grief embitter all the way.”[1]
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- “Folk-Songs of Southern India,” by Charles E. Gover, a fascinating but
- little-known work.
-
-Rather than this—death. How far deeper the gloom revealed by these lines
-from the folk-songs of an obscure Dravidian tribe living in the Nilgiri
-Hills, than any which cultured Western pessimism can show! Compared with
-them, the despairing cry of Baudelaire seems almost a hymn of joy:—
-
- “’Tis death that cheers and gives us strength to live,
- ’Tis life’s chief aim, sole hope that can abide,
- Our wine, elixir, glad restorative
- Whence we gain heart to walk till eventide.
-
- Through snow, through frost, through tempests it can give
- Light that pervades th’ horizon dark and wide;
- The inn which makes secure when we arrive
- Our food and sleep, all labour laid aside.
-
- It is an Angel whose magnetic hand
- Gives quiet sleep and dreams of extasy,
- And strews a bed for naked folk and poor.
-
- ’Tis the god’s prize, the mystic granary,
- The poor man’s purse and his old native land,
- And of the unknown skies the opening door.”
-
-Folk-songs are more valuable aids than the higher literature of nations
-in an inquiry as to what they really believe. The religion of the
-Dravidian mountaineers is purely Aryan (though their race is not); their
-songs may be taken, therefore, as Aryan documents. They are particularly
-characteristic of the dual belief as to a future state which is, to this
-day, widely diffused. How firmly these people believe in transmigration
-the quatrain quoted above bears witness; yet they also believe that
-souls are liable to immediate judgment. This contradiction is explained
-by the theory that a long interval may elapse between death and
-re-incarnation and that during this interval the soul meets with a
-reward or punishment. To say the truth, the explanation sounds a rather
-lame one. Is it not more likely that the idea of immediate judgment,
-wherever it appears, is a relic of Vedic belief which has to be
-reconciled, as best it can, with the later idea of transmigration? The
-Dravidian songs are remarkable for their strong inculcation of regard
-for animals. In their impressive funeral dirge which is a public
-confession of the dead man’s sins, it is owned that he killed a snake, a
-lizard and a harmless frog. And that not mere lifetaking was the point
-condemned, is clearly proved by the further admission that the
-delinquent put the young ox to the plough before it was strong enough to
-work. In a Dravidian vision of Heaven and Hell certain of the Blest are
-perceived milking their happy kine, and it is explained that these are
-they who, when they saw the lost kine of neighbour or stranger in the
-hills, drove them home nor left them to perish from tiger or wolf.
-Surely in this, as in the Jewish command which it so closely resembles,
-we may read mercy to beast as well as to man.
-
-It is sometimes said that there is as much cruelty to animals in India
-as anywhere. Some of this cruelty (as it seems to us) is caused directly
-by reluctance to take life; of the other sort, caused by callousness, it
-can be only said that the human brute grows under every sky. One great
-fact is admitted: children are not cruel in India: Victor Hugo could not
-have written his terrible poem about the tormented toad in India. I
-think it a mistake to attribute the Indian sentiment towards animals
-wholly to transmigration; nevertheless, it may be granted that such a
-belief fosters such a sentiment. Indeed, if it were allowable to look
-upon the religion of the many as the morality of the one, it would seem
-natural to suppose that the theory of transmigration was invented by
-some creature-loving sage on purpose to give men a fellow-feeling for
-their humbler relations. Even so, many a bit of innocent folk-fable has
-served as “protective colouration” to beast or bird: the legend of the
-robin who covered up the Babes in the Wood; the legend of the swallow
-who did some little service to the crucified Saviour, and how many other
-such tender fancies. Who invented them, and why?
-
-If Plato had wished simply to find a happy substitute for Hades, he
-might have found it—had he looked far enough—in the Vedic kingdom of the
-sun, radiant and eternal, where sorrow is not, where the crooked are
-made straight, ruled over by Yama the first man to die and the first to
-live again, death’s bright angel, lord of the holy departed—how far from
-Pluto and the “Tartarean grey.” It would not have provided a solution to
-the mystery of being, but it might have made many converts, for after a
-happy heaven all antiquity thirsted.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE BUDDHISTIC TIGER.
- British Museum.
- (_From a painting on silk by Ko-Tō._)]
-
-It is not sure if the scheme of existence mapped out in soul-wandering
-is really more consoling for beast than for man. It is a poor compliment
-to some dogs to say that they have been some men. Then again, it is
-recognised as easier for a dog to be good than for a man to be good, but
-after a dog has passed his little life in well-doing he dies with the
-prospect that his spirit, which by his merits becomes again a man, will
-be sent down, by that man’s transgressions, to the society of jackals.
-According to the doctrine of soul-wandering, animals are, in brief, the
-Purgatory of men. Just as prayers for the dead (which means, prayers for
-the remission to them of a merited period of probation) represent an
-important branch of Catholic observances, so prayers for the remission
-of a part of the time which souls would otherwise spend in animal forms
-constitute the most vital and essential feature in Brahmanical worship.
-
-Of course, this is also true of Buddhism, to which many people think
-that the theory of soul-wandering belongs exclusively, unmindful that
-the older faith has it as well. The following hymn, used in Thibet,
-shows how accurately the name of Purgatory applies to the animal
-incarnations of the soul:—
-
- “If we [human beings] have amassed any merit
- In the three states,
- We rejoice in this good fortune when we consider
- The unfortunate lot of the poor [lower] animals,
- Piteously engulphed in the ocean of misery;
- On their behalf, we now turn the Wheel of Religion.”
-
-There are grounds for thinking that the purgatorial view of animals was
-part of the religious beliefs of the highly civilised native races of
-South America. The Christianised Indians are very gentle in their ways
-towards animals, while among the savage tribes in Central Peru (which
-are probably degraded off-shoots from the people of the Incas) the
-belief still survives that good men become monkeys or jaguars, and bad
-men parrots or reptiles. For the rest, soul-wandering has an enduring
-fascination for the human mind.
-
-In January, 1907, Leandro Improta, a young man well furnished with
-worldly goods, shot himself in a café at Naples. His pocket was found to
-contain a letter in which he said that the act was prompted by a desire
-to study metempsychosis; much had been written on the subject, but it
-pleased him better to discover than to talk: “so I determined to die and
-see whether I shall be re-born in the form of some animal. It would be
-delightful to return to this world as a lion or a rat.” It might not
-prove delightful after all!
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- II
-
- THE GREEK CONCEPTION OF ANIMALS
-
-
-“THE heralds brought a sacred hecatomb to the gods through the city and
-the long-haired Grecians were assembled under the shady grove of
-far-darting Apollo, but when they had tasted the upper flesh and had
-drawn it out, having divided the shares, they made a delightful feast.”
-In this description the poet of the Odyssey not only calls up a
-wonderfully vivid picture of an ancient fête-day, but also shows the
-habit of mind of the Homeric Greeks in regard to animal food. They were
-voracious eaters—although the frequent reference to feasts ought not to
-make us suppose that meat was their constant diet; rather the reverse,
-for then it would not have been so highly rated. But when they had the
-chance, they certainly did eat with unfastidious copiousness and
-unashamed enjoyment. It is not pleasant to read about, for it sets one
-thinking of things by no means far away or old; for instance, of the
-disappearance of half-cooked beef at some Continental _tables d’hôte_.
-We find that Homer is painfully near us. But in Homeric times the ghost
-of a scruple had to be laid before the feast could be enjoyed. Animal
-food was still closely connected with the idea of sacrifice. Sacrifice
-lends distinction to subject as well as object; it was some atonement to
-the animal to dedicate him to the gods. He was covered with garlands and
-attended by long-robed priests; his doom was his triumph. The devoted
-heifer or firstling of the flock was glorified beyond all its kind. Some
-late sceptic of the _Anthology_ asked what possible difference it could
-make to the sheep whether it were devoured by a wolf or sacrificed to
-Herakles so that he might protect the sheepfold from wolves? But
-scepticism is a poor thing. From immolation to apotheosis there is but a
-step; how many human victims willingly bowed their heads to the knife!
-
-The sacrificial aspect of the slaughter of domestic animals took a
-strong hold of the popular imagination. It is still suggested by the
-procession of garlanded beasts which traverses the Italian village on
-the approach of Easter: the only time of year when the Italian peasant
-touches meat. In the tawdry travesty of the _Bœuf gras_, though the
-origin is the same, every shred of the old significance is lost, but
-among simple folk south of the Alps, unformed thoughts which know not
-whence they come still contribute a sort of religious glamour to that
-last pageant. Far back, indeed, stretches the procession of the victims,
-human and animal—for wherever there was animal sacrifice, at some remote
-epoch, “the goat without horns” was also offered up.
-
-The Homeric Greeks had no butchers; they did the slaying of beasts
-themselves or their priests did it for them. Agamemnon kills the boar
-sacrificed to Zeus with his own hands, which are first uplifted in
-prayer. The commonest meat was the flesh of swine, as may be seen by the
-pig of Æsop which replied, on being asked by the sheep why he cried out
-when caught, “They take you for your wool or milk, but me for my life.”
-In Homer, however, there is much talk of fatted sheep, kids and oxen,
-and there is even mention of killing a cow. The Athenians had qualms
-about slaughtering the ox, the animal essential to agriculture—though
-they did it—but the Homeric Greek was not troubled by such thoughts. He
-was not over nice about anything; he was his own cook, and he did not
-lose his appetite while he roasted his bit of meat on the spit. A Greek
-repast of that age would have shocked the abstemious Indian as much as
-the Hindu reformer, Keshub Chunder Sen, confessed to have been shocked
-by the huge joints on English sideboards.
-
-Putting aside his meat-eating proclivities, for which we cannot throw
-stones at him, the Greek of the Iliad and of the Odyssey is the friend
-of his beast. He does not regard it as his long-lost brother, but he
-sees in it a devoted servant; sometimes more than human in love if less
-than human in wit. His point of view, though detached, was appreciative.
-Practically it was the point of view of the twentieth century. Homer
-belongs to the Western world, and in a great measure to the modern
-Western world. He had no racial fellow-feeling with animals; yet he
-could feel for the sparrow that flutters round its murdered young ones
-and for the vulture that rends the air with cries when the countryman
-takes its fledglings from the nest. He could shed one immortal tear over
-the faithful hound that recognises his master and dies. “There lay the
-dog Argus, full of vermin.” If it had not been a living creature, what
-sight could have more repelled human eyes? But with dog as with man, the
-miserable body is as naught beside—what in the man we call the soul. “He
-fawned with his tail and laid down both his ears, but he could no more
-come nearer his master.” All the sense of disgust is gone and there is
-something moist, perhaps, in our eyes too, though it is not the ichor of
-immortality.
-
-Giving names to animals is the first instinctive confession that they
-are not _things_. What sensible man ever called his table Carlo or his
-inkpot Trilby? Homer gives his horses the usual names of horses in his
-day; this is shown by the fact that he calls more than one horse by the
-same name. Hector’s steeds were Xanthus, Æthon and noble Lampus; often
-would Andromache mix wine for them even before she attended to the wants
-of her husband, or offer them the sweet barley with her own white hands.
-Æthe is the name of Agamemnon’s graceful and fleet-footed mare. Xanthus
-and Balius, offspring of Podarges, are the horses which Achilles
-received from his father. He bids them bring their charioteer back in
-safety to the body of the Greeks—and then follows the impressive
-incident of the warning given to him of his impending fate. The horse
-Xanthus bends low his head: his long mane, which is collected in a ring,
-droops till it touches the ground. Hera gives him power of speech and he
-tells how, though the steeds of Achilles will do their part right well,
-not all their swiftness, not all their faithful service can save their
-master from the doom that even now is drawing near. “The furies restrain
-the voice”: the laws which govern the natural order of things must not
-be violated. “O Xanthus,” cries Achilles, “O Xanthus, why dost thou
-predict my death?... Well do I know myself that it is my fate to perish
-here, far away from my dear father and mother!” It is the passionate cry
-of the Greek, the lover of life as none has loved it, the lover of the
-sweet air gladdened by the sun.
-
-Many a soldier may have spoken to his horse, half in jest, as Achilles
-spoke to Xanthus and Balius: “bring me safely out of the fray.” The
-supernatural and terrible reply comes with the shock of the unforeseen,
-like a clap of thunder on a calm day. This incident is a departure from
-the usual Homeric conventionality, for it takes us into the domain of
-real magic. The belief that animals know things that we know not, and
-see things that we see not, is scattered over all the earth. Are there
-not still good people who feel an “eerie” sensation when a cat stares
-fixedly into vacancy in the twilight? “Eerie” sensations count for much
-in early beliefs, but what counts for more is the observation of actual
-facts which are not and, perhaps, cannot be explained. The uneasiness of
-animals before an earthquake, or the refusal of some animals to go to
-sea on ships which afterwards come to grief—to refer to only two
-instances of a class of phenomena the existence of which cannot be
-gainsaid—would be sufficient to convince any savage or any primitive man
-that animals have foreknowledge. If they know the future on one point,
-why should they not know it on others? The primitive man generally
-starts from something which he deems _certain_; he deals in
-“certainties” far more than in hypotheses, and when he has seized a
-“certainty” in his own fashion he draws logical deductions from it.
-Savages and children have a ruthless logic of their own.
-
-The prophetic power of animals has important bearings on the subject of
-divination. In cases of animal portents the later theory may have been
-that the animal was the passive instrument or medium of a superior
-power; but it is not likely that this was the earliest theory. The
-goddess did not use Xanthus as a mouthpiece: she simply gave him the
-faculty of speech so that he could say what he already knew. The second
-sight of animals was believed to be communicable to man through their
-flesh, and especially through their blood. Porphyry says plainly that
-diviners fed on the hearts of crows, vultures, and moles (the heart
-being the fountain of the blood), because in this manner they partook of
-the souls of these animals, and received the influence of the gods who
-accompanied these souls. The blood conveyed the qualities of the spirit.
-In my opinion the Hebrew ordinance against partaking of the blood was
-connected with this idea; the soul was not to be meddled with. I do not
-know if attention has been paid to the remarkable juxtaposition of the
-blood prohibition with enchantment in Leviticus xix. 26. The Institutes
-of Manu clearly indicate that the blood was not to be swallowed because,
-by doing so, could be procured an illicit mixing up of personality: the
-most awful of sins, more awful because so much more mysterious than our
-mediæval “pact,” or selling the soul to the devil. A knowledge of magic
-is essential to the true comprehension of all sacred writings.
-
-That animals formerly talked with human voices was the genuine belief of
-most early races, but there are few traces of it in Greek literature. A
-hint of a real folk-belief is to be found, perhaps, in the remark of
-Clytemnestra, who says of Cassandra, when she will not descend from the
-car that has brought her, a prisoner, to Agamemnon’s palace:—
-
- “I wot—unless like swallows she doth use
- _Some strange barbarian tongue from over sea_,
- My words must bring persuasion to her soul.”
-
-But such hints are not frequent. The stories of “talking beasts” which
-enjoyed an immense popularity in Greece were founded on as conscious
-“make-believe” as the Beast tales of the Middle Ages. From the “Battle
-of the Frogs and Mice” to Æsop’s fables, and from these to the comedies
-of Aristophanes, the animals are meant to hold up human follies to
-ridicule or human virtues to admiration. The object was to instruct
-while amusing when it was not to amuse without instructing. Æsop hardly
-asks the most guileless to believe that his stories are of the “all
-true” category—which is why children rarely quite take them to their
-hearts. At the same time, he shows a close study of the idiosyncrasies
-of animals, so close that there is little to alter in his
-characterisation. Out of the mass of stories in the collection
-attributed to him, one or two only seem to carry us back to a more
-ingenuous age. The following beautiful little tale of the “Lion’s
-Kingdom” is vaguely reminiscent of the world-tradition of a “Peace in
-Nature.”
-
-“The beasts of the field and forest had a lion as their king. He was
-neither wrathful, cruel, nor tyrannical, but just and gentle as a king
-could be. He made during his reign a proclamation for a general assembly
-of all the birds and beasts, and drew up conditions for an universal
-league in which the Wolf and the Lamb, the Panther and the Kid, the
-Tiger and the Stag, the Dog and the Hare, should live together in
-perfect peace and amity. The Hare said, ‘Oh, how I have longed to see
-this day, in which the weak shall take their place with impunity by the
-side of the strong.’”
-
-The temper of a people towards animals can be judged from its sports. It
-has been well said, Who could imagine Pericles presiding over a “Roman
-holiday”? Wanton cruelty to animals seemed to the Greeks an outrage to
-the gods. The Athenians inflicted a fine on a vivisector of the name of
-Xenocrates (he called himself a “philosopher”) who had skinned a goat
-alive. In Greece, from Homeric times downwards, the most favourite sport
-was the chariot-race which, at first, possessed the importance of a
-religious event, and always had a dignity above that of a mere pastime.
-The horses received their full share of honour and glory; for many
-centuries the graves of Cimon’s mares, with which he had thrice
-conquered at the Olympian games, were pointed out to the stranger, near
-his own tomb.
-
-In the ancient Greek as in the modern world, while the majority held the
-views about animals which I have briefly sketched, a small minority held
-views of quite a different kind. It may be that no outward agency is
-required to cause the periodical appearance of men who are driven from
-the common road by the nostalgia of a state in which the human creature
-had not learnt to shed blood. The earliest tradition agrees with the
-latest science in testifying that man did not always eat flesh. It seems
-as if sometimes, in every part of the earth, an irresistible impulse
-takes hold of him to resume his primal harmlessness. It is natural,
-however, that students should have sought some more definite explanation
-for the introduction of the Orphic sect into Greece, where it can be
-traced to about the time generally given to Buddha—the sixth century
-B.C. Some have conjectured that dark-skinned, white-robed missionaries
-from India penetrated into Europe as we know that they penetrated into
-China, bringing with them the gospel of the unity of all sentient
-things. Others agree with what seems to have been thought by Herodotus:
-that wandering pilgrims brought home treasured secrets from the temple
-of Ammon or some other of those Egyptian shrines with which the Greeks
-constantly kept up certain _rapports_. It may be, now, that these two
-theories will be abandoned in favour of a third which would refer the
-origin of the Orphists to Ægean times and suppose them to be the last
-followers of an earlier faith. When they do come into history, it is as
-poor and ignorant people—like the Doukhobors of to-day—whose obscurity
-might well account for their having remained long unobserved. But this
-is no reason for concluding that their beginnings were obscure.
-
-What is best understood about them is that they abstained rigorously
-from flesh except during the rare performance of some rite of
-purification, in which they tasted the blood of a bull which was
-supposed to procure mystic union with the divine. As happened with the
-performers of other cruel or horrid rites, the transcendent significance
-they ascribed to the act paralysed their power of recognising its
-revolting nature. A diseased spiritualism which ignores matter
-altogether is the real key to such phenomena. It is too soon to say
-whether any link can be established between the Orphic practices and the
-so-called “bull-fights” of which traces have been found in Crete.
-Despised and tabooed though they were in historical Greece, the Orphists
-are still held to have exercised some sure though undefined influence on
-the development of the greatest spiritual fact of Hellenic civilisation,
-the Eleusinian Mysteries.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- (_Photo:_ _Sommer_)
- ORPHEUS.
- (_Fresco at Pompeii._)]
-
-The popular description of Orpheus as founder of the Orphists must be
-taken for what it is worth. The sect may have either evolved or borrowed
-the legend. Christianity itself appropriated the myth of Orpheus,
-pictorially, at least, in those rude tracings in the Roman catacombs
-showing the Good Shepherd in that character, which inspired Carlyle to
-write one of the most impassioned passages in English prose. The sweet
-lute-player who held entranced lion and lamb till the one forgot his
-wrath and the other his fear, was the natural symbol of the prototype of
-a humane religion.
-
-Out of the nebulous patches of Greek enthusiasts who cherished tender
-feelings towards animals, emerges the intellectual sun of the Samian
-sage. It is difficult not to connect Pythagoras in some way with the
-Orphists, nor would such a connexion make it the less probable that he
-journeyed to the sacred East in search of fuller knowledge. Little,
-indeed, do we know about this moulder of minds. He passed across the
-world’s stage dark “with excess of light”—an influence rather than a
-personality. Yet he was as far as possible from being only a dreamer of
-dreams; he was the Newton, the Galileo, perhaps the Edison and Marconi
-of his epoch. And it was this double character of moral teacher and man
-of science which caused the extraordinary reverence with which he was
-regarded. Science and religion were not divorced then; the Prophet could
-present no credentials so valid as an understanding of the laws which
-govern the universe. Mathematics and astronomy were revelations of
-divine truth. It was the scientific insight of Pythagoras, the wonderful
-range and depth of which is borne out more and more by modern
-discoveries, that lent supreme importance to whatever theories he was
-known to have held. The doctrine of transmigration had not been treated
-seriously while it was only preached by the Orphists, but after it was
-adopted by Pythagoras it commanded a wide attention, though it never won
-a large acceptance. One expounder it had, who was too remarkable an
-original thinker to be called a mere disciple—the greatly-gifted
-Empedocles, who denounced the eaters of flesh as no better than
-cannibals, which was going further than Pythagoras himself had ever
-gone.
-
-Even in antiquity, there were some who suspected that at the bottom of
-the Pythagorean propaganda was the wish to make men more humane. Without
-taking that view, it may be granted that a strong love of animals
-prepares the mind to think of them as not so very different from men. A
-thing that tends in the same direction is the unfavourable comparison of
-some men with some beasts: the sort of sentiment which made Madame de
-Staël say that the more she knew of men the more she liked dogs. Did not
-Darwin declare that he would as soon be descended from that heroic
-little monkey who braved his dreaded enemy to save the life of his
-keeper, or from that old baboon who, descending from the mountains,
-carried away in triumph his young comrade from a crowd of astonished
-dogs, as from various still extant races of mankind? Darwinism is really
-the theory of Pythagoras with the supernatural element left out. The
-homogeneity of living things is one of the very old beliefs from which
-we strayed and to which we are returning.
-
-Among the Greeks, sensitive and meditative minds which did not place
-faith in the Pythagorean system of life were attracted, nevertheless, by
-its speculative possibilities which they bent to their own purposes.
-Thus Socrates borrowed from Pythagoras when he suggested that imperfect
-and earth-bound spirits might be re-incorporated in animals whose
-conventionally ascribed characteristics corresponded with their own
-moral natures. Unjust, tyrannical, and violent men would become wolves,
-hawks, and kites, while good commonplace people—virtuous
-Philistines—would take better forms, such as ants, bees, and wasps, all
-of which live harmoniously in communities. It is pleasant to find that
-Socrates did justice to that intelligent insect, the undeservedly
-aspersed wasp. Men who are good in all respects save the highest, may
-re-assume human forms. Socrates does not explain why it is that humanity
-progresses so slowly if it is always being recruited from such good
-material? He passes on from these righteous men to the super-excellent
-man to whom alone he allots translation into a divine and wholly
-immaterial sphere; he it is who departs from this world completely pure
-of earthly dross; who cannot be moved by ill-fortune, poverty, disgrace;
-who has “overcome the world” in the Pauline sense, who has died while
-living, in the Indian sense. Though Socrates does not say so, it is this
-super-excellent man who really convinces him of the immortality of the
-soul according to the meaning which we attach to these words.
-
-That the more tender and poetic aspects of Pythagorean speculations had
-deeply impressed Socrates can be seen by the fact that they recurred to
-his mind in the most solemn hour of his life. From these he drew the
-lovely parable with which he gently reproved the friends who were come
-to take leave of him for their surprise at finding him no wise
-depressed. He asks if he appears to them inferior in divination to the
-swans, who, when they perceive that they must die, though given to song
-before, then sing the most of all, delighted at the prospect of their
-departure to the deity whose ministers they are. Mankind has said
-falsely of the swans that they sing through dread of death and from
-grief. Those who say this do not reflect that no bird sings when it is
-hungry or cold or afflicted with any other pain, not even the
-nightingale or swallow or hoopoe, which are said to sing a dirge-like
-strain, “but neither do they appear to me to sing for grief nor do the
-swans, but as pertaining to Apollo they are skilled in the divining art,
-and having a foreknowledge of the bliss in Hades, they express their joy
-in song on that day rather than at any previous time. But I believe
-myself to be a fellow-servant of the swans and consecrated to the same
-divinity, and that I am no less gifted by my master in the art of
-divination, nor am I departing with less good grace than they.”
-
-Socrates would not have been “the wisest of men” if he had dogmatised
-about the unknowable; to insist, he says, that things were just as he
-described them, would not become an intelligent being; he only claimed
-an approximate approach to the truth. In appearance Plato went nearer to
-dogmatic acceptance of the theory of the transmigration of souls, but
-probably it was in appearance only. Like his master, he thought it
-reasonable to suppose that the human soul ascended if it had done well,
-and descended if it had done ill, and of this ascent and descent he took
-as symbol its attirement in higher or lower corporeal forms till, freed
-from the corruptible, it joined the incorruptible.
-
-The Greeks were the first people to have an insatiable thirst for exact
-knowledge; they showed themselves true precursors of the modern world by
-their researches into scientific zoology, which were carried on with
-zeal long before Aristotle took the subject in hand. We cannot judge of
-these early researches because they are nearly all lost; but Aristotle’s
-“History of Animals,” even after the revival of learning, was still
-consulted as a text-book, and perhaps nothing that he wrote contributed
-more to win for him the fame of
-
- “... maestro di color che sanno.”
-
-The story goes that this work was written by desire of Alexander the
-Great or, as some say, Philip of Macedon, and that the writer was given
-a sum which sounds fabulous in order that he might obtain the best
-available information. What interest most the modern reader are the
-“sayings by the way” on the moral qualities or the intelligence of
-animals. “Man and the mule,” says Aristotle, “are always tame”—a
-classification not very complimentary to man. The ox is gentle, the wild
-boar is violent, crafty the serpent, noble and generous the lion. Except
-in the senses of touch and taste, man is far surpassed by the other
-animals—a remark that was endorsed by St. Thomas Aquinas, who inferred
-from the limitation of man’s senses that he would have made bad use of
-them if they had been more acute. Aristotle laid down the axiom that man
-alone can reason, though other animals can remember and learn, but he
-never pursued this theory as far as it was pushed by Descartes, much
-less by Malebranche. He believed that the soul of infants differed in no
-respect from that of animals. All animals present traces of their moral
-disposition, though these distinctions are more marked in man. Animals
-understand signs and sounds, and can be taught. The females are less
-ready to help the males in distress than the males are to help the
-females. Bears carry off their cubs with them if they are pursued. The
-dolphin is remarkable for the love of its young ones; two dolphins were
-seen supporting a small dead dolphin on their backs, that was about to
-sink, as if in pity for it, to keep it from being devoured by wild
-creatures. In herds of horses, if a mare dies, other mares will bring up
-the foal, and mares without foals have been known to entice foals to
-follow them and to show much affection to them, though they die for want
-of their natural sustenance.
-
-Aristotle says that music attracts some animals; for instance, deer can
-be captured by singing and playing on the pipe. Animals sometimes show
-fore-thought, as the ichneumon, which does not attack the asp till it
-has called others to help it—which reminds one of the dog whose master
-took him to Exeter, where he was badly treated by the yard-dog of the
-inn; on this, he escaped and went to London, whence he returned with a
-powerful dog-friend who gave the yard-dog a lesson which he must have
-long remembered. Hedgehogs are said by Aristotle and other ancient
-authors to change the entrance of their burrows according as the wind
-blows from north or south; a man in Byzantium got no small fame as a
-weather prophet by observing this habit. He thinks that small animals
-are generally cleverer than larger ones. A tame woodpecker placed an
-almond in a crevice of wood so as to be able to break it, which it
-succeeded in doing with three blows. Aristotle does not mention the
-similar ingenuity of the thrush which I have noticed myself; it brings
-snails to a good flat stone on which it breaks the shell by knocking it
-up and down. He admired the skill of the swallow in making her nest.
-Although he knew of the migrations of birds, and declared that cranes go
-in winter to the sources of the Nile, “where there is a race of
-pigmies—no fable, but a fact,” he was not free from the erroneous idea
-(which is to be found in modern folk-lore) that some birds hybernate in
-caves, out of which they emerge, almost featherless, in the spring. Of
-the nightingale, he says that it sings ceaselessly for fifteen days and
-nights when the mountains are thick with leaves.
-
-The spider’s art and graceful movements receive due praise, as do the
-cleanly habits of bees, which are said to sting people who use unguents
-because they dislike bad smells. “Bright and shiny bees” Aristotle
-asserts to be idle, “like women.”
-
-Of all animals his favourites are the lion and the elephant. The lion is
-gentle when he is not hungry and he is not jealous or suspicious. He is
-fond of playing with animals that are brought up with him, and he gets
-to have a real affection for them. If a blow aimed at a lion fails, he
-only shakes and frightens his attacker, and then leaves him without
-hurting him. He never shows fear or turns his back on a foe. But old
-lions that are unable to hunt sometimes enter villages and attack
-mankind. This is the first observation of the “man-eating” lion or
-tiger, and the reason given for his perverse conduct is still believed
-to be the right one.
-
-Aristotle assigned the palm of wisdom to the elephant, a creature
-abounding in intellect, tame, gentle, teachable, and one which can even
-learn how to “worship the king”—which is what many of us saw the
-elephants do at the Delhi Durbar.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- STELE WITH CAT AND BIRD.
- Athens Museum.]
-
-In a later age, Apollonius of Tyana confirmed from personal observation
-all Aristotle’s praise; he watched with admiration the crossing of the
-Indus by a herd of thirty elephants which were being pursued by
-huntsmen; the light and small ones went first, then the mothers, who
-held up their cubs with tusk and trunk, and lastly the old and large
-elephants. Pliny gave a similar account of the way in which elephants
-cross rivers, and it is, I believe, still noticed as a fact that the old
-ones send the young ones before them. The officer whose duty it was to
-superintend the embarcation of Indian elephants for Abyssinia during the
-campaign of Sir Robert Napier told me how a very fine old elephant, who
-perfectly understood the business in hand, drove all the others on
-board, but after performing this useful service, when it came to be his
-turn, he refused resolutely to move an inch, and had to be left behind.
-The sympathy with animals for which Apollonius was remarkable made him
-feel for these great beasts brought into subjection; he declares that at
-night they mourn over their lost liberty with peculiar piteous sounds
-unlike those which they make usually; if a man approaches, however, they
-cease their wailing out of respect for him. He speaks of their
-attachment to their keeper, how they eat bread from his hand like a dog
-and caress him with their trunks. He saw an elephant at Taxila which was
-said to have fought against Alexander the Great three hundred and fifty
-years before. Alexander named it Ajax, and it bore golden bracelets on
-its trunk with the words: “Ajax. To the Sun from Alexander son of Jove.”
-The people decked it with garlands and anointed it with precious salves.
-Several classical writers bore witness to the pleasure which elephants
-took in music; they could be made to dance to the pipe. It was also said
-that they could write. Their crowning merit—that of helping away wounded
-comrades, which is vouched for by no less an authority than Mr. F. C.
-Selous—does not seem to have been observed in ancient times.
-
-In Greek mythology the familiar animals of the gods occupy a place
-half-way between legend and natural history. Viewed by one school as
-totems, as the earlier god of which the later is only an appendix, to
-more conservative students they may appear to be, in the main, the
-outgrowth of the same fondness for coupling man and beast and fitting
-man with a beast-companion suited to his character, which gave St. Mark
-his lion and St. John his eagle. The panther of Bacchus is the most
-attractive of the divine _menagerie_, because Bacchus, in this
-connexion, is generally shown as a child and the friendships of beasts
-and children are always pleasing.
-
-The affection of Bacchus for panthers has been attributed to the fact
-that he wore a panther-skin, but there seems no motive for deciding that
-the one tradition was earlier than the other; the rationale of a myth is
-often evolved long after the myth itself. Perhaps, after all, the
-stories of gods and animals often originated in the simple belief that
-gods, like men, had a weakness for pets!
-
-In the Pompeian collections at Naples there are several designs of
-Bacchus and his panther; one of them shows the panther and the ass of
-Silenus lying down together; in another, a very fine mosaic, the winged
-genius of Bacchus careers along astride of his favourite beast; in a
-third, a chubby little boy, with no signs of godhead about him, clambers
-on to the back of a patient panther, which has the long-suffering look
-of animals that are accustomed to be teased by children. It may be
-noticed that children and animals, both somewhat neglected in the older
-art, attained the highest popularity with the artists of the age of
-Pompeii. Children were represented in all sorts of attitudes, and all
-known animals, from the cat to the octopus and the elephant to the
-grasshopper, were drawn not only with general correctness but with a
-keen insight into their humours and temperaments.
-
-It is said that a panther was once caught in Pamphylia which had a gold
-chain round its neck with the inscription in Armenian letters: “Arsaces
-the king to the Nysæan god.” Oriental nations called Bacchus after Nysa,
-his supposed birthplace. It was concluded that the king of Armenia had
-given its freedom to this splendid specimen to do honour to the god. The
-panther became very tame and was fondled by every one, but when the
-spring came it ran away, chain and all, to seek a mate in the mountains
-and never more came back.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- III
-
- ANIMALS AT ROME
-
-
-ROME, the eternal, begins with a Beast-story. However much deeper in the
-past the spade may dig than the reputed date of the humanitarian
-She-wolf, her descendant will not be expelled from the grotto on the
-Capitol, nor will it cease to be the belief of children (the only
-trustworthy authorities when legends are concerned) that the grandeur
-that was Rome would have never existed but for the opportune
-intervention of a friendly beast!
-
-The fame of the She-wolf shows how eagerly mankind seizes on some touch
-of nature, fact or fable, that seems to make all creatures kin. Rome was
-as proud of her She-wolf as she was of ruling the world. It was the
-“luck” of Rome; even now, something of the old sentiment exists, for I
-remember that during King Edward’s visit old-fashioned Romans were angry
-because this emblem was not to be seen in the decorations.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- (_Photo: Bruckmann._)
- CAPITOLINE SHE-WOLF.]
-
-The story did not make such large demands on credulity as sceptics
-pretend. The wolf is not so much the natural enemy of man as the cat is
-of the mouse: yet cats have been known to bring up families of mice or
-rats which they treated with affection. In recent times a Russian bear
-was stated to have carried away to the woods a little girl whom it fed
-with nuts and fruits. The evidence seemed good, though the story did
-sound a little as if it were suggested by Victor Hugo’s “Épopée du
-Lion.” But in India there are stories of the same sort—stories actually
-of She-wolves—which appear to be impossible to set aside. In a paper
-read before the Bombay Natural History Society, the well-known Parsi
-scholar, Jivanji Jamsedji Modi, described how he had seen one such
-“wolf-boy” at the Secundra Orphanage: the boy had remained with wolves
-up to six years old when he was discovered and captured, not without
-vigorous opposition from his vulpine protectors.
-
-The historical record of Rome as regards animals is not a bright one.
-The cruelty of the arena does not stain the first Roman annals; the
-earliest certified instance of wild-beast baiting belongs to 186 B.C.,
-and after the practice was introduced it did not reach at once the
-monstrous proportions of later times. Still, one does not imagine that
-the Roman of republican times was very tender-hearted towards animals.
-Cato related, as if he took a pride in it, that when he was Consul he
-left his war-horse in Spain to spare the public the cost of its
-conveyance to Rome. “Whether such things as these,” says Plutarch, who
-tells the story, “are instances of greatness or littleness of soul, let
-the reader judge for himself!” When the infatuation for the shows in the
-arena was at its height, the Romans felt an enormous interest in
-animals: indeed, there were moments when they thought of nothing else.
-It was an interest which went along with indifference to their
-sufferings; it may be said to have been worse than no interest at all,
-but it existed and to ignore it, as most writers have done, is to make
-the explicable inexplicable. If the only attraction of these shows had
-been their cruelty we should have to conclude that the Romans were all
-afflicted with a rare though not unknown form of insanity. Much the same
-was true of the gladiatorial shows. Up to a certain point, what led
-people to them was what leads people to a football match or an
-assault-at-arms. Beyond that point—well, beyond it there entered the
-element that makes the tiger in man, but for the most part it was
-inconscient.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- LION BEING LED FROM THE ARENA BY A SLAVE.
- (_Nennig Mosaic._)]
-
-When we see Pola or Verona or Nîmes; when we tread the crowded streets
-to the Roman Colosseum or traverse the deserted high-road to Spanish
-Italica; most of all, when we watch coming nearer and nearer across the
-wilderness between Kairouan and El Djem the magnificent pile that stands
-outlined against the African sky—we all say the same thing: “What a
-wonderful race the Romans were!” It is an exclamation that forces itself
-to the lips of the most ignorant as to those of the scholar or
-historical student. At such moments, it may be true, that the less we
-think of the games of the arena the better; the remembrance of them
-forms a disturbing element in the majesty of the scene. But they cannot
-be put out of mind entirely, and if we do think of them, it is desirable
-that we should think of them correctly. It so happens that it is
-possible to reconstruct them into a lifelike picture. There exists one,
-though, as far as I know, only one, faithful, vivid, and complete
-contemporary representation of the Roman Games. This is the superb
-mosaic pavement which was discovered in the middle of the last century
-by a peasant striking on the hard surface with his spade, at the village
-of Nennig, not far from the Imperial city of Treves. The observer of
-this mosaic perceives at once that the games were of the nature of a
-“variety” entertainment. There was the music which picturesque-looking
-performers played on a large horn and on a sort of organ. (The horn
-closely resembles the pre-historic horns which are preserved in the
-National Museum at Copenhagen, where they were blown with inspiring
-effect before the members of the Congress of Orientalists in 1908.)
-There was the bloodless contest between a short and tall athlete, armed
-differently with stick and whip. In the central division, because the
-most important, is shown the mortal earnest of the gladiatorial fight,
-strictly controlled by the Games-master. In the sexagion above this is a
-hardly less deadly struggle between a man and a bear: the bear has got
-the man under him but is being whipped off so that the “turn” may not
-end too quickly, and, perhaps, also to give the more expensive victim
-another chance. To the right hand, a gladiator who has run his lance
-through the neck of a panther, holds up his hand to boast the victory
-and claim applause: the dying panther tries vainly to free itself from
-the weapon. To the left is a fight between a leopard and an unfortunate
-wild ass, which has already received a terrible wound in its side and is
-now having its head drawn down between the fore-paws of the leopard. I
-hear that in beast-fights organised by Indian princes, these unequal
-combatants are still pitted against each other. Lastly, the Nennig
-Mosaic depicts a fat lion that has also conquered a wild ass, of which
-the head alone seems to remain: it has been inferred, though I think
-rashly, that the lion has eaten up all the rest; at any rate he now
-seems at peace with the world and is being led back to his cage by a
-slave.
-
-Everything is quiet, orderly, and a model of good management. The
-custodian of the little museum told me that the (surprisingly few)
-visitors to Nennig were in the habit of remarking of this representation
-of the Roman Games that it made them understand for the first time how
-the cultivated Romans could endure such sights. Unhappily, conventional
-propriety joined to the sanction of authority will make the majority of
-mankind endure anything that causes no danger or inconvenience to
-themselves.
-
-Except with a few, at whom their generation looks askance, the sense of
-cruelty more than any other moral sense is governed by habit, by
-convention. It is even subject to latitude and longitude; in Spain I was
-surprised to find that almost all the English and American women whom I
-met had been to, at least, one bull-fight. Insensibility spreads like a
-pestilence; new or revived forms of cruelty should be stopped at once or
-no one can say how far they will reach or how difficult it will be to
-abolish them. One might have supposed that the sublime self-sacrifice of
-the monk who threw himself between two combatants—which brought the
-tardy end of gladiatorial exhibitions in Christian Rome—would have saved
-the world for ever from that particular barbarity; but in the fourteenth
-century we actually find gladiatorial shows come to life again and in
-full favour at Naples! This little-known fact is attested in Petrarch’s
-letters. Writing to Cardinal Colonna on December 1, 1343, the truly
-civilised poet denounces with burning indignation an “infernal
-spectacle” of which he had been the involuntary witness. His gay friends
-(there has been always a singular identity between fashion and
-barbarism) seem to have entrapped him into going to a place called
-Carbonaria, where he found the queen, the boy-king, and a large audience
-assembled in a sort of amphitheatre. Petrarch imagined that there was to
-be some splendid entertainment, but he had hardly got inside when a
-tall, handsome young man fell dead just below where he was standing,
-while the audience raised a shout of applause. He escaped from the place
-as fast as he could, horror-struck by the brutality of spectacle and
-spectators, and spurring his horse, he turned his back on the “accursed
-spot” with the determination to leave Naples as soon as possible. How
-can we wonder, he asks, that there are murders in the streets at night
-when in broad daylight, in the presence of the king, wretched parents
-see their sons stabbed and killed, and when it is considered
-dishonourable to be unwilling to present one’s throat to the knife just
-as if it were a struggle for fatherland or for the joys of Heaven?
-
-Very curious was the action of the Vatican in this matter; Pope John
-XXII. excommunicated every one who took part in the games as actor or
-spectator, but since nobody obeyed the prohibition, it was rescinded by
-his successor, Benedict XII., to prevent the scandal of a perpetual
-disregard of a Papal ordinance. So they went on cutting each other’s
-throats with the tacit permission of the Church until King Charles of
-the Peace succeeded in abolishing the “sport.”
-
-The action of the Church in respect to bull-fights has been much the
-same; local opinion is generally recognised as too strong for
-opposition. The French bishops, however, did their best to prevent their
-introduction into the South of France, but they failed completely.
-
-I have strayed rather far from the Roman shows, but the savagery of
-Christians in the fourteenth century (and after) should make us wonder
-less at Roman callousness. All our admiration is due to the few finer
-spirits who were repelled by the slaughter of man or beast to make a
-Roman’s holiday. Cicero said that he could never see what there was
-pleasurable in the spectacle of a noble beast struck to the heart by its
-merciless hunter or pitted against one of our weaker species! For a
-single expression of censure such as this which has come down to us,
-there must have been many of which we have no record. Of out-spoken
-censure there was doubtless little because violent condemnation of the
-arena would have savoured of treason to the State which patronised and
-supported the games just as Queen Elizabeth’s ministers supported
-bull-baiting.
-
-Rome must have been one vast zoological garden, and viewing the strange
-animals was the first duty of the tourist. Pausanias was deeply
-impressed by the “Ethiopian bulls which they call rhinoceroses” and also
-by Indian camels in colour like leopards. He saw an all-white deer, and
-very much surprised he was to see it, but, to his subsequent regret, he
-forgot to ask where it came from. He was reminded of this white deer
-when he saw white blackbirds on Mount Cyllene in Arcadia. I remember a
-white blackbird which stayed in the garden of my old English home for
-more than two years: a wretched “sportsman” lay in wait for it when it
-wandered into a neighbouring field and shot it.
-
-The feasibility of the transport of the hosts of animals destined to the
-arena will always remain a mystery. At the inauguration of the
-Colosseum, five thousand wild beasts and six thousand tame ones were
-butchered, nor was this the highest figure on a single occasion.
-Probably a great portion of the animals was sent by the Governors of
-distant provinces who wished to stand well with the home authorities.
-But large numbers were also brought over by speculators who sold them to
-the highest or the most influential bidder. One reason why Cassius
-murdered Julius Cæsar was that Cæsar had secured some lions which
-Cassius wished to present to the public. Every one who aimed at
-political power or even simply at being thought one of the “smart set”
-(the odious word suits the case) spent king’s ransoms on the public
-games. For vulgar ostentation the wealthy Roman world eclipsed the
-exploits of the modern millionaire. If any one deem this impossible, let
-him read, in the _Satyricon_ of Petronius, the account of the fêtes to
-be given by a leader of fashion of the name of Titus. Not merely
-gladiators, but a great number of freedmen would take part in them: it
-would be no wretched mock combat but a real carnage! Titus was so rich
-that he could afford such liberality. Contempt is poured upon the head
-of a certain Nobarnus who offered a spectacle of gladiators hired at a
-low price and so old and decrepit that a breath threw them over. They
-all ended by wounding themselves to stop the contest. You might as well
-have witnessed a mere cock-fight!
-
-I should think that not more than one animal in three survived the
-voyage. This would vastly increase the total number. The survivors often
-arrived in such a pitiable state that they could not be presented in the
-arena, or that they had to be presented immediately to prevent them from
-dying too soon. Symmachus, last of the great nobles of Rome, who,
-blinded by tradition, thought to revive the glories of his beloved city
-by reviving its shame, graphically describes the anxieties of the
-preparations for one of these colossal shows on which he is said to have
-spent what would be about £80,000 of our money. He began a year in
-advance: horses, bears, lions, Scotch dogs, crocodiles, chariot-drivers,
-hunters, actors, and the best gladiators were recruited from all parts.
-But when the time drew near, nothing were ready. Only a few of the
-animals had come, and these were half dead of hunger and fatigue. The
-bears had not arrived and there was no news of the lions. At the
-eleventh hour the crocodiles reached Rome, but they refused to eat and
-had to be killed all at once in order that they might not die of hunger.
-It was even worse with the gladiators, who were intended to provide, as
-in all these beast shows, the crowning entertainment. Twenty-nine of the
-Saxon captives whom Symmachus had chosen on account of the well-known
-valour of their race, strangled one another in prison rather than fight
-to the death for the amusement of their conquerors. And Symmachus, with
-all his real elevation of mind, was moved to nothing but disgust by
-their sublime choice! Rome in her greatest days had gloried in these
-shows: how could a man be a patriot who set his face against customs
-which followed the Roman eagles round the world? How many times since
-then has patriotism been held to require the extinction of moral sense!
-
-Sometimes the humanity of beasts put to shame the inhumanity of man.
-There was a lion, commemorated by Statius, which had “unlearnt murder
-and homicide,” and submitted of its own accord to a master “who ought to
-have been under its feet.” This lion went in and out of its cage and
-gently laid down unhurt the prey which it caught: it even allowed people
-to put their hands into its mouth. It was killed by a fugitive slave.
-The Senate and people of Rome were in despair, and Imperial Cæsar, who
-witnessed impassible the death of thousands of animals sent hither to
-perish from Africa, from Scythia, from the banks of the Rhine, had tears
-in his eyes for a single lion! In later Roman times a tame lion was a
-favourite pet: their masters led them about wherever they went, whether
-much to the gratification of the friends on whom they called is not
-stated.
-
-Another instance of a gentle beast was that of a tiger into whose cage a
-live doe had been placed for him to eat. But the tiger was not feeling
-well and, with the wisdom of sick animals, he was observing a diet. So
-two or three days elapsed, during which the tiger made great friends
-with the doe and when he recovered his health and began to feel very
-hungry, instead of devouring his fellow-lodger he beat with his paws
-against the bars of the cage in sign that he wanted food. These stories
-were, no doubt, true, and there may have been truth also in the
-well-known story of the lion which refused to attack a man who had once
-succoured him. Animals have good memories.
-
-One pleasanter feature of the circus was the exhibition of performing
-beasts. Though the exhibitors of such animals are now sometimes charged
-with cruelty, it cannot be denied that the public who goes to look at
-them is composed of just the people who are most fond of animals. All
-children delight in them because, to their minds, they seem a
-confirmation of the strong instinctive though oftenest unexpressed
-belief, which lurks in every child’s soul, that between man and animals
-there is much less difference than is the correct, “grown-up” opinion;
-this is a part of the secret lore of childhood which has its origins in
-the childhood of the world. The amiable taste for these exhibitions—in
-appearance, at least, so harmless—strikes one as incongruous in the same
-persons who revelled in slaughter. Such a taste existed, however, and
-when St. James said that there was not a single beast, bird or reptile
-which had not been tamed, he may have been thinking of the itinerant
-showmen’s “learned” beasts which perambulated the Roman empire.
-
-Horses and oxen were among the animals commonly taught to do tricks. I
-find no mention of monkeys as performing in the arena, though Apuleius
-says that in the spring fêtes of Isis, the forerunners of the Roman
-carnival, he saw a monkey with a straw hat and a Phrygian tunic—we can
-hardly keep ourselves from asking: _what had it done with the
-grind-organ?_ But in spite of this startlingly modern apparition,
-monkeys do not seem to have been popular in Rome; I imagine even, that
-there was some fixed prejudice against them. The cleverest of all the
-animal performers were, of course, the dogs, and one showman had the
-ingenious idea of making a dog act a part in a comedy. The effects of a
-drug were tried on him, the plot turning on the suspicion that the drug
-was poisonous, while, in fact, it was only a narcotic. The dog took the
-piece of bread dipped in the liquid, swallowed it, and began to reel and
-stagger till he finally fell flat on the ground. He gave himself a last
-stretch and then seemed to expire, making no sign of life when his
-apparently dead body was dragged about the stage. At the right moment,
-he began to move very slightly as if waking out of a deep sleep; then he
-raised his head, looked round, jumped up and ran joyously to the proper
-person. The piece was played at the theatre of Marcellus in the reign of
-old Vespasian, and Cæsar himself was delighted. I wonder that no manager
-of our days has turned the incident to account; I never yet saw an
-audience serious enough not to become young again at the sight of
-four-footed comedians. Even the high art-loving public at the Prince
-Regent’s theatre at Munich cannot resist a murmur of discreet merriment
-when the pack of beautiful stag-hounds led upon the stage in the hunting
-scene in “Tannhäuser” gravely wag their tails in time with the music!
-
-The pet lions were only one example of the aberrations of pet-lovers in
-ancient Rome. Maltese lap-dogs became a scourge: Lucian tells the
-lamentable tale of a needy philosopher whom a fashionable lady cajoles
-into acting as personal attendant to her incomparable Mirrhina. The
-Maltese dog was an old fad; Theophrastus, in the portrait of an
-insufferable _élégant_, mentions that, when his pet dog dies, he
-inscribes “pure Maltese” on its tombstone.
-
-Many were the birds that fell victims to the desire to keep them in
-richly ornamented cages in which they died of hunger, says Epictetus,
-sooner than be slaves. The canary which takes more kindly to captivity
-was unknown till it was brought to Italy in the sixteenth century.
-Parrots there were, but Roman parrots were not long-lived: they shared
-the common doom: “To each his sufferings, all are _pets_.” The parrots
-of Corinna and of Melior which ought to have lived to a hundred or, at
-any rate, to have had the chance of dying of grief at the loss of their
-possessors (as a parrot did that I once knew), enjoyed fame and fortune
-for as brief a span as Lesbia’s sparrow. Melior’s parrot not only had
-brilliant green feathers but also many accomplishments which are
-described by its master’s friend, the poet Statius. On one occasion, it
-sat up half the night at a banquet, hopping from one guest to another
-and talking in a way that excited great admiration; it even shared the
-good fare and on the morrow it died—which was less than surprising. I
-came across an old-fashioned criticism of this poem in which Statius is
-scolded for showing so much genuine feeling about ... a parrot! The
-critic was right in one thing—the genuine feeling is there; those who
-have known what a companion a bird may be, will appreciate the little
-touch: “You never felt alone, dear Melior, with its open cage beside
-you!” Now the cage is empty; it is “_la cage sans oiseaux_” which Victor
-Hugo prayed to be spared from seeing. Some translator turned this into
-“a nest without birds,” because he thought that a cage without birds
-sounded unpoetical, but Victor Hugo took care of truth and left poetry
-to take of itself. And whatever may be the ethics of keeping cage birds,
-true it is that few things are more dismal than the sight of the little
-mute, tenantless dwelling which was yesterday alive with fluttering
-love.
-
-We owe to Roman poets a good deal of information about dogs, and
-especially the knowledge that the British hound was esteemed superior to
-all others, even to the famous breed of Epirus. This is certified by
-Gratius Faliscus, a contemporary of Ovid. He described these animals as
-remarkably ugly, but incomparable for pluck. British bull-dogs were used
-in the Colosseum, and in the third century Nemesianus praised the
-British greyhound. Most of the valuable dogs were brought from abroad;
-it is to be inferred that the race degenerated in the climate of Rome,
-as it does now. Concha, whose epitaph was written by Petronius, was born
-in Gaul. While Martial’s too elaborate epitaph on “The Trusty Lydia” is
-often quoted and translated, the more sympathetic poem of Petronius has
-been overlooked. He tells the perfections of Concha in a simple,
-affectionate manner; like Lydia, she was a mighty huntress and chased
-the wild boar fearlessly through the dense forest. Never did chain
-hamper her liberty and never a blow fell on her shapely, snow-white
-form. She reposed softly, stretched on the breast of her master or
-mistress, and at night a well-made bed refreshed her tired limbs. If she
-lacked speech, she could make herself understood better than any of her
-kind—yet no one had reason to fear her bark. A hapless mother, she died
-when her little ones saw the light, and now a narrow marble slab covers
-the earth where she rests.
-
-Cicero’s tribute to canine worth is well known: “Dogs watch for us
-faithfully; they love and worship their masters, they hate strangers,
-their powers of tracking by scent is extraordinary; great is their
-keenness in the chase: what can all this mean but that they were made
-for man’s advantage?” It was as natural to the Roman mind to regard man
-as the lord of creation as to regard the Roman as the lord of man. For
-the rest, his normal conception of animals differed little from that of
-Aristotle. Cicero says that the chief distinction between man and
-animals, is that animals look only to the present, paying little
-attention to the past and future, while man looks before and after,
-weighs causes and effects, draws analogies and views the whole path of
-life, preparing things needful for passing along it. Expressed in the
-key of antique optimism instead of in the key of modern pessimism, the
-judgment is the same as that of Burns in his lines to the field-mouse:
-
- “Still thou art blest, compared wi’ me!
- The present only touches thee:
- But, och! I backward cast my e’e
- On prospects drear!
- And forward, tho’ I canna see,
- I guess and fear.”
-
-And of Leopardi in the song of the Syrian shepherd to his flock:—
-
- “O flock that liest at rest, O blessed thou
- That knowest not thy fate, however hard,
- How utterly I envy thee!”
-
-Cicero’s more virile mind would have spurned this craving to renounce
-the distinguishing human privilege for the bliss of ignorance.
-
-Wherever we fix the limits of animal intelligence, there is no question
-of man’s obligation to treat sentient creatures with humanity. This was
-recognised by Marcus Aurelius when he wrote the golden precept: “As to
-animals which have no reason ... do thou, since thou hast reason, and
-they have none, make use of them with a generous and liberal spirit.”
-Here we have the broadest application of the narrowest assumption. From
-the time, at least, that Rome was full of Greek teachers, there were
-always some partisans of a different theory altogether. What Seneca
-calls “the illustrious but unpopular school of Pythagoras” had a little
-following which made up by its sincere enthusiasm for the fewness of its
-members. Seneca’s own master Sotio was of this school, and his teaching
-made a deep impression on the most illustrious of his pupils, who sums
-up its chief points with his usual lucidity: Pythagoras gave men a
-horror of crime and of parricide by telling them that they might
-unawares kill or devour their own fathers; all sentient beings are bound
-together in a universal kinship and an endless transmutation causes them
-to pass from one form to another; no soul perishes or ceases its
-activity save in the moment when it changes its envelope. Sotio took for
-granted that the youths who attended his classes came to him with minds
-unprepared to receive these doctrines, and he aimed more at making them
-accept the consequences of the theory than the theory itself. What if
-they believed none of it? What if they did not believe that souls passed
-through different bodies and that the thing we call death is a
-transmigration? That in the animal which crops the grass or which
-peoples the sea, a soul resides which once was human? That, like the
-heavenly bodies, every soul traverses its appointed circle? That nothing
-in this world perishes, but only changes scene and place? Let them
-remember, nevertheless, that great men have believed all this: “Suspend
-your judgment, and in the meantime, respect whatever has life.” If the
-doctrine be true, then to abstain from animal flesh is to spare oneself
-the committal of crimes; if it be false, such abstinence is commendable
-frugality; “all you lose is the food of lions and vultures.”
-
-Sotio himself was a thorough Pythagorean, but there was another
-philosopher of the name of Sestius who was an ardent advocate of
-abstinence from animal food without believing in the transmigration of
-souls. He founded a sort of brotherhood, the members of which took the
-pledge to abide by this rule. He argued that since plenty of other
-wholesome food existed, what need was there for man to shed blood?
-Cruelty must become habitual when people devour flesh to indulge the
-palate: “let us reduce the elements of sensuality.” Health would be also
-the gainer by the adoption of a simpler and less various diet. Sotio
-used these arguments of one whom he might have called an unbeliever, to
-reinforce his own.
-
-Seneca does not say if many of his schoolfellows were as much impressed
-as he was by this teaching. For a year he abstained from flesh, and when
-he got accustomed to it, he even found the new diet easy and agreeable.
-His mind seemed to grow more active. That he was allowed to eat what he
-liked without encountering interference or ridicule shows the
-considerable freedom in which the youth of Rome was brought up: this
-made them men. But at the beginning of the reign of Tiberius there went
-forth an edict against foreign cults, and abstinence from flesh was held
-to show a leaning towards religious novelties. For this reason the elder
-Seneca advised his son to give up vegetarianism. Seneca honestly
-confesses that he went back to better fare without much urging; yet he
-always remained frugal, and he seems never to have felt quite sure that
-his youthful experiment did not agree best with the counsels of
-perfection.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- IV
-
- PLUTARCH THE HUMANE
-
-
-PLUTARCH was the Happy Philosopher—and there were not many that were
-happy. A life of travel, a life of teaching, an honoured old age as the
-priest of Apollo in his native village in Bœotia: what kinder fate than
-this? He was happy in the very obscurity which seems to have surrounded
-his life at Rome, for it saved him from spite and envy. He was happy, if
-we may trust the traditional effigies, even in that thing which likewise
-is a good gift of the gods, a gracious outward presence exactly
-corresponding with the soul within. A painter who wished to draw a type
-of illimitable compassionateness would choose the face attributed to
-Plutarch. Finally, this gentle sage is happy still after eighteen
-hundred years in doing more than any other writer of antiquity to build
-up character by diffusing the radiance of noble deeds. Nevertheless,
-were he to come back to life he would have one disappointment, and that
-would be to find how few people read his essays on kindness to animals:
-they would stand a better chance of being read if they were printed
-alone, but to arrive at them you must dive in the formidable depths of
-the _Moralia_: a very storehouse of interesting things, but hardly
-attractive to the general in a hurried age. Some of its treasures have
-been revealed by Dr. Oakesmith in his admirable monograph on “The
-Religion of Plutarch.” The mine of nobly humane sentiment remains,
-however, almost unexplored.
-
-The essays devoted to animals are three in number, with the titles:
-“Whether terrestrial or aquatic animals are the more intelligent?” “That
-animals have the use of Reason”; “On the habit of eating flesh.” The two
-first are in the form of dialogues, and the third is a familiar
-discourse, a _conférence_, such as those which now form a popular
-feature of the Roman season. Through these studies there runs a vein of
-transparent sincerity: we feel that they were composed not to show the
-author’s cleverness or to startle by paradoxes, but with the real wish
-to make the young men for whom they were intended a little more humane.
-Plutarch did not take up the claims of animals because good “copy” could
-be made out of them. As his wish is to persuade, he does not ask for the
-impossible. It is the voice of the highly civilised Greek addressing the
-young barbarians of Rome: for to the Greek’s inmost mind the Roman must
-have always remained somewhat of a barbarian. There is great restraint:
-though Plutarch must have loathed the games of the arena, he speaks of
-them with guarded deprecation. He makes one of his characters say that
-the chase (which he did not himself like) was useful in keeping people
-from worse things, “such as the combats of gladiators.” He is genuinely
-anxious by all means to persuade some, and for this reason he refrains
-from scaring away his hearers or readers by extreme demands. Though he
-has a strong personal repugnance to flesh-eating, he does not insist on
-every one sharing it. Anyhow, he says, Be as humane as you can; cause as
-little suffering as is possible; no doubt it is not easy, all at once,
-to eradicate a habit which has taken hold of our sensual nature, but, at
-least, let us deprive it of its worst features. Let us eat flesh if we
-must, but for hunger, not for self-indulgence; let us kill animals but
-still be compassionate—not heaping up outrages and tortures “as, alas,
-is done every day.” He mentions how swans were blinded and then fattened
-with unnatural foods, which is only a little worse than things that are
-done now. What is certain is, that extreme and habitual luxury in food
-has spelt decadence from the banquets of Babylon downwards.
-
-Plutarch goes on to ask whether it is impossible to amuse ourselves
-without all these excesses? Shall we expire on the spot, are the
-resources of men totally exhausted, if the table be not supplied with
-_pâtés de foies gras_? Is life not worth living without slaughter to
-make a feast, slaughter to find a pastime; cannot we exist without
-asking of certain animals that they show courage, and fight in spite of
-themselves, or that they massacre other animals which have not the
-natural energy to defend themselves? Must we for our sport tear the
-mother from the little ones which she suckles or hatches? Plutarch
-implores us not to imitate the children of whom Bion speaks, who amused
-themselves by throwing stones at the frogs, but the frogs were not at
-all amused—they simply died. “When we take our recreation, those who
-help in the fun ought to share in it and be amused as well.” Thus does
-the kind Greek philosopher exhort us
-
- “Never to blend our pleasure or our pride
- With sorrow of the meanest thing that feels.”
-
-Did Wordsworth know that his thought had been expressed so long before?
-It matters little; the counsels of mercy never grow old.
-
-With good sense and in that spirit of compromise which is really the
-basis of morality, Plutarch argued that cruelty to animals does not lie
-in the use but in the abuse of them; it is not cruel to kill them if
-they are incompatible with our own existence; it is not cruel to tame
-and train to our service those made by nature gentle and loving towards
-man which become the companions of our toil according to their natural
-aptitude. “Horse and ass are given to us,” as Prometheus says, “to be
-submissive servants and fellow-workers; dogs to be guardians and
-watchers, goats and sheep to give us milk and wool.” (Cow’s milk seems
-to have been rarely drunk, as is still the case in the Mediterranean
-islands and in Greece.)
-
-“The Stoics,” says Plutarch, “made sensibility towards animals a
-preparation to humanity and compassion because the gradually formed
-habit of the lesser affections is capable of leading men very far.” In
-the “Lives” he insists on the same point: “Kindness and beneficence
-should be extended to creatures of every species, and these still flow
-from the breast of a well-natured man as streams that issue from the
-living fountain. A good man will take care of his horses and dogs not
-only when they are young, but when old and past service.... We certainly
-ought not to treat living creatures like shoes or household goods,
-which, when worn out with use, we throw away, and were it only to learn
-benevolence to human kind, we should be merciful to other creatures. For
-my own part I would not sell even an old ox.”
-
-Here I may say that Plutarch should have thanked Fate which made him a
-philosopher and not a farmer. For how, alas, can the farmer escape from
-becoming the accomplice of that which the Italian poet apostrophizes in
-the words—
-
- “Natura, illaudabil maraviglia,
- Che per uccider partorisci e nutri!”
-
-How can well-cared-for old age be the lot of more than a very few of the
-animals that serve us so faithfully? The exception must console us for
-the rule. The beautiful story of one such exception is told by both
-Plutarch and Pliny the Elder. When Pericles was building the Parthenon a
-great number of mules were employed in drawing the stones up the hill of
-the Acropolis. Some of them became too old for the work, and these were
-set at liberty to pasture at large. But one old mule gravely walked
-every day to the stone-yard and accompanied, or rather led, the
-procession of mule-carts to and fro. The Athenians were delighted with
-its devotion to duty, and decided that it should be supported at the
-expense of the State for the rest of its days. According to Pliny, the
-mule of the Parthenon lived till it had attained its eightieth year, a
-record that seems startling even having regard to the proverbial
-longevity of pensioners. Plutarch does not mention it, perhaps, because
-he had some doubts about its accuracy. In other respects the story may
-be accepted as literally true; and does it not do us good to think of
-it, as we look at the most glorious work of man’s hands bathed in the
-golden afterglow? Does it not do us good to think that at the zenith of
-her greatness Athens
-
- “... Mother of arts
- And eloquence, native to famous wits”
-
-stooped—nay, rose—to generous appreciation of the willing service of an
-old mule?
-
-In dealing with animal psychology Plutarch makes a strong point of the
-inherent improbability that, while feeling and imagination are the
-common share of all animated beings, reason should be apportioned only
-to a single species. “How can you say such things? Is not every one
-convinced that no being can feel without also possessing understanding,
-that there is not a single animal which has not a sort of thought and
-reason just as he comes into the world with senses and instinct?”
-Nature, which is said to make all things from one cause and to one end,
-has not given sensibility to animals simply in order that they should be
-capable of sensations. Since some things are good for them, and others
-bad, they would not exist for a single instant if they did not know how
-to seek the good and shun the bad. The animal learns by his senses what
-things are good and what are bad for him, but when, in consequence of
-these indications, of his senses, it is a question of taking and seeking
-what is useful and of avoiding and flying from what is harmful, these
-same animals would have no means of action if Nature had not made them
-up to a certain point capable of reason, of judgment, of memory, and of
-attention. Because, if you completely deprived them of the spirit of
-conjecture, memory, foresight, preparation, hope, fear, desire, grief,
-they would cease to derive the slightest utility from the eyes or ears
-which they possess. Plutarch might have added that a mindless animal
-would resemble not a child or a savage, but an idiot. He does point out
-that they would be better off with no senses at all than with the power
-of feeling and no power of acting upon it. But, he adds, could sensation
-exist without intelligence? He quotes a line from I do not know what
-poet:—
-
- “The spirit only hears and sees—all else
- Is deaf and blind.”
-
-If we look with our eyes at a page of writing without seizing the
-meaning of a word of it, because our thoughts are preoccupied, is it not
-the same as if we had never seen it? But even were we to admit that the
-senses suffice to their office, would that explain the phenomena of
-memory and foresight? Would the animal fear things, not present, which
-harm him, or desire things, not present, which are to his advantage?
-Would he prepare his retreat or shelter or devise snares by which to
-catch other animals? Only one theory can be applied to mind in man and
-mind in animals.
-
-It will be seen from this summary that Plutarch traversed the whole
-field of speculation on animal intelligence which has not really
-extended its boundaries since the time when he wrote, though it is
-possible that we are now on the verge, if not of new discoveries, at
-least of the admission of a new point of view. The study of the dual
-element in man, the endeavour to establish a line of demarcation between
-the conscious and subliminal self, may lead to the inquiry, how far the
-conscious self corresponds with what was meant, when speaking of
-animals, by “reason,” and the subliminal self with what was meant by
-“instinct”? But the use of a new terminology would not alter the
-conclusion: call it reason, consciousness, spirit; some of it the
-“paragon of animals” shares with his poor relations. The case is put in
-a homely way but not without force by the heroine of a forgotten novel
-by Lamartine: the speaker is an old servant who is in despair at losing
-her goldfinch: “Ah! On dit que les bêtes n’ont pas l’âme,” she says. “Je
-ne veux pas offenser le bon Dieu, mais si mon pauvre oiseau n’avait pas
-d’âme, avec quoi done n’aurait-il tant aimée? Avec les plumes ou avec
-les pattes, peut-être?”
-
-Plutarch reviews—to reject—the “Automata” argument, which had already
-some supporters. Certain naturalists, he says, try to prove that animals
-feel neither pleasure nor anger nor yet fear; that the nightingale does
-not meditate his song, that the bee has no memory, that the swallow
-makes no preparations, that the lion never grows angry, nor is the stag
-subject to fear. Everything, according to these theorists, is merely
-delusive appearance. They might as well assert that animals cannot see
-or hear; that they only appear to see or hear; that they have no voice,
-only the semblance of a voice; in short, that they are not alive but
-only seem to live.
-
-The moral aspects of any problem are those which to a moralist seem the
-most important, and Plutarch did not seek to deny the force of the
-objection: If virtue be the true aim of reason, how can Nature have
-bestowed reason on creatures which cannot direct it to its true object?
-But he denied the postulate that animals have no ethical potentialities.
-If the love of men for their children is granted to be the corner-stone
-of all human society, shall we say that there is no merit in the
-affection of animals for their offspring? He sums up the matter by
-remarking that the limitation of a faculty does not show that it does
-not exist. To pretend that every being not endowed at birth with perfect
-reason is, by its nature, incapable of reason of any kind, would be to
-ignore the fact that although reason is a natural gift the degree in
-which it is possessed by any individual depends on his training and on
-his teachers. Perfect reason is possessed by none because none has
-perfect rectitude and moral excellence.
-
-Animals exhibit examples of sociability, courage, resource, and again,
-of cowardice and viciousness. Why do we not say of one tree that it is
-less teachable than another, as we say that a sheep is less teachable
-than a dog? It is, of course, because plants cannot think, and where the
-faculty of thought is wholly wanting, there cannot be more or less
-quickness or slowness, more or less of good qualities or of bad.
-
-Yet it must be allowed that man’s intelligence is amazingly superior to
-that of animals. But what does that prove? Do not some animals leave man
-far behind in the keenness of their sight and the sharpness of their
-hearing? Shall we say, therefore, that man is blind or deaf? We have
-some strength in our hands and in our bodies although we are not
-elephants or camels. In the same way, we should be careful not to infer
-that animals lack all reasoning faculties from the fact that their
-intelligence is duller and more defective than man’s. “Boatfuls” of true
-stories can be cited to show the docility and special aptitudes of the
-different children of creation. And a very amusing occupation it is,
-says Plutarch, for young people to collect such stories. In the course
-of his work, he sets them a good example, for he brings together a real
-“boatful” of anecdotes of clever beasts, but at this point he contents
-himself with observing that madness in dogs and other animals would be
-alone sufficient to show that they had some mind: otherwise, how could
-they go out of it?
-
-The stoics who taught the strictest humanity to animals rejected,
-nevertheless, the supposition that animals had reason, for how, they
-asked, can such a theory be reconciled with the idea of eternal justice?
-Would it not make abstinence from their flesh imperative and entail
-consequences which would make our life impracticable? If we were to give
-up using animals for our own purposes, we should be reduced ourselves
-almost to the condition of brutes. “What works would be left for us to
-do by land or sea, what industries to cultivate, what embellishments of
-our way of living, if we regarded animals as reasonable beings and our
-fellow-creatures, and hence adopted the rule (which, clearly, would be
-only proper) to do them no harm and to study their convenience.”
-
-Many a sensitive modern soul has pondered over this crux without finding
-a satisfactory solution. Plutarch says that Empedocles and Heraclites
-admitted the injustice, and laid it to the door of Nature which permits
-or ordains a state of war and necessity, in which nothing is
-accomplished without the weaker going to the wall. For himself, he would
-propose to those “who, instead of disputing, gently follow and learn”
-the better way out of the difficulty—which was introduced by the Sages
-of Antiquity, then long lost, and found again by Pythagoras. This better
-way is to use animals as our helpers but to refrain from taking life.
-
-Plutarch here evades a stumbling-block which he does not remove. The
-dialogue, as it has come down to us, breaks off suddenly after one final
-objection: how can beings have reason which have no notion of God? Some
-scholars imagine that Plutarch hurried the dialogue to a close because
-this query completely baffled him; others (and they are the majority)
-attribute the abrupt finish to the loss of the concluding part. Would
-Plutarch have contented himself with citing the analogy of young
-children who, although not without the elements of reason, know very
-little of theology, or would not he rather have contended with Celsus,
-that animals _do_ possess religious knowledge? If he took the last
-course, it may well be that the disappearance of the end of the dialogue
-was not accidental. At Ravenna there is a terrible mosaic, alive with
-wrath and energy, which shows a Christ we know not (for He looks like a
-grand Inquisitor) thrusting into the flames heretical books. As I looked
-at it, I thought how many valuable classical works, vaguely suspected on
-the score of faith or morals, must have shared the fate of “unorthodox”
-polemics in the merry bonfires which this mosaic holds up for imitation!
-
-The argument “that it sounds unnatural to ascribe reason to creatures
-ignorant of God,” suggests familiarity with a passage in Epictetus
-(Plutarch’s contemporary), where he says that man alone was made to have
-the understanding which recognises God—a recognition which he elsewhere
-explains by the hypothesis that every man has in him a small portion of
-the divine. Having this intuitive sense, man is bound, without ceasing,
-to praise his Creator, and, since others are blind and neglect to do it,
-Epictetus will do it on behalf of all: “for what else can I do, a lame
-old man, than sing hymns to God? If I was a nightingale, I should do the
-part of a nightingale; if I were a swan, I would do like a swan; but now
-I am a _rational creature_, and I ought to praise God: this is my work;
-I do it, nor will I desert this post so long as I am allowed to keep it,
-and I exhort you to join in this song.”
-
-The words are among the sweetest and most solemn that ever issued from
-human lips; yet those who care to pursue the subject farther may submit
-that there was some one before Epictetus, who called upon the beasts,
-the fishes and the fowls to join him in blessing the name of the Lord,
-and there was some one after him who commanded the birds of the air to
-sing the praises of their Maker and Preserver! It is strange that,
-despite the hard-and-fast line which the moulders of the Catholic Faith
-were at pains to trace between man and beast, if we would find the most
-emphatic assertion of their common privilege of praising God, we must
-leave the Pagan world and take up the Bible and the “Fioretti” of St.
-Francis!
-
-[Illustration:
-
- (_Photo: Sommer._)
- BACCHUS RIDING ON A PANTHER.
- Naples Museum.
- (_Mosaic found at Pompeii._)]
-
-Of the anecdotes with which Plutarch enlivens his pages, he says himself
-that he puts on one side fable and mythology, and limits his choice to
-the “all true” category, and if he appears to be at times a little
-credulous, one may well believe that he is always candid. Just as in his
-“Lives” he tried to ennoble his readers by making noble deeds
-interesting, so in his writings on animals, he tried to make people
-humane by making his dumb clients interesting. He did not start with
-thinking the task an easy one, for he was convinced that man is more
-cruel than the most savage of wild beasts. But he aims at pouring, if
-not a full draught of mercy, at least some drops, into the heart that
-never felt a pang, the mind that never gave a thought. Many of his
-stories are taken straight from the common street life of the Rome of
-his day, as that of the elephant which passed every day along a certain
-street where the schoolboys teased it by pricking its trunk with their
-writing stylets (men may come and go, but the small boy is a fixed
-quantity!). At last, the elephant, losing patience, picked up one of his
-tormentors and hoisted him in the air; a cry of horror rose from the
-spectators, no one doubted that in another moment the child would be
-dashed to the ground. But the elephant set the offender down very gently
-and walked away, thinking, no doubt, that a good fright had been a
-sufficient punishment. The Syrian elephant, of whom Plutarch tells how
-he made his master understand that in his absence he had been cheated of
-half his rations, was not cleverer than some of his kind on service in
-India, who would not begin to eat till all three cakes which formed
-their rations were set before each of them—a fact that was told me by
-the officer whose duty it was to preside at their dinner. Plutarch
-speaks of counting oxen that knew when the number of turns was finished
-which constituted their daily task at a saw-mill: they refused to
-perform one more turn than the appointed figure. As an instance of the
-discrimination of animals, he tells how Alexander’s horse, Bucephalus,
-when unsaddled, would allow the grooms to mount him, but when he had on
-all his rich caparisons, no one on earth could get on his back except
-his royal master. There is no doubt that animals take notice of dress. I
-have been told that when crinolines were worn, all the dogs barked at
-any woman not provided with one. Plutarch was among the earliest to
-observe that animals discover sooner than man when ice will not bear,
-which he thinks that they find out by noticing if there is any sound of
-running water. He says truly that to draw such an inference presupposes
-not only sharp ears, but a real power of weighing cause and effect.
-Plutarch mentions foxes as particularly clever in this respect, but dogs
-possess the same gift. The French Ambassador at Rome—who, like all
-persons of superior intelligence, is very fond of animals—told me the
-following story. One winter day, when he was French Minister at Munich,
-he went alone with his gun and his dog to the banks of the Isar. Having
-shot a snipe, he ordered the dog to go on to the ice to fetch it, but,
-to his surprise, the animal, which had never disobeyed him, refused.
-Annoyed at its obstinacy, he went himself on to the ice, which
-immediately gave way, and had he not been a good swimmer he might not be
-now at the Palazzo Farnese.
-
-The two creatures that have been most praised for their wisdom are the
-elephant and the ant, but of the ant’s admirers from Solomon to Lord
-Avebury, not one was ever so enthusiastic as Plutarch. Horace, indeed,
-had discoursed of her foresight: “She carries in her mouth whatever she
-is able, and piles up her heap, by no means ignorant or careless of the
-future; then, when Aquarius saddens the inverted year, never does she
-creep abroad, wisely making use of the stores which were provided
-beforehand.” But such a tribute sounds cold beside Plutarch’s praise of
-her as the tiny mirror in which the greatest marvels of Nature are
-reflected, a drop of the purest water, containing every Virtue, and,
-above all, what Homer calls “the sweetness of loving qualities.” Ants,
-he declares, show the utmost solicitude for their comrades, alive and
-dead. They exhibit their ingenuity by biting off the ends of grains to
-prevent them from sprouting and so spoiling the provender. He speaks,
-though not from his own observation, of the beautiful interior
-arrangements of ant-hills which had been examined by naturalists who
-divided the mount into sections, “A thing I cannot approve of!”
-Tender-hearted philosopher, who had a scruple about upsetting an
-ant-hill! Of other insects, he most admires the skill of spiders and
-bees. It is said that the bees of Crete, when rounding a certain
-promontory, carried tiny stones as ballast to avoid being blown away by
-the wind. I have seen more than once a tiny stone hanging from the
-spider-threads which crossed and re-crossed an avenue—it seemed to me
-that these were designed to steady the suspension bridge.
-
-Plutarch insists that animals teach themselves even things outside the
-order of their natural habits, a fact which will be confirmed by all who
-have observed them closely. Just as no two animals have the same
-disposition, so does each one, though in greatly varying degree, display
-some little arts or accomplishments peculiar to itself. Plutarch
-mentions a trained elephant that was seen practising its steps when it
-thought that no one was looking. But he allots the palm of self-culture
-to an incomparable magpie that belonged to a barber whose shop faced the
-temple called the Agora of the Greeks. The bird could imitate to
-perfection any sort of sound, cry or tune; it was renowned in the whole
-quarter. Now it happened one morning that the funeral of a wealthy
-citizen went past, accompanied by a very fine band of trumpeters which
-performed an elaborate piece of music. After that day, to every one’s
-surprise, the magpie grew mute! Had it become deaf or dumb or both!
-Endless were the surmises, and what was not the general amazement when,
-at last, it broke its long silence by bursting forth with a flood of
-brilliant notes the exact reproduction of the difficult trills and
-cadences executed by the funeral band! Evidently it had been practising
-it in its head all that while, and only produced it when it had got it
-quite perfect. Several Romans and several Greeks witnessed the facts and
-could vouch for the truth of the narrative.
-
-The swallow’s nest and the nightingale’s song make Plutarch pause and
-wonder; he believes, with Aristotle, that the old nightingales teach the
-young ones, remarking that nightingales reared in captivity never sing
-so well as those that have profited by the parental lessons. He gives a
-word to the dove of Deucalion which returned a first time to the ark
-because the deluge continued, but disappeared when it was set free
-again, the waters having subsided. Plutarch confesses, however, that
-this is “mythical,” and though he admits that birds deserved the name by
-which Euripides calls them of “Messengers of the gods,” he is inclined
-to attribute their warnings to the direct intervention of an over-ruling
-deity of whom they are the inconscient agents.
-
-It is a pleasure to find that Plutarch had a high appreciation of the
-hedgehog—the charming “urchin” which represents to many an English child
-an epitome of wild nature, friendly yet untamed, familiar yet
-mysterious. He does not say that it milks cows—a calumny which is an
-article of faith with the British ploughman—but he relates that when the
-grapes are ripe, the mother urchin goes under the vines and shakes the
-plants till some of the grapes fall off; then, rolling herself over
-them, she attaches a number of grapes to her spines and so marches back
-to the hole where she keeps her nurslings. “One day,” says Plutarch,
-“when we were all together, we had the chance of seeing this with our
-own eyes—it looked as if a bunch of grapes was shuffling along the
-ground, so thickly covered was the animal with its booty.”
-
-Dogs that threw themselves on their masters’ pyre, dogs that caused the
-arrest of assassins or thieves, dogs that remained with and protected
-the bodies of their dead masters, clever dogs, devoted dogs, magnanimous
-dogs—these will be all found in Plutarch’s gallery. How high-minded, he
-says, it is in the dog when, as Homer advises, you lay down your stick,
-even an angry dog ceases to attack you. He praises the affectionate
-regard which many have shown in giving decent burial to the dogs they
-cherished, and recalls how Xantippus of old, whose dog swam by his
-galley to Salamis when the Athenians were forced to abandon their city,
-buried the faithful creature on a promontory which “to this day” is
-known as the Dog’s Grave. Very desolate was the case of the other
-animals that ran up and down distraught when their masters embarked,
-like the poor cats and dogs which helped the English soldiers in the
-block-houses to while away the weary hours, and which, by superior
-orders, were left to their fate, though their comrades in khaki were
-anxious enough to carry them away. As a proof of the affection of the
-Greeks for their dogs Plutarch might have spoken of the not uncommon
-representation of them on the _Stelæ_ in the family group which brings
-together all the dearest ties between life and death.
-
-One animal is missing from Plutarch’s portrait gallery—the cat, to which
-he only concedes the ungracious allusion “that man had not the excuse of
-hunger for eating flesh, like the weasel or cat.” Can we make good the
-omission from other sources?
-
-There is a general notion that cats “were almost unknown to Greek and
-Roman antiquity”—these are the words of so well-informed a writer as M.
-S. Reinach. Yet instances exist of paintings of cats on Greek vases of
-the fifth century, and I was interested to see in the Museum at Athens a
-well-carved cat on a stele. Aristotle, who, like Plutarch, mentions cats
-in connexion with weasels (both, he says, catch birds), reckons the time
-they live at six years, less than half the life of an average modern
-cat; this may indicate that though known, they were not then
-acclimatised in Europe. Æsop has four fables of cats: 1. A cat dressed
-as a physician offers his services to an aviary of birds; they are
-declined. 2. A cat seeks an excuse for eating a cock; he fails to find
-the excuse, but eats the cock all the same. 3. A cat pretends to be dead
-so that mice may come near her. 4. A cat falls in love with a handsome
-young man and induces Venus to change her into a lovely maiden. But on a
-mouse coming into the room, she scampers after it. Venus, being
-displeased, changes her back into a cat. This belongs to a large circle
-of folk-tales, and probably all these fables came from the East.
-
-Herodotus tells as a “very marvellous thing” that cats are apt to rush
-back into a burning house, and that the Egyptians try to save them, even
-at the risk of their lives, but rarely succeed: hence great lamentation.
-Also, that if a cat die in a house all the dwellers in it shave their
-eyebrows; “the cats, when they are dead, they carry for burial to the
-city of Bubastis.” The Egyptian name for light (and for cat) is _Mau_,
-and the inference is irresistible, that the Egyptians supposed the cat
-to be constantly apostrophizing the sacred light of which she was the
-symbol. Nothing shows the strength of tradition better than the
-existence of an endowment at Cairo for the feeding and housing of
-homeless cats.
-
-If the cat in Europe had been a rarity so great as most people think, it
-would have been more highly prized. It seems nearer the truth to say
-that it was not admired. Its incomplete domestication which attracts us,
-did not attract the ancient world. Tame only so far as it suits their
-own purposes, cats patronize man, looking down upon him from a higher
-plane, which, if only the house-top, they make a golden bar.
-
- “Chat mystérieux,
- Chat séraphique, chat étrange ...
- Peut-être est-il fée, est-il dieu?”
-
-Greeks and Romans preferred a plain animal to this half-elf, half-god.
-
-The Greek comic writer, Anaxandrides, said to the Egyptians: “You weep
-if you see a cat ailing, but I like to kill and skin it.” The fear lest
-cats should be profanely treated in Europe led the Egyptians to do all
-they could to prevent their exportation; they even sent missions to the
-Mediterranean to ransom the cats borne into slavery and carry them back
-to Egypt. But these missions could not have reached the cats that had
-been taken inland, and as the animal increases rapidly, it may have been
-fairly common from early times. There is no doubt, however, that the
-number went up with a bound when Egypt became Christian, and every monk
-who came to Europe brought shoals of cats, the date corresponding with
-that of the first invasion of the rat in the trail of the Huns.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- BRONZE STATUE OF AN EGYPTIAN CAT.
- (_Collection of H.E. Monsieur Camille Barrère, French Ambassador at
- Rome._)]
-
-Antiquity regarded the cat, before all things, as a little beast of
-prey. Nearly every reference to it gives it this character. In the stele
-at Athens the cat is supposed to be looking at a bird-cage to which the
-man is pointing; the man holds a bird in his left hand, presumably the
-pet of the child who stands by him. It seems as if the cat meditated if
-it had not performed some fell deed. Seneca observed that young chickens
-feel an instinctive fear of the cat but not of the dog. The fine mosaic
-at Pompeii shows a tabby kitten in the act of catching a quail.
-
-Only one ancient poet, by a slight magician-like touch, calls up a
-different vision: Theorcitus makes the voluble Praxinœ say to her maid:
-“Eunœ, pick up your work, and take care, lazy girl, how you leave it
-lying about again; the cats find it just the bed they like.” There—at
-last—is the cat we know! But after all, it is an Egyptian cat: a cat
-sure of her privileges, a cat who relies on her goddess prototype, and
-has but a modicum of respect for the chattering little Syracusan woman
-in whose house she condescends to reside. Such were not cats of ancient
-Greece and Rome, who, from being un-appreciated, fell back to the morals
-of the simple ravager.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- V
-
- MAN AND HIS BROTHER
-
-
-TRADITIONAL beliefs are like the _coco de mer_ which was found floating,
-here and there, on the sea, or washed up on the shore, and which gave
-birth to the strangest conjectures; it was supposed to tell of
-undiscovered continents or to have dropped from heaven itself. Then, one
-day, some one saw this peculiar cocoanut quietly growing on a tall
-palm-tree in an obscure islet of the Indian Ocean. All we gather of
-primitive traditions is the fruit. Yet the fruit did not grow in the
-air, it grew on branches and the branches grew on a trunk and the trunk
-had a root. To get to the root of even the slightest of our own
-prejudices—let alone those of the savage—we should have to travel back
-far into times when history was not.
-
-Lucretius placed at the beginning of the ages of mankind a berry-eating
-race, innocent of blood. The second age belonged to the hunter who
-killed animals, at first, and possibly for a long time, for their skins,
-before he used their flesh as food. In the third age animals were
-domesticated; first the sheep, because that was gentle and easily tamed
-(which one may see by the moufflons at Monte Carlo), then, by degrees,
-the others.
-
-This classification was worthy of the most far-seeing mind of antiquity.
-Had not human originally meant humane we should not have been here to
-tell the tale. The greater traditions of a bloodless age are enshrined
-in sacred books; minor traditions of it abound in the folk-lore of the
-world. Man was home-sick of innocence; his conscience, which has gone on
-getting more blunted, not more sensitive, revolted at the “daily
-murder.” So mankind called upon heaven to provide an excuse for
-slaughter.
-
-The Kirghis of Mongolia say that in the beginning only four men and four
-animals were made: the camel, the ox, the sheep, and the horse, and all
-were told to live on grass. The animals grazed, but the men pulled up
-the grass by the roots and stored it. The animals complained to God that
-the men were pulling up all the grass, and that soon there would be none
-left. God said: “If I forbid men to eat grass, will you allow them to
-eat you?” Fearing starvation, the animals consented.
-
-From the first chapter of Genesis to the last of the “Origin of Species”
-there is one long testimony to our vegetarian ancestor, but beyond the
-fact that he existed, what do we know about him? We may well believe
-that he lived in a good climate and on a plenteous earth. Adam and Eve
-or their representatives could not have subsisted in Greenland. I think
-that the killing of wild animals, and especially the eating of them,
-began when man found himself confronted by extremes of cold and length
-of winter nights. The skins of animals gave him the only possibility of
-keeping warm or even of living at all, if he was to brave the outer air,
-while their flesh may have been often the only food he could find. He
-was obliged to eat them to keep alive, as Arctic explorers have been
-obliged to eat their sledge-dogs. Not preference, but hard necessity,
-made him carnivorous.
-
-These speculations are confirmed by the doings of the earliest man of
-whom we have any sure knowledge; _not_ the proto-man who must have
-developed, as I have said, under very different climatic conditions.
-Perhaps he sat under the palm-trees growing on the banks of the Thames,
-but though the palm-trees have left us their fruit, man, if he was
-there, left nothing to speak of his harmless sojourn. By tens of
-thousands of years the earliest man with whom we can claim acquaintance
-is the reindeer hunter of Quartenary times. He hunted and fed upon the
-reindeer, but he had not tamed them. He wore reindeer skins, but he
-could not profit by reindeer milk; no children were brought up by hand,
-possibly to the advantage of the children. It is likely, by the by, that
-the period of human lactation was very long. The horse also was killed
-for food at a time infinitely removed from the date of his first service
-to man.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- REINDEER BROWSING.
- Older Stone Age.]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- HORSE DRAWING DISC OF THE SUN.
- Older Bronze Age.]
-
-The reindeer hunter was a most intelligent observer of animals. He was
-an artist and a very good one. The best of his scratchings on reindeer
-horn and bone of horses and reindeer in different attitudes are
-admirable for freedom, life, and that intuition of character which makes
-the true animal painter. For a time which makes one dizzy to look down
-upon, no such draughtsman appeared as the pre-historic cave dweller. The
-men of the age of Polished Stone and of the early ages of metals
-produced nothing similar in the way of design. They understood beauty of
-form and ornament or, rather, perhaps, they still shared in that
-Nature’s own unerring touch; it took millenniums of civilisation for man
-to make one ugly pot or pan. But these men had not the gift or even the
-idea of sitting down to copy a grazing or running animal.
-
-We need not go far, however, to find a man who, living under nearly the
-same conditions as the reindeer hunter of Southern France, has developed
-the same artistic aptitude. I shall always recall with pleasure my visit
-to a Laplander’s hut; it was in the broad daylight of Arctic midnight—no
-one slept in the hut, except an extraordinarily small baby in a
-canoe-shaped cradle. The floor was spread with handsome furs, and its
-aspect was neither untidy nor comfortless. I reflected that this was how
-the cave dweller arranged his safe retreat. Much more strongly was he
-brought to my mind by the domestic objects of every sort made of
-reindeer horn and adorned with drawings. As I write I have one of them
-before me, a large horn knife, the sheath of which ends with the
-branching points. It is beautifully decorated with _graffiti_, showing
-the good and graceful creature without whom the Laplander cannot live.
-The school of art is distinctly Troglodite.
-
-A theory has been started that the man of the Quartenary age drew his
-horses and his reindeer solely as a magical decoy from the idea that the
-pictures “called” the game as whistling (_i.e._, imitating the sound of
-the wind) “calls” the wind. I do not know that the Lapps, though
-practised in magic, have any such purpose in view. It is said that it
-would be absurd to attribute a motive of mere artistic pleasure to the
-Troglodite. Why? Some races have as natural a tendency to artistic
-effort as the bower-bird has to decorate its nest. Conditions of climate
-may have given the hunter periods of enforced idleness, and art, in its
-earliest form, was, perhaps, always an escape from _ennui_, a mode of
-passing the time. That the early hunter dealt in magic is likely enough;
-he is supposed, though not on altogether conclusive grounds, to have
-been a fetich-worshipper, and fetich-worship is akin to some kinds of
-magic. But it does not follow that _all_ his art had this connexion. How
-animals appeared to his eyes we know; what he thought about them he has
-not told us. The Eskimo, the modern pre-historic man who is believed to
-be a better-preserved type than even the Lapp, may be asked to speak for
-him.
-
-The Eskimo can say that he had a friendly feeling towards all living
-things, notwithstanding that he fed on flesh, and that wild beasts
-sometimes fed on him. Not that he had ever talked of wild beasts, for he
-had no tame ones. He had not a vocabulary of rude terms about animals.
-He was inclined to credit every species with many potential merits. The
-Eskimo is afraid—very much afraid—of bears. Yet he is the first to admit
-that the bear is capable of acting like the finest of fine gentlemen. A
-woman was in a fright at seeing a bear and so gave him a partridge; that
-bear never forgot the trifling service, but brought her newly killed
-seals ever after. Another bear saved the life of three men who wished to
-reward him. He politely declined their offer, but if, in winter time,
-they should see a bald-headed bear, will they induce their companions to
-spare him? After so saying, he plunged into the sea. Next winter a bear
-was sighted and they were going to hunt him, when these men, remembering
-what had happened, begged the hunters to wait till they had had a look
-at him. Sure enough it was “their own bear”! They told the others to
-prepare a feast for him, and when he had refreshed himself, he lay down
-to sleep and _the children played around him_. Presently he awoke and
-ate a little more, after which he went down to the sea, leapt in, and
-was never seen again.
-
-Even such lovely imaginings, we may believe, without an excessive
-stretch of fancy, gilded the mental horizon of the Troglodite. He had
-long left behind the stage of primal innocence, but no supernatural
-chasm gaped between him and his little brothers.
-
-The reindeer hunters were submerged by what is more inexorable than
-man—Nature. The reindeer vanished, and with him the hunter, doomed by
-the changed conditions of climate. He vanished as the Lapp is vanishing;
-the poignantly tragic scene which was chronicled by two lines in the
-newspapers during the early summer of 1906—the suicide of a whole clan
-of Lapps whose reindeer were dead and who had nothing to do but to
-follow them—may have happened in what we call fair Provence. Thousands
-of men paid with their lives for its becoming a rose garden.
-
-The successors of the reindeer hunters, Turanian like them, but far more
-progressive, were the lake dwellers, the dolmen-builders, with their
-weaving and spinning, their sowing and reaping, their pottery and their
-baskets, their polished flints and their domestic animals. Man’s
-greatest achievement, the domestication of animals, had been reached in
-the unrecorded ages that divide the rough and the polished stone. Man,
-“excellent in art,” had mastered the beast whose lair is in the wilds;
-“he tames the horse of shaggy mane, he puts the yoke upon its neck; he
-tames the tireless mountain bull.” The great mind of Sophocles saw and
-saw truly that these were the mighty works of man; the works which made
-man, man. We know that when the Neolithic meat-eater of what is now
-Denmark threw away the bones after he had done his meal, these bones
-were gnawed by house-dogs. A simple thing, but it tells a wondrous tale.
-Did these dogs come with their masters from Asia, or had they been tamed
-in their Northern home? The answer depends on whether the dog is
-descended from jackal or wolf. In either case it is unlikely that the
-most tremendous task of domestication was the first.
-
-Not everywhere has man domesticated animals, though we may be sure that
-he took them everywhere with him after he had domesticated them. If man
-walked on dry land across the Atlantic as some enthusiastic students of
-sub-oceanic geography now believe that he did, he led no sheep, no
-horses, no dogs. In America, when it was discovered, there was only one
-domestic animal, and in Australia there was none. Of native animals, the
-American buffalo could have been easily tamed. It may be said that in
-Australia there was no suitable animal, but the dog’s ancestor could not
-have seemed a suitable animal for a household protector; a jackal is not
-a promising pupil, still less a wolf, unless there was some more gentle
-kind of wolf than any which now survives. Might not a good deal have
-been made out of the kangaroo? Possibly the whole task of domestication
-was the work of one patient, intelligent and widely-spread race, kindred
-of the Japanese, who in making forest trees into dwarfs show the sort of
-qualities that would be needed to make a wild animal not only unafraid
-(that is nothing), but also a willing servant.
-
-The Neolithic man’s eschatology of animals and of himself was identical.
-He contemplated for both a future life which reproduced this one. “The
-belief in the deathlessness of souls,” said Canon Isaac Taylor, “was the
-great contribution of the Turanian race to the religious thought of the
-world.” This appears to claim almost too much. Would any race have had
-the courage to start upon its way had it conceived death as real?
-
- “It is a modest creed and yet
- Pleasant if one considers it,
- To own that death itself must be
- Like all the rest, a mockery.”
-
-It is a creed which springs from the very instinct of life. Two pelicans
-returning to their nest found their two young ones dead from sunstroke.
-The careful observer who was watching them has recorded that they _did
-not seem to recognise_ the inert, fluffy heap as what _was_ their
-fledglings; they hunted for them for a long while, moving the twigs of
-the nest, and at last threw one of the dead birds out of it. So the
-primitive man in presence of the dead knows that this is not _he_ and he
-begins to ask: where is he?
-
-But if every race in turn has asked that question, it was asked with
-more insistence by some peoples than by others, and above all, it was
-answered by some with more assurance. The Neolithic Turanians had
-nothing misty in their vision of another world. It was full of movement
-and variety: the chase, the battle, the feast, sleep and awakening,
-night and day—these were there as well as here. Animals were essential
-to the picture, and it never struck the Neolithic man that there was any
-more difficulty about their living again than about his living again. If
-he philosophised at all, it was probably after the fashion of the Eskimo
-who holds the soul to be the “owner” of the body: the body, the flesh,
-dies and may be devoured, but he who kills the body does not kill its
-“owner.”
-
-Vast numbers of bones have been found near the dolmens in Southern
-France. The steed of the dead man galloped with him into the Beyond. The
-faithful dog trotted by the little child, comrade and guardian. In the
-exquisite Hebrew idyll Tobias has his dog as well as the angel to
-accompany him on his adventurous earthly journey. The little Neolithic
-boy had only the dog and his journey was longer; but to some grieving
-fathers would it not be a rare comfort to imagine their lost darlings
-guarded by loving four-footed friends along the Path of Souls?
-
-The Celtic conquerors of the dolmen-builders took most of their
-religious ideas. When successful aid in mundane matters was what was
-chiefly sought in religion, a little thing might determine conversion
-_en masse_. If the divinities of one set of people seemed on some
-occasion powerless, it was natural to try the divinities of somebody
-else. When success crowned the experiment, the new worship was formally
-adopted. This is exactly what happened in the historic case of Clovis
-and “Clothilde’s God,” and it doubtless happened frequently before the
-dawn of history. Druidism is believed to have arisen in this way in a
-grafting of the new on the old. The Celts had the same views about the
-next world as the dolmen-builders. They are thought to have taken them
-from the conquered with the rest of their religious system, but to me it
-seems unlikely that they had not already similar views when they arrived
-from Asia. In the early Vedas goats and horses were sacrificed to go
-before and announce the coming of the dead; Vedic animals kept their
-forms, the renewed body was perfect and incorruptible, but it was the
-real body. A celebrated racehorse was deified after death. Such beliefs
-have a strong affinity to the theory that animals (or slaves) killed at
-the man’s funeral will be useful to him in the after-life. However
-derived, our European ancestors embraced that theory to the full.
-
-Only a few years ago a second Viking ship was found at Oseberg, in
-Norway, in which were the remains of ten horses, four dogs, a young ox,
-and the head of an old ox. Three more horses were found outside. The
-dogs had on their own collars with long chains. There were also sledges
-with elaborately carved animals’ heads. It was a queen’s grave; her
-distaff and spinning-wheel told of simple womanly tasks amidst so much
-sepulchral splendour. In those late times the law by which religious
-forms grow more sumptuous as the faith behind them grows less, may have
-come into operation. Lavish but meaningless tributes may have taken the
-place of a provision full of meaning for real wants.
-
-So the sacrifices to the gods may have been once intended to stock the
-pastures of heaven. It cannot be doubted that the victim was never
-_killed_ in the mind of the original sacrificer, it was merely
-transferred to another sphere. The worser barbarity comes in when the
-true significance of the act is lost and when it is repeated from habit.
-
-After animals were domesticated they were not killed at all for a long
-time—still less were they eaten. Of this there can be no shadow of
-doubt. The first domestic animals were far too valuable possessions for
-any one to think of killing them. As soon would a showman kill a
-performing bull which had cost him a great deal of trouble to train.
-Besides this, and more than this, the natural man, who is much better
-than he is painted, has a natural horror of slaying the creature that
-eats out of his hand and gives him milk and wool and willing service.
-
-There are pastoral tribes now in South Africa which live on the milk,
-cheese and butter of their sheep, but only kill them as the last
-necessity. In East Africa the cow is never killed, and if one falls ill,
-it is put into a sort of infirmary and carefully tended. We all know the
-divinity which hedges round the Hindu cow. The same compunction once
-saved the labouring ox. When I was at Athens for the Archæological
-Congress of 1905, Dr. R. C. Bosanquet, at that time head of the British
-school, told me that he had observed among the peasants in Crete the
-most intense reluctance to kill the ox of labour. In several places in
-Ancient Greece all sorts of devices were resorted to in order that the
-sacrificial knife might seem to kill the young bull accidentally, and
-the knife—the guilty thing—was afterwards thrown into the sea. This last
-custom is important; it marks the moment when the slaughter of domestic
-animals, _even_ for sacrificial purposes, still caused a scruple. The
-case stands thus: at first they were not killed at all; then, for a long
-time, they were killed only for sacrifice. Then they were killed for
-food, but far and wide relics of the original scruple may be detected as
-in the common invocation of divine permission which every Moslem butcher
-utters before killing an animal.
-
-Animal and human sacrifices are one phenomenon of early manners, not
-two. The people who sacrificed domestic animals to accompany their dead
-generally, if not always, also sacrificed slaves for the same purpose,
-and the sacrifice of fair maidens at the funerals of heroes was to give
-them these as companions in another world.
-
-I am not aware that Gift Sacrifice ever led to cannibalism nor, in its
-primitive forms, did it lead to eating the flesh of the animal victim
-which was buried or burnt with the body of the person whom it was
-intended to honour. This is what was done by the dolmen-builders. The
-earlier reindeer hunters had no domestic animals to sacrifice, and it is
-unlikely that they sacrificed men. At all events, they were not
-cannibals.
-
-On the other hand, cannibalism is closely connected with Pact Sacrifice,
-which there is a tendency now to regard as antecedent to Gift Sacrifice,
-especially among those scholars who think that the whole human race has
-passed through a stage of Totemism. Psychologically the Totemist’s
-sacrifice of a reserved animal to which all the sanctity of human life
-is ascribed, resembles the sacrifice by some African tribes of a human
-victim—as in both cases not only is a pact of brotherhood sealed, but
-also those who partake of the flesh are supposed to acquire the
-physical, moral, or supersensual qualities attributed to the victim.
-Indeed, it would be possible to argue that the Totem was a substitute
-for a human victim, and a whole new theory of Totemism might be evolved
-from that postulate, but it is wiser to observe such affinities without
-trying to derive one thing from another which commonly proves a snare
-and a delusion. It is sufficient to note that among fundamental human
-ideas is the belief that man grows like what he feeds upon.
-
-The sacrifice of the Totem, though found scattered wherever Totemism
-prevails, is not an invariable or even a usual accompaniment of it. When
-it does occur, the Totem is not supposed to die, any more than the
-victim was supposed to die in the primitive Gift Sacrifice. It changes
-houses or goes to live with “our lost others,” or returns to eternal
-life in the “lake of the dead.” The death of the soul is the last thing
-that is thought of. The majority of Totemists do not kill their Totems
-under any circumstances, and when the Totem is a wild beast they believe
-that it shows a like respect for the members of its phratry. If one dies
-they deplore its loss; in some parts of East Africa where the Totem is a
-hyena not even the chief is mourned for with equal ceremony.
-
-Totemism is the adoption of an animal (or plant) as the visible badge of
-an invisible bond. The word Totem is an American Indian word for
-“badge,” and the word Taboo a Polynesian term meaning an interdiction.
-The Totemist generally says that he is descended from his Totem: hence
-the men and the beasts of each Totem clan are brothers. But the beast is
-something more than a brother, he is the perpetual reincarnation of the
-race-spirit. Numerical problems never trouble the natural human mind;
-all the cats of Bubastis were equally sacred, and all the crows of
-Australia are equally sacred to the clans who have a crow for Totem. To
-the mass of country folks every cow is _the_ cow, every mouse is _the_
-mouse; the English villager is practically as much convinced of this as
-the American Indian or the Australian native is convinced that every
-Totem is _the_ Totem.
-
-Men and women of the same Totem are _taboo_: they cannot intermarry. But
-I need not speak of Totemism here as a social institution. My business
-with it is limited to its place in the history of ideas about animals.
-
-In Totemism we find represented not one idea, but an aggregation of most
-of the fundamental ideas of mankind. This is why the attempt to trace it
-to one particular root has failed to dispose of the question of its
-origin in a final and satisfactory manner. For a time there seemed to be
-a general disposition to accept what is called the “Nickname theory” by
-which Totemism was attributed to the custom of giving animal nicknames.
-We have a peasant called Nedrott (in the Brescian dialect “duck”); I
-myself never heard his real name—his wife is “la Nedrott” and his
-children are “i Nedrotti.” It is alleged that his father or grandfather
-had flat feet. But I never heard of a confusion between the Nedrotti and
-their nicknamesakes. It may be said that this would be sure to happen
-were they less civilised. How can we be sure that it would be sure to
-happen? An eminent scholar who objects to the nickname theory on the
-ground that it assigns too much importance to “verbal misunderstanding,”
-proposes as an alternative the “impregnation theory.” A woman, on
-becoming aware of approaching motherhood, mentally connects the future
-offspring with an animal or plant which happens to catch her eye at that
-moment. This is conceivable, given the peculiar notions of some savages
-on generation, but if all Totemism sprang from such a cause, is it not
-strange that in Australia there are only two Totems, the eagle-hawk and
-crow?
-
-As a mere outward fact, the Totem is what its name implies, a badge or
-sign; just as the wolf was the badge of Rome, or as the lion is taken to
-represent the British Empire. The convenience of adopting a common badge
-or sign may have appeared to men almost as soon as they settled into
-separate clans or communities. Besides public Totems there exist private
-and secret Totems, and this suggests that the earliest communities may
-have consisted of a sort of freemasonry, a league of mutual help of the
-nature of a secret society. Around the outward and so to speak heraldic
-fact of Totemism are gathered the impressions and beliefs which make it
-a rule of life, a morality and a religion.
-
-The time may come when the desire to give a reason for an emotion will
-be recognised as one of the greatest factors in myth-making. The
-Totemist thinks that he spares his Totem because it is his Totem. But
-man is glad to find an excuse for sparing something. Altruism is as old
-as the day when the first bird took a succulent berry to its mate or
-young ones instead of eating it. Where men see no difference between
-themselves and animals, what more natural than that they should wish to
-spare them? When it was found difficult or impossible to spare all, it
-was a katharsis of the wider sentiment to spare one, and Totemism gave a
-very good excuse. It appealed to a universal instinct. This is not the
-same as to say that it had its origin in keeping pets; it would be
-nearer the truth to describe the love of pets as a later birth of the
-same instinctive tendency which the Totemist follows when he cherishes
-and preserves his Totem.
-
-The primitive man is a child in the vast zoological garden of Nature; a
-child with a heart full of love, curiosity and respect, anxious to make
-friends with the lion which looks so very kind and the white bear who
-must want some one to comfort him. The whole folk-lore of the world
-bears witness to this temper, even leaving Totemism out of the question.
-
-The Bechuanas make excuses to the lion before killing him, the Malays to
-the tiger, the Red Indians to the bear—he says that his children are
-hungry and need food—would the bear kindly not object to be killed? Some
-writers see Totemism in all this, and so it may be, but there is
-something in it deeper than even Totemism—there is human nature.
-
-Take the robin—has any one said it was a Totem? Yet Mrs. Somerville
-declared she would as soon eat a child as a robin, a thoroughly Totemist
-sentiment. A whole body of protective superstition has crystallised
-around certain creatures which, because of their confiding nature, their
-charming ways, their welcome appearance at particular seasons, inspired
-man with an unusually strong impulse to spare them. I was interested to
-find the stork as sacred to the Arabs in Tunis and Algeria as he is to
-his German friends in the North. A Frenchman remarked that “sacred birds
-are never good to eat,” but he might have remembered the goose and hen
-of the ancient Bretons which Cæsar tells us were kept “for pleasure” but
-never killed; not to speak of the pigeons of Moscow and of Mecca.
-
-It should be observed how quickly the spared or cherished bird or beast
-becomes “lucky.” In Germany and Scandinavia it is lucky to have a
-stork’s nest on the roof. The regimental goat is the “luck of his
-company.”
-
-M. S. Reinach’s opinion that in Totemism is to be found the secret of
-the domestication of animals offers an attractive solution to that great
-problem, but it has not been, nor do I think that it will ever be,
-generally accepted. It, is however, plain, that where population is
-sparse, and dogs and guns undreamt of, wild animals would be far less
-wild than in countries with all the advantages of civilisation; the
-tameness of birds on lonely islands when the explorer first makes his
-descent is a case in point. No doubt, therefore, with the encouragement
-they received, the animal Totems acquired a considerable degree of
-tameness, but from that to domestication there is a long step. Our
-household “Totem,” the robin, is relatively tame; he will even eat
-crumbs on the breakfast-table, but he flies away in springtime and we
-see him no more.
-
-Besides being a social institution and a friendly bond between man and
-beast, Totemism is an attempt to explain the universe. Its spiritual
-vitality depends on the widely rooted belief in archetypes; the things
-seen are the mirror of the things unseen, the material is unreal, the
-immaterial the only reality. We are ourselves but cages of immortal
-birds. The real “I” is somewhere else; it may be in a fish, as in the
-Indian folk-tale, or it may be in a god. I do not know, by the by, if it
-has been remarked that a man can be a Totem: the incarnation of the
-indwelling race-spirit. The Emperor of Japan corresponds exactly to this
-description. The deified Cæsar was a Totem. A god can be a Totem: among
-the Hidery (islanders of the North Pacific whose interesting legends
-were published by the Chicago Folk-lore Association) the raven, which is
-their Totem, is the manifestation of the god Ne-kilst-lass who created
-the world. Here Totemism approaches till it touches Egyptian
-zoomorphism. Was this form an earlier or a later development than that
-in which the Totem is merely an ancestor? Our inability to reply shows
-our real want of certainty as to whether Totemism is a body of belief in
-a state of becoming or _in a state of dissolution_.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo:_ _Egypt Exploration Fund._
- HATHOR COW.
- Cairo Museum.
- (_Found in 1906 by Dr. E. Naville at Deir-el-bahari._)]
-
-We do know that Egyptian zoomorphism is not old, at least in the
-exaggerated shape it assumed in the worship of the bull Apis. It is a
-cult which owed its success to the animistic tendency of the human mind,
-but its particular cause is to be looked for in crystallised figurative
-language. The stupendous marble tombs of the sacred bulls that seem to
-overpower us in the semi-obscurity of the Serapeum remind one of how
-easy it is to draw false conclusions relative to the past if we possess
-only half-lights upon it: had Egyptian hieroglyphics never yielded up
-their secret we might have judged the faith of Egypt to have been the
-most material, instead of one of the most spiritual of religions.
-
-In Egyptian (as in Assyrian) cosmogony the visible universe is the
-direct creation of God. “The god who is immanent in all things is the
-creator of every animal: under his name of Ram, of the sheep, Bull, of
-the cows: he loves the scorpion in his hole, he is the god of the
-crocodile who plunges in the water: he is the god of those who rest in
-their graves. Amon is an image, Atmee is an image, Ra is an image: HE
-alone maketh himself in millions of ways.” Amon Ra is described in
-another grand hymn as the maker of the grass for the cattle, of fruitful
-trees for men yet unborn; causing the fish to live in the river, the
-birds to fill the air, giving breath to those in the egg, giving food to
-the bird that perches, to the creeping thing and to the flying thing
-alike, providing food for the rats in their holes, feeding the flying
-things in every tree. “Hail to thee, say all creatures. Hail to thee for
-all these things: the One, Alone with many hands, awake while all men
-sleep, to seek out the good of all creatures, “Amon Sustainer of all!”
-This is, indeed, a majestic psalm of universal life.
-
-Contrary to what was long the impression, the Wheel of Being was not an
-Egyptian doctrine, but the dead, or rather some of them, were believed
-to have the power of transforming themselves into animals for limited
-periods. It was a valued privilege of the virtuous dead: the form of a
-heron, a hawk or a swallow was a convenient travelling dress.
-Four-footed beasts were reserved to gods.
-
-There was no prejudice against sport if carried on with due regard to
-vested sacred rights. The first hunting-dog whose name we know was
-Behkaa, who was buried with his master, his name being inscribed over
-his picture on the tomb. The injury of animals sacred to the gods was,
-of course, a grave sin. Among the protests of innocence of a departing
-soul we read: “I have not clipped the skins of the sacred beasts; I have
-not hunted wild animals in their pasturages; I have not netted the
-sacred birds; I have not turned away the cattle of the gods; I have not
-stood between a god and his manifestation.”
-
-The Egyptian mind, which was essentially religious, saw the “god who is
-immanent in all things” yet standing outside these things to sustain
-them with a guiding providence; the highly trained Chinese mind, with
-its philosophic trend, saw the divine indivisible intelligence without
-volition illuminating all that lived: “The mind of man and the mind of
-trees, birds and beasts, is just the one mind of heaven and earth, only
-brighter or duller by reflection: as light looks brighter when it falls
-on a mirror than when it falls on a dark surface, so divine reason is
-less bright in cow or sheep than in man.” This fine definition was given
-by Choo-Foo-Tsze, the great exponent of Confucianism, who, when he was
-four years old, surprised his father by asking, on being told that the
-sky was heaven, “What is above it?” Choo-Foo-Tsze in the thirteenth
-century anticipated some modern conclusions of geology by remarking that
-since sea shells were found on lofty mountains as if generated in the
-middle of stones, it was plain “that what was below became lifted up,
-what was soft became hard”; it was a deep subject, he said, and ought to
-be investigated. Long before the Nolan, Confucius had conceived the idea
-of the great Monad: “one God who contains and comprehends the whole
-world.” It was an idea entirely incomprehensible to all but a few
-educated men in any age. Confucianism, Buddhism and Taoism left the
-Chinese masses what they found them—a people whose folk-lore was their
-religion. Were they asked to believe in the Wheel of Being? They made
-that folk-lore too. Dr. Giles tells the folk-tale of a certain gentleman
-who, having taken a very high degree, enjoyed the privilege (which is
-admitted to be uncommon) of recollecting what happened between his last
-death and birth. After he died, he was cited before a Judge of Purgatory
-and his attention was attracted by a quantity of skins of sheep, dogs,
-oxen, horses, which were hanging in a row. These were waiting for the
-souls which might be condemned to wear them; when one was wanted, it was
-taken down and the man’s own skin was stripped off and the other put on.
-This gentleman was condemned to be a sheep; the attendant demons helped
-him on with his sheep-skin when the Recording Officer suddenly mentioned
-that he had once saved a man’s life. The Judge, after looking at his
-books, ruled that such an act balanced all his misdoings: then the
-demons set to work to pull off the sheep-skin bit by bit, which gave the
-poor gentleman dreadful pain, but at last it was all got off except one
-little piece which was still sticking to him when he was born again as a
-man.
-
-This story is amusing as showing what a mystical doctrine may come to
-when it gets into the hands of the thoroughgoing realist. For the
-Chinese peasant the supernatural has no mystery. To him it is a mere
-matter of ordinary knowledge that beasts, birds, fishes and insects not
-only have ghosts but also ghosts of ghosts—for the first ghost is liable
-to die. If any of these creatures do not destroy life in three
-existences, they may be born as men—a belief no doubt due to the
-Buddhists, who in China seem to have concentrated all their energies on
-humanitarian propaganda and let metaphysics alone. Taoism has been
-called an “organised animism.” Organised or unorganised, animism is
-still the popular faith of China. It is too convenient to lightly
-abandon, for it explains everything. For instance, whatever is odd,
-unexpected, very lucky, very unlucky, can be made as plain as day by
-mentioning the word “fox.” Any one may be a fox without your knowing it:
-the fox is a jinnee, an elf who can work good or harm to man; who can
-see the future, get possession of things at a distance, and generally
-outmatch the best spiritualist medium. In Chinese folk-lore the fox has,
-as it were, made a monopoly of the world-wide notion that animals have a
-more intimate knowledge of the supernatural than men. Soothsayers are
-thought to be foxes because they know what is going to happen.
-
-Man’s speculations about himself and the universe arrange themselves
-under three heads: those which have not yet become a system, those which
-are a system, those which are the remains of a system. It is impossible
-that any set of ideas began by being a system unless it were revealed by
-an angel from heaven. But no sooner do ideas become systematic than they
-pass into the stage of dogma which is accepted not discussed. Everything
-is made to fit in with them. Thus to find the free play of the human
-mind one must seek it where there are the fewest formulæ, written or
-unwritten, for tradition is as binding as any creed or code. There are
-savage races which, if they ever had Totemism, have preserved few if any
-traces of it. To take them one by one and inquire into their views on
-animals would be well worth doing, but it is beyond my modest scope. I
-will say this, however—show me a savage who has not some humane and
-friendly ideas about animals! The impulse to confess brotherhood with
-man’s poor relations is everywhere the same: the excuses or reasons
-given for it vary a little. The animal to be kindly treated is the
-sanctuary of a god, the incarnation of a tribe, or simply the shelter of
-a poor wandering ghost.
-
-The Amazulu, one of the finest of savage races, believe that _some_
-snakes are Amatongo—some, not all. In fact, these snakes which are dead
-men are rather rare. One kind is black and another green. An Itongo does
-not come into the house by the door, nor does it eat frogs or mice. It
-does not run away like other snakes. Some say, “Let it be killed.”
-Others interfere, “What, kill a man?” If a man die who had a scar and
-you see a snake with a scar, ten to one it is that man. Then, at night,
-the village chief _dreams_ and the dead man speaks to him. “Do you now
-wish to kill me? Do you already forget me? I thought I would come and
-ask you for food, and do you kill me?” Then he tells him his name.
-
-Without any teaching, without any system, the savage thinks that the
-appearances which stand before him in sleep are real. If they are not
-real, what are they? The savage may not be a reasonable being, but he is
-a being who reasons.
-
-In the morning the village chief tells his dream and orders a
-sin-offering to the Itongo (ghost) lest he be angry and kill them. A
-bullock or a goat is sacrificed and they eat the flesh. Afterwards they
-look everywhere for the snake, but it has vanished.
-
-A snake that forces its way rapidly into a house is known to be a liar
-and he is a liar still. Do they turn him out of doors with a lecture on
-the beauty of veracity? Far from that. “They sacrifice something to such
-an Itongo.” A few men turn into poisonous snakes, but this is by no
-means common. If offended, the Amatongo cause misfortune, but even if
-pleased they do not seem to confer many benefits; perhaps they cannot,
-for surely it is easier to do evil than good. Once, however, a snake
-which was really the spirit of a chief, placed its mouth on a sore which
-a child had; the mother was in a great fright, but happily she did not
-interfere and the snake healed the sore and went silently away.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo:_ _Mansell._
- WILD GOATS AND YOUNG.
- British Museum.
- (_Assyrian Relief._)]
-
-Other animals are sometimes human beings as well as snakes. The lizard
-is often the Itongo of an old woman. A boy killed some lizards in a
-cattle-pen with stones. Then he went and told his grandmother, who said
-he had done very wrong—those lizards were chiefs of the village and
-should have been worshipped. I think the grandmother was a humane old
-person; I even suspect that she said the lizards were chiefs and not old
-women to make the admonition more awful. The man who told this story to
-Canon Callaway (from whose valuable work on the Amazulu I take these
-notes) added that, looking back to the incident, he doubted if the
-lizards were Amatongo after all, because no harm came of their murder.
-He thought that they must have been merely wild animals which had become
-tame owing to people mistakenly thinking that they were Amatongo.
-
-What can one say to boys who ill-treat lizards? I own that I have
-threatened them with ghostly treatment of the same sort. I even tried
-the supernatural argument with a little Arab boy, otherwise a nice
-intelligent child, who was throwing stones at a lizard which was moving
-at the bottom of the deep Roman well at El Djem: I did not know then
-that the persecution of lizards in Moslem lands is supposed (I hope
-erroneously) to have been ordered by Mohammed “because the lizard mimics
-the attitude of the Faithful at prayer.”
-
-The lizard, one of the most winsome of God’s creatures, has suffered
-generally from the prejudice which made reptile a word of reproach. It
-is the more worthy of remark, therefore, that in a place where one would
-hardly expect it, protective superstition has done its work of rescue:
-Sicilian children catch lizards, but let them go unhurt to intercede for
-them before the Lord, as the lizard is held to be “in the presence of
-the Lord in heaven.” One wonders if this is some distant echo of the
-text about the angels of the children (their archetypes) who always see
-God.
-
-Not always were reptiles scorned, but, possibly, they were always
-feared. Man’s first idea is to worship what he fears; his second idea,
-which may not come for many thousand years, is to throw a stone at it.
-The stone, besides representing physical fear, at a given moment also
-represents religious reprobation of what had been an object of worship
-in a forsaken faith. Primitive man took the interest of a wondering
-child in the great Saurian tribe. How did he know that they _flew_, that
-there were “dragons” on the earth? How did he know that the snake once
-had legs?—for if the snake of Eden was ordered to go on its belly, the
-inference seems to be that he was thought once to have moved in another
-way. The snake has lost his legs and the lizard his wings, and how the
-ancient popular imagination of the world made such accurate guesses
-about them must be left a riddle, unless we admit that it was guided by
-the fossil remains of extinct monsters.
-
-The serpent of the Biblical story was, says Dr. H. P. Smith, “simply a
-jinnee—a fairy if you will—possessed of more knowledge than the other
-animals, but otherwise like them.” Here, again, we meet in the most
-venerable form, the belief that animals know more than men. Can we
-resist the conclusion that to people constantly inclined towards magic
-like the old-world Jews, it must have appeared that Eve was dabbling in
-magic—by every rule of ancient religion, the sin of sins?
-
-The cult of the serpent in its many branches is the greatest of animal
-cults, and it is the one in which we see most clearly the process by
-which man from being an impressionist became a symbolist, and from being
-a symbolist became a votary. We have only to read the Indian statistics
-of the number of persons annually killed by snake-bite to be persuaded
-that fear must have been the original feeling with which man regarded
-the snake. Fear is a religious feeling in primitive man, but other
-religious feelings were added to it—admiration, for the snake, as all
-who have had the good luck to observe it in its wild state must agree,
-is a beautiful, graceful, and insinuating creature; a sense of mystery,
-a sense of fascination which comes from those keen eyes fixed fearlessly
-upon yours, the simple secret, perhaps, of the much discussed power of
-snakes to fascinate their prey. What wonder if man under the influence
-of these combined impressions, symbolised in the serpent a divine force
-which could be made propitious by worship!
-
-In the forming of cults there has always been this unconscious passage
-from impressions to symbols, from symbols to “manifestations.” But there
-has been also the conscious use of symbols by the priests and sages of
-ancient religions, in imparting as much of divine knowledge to the
-uninitiated as they thought that the uninitiated could bear. The origin
-of serpent worship has a probable relationship with this conscious use
-of symbols as well as with their unconscious growth.
-
-Besides the prejudice against reptiles, modern popular superstition has
-placed several animals under a ban, and especially the harmless bat and
-the useful barn owl. Traditional reasons exist, no doubt, in every case;
-but stronger than these are the associations of such creatures with the
-dark in which the sane man of a certain temperament becomes a partial
-lunatic; a prey to unreal terrors which the flap of a bat’s wing or the
-screech of an owl is enough to work up to the point of frenzy. It is a
-most unfortunate thing for an animal if it be the innocent cause of a
-_frisson_, a feeling of uncanny dread. The little Italian owl,
-notwithstanding that it too comes out at dusk, has escaped prejudice.
-This was the owl of Pallas Athene and of an earlier cult. As in the case
-of the serpent, its wiles to fascinate its prey were the groundwork of
-its reputation for wisdom. Of this there cannot be, I think, any doubt,
-though the droll bobs and curtesies which excite an irresistible and
-fatal curiosity in small birds, have suggested in the mind of the modern
-man a thing so exceedingly far from wisdom as _civetteria_, which word
-is derived from _civetta_—“the owl of Minerva” as Italian class-books
-say. The descent from the goddess of wisdom to the coquette is the
-cruellest decadence of all!
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- VI
-
- THE FAITH OF IRAN
-
-
-THE Zoroastrian theory of animals cannot be severed from the religious
-scheme with which it is bound up. It is not a side-issue, but an
-integral part of the whole. It would be useless to attempt to treat it
-without recalling the main features in the development of the faith out
-of which it grew.
-
-In the first place, who were the people, occupying what we call Persia,
-to whom the Sage, who was not one of them, brought his interpretation of
-the knowledge of good and evil? The early Iranians must have broken off
-from the united body of the Aryans at a time when they spoke a common
-language, which though not Sanscrit, was very like it. The affinities
-between Sanscrit and the dialect called with irremediable inaccuracy
-“Zend” are of the strongest. From this we conclude that, on their
-establishment in their new home, the Iranians differed little from the
-race of whose customs the Rig-Veda gives—not a full picture—but a
-faithful outline. Pastoral folk, devoted to their flocks and herds, but
-not unlearned in the cultivation of the earth and the sowing of grain,
-they had reached what may be called the highest stage of primitive
-civilisation. Though milk, butter and cooked corn formed their principal
-food, on feast days they also ate meat, chiefly the flesh of oxen and
-buffaloes, which they were careful to cook thoroughly. The progressive
-Aryans, who called half-raw meat by a term exactly corresponding to the
-too familiar “rosbif saignant,” denounced the more savage peoples who
-consumed it as “wild men” or “demons.” They kept horses, asses and
-mules; horses were sacrificed occasionally; for instance, kings
-sacrificed a horse to obtain male issue. The wild boar was hunted, if
-not in the earliest, at least in very early times. The dog was prized
-for its fidelity as guardian of the house and flocks, but there is no
-trace of its having been protected by extraordinary regulations such as
-those which later came into force in Iran. On the other hand, the name
-of dog had never yet been used in reproach. It seems to have been among
-Semitic races that the contempt for man’s best friend arose, but it is
-morally certain that it arose nowhere till dogs became scavengers of
-cities. It was the homeless pariah cur that gave the dog the bad name
-from which have sprung so many ugly words registered in modern
-vocabularies. Even now, when Jew or Moslem uses “dog” in a bad sense, he
-means “cur”; he knows quite well the other kind of dog—he knows Tobit’s
-dog, which, bounding on before the young man and the angel, told the
-glad tidings of his master’s return; Tobit’s dog which was one of the
-animals admitted by Mohammed into highest heaven. But “pariah dog”
-became synonymous of pariah, and notwithstanding the present tendency to
-attribute the opprobrium of the pig to original sanctity (and consequent
-reservation), I am inclined to think that the pig likewise came to be
-scorned because he was a scavenger. In some Indian cities herds of wild
-pigs still enter the gates just before they are closed at dusk, to pass
-out of them as soon as they are opened in the morning: during the night
-they do their work excellently, and by day they take a well-earned sleep
-in the jungle. They deserve gratitude, for they keep the cities free
-from disease, but, like other public servants, they scarcely get it.
-
-In Vedic times every home had its watch-dog, whose warning bark was as
-unwelcome to lovers as it was to robbers. The Rig-Veda preserves the
-prayer of a young girl who asks that her father, her mother, her
-grandfather, _and the watch-dog_ may sleep soundly while she meets her
-expected lover: a charming glimpse of the chaste freedom of early Aryan
-manners. The newly-wedded wife enters her husband’s house as mistress,
-not as slave; the elders say to the young couple: “You are master and
-mistress of this house; though there be father-in-law and mother-in-law,
-they are placed under you.” If that was not quite what happened, yet the
-principle was granted, and there is much in that. The bride rode to her
-new home in a car drawn by four milk-white oxen; when she alighted at
-the threshold, these golden words were spoken to her: “Make thyself
-loved for the sake of the children that will come to thee; guard this
-house, be as one with thy husband; may you grow old here together. Cast
-no evil looks, hate not thy spouse, be gentle in thought and deed _even_
-_to the animals of this home_.” Bride and bridegroom are exhorted to be
-of one heart, of one mind, “to love each other as a cow loves her calf,”
-a simple and true metaphor full of the country-side, full of the youth
-of the world.
-
-If these were the customs and this was the life which the Iranians may
-be supposed to have taken with them, what was the religion? The early
-Aryans had a Nature-cult more spiritualised under the form of Varuna and
-more materialised under the form of Indra. Some students of the Avesta
-have thought that here could be found the elements of the Dualism which
-formed the essential doctrine of Mazdaism. But it is almost certain that
-no real Dualism existed in oldest Iran. The Avesta once contrasts the
-worshippers of God with the worshippers of Daevas, of those who breed
-the cow and have the care of it with those who ill-treat it and
-slaughter it at their sacrifices. But Indra-worship has no connexion
-with devil-worship, nor does this or similar texts prove that
-devil-worship, properly so called, ever flourished in Iran. Other
-religious reformers than Zoroaster have named the devotees of former
-religions “devil-worshippers.” For the rest, there is reason to think
-that in the Avesta the term was applied to Turanian raiders, not to true
-Iranians.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo:_ _Mansell._
- ASSYRIAN GOD CARRYING ANTELOPE AND WHEAT-EAR.
- British Museum.]
-
-In an Assyrian inscription, Ahura Mazda is said to have created joy for
-_all_ creatures: a belief which Mazdean Dualism impugns. So far as can
-be guessed, the earliest Iranian faith was the worship of good
-spirits—of a Good Spirit. Less pure extra-beliefs may, or rather must,
-have existed contemporaneously, but they remained in the second rank.
-The cult of good spirits was the home-cult of shepherd and herdsman
-offered to the genii of their flocks and herds. While these genii
-answered the purpose of the lares or little saints everywhere dear to
-humble hearts, it is probable that in character they already resembled
-the Fravashis or archetypes that were to play so great a part in Mazdean
-doctrine. The cult of the Good Spirit, the national and kingly cult, was
-the worship of one God whose most worthy symbol, before Zoroaster as
-after, was the sun and whose sacrament with men was fire. The early
-Iranian had no temple, no altar: he went up into a high place and
-offered his prayer and sacrifice without priest or pomp. If we wish to
-trace his faith back to an Indian source, instead of bringing on the
-scene Varuna and Indra, it will be better to inquire whether there were
-elements of the same faith underlying the unwieldy fabric of Vedic
-religion. The answer is, that there were. The grandest text in the
-Rig-Veda, the one text recognised from farthest antiquity as of
-incalculable value, is the old Persian religion contained in a formula:
-“That Sun’s supremacy—God—let us adore Which may well direct.”
-
- “Enable with perpetual light,
- The dulness of our blinded sight.”
-
-So great a virtue was attributed to the Gayatri that the mind which
-thought it was supposed to unite with the object of thought: the eyes of
-the soul looked on Truth, of which all else is but the shadow. This is
-the spirit in which it is still repeated every day by every Hindu. The
-sacrosanct words were “Vishnu, Brahma, and Shiva,” or, yet more often,
-they are described as “the mother of the Vedas,” which, if it means
-anything, means that they are older than the Vedas. The point most to be
-noticed about the Gayatri is that its importance cannot be set aside by
-saying that this text is to be explained by Henotheism: the habit of
-referring to each god immediately addressed as supreme. Nor was the text
-selected arbitrarily by Western monotheists: for thousands of years
-before any European knew it, the natives of India had singled it out as
-the most solemn affirmation of man’s belief in the Unseen.
-
-It is open to argument, though not to proof, that the Gayatri
-crystallises a creed which the Iranians took with them in their
-migration. Peoples then moved in clans, not in a motley crowd gathered
-on an emigrant steamer. The clan or clans to which the Iranians belonged
-may have clung to a primordial faith, not yet overlaid by myths which
-materialised symbols and mysteries which made truth a secret.
-
-Such speculations are guess-work, but that the primitive religion of
-Persia was essentially monotheistic is an opinion which is likely to
-survive all attacks upon it. On less sure grounds stands the
-identification of that primitive religion with Zoroastrianism. The great
-authorities of a former generation, and amongst them my distinguished
-old friend, Professor Jules Oppert, believed that Cyrus was a Mazdean.
-But there is a good deal to support the view that Zoroastrianism did not
-become the State religion till the time of the Sásánians, who, as a new
-dynasty, grasped the political importance of having under them a strong
-and organised priesthood. Before that time the Magians seem to have been
-rather a sort of Salvation Army or Society of Jesus than the directors
-of a national Church.
-
-As late as the reign of Darius the Persians frequently buried their
-dead, a practice utterly repugnant to the Mazdean. Again, from Greek
-sources we know that the Persian kings sacrificed hecatombs of animals;
-thousands of oxen, asses, stags, &c., were immolated every day. Darius
-ordered one hundred bullocks, two hundred rams, four hundred lambs to be
-given to the Jews on the dedication of the new Temple (as well as twelve
-he-goats as sin-offerings for the twelve tribes) so that they might
-offer “sacrifices of sweet savours unto the God of heaven and pray for
-the life of the king and his sons.” Evidently Darius considered profuse
-animal sacrifices as a natural part of any great religious ceremony. Can
-it be supposed that such slaughter would have pleased a strict
-Zoroastrian? The Mazdeans retained the sacrifice of flesh as food: a
-small piece of the cooked meat eaten at table was included in the daily
-offering with bread, grain, fruits and the Homa juice, which was first
-drunk by the officiating priest, then by the worshippers, and finally
-thrown on the sacred fire. The small meat-offering was not animal
-sacrifice or anything at all like it. The Parsis substitute milk even
-for this small piece of meat, perhaps because the meat was usually beef,
-which would have caused offence to their Hindu fellow-citizens. I asked
-a Parsi High Priest who lunched with me at Basle during the second
-Congress for the History of Religions, what viands were eschewed by his
-community? He replied that they avoided both beef and the flesh of
-swine, but only out of respect for their neighbours’ rules: to them oil
-alone was forbidden—probably because of its virtue as a light-giver. In
-the Zoroastrian sacrifice it was never lost sight of that the outward
-act was but one of piety and obedience; the true sacrifice was of the
-heart: “I offer good thoughts, good words, good deeds.” It is hardly
-needful to say that the Mithraic taurobolium was in sheer contradiction
-to Mazdean law. Heretical sects were the bane of Zoroastrianism, and
-with one of these sprang up the strange practices which the Romans
-brought into Europe. Possibly its origin should be sought in some
-infiltration from the West, for it is more suggestive of Orphic rites
-than of any form of Eastern ceremonies. A Christian writer of the name
-of Socrates, who lived in the fifth century, said that at Alexandria, in
-a cavern consecrated to Mithra, human skulls and bones were found, the
-inference being that human sacrifice was the real rite, symbolised by
-the slaying of the bull. The source of this information is suspect, but
-even if not guilty of such excesses, the Mithra-worshippers of Western
-Persia must have been rank corrupters of the faith. In the Avesta,
-Mithra is the luminous æther; sometimes he appears as an intercessor;
-sometimes he dispenses the mercy or wields the vengeance of God. But in
-reality he is an attribute, about the nature of which members of the
-faith had less excuse for making mistakes than we have. It is difficult
-for the Indian or Japanese not to make analogous mistakes concerning
-some forms of worship in Southern Europe.
-
-In Old Iran the Sacred Fire was kept perpetually alight. Sweet perfumes
-were spread around the place of prayer, for which a little eminence was
-chosen, but there were no images and no temples. Archæologists have
-failed to find traces of a building set apart for religious worship
-among the splendid ruins of Persepolis: the “forty towers” only tell of
-the pleasure-palace of an Eastern king. Was it that the profound
-spirituality of this people shrank not only from carving a graven image
-of the deity, but also from giving him a house made with hands? What
-could the maker of the firmament want with human fanes? Some such
-thought may have caused the Iranians to suppress for so long a time the
-instinct which impels man to build temples. In any case, it seems as if
-Cyrus and after him Darius threw themselves into the scheme for
-rebuilding the Hebrew temple with all the more enthusiasm from the fact
-that immemorial custom held them back from temple-building at home. The
-cuneiform inscriptions bear witness that these kings were monotheists:
-they believed in one sole creator of heaven and earth, by whose will
-kings reign and govern, and if they invoked the aid of heavenly
-hierarchs they never confused the creatures, however powerful, with the
-creator. That Creator they called by the name of Ahura Mazda, but they
-recognised that he was one, whatever the name might be by which he was
-called. “Thus saith Cyrus, king of Persia: the Lord God of Heaven hath
-given me all the kingdoms of the earth, and He hath charged me to build
-Him a house at Jerusalem, which is Judah.” In the uncanonical Book of
-Esdras, it is said more significantly that King Cyrus “commanded to have
-the house of the Lord in Jerusalem built where they should worship with
-eternal fire.” The recently deciphered Babylonian inscriptions have been
-brought forward to show that the Jews were mistaken in thinking that
-Cyrus was a monotheist, because he honoured Merodach in Babylon just as
-he had honoured Jehovah at Jerusalem. He was, it is said, a “polytheist
-at heart.” If he was, his honouring Merodach does not prove it. To my
-mind it proves exactly the reverse. Cyrus understood the monotheism
-which was at the bottom of the Babylonian religious system and which
-these very tablets have revealed to modern scholarship. He understood
-that “however numerous and diversified the nations of the earth may be,
-the God who reigns over them all can never be more than one.”[2]
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- Words written by a Japanese reformer named Okubo about fifty years
- ago.
-
-He was governed by expediency in his respect for the faiths of his
-subject peoples, but he was governed also by something higher than
-expediency. That Darius Hystaspis, who is allowed to have been a
-monotheist, continued his policy, shows that it was not thought to
-involve disloyalty to Ahura Mazda since of such disloyalty Darius would
-have been incapable.
-
-If we grant that the Iranians were, in the main, monotheistic at a date
-when not more than a part of the population professed Zoroastrianism,
-the question follows, of what was the difference between the reformed
-and the unreformed religion? To answer this satisfactorily, we must
-remember that the paramount object of Zoroaster was less change than
-conservation. Like Moses whom an attractive if not well-founded theory
-makes his contemporary, he saw around a world full of idolatry, and he
-feared lest the purer faith of Iran should be swamped by the
-encroachments of polytheism and atheism (for, strangely enough, the
-Avesta abounds in references to sheer negation). The aim of every
-doctrine or practice which he introduced was to revivify, to render more
-comprehensible, more consistent, the old monotheistic faith.
-
-With regard to practice, the most remarkable innovation was that which
-concerned the disposal of the dead. It cannot be explained as a relic of
-barbarism: it was introduced with deliberation and with the knowledge
-that it would shock human sensibility then, just as much as it does now.
-The avowed reason for giving the dead to vultures or animals is that
-burial defiles the earth. It was recognised that this argument was open
-to the objection that birds or beasts were likely to drop portions of
-dead bodies on the earth. The objection was met with scholastic
-resourcefulness not to say casuistry: it was declared that “accidents”
-do not count. Though so strongly insisted on in the Avesta, the practice
-only became general at a late period: even after Mazdeism had made
-headway, bodies were often enveloped in wax to avoid defilement of the
-earth while evading the prescribed rite. Cremation, the natural
-alternative to burial, would have polluted the sacred fire. It was
-observed, no doubt, that the consumption of the dead by living animals
-was the means employed by Nature for disposing of the dead. Why do we so
-rarely see a dead bird or hare or rabbit or squirrel? The fact is not
-mysterious when we come to look into it. It may have been thought that
-what Nature does must be well done. The Parsis themselves seem to
-suppose that this and other prescriptions of their religious law were
-inspired by sanitary considerations, and they attribute to them their
-comparative immunity from plague during the recent epidemics at Bombay.
-Defilement of water by throwing any impurity into rivers is as severely
-forbidden as the defilement of the earth. Possibly another reason
-against burial was the desire to prevent anything like the material cult
-of the dead and the association of the fortunes of the immortal soul
-with those of the mortal body, such as prevailed among the Egyptians,
-whose practices doubtless were known to the Magi by whom, rather than by
-any one man, the Mazdean law was framed. Finally, the last rites
-provided a recurrent object-lesson conducive to the mental habit of
-separating the pure from the impure. They reminded the Mazdean that life
-is pure because given by Ormuzd; death impure because inflicted by
-Ahriman. The rule of every religion is designed largely, if not chiefly,
-as a moral discipline.[3]
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- Among the Buddhists of Thibet the dead are given to dogs and birds of
- prey as a last act of charity—to feed the hungry.
-
-The true originality of Zoroastrianism as a religious system lies in the
-dualistic conception of creation which is the nexus that connects all
-its parts. This was seen at once, when the Avesta became known in
-Europe, but the idea was so entirely misunderstood and even travestied,
-that Zoroaster was represented as a believer in two gods whose power was
-equal, if, indeed, the power of the evil one were not the greater.
-Recently among the manuscripts of Leopardi were found these opening
-lines of an unfinished “Hymn to Ahriman”:—
-
- “Re delle cose, autor del mondo, arcana
- Malvagità, sommo potere e somma
- Intelligenza, eterno
- Dator de’ mali e regitor del moto....”
-
-They are fine lines, but if Anro-Mainyus might fitly be called “arcana
-malvagità” and “dator de’ mali,” nothing could be farther removed from
-the Zoroastrian idea than the rest of the description. Ahriman possessed
-neither supreme power nor supreme intelligence, nor was he author of the
-world, but only of a small portion of it. To this day, however, it has
-pleased pessimists to claim Zoroaster, the most optimist of prophets, as
-one of their fraternity.
-
-The real Ahriman gains in tremendous force from the vagueness of his
-personality. Sometimes he _acts_ as a person: as in the Temptation of
-Zoroaster when he offers him the kingdoms of the world if he will but
-serve him. But no artist would have dared to give him human form. And
-surely no one in Iran would have alluded to him by mild or good-humoured
-euphemisms. He shares this, however, with the mediæval devil, that he
-works at an eternally pre-destined disadvantage. He is fore-doomed to
-failure. Good is stronger than Evil, and Good is lasting, Evil is
-passing. In the end, Evil must cease to be.
-
-Though not immortal, Ahriman was primordial. Unlike the fallen star of
-the morning, what he is, that he was. He did not choose Evil: he _is_
-Evil as Ormuzd _is_ Good. He can create, but only things like himself.
-The notion that both Ormuzd and Ahriman proceeded from a prior entity,
-Boundless Time, is a late legend. Ormuzd and Ahriman existed always, the
-one in eternal light, the other in beginningless darkness. An immense
-vacuum divided the light from the darkness and Ahriman knew not Ormuzd,
-Evil knew not Good, till Good was externalised in the beneficent
-creation.
-
- “Young life lowed through the meadows, the woods and the echoing
- mountains,
- Wandered bleating in valleys and warbled on blossoming branches.”
-
-The sight of created things gave Ahriman the will to create
-corresponding things, evil instead of good. He made sin, disease, death,
-the flood, the earthquake, famine, slaughter, noxious animals. So the
-pieces were set down on the chess-board of being, and, as in all
-religions, man’s soul was the stake.
-
-The difference from other religions lay in the determined effort to
-grapple with the problem of the origin of evil. The tribe of divine
-students among whom Mazdeism sprang up saw in that unsolved problem the
-great cause of unbelief, and they set themselves to solve it by the
-theory which J. S. Mill said was the only one which could reconcile
-philosophy with religion—the theory of primal forces at war. The Indian
-did not attempt to fathom it; the Egyptian and Assyrian set it aside; we
-know the offered Hebrew solution: “I form the light and create darkness;
-I make peace and create evil, I, the Lord, do all these things.” But
-this is a statement, not a solution, because though it may be believed,
-it cannot be thought. The attraction of the dualistic conception is
-shown by nothing more clearly than by the extraordinary vitality of
-Manichæism in the face of every kind of persecution both in the East and
-West, although Manichæism, with its ascription of the creation of
-mankind to the Evil Principle, its depreciation of woman, its
-out-and-out asceticism which included abstinence from animal food (a
-rule borrowed by Mani from the Buddhists in his journey in India)
-contrasts unfavourably with the faith that did not make a single demand
-on human nature except to be good, even as its Creator was good.
-
-The origin of the Magians was Semitic, or, as some think, præ-Semitic
-and præ-Aryan. Travellers brought tales of them to the ancient world
-which listened with a fascinated interest, while it failed to see the
-importance of the mighty religious phenomenon of Israel. The “Wise men
-of the East” had a charm for antiquity, as they were to have for the
-Infant Church which never tired of depicting them in its earliest art.
-Mention of the “Persarum Magos” is frequent from Herodotus to Cicero,
-who speaks of them under that name. According to Herodotus the Magi sang
-the Theogony, and Pausanias describes them as reading from a book which
-was certainly the Avesta, though it must not be overlooked that never
-but once does it contain the smallest reference to them. This tribe of
-divine students enjoyed a high reputation at the Babylonian Court, which
-seems less unexpected by the light of recent research than it did when
-the Babylonians and Assyrians were thought to be destitute of any trace
-of an esoteric religion tending to monotheism. That the Magians were
-monotheists cannot be disputed. Probably they were skilled in astronomy
-and in medicine, the two sciences which almost covered what was meant
-then by learning in the East. Probably also they were astrologers like
-other searchers of the heavens, but they were not magic-workers, a
-calling that had a bad name. The Magi in the Gospel story are supposed
-to have been guided by astronomical calculations; whatever these may
-have been, they could not have been ignorant of the prophecy in their
-own Scriptures of a Virgin who should give birth to the Saviour and
-Judge of men. The ante-natal soul of this Virgin had been venerated for
-centuries in Iran. An infiltration of Messianic prophecies might induce
-them to conclude that the Child would be “King of the Jews.” It was not
-likely that they would take so long a journey to do homage to any
-new-born earthly king, but it was quite possible that they might go in
-search of the promised Saviour.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo:_ _Mansell._
- COUNTING CATTLE.
- British Museum.
- (_Egyptian Fresco._)]
-
-In Media we know that the people lived at one time in tribes, without
-kings. In one form or another, the tribal organisation existed and
-exists everywhere in the East. What is caste but a petrified tribal
-system? The first discovery which a European makes on landing on the
-skirts of the East, is that everything is done by tribes. The Algerian
-conjurors who swallow fire, drive nails into their heads and do other
-gruesome feats are a semi-religious tribe which has thrived from time
-immemorial on the exercise of the same profession. The dwarfs of the
-late Bey of Tunis, whom I saw at Bardo, belonged to a tribe which does
-nothing but furnish dwarfs. Apply to a high or worthy end this corporate
-pursuit of a given object and it must produce remarkable results.
-
-The unanimous belief of the Greeks that Zoroaster was founder of the
-Magians is held no longer, but he is still thought to have been one of
-them. Moslem tradition made him the servant of a Hebrew prophet, and
-even serious Western students were inclined to trace Mazdeism to the
-Jewish prisoners who were brought into Media by the Assyrians. It is
-unnecessary to say that at present the Jews are regarded as the debtors.
-
-There is no figure of a religious teacher so elusive as that of
-Zoroaster, and they are all elusive. But in the case of Zoroaster it is
-not only the man that eludes us—it is also his environment. Brahmanical
-India of to-day reflects as in a glass the society into which Sakya Muni
-cast his seed; in fact, we understand the seed-sowing better than the
-harvest; Buddhism at its apogee seems of the nature of an interlude in
-the history of the changeless East. China still throws light on its
-passionless sage, passionless in a sense so far deeper than the Indian
-recluses, who, though they knew it not, did but substitute for the
-passion of the flesh the more inebriating passion of the spirit. From
-the splendid treasury of præ-Islamic poetry, we know that the Arab race
-had acquired its specialised type before the Muezzin first called the
-faithful to prayer. The moral petrifaction of the many and the religious
-and patriotic ferment of the few which formed the _milieu_ of nascent
-Christianity, can be realised without any stretch of the imagination.
-Buddha, Confucius, and He that was greater than they, came into highly
-civilised societies in organised states; Mohammed came into an
-unorganised state which lacked political and religious cohesion, but the
-unity of race was already developed: the Emirs of the Soudan whose star
-set at Omdurman were the living pictures of the Arabs who first rallied
-to the Prophet’s banner. Of the society of Old Iran to which Zoroaster
-spoke, it is difficult to form a distinct idea and to judge how far it
-had moved away from early Aryan simplicity. We gather that it was still
-a society in which sheep-raising and dairy-farming played a preponderant
-part. Those modern expressions may serve us better than to say
-“shepherds” and “herdsmen,” since fixity of dwelling with the possession
-of what then was considered wealth seems to have been a very common
-case. Nomadic life lasted on, but it was held in disrepute. There
-appears to have been nothing like a national or warlike spirit such as
-that possessed by the Jews, though occasional Turanian incursions had to
-be repelled. There were few towns and many scattered villages and
-homesteads. We are conscious that these impressions derived from the
-Avesta may be partially erroneous. Teachers of religion only take note
-of political or other circumstances so far as it suits their purpose.
-
-Zoroaster (the Greek reading of Zarathustra, which in modern Persian
-becomes Zardusht), was born, as far as can be guessed, in Bactria, which
-became the stronghold of Avestic religion and the last refuge of the
-national monarchy on the Arab invasion. There was a time when his
-existence was denied, but no one doubts it now. Eight hundred years
-before Christ is the date which most modern scholars assign to him,
-though some place him much farther back, while others think they discern
-reasons for his having appeared after Buddha. The legend of his life
-(not to be found in the Avesta) begins in the invariable way: he was
-descended from kings; as a young man he retired to a grotto in the
-desert, where he lived an austere life of reflection for seven years.
-Zoroaster never taught asceticism, but tradition attributes to him the
-season of solitude and self-collection without which perhaps, in fact as
-well as in fable, the supreme power over other men’s minds was never
-wielded by man.
-
-Various marvellous particulars are related: he was suckled by two ewes;
-wild animals obeyed his voice; when thrown under the feet of oxen and
-horses, they avoided hurting him. In his seven years’ retirement he
-meditated on idol-worship, on false gods and false prophets. The people
-of Iran, substantially monotheist but prone to sliding into degrading
-superstition, offered a field for his mission. He took to him a few
-disciples and began to preach to as many as would hear, but he met with
-great difficulties. At last, he found favour with a king by curing his
-favourite horse, and he might have ended his days in peace but the
-spirit urged him to continue his apostolate. Not to princes but to
-peasants did he chiefly address himself; he did not call them away from
-their work but exhorted them to pursue it diligently. “He who cultivates
-the earth will never lack, but he who does not, will stand idly at the
-doors of others to beg food.” Labour is not an evil, man who earns his
-bread by the sweat of his brow is not under a curse: he is the
-fellow-worker with God! This was the grandest thing that Zoroaster
-taught. It is singular to note the affinity between his teaching and the
-Virgilian conception of the husbandman as half a priest. In the Middle
-Ages the same thought arose where one would not look for it: among those
-religious orders which had the luminous inspiration that in work not in
-indolence lay the means of salvation: “_Laborare est orare._”
-
-The care of the God-created animals brought with it a special blessing:
-it was actually a way to heaven. If a friend gave us a cherished animal,
-should not we treat it well for that friend’s sake as well as for its
-own value? Would not it remind us of the giver? Would not we be anxious
-that he should find it in good health if by chance he came on a visit?
-This is how Zoroaster wished man to feel about the cow, the sheep, the
-dog. Auguste Comte considered domestic animals as a part of humanity.
-Zoroaster considered them as a trust from God.
-
-Moslem traditions finish the story of the Mazdean prophet by telling
-that he was beaten to death by “devil-worshippers,” probably Turanian
-raiders. Zoroastrian authorities are silent about his end, which is
-thought to bear out the legend that it was unfortunate.
-
-The Parsis hold that the whole Avesta was the work of Zoroaster. Much of
-the original material has disappeared, and although Western writers are
-disposed to throw all the blame on the Moslem invaders, the steady
-Persian tradition which accuses “Alexander the Rûman” of having caused
-the destruction of an important part of it, cannot be well answered by
-saying that such barbarism was not likely to be committed by the
-Macedonian conqueror. When Persepolis was reduced to ruins some of the
-sacred books “written with gold ink on prepared cow-skins” may have been
-destroyed by accident, but as it was certain that the Zoroastrian
-priests would do all they could to foment resistance to the hated
-idolater, we cannot be too sure that the deed was not done on purpose.
-The way of disposing of the dead set the Greeks against the
-Zoroastrians, and they even thought or affected to think that the dying
-as well as the dead were given to dogs. The Arabs, no doubt, burnt what
-they could lay their hands on of what was left, and it tells much for
-the devotion of the faithful few, the persecuted remnant in Persia, and
-the band of exiles who found a happier fate in India, that nevertheless
-the Avesta has been preserved in a representative though incomplete
-form, to take its place in among the sacred literatures of the world.
-When the Parsis return, as they hope to do, to a free Persia, they may
-carry the Avesta proudly before them as the Sikhs carried the Granth to
-the prophet-martyr’s tomb at Delhi: they have done more than keep the
-faith, they have _lived it_.
-
-The present Avesta consists of five books. The Gâthâs or hymns alone
-really claim to have been composed by Zoroaster himself, and this claim
-is admitted by European scholars who disagree with the Parsis in denying
-that the other four books are by the same author. They are: the “Yasna,”
-a ceremonial liturgy, the “Vispered,” a work resembling the “Yasna,” but
-apparently less ancient; the “Vendîdâd,” which contains the Mazdean
-religious law, and the “Khordah Avesta,” a household prayer-book for the
-laity. The original text was written in an Aryan dialect related to
-Sanscrit; after a time, this tongue was understood by no one but the
-priests and not much by them; it was decided, therefore, to make a
-translation, which was called the “Zend,” or “interpretation,” or, as we
-should say, “the authorised version.” At first Europeans thought that
-“Zend” meant the original tongue in which the work was written.
-Curiously enough, the language into which the Scriptures were rendered
-was not Iranian or Old Persian, but Pahlavi, a _lingua franca_ full of
-Semitic words, which had been coined for convenience in communicating
-with the Assyrians and Syrians when they were under one king. Pahlavi
-was also used for official inscriptions, for coinage, for commerce; it
-was a sort of Esperanto. The text and the translation enjoyed equal
-authority, but the former was called “the Avesta of Heaven” and the
-latter “the Avesta of Earth.”
-
-The first fragment of the “Avesta” that reached Europe was a copy of the
-“Yasna” brought to Canterbury by an unknown Englishman in 1633. Other
-scraps followed, but no real attempt to translate it was made till the
-adventurous Anquetil Duperron published in 1771 the version which he had
-made with the assistance of Parsi priests and which was rejected in
-unwise haste by Sir William Jones as a _supercherie littéraire_, chiefly
-on the score that its contents were for the most part pure nonsense, and
-hence could not be the work of Zoroaster. Germany at once was more just
-than England to the man who, though he had not succeeded in making a
-good translation, deserved the highest honour as a pioneer.
-
-Even now that better translations are available, the Avesta is apt to
-dishearten the reader on his first acquaintance with it. Many passages
-have remained obscure, and the desire to be literal in this as in some
-other Oriental works has hindered the translators from writing their own
-languages well. It needs a Sir Richard Jebb to produce a translation
-which is a classic and is yet microscopically accurate. I once asked
-Professor F. C. Burkitt why the Septuagint did not make more impression
-on the Hellenic and Roman students of Alexandria by mere force of the
-literary power of the Bible? He replied that he thought it was to be
-explained by the poor degree of literary skill possessed by the Greek
-translators or by most of them. Another reminiscence comes to my mind
-here: I recollect that eminent scholar and deeply religious-minded man,
-Albert Réville, saying to me: “The Bible is so much more amusing than
-the Koran!” I am afraid one must confess that the Koran is so much “more
-amusing” than the Avesta. It is a good rule, however, to approach all
-religious books with patience and with reverence, for they contain, even
-if concealed under a bushel, the finest thoughts of man.
-
-When we have grown accustomed to the outward frame of the Avesta, the
-inner sense becomes clearer. It is like a piece of music by
-Tschaikowsky: at first the modulations seem bizarre, the themes
-incoherent; then, by degrees, a consecutive plan unwinds itself and we
-know that what appeared meaningless sound was divine harmony.
-
-The essential teaching of the Avesta is summed up in the text: “Adore
-God with a pure mind and a pure body, and honour Him in His works.”
-Force, power, energy, waters and stagnant pools, springs, running
-brooks, plants that shoot aloft, plants that cover the ground, the
-earth, the heavens, stars, sun, moon, the everlasting lights, the
-flocks, the kine, the water-tribes, those that are of the sky, the
-flying, the wild ones—“We honour all these, Thy holy and pure creatures,
-O Ahura Mazda, divine artificer!”
-
- “The Voice said: Call My works thy friends.”
-
-If the lyric note of great religious expression is rarely reached (only,
-perhaps, in a few pieces, such as the noble hymn to the sun-symbol), the
-sustained exposition of life is so reasonable and yet so lofty that to
-contemplate it after gazing at the extravagances of pillar-saints and
-Indian Yogi, signals, as it were, a return to sanity and health after
-the _nuit blanche_ of fever.
-
-The “Khordah Avesta” contains this counsel or good wish: “Be cheerful;
-live thy life the whole time which thou wilt live.” Man is not asked to
-do the impossible or even the difficult: he is asked to _enjoy_. To the
-extreme spirituality which shrank from making even a mental image of God
-is joined a “this worldliness” which saw in rational enjoyment a
-religious duty. Instead of choosing poverty, man was ordered to make
-good use of wealth; instead of mortifying the flesh, he was to avoid
-calumny, evil-speaking, quarrels, to give clothes to the poor, to pray
-not only for himself but for others. If he does wrong, let him repent
-honestly in his heart and do some practical good work as a pledge of his
-repentance. The soul which grieves for its wrongdoing and sins no more
-comes back into the light of “God the giver, Forgiver, rich in Love, who
-always is, always was, always will be!” When it was asked, “What is in
-the first place most acceptable to this earth?” the answer came: “When a
-holy man walks on it, O Zarathustra!” Good men work _with_ God, who,
-sure of ultimate triumph, is yet Himself struggling now against the
-Power of Darkness. There is no religion without a good life: “All have
-not the Faith who do not hear it; all hear it not who are unclean; all
-are unclean who are sinners.” God did not send calamities to His
-servants, but He compassionates them in their trials: “The voice of him
-weeping, however low, mounts up to the star-lights, comes round the
-whole world.” It is no sin to desire riches: “Thy kingdom come, O Ahura,
-when the virtuous poor shall inherit the earth.” In spite of the
-sufferings of good people, even on this fair earth there is more of
-pleasantness for the good than for the wicked, and in the next world
-there is bliss eternal. I do not think that Robert Browning studied the
-Avesta, but to the thoroughly Zoroastrian line quoted above I am tempted
-to add this other which is not less so:—
-
- “Never dreamed, though right were worsted, wrong would triumph.”
-
-For the individual, as for the universe, Right must triumph. If the
-prophet of optimism has a harder task than the oracle of despair, it is,
-perhaps, a more profitable task.
-
-The Parsi repeats daily, as his ancestors did before him, the so-called
-Honover or “Ahuna-Vairya,” or _logos_ which brings God down to man as
-the Gayatri lifts man up to God: “One Master and Lord, all holy and
-supreme; one teacher of His Law, appointed by God’s almighty will as
-shepherd to the weak.” The Mazdean “law” was a thought-out system to
-prevent idolatry and atheism, and to make men lead good lives. There is
-no racial exclusiveness in it: the Mazdeans had no shibboleth or
-peculiar sign; Zoroaster, himself a foreigner, did not appeal to a
-chosen people or to a miraculously evolved caste: he only knew of good
-men and bad. A really good man, truthful and charitable in all his ways,
-had three heavens open to him even though he “offered no prayers and
-chanted no Gâthâs”; only the fourth heaven, a little nearer the presence
-of God, was reserved for those who had devoted their lives to religion.
-Temperance was enjoined, as without temperance there could not be
-health. The family was sacred and marriage meritorious: children, the
-gift of Ahura Mazda, were recruits for the great Salvation Army of the
-future. Immorality was severely censured, but the victims of it were
-befriended. Stringent and most humane religious laws protected the
-_fille-mère_ from being driven “by her shame” to destroy herself or her
-offspring. Girls were married at sixteen: the address to young brides
-may be compared with that in the Rig-Veda: “I speak these words to you,
-maidens who wed. I say them unto you—imprint them on your hearts. Learn
-to know the world of the Holy Spirit according to the Law. Even so, let
-one of you take the other as the Law ordains, for it will be to you a
-source of perfect joy.”
-
-At the time when Zoroastrianism was the State religion, the Sásánian
-period, we find that the kings frequently had harems. It is certain,
-however, that if in this as in other things the priests were complacent,
-they were untrue to orthodox Zoroastrian doctrine and custom, which only
-permitted the taking of a second wife in some rare cases, as when there
-was no issue by the first.
-
-Even then, it does not seem to have been encouraged. The blot on Avestic
-morality is the strange recommendation of consanguineous marriages,
-which the Parsis interpret as far as possible in a figurative sense, but
-it must have been intended to be followed, though it is plain that such
-unions were never popular. The declared object was the hypothetical
-maximum purity of race: exactly the same object as that contemplated in
-the union of Siegemund and Siegelind in the Nibelungenlied—a curious
-parallel. To my mind, the desire to keep agricultural property together
-may have had something to do with it. The present moral ideas of the
-Parsis do not differ from those of Europeans, and when they requested to
-be placed under the English instead of the Hindu marriage law, their
-wish was granted.
-
-In Avesta times the priests both married and toiled like the rest of the
-people. When their prosperity under the Sásánians tended to make them a
-class apart, they seem to have become less faithful to the ideals of
-their master, less stern in opposing evil in high places. It is a common
-experience of history. Originally they were true citizen-priests, mixing
-with the people as being of them. There was no life better or holier
-than the common life of duty and work. Isolation of any kind was
-contrary to the central Zoroastrian view of man as a social being. Among
-the wicked souls in hell, each one thinks itself utterly alone: it has
-no sight or knowledge of the host around it. Nothing could illustrate
-more powerfully than this the saying of a great French writer: “_Seul a
-un synonyme: mort!_” Solitude is the death of the soul.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- VII
-
- ZOROASTRIAN ZOOLOGY
-
-
-NO investigator of early Iran can afford to neglect the _Shahnameh_ of
-Firdusi, which was as good history as he could make it; that is to say,
-it was founded on extremely old legendary lore collected by him with a
-real wish to revive the memory of the past. Firdusi sang the glories of
-the “fire-worshippers” with such enthusiasm that one cannot be surprised
-if, when he died, the Sheikh of Tús doubted whether he ought receive
-orthodox Moslem burial: a doubt removed by an opportune dream in which
-the Sheikh saw the poet in Paradise. In Firdusi’s epic we are told that
-the earliest Persian king (who seems to have been not very far off the
-first man) lived in peace with all creation. Wild animals came round and
-knew him for their lord. He had a son who was killed by demons and a
-grandson named Húsheng, who, as soon as he was old enough, made war on
-the demons (Turanians?) to avenge his father’s murder. Every species of
-wild and tame beast obeyed Húsheng:—
-
- “The savage beasts, and those of gentler kind,
- Alike reposed before him and appeared
- To do him homage.”
-
-In his war on the demon’s brood, Húsheng was helped by wolf, tiger,
-lion, and even by the fowls of the air. All this while mankind had lived
-on fruit and the leaves of trees. Húsheng taught his people to bake
-bread. He was succeeded by his son Taliumen, in whose reign panthers,
-hawks, and falcons were tamed. The next king introduced weaving and the
-use of armour. His successor was remembered for having kept a herd of
-1,000 cows whose milk he gave to the poor. Then came Zorák, who owned
-10,000 horses. Zorák was seduced by Iblís, the evil spirit, who, in
-order to accomplish it, became his chief cook. Iblís was the real
-founder of the culinary art; till then, people lived still almost
-entirely on bread and fruit, but the king’s new _chef_ prepared the most
-savoury dishes, for which he used the flesh of all kinds of birds and
-beasts. Finally, he sent to table a partridge and a pheasant, after
-which Zorák promised the devil to grant him any request he might make.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo:_ _J. Dieulafoy._
- KING FIGHTING GRIFFIN WITH SCORPION’S TAIL.
- Palace of Darius.
- (_By permission of M. Marcel Dieulafoy._)]
-
-Here there are fugitive reminiscences of parallel legends in the
-_Bundehesh_, a Parsi religious book belonging to post-Avestic times. The
-first human couple served God faithfully till, for some unexplained
-reason, they were induced to ascribe creation and supreme power to the
-daevas. This was the “unforgivable sin,” the ascription of the
-miraculous power of God to the devil. Ahriman rejoiced at their treason,
-though it is not said that he was the cause of it: man could choose
-between good and evil. After their defection, the man and the woman
-clothed themselves in leaves and took to hunting. Ahriman put it into
-their heads to kill a goat and then to light a fire by rubbing two
-sticks: they blew on the fire to fan the flame and roasted a piece of
-the goat. One bit they threw in the air as a sacrifice to the Nature
-spirits, saying, “This for the Yazatas!” A kite flew past and carried
-off the sacrifice. Afterwards, the man and woman dressed in skins and
-told innumerable lies. Going from bad to worse, they engendered a large
-family whence sprang the twenty-five races of mankind.
-
-How this story got into the _Bundehesh_ I do not know, but I am sure
-that Zoroaster would have disowned it. He knew of no collective “fall of
-man,” whether in connexion with partridges, pheasants, or goat-flesh.
-
-The Avesta, in its sober cosmogony, is content to speak of the
-proto-man, Gayo Marathan (mortal life), and the proto-good-animal, Geus
-Urva, from whom all human beings and all animals of the good creation
-are derived. Nevertheless, Ahura Mazda is described frequently as
-_creating_ each animal; the proto-creature was only the _modus operandi_
-of the divine power. As in biology, divided sex was a secondary
-development. From the bull, Geus Urva, proceeded first his own species,
-and then sheep, camels, horses, asses, birds, water-animals.
-
-The distinguishing qualification given him of _good and laborious_ is
-the most striking proof of the originality of Magian ideas: instead of
-the strong bulls of Basan roaring in their might, the bull we have here
-is one with the ploughing ox:—
-
- “T’amo, o pio bove; e mite un sentimento
- Di vigore e di pace al cor m’infondi....”
-
-—the patient, the long-suffering, the gentle, though strong-limbed
-helper of man in his daily toil, good in his vigour, good in his
-mildness, but good most of all in his labour, for Zoroaster called
-labour a holy thing. The animal which did most to cultivate God’s earth
-and make the desert flower like a rose, was the paragon of creatures. It
-must not be thought that to the Geus Urva or his kind was ever rendered
-the homage due to their Creator. If there was one thing more abhorrent,
-to the Zoroastrian mind than idolatry it was zoolatry: when Cambyses
-killed a new Apis with many of his followers in Egypt, he had no reason
-to fear Mazdean criticism.
-
-The soul of the bull receives _dulia_ not _latria_. “We honour the soul
-of the bull ... and also our own souls and our cattle’s souls who help
-to preserve our life; the souls by which they exist and which exist for
-them.” So runs one of the Gâthâs, one of the hymns of Zoroaster himself.
-“We honour the souls of the swift, wild animals; we honour the souls of
-just men and women in whatever place they are born, whose pure natures
-have overcome evil. We honour saintly men and saintly women, living
-immortal, always living, always increasing in glory—all man and woman
-souls faithful to the Spirit of God.”
-
-In this song of praise we have brought before us vividly a fundamental
-doctrine of the Avesta which pervades every page of it: the belief in
-the Fravashi, the soul-partner, the double or angel, which exists before
-birth as during life and after death. This belief has a great interest
-for us as it would seem that it was only by chance that it did not pass
-into the body of Christian dogma. The Jews of the new school had held it
-for quite two hundred years before Christ. Besides other allusions, are
-the three distinct references to the soul-partner in the New Testament.
-Christ Himself speaks of the angels of the children who are always in
-the presence of God and who complain to Him if the children are
-ill-treated. Secondly, when Peter issued from prison, those who saw him
-said, “It is his angel.” Thirdly, it is stated that the Sadducees
-believed that there was no resurrection, “neither angel nor Spirit,” but
-that the Pharisees, of whom Paul was one, “confessed both.” These three
-references become intelligible for the first time after reading the
-Gâthâs. True it is that he who knows only one religion, knows none.
-
-Ahriman inflicted every sort of suffering on the primal creature—this
-was the beginning of cruelty to animals. At last, he caused its death.
-The soul of the Bull dwells in the presence of God, and to it, as
-intercessor, all suffering creatures lift their plaints. Why were they
-made to suffer wrath, ill-usage, hunger? Will no one lead them to sweet
-pastures? The creature-soul carries the cry of the creatures to God.
-Ahura Mazda promises the advent of Zoroaster, redresser of all wrongs.
-But the Bull-soul weeps and complains: how can the voice of one weak man
-avail to help? It invokes stronger and more effectual aid.
-
-The hymn is really a litany of suffering animals, the grandeur of the
-thought flashing across obscurities which make it almost impossible to
-translate. Very mysterious is the expression of incredulity in the
-efficacy of the help of Zoroaster, an expression which stands quite
-alone, and in which some have seen a proof that this hymn was not
-written by the Prophet. But would any one else have dared to question
-his power or to call him “one weak man”? Can it be that Zoroaster was
-distressed to find his efforts to prevent cruelty so unavailing, and
-that he here covertly invokes the “strong arm of the law” to do what he
-had failed in doing?
-
-In the pages of the Avesta everything is tried to enforce humanity:
-hopes of reward, threats of punishment, appeals to religious obedience,
-common gratitude, self-interest. It cannot but appear singular that
-among an Eastern pastoral and agricultural people such reiterated
-admonitions should have been needful. The cow and the horse, “animals
-manifestly pure which bring with them words of blessing,” inflict
-terrible anathemas on their tormentors:—
-
- The cow curses him who keeps her: “Mayest thou remain without
- posterity, ever continuing of evil report, thou who dost not
- distribute me food, and yet causest me to labour for thy wife,
- thy children and thy own sustenance.”
-
- The horse curses his owner: “Mayest thou not be he who harnesses
- swift horses, not one of those who sit on swift horses, not one
- who makes swift horses hasten away. Thou dost not wish strength
- to me in the numerous assembly, in the circle of many men.”
-
-The cow which is led astray by robbers calls to Mithra “ever with
-unlifted hands, thinking of the stall,” and Mithra, here figuring as the
-vengeance of God, destroys the house, the clan, the confederacy, the
-region, the rule of him who injured her. She is the type of prosperity:
-“O thou who didst create the cow, give us immortal life, safety, power,
-plenty.” She is dear to her Creator: “Thou hast given the earth as a
-sweet pasture for the cow.” She is praised because she furnishes the
-offerings, flesh, milk, and butter.
-
-This reminds us of the differences of point of view between the Persian
-and the Indian humanitarian. The Indian, in theory at least, simply
-forbade taking animal life. He had the great advantage of the argument
-of the straight line. The Zoroastrian was handicapped by his moderation.
-It is easier far to teach extraordinary than ordinary well-doing; every
-moralist who has set out to improve mankind has found that. Zoroaster
-had not the smallest doubt about his contention that man has imperative
-duties in regard to what used to be called “the brute creation.” Man
-could not live as man at all without it: we who have harnessed steam and
-trapped the electric spark might entertain such a possibility, but to
-Zoroaster the idea would have seemed absurd. As we owe so much to
-animals, the least we can do is to treat them well. Yet, though he
-included wanton and useless slaughter in “ill-treatment,” he allows the
-killing of animals for food. Herodotus remarked that, unlike the
-Egyptians, the Magian priests did not think it pollution to kill animals
-with their own hands—except dogs and oxen.
-
-It is to be supposed that the framers of Zoroastrian law believed that
-animal food was necessary for man’s health and strength, perfect health
-being the state most acceptable to the Creator. Believing this, they
-could not forbid the temperate use of it. Gargantuan feasts were not
-dreamt of; if they had been, they would have received the condemnation
-given to all excesses. We are apt to fall into the way of thinking of
-sacred books which is that of their own adepts; we think of them as
-written by unpremeditated impulse. But commonly this was not the case.
-The Avesta, especially, bears signs of conclusions reached by patient
-reasoning. While, however, the Magians permitted the slaughter of
-animals, they bowed to the original scruple which has no race-limits, by
-ordering that such slaughter should be accompanied by an expiatory rite
-without the performance of which it was unlawful. This was the offering
-of the head of the animal to Homa: regarded, in this instance, as the
-archetype of the “wine of life”—the sacred or sacramental juice of the
-plant which has been identified with the Indian Soma. The Homa juice was
-much the most sacred thing that could be eaten or drunk; if it is true
-that it contained alcohol, the little jet of flame that would start
-upwards as it was thrown on the sacrificial fire might seem actually to
-bear with it the spirit of the offering. Whatever was the exact idea
-implied by the dedication of slaughtered animals to Homa, the fact that
-they were killed for food did not, of course, in any way affect their
-extra-mortal destiny. The “souls of our cattle”—their archetypes—could
-not suffer death.
-
-As a careful observer, which he is now allowed to have been, Herodotus
-remarked that not only might the priests take animal life, but that they
-thought it highly meritorious to take the life of certain animals such
-as ants, serpents, and some kinds of birds. It required no profound
-knowledge of the East to notice something unusual in this. Even the
-Jews, with their classification of clean and unclean beasts, cast no
-moral slur on the forbidden category, and if the serpent of Eden was
-cursed, later snakes regained their character and inspired no loathing;
-the snake-charmer with his crawling pupils was a well known and popular
-entertainer. Farther East, every holy man respected the life of an ant
-as much as of an elephant. Zoroaster alone banned the reptile and the
-major part of the insect world. No penance was more salutary than to
-kill ten thousand scorpions, snakes, mosquitoes, ants that walk in
-single file, harvesting ants, wasps, or a kind of fly which was the very
-death of cattle. The innocent lizard suffered by reason of his
-relationship with the crocodile; the harmless frog and tortoise excited
-a wrath which they had done nothing to merit. Among mammals, the mouse
-is singled out for destruction: although the wolf is a legionary of
-Ahriman, he is more often classed with the “wicked two-legged
-one”—perverse man—than with the evil creation properly so called. In one
-place Ahriman is said to have created “devouring beasts,” but on closer
-examination these devouring beasts proved to be only the harvesting ants
-which were reckoned deadly foes of the agriculturist. Any one who has
-seen how much newly-sown grass seed these favourites of Solomon will
-remove in a shining hour will understand the prejudice, though he will
-not, I hope, share it. Roughly speaking, the diligent, old-fashioned
-gardener who puzzles his pious mind as to why “those things” were ever
-created, is a born Zoroastrian. To tell him with Paul that “every
-creature of God is good” does not comfort him much. Zoroaster’s answer
-is as philosophically complete as it is scientifically weak. Certain
-creatures are noxious to man; a good Creator would not have made
-creatures noxious to men, ergo, such creatures were not made by a good
-Creator. Besides the scientific objection to any hard-and-fast line of
-division between animals, there is another: the pity of it. I wonder
-that some velvet-coated field-mouse, approaching softly on tip-toe as
-Zoroaster lay in his grotto, did not inquire with its appealing eyes:
-“Do you really think that I look as if I were made by the Evil One?” In
-spite of the numerous advantages of a theory which, in a literal sense,
-makes a virtue of necessity (a sad necessity to some of us), the
-theological ban of creatures for no other reason than that they are
-inconvenient to man detracts from the ideal beauty of Zoroastrian faith.
-
-Darwin, in a letter to Asa Gray, the American botanist, said that the
-sufferings of caterpillars and mice made him doubt the existence of “a
-beneficent and omnipotent Creator.” How often does doubt seem more
-religious than belief!
-
-The eschatology of the creatures deemed of darkness is not clear, but I
-believe there is no mention of their Fravashis: it is permissible to
-suppose, therefore, that, all along, they are rather appearances than
-realities: things that cannot feel, though Ahriman feels defeat in their
-destruction. For the rest, though Zoroaster treated wasps or mice much
-as Torquemada treated heretics, he made it no merit to torment them: he
-simply desired their extermination as every fruit-grower or farmer
-desires it to this day.
-
-Students of Zoroastrianism have been mystified by the seeming detachment
-of the dog from the other “good” animals and the separate jurisdiction
-designed for it. In my opinion this arose only from the fact that the
-dog was not a food-providing animal. Hence it could be made penal (by
-religious, not by civil, law, it must be remembered) to kill a dog, and
-it was natural that his body should be disposed of in the same way as a
-man’s. What else could be done with it? It was natural also that since
-his death was inflicted by Ahriman (since it came of itself),
-purification ceremonials should be performed to remove the pollution.
-The religious scope of such ceremonials was like that of reconsecrating
-a church in which suicide or murder has been committed. That the dog was
-highly appreciated, that he was valued as an essential helper in the
-existing conditions of life, is amply proved, but that he was
-“reverenced” more than some other animals—_e.g._, the cow—is open to
-doubt. The dog was recognised as more human which made him more liable
-to err. It was the celebrated chapter on the dog which convinced Sir W.
-Jones that Anquetil Duperron’s translation was a forgery. It should have
-struck him that this was not how a European would have made Zoroaster
-speak about the favoured animal. In the comparisons of canine qualities
-with those of certain human beings, there is more of satire than of
-panegyric. The whole Fargard XIII. has been interpreted as purely
-mystical: the dog symbolising the “will,” a meaning which, according to
-this argument, fits the term “Dog” in all passages of the scriptures of
-Iran. This is a hard saying. More reasonable is the supposition that
-Fargard XIII. formed part of a treatise on animals and got into the
-Vendîdâd by chance. However that may be, the “eight characters” of the
-dog show observation though not reverence: he loves darkness like a
-thief, and at times has been known to be one; he fawns like a slave, he
-is a self-seeker like a courtezan, he eats raw meat like a beast of
-prey. The words relative to his “chasing about the well-born cow” have
-been interpreted to mean that he chased her back home when she had
-strayed, but I seem to have seen dogs chasing about well-born cows from
-no such benevolent motive. Some of the comparisons are neither
-flattering nor critical but descriptive: the dog loves sheep like a
-child, he runs here and there in front, like a child; he dodges in and
-out like a child.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE REAL DOG OF IRAN.
- Louvre.
- (_By permission of Messrs. Chapman & Hall, Ltd._)]
-
-The _jeu d’esprit_ of the “eight characters” is followed by what appears
-to be a serious statement of how to treat the dog which misconducts
-himself. There is no capital punishment, nothing like the stoning of the
-ox which gores a man or woman, in the Bible. If a dog attacks man or
-cattle he is to lose an ear; if he does it a third time his foot is to
-be cut off, or, as Bleeck humanely suggests, he is to be rendered so far
-lame that it is easy to escape from him. The “dumb dog” of vicious
-disposition is to be tied up. If a dog is no longer sane in his mind and
-has become dangerous on that account, you are to try and cure him as you
-would a man, but if this fails, you must chain him up and muzzle him,
-using a sort of wooden pillory which prevents him from biting. This
-passage is curious, because, while it seems to allude plainly to
-hydrophobia, it contains no hint of the worser consequences to man than
-a simple bite.
-
-We find that there were four if not more breeds of dogs, each of which
-was carefully trained for its work. The house-dog, the personal dog
-(which may have been a blood-hound), sheep and herd-dogs are all
-mentioned, but there is no mention of sporting-dogs or of sport in the
-Avesta. The dogs must have been powerful, as they were required to be a
-match for the wolf, “the growing, the flattering, the deadly wolf,”
-which was the dread of every homestead in Iran. There were also “wolves
-with claws” (tigers), but they were comparatively few. The kinship of
-wolf and dog was recognised, and there was an impression that the most
-murderous wolf was the half-breed of a wolf and a bitch. Perhaps the
-wolf of dog-descent came more boldly to the dwelling of man, having no
-instinctive fear of him. It is said, too, that the deadliest kind of dog
-was the dog that had a wolf-mother. Possibly such cross-breeding was
-tried experimentally in the hope of obtaining dogs which could best
-resist the wolf.
-
-If the dog is never represented as a creature of faultless perfection,
-it yet remains an established truth that “dwellings would not stand fast
-on the earth created by Ahura Mazda were there not dogs which pertain to
-the cattle and to the village.” It is the Lord of Creation who says:
-“The dog I have made, O Zarathustra, with his own clothing and his own
-shoes; with keen scent and sharp teeth, faithful to men, as a protector
-to the folds. For I have made the dog, I who am Ahura Mazda!” To attack
-the dog was like an attack on the police. Slitting the ear of the house
-or sheep-dog out of malice, or cutting off his foot, or belabouring him
-so that thieves got at the sheep, were not unfrequent crimes and they
-are dealt with no more severely than they deserve. Who killed a
-house-dog outright, or a sheep-dog or personal dog or well-trained dog,
-was warned that in the next world his soul would go howling worse than a
-wolf in the depths of the forest; shunned by all other souls, growled at
-by the dogs that guard the bridge Chinvat. Eight hundred blows with a
-horse-goad are adjudged to the wretch who so injures a dog that it die.
-To strike or chase a bitch with young brings a dreadful curse. Much is
-said about the proper care of the mother and the puppies. To give a dog
-too hot food or too hard bones is as bad as turning apostate. His right
-food is milk and fat and lean meat. “Of all known creatures that which
-ages soonest is the dog left foodless among people who eat—who seeks
-here and there his food and finds it not.”
-
-As a rule unnamed wild animals may be supposed to have been protected.
-The fox was considered a powerful daeva-scarer, which shows that not
-only in China did the fox seem an “uncanny” beast. In Iran his
-supernatural services made him highly esteemed. There seem to have been
-no cats though so many mice. The later Iran was destined to be a great
-admirer of cats, witness the praise of them by Persian poets, but it is
-not easy to fix the date when they were introduced. Monkeys were known
-and were attributed by a post-Avestic superstition to the union of human
-women and daevas. Vultures were sacred because they devoured good
-Mazdeans. On the whole, not much attention was paid to wild nature, with
-one striking exception: the extraordinary respect for the water-dog,
-beaver or otter. Suddenly the solid utilitarian basis of Zoroastrian
-zoology gives way and we behold a fabric of dreams. We might understand
-it better could we know the early animistic beliefs of Iran, though the
-trend of the Avesta apparently ran _counter_ to old popular credences
-far more than with them. It should be remembered that water was only a
-little less sacred than fire in the Zoroastrian system; the defilement
-of rivers was strictly forbidden. The Udra, or beaver, became the “luck”
-of the rivers: to destroy it would provoke a drought. If it was found
-roaming on the land, the Mazdean was bound to carry it to the nearest
-stream. In later legend, the Udra, even more than the fox, was a
-daeva-foe. But by far its most important characteristic is its mythical
-connexion with the dog. To the question: “What becomes of the aged dog
-when his strength fails him and he dies?” follows the answer: “He goes
-to the dwelling in the water, where he is met by two water-dogs.” These
-are his conductors to the dogs’ paradise. A fair sward beneath the
-waters, cool and fresh in the summer heat, is at least a pleasant idea,
-but when the two water-dogs are described as consisting of one thousand
-male and one thousand female dogs, the myth seems to lose its balance
-which no proper myth ought to do. Myths have the habit of proceeding
-rationally enough in their own orbit. Later commentators reject this
-fantastic interpretation and suppose the verse to mean that the dog-soul
-is received, not by two, but by two thousand water-dogs, which in
-Oriental hyperbole would mean merely “a great many.”
-
-Be this as it may, Udra-murder was a frightful sin, and frightful were
-the penalties attached to it. Besides undergoing the usual blows with a
-horse-goad (to be self inflicted?) the murderer must kill ten thousand
-each of some half-dozen insects and reptiles: this, at least, is how it
-looks, but as a matter of fact the long lists of penalties in the
-Vendîdâd must be taken not as cumulative, but as alternative. This is
-evident, though it is never stated, and it explains many things. A large
-number of the alternative punishments for beaver-killing take the form
-of offerings to the priests. Arms, whips, grindstones, handmills,
-house-matting, wine and food, a team of oxen, cattle both small and
-large, _a suitable wife_—the young sister of the sinner—these are among
-the specified offerings. The culprit may also build a bridge, or breed
-fourteen dogs as an act of expiation; in short, he may do any kind of
-meritorious deed, but something he must do, or it will be the worse for
-him in the world to come.
-
-The Vendîdâd was not a code of criminal law enforced by the civil power,
-but an adjugation of penances for the atonement of sin. This was not
-understood at first, which caused the selection of punishments to appear
-more extravagant than it really is. For the most part the penances were
-active good works or things which were reckoned as such. Charity and
-alms-giving were always contemplated among the means of grace, and if
-they were not dwelt upon more continually, it was because there existed
-nothing comparable to modern destitution. Moreover, it was understood
-better than in other parts of the East that not every beggar was a
-saint: too often he was a lazy fellow who had shirked the common
-obligation of labour. The repetition of certain prayers was another
-practice recommended to the repentant sinner. But no good work or pious
-exercise was of any avail unless accompanied by sincere sorrow for
-having done wrong. The Law opened the door of grace, but to obtain it
-the heart must have become changed. God forgives those who truly desire
-His forgiveness. It is impossible to doubt that the spurious Mazdeism
-which got into Europe, distorted though it was, yet took with it the two
-great Mazdean doctrines of repentance and the remission of sin. Great
-ideas conquer, and it was by these two doctrines that Mithraism so
-nearly conquered the Western world—not by its unlovely rites.
-
-On one or two points the human eschatology of Zoroastrianism is
-associated with dogs. A dog is brought into the presence of the dying
-man. This has been explained by reference to the dogs of Yama, the Vedic
-lord of death, and the European superstition about the howling of a dog
-being a death-portent is explained in the same way, but in both
-instances the immediate cause seems nearer at hand. An Indian officer
-once remarked to me that any one who had heard the true “death-howl” of
-a dog would never need any recondite reason for the uncomfortable
-feeling which it arouses. As regards the Zoroastrian dog, the immediate
-cause of the belief that he drives away evil spirits lies in the fact
-that he drives away thieves and prowlers in the night. Death being a
-pollution as the work of Ahriman, evil spirits beset the dying, but they
-flee at the sight of the dog, created by Ahura Mazda to protect man. The
-dead wander for three days near the tenantless body: then they go to the
-bridge Chinvat, where the division takes place between the good and the
-wicked. The bridge is guarded by dogs, who drive away all things evil
-from the path of the righteous, but do nothing to prevent bad spirits
-from tripping up sinners so that they fall into the pit.
-
-The good go into light, sinners into darkness, where Ahriman, “whose
-religion is evil,” mocks them, saying: “Why did you eat the bread of
-Ahura Mazda and do my work? and thought not of your own Creator but
-practised my will?” Nothing is told of the punishment of Ahriman—the
-doom of Evil is to be Evil—but in the end he will be utterly
-extinguished. Through time, _but not_ through eternity the wicked remain
-in his power. In the Khordah Avesta it is said that God, after purifying
-all the obedient, will purify the wicked out of hell. In the words of a
-living Parsi writer: “The reign of terror, at the end of the stipulated
-time, vanishes into oblivion, and its chief factor, Ahriman, goes to
-meet his doom of total extinction, whilst Ahura Mazda, the Omnipotent
-Victor, remains the Great All in All.”
-
-The Zoroastrian was as free as Socrates himself from the materialism
-which looks upon the body after death as if it were still the being that
-tenanted it. Some kind of renewed body the dead will have: meanwhile,
-this is not they! The hope of immortality was so firm that it was
-thought an actual sin to give way to excessive mourning: the wailing and
-keening of the Jews seem to be here condemned, though they are not
-mentioned, there being no direct allusion to the religions of other
-peoples in the Avesta. There is a river of human tears which hinders
-souls on their way to beatitude: the dead would fain that the living
-check their tears which swell the river and make it hard to cross over
-in safety. The same idea is to be found in one of the most beautiful of
-Scandinavian folk-songs.
-
-The small work known as the Book of Ardâ Vîrâf is a document of
-priceless worth to the student of Mazdean eschatology, and it is also of
-the greatest interest in its relation to ideas about animals. If printed
-in a convenient form, every humane person would carry it in his pocket.
-Like the vision of the Seer of Patmos this work is purely religious; it
-attempts no criticism of life and man such as that embodied in the
-“Divina Commedia,” but in spite of this difference in aim, there is an
-astonishing resemblance between its general plan and that of the poem of
-Dante. Without going into this subject, I may say that I cannot feel
-convinced that with the geographical, astronomical, and other knowledge
-of the East which is believed to have reached Dante by means of
-conversations with merchants, pilgrims and perhaps craftsmen (for that
-Italian artists worked in India at an early date the Madonna-like groups
-in many a remote Hindu temple bear almost certain testimony), there did
-not come to him also some report of the travels of the Persian visitant
-to the next world.
-
-The author of the Persian vision was a pious Mazdean whose whole desire
-was to revive religious feeling amid growing indifference. He is
-supposed to have lived not earlier than 500, and not later than 700 A.D.
-The former is the likelier date. Had the assault of Islam begun, the
-book must have borne traces of the struggle with invaders who threatened
-to annihilate the faith. The author states that the work was intended as
-an antidote in the first place to atheism and in the second to “the
-religions of many kinds” that were springing up. This probably contains
-a reference to Christian sects, but it is not the way that allusion
-would have been made to propagandists with a sword in their hands.
-Christian sects managed to recover from the first persecution in 344
-A.D., after which they were more often than not tolerated, though the
-Zoroastrian priesthood feared a Church that possessed an organisation so
-much like their own. They were accused, moreover, as at Rome, of being
-anti-national: everywhere the sentiment against the Christians took a
-form closely resembling the anti-Semiticism of our days. Such
-accusations can hardly fail to create, to some extent, the thing they
-predicate, and it is no great wonder if in the end the Persian
-Christians received the Moslem invaders with favour. Though the essence
-of Mazdeism is peace to men of good-will, it is to be feared that the
-Zoroastrian priests (like others) were less tolerant than their creed,
-and that the harassing of the Christians generally originated with them.
-They are known to have counselled this policy to Homizd IV., who gave
-them the memorable answer that his royal throne could not stand on its
-front legs alone, but needed the support of the Christians and other
-sectaries as well as of the faithful. It was one of the wisest sayings
-that ever fell from the lips of a king and more Mazdean than all the
-bigotry of Zoroastrian clericalism.
-
-The author of Ardâ Vîrâf tried the perfectly legitimate means of
-persuasion in rallying his countrymen to their own religion. He tells
-the story of how, in an age of doubt, it was agreed that the best thing
-would be to send some one into the next world to see if Mazdeism were,
-indeed, the true religion. Lots fell on a very virtuous man named Ardâ
-Vîrâf, who was commissioned to make the journey in a trance-state
-produced by the administration of a narcotic. Even now, in India,
-children and others are given narcotics, sometimes of a dangerous sort,
-in order to obtain knowledge which is supposed to come to them whilst
-insensible. To a Mazdean the ordeal would be particularly terrible,
-because sleep, like death, was created by Ahriman. The calm fortitude
-with which Ardâ Vîrâf submits, while his family break into loud weeping,
-almost reminds one of the bearing of Socrates on the eve of a similar
-departure but one with no return. “It is the custom that I should pray
-to the departed souls and make a will,” he says; “when I have done that,
-give me the narcotic.” His body was treated as though dead, being kept
-at the proper distance from fire and other sacred things, but priests
-stayed near it night and day, praying and reading the Scriptures, that
-the powers of ill might not prevail.
-
-At the end of seven days the wandering spirit of Ardâ Vîrâf re-entered
-his inanimate form, and after he had taken food and water and wine he
-called for a ready writer, to whom he dictated the tale of what he had
-seen. Guided by Srosh the Pious and Ataro the Angel (Virgil and
-Beatrice) the traveller visited heaven and hell. At the outset he saw
-the meeting of a righteous soul and its Fravashi. This soul crosses the
-Chinvat bridge in safety, and on the other side passes into an
-atmosphere laden with an ineffably sweet perfume which emanates from the
-direction of the presence of God. Here it meets a damsel more wondrously
-fair than aught it has beheld in the land of the living. Enraptured at
-the sight, it asks her name and receives the answer: “I am thine own
-good actions.” Every good deed embellishes the human soul’s archetype,
-every evil deed mars and stains it with the hideousness of sin. This
-poetic and beautiful conception was not due to the author of Ardâ Vîrâf:
-it is taken from the venerable pages of the Avesta itself.
-
-In the abode of Punishment the most impressive penalties are those
-undergone by the souls which have tortured helpless infants or dumb
-animals. The mother who feeds another’s child from greed and starves her
-own, is seen digging into an iron hill with her breasts while the cry of
-her child for food comes ever from the other side of the hill, “but the
-infant comes not to the mother nor the mother to the infant.” Here the
-supreme anguish is mental: it is caused by the awakening of that
-maternal instinct which the woman stifled on earth. Has the _Inferno_
-any thought so luminously subtle as this? The woman-soul will never
-reach her child “till the renewal of the world.” Till the renewal of the
-world! Across the hell-fog penetrates the final hope!
-
-The unfaithful wife who destroys the fruit of her illicit love suffers a
-horrible punishment. It is strange that if we wish to find an analogy to
-these severe judgments on offences against infancy, we must go to a
-small tribe of Dravidian mountaineers in the Nilgiri hills, among whose
-folk-songs is one which describes a vision of heaven and hell. In this a
-woman is shown who is condemned to see her own child continually die,
-because she refused help to a stranger’s child, saying: “It is not
-mine!”
-
-Those who treated their beasts cruelly, who overworked them, overloaded
-them, gave them insufficient food, continued to work them when they
-suffered from sores caused by leanness instead of trying to cure the
-sores, are seen by Ardâ Vîrâf hung up head downwards while a ceaseless
-rain of stones falls on their backs. Those who wantonly killed animals
-have a knife driven ceaselessly into their hearts. Those who muzzled the
-ox which ploughed the furrows are dashed under the feet of cattle. The
-same punishment falls to those who forget to give water to the oxen in
-the heat of the day or who worked them when hungry and thirsty. Demons
-like dogs constantly tear the man who kept back food from
-shepherds’-dogs and house-dogs or who beat or killed them: he offers
-bread to the dogs, but they eat it not and only tear the more.
-
-Ardâ Vîrâf tells a story which belongs to the cycle of “Sultan Murad,”
-immortalised by Victor Hugo. A certain lazy man named Davânôs, who never
-did any other thing of good during all the years when he governed many
-provinces, once cast a bundle of grass with his right foot to within the
-reach of a ploughing-ox. Hence his right foot is exempted from torment
-while the rest of his body is gnawed by noxious creatures.
-
-It is easy to imagine that the realistic picture of heaven and hell by a
-poet of no little power produced the deepest effect on the minds of
-people, who for the most part took it to be literally true. No Oriental
-work ever became more popular or was more widely read and translated.
-People still living can remember the time when it was the habit of the
-Parsis at Bombay to have public readings of Ardâ Vîrâf, on which
-occasions the audience, especially the feminine part of it, broke into
-violent sobbing from the excitement caused by the description of the
-punishment of the wicked. The Parsis have abandoned now the theory that
-the book is other than a work of imagination, but it may be hoped that
-they will not cease to regard it as a cherished legacy from their
-fathers and a precious bequest to their children.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- VIII
-
- A RELIGION OF RUTH
-
-
-AN Englishman who went to see a Hindu saint was deterred from entering
-the cave where the holy man lived by the spectacle of numerous rats. The
-hermit, observing his hesitation, inquired what was the matter? “Don’t
-you see them?” answered his visitor. “Yes,” was the brief reply. “Why
-don’t you kill them?” asked the Englishman. “Why should I kill them?”
-said the native of the land. Finding the whole onus of the discussion
-thrown on his shoulders, the English traveller felt that it would be
-difficult with his limited knowledge of the language to express a
-European’s ideas about rats. He thought to sum up the case in one
-sentence: “We people kill them.” To which the saint answered: “We people
-don’t kill them.”
-
-In another country, but still among a race which has inherited the habit
-of looking at questions between man and animals not exclusively from the
-man’s point of view, a learned professor proposed to an old gardener at
-Yezd that they should dig up an ant-hill to ascertain if the local
-prejudice were true which insisted that inside each ant-hill there
-lodged two scorpions. The old Persian declined to be a party to any such
-proceeding. “As long as the scorpions stay inside,” he said with
-decision, “we have no right to molest them and to do so would bring
-ill-luck.”
-
-These anecdotes show, amusingly and convincingly, the wall of
-demarcation between Eastern and Western thought by which the son of the
-West is apt to find his passage barred. They serve my purpose in quoting
-them the better because they are not connected with the religious sect
-whose precepts I am going to sketch. They illustrate what I believe to
-be true, namely, that this sect and Buddhism itself would not have made
-their way in so wonderful a manner, seemingly almost without effort, had
-they not found the ground prepared by a racial tendency to fly to the
-doctrine of _Ahimsa_, or “non-killing,” which forms part of their
-systems.
-
-No religion prevails unless it appeals to some chord, if not of the
-human heart everywhere, at least of the particular human hearts to which
-it is directed. In the West a religion based on Vegetarianism would not
-have a chance. Not that there exists no trace of the life-preserving
-instinct among Western peoples—far from that. All nice children have it
-and all saints of the type of him of Assisi. Other people have it who
-are neither children, nor saints, nor yet lunatics (“though by your
-smiling you seem to say so”). I know an old hero of the Siege of Delhi
-who to this day would stoop to lift a worm from his path. But the
-sentiment, which in the West is rather a secret thing, forming a sort of
-freemasonry among those who feel it, asserts its sway in the East in the
-broad light of day. No one there would mind giving the fullest publicity
-to his opinion that the scorpion has as good a right to live undisturbed
-in his domestic ant-hill as you have in your suburban villa.
-
-Long before the Jainas made _Ahimsa_ a gateway to perfection,
-innumerable Asiatics practised and even preached the very same rule. It
-was the bond of union between all the religious teachers and ascetics
-who constituted a well-defined feature in Indian life from remote if not
-from the earliest antiquity. The founders of Jainism and of Buddhism,
-too, were Gurus like the rest, only they possessed an intensified
-magnetic influence and, at least in Buddha’s case, an unique genius.
-Every Eastern religion has been taught by a Guru, not excepting the most
-divine of them all.[4]
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- “It is stated of the Divine Founder of the Christian religion that
- without a parable spoke He not to the people. Christ, in fact, acted
- and taught as an _Oriental Guru_, a character which none of the
- European writers of Christ’s life has invested Him with” (Rev. J.
- Long: v. “Oriental Proverbs” in the Report of the Proceedings of the
- Second Congress of Orientalists).
-
-In the occurrence of a new religious evolution much depends on the
-individual, but much also on the fulness of time. When Buddhism and
-Jainism arose, the psychological moment was come for a change or
-modification in the current faith. To some degree, both were a revolt
-against Sacerdotalism. Men were told that they could work out their
-salvation without priestly aid or intervention. The new teachers, though
-each springing from the class of the feudal nobility, won to their side
-the surging wave of the only kind of democratic yearning which, till
-now, Asia has known—the yearning for religious equality. Professor
-Hermann Jacobi (the foremost authority on Jainism, to whom all who study
-the subject owe an unbounded debt) suggests that there was a certain
-friction between the highly meritorious of the noble and the priestly
-castes because the priests were inclined to look down on the layman
-saint. To this category belonged Sakya Muni, who was the younger son of
-a prince, or, as we should say, a feudal lord, and who renounced rank
-and riches to become a recluse. The same family history is told of
-Mahavira, whom the Jainas claim to be their founder. For a long time
-Europeans believed the two religions to have but one source, and Jainism
-was dismissed as a Buddhist sect. The Jainas, however, always strongly
-held that they had a founder of their own, namely, Mahavira, and they
-even declared that Buddha was not his master but his disciple. After
-much research, Professor Jacobi decided the case in their favour by
-assigning to them a separate origin. Both Sakya Muni and Mahavira are
-generally believed to have flourished in the sixth century B.C.
-
-The confusion of the Jainas with the Buddhists and even with the
-Brahmans has made it difficult to reckon their present numbers: in the
-census of 1901 they are estimated at 1,334,138, chiefly living in the
-Bombay Presidency, but this does not tell us their real number. Jainas
-are to be found almost everywhere in Upper India, in the West and South
-and along the Ganges. They inhabit the towns more than the country. In
-treating ancient Indian religions the living document is always round
-the corner, ready to be called into the witness-box, and the Jainas of
-to-day can give a good account of themselves. Every one has a good word
-for them; a friend of mine, than whom few know India better, describes
-them thus: “A tall, fair, handsome, good and humble lot they are and
-terribly bullied they are by their more bellicose fellow-countrymen, who
-all look on Jainas as made for them to pilfer, but the Jainas never turn
-on their persecutors.” In spite of their meekness, they are good men of
-business, which is proved by their remarkable success in commerce.
-Perhaps it is not such bad policy to be peaceful, and helpful, and
-honest as a cynical century supposes.
-
-The Jainas say of Mahavira that he was one of a long line of holy
-ascetics twenty-four of whom are venerated in their temples under the
-name of Tirthakaras or Jinas, “Conquerors” in the sense of having
-conquered the flesh. Needless to point out that the founders of great
-religious systems invariably accept this principle of evolution: they
-complete what others began, and in due time a new manifestation will
-arrive either in the form of a more perfect revelation of themselves or
-in that of a fore-destined successor. The Buddhists now await Matreya,
-or “the Buddha of kindness.” The Jainas have not added to their
-twenty-four glorified beings, but there is nothing to prevent them from
-doing so. To these specimens of perfected humanity they have raised some
-of the most glorious temples ever lifted by the hand of man towards
-heaven. Tier on tier mount the exquisitely beautiful towers of the Jaina
-cathedrals in the most lonely part of the Muklagerri hills. They seem
-like the Parsifal music turned into stone: an allegory of the ascent of
-the soul from corruption to incorruption, from change to permanency. The
-desire to worship something finds a vent in the reverence paid to the
-Tirthakaras, but the Jaina religion admits neither relics nor the
-iteration of prayers. The building of splendid shrines and of refuges
-for man and beast are the particular means of grace open to the Jaina
-who cannot comply in all respects with the exacting demands of his
-scriptures, which, were they literally fulfilled, would leave no one on
-the world but ascetics. The wealthy Jaina is only too glad to avail
-himself of the chance of acquiring some merit, however far it must fall
-short of the highest. Besides this, in moments of religious fervour
-temple-building becomes a frenzy: whole races are swept along by the
-blind impulse to incarnate their spiritual cravings in spires or pagodas
-or minarets pointing to the sky—the eternal symbol. The greatest of
-Jaina temples mark the epoch of some such wave of spiritual emotion.
-
-The Jaina scriptures, which were first collected from aural report and
-written down by a learned man in the sixth century A.D., are really a
-Rule of Discipline for monks, and not a guide for the mass of mankind.
-If we could imagine the only Christian Scripture being the immortal book
-of Thomas à Kempis, we should form the idea of a very similar state of
-things. It is surprising not how little but how much of this rigid rule
-is followed by every Jaina to this day, be he monk or layman. The
-vegetarian principle involved in _Ahimsa_ is observed rigorously by
-all—clearly with no bad effect on health after a trial of about
-twenty-four centuries, for the Jainas’ physique is excellent, and they
-are less subject to disease than the other communities. They strain and
-boil water before drinking, and whatever may be said of the motive, the
-practice must be highly commended. They are also often to be seen
-wearing a mouth-cloth to prevent them from swallowing flies, and they
-carry little brooms with which they sweep insects out of their path. The
-hospitals for sick animals begin to be better managed than formerly,
-when they incurred much censure as mere conglomerations of hopeless
-suffering to relieve which practical means were not taken. A folly
-adopted by the more fanatical Jainas at the time of their origin was
-that of going “sky-clad,” which makes it probable that they were the
-gymnosophists known to the Greeks. They saw well later to limit this
-practice to certain times and occasions or to abandon it for the far
-more pleasant one of wearing white garments. Buddha warned his followers
-against the “sky-clad” aberration. He disagreed with the Jainas on a
-more vital point in the view he took of penance and self-inflicted
-torture. It shows the high intellectuality of the man that towards the
-end of his life he pronounced penance, though he had gone through much
-of it himself, to be vanity of vanities. The Jainas took the opposite
-view: “Subdue the body just as fire consumes old wood.” They hold that
-merit is bound up with a certain definite and tangible thing: the
-Buddhist, more philosophically, makes it consist in intention. This is
-the chief doctrinal difference between Jaina and Buddhist, and though
-each is bound to charity and the Jaina is particularly enjoined by his
-scriptures not to turn other people’s religion into ridicule, it has to
-be confessed that in their frequent disputes they spare no pains and
-neglect no arts of Socratic reasoning to reduce each other’s theories to
-an absurdity. Irony is a weapon always used in Indian religious
-discussion.
-
-Mahavira himself “fulfilled the law” by allowing gnats, flies, and other
-things to bite him and crawl over him for four months without ever once
-losing his equanimity. It is told that he met all sorts of pleasant or
-unpleasant events with an even mind whether they arose from divine
-powers, men, or animals. The Jainas did not deny that there were divine
-powers: there might be any number of them, and the influence they
-wielded for good or for ill (I think especially for ill) was not
-inconsiderable. Only they were not morally admirable like a man
-victorious through suffering. The greater willingness of the Jainas to
-admit gods into the wheel of being, and even to allow some homage to be
-paid to them, was one reason why they clashed less with the Brahmans.
-After the subsidence of Buddhism the Jainas managed to go on existing,
-somewhat despised and annoyed, but tolerated.
-
-While both Buddhists and Jainas place the prohibition to take life at
-the head of their law, its application is infinitely more thoroughgoing
-among the Jainas, who also attach to it ideas which have no place in
-Buddhist metaphysics. From the Jaina position, it seems to imply a
-tendency to primitive animism, though it is hard to say whether this
-comes from a real process of retrogression or simply from the Indo-Aryan
-desire for a synthesis—the more easily attained the more you assume. It
-is startling to hear that in the last census over eight millions were
-returned as animists—it proves that the old credences die hard. The
-Jainas took into their soul-world fire, water, wind, shooting plants and
-germinating seeds. The disciplinary results must have been inconvenient,
-but a religion was never less popular because it put its devotees to
-inconvenience. Those who still clung to animistic beliefs were already
-prepared to see a soul in the flickering fire, the rushing water, the
-growing blade. We all have odds and ends of animism; did not Coventry
-Patmore say: “There is something human in a tree?” With more detail the
-Jaina observes that trees and plants are born and grow old; they
-distinguish the seasons, they turn towards the sun, the seeds grow up:
-how, then, shall we deny all knowledge to them? “The asoka buds and
-blossoms when touched by a fair girl’s feet.” Can we help recalling the
-familiar lines in the “Sensitive Plant?”—
-
- “I doubt not the flowers of that garden sweet
- Rejoiced in the sound of her gentle feet;
- I doubt not they felt the spirit that came
- From her glowing fingers thro’ all their frame.”
-
-Now, Science, which is on the way to becoming very kind to man’s early
-beliefs, comes forward in the person of Mr. Francis Darwin to tell us
-that plants _have_ “mind” and “intelligence,” especially the hop and the
-bryony. All fairy-tales will come true if we wait long enough.
-
-Once, and once only, in Jaina writings I have noticed it given as a
-distinct reason for sparing plants and trees, that they may contain the
-transmigrated soul of a man. Even in the case of animals the doctrine of
-transmigration is rarely adduced as the reason for not killing them,
-though it is fully accepted by Jainas in common with all the Indian
-sects sprung from Brahmanism by which it was started. Coming to the
-Indian views of animals from those which antiquity represented as the
-preaching of Pythagoras, we expect to see this argument put forward at
-every turn, but it is not. In Jaina writings the incentive is humanity:
-to do to others as we would be done by. It is true that as an aid to
-this incentive, the cruel are threatened with the most awful
-punishments. In Indian sacred writings one is wearied by the nice
-balance constantly drawn between every deed and its consequences to the
-doer for a subsequent millennium. In mediæval monkish legends we find
-exactly the same device for keeping the adept in the paths of virtue,
-but wherever we find it, we sigh for the spontaneous emotion of pity of
-the Good Samaritan who never reflected “If I do not get off my ass and
-go to help that Jew, how very bad it will be for my Karman!”
-
-We ought not to forget in this connexion that rewards and punishments
-have not the same meaning to the Indian as to us: they are not
-extraneous prizes or penalties, but the working out of a mathematical
-problem which we both set and solve for ourselves. It is utterly
-impossible to escape from the consequences of our evil acts: they are
-debts which must be paid, though we may set about performing good acts
-which will make our future happiness exceed our future misery in time
-and extent. The highest good comes of itself, automatically, to him who
-merits it, as is illustrated with great beauty in the Jaina story of the
-White Lotus. This flower, the symbol of perfection, bloomed in the
-centre of a pool and was descried by many who made violent efforts to
-reach it, but they were all set fast in the mud. Then came a holy
-ascetic who stood motionless on the bank. “O white Lotus, fly up!” he
-said, and the White Lotus flew to his breast. Even among Indian sects
-which all abound in this kind of composition the Jainas are remarkable
-for their wealth of moral tales and apothegms. As is well known, they
-possess a parable called “The Three Merchants,” closely resembling the
-parable of the Talents as told by Matthew and Luke, and still more
-exactly agreeing with the version given in the so-called “Gospel
-according to the Hebrews.”
-
-The theory of Karman suggests several modern scientific speculations
-such as the idea that the brain retains an ineffaceable print of every
-impression received by it, and again, the extreme view of heredity which
-makes the individual the moral and physical slave of former generations.
-It is a theory which has the advantage of disposing of many riddles.
-Different sects have slightly varying opinions about the nature of the
-Karman: the Jainas see in this receptacle of good and evil deeds a
-material, though supersensual, reality with a physical basis. Each
-individual consists of five parts: the visible body, the vital energy
-thought to consist of fire, or, as we might say, of electricity, the
-Karman and two subliminal selves which appear to be only latent in most
-persons, but by which, when called into activity, the individual can
-transform himself, travel to distances and do other unusual things. That
-each man is provided with a wraith or double is an old and widely-spread
-belief; but in Western lore the double does not seem to be commanded by
-its pair: it rather moves like an unconscious, wandering photograph of
-him.
-
-The Jainas have the same word for the soul and for life: _gîva_, and
-this name they bestow on the whole range of things which they consider
-as living: the elements, seeds, plants, animals, men, gods. One would
-think that the sense of personal identity would become vague in the
-contemplation of voyages over so vast a sea of being, but, on the
-contrary, this identity is the one thing about which the individual
-seems perfectly sure. We have frequently such utterances as: “My own
-self is the doer and the undoer of misery and happiness; my own self is
-friend and foe.” A sort of void seems spread round the individual which
-even family affection, very strong though it has always been in India,
-is powerless to bridge. A lovely testimony to this affection, and at the
-same time an avowal of its unavailingness, is to be found in the one
-single exception to the Jaina law that the wholly virtuous man must
-desire nothing, not even Nirvana must he desire, much less earthly love
-or friendship. But he may desire to take upon him the painful illness of
-one of his dear kindred. It is added sadly, however, that never has such
-a desire been fulfilled, for one man cannot take upon him the pains of
-another, neither can he feel what another feels.
-
-“Man is born alone, he dies alone, he falls alone, he rises alone. His
-passions, consciousness, intellect, perceptions and impressions belong
-to him exclusively. Another cannot save him or help him. He grows old,
-his hair turns white, even this dear body he must relinquish—none can
-stay the hour.”
-
-Again it is written:—
-
-“Man! thou art thy own friend, why wishest thou for a friend beyond
-thyself?”
-
-The isolation of the soul with its paramount importance to its owner
-(that is to say, to itself) makes it obligatory to pursue its interests
-even at the expense of the most sacred affections. The Pagan, the Jew,
-the Moslem could not have been brought to yield assent to this doctrine,
-but it meets us continually in Catholic hagiology; for instance, St.
-François de Sales told Madame de Chantal that she ought, if needful, to
-walk into the cloister over the dead body of her son. So in a Jaina
-story, father, mother, wife, child, sister, brother try in vain to wrest
-a holy young man from his resolve to leave them. In vain the old people
-say: “We will do all the work if you will only come home; come, child!
-We will pay your debts; you need not stay longer than you like—only come
-home!” The quite admirable young man (who sets one furiously wishing for
-a stout birch rod) proceeds on his way unmoved. But it is remarked, “At
-such appeals the weak break down like old, worn-out oxen going up hill.”
-We prefer the weak.
-
-Who was the first anchorite? Perhaps in very early states of society a
-few individuals got lost in the mountain or forest, where they lived on
-fruits and nuts, and then, after a long time, some of them were
-re-discovered, and, because they seemed so strange and mysterious after
-their long seclusion, they were credited with supernatural gifts.
-Animals do not go away alone except in the rare case of being seized
-with mania, or in the universal case of feeling the approach of death.
-The origin of hermits cannot, therefore, be explained by analogy with
-animals.
-
-One can conceive that a hermit’s life may have great attractions, but
-scarcely that of a Jaina hermit, who is expected to employ his leisure
-in the most painful mortification of the flesh. Though other-worldly
-advantages form the great object which spurs men to choose such a lot we
-must not forget that this sort of life is held to confer powers which
-are, by no means, other-worldly. By it the Brahman becomes superior to
-caste, being incapable of pollution: if he wished he could drink after
-the most miserable Western had touched the cup.
-
-The theory of asceticism is very much alike everywhere, and the
-extraordinary faculties claimed by the Jainas for their holy men are the
-portion, more or less, of the Indian holy man in general. These
-faculties may be briefly described as an abnormal development of the
-subliminal self, but that is not an adequate account of the vastness of
-their range. One feels often inclined to ask—without granting revelation
-or, indeed, the existence of an omniscient being who could give it—_how_
-does the Buddhist or Jaina acquire perfect certainty that he knows all
-about his own and man’s destiny? The question of authority is of primary
-importance in all religions: in what way does Buddhist or Jaina solve
-it? It is evident that scepticism based on this very ground does
-sometimes harass the soul of the Jaina novice: “The weak,” we are told,
-“when bitten by a snarling dog or annoyed by flies and gnats, will begin
-to say: ‘_I have not seen the next world, all may end with death._’” It
-startles one to hear from the mouth of the devil’s advocate in an
-ancient Eastern homily a cry so modern, so Western:—
-
- “Death means heaven, he longs to receive it,
- But what shall I do if I don’t believe it?”[5]
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- “Verses written in India,” p. 13.
-
-Sir Alfred Lyall’s questioner found none to answer him, but the Jaina
-has an answer which, if accepted, must prove entirely satisfactory. The
-superlatively virtuous individual possesses an effortless certainty
-about the secrets of life. In a state superinduced by means which,
-though arduous, are at the disposal of all, the soul can view itself,
-read its history, past, present and to come, know the souls of others,
-remember what happened in former births, understand the heavenly bodies
-and the universe. Here is nothing miraculous: a veil is lifted, and
-hidden things become plain. It is as if a man who had cataract in both
-eyes underwent a successful operation—after which he sees.
-
-The supersensual perception of Jaina, or Joghi, or Guru is much akin to
-the “infused knowledge” ascribed to the saints of the Thebaid. He
-knows—because he knows. By the devout, information derived from these
-persons is accepted as readily as we should accept information about
-radium from a qualified scientific man. The most confident of all that
-the information is true is he who gives it: fraud must be dismissed
-finally as the key to any such phenomena.
-
-The Indian mind has grasped a great idea in referring what we call
-spirit to fixed laws no less than what we call matter. But in spirit it
-sees a force infinitely exceeding the force of matter. “The holy monk,”
-say the Jaina scriptures, “might reduce millions to ashes by the fire of
-his wrath.” Besides such tremendous powers as these he has all the minor
-accomplishments of the spiritualist or hypnotist: thought-reading,
-levitation, clairvoyance, &c., and he can always tame wild beasts. He is
-under strict obligations to use his powers with discretion. It is not
-right to make profit out of them: that man is anathema who lives by
-divination from dreams, diagrams, sticks, bodily changes, the cries of
-animals. The Jainas denounce magic not less strongly than the other
-religious teachers of the East. This is interesting because the reasons
-are lacking which are commonly held to explain the world-wide prejudice
-against magic: the Jainas do not attribute it to the agency of evil
-spirits, nor can their dislike of it be attributed to the professional
-jealousy of priests in regard to rival thaumaturgists. For the Jaina the
-power of magic-working lies in every one, and those who have developed
-their other spiritual powers have also this one at their command, but to
-avail themselves of it is an enormous sin. There is a weird story
-showing what infamies a magic-working “ascetic” may perpetrate. A monk
-carried off, by magical arts, all the women he met, till the king of
-that country trapped him in a hollow tree and had him put to death. The
-women were set free and returned to their husbands, except one, who
-refused to go back because she had fallen desperately in love with her
-seducer. A very wise man suggested that the monk’s bones should be
-pounded and mixed with milk, and then given to the woman to drink: this
-was done and she was cured of her passion.
-
-Over the whole East, the report that some one was working miracles, even
-the most beneficent, raised both suspicion and jealousy. This was why
-secrecy was recommended about all such acts.
-
-How far the belief in the extraordinary gifts of the ascetic rests on
-hallucination, and how far men in an artificially created abnormal
-condition can do things of which hypnotic manifestations are but the
-outer edge, it is not my purpose to inquire. The Jaina monks are said
-sometimes to fast for four days, and no doubt the stimulus of starvation
-(especially when the brain has not been weakened by long disease),
-produces an ecstatic state which men have everywhere supposed to
-indicate religious perfection. This may be observed even in birds, which
-from some difficulty in swallowing, die of starvation: I had a canary
-that sang for days before it died a sweet incessant song, the like of
-which I never heard: it seemed not earthly.
-
-The best side in Eastern religions is not their thaumaturgy but the
-steady ethical tendency which pushes itself up out of the jungle of
-extravagance and self-delusion. Though we may not have much sympathy
-with the profession of a “houseless” saint, it is impossible to deny the
-moral elevation of such a picture of him as is drawn in the Jaina
-conversion story of “The True Sacrifice.” A holy man, born in the
-highest Brahmanical caste, but who had found wisdom in Jaina vows, went
-on a long journey and walked and walked till he came to Benares, where
-he found a very learned Brahman who was deeply versed in astronomy and
-in the Vedas. When the “Houseless” arrived, the priest was about to
-offer up sacrifice, and perhaps because he did not wish to be disturbed
-at such a moment, he told him rudely to go away—he would have no beggars
-there. The holy man was not angry; he had not come to extort food or
-water, but from the pure desire to save souls. He quietly told the
-priest that he was ignorant of the essence of the Vedas, of the true
-meaning of sacrifice, of the government of the heavenly bodies. There
-must have been a peculiar effluence of sanctity flowing from the
-“Houseless” as the priest took his rebukes with meekness, and merely
-asked for enlightenment. Then the seer delivered his message. It is not
-the tonsure that makes the priest or repetition of the sacred syllable
-_om_ that makes the saint. It is not by dwelling in woods or by wearing
-clothes of bark or grass that salvation may be reached. Equanimity,
-chastity, knowledge, and penance are the ways to holiness. His actions
-alone colour a man’s soul: as his works are, so is he. Persuaded of the
-truth, the priest addressed the “Houseless” as the truest of
-sacrificers, the most learned of all who know the Vedas, the inspired
-exponent of Brahmanhood, and begged him to accept his alms. But the
-mendicant refused: he only conjured the priest out of pity for his own
-soul to join the order of the “Houseless.” After having been rightly
-schooled in Jaina precepts, the Brahman followed his advice, and in due
-time he became a very great saint like his instructor.
-
-As the Jaina scriptures are in effect a manual of discipline for monks,
-it is natural that they should be severe on womankind. Not that a
-woman’s soul is worth less than a man’s or, rather, since spirit is
-sexless, the distinction does not exist. A woman may be as good a saint
-as a man; a nun may be as meritorious as a monk. The identity of
-mysticism independent of creed was never more apparent than in the
-beautiful saying of a Jaina nun: “As a bird dislikes the cage, so do I
-dislike the world,” which might have been uttered by any of the
-self-consumed spirits of the Latin Church from St. Teresa downwards. I
-have never come across an allusion to being born again as a woman as a
-punishment. But though the fullest potentiality of merit is allowed to
-woman in the abstract, the Eternal Feminine is looked upon in the
-concrete as man’s worst snare. “Women are the greatest temptation in the
-world.” The Jaina books are Counsels of Perfection and not a Decalogue
-framed for common humanity: they give one the idea of being intended for
-preternaturally good people, and never more so than in the manner in
-which they treat the dreadful snares and temptations for which women are
-answerable: instead of a Venusberg, we are shown—the domestic hearth!
-The story in question might be called “The Woes of the Model Husband!” A
-girl who vowed that she would do anything rather than be parted from the
-dear object of her affections, has no sooner settled the matter once for
-all by marriage than she begins to scold and trample on the poor man’s
-head. Her spouse is sent on a thousand errands, not one moment can he
-call his own. Countless are the lady’s wants and her commands keep pace
-with them: “Do look for the bodkin; go and get some fruit; bring wood to
-cook the vegetables; why don’t you come and rub my back instead of
-standing there doing nothing? Are my clothes all right? Where is the
-scent-bottle? I want the hair-dresser. Where is my basket to put my
-things in? And my trinkets? There, I want my shoes and my umbrella.
-Bring me my comb and the ribbon to tie up my hair. Get the looking-glass
-and a tooth-brush. I must have a needle and thread. You really ought to
-look after the stores, the rainy season will be here in no time.” These
-and many more are the young wife’s behests, the appalling list of which
-might well intimidate those about to marry, but there is worse to come.
-When “the joy of their lives, the crown of their wedded bliss” arrives
-in the shape of a baby, it is the unfortunate husband who is set to mind
-it: he has to get up in the night to sing lullabies to it “just as if he
-were a nurserymaid,” and ashamed though he is of such a humiliation, he
-is actually put to wash the baby-linen! “All this has been done by many
-men who for the sake of pleasure have stooped so low; they become the
-equals of slaves, animals, beasts of burden, _mere nobodies_.” Would not
-most readers take this for a quotation from one of Ibsen’s plays rather
-than from a sacred volume which was composed a considerable time before
-the beginning of our era?
-
-The Indian pessimist is withheld from suicide by the dread of a worse
-existence beyond the pyre. He is the coward of conscience to a much
-greater extent than the weary Occidental, because his sense of the
-unseen is so much stronger. In the Jaina system, however, suicide is
-permitted under certain circumstances. After twelve years of rigorous
-penance a man is allowed the supreme favour of “a religious death”—in
-other words, he may commit suicide by starvation. This is called Itvara.
-The civilised Indian does not seem to have the power of dying when he
-pleases without the assistance of starvation which is possessed by some
-of the higher savage races.
-
-The soul may be re-born in any earthly form from the lowest to the
-highest, but there are other possibilities before it when it leaves its
-mortal coil. Those who are very bad, too bad to disgrace the earth
-again—above all, the cruel—are consigned to an _Inferno_ more awful than
-Dante’s, though not without points of striking resemblance to it. The
-very good who abounded in charity and in truth, but who yet lived in the
-world the life of the world, become gods, glorified beings enjoying a
-great measure of happiness and power, but not eternal. Far beyond the
-joys of this heaven, which are still thinkable, is the unthinkable bliss
-of the Perfect, of the Conquerors, of the Changeless. The human mind
-could not adjust the idea of evolution more scientifically to the soul’s
-destiny.
-
-It is unnecessary to say that the number who become even gods is very
-small. A great deal is achieved if a man is simply born again as a man,
-for though Jaina and Buddhist thinks that man’s lot is wretched (or, at
-least that it ought to be when we consider its inherent evils), yet it
-must be distinctly remembered that he thinks the life of beasts far more
-wretched. Leopardi’s “Song of the Nomadic Shepherd in Asia,” in which he
-makes the world-weary shepherd envy the fate of his sheep, is steeped in
-Western not in Eastern pessimism: only in the last lines, which really
-contradict the rest, we find the true Eastern note:—
-
- “Perchance in every form
- That Nature may on everything bestow
- The day of birth brings everlasting woe.”
-
-The Indian seems never to be struck by what to us seems (perhaps in
-error, but I hope not) the inconscient joy of creatures, nor yet that of
-children. He is constantly sure that all creation groaneth and
-travaileth. Nothing is young in Asia, all is very old. Every one is
-tired. In our minds thoughtless joy is connected with innocency, and in
-these Indian creeds there is no innocency as there is no effortless
-All-Good. Perfection is the result of labour. No other religious teacher
-spoke of little children as Christ did—Christ, whose incomprehensible
-followers were one day to consign the larger part of them, as a favour,
-“to the easiest room in hell.” Ardently as children are desired and
-lovingly as they are treated in the East, something essential to the
-charm of childhood eludes the Oriental perception of it.
-
-In the sacred books of those Indian communities which concern themselves
-most about animals, they are very rarely shown in an attractive light.
-The horse, almost alone, is spoken of with genuine admiration; for
-instance, there is this simile: “As the trained Kambôga steed whom no
-noise frightens, exceeds all other horses in speed, so a very learned
-monk is superior to all others.” An elephant is extolled for having
-knelt down before a holy recluse though only newly tamed, and we hear
-that Mahavira’s words were understood by all animals. Folk-lore tells
-much that scriptures do not tell, and if we had a collection of Jaina
-folk-lore we should find, no doubt, records of charming friendships
-between beasts and saints, but in the Jaina sacred books pity, not love,
-is the feeling shown towards animals.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- BUDDHA PACIFYING AN INTOXICATED ELEPHANT.
- India Museum.]
-
-As a rule, Indian philosophical writers shirk the question of how far
-the soul which was and may be again a man’s retains its consciousness
-during its residence in lower forms. Probably the answer, were it given,
-would be: “Not very far,” but the higher animals are credited with a
-fuller share of reflection than in the West. Hence it is preferable to
-assume the shape of one of the higher than of one of the lower
-organisms, but still it is far better to be re-born as the lowest of men
-than as the highest of animals.
-
-If it is something to be re-born as a man at all, it is a great deal to
-be re-born as a fortunate man, healthy, wealthy, and surrounded by
-troops of friends: at least, to the simple-minded such a prospect must
-appear to hold out a very splendid hope. It is remarkable what good care
-the framers of the intensely ascetic Jaina faith took of people who
-could not pretend to walk in the path of the elect. The mere
-“householder” (so called to distinguish him from the more admirable
-“Houseless”) has the promise of an ample recompense if he is only
-truthful, and humane, and liberal in alms-giving and temple-building. He
-may win very great promotion on earth or even a place in the Jaina
-heaven, the abode of light, where happy beings live long and enjoy great
-power and energy, and never grow old. Such a state agrees with the
-logical evolution of a virtuous but still this-worldly man. Could he
-aspire sincerely to a more spiritual state, and can the soul outsoar its
-own aspirations? The Jaina heaven is not eternal, but does every one
-wish for eternity? Most people wish for ten or fifteen years of
-tolerable freedom from care on this side of the grave. If they knew for
-certain that they were going to enjoy one thousand years of heaven, they
-would not think much of what would happen at the end of that time.
-
-There remain the pure and separated spirits who in this present life
-have climbed beyond the plane of mortality. They are in the world, not
-of it, and they, indeed, “have a glimpse of incomprehensibles and
-thoughts of things which thoughts but tenderly touch.” For these, the
-Jaina, like the Buddhist, keeps Nirvana.
-
-The extreme reticence of Buddha and even of Buddhist commentators on the
-inner significance of this word—meaning literally “liberation”—is not
-observed by the Jainas, though it must not be inferred that there was
-any doctrinal difference of it in the view taken by the two sects. The
-Jainas show a great anxiety to tell what Nirvana is; if they fail it is
-because it baffles all description. They repudiate the idea that it
-signified annihilation, but admit that the subject oversteps the bounds
-of the thinkable. “The liberated soul perceives and knows, but there is
-no analogy by which to describe it—without body, re-birth, sex,
-dimensions.” We think of the wonderful lines in the _Helena_ of
-Euripides:—
-
- “... the mind
- Of the dead lives not, but immortal sense
- When to immortal ether gone, possesses;”
-
-lines which, like not a few others in Euripides, seem to reflect a light
-not cast from Grecian skies.
-
-Like every stage in the history of the life-soul (_giva_) Nirvana is
-governed by an immutable law of evolution. When all the dross is
-eliminated only pure spirit is left: a distilled essence not only
-indestructible, for spirit is always indestructible, but also
-changeless. All the rest dies, which means that it changes, that it is
-re-born: this part can die no more, and hence can be born no more. It
-has gained the liberty of which the soul goes seeking in the Dantesque
-sense. It has gained safety, rest, peace.
-
-How familiar the words sound! Here am I in Asia, and I could dream
-myself back under the roof of the village church where generations of
-simple folk had sought a rest-cure for their minds: where I, too, first
-listened to those words _safety_, _rest_, _peace_, with the strange
-home-sickness they awaken in young children or in the very old who have
-preserved their childhood’s faith. There are words that, by collecting
-round them inarticulate longings and indefinite associations, finally
-leave the order of language and enter that of music; they evoke an
-emotion, not an idea. The emotions which sway the human heart are few,
-and they are very much alike. The self-same word-music transports the
-English child to the happy land, far, far away, and the Indian mystic to
-Nirvana.
-
-Almost everything which the Jainas say of Nirvana might have been said
-by any follower of any spiritual religion who attempted to suggest a
-place of final beatitude. “There is a safe place in view of all, but
-hard to approach, where there is no old age, nor death, nor pain, nor
-disease. This place which is in view of all is called Nirvana or freedom
-from pain, or it is called perfection; it is the safe, happy, quiet
-place. It is the eternal haven which is in view of all, but is difficult
-to approach.”
-
-Nirvana is the getting-well of the soul. “He will put away all the
-misery which always afflicts mankind; as it were, _recovered from a long
-illness_, he becomes infinitely happy and obtains the final aim.”
-
-We are told that the Buddhas that were and the Buddhas that will be,
-have peace for their foundation, even as all things have the earth for
-their foundation. (The term Buddha, or “Enlightened,” is used by Jainas
-as well as by Buddhists for super-excellent beings.)
-
-Nirvana may or rather must be possessed before the death of the visible
-body: it must be obtained by the living if it is to be enjoyed by the
-dead. Detachment from the world, self-denial, selflessness, help the
-soul on its way, but the two moral qualities which are absolutely
-essential are kindness and veracity. Ruth and truth are written over the
-portals of eternity. “He should cease to injure living things whether
-they move or not, on high, below or on earth, for this has been called
-Nirvana, which consists in peace.” “A sage setting out for Nirvana
-should not speak untruth: this rule comprises Nirvana and the whole of
-carefulness.”
-
-If a novice does anything wrong, he should never deny it: if he has not
-done it he should say, “I have not done it.” A lie must never be
-told—“not even in jest or in anger.” Were there nothing else of good in
-Jaina discipline this devotion to truth would place it high on mankind’s
-mountain.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo in_ _India Museum._
- COLOSSAL RECLINING BULL
- (_Southern India._)]
-
-The law of _Ahimsa_, “non-killing,” which stands at the head of the
-precepts of both Buddhist and Jaina, is not only far more rigidly
-observed by the Jaina, but also invested by him with a greater positive
-as well as relative value. One might say that with the Buddhists it is
-more a philosophic deduction, with the Jainas more a moral necessity.
-The position of Buddhists in this matter of _Ahimsa_ is one of
-compromise. There never was a Buddhist who did not think cruelty to
-animals an abominable sin, there is no compromise on that point, but, in
-respect to animal food, the usual Buddhist layman is not really more
-strict than any very humane person in the West; he abjures sport, he
-will not kill animals himself, but he does not refuse to eat meat if it
-is set before him. The Buddhists declare that the Lord Buddha was prayed
-to forbid animal food absolutely, but he would not. It is argued that in
-the flesh itself, when the life is gone from it, there is nothing
-particularly sacred: therefore it is permissible to sustain life on it.
-Your servants may buy meat ready for sale in the market: it would be
-there just the same if you did not send to buy it, but you ought not to
-tell them to give an order for some sort of meat which is not on sale;
-still less should you incite people to snare or shoot wild animals for
-your table. The Buddhists of to-day say with the opponents to
-vegetarianism in Europe, that total abstention from the flesh of animals
-would lead to the disappearance of the chief part of them; though it
-might be answered that sheep would still be wanted for their wool, goats
-and cows for their milk, oxen for ploughing. But a harder question is,
-What would happen to these animals when they grew old? The Jainas seek
-to settle this crux by building hospitals for them, but the result has
-been indifferently encouraging.
-
-In Siam even monks are allowed animal food within certain limits, but as
-a rule what I have said of the Buddhist view of _Ahimsa_ does not apply
-to the religious, who leans to the strictest Jaina principle of having
-nothing to do with shedding blood on any pretence. The Buddhist monks in
-China teach the virtue of “fang sheng” (“life-saving”) by object-lessons
-in the shape of tanks built near the convents to which people bring
-tortoises, fishes and snakes to save them from death, and the monks also
-keep homes for starving or lost animals. Favoured European visitors are
-invited to witness the custom of feeding the wild birds before the
-morning meal is served: the brothers sit silently at the refectory-table
-with their bowls of rice and vegetables in front of them, but none
-begins to eat till one brother rises, after a sort of grace has been
-said, and goes to the door with a little rice in his hands which he
-places on a low stone pillar. All the birds are waiting on the roofs and
-fly down delighted to partake of their breakfast.
-
-Fra Odoric, the Venetian Franciscan who dictated an account of his
-travels in 1330, describes a convent scene which was shown to him as a
-most interesting thing, so that when he went home he might say that he
-had seen “this strange sight or novelty.” To win the consent of the
-monks his native friend, who acted as cicerone, informed them that this
-Raban Francus, this religious “Frenchman” (Europeans were all
-“Frenchmen”) was going to the city of Cambaleth to pray for the life of
-the great Can. Thus recommended he was admitted, and the “religious man”
-with whom they had spoken “took two great basketsful of broken relics
-which remained on the table and led me into a little walled park, the
-door whereof he unlocked with his key, and there appeared unto us a
-pleasant fair green plot, into the which we entered. In the said green
-stands a little mount in form of a steeple, replenished with fragrant
-herbs and fine shady trees. And while we stood there, he took a cymbal
-or bell and rang therewith, as they use to ring to dinner or bevoir in
-cloisters, at the sound thereof many creatures of divers kinds came down
-from the mount, some like apes, some like cats, some like monkeys, and
-some having faces like men. And while I stood beholding of them, they
-gathered themselves together about him, to the number of 4,200 of these
-creatures, putting themselves in good order, before whom he set a
-platter and gave them the said fragments to eat. And when they had eaten
-he rang upon his cymbal a second time and they all returned to their
-former places. Then, wondering greatly at the matter, I demanded what
-kind of creatures those might be. They are (quoth he) the souls of noble
-men which we do here feed for the love of God who governeth the world,
-and as a man was honourable or noble in this life, so his soul after
-death entereth the body of some excellent beast or other, but the souls
-of simple and rustical people do possess the bodies of more vile and
-brutish creatures.”
-
-Odoric’s informant was in error if he really said that distinctions of
-rank influenced the soul’s destiny, as this is no Buddhist doctrine. The
-charming description of the “strange sight or novelty” was imitated by
-Mandeville, who adds, with a sympathetic tolerance which is very
-characteristic of him, that the monks were “good religious men after
-their faith and law.”
-
-That the stricter was also the more primitive Buddhist rule seems
-probable, and it may be that Buddha’s alleged defence of meat-eating was
-an invention meant to cover later latitudinarianism. Nevertheless,
-_Ahimsa_ was, from the first, a more integral part of the Jaina religion
-than of the Buddhist. The true keynote of either faith can be detected
-in their respective conversion stories. In all outbursts of religious
-revivalism (of which nature both Buddhism and Jainism largely partook)
-the moment of conversion is the hinge on which everything turns.
-
-In the Buddhist story, a young prince, born on the steps of the throne,
-nursed in luxury and happily wedded, sees consecutively a broken-down
-old man, a man with a deadly disease, and a decomposing corpse. These
-dreadful and common realities were brought home to his mind with
-intolerable force. We seem to hear the despairing cry of R. L.
-Stevenson: “Who would find heart to begin to live if he dallied with the
-consideration of death”? We live because we drug ourselves with the
-waters of a new Lethe which make us forget future as well as past. Sakya
-Muni could not forget what he had seen or the lesson which it taught:
-the rest of his life was devoted to freeing himself and others from
-being endlessly subject to a like doom.
-
-Now let us recall the Jaina conversion story. The son of a powerful king
-was on his way to marry a beautiful princess. At a certain place he saw
-a great many animals in cages and enclosures looking frightened and
-miserable. He asked his charioteer why all those animals which desired
-to be free and happy were penned up in cages and enclosures? The
-charioteer replied that they were not to be pitied, they were “lucky
-animals” which were to furnish a feast for a great multitude at His
-Highness’s wedding. (This is the very thing that an English poor man
-would have said.) Full of compassion, the future “saviour of the world”
-reflected: “If for my sake all these living creatures are killed, how
-shall I obtain happiness in another world?” Then and there he renounces
-the pomps and vanities of human existence, and he means it, too. The
-poor little bride, forsaken in this life, and not much comforted by
-promised compensation in the next, “not knowing what she could do,” cuts
-off her pretty hair and goes to a nunnery. In time she becomes a model
-of perfection, and many of her kindred and servants are persuaded by her
-to join the order.
-
-In this story the revulsion is caused by pity, not by loathing. The
-instant he sees these poor animals, the kind-hearted prince feels sorry
-for them; then comes that unlucky word “lucky” which to the man of
-ignorance seems to be so particularly appropriate; it jars on Mahavira’s
-nerves as it would on the nerves of any sensitive or refined person.
-Nothing moves men to tears or laughter so surely as the antithetical
-shock of the incongruous. A rush of emotion overpowers Mahavira: he will
-not be happy at the cost of so much misery; he would become odious in
-his own sight. So he renounces all for the eternity of one moment of
-self-approving joy.
-
-The Jainas carefully exclude every excuse for taking animal life: none
-is valid. Animals must not be killed for offering up in sacrifice, not
-for their skin, flesh, tail feathers, brush, horns, tusks, sinews,
-bones. They must not be killed with a purpose or without a purpose. If
-we have been wounded by them, or fear to be wounded by them, or if they
-eat our flesh or drink our blood, still we should not only bear it, but
-also feel no anger. “This is the quintessence of wisdom, not to kill
-anything whatever: know this to be the legitimate conclusion from the
-principle of reciprocity.”
-
-No one denies that the principle of reciprocity is the basis of all
-morality, and by extending it from men to sentient things, the Jainas
-have safeguarded their doctrine of _Ahimsa_ with a stronger wall of
-defence than any built on the fantastic fear of devouring one’s
-ancestors. Nor can it be said of the Jainas that to a superstitious
-repugnance to taking life they join indifference to causing suffering:
-inflicting suffering is hardly distinguished from inflicting death. “All
-breathing, existing, living, sentient creatures should not be slain nor
-treated with violence, nor abused, nor tormented, nor driven away. This
-is the pure unchangeable law.” “Indifferent to worldly objects, a man
-should wander about treating all the creatures in the world as he
-himself would be treated.”
-
-Perhaps the most remarkable of Jaina stories is a real masterpiece of
-wit and wisdom in which this theory of reciprocity is enforced. For the
-whole of it I must refer the reader to Professor Jacobi’s translation; I
-can only give the leading points. Once upon a time three hundred and
-sixty-three philosophers, representing a similar number of philosophical
-schools, and differing in character, opinions, taste, undertakings and
-plans, stood round in a large circle, each one in his place. They
-discussed their various views, and at last one man took a vessel full of
-red-hot coals which he held at a distance from him with a pair of tongs.
-“Now, you philosophers,” said he, “just take this for a moment and hold
-it in your hands. No trickery, if you please; you are _not_ to hold it
-with the tongs or to put the fire out. Fair and honest!”
-
-With extreme unanimity the three hundred and sixty-two drew back their
-hands as fast as they could. Then the speaker continued: “How is this,
-philosophers; what _are_ you doing with your hands?” “They will be
-burnt,” said the others. “And what does it matter if they are burnt?”
-“But it would hurt us dreadfully.” “So you do not want to suffer pain?”
-Well, this is the case with all animals. This maxim applies to every
-creature, this principle, this religious reflection, holds good of all
-living things. Therefore those religious teachers who say that all sorts
-of living things may be beaten or ill-treated, or tormented, or deprived
-of life will, in time, suffer in the same way themselves, and have to
-undergo the whole round of the scale of earthly existence. They will be
-whirled round, put in irons, see their mothers, fathers, children die,
-have bad luck, poverty, the society of people they detest, separation
-from those they love, “they will again wander distraught in the
-beginningless and endless wilderness.”
-
-Like a true orator the Jaina member of this early Congress of Religions,
-who has drifted from irony to fierce denunciation, does not leave his
-hearers with these visions of terror, but with the consoling promise to
-the merciful of everlasting beatitude.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- WILD BULLS AND TAMED BULLS.
- Reliefs on two gold cups found at Vapheio.
- (_From Schuckhardt’s “Schliemann’s Excavations.” By permission of
- Messrs. Macmillan & Co., Ltd._)]
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- IX
-
- LINES FROM THE ADI GRANTH
-
-
-THE Adi Granth, or sacred Book of the Sikhs of the Punjab, was composed
-by the founder of their religion and their nationality, Baba Nanak (_b._
-1469), who abolished caste and idolatry, and established a pure
-monotheism. A striking incident at the Coronation Durbar was the arrival
-of the Sikh mission in charge of the Adi Granth, which was brought on a
-pilgrimage from its shrine in the exquisitely beautiful golden temple at
-Amritsar to the tomb of the disciple of Nanak, who, before suffering
-martyrdom at Delhi during the Mogul Empire, prophesied the advent of a
-fair race destined to sweep the Mogul power to the winds. I take these
-few sentences to show the essential continuity of Indian thought about
-animals. In the faith of Nanak none remains of the particular tenets of
-Buddhism or Jainism or Hinduism, but the animal is still _inside_, not
-_outside_, the pale of what may be called Pan-humanity: the whole family
-of earth-born creatures.
-
-
- I.
-
- Say not that this or that distasteful is,
- In all the dear Lord dwells,—they all are His
-
- Grieve not the humblest heart; all hearts that are,
- Are priceless jewels, all are rubies rare.
-
- Ah! If thou long’st for thy Beloved, restrain
- One angry word that gives thy brother pain.
-
-
- II.
-
- All creatures, Lord, are Thine, and Thou art theirs,
- One bond Creator with created shares;
-
- To whom, O Maker! must they turn and weep
- If not to Thee their Lord, who dost all keep?
-
- All living creatures, Lord, were made by Thee,
- Where Thou hast fixed their station, there they be.
-
- For them Thou dost prepare their daily bread,
- Out of Thy loving-kindness they are fed;
-
- On each the bounties of Thy mercy fall,
- And Thy compassion reaches to them all.
-
-
- III.
-
- One understanding to all flesh He gives,
- Without that understanding nothing lives;
-
- As is their understanding,—they are so;
- The reckoning is the same. They come and go.
-
- The faithful watch-dog that does all he can,
- Is better far than the unprayerful man.
-
- Birds in their purse of silver have no store,
- But them the Almighty Father watches o’er.
-
- They say who kill, they do but what they may,
- Lawful they deem the bleating lamb to slay;
-
- When God takes down the eternal Book of Fate,
- Oh, tell me what, what then will be their state?
-
- He who towards every living thing is kind,
- Ah! he, indeed, shall true religion find!
-
-
- IV.
-
- Great is the warrior who has killed within
- Self,—Self which still is root and branch of sin.
-
- “I, I,” still cries the World, and gads about,
- Reft of the Word which Self has driven out.
-
-
- V.
-
- Thou, Lord, the cage,—the parrot, see! ’Tis I!
- Yama the cat: he looks and passes by.
-
- By Yama bound my mind can never be,
- I call on Him who Yama made and me.
-
- The Lord eternal is: what should I fear?
- However low I fall, He still will hear.
-
- He tends his creatures as a mother mild
- Tends with untiring love her little child.
-
-
- VI.
-
- I do not die: the world within me dies:
- Now, now, the Vivifier vivifies;
-
- Sweet is the world,—ah! very sweet it is,
- But through its sweets we lose the eternal bliss!
-
- Perpetual joy, the inviolate mansion, where
- There is no grief, woe, error, sin, nor care;
-
- Coming and going and death, enter not in;
- The changeless only there an entrance win.
-
- Whosoe’er dieth, born again must be,
- Die thou whilst living, and thou wilt be free!
-
-
- VII.
-
- He, the Supreme, no limit has nor end,
- And what HE is how can _we_ comprehend?
-
- Once did a wise man say: “He only knows
- God’s nature to whom God His mercy shows.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- X
-
- THE HEBREW CONCEPTION OF ANIMALS
-
-
- I
-
- ... “About them frisking played
- All beasts of the earth, since wild, and of all chase
- In wood or wilderness, forest or den;
- Sporting the lion ramped, and in his paw
- Dandled the kid; bears, tigers, ounces, pards,
- Gambolled before them; the unwieldy elephant,
- To make them mirth, used all his might, and wreathed
- His lithe proboscis.”
- _Paradise Lost_, Book IV.
-
-THE idea of a condition of existence in which all creatures are happy
-and at peace implies a protest against the most patent fact of life as
-we see it. Western civilisation inherited from the Roman Empire the
-hardness of heart towards animals of which the popularity of
-beast-fights in the Arena was the characteristic sign. It was, however,
-a Roman poet who first pointed out in philosophical language that the
-sufferings of animals stand written in the great indictment against
-Nature no less than the sufferings of men. Not only man is born to
-sorrow, said Lucretius; look at the cow whose calf bleeds before some
-lovely temple, while she wanders disconsolate over all the fields,
-lowing piteously, uncomforted by the image of other calves, because her
-own is not.
-
-Eighteen hundred years later Schopenhauer said that by taking a very
-high standard it was possible to justify the sufferings of man but not
-those of animals. Darwin arrived at the same conclusion. “It has been
-imagined,” he remarks, “that the sufferings of man tend to his moral
-improvement, but the number of men in the world is nothing compared with
-the number of other sentient beings which suffer greatly without moral
-improvement.” To him, the man of the religious mind whom men lightly
-charged with irreligion, it was “_an intolerable thought_” that after
-long ages of toil all these sentient beings were doomed to complete
-annihilation.
-
-Yes, and to the young conscience of mankind this was also an intolerable
-thought. And since it was intolerable the human conscience in the
-strength of its youth shook it off, cast it aside, awoke from it as we
-awake from a nightmare. Religion has been regarded too exclusively as a
-submission to Nature. At times it is a revolt against Nature, a
-repudiation of what our senses report to us, an assertion that things
-seen are illusions, and that things unseen are real. Religion is born of
-Doubt. The incredibility of the Known forced man to seek refuge in the
-Unknown. From that far region he brought back solutions good or bad,
-sublime or trivial, to the manifold problems which beset man’s soul.
-
-A poet, doomed to early death, who looked into Nature on a summer’s day
-and could discern nothing but “an eternal fierce destruction,” wrote, in
-his despair—
-
- “Things cannot to the will
- Be settled, but they tease us out of thought.
- ... It is a flaw
- In happiness to see beyond our bourn;
- It forces us in summer skies to mourn,
- It spoils the singing of the nightingale.”
-
-But when the world was young things _could_ be settled to the will. We
-are, of course, constantly regulating our impressions of phenomena by a
-standard of higher probability. If we see a ship upside down, we say,
-“This is not a ship, it is a mirage.” When the primitive man found
-himself face to face with seeming natural laws which offended his sense
-of inherent probability, he rejected the hypothesis that they were
-actual or permanent, and supposed them to be either untrustworthy
-appearances or deviations from a larger plan.
-
-Every basic religion gave a large share of thought to animals. The
-merit, from a humane point of view, of the explanation of the mystery
-offered by the religious systems of India has been praised even to
-excess. In contrast to this, it was often repeated that the Hebrew
-religion ignored the claims of animals altogether. I wish to show that
-even if this charge were not open to other disproof, no people can be
-called indifferent to those claims which believes in a Nature Peace.
-
-Traces of such a belief spread from the Mediterranean to the Pacific,
-from the Equator to the Pole. But the Peace is not always complete;
-there are reservations. In the glowing prediction of a Peace in Nature
-in the Atharva-Veda, vultures and jackals are excluded. Mazdeans would
-exclude the “bad” animals. The Hebrew Scriptures, on the other hand,
-declare that all species are good in the sight of their Maker. Every
-beast enjoyed perfect content according to the original scheme of the
-Creator. But man fell, and all creation was involved in the consequences
-of his fall.
-
-I remember seeing at the Hague an impressive painting by a little-known
-Italian artist[6] which represents Adam about to take the apple from Eve
-while at their feet a tiger tenderly licks the wool of a lamb. Adam’s
-face shows that he is yielding—yielding for no better reason than that
-he cannot say “No”—to the beautiful woman at his side; and there,
-unconscious and happy, lie the innocent victims of his act: love to be
-turned to wrath, peace to war. The Nature Peace has been painted a
-hundred times, but never with such tragic significance.
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- Cignani. A singular sixteenth-century “Nature War” may be observed in
- a _graffito_ on the pavement of the Chapel of St. Catherine in the
- church of St. Domenico, at Siena. A nude youth, resembling Orpheus,
- sits on a rock in a leafy grove, in the midst of various animals; with
- a disturbed air he looks into a mirror at the back of which is an eye,
- a leopard shows his teeth at him, while a vulture screams at a monkey,
- and another bird snatches a surprised rabbit or squirrel; the other
- creatures, unicorn, wolf, eagle, display signs of uneasiness.
- Endeavours to read this fable have not proved satisfactory.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo:_ _Bruckmann._
- THE GARDEN OF EDEN.
- (_By Rubens._)
- Hague Gallery.]
-
-The Miltonic Adam sees in the mute signs of Nature the forerunners of
-further change:—
-
- “The bird of Jove, stooped from his airy tour,
- Two birds of gayest plume before him drove;
- Down from a hill the beast that reigns in woods,
- First hunter then, pursued a gentle brace,
- Goodliest of all the forest, hart and hind.”
-
-In an uncanonical version of Genesis which was translated from an
-Armenian manuscript preserved at Venice, by my dear and sadly missed
-friend, Padre Giacomo Issaverdens, a still more dramatic description is
-given of the manner in which the Peace ended. When Adam and Eve were
-driven from the Garden of Eden they met a lion, which attacked Adam.
-“Why,” asked Adam, “do you attack me when God ordered you and all the
-animals to obey me?” “You disobeyed God,” replied the lion, “and we are
-no longer bound to obey you.” Saying which, the noble beast walked away
-without harming Adam. But war was declared.
-
-War was declared, and yet the scheme of the Creator could not be for
-ever defeated. Man who had erred might hope—and how much more must there
-be hope for those creatures that had done no harm.
-
-When the Prophets spoke of a Peace in Nature in connexion with that
-readjustment of the eternal scales which was meant by the coming of the
-Messiah, it cannot be doubted that they spoke of what was already a
-widely accepted tradition. But without their help we should have known
-nothing of it and we are grateful to them. Of all the radiant dreams
-with which man has comforted his heart, aching with realities, is there
-one to be compared with this? It is of the earth earthly, and that is
-the beauty of it. “The wolf shall dwell with the lamb, and the leopard
-lie down with the kid; and the calf and the young lion together; and a
-little child shall lead them; the cow and the bear shall feed; and their
-young ones lie down together; and the lion shall eat straw like the ox.”
-
- “For behold I create new heavens and a new earth. They shall not
- hurt nor destroy in all My holy mountain, saith the Lord.”
-
-Is not this the best of promised lands, the kindest of Elysiums, which
-leaves none out in the cold of cruelty and hatred? The importunate
-questioner may inquire, How can this primal and ultimate happiness
-compensate for the intervening ages of pain? About this, it may be
-observed that in religious matters people ought not to want to know too
-much. This is true of the faithful and even of the unfaithful.
-Scientific researches in the great storehouse which contains the
-religions of the world are more aided by a certain reserve, a certain
-reverence, than by the insatiable curiosity of the scalpel. Religions
-sow abroad _idées mères_; they tell some things, others they leave
-untold. They take us up into an Alpine height whence we see the broad
-configuration of the country and lose sight of the woods and the
-tortuous ravines among which we so often missed the track. Now, from the
-Alpine height of faith, the idea of an original and final Nature Peace
-makes the intervening discord seem of no account—a false note between
-two harmonies.
-
-The Nature Peace as the emblem of perfect moral beauty became nearly the
-first Christian idea carried out in art. I remarked a rude but striking
-instance of it on one of the funereal monuments which have been found
-lately at Carthage, belonging to a date when Christian and pagan
-commemorated their dead in the same manner, the former generally only
-adding some slight symbolical indication of his faith. In this stele
-Christ, carrying the lamb across His shoulders, is attended by a panther
-and a lion. All such primitive attempts to represent a Nature Peace are
-chiefly interesting (and from this point of view their interest is
-great) from the fact that in child-like, stammering efforts they reveal
-the intrinsic idiosyncrasy of Christian thought after the Church had
-parted from the realities of proximity with its Founder, and had not
-reached the realities of a body corporate striving for supremacy. Christ
-the Divine Effluence was the faith which made men willing to face the
-lions.
-
-Doubtless many of those martyrs clung to the sublime conception of a
-final Peace, the complement of the first. That this was accepted as no
-allegory by the later spiritualised Jews, and especially by the
-Pharisees, seems to be a well-established fact. It is difficult to
-interpret in any other way the solemn statement of St. Paul, that the
-“whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain together _until now_,”
-waiting for redemption; or the beatific vision of Josephus: “The whole
-Creation also will lift up a perpetual hymn ... and shall praise Him
-that made them together with the angels and spirits and men, now freed
-from all bondage.” _Homines et jumenta salvabis Domine._
-
-
- II.
-
-What was the view taken of animals by the Jewish people, apart from the
-fundamental ideas implied by a primordial Peace in Nature?
-
-It was the habit of Hebrew writers to leave a good deal to the
-imagination; in general, they only cared to throw as much light on
-hidden subjects as was needful to regulate conduct. They gave precepts
-rather than speculations. There remain obscure points in their
-conception of animals, but we know how they did _not_ conceive them:
-they did not look upon them as “things”; they did not feel towards them
-as towards automata.
-
-After the Deluge, there was established “the everlasting covenant
-between God and every living creature of all flesh that is upon the
-earth.” Evidently, you cannot make a covenant with “things.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _N. Consoni._
- GENESIS VIII.
- (_Loggie di Raffaello._)]
-
-That the Jews supposed the intelligence of animals to be not extremely
-different from the intelligence of man is to be deduced from the story
-of Balaam, for it is said that God opened the mouth—not the mind—of the
-ass. The same story illustrates the ancient belief that animals see
-apparitions which are concealed from the eyes of man. The great interest
-to us, however, of the Scriptural narrative is its significance as a
-lesson in humanity. When the Lord opened the mouth of the ass, what did
-the ass say? She asks her master why he had smitten her three times?
-Balaam answers, with a frankness which, at least, does him credit,
-because he was enraged with the ass for turning aside and not minding
-him, and he adds (still enraged, and, strange to say, nowise surprised
-at the animal’s power of speech) that he only wishes he had a sword in
-his hand, as he would then kill her outright. How like this is to the
-voice of modern brutality! The ass, continuing the conversation, rejoins
-in words which it would be a shame to disfigure by putting them into the
-idiom of the twentieth century: “Am I not thine ass upon which thou hast
-ridden ever since I was thine unto this day? Was I ever wont to do so
-unto thee?” Balaam, who has the merit, as I have noticed, of being
-candid, replies, “No, you never were.” Then, for the first time, the
-Prophet sees the angel standing in the path with a drawn sword in his
-hand—an awe-inspiring vision! And what are the angel’s first words to
-the terrified prophet who lies prostrate on his face? They are a reproof
-for his inhumanity. “Wherefore hast thou smitten thine ass these three
-times?” Then the angel tells how the poor beast he has used thus has
-saved her master from certain death, for had she not turned from him, he
-would have slain Balaam and saved her alive. “And Balaam said unto the
-angel of the Lord, I have sinned.”
-
-Balaam was not a Jew; but the nationality of the personages in the Bible
-and the origin or authorship of its several parts are not questions
-which affect the present inquiry. The point of importance is, that the
-Jews believed these Scriptures to contain Divine truth.
-
-With regard to animals having the gift of language, it appears from a
-remark made by Josephus that the Jews thought that all animals spoke
-before the Fall. In Christian folk-lore there is a superstition that
-animals can speak during the Christmas night: an obvious reference to
-their return to an unfallen state.
-
-Solomon declares that the righteous man “regardeth the life of his
-beast”; a saying which is often misquoted, “merciful” being substituted
-for “righteous,” by which the proverb loses half its force. The Hebrew
-Scriptures contain two definite injunctions of humanity to animals. One
-is the command not to plough with the ox and the ass yoked together—in
-Palestine I have seen even the ass and the camel yoked together; their
-unequal steps cause inconvenience to both yoke-fellows and especially to
-the weakest. The other is the prohibition to muzzle the ox which treads
-out the corn: a simple humanitarian rule which it is truly surprising
-how any one, even after an early education in casuistry, could have
-interpreted as a metaphor. There are three other commands of great
-interest because they show how important it was thought to preserve even
-the mind of man from growing callous. One is the order not to kill a cow
-or she-goat or ewe and her young both on the same day. The second is the
-analogous order not to seethe the kid in its mother’s milk. The third
-refers to bird-nesting: if by chance you find a bird’s nest on a tree or
-on the ground and the mother bird is sitting on the eggs or on the
-fledglings, you are on no account to capture her when you take the eggs
-or the young birds (one would like bird-nesting to have been forbidden
-altogether, but I fear that the human boy in Syria had too much of the
-old Adam in him for any such law to have proved effectual!). Let the
-mother go, says the sacred writer, and if you must take something, take
-only the young ones. This command concludes in a very solemn way, for it
-ends with the promise (for what may seem a little act of unimportant
-sentiment) of the blessing promised to man for honouring his own father
-and mother—that it will be well with him and that his days will be long
-in the land.
-
-In the law relative to the observance of the Seventh Day, not only is no
-point insisted on more strongly than the repose of the animals of
-labour, but in one of the oldest versions of the fourth commandment the
-repose of animals is spoken of as if it were the chief object of the
-Sabbath: “Six days shalt thou do thy work, and on the seventh day thou
-shalt rest: _that_ thine ox and thine ass may rest” (Exodus xxiii. 12).
-Moreover, it is expressly stated of the Sabbath of the Lord, the seventh
-year when no work was to be done, that all which the land produces of
-itself is to be left to the enjoyment of the beasts that are in the
-land. The dominant idea was to give animals a chance—to leave something
-for them—to afford them some shelter, as in the creation of
-bird-sanctuaries in the temples.
-
-In promises of love and protection to man, to the Chosen People, animals
-are almost always included. “The heavens shall tremble: the sun and moon
-shall be dark, and the stars shall withdraw their shining” (Joel ii.
-10). “Be not afraid, ye beasts of the field: for the pastures of the
-wilderness do spring, for the tree beareth her fruit, the fig-tree and
-the vine do yield their strength. Be glad, ye children of Zion, and
-rejoice in the Lord your God” (Joel ii. 22, 23).
-
-The wisdom of animals is continually praised. “Go to the ant, thou
-sluggard; consider her ways and be wise: which having no guide,
-overseer, or ruler, provideth her meat in the summer, and gathereth her
-food in the harvest.” So said the wisest of the Jews. I am tempted to
-quote here a passage from the writings of Giordano Bruno: “With what
-understanding the ant gnaws her grain of wheat lest it should sprout in
-her underground habitation. The fool says this is instinct, but we say
-it is a species of understanding.” If Solomon did not make the same
-reflection, it was only because that wonderful word “instinct” had not
-yet been invented.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo:_ _Alinari._
- DANIEL AND THE LIONS.
- (_Early Christian Sarcophagus at Ravenna._)]
-
-We have seen that the Jews supposed animals to be given to men for use
-not for abuse, and the whole of Scripture tends to the conclusion that
-the Creator—who had called good all the creatures of His hand—regarded
-none as unworthy of His providence. This view is plainly endorsed by the
-saying of Christ that not a sparrow falls to the ground without the will
-of the Father (or “not one of them is forgotten in the sight of God”),
-and by the saying of Mohammed, who likewise believed himself the
-continuer of Jewish tradition: “There is no beast that walks upon the
-earth but its provision is from God.”
-
-But there is something more. Every one knows that the Jews were allowed
-to kill and eat animals. The Jewish religion makes studiously few
-demands on human nature. “The ways of the Lord were pleasant ways.”
-Since men craved for meat or, in Biblical language, since they lusted
-after flesh, they were at liberty to eat those animals which, in an
-Eastern climate, could be eaten without danger to health. But on one
-condition: the body they might devour—what was the body? It was earth.
-The soul they might not touch. The mysterious thing called life must be
-rendered up to the Giver of it—to God. The man who did not do this, when
-he killed a lamb, was a murderer. “The blood shall be imputed to him; he
-hath shed blood, and that man shall be cut off from among his people.”
-
-The inclination must be resisted to dispose of this mysterious ordinance
-as a mere sanitary measure. It was a sanitary measure, but it was much
-besides. The Jews believed that every animal had a soul, a spirit, which
-was beyond human jurisdiction, with which they had no right to tamper.
-When we ask, however, what this soul, this spirit, was, we find
-ourselves groping in the dark. Was it material, as the soul was thought
-to be by the Egyptians and by the earliest doctors of the Christian
-Church? Was it an immaterial, impersonal, Divine essence? Was its
-identity permanent, or temporary? We can give no decisive answer; but we
-may assume with considerable certainty that life, spirit, whatever it
-was, appeared at least to the majority of the Jews to possess one
-nature, whether in men or in animals. When a Jew denied the immortality
-of the soul, he denied it both for man and for beast. “I said in my
-heart,” wrote the author of Ecclesiastes, “concerning the estate of the
-sons of men that God might manifest them, and that they might see that
-they themselves are beasts. For that which befalleth the sons of men
-befalleth beasts; even one thing befalleth them; as the one dieth so the
-other dieth; yea, they have all one breath; so that a man hath no
-pre-eminence above a beast.”
-
-The mist which surrounds the Hebrew idea of the soul may proceed from
-the fact that they did not know themselves what they meant by it, or
-from the fact that they once knew what they meant by it so well as to
-render elucidation superfluous. If the teraphim represented the Lares or
-family dead, then the archaic Jewish idea of the soul was simple and
-definite. It is possible that in all later times two diametrically
-opposed opinions existed contemporaneously, as was the case with the
-Pharisees and Sadducees. The Jewish people did not feel the pressing
-need to dogmatise about the soul that other peoples have felt; they had
-one living soul which was immortal, and its name was Israel!
-
-Still, through all ages, from the earliest times till now, the Jews have
-continued to hold sacred “the blood which is the life.”
-
-In Hindu religious books, where similar ordinances are enforced, there
-are hints of a suspicion which, as I have said elsewhere, could not have
-been absent from the minds of Hebrew legislators—the haunting suspicion
-of a possible mixing-up of personality. Here we tread on the skirts of
-magic: a subject which belongs to starless nights.
-
-We come back into the light of day when we glance at the relations
-which, according to Jewish tradition, existed between animals and their
-Creator. We see a beautiful interchange of gratitude on the one side and
-watchful care on the other. As the ass of Balaam recognised the angel,
-so do all animals—except man—at all times recognise their God. “But ask
-now the beasts and they shall teach thee; and the fowls of the air, and
-they shall tell thee.... Who knoweth not of all these that the hand of
-the Lord hath wrought this? In whose hand is the soul of every living
-thing, and the breath of all mankind.”
-
-I will only add to these words of Job a few verses taken here and there
-from the Psalms, which form a true anthem of our fellow-creatures of the
-earth and air:—
-
- “Beasts and all cattle, creeping things and flying fowl, let them
- praise the name of the Lord.
- He giveth to the beast his food and to the young ravens which cry.
- He sendeth the springs into the valleys which run among the hills;
- They give drink to every beast of the field, the wild asses quench
- their thirst.
- By them shall the fowls of heaven have their habitation which sing
- among the branches:
- The trees of the Lord are full of sap, the cedars of Lebanon which He
- hath planted,
- Where the birds make their nests; as for the stork, the fir-trees are
- her house.
- The great hills are a refuge for the wild goats and the rocks for the
- conies.
- Thou makest darkness, and it is night, wherein all the beasts of the
- forest do creep forth;
- The young lions roar after their prey, and seek their meat from God;
- The sun ariseth, they gather themselves together and lay them down in
- their dens.
- ... Yea, the sparrow hath found an house, and the swallow a nest for
- herself where she may lay her young.
- Even thine altars, O Lord of Hosts, my King and my God!”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XI
-
- “A PEOPLE LIKE UNTO YOU”
-
-
-A FRIEND who was spending the winter at Tunis asked me if it were true
-that there was any teaching of kindness to animals in the religion of
-Islam? She had seen with pain the little humanity practised by the lower
-class of Arabs, and she had difficulty in believing that such conduct
-was contrary to the law of the Prophet. I replied, that if men are
-sometimes better than their creeds, at other times they are very much
-worse. At the head of every chapter of the Koran, it is written: “In the
-name of the most merciful God.” If God be merciful, shall man be
-unmerciful? Alas, that the answer should have been so often “yes”!
-
-Inhumanity to animals is against the whole spirit of the Koran, and also
-against that of Moslem tradition. In the “Words of Mohammed,” of which
-one thousand four hundred and sixty-five collections exist, and which
-are looked upon as “the Moslem’s dictionary of morals and manners,” the
-Apostle is described as saying: “Fear God in these dumb animals, and
-ride them when they are fit to be rode, and get off them when they are
-tired.” Mohammed was asked by his disciples: “Verily, are there rewards
-for our doing good to quadrupeds and giving them water to drink? “He
-said: “There are rewards for benefiting every animal having a moist
-liver” (every sentient creature). He said again: “There is no Moslem who
-planteth a tree or soweth a field, and man, birds or beasts eat from
-them, but it is a charity for him.” Like all other religious teachers,
-he was made by legend the central figure of a Nature Peace. He had
-miraculous authority over beasts as well as over man, and beasts, more
-directly than man, knew him to be from God. Once he was standing in the
-midst of a crowd when a camel came and prostrated itself before him. His
-companions exclaimed, “O Apostle of God! Beasts and trees worship thee,
-then it is meet for us to worship thee.” Mohammed replied, “Worship God,
-and you may honour your brother—that is, me.”
-
-Those who know nothing else about Mohammed know the story of how he cut
-away his sleeve rather than awaken his cat, which was sleeping upon it.
-He is reported to have told how a woman was once punished for a cat: she
-tied it till it died of hunger—she gave that cat nothing to eat, nor did
-she allow it to go free, so that it might have eaten “the reptiles of
-the ground.” (Cats do eat lizards and snakes too, even when they have
-plenty of food—very bad for them it is.) Mohammed’s fondness of cats has
-been suggested as the reason why two or three of them usually go with
-the Caravan which takes the Sacred Carpet from Cairo to Mecca, but
-perhaps the origin of that custom is far more remote.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- “AN INDIAN ORPHEUS.”
- Royal Palace at Delhi.
- (_Imitated from a painting by Raphael._)]
-
-In the words of Mohammed there is this beautiful version of the “Sultan
-Murad” cycle: an adulteress was passing by a well when she saw a dog
-which was holding out its tongue from the thirst which was killing him.
-The woman drew off her shoe and tied it to the end of her garment; then
-she drew up water and gave the dog to drink. The dog fawned on her and
-licked her hands. Now the Sultan was passing that way, and he saw the
-woman and the dog and inquired into the matter. When he had heard all,
-he told the guards to undo her chain and give her back her veil and lead
-her to her own home.
-
-On one occasion the Prophet met a man who had a nest of young doves, and
-the mother fluttered after and even down about the head of him that held
-it. The Prophet told him to put the nest back where he found it, for
-this wondrous love comes from God.
-
-The verse which gives the keynote to Moslem ideas about animals occurs
-in the sixth chapter of the Koran, and runs thus: “There is no beast on
-earth nor bird which flieth with its wings but the same is a people like
-unto you, we have not omitted anything in the Book of our decrees; then
-unto their Lord shall they return.” In other texts where the word
-“creatures” is used there is a strong presumption that animals, as well
-as men, genii and angels, are included; as, for instance, “unto Him do
-all creatures which are in heaven and earth make petition,” and again,
-“all God’s creatures are His family, and he is the most beloved of God
-who trieth to do the most good to God’s creatures”—which is almost word
-for word—
-
- “He prayeth best, who loveth best
- All things both great and small;
- For the dear God who loveth us,
- He made and loveth all.”
-
-The common grace after eating is “Praise be to the Lord of all
-creatures!” Moslem hunters and butchers have the custom, called the
-Hallal, of pronouncing a formula of excuse (Bi’sm-illah!) before slaying
-any animal. The author of “Malay Magic” mentions, that if a Malay takes
-a tiger in a pitfall, the Pawang, or medicine-man, has to explain to the
-quarry that it was not he that laid the snare but the Prophet Mohammed.
-
-By orthodox Moslem law hunting was allowed, provided it was for some
-definite end or necessity. It was legitimate to hunt for food, or for
-clothing, as when the skin was the object. Dangerous wild beasts, the
-incompatible neighbours of all but saints, might be hunted to protect
-the more precious lives of men. Beyond this, from an orthodox point of
-view, hunting was regarded as indefensible. Such was the rule, and there
-is no greater mistake than to undervalue the moral standard because
-every one does not attain to it. Perhaps few Moslems keep this rule
-rigidly, but it is true now as it was when Lane wrote on the subject,
-that a good Moslem who hunts for amusement does not seek to prolong the
-chase: he tries to take the game as quickly as he can, and if it is not
-dead when taken, it is instantly killed by having its throat cut. Such
-amusements as shooting pigeons, or the unspeakable abomination of firing
-at wild birds from ships, which makes certain tourist steamers a curse
-in the Arctic regions, would inspire even the not too orthodox Moslem
-with profound disgust.
-
-There were some Moslems who went far beyond the law—for whom taking
-life, when the fact of doing so came rudely before them, was a thing
-revolting in itself. Such sensibility was manifest in the Persian poets,
-and it has been attributed to their inherited Zoroastrian tendencies;
-but to think this is to misunderstand the groundwork of Mazdean humane
-teaching, which was not based on sensitiveness about taking life. Such
-sensitiveness is rarely found, except among Aryan races, and
-Zoroastrianism, though it spread among an Aryan people, was not an Aryan
-religion. It is more likely to be true that the Persian peculiar
-tenderness for animals was an atavistic revival of the old Aryan
-temperament. Renan said that Sufism was a racial Aryan reaction against
-_l’effroyable simplicité de l’esprit sémitique_. Sensitiveness about
-animals was a necessary ingredient, so to speak, of Sufism. Sadi, the
-Sufic poet _par excellence_, poured blessings on the departed spirit of
-Firdusi for the couplet which Sir William Jones translated so well and
-loved so much:—
-
- “Ah, spare yon emmet, rich in hoarded grain;
- He lives with pleasure, and he dies with pain.”
-
-That birds and many, if not all, animals have a language by which they
-can interchange their thoughts is a belief shared by Moslems, both
-learned and ignorant. The Koran says that the language of birds was
-understood by Solomon, and folk-lore gives many other persons credit for
-the same accomplishment. A person believed to have such powers could
-turn the belief, if not the powers, to uses both good and bad. An
-Arabian tale relates how a pleasure-loving Persian king summoned a
-Maubadz, a head Magian, to tell him what two owls were chattering about.
-The Maubadz told with considerable detail the plan which the female owl
-was unfolding to the male owl, of how each of their future numerous
-offspring might be set up in life as sole possessor of a forsaken
-village, if only the present “fortunate king” lived long enough. The
-monarch understood the rebuke, and resolved to mend his ways, and to
-encourage tillage and agriculture, instead of devoting himself to idle
-pastimes.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- MOSLEM BEGGAR FEEDING DOGS AT CONSTANTINOPLE.]
-
-Bird-trills mean sentences or words, chiefly religious. The pigeon cries
-continually, “Alláh! Alláh!” The common dove executes this long
-sentence: “Assert the unity of your Lord who created you, so will He
-forgive you your sin.” There was a parrot who could repeat the whole
-Koran by heart and could never be put out so as to make mistakes. I knew
-of an old priest who repeated the _Divina Commedia_ from the first line
-to the last, and the knowledge of the whole of the _Iliad_ was common in
-ancient Athens, where people were laughed at who gave themselves the
-airs of scholars on the ground of such feats of memory. But in the
-bird-world the Moslem parrot surely stands alone, though we hear of a
-pious raven who could say correctly the thirty-second chapter and who
-always made the proper prostration when it came to the words: “My body
-prostrateth itself before Thee, and my heart confideth in Thee.”
-
-The chapter of the Koran entitled “the Ant” is full of charming zoology.
-God bestowed knowledge on David and Solomon, and Solomon, who was
-“David’s heir,” said to the people: “O men, we have been taught the
-speech of birds, and have had all things bestowed on us: this is
-manifest excellence.” The armies of Solomon consisted of men and genii
-and birds: they were arrayed in proper order on an immense carpet of
-green silk: the men were placed to the right, the genii to the left, and
-the birds flew overhead, making a canopy of shade from the burning rays
-of the sun. Solomon sat in the middle on his throne, and when it was
-desired to move, the wind transported the carpet with all on it from one
-place to another. This account, however, is not in the Koran, and need
-not be believed. But that the armies were of the three species of beings
-we have the highest authority for asserting. They arrived, one day, in
-the Valley of Ants. A sentinel ant beheld the approaching host and
-called to her companions to hasten into their habitations for fear that
-Solomon and his armies should crush them underfoot without perceiving
-it. This made Solomon smile, but while he laughed at her words, he yet
-remembered to thank the Lord for the favour wherewith He had favoured
-him: the privilege of knowing the language of beasts. After blessing
-God, and praying that in the end He would take him into paradise among
-His righteous servants, the king looked around at his feathered army and
-lo! he missed the lapwing. Some say that the reason why he noticed her
-absence was because in that place water was lacking for the ablution,
-and, as every one knows, the lapwing is the water-finder. Be that as it
-may (it is not stated in the Koran), he cried in displeasure: “What is
-the reason I do not see the lapwing? Is she absent? Verily I will
-chastise her with a severe punishment, or I will put her to death unless
-she bring me a just excuse.” Not long did he have to wait before the
-lapwing appeared, nor was the just excuse wanting. She had seen a
-country which the king had not seen, and she brought hence a remarkable
-piece of news. In the land of Saba (Sheba) a woman reigned who received
-all the honour due to a great prince. She had a magnificent throne of
-gold and silver; she and her people worshipped the Sun besides God.
-Satan, added the lapwing, becoming controversial, had turned them away
-from the truth lest they should worship the true God, from whom nothing
-is hid. And then this little bird of a story like a fairy-tale ends her
-discourse with one of those sharp, sudden, antithetical organ-blasts
-which again and again lift the mind of the reader of the Koran into the
-highest regions of poetry and religion: “God! there is no God but He;
-the Lord of the Magnificent Throne!” What wonderful art there is in the
-repetition of the words which had been applied just before to earthly
-splendour! The effect is the same as that of the words in Arabic which
-we see carved at every turn in the splendid halls of the Alhambra: “God
-only is conqueror.” What is the splendour or the power of earthly kings?
-
-The story resumes its course. Solomon tells the lapwing that they will
-see, by and by, if she has told the truth or is a liar. He writes a
-letter (which tradition says was perfumed with musk and sealed with the
-king’s signet), and he commands the bird to take it to the land of Saba.
-Some say that the lapwing delivered the letter by throwing it into the
-queen’s bosom as she sat surrounded by her army; others that she brought
-it to her through an open window when she was sitting in her chamber: at
-any rate, it reached its destination, and the lapwing’s character was
-completely rehabilitated. With regard to Queen Balkis, the Bible, the
-Koran, and the Emperor Menelek may be consulted.
-
-One of the beasts most esteemed by Moslems, one of those who, with
-Balaam’s ass, Jonah’s whale, Abraham’s ram, Solomon’s ant, and several
-other favourite animals, are known to have been admitted into the
-highest heaven, is the dog in the Moslem version of the “Seven Sleepers
-of Ephesus,” the legend of the seven young men who hid in a cave and
-slept safely through a long period of persecution. The dog has a Divine
-command to say to the young men, “I love those who are dear to God, and
-I will guard you.” He lay stretched across the mouth of the cave during
-the whole time that the persecution lasted. Moslems say of a very
-avaricious man, “He would not give a bone to the dog of the Seven
-Sleepers.” The dog’s name was Katmîr (though some said it was Al Rakîm),
-and people wrote it as a talisman on important letters sent to a
-distance or oversea, to make sure of their arriving safely: it was like
-registration without the fee. He appears to have slept, as did his
-masters, while he guarded the entrance to the cave: the protection which
-he afforded must be attributed to his supernatural gifts as a
-devil-scarer rather than to the watch he kept. Dogs were believed to see
-“things invisible to us”—_i.e._, demons. If a dog barks in the night the
-Faithful ask God’s aid against Satan. The cock is also a devil-scarer
-and sees angels as well as demons: when he crows it is a sign that he
-has just seen one.
-
-Sometimes genii take the form of certain animals such as cats, dogs, and
-serpents (animals which are not eaten). If a man would kill one of the
-animals in which genii often appear, he must first warn the genii to
-vacate its form. This means that there is a greater prejudice against
-taking the life of such animals than in the case of animals slaughtered
-for food, when it is sufficient (though necessary) to say “If it pleases
-God.” While non-mystical Moslems did not respect life as such,
-nevertheless they realised the great scientific truth that _life_ is the
-supreme mystery. “The idols ye invoke besides God,” says the Koran, “can
-never create a single fly although they were all assembled for that
-purpose, and if the fly snatch anything from them” (such as offerings of
-honey) “they cannot recover the same from it.” Moslems are fond of the
-legend from the Gospel of the Infancy of how the Child Jesus, when He
-and other children were playing at making clay sparrows, breathed on the
-birds made by Him and they flew away or hopped on His hands. The parents
-of the other children forbade them to play any more with the Holy Child,
-whom they thought to be a sorcerer. That the Jews really imagined the
-unusual things done by Christ to be magic-working, and that this belief
-entered more into their wish to compass His death than is commonly
-supposed, a knowledge of Eastern ideas on magic inclines one to think.
-Moslems readily admit the truth of the miracle of the sparrows as of the
-other miracles of Jesus; they add, however, that life came into the clay
-figures “by permission of God.”
-
-Towards the end of the world, animals will speak with human language.
-Before this happens will have come to pass the reign of the “Rooh
-Allah,” the Spirit of God, as all Moslems call Christ. It is told that
-He will descend near the White Tower east of Damascus and will remain on
-earth for forty (or for twenty-four) years, during which period malice
-and hatred will be laid aside and peace and plenty will rejoice the
-hearts of men. While Jesus reigns, lions and camels and bears and sheep
-will live in amity and a child will play with serpents unhurt.
-
-A kind of perpetual local Nature Peace prevails at Mecca; no animals are
-allowed to be slaughtered within a certain distance of the sacred
-precinct. It should be noted also that pilgrims are severely prohibited
-from hunting; the wording of the verse in the Koran which establishes
-this rule seems to imply the possibility that wild animals themselves
-are doing the pilgrimage; hence they must be held sacred.
-
-The law forbidding Moslems to eat the flesh of swine was copied from the
-Jewish ordinance, without doubt from the conviction that it was
-unwholesome. Those who were driven by extreme hunger to eat of it were
-not branded as unclean. There is a curious Indian folk-tale which gives
-an account of why swine-flesh was forbidden. At the beginning Allah
-restrained man from eating any animals but those which died a natural
-death. As they did not die as quickly as they wished, men began to
-hasten their deaths by striking them and throwing stones at them. The
-animals complained to Allah, who sent Gabriel to order all the men and
-all the animals to assemble so that He might decide the case. But the
-obstinate pig did not come. So Allah said: “The pigs, the lowest of
-animals, are disobedient; let no one eat them or touch them.” There is
-no record whatever of the pigs having signed a protest.
-
-It is by no means clear when the prejudice against dogs took hold of the
-Moslem mind. At first their presence was even tolerated inside the
-Mosque, and the report that the Prophet ordered all the dogs at Medina
-to be killed, especially those of a dark colour, is certainly a fable.
-The Caliph Abu Djafar al Mausur asked a learned man this very question:
-why dogs were treated with scorn? The learned man was so worthy of that
-description that he had the courage to say he did not know. “Tradition
-said so.” The Caliph suggested that it might be because dogs bark at
-guests and at beggars. There is a modern saying that angels never go
-into a house where there is a dog or an image. Still, the ordinary
-kindness of the Turks to the pariah dogs at Constantinople, where the
-beggar shares his last crust with them, shows that the feeling belongs
-more to philology than to nature. The pariah dog is the type of the
-despised outcast, but when a European throws poisoned bread to him the
-act is not admired by the Moslem more than it deserves to be.
-
-Several _savants_ have thought that the dog is scorned by Moslems
-because he was revered by Mazdeans; that he suffered indignity at the
-hands of the new believers as a protest against the excess of honour he
-had received from the old. This theory, though ingenious, does not seem
-to be borne out by facts. The comparisons of the qualities of the good
-dervish and the dog, which is a sort of vade mecum of dervishes
-everywhere, was almost certainly suggested by the “Eight
-Characteristics” of the dog in the Avesta. It is singular that the dog
-gets far better treatment in the Moslem comparisons than in the Mazdean.
-“The dog is always hungry: so is it with the faithful; he sleeps but
-little by night: so is it with those plunged in divine Love; if he die,
-he leaves no heritage: so is it with ascetics; he forsakes not his
-master even if driven away: so is it with adepts; he is content with few
-temporal goods: so is it with the pursuers of temperance; if he is
-expelled from one place he seeks another: so is it with the humble; if
-he is chastised and dismissed and then called back he obeys: so is it
-with the modest; if he sees food he remains standing afar: so is it with
-those who are consecrated to poverty; if he go on a journey he carries
-no refreshment for the way: so is it with those who have renounced the
-world.” Some of these “Characteristics” are flung back in irony at the
-dervishes by those who bitterly deride them, as the friars in the ages
-of Faith were derided in Europe—without its making the least difference
-to their popularity—but the homily itself is quite serious and meant for
-edification. Hasan Basri, who died in 728 A.D., was the author or
-adapter. Its wide diffusion is due to the accuracy with which it depicts
-the wandering mystic, whether he be called a dervish or a Fakeer, or, in
-the Western translation of Fakeer, a “Poverello” of St. Francis.
-
-A certain rich man apologised to a Dervish because his servants, without
-his knowledge, had often driven him away: the holy man showed, he said,
-great patience and humility in coming back after such ill-treatment. The
-dervish replied that it was no merit but only one of the “traits of the
-dog,” which returns however often it is driven off. The worst enemies to
-the dervish have ever been the Ulemas, for whom he is a kind of
-dangerous lunatic strongly tinged with heresy. Among his unconventional
-ideas was sure to penetrate, more or less, the neoplatonist or Sufic
-view of animals. Wherever transcendental meditations on the union of the
-created with the Creator begin to prevail, men’s minds take the
-direction of admitting a more intimate relation of all living things
-with God. We might be sure that the dervishes would follow this
-psychological law even if we could not prove it. To prove it, however,
-we need go no further than the great prayer, one of the noblest of human
-prayers, which is used by many of the Dervish orders. There we read:
-“Thy science is everlasting and knows even the numbers of the breaths of
-Thy creatures: Thou seest and hearest the movements of all Thy
-creatures; thou hearest even the footsteps of the ant when in the dark
-night she walks on black stones; even the birds of the air praise Thee
-in their nests; the wild beasts of the desert adore Thee; the most
-secret as well as the most exposed thoughts of Thy servants Thou
-knowest....”
-
-In the same way, it was natural that the Dervishes should be supposed to
-have the power attributed to all holy (or harmless) men over the kings
-of the desert and forest. It could not be otherwise. Bishop Heber heard
-of two Indian Yogis who lived in different parts of a jungle infested by
-tigers in perfect safety; indeed, it was reported that one of these
-ascetics had a nightly visit from a tiger, who licked his hands and was
-fondled by him. This is a Hindu jungle story, but it would be just as
-credible if it were told of a Dervish. Of the credibility of the first
-part of it, and probably of the last also, there is not a single
-wandering ascetic of any sort who would entertain a doubt. Some years
-ago a Moslem recluse deliberately put his arm into the cage of Moti, the
-tiger in the Lahore Zoological Gardens. The tiger lacerated the arm, and
-the poor man died in the hospital after some days’ suffering, during
-which he showed perfect serenity. He had made a mistake; the tiger,
-brought up as a cub by British officers and deprived of his liberty, was
-not endowed with the power of discrimination possessed by a king of the
-wild. This, I hope, the Fakeer reflected, but it is more likely that he
-deemed that cruel clutch a sign of his own unworthiness and accepted
-death meekly, hoping not for reward but for pardon.
-
-One would like to know more of a book which Mr. Charles M. Doughty found
-a certain reputed saint “poring and half weeping over,” the argument of
-which was “God’s creatures the beasts,” while its purpose was to show
-that every beast yields life-worship unto God. Even if this Damascus
-saint was not very saintly (as the author of “Arabia Deserta” hints),
-yet it is interesting to note that this subject should have appeared to
-a would-be new Messiah the most important he could choose for his
-Gospel.
-
-A Persian poet, Azz’ Eddin Elmocadessi, advises man to learn from the
-birds,
-
- “Virtues that may gild thy name;
- And their faults if thou wouldst scan,
- Know thy failings are the same.”
-
-The recognition in animals of most human qualities in a distinct though
-it may be a limited form underlies all Eastern animal-lore and gives it
-a force and a reality even when it deals with extravagant fancies. There
-is a broad difference between the power of feeling _for_ animals and the
-power of feeling _with_ them. The same difference moulds the sentiments
-of man to man: nine men in ten can feel for their fellow-humans, but
-scarcely one man in ten can feel with them. They even know it, and they
-say ungrammatically, “I feel the greatest sympathy _for_ so and so.” An
-instance of true _mitempfindung_, of insight into the very soul of a
-creature, exists in an Arabian poem by Lebid, who was one of the most
-interesting figures of the period in which the destinies of the Arab
-race were cast. He was the glory of the Arabs, not only on account of
-his faultless verse, but also because of his noble character. It is told
-of him that whenever an east wind blew, he provided a feast for the
-poor. Himself a pre-Islamic theist, he hailed the Prophet as the
-inspired enunciator of the creed he had held imperfectly and in private.
-All his poems were composed in the “Ignorance”; on being asked for a
-poem after his conversion at ninety years of age, he copied out a
-chapter of the Koran, and said, “God has given me this in exchange for
-poesy.” I do not think this meant that he despised the poet’s art, but
-that now, when he could no longer exercise it, he had what was still
-more precious.
-
-The passage in question is one of several which show Lebid’s
-surprisingly close acquaintance with the ways and thoughts of wild
-animals. It is one of those elaborate similes which were the pride of
-Arabian poets, who often preferred to take comparisons already in use
-than to invent new ones. Wherever literature became a living
-entertainment, something of this kind happened: witness the borrowings
-from the Classics by the poets of the Renaissance; people liked to
-recognise familiar ideas in a new dress. Lebid’s similes have been
-turned and re-turned by other poets, but none approached the art and
-truth he infused into them. I am indebted to Sir Charles Lyall for the
-following version, which is not included in his volume of splendid
-translations of early Arabian poetry. The subject of the passage is the
-grief of a wild cow that has lost her calf:—
-
- “Flat-nosed is she—she has lost her calf and ceases not to roam
- About the marge of the sand meadows and cry
- For her youngling, just weaned, white, whose limbs have been torn
- By the ash-grey hunting wolves who lack not for food.
- They came upon it while she knew not, and dealt her a deadly woe:
- —Verily, Death, when it shoots, misses not the mark!
- The night came upon her, as the dripping rain of the steady shower
- Poured on and its continuous flow soaked the leafage through and
- through.
- She took refuge in the hollow trunk of a tree with lofty branches
- standing apart
- On the skirts of the sandhills where the fine sand sloped her way.
- The steady rain poured down, and the flood reached the ridge of her
- back,
- In a night when thick darkness hid away all the stars;
- And she shone in the face of the mirk with a white, glimmering light
- Like a pearl born in a sea-shell, that has dropped from its string.
- Until, when the darkness was folded away and morning dawned,
- She stood, her legs slipping in the muddy earth.
- She wandered distracted about all the pools of So’âid
- For seven nights twinned with seven whole long days,
- Until she lost all hope, and her udders shrunk—
- The udders that had not failed in all the days of the suckling and
- weaning,
- Then she heard the sound of men and it filled her heart with fear,
- Of men from a hidden place; and men, she knew, were her bane.
- She rushed blindly along, now thinking the chase before,
- And now behind her: each was a place of dread.
- Until, when the archers lost hope, they let loose on her
- Trained hounds with hanging ears, each with a stiff leather collar
- on its neck;
- They beset her and she turned to meet them with her horns
- Like to spears of Semhar in their sharpness and their length.
- To thrust them away: for she knew well, if she drove them not off,
- That the fated day of her death among the fates of beasts had come;
- And among them, Kesâb was thrust through and slain and rolled in blood
- lay there,
- And Sukhâm was left in the place where he made his onset.”
-
-There the description breaks off. In spite of the haunting cry of the
-cow of Lucretius, in spite of the immortal tears of Shakespeare’s “poor
-sequester’d stag”—no vision of a desperate animal in all literature
-seems to me so charged with every element of pathos and dramatic
-intensity as this cow of Lebid. How fine is the altogether unforeseen
-close, which leaves us wondering, breathless: Will she escape? Will no
-revengeful arrow reach her? Will the archers do as Om Piet did to the
-wildebeest?—
-
- “A wildebeest cow and calf were pursued by Om Piet with three
- hunting-dogs. The Boer hunter tells the tale: ‘The old cow laid
- the first dog low; the calf is now tired. The second dog comes
- up to seize it; the cow strikes him down. Now the third dog
- tries to bite the little one, who can run no more, but the cow
- treats him so that there’s nothing to be done but to shoot him.
- Then Om Piet stands face to face with the wildebeest, who snorts
- but does not fly. Now though I come to shoot a wildebeest yet
- can I not kill a beast that has so bravely fought and will not
- run away; so Om Piet takes off his hat, and says, “Good-day to
- you, old wildebeest. You are a good and strong old wildebeest.”
- And we dine off springbuck that night at the farm.’”[7]
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- “A Breath from the Veldt,” by Guille Millais, 2nd edition, 1899.
-
-I ought to explain that, like the “cow” of Om Piet, Lebid’s “cow” is an
-antelope—the _Antilope defassa_—of which a good specimen may be seen in
-the Natural History Museum at South Kensington. The old Boer’s hunting
-yarn brings an unexpected confirmation of the Arabian poet’s testimony
-to its courage and maternal love.
-
-Since the chase began, down to the blind brutality of the battue (which
-wiped it out) chivalry has been a trait of the genuine sportsman. In the
-golden legend of hunter’s generosity should be inscribed for ever the
-tale—the true tale as I believe it to be—of the Moslem prince
-Sebectighin, who rose from slave-birth to the greatest of Persian
-thrones—and more honour to him, notwithstanding the slur which Firdusi,
-stung by Mahmoud’s want of appreciation, cast, in a foolish moment, on
-his father’s origin. Sebectighin was a horseman in the service of the
-Sultan and as a preparation for greater things he found a vent for his
-pent-up energies in the chase. One day he remarked a deer with her
-little fawn peacefully grazing in a glade of the forest. He galloped to
-the spot, and in less than a second he had seized the fawn, which, after
-binding its legs, he placed across his saddle-bows. Thus he started to
-go home, but looking back, he saw the mother following, with every mark
-of grief. Sebectighin’s heart was touched; he loosened the fawn and
-restored it to its dam. And in the night he had a vision in his dreams
-of One who said to him, “The kindness and compassion which thou hast
-this day shown to a distressed animal has been approved of in the
-presence of God; therefore in the records of Providence the kingdom of
-Ghusni is marked as a reward against thy name. Let not greatness destroy
-thy virtue, but continue thy benevolence to man.”
-
-Among the Afghan ballads collected by James Darmesteter, of which it has
-been aptly said that they give an admirable idea of Homer in a state of
-becoming, there is one composed in a gentler mood than the songs of war
-and carnage which has a gazelle for heroine and the Prophet as _Deus ex
-machina_. As there is no translation of it into English I have attempted
-the following version:—
-
- “The Son of Abu Jail he set a snare for a gazelle,
- Without a thought along she sped, and in the snare she fell.
-
- ‘O woe is me!’ she weeping cried, ‘that I to look forgot!
- Fain would I live for my dear babes, but hope, alas! is not.’
-
- Then to the Merciful she made this short and fervent prayer:
- ‘I left two little fawns at home; Lord, keep them in Thy care!’
-
- The son of Abu Jail he came, in haste and glee he ran,
- ‘Ah, now I’ve got you in my net, and who to save you can?’
-
- He grasped her by her tender throat, his fearsome sword did draw,
- When lo! the Lord held back his hand! The Prophet’s self he saw!
-
- ‘The world was saved for love of thee, save for thy pity’s sake!’
- So breathed the trembling doe, and then the holy Prophet spake:
-
- ‘Abu, my friend, this doe let go, and hark to my appeal;
- She has two tender fawns at home who pangs of hunger feel,
-
- ‘Let her go back one hour to them, no longer will she stay,
- And when she comes, O heartless man, then mayest thou have thy way!
-
- But if, by chance, she should not come, then by my faith will I
- Be unto thee a bonded slave until the day I die.’
-
- Then Abu the gazelle let go; to her dear young she went,
- ‘Quick, children, take my breast,’ she said, ‘my life is almost spent;
-
- ‘The Master of the Universe for me a pledge I gave,
- But I must swift return and then no man my life can save.’
-
- Then said the little ones to her, ‘Mother, we dare not eat;
- Go swiftly back, redeem the pledge, fast as can fly thy feet.’
-
- One hour had scarce run fully out when, panting, she was there;
- Now, Abu, son of Abu, thou mayest take her life or spare!
-
- Said Abu, ‘In the Prophet’s name, depart, I set you free ...
- But thou, our Helper, at God’s throne, do thou remember me!’
-
- So have I told, as long ago my father used to tell,
- How Pagan Abu Moslem turned and saved his soul from hell.”
-
-This brief sketch will suffice to show that if the Moslem is not humane
-to animals it is his own fault, as I think it is his own fault if he is
-not humane to man. Teaching humanity to animals must always imply the
-teaching of humanity to men. This was perfectly understood well by all
-these Oriental tellers of beast-stories: they would all have endorsed
-the saying of one of my Lombard peasant-women (dear, good soul!), “Chi
-non è buono per le bestie, non è buono per i Cristiani”; _Cristiano_
-meaning, in Italian popular speech, a human being. Under the most varied
-forms, in fiction which while the world lasts, can never lose its
-freshness, the law of kindness is brought home. Perhaps the most
-beautiful of all humane legends is one preserved in a poem by Abu
-Mohammed ben Yusuf, Sheikh Nizan-eddin, known to Europeans as Nizami.
-This Persian poet, who died sixty-three years before Dante was born, may
-have taken the legend from some collection of Christ-lore, some
-uncanonical book impossible now to trace; it is unlikely that he
-invented it. As Jesus walks with His disciples through the market-place
-at evening, He comes upon a crowd which is giving vent to every
-expression of abhorrence at the sight of a poor dead dog lying in the
-gutter. When they have all had their say, and have pointed in disgust to
-his blear eyes, foul ears, bare ribs, torn hide, “which will not even
-yield a decent shoe-string,” Jesus says, “How beautifully white his
-teeth are!” No story of the Saviour outside the Gospels is so worthy to
-have been in them.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XII
-
- THE FRIEND OF THE CREATURE
-
-
-IN Hindu mythology Gunádhya attracts a whole forestful of beasts by
-reciting his poems to them. The power of Apollo and of Orpheus in taming
-beasts depended on a far less surprising _modus operandi_; like the
-greater part of myths, this one was not spun from the thin air of
-imagination. Music has a real influence on animals; in spite of theories
-to the contrary, it is probable that the sweet flute-playing of the
-snake-charmer—his “sweet charming” in Biblical phrase—is no mere piece
-of theatrical business, but a veritable aid in obtaining the desired
-results. I myself could once attract fieldmice by playing on the violin,
-and only lately, on the road near our house at Salò, I noticed that a
-goat manifested signs of wishing to stop before a grind-organ; its
-master pulled the string by which it was led, but it tugged at it so
-persistently that, at last, he stopped, and the goat, turning round its
-head, listened with evident attention. Independently of the pleasure
-music may give to animals, it excites their curiosity, a faculty which
-is extremely alive in them, as may be seen by the way in which small
-birds are attracted by the pretty antics of the little Italian owl; they
-cannot resist going near to have a better view, and so they rush to
-their doom upon the limed sticks.
-
-Legends have an inner and an outer meaning; the allegory of Apollo, Lord
-of Harmony, would have been incomplete had it lacked the beautiful
-incident of a Nature Peace—partial indeed, but still a fairer triumph to
-the god than his Olympian honours. For nine years he watched the sheep
-of Admetus, as Euripides described:—
-
- “Pythean Apollo, master of the lyre,
- Who deigned to be a herdsman and among
- Thy flocks on hills his hymns celestial sung;
- And his delightful melodies to hear
- Would spotted lynx and lions fierce draw near;
- They came from Othry’s immemorial shade,
- By charm of music tame and harmless made;
- And the swift, dappled fawns would there resort,
- From the tall pine-woods and about him sport.”
-
-When Apollo gave Orpheus his lyre, he gave him his gift “to soothe the
-savage breast.” In the splendid Pompeian fresco showing a Nature Peace,
-the bay-crowned, central figure is said to be Orpheus, though its
-god-like proportions suggest the divinity himself. At any rate, nothing
-can be finer as the conception of an inspired musician: the whole body
-_sings_, not only the mouth. A lion and a tiger sit on either side;
-below, a stag and a wild boar listen attentively, and a little hare
-capers near the stream. In the upper section there are other wild beasts
-sporting round an elephant, while oxen play with a tiger; an
-anticipation of the ox and tiger in Rubens’ “Garden of Eden.”
-
-The power of Orpheus to subdue wild beasts was the reason why the early
-Christians took him as a type of Christ. Of all the prophecies which
-were believed to refer to the Messiah none so captivated the popular
-mind as those which could be interpreted as referring to His recognition
-by animals. The four Gospels which became the canon of the Church threw
-no light on the subject, but the gap was filled up by the uncanonical
-books; one might think that they were written principally for the
-purpose of dwelling on this theme, so frequently do they return to it.
-In the first place, they bring upon the scene those dear objects of our
-childhood’s affection, the ass and the ox of the stable of Bethlehem.
-Surely many of us cherish the impression that ass and ox rest on most
-orthodox testimony: an idea which is certainly general in Catholic
-countries, though, the other day, I heard of a French priest who was
-heartless enough to declare that they were purely imaginary. “Alas,” as
-Voltaire said, “people run after truth!” As a matter of fact, it appears
-evident that the ass and the ox were introduced to fulfil the prophecy
-of Isaiah: “The ox knoweth his owner and the ass his master’s manger,
-but Israel knoweth Me not.” But there arose what was thought a
-difficulty: the apocryphal Gospels, in harmony with the earliest
-traditions, place the birth of Christ, not in a stable, but in the
-grotto which is still shown to travellers. To reconcile this with the
-legend of the ass and ox and also with the narrative of St. Luke, it was
-supposed that the Holy Family moved from the grotto to a stable a few
-days after the Child was born. This is a curious case of finding a
-difficulty where there was none, for it is very likely that the caves
-near the great Khan of Bethlehem were used as stables. In every
-primitive country shepherds shelter themselves and their flocks in holes
-in rocks; I remember the “uncanny” effect of a light flickering in the
-depths of a Phœnician tomb near Cagliari; it was almost disappointing to
-hear that it was only a shepherd’s fire.
-
-Thomas, “the Israelite philosopher,” as he called himself, author of the
-Pseudo-Thomas which is said to date from the second century, appears to
-have been a Jewish convert belonging to one of the innumerable
-“heretical” sects of the earliest times. It may be guessed, therefore,
-that the Pseudo-Thomas was first written in Syriac, though the text we
-possess is in Greek. It is considered the model on which all the other
-Gospels of the Infancy were founded, but the Arabic variant contains so
-much divergent matter as to make it probable that the writer drew on
-some other early source which has not been preserved. Mohammed was
-acquainted with this Arabian Gospel, and Mohammedans did not cease to
-venerate the sycamore-tree at Matarea under which the Arabian evangelist
-states that the Virgin and Child rested, till it died about a year ago.
-The Pseudo-Thomas contains some vindictive stories, which were modified
-or omitted in the other versions: probably they are all to be traced to
-Elisha and his she-bears: a theory which I offer to those who cannot
-imagine how they arose. A curious feature in these writings is the
-scarcity of anything actually original; the most original story to be
-found in them is that of the clay sparrows, which captivated the East
-and penetrated into the folk-lore even of remote Iceland.
-Notwithstanding the fulminations of Councils, the apocryphal Gospels
-were never suppressed; they enjoyed an enormous popularity during the
-Middle Ages, and many details derived solely from these condemned books
-crept into the _Legenda Aurea_ and other strictly orthodox works.
-
-The “Little Child” of Isaiah’s prophecy was the cause of troops of wild
-beasts being convoked to attend the Infant Christ. Lions acted as guides
-for the flight into Egypt, and it is mentioned that not only did they
-respect the Holy Family, but also the asses and oxen which carried their
-baggage. Besides, the lions, leopards, and other creatures “wagged their
-tails with great reverence” (though all these animals are not of the dog
-species, but of the cat, in which wagging the tail signifies the reverse
-of content).
-
-This is the subject of an old English ballad:—
-
- “And when they came to Egypt’s land,
- Amongst those fierce wild beasts,
- Mary, she being weary,
- Must needs sit down to rest.
- ‘Come, sit thee down,’ said Jesus,
- ‘Come, sit thee down by Me,
- And thou shall see how these wild beasts
- Do come and worship Me.’”
-
-First to come was the “lovely lion,” king of all wild beasts, and for
-our instruction the moral is added: “We’ll choose our virtuous princes
-of birth and high degree.” Sad rhymes they are, nor, it will be said, is
-the sense much better; yet, hundreds of years ago in English villages,
-where, perhaps, only one man knew how to read, this doggerel served the
-end of the highest poetry: it transported the mind into an ideal region;
-it threw into the English landscape deserts, lions, a Heavenly Child; it
-stirred the heart with the romance of the unknown; it whispered to the
-soul—
-
- “The Now is an atom of sand,
- And the Near is a perishing clod;
- But Afar is a Faëry Land,
- And Beyond is the bosom of God.”
-
-The pseudo-gospel of Matthew relates an incident which refers to a later
-period in the Holy Childhood. According to this narrative, when Jesus
-was eight years old He went into the den of a lioness which frightened
-travellers on the road by the Jordan. The little cubs played round His
-feet, while the older lions bowed their heads and fawned on Him. The
-Jews, who saw it from a distance, said that Jesus or His parents must
-have committed mortal sin for Him to go into the lion’s den. But coming
-forth, He told them that these lions were better behaved than they; and
-then He led the wild beasts across the Jordan and commanded them to go
-their way, hurting no one, neither should any one hurt them till they
-had returned to their own country. So they bade Him farewell with gentle
-roars and gestures of respect.
-
-These stories are innocent, and they are even pretty, for all stories of
-great, strong animals and little children are pretty. But they fail to
-reveal the slightest apprehension of the deeper significance of a peace
-between all creatures. Turn from them to the wonderful lines of William
-Blake:—
-
- “And there the lion’s ruddy eyes
- Shall flow with tears of gold,
- And pitying the tender cries
- And walking round the fold
- Saying: Wrath by His meekness,
- And by His health sickness,
- Are driven away
- From our mortal day.
-
- And now beside thee, bleating lamb,
- I can lie down and sleep,
- Or think on Him who bore thy name,
- Graze after thee, and weep;
- For, washed in life’s river,
- My bright mane for ever
- Shall shine like the gold
- As I guard o’er the fold.”
-
-No one but Blake would have written this, and few things that he wrote
-are so characteristic of his genius. The eye of the painter seizes what
-the mind of the mystic conceives, and the poet surcharges with emotion
-words which, like the Vedic hymns, infuse thought rather than express
-it.
-
-A single passage in the New Testament connects Christ with wild animals;
-in St. Mark’s Gospel we are told that after His baptism in the Jordan
-Jesus was driven by the Spirit into the wilderness, where “He was with
-the wild beasts, and the angels ministered unto Him.” In the East the
-idea of the anchorite who leaves the haunts of men for the haunts of
-beasts was already fabulously old. In the Western world of the Roman
-Empire it was a new idea, and perhaps on that account, while it excited
-the horror of those who were faithful to the former order of things, it
-awoke an extraordinary enthusiasm among the more ardent votaries of the
-new faith. It led to the discovery of the inebriation of solitude, the
-powerful stimulus of a life with wild nature. Many tired brain-workers
-have recourse to mountain ascents as a restorative, but these can rarely
-be performed alone, and high mountains with their immense horizons tend
-to overwhelm rather than to collect the mind. But to wander alone in a
-forest, day after day, without particular aim, drinking in the pungent
-odours of growing things, fording the ice-cold streams, meeting no one
-but a bird or a hare—this will leave a memory as of another existence in
-some enchanted sphere. We have tasted an ecstasy that cities cannot
-give. We have tasted it, and we have come back into the crowded places,
-and it may be well for us that we have come back, for not to all is it
-given to walk in safety alone with their souls.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo:_ _Anderson._
- ST. JEROME EXTRACTING A THORN FROM THE PAW OF A LION.
- (_By Hubert van Eyck._)
- Naples Museum.]
-
-Of one of the earliest Christian anchorites in Egypt it is related that
-for fifty years he spoke to no one; he roamed in a state of nature,
-flying from the monks who attempted to approach him. At last he
-consented to answer some questions put by a recluse whose extreme piety
-caused him to be better received than the others. To the question of why
-he avoided mankind, he replied that those who dwelt with men could not
-be visited by angels. After saying this, he vanished again into the
-desert. I have observed that the idea of renouncing the world was not a
-Western idea, yet, at the point where it touches madness, it had already
-penetrated into the West—we know where to find its tragic record:—
-
- “Ego vitam agam sub altis Phrygiae columinibus,
- Ubi cerva silvicultrix, ubi aper nemorivagus?”
-
-The _point of madness_ would have been reached more often but for the
-charity of the stag and the wild boar and the lion and the buffalo, who
-felt a sort of compassion for the harmless, weak human creatures that
-came among them, and who were ready to give that response which is the
-sustaining ichor of life.
-
-The same causes produce the same effects—man may offer surprises but
-never men. Wherever there are solitaries there are friendships between
-the recluse and the wild beast. All sorts of stories of lions and other
-animals that were on friendly terms with the monks of the desert have
-come down to us in the legends of the Saints. The well-known legend of
-how St. Jerome relieved a lion of a thorn which was giving him great
-pain, and how the lion became tame, was really told of another saint,
-but Jerome, if he did not figure in a lion story, is the authority for
-one: in his life of Paul the Hermit he relates that when that holy man
-died, two lions came out of the desert to dig his grave; they uttered a
-loud wail over his body and knelt down to crave a blessing from his
-surviving companion—none other than the great St. Anthony. He also says
-that Paul had subsisted for many years on food brought to him by birds,
-and when he had a visitor the birds brought double rations.
-
-As soon as the hermit appears in Europe his four-footed friends appear
-with him. For instance, there was the holy Karileff who tamed a buffalo.
-Karileff was a man of noble lineage who took up his abode with two
-companions in a clearing in the woods on the Marne, where he was soon
-surrounded by all sorts of wild things. Amongst these was a buffalo, one
-of the most intractable of beasts in its wild state, but this buffalo
-became perfectly tame, and it was a charming sight to see the aged saint
-stroking it softly between its horns. Now it happened that the king, who
-was Childebert, son of Clovis, came to know that there was a buffalo in
-the neighbourhood, and forthwith he ordered a grand hunt. The buffalo,
-seeing itself lost, fled to the hut of its holy protector, and when the
-huntsmen approached they found the monk standing in front of the animal.
-The king was furious, and swore that Karileff and his brethren should
-leave the place for ever; then he turned to go, but his horse would not
-move one step. This filled him with what was more likely panic fear than
-compunction; he lost no time in asking the saint for his blessing, and
-he presented him with the whole domain, in which an abbey was built and
-ultimately a town, the present Saint-Calais. On another occasion the
-same Childebert was hunting a hare, which took refuge under the habit of
-St. Marculphe; the king’s huntsman rudely expostulated, and the monk
-surrendered the hare, but, lo and behold! the dogs would not continue
-the pursuit and the huntsman fell off his horse!
-
-A vein of more subtle sensibility runs through the story of St. Columba,
-who, not long before his death, ordered a stork to be picked up and
-tended when it dropped exhausted on the Western shore of Iona. After
-three days, he said, the stork would depart, “for she comes from the
-land where I was born and thither would she return.” In fact, on the
-third day, the stork, rested and refreshed, spread out its wings and
-sailed away straight towards the saint’s beloved Ireland. When Columba
-was really dying the old white horse of the convent came and laid its
-head on his shoulder with an air of such profound melancholy that it
-seemed nigh to weeping. A brother wished to drive it away, but the saint
-said No; God had revealed to the horse what was hidden from man, and it
-was come to bid him goodbye.
-
-Evidently there is only a slight element of the marvellous in these
-legends and none at all in others, such as the story of Walaric, who fed
-little birds and told the monks not to approach or frighten his “little
-friends” while they picked up the crumbs. To the same order belong
-several well-authenticated stories of the Venerable Joseph of Anchieta,
-apostle of Brazil. He protected the parrots that alighted on a ship by
-which he was travelling from the merciless sailors who would have caught
-and killed them. Whilst descending a river he would have saved a monkey
-which some fishermen shot at with their arrows, but he was not in time;
-the other monkeys gathered round their slain comrade with signs of
-mourning: “Come near,” said the holy man, “and weep in peace for that
-one of you who is no more.” Presently, fearing not to be able longer to
-restrain the cruelty of the men, he bade them depart with God’s
-blessing.
-
-Here is no marvel; only sympathy which is sometimes the greatest of
-marvels. It needed the mind of a Shakespeare to probe just this secret
-recess of feeling for animals:—
-
- “—— What dost thou strike at, Marcus, with thy knife?
- —— At that I have killed, my Lord, a fly.
- —— Out on thee, murderer, thou killest my heart;
- Mine eyes are cloyed with view of tyranny;
- A deed of death done on the innocent,
- Becomes not Titus’ brother; get thee gone,
- I see thou art not for my company.
- —— Alas! my Lord, I have but killed a fly.
- —— But how if that fly had a father and mother?
- How would he hang his slender gilded wings
- And buz lamented doings in the air?
- Poor harmless fly!
- That with his pretty buzzing melody
- Came here to make us merry, and thou hast killed him.”
-
-If St. Bernard saw a hare pursued by dogs or birds threatened by a hawk
-he could not resist making the sign of the cross, and his benediction
-always brought safety. It is to this saint that we owe the exquisite
-saying, “If mercy were a sin I think I could not keep myself from
-committing it.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo:_ _Hanfslängl._
- ST. EUSTACE AND THE STAG.
- (_By Vittore Pisano._)
- National Gallery.]
-
-Apart from the rest, stands one saint who brought the wild to the
-neighbourhood of a bustling, trafficking little Italian town of the
-thirteenth century and peopled it with creatures which, whether of fancy
-or of fact, will live for ever. How St. Francis tamed the “wolf of
-Agobio” is the most famous if not altogether the most credible of the
-animal stories related of him. That wolf was a quadruped without morals;
-not only had he eaten kids but also men. All attempts to kill him
-failed, and the townsfolk were afraid of venturing outside the walls
-even in broad daylight. One day St. Francis, against the advice of all,
-went out to have a serious talk with the wolf. He soon found him and,
-“Brother Wolf,” he said, “you have eaten not only animals but men made
-in the image of God, and certainly you deserve the gallows;
-nevertheless, I wish to make peace between you and these people, brother
-Wolf, so that you may offend them no more, and neither they nor their
-dogs shall attack you.” The wolf seemed to agree, but the saint wished
-to have a distinct proof of his solemn engagement to fulfil his part in
-the peace, whereupon the wolf stood up on his hind legs and laid his paw
-on the saint’s hand. Francis then promised that the wolf should be
-properly fed for the rest of his days, “for well I know,” he said
-kindly, “that all your evil deeds were caused by hunger”—upon which text
-several sermons might be preached, for truly many a sinner may be
-reformed by a good dinner and by nothing else. The contract was kept on
-both sides, and the wolf lived happily for some years—“notricato
-cortesemente dalla gente”—at the end of which he died of old age,
-sincerely mourned by all the inhabitants.
-
-If any one decline to believe in the wolf of Gubbio, why, he must be
-left to his invincible ignorance. But there are other tales in the
-_Fioretti_ and in the _Legenda Aurea_ which are nowise hard to believe.
-What more likely than that Francis, on meeting a youth who had
-wood-doves to sell, looked at the birds “con l’occhio pietoso,” and
-begged the youth not to give them into the cruel hands that would kill
-them? The young man, “inspired by God,” gave the doves to the saint, who
-held them against his breast, saying, “Oh, my sisters, innocent doves,
-why did you let yourselves be caught? Now will I save you from death and
-make nests for you, so that you may increase and multiply according to
-the commandment of our Creator.” Schopenhauer mentions, with emphatic
-approval, the Indian merchant at the fair of Astrachan who, when he has
-a turn of good luck, goes to the market-place and buys birds, which he
-sets at liberty. The holy Francis not only set his doves free, but
-thought about their future, a refinement of benevolence which might
-“almost have persuaded” the humane though crusty old philosopher to put
-on the Franciscan habit.
-
-(At this point I chance to see from my window a kitten in the act of
-annoying a rather large snake. It is a coiled-up snake; probably an
-Itongo. It requires a good five minutes to induce the kitten to abandon
-its quarry and to convey the snake to a safe place under the myrtles.
-This being done, I resume my pen.)
-
-I have remarked that in some respects the Saint of Assisi stands apart
-from the other saints who took notice of animals. It was a common thing,
-for instance, for saints to preach to creatures, but there is an
-individual note in the sermon of Francis to the birds which is not found
-elsewhere. The reason why St. Anthony preached to the fishes at Rimini
-was that the “heretics” would not listen to him, and St. Martin
-addressed the water-fowl who were diving after fish in the Loire
-because, having compared them to the devil, seeking whom he may devour,
-he thought it necessary to order them to depart from those waters—which
-they immediately did, no doubt frightened to death by the apparition of
-a gesticulating saint and the wild-looking multitude. The motive of
-Francis was neither pique at not being listened to nor the temptation to
-show miraculous skill as a bird-scarer; he was moved solely by an
-effusion of tender sentiment. Birds in great quantities had alighted in
-a neighbouring field: a beautiful sight which every dweller in the
-country must have sometimes seen and asked himself, was it a parliament,
-a garden party, a halt in a journey? “Wait a little for me here upon the
-road,” said the saint to his companions; “I am going to preach to my
-sisters the birds.” And so, “_having greeted them as creatures endowed
-with reason_,” he went on to say: “Birds, my sisters, you ought to give
-great praise to your Creator, who dressed you with feathers, who gave
-you wings to fly with, who granted you all the domains of the air, whose
-solicitude watches over you.” The birds stretched out their necks,
-fluttered their wings, opened their beaks, and looked at the preacher
-with attention. When he had done, he passed in the midst of them and
-touched them with his habit, and not one of them stirred till he gave
-them leave to fly away.
-
-The saint lifted worms out of the path lest they should be crushed, and
-during the winter frosts, for fear that the bees should die in the hive,
-he brought honey to them and the best wines that he could find. Near his
-cell at Portionuculo there was a fig-tree, and on the fig-tree lived a
-cicada. One day the Servant of God stretched out his hand and said,
-“Come to me, my sister Cicada”; and at once the insect flew upon his
-hand. And he said to it, “Sing, my sister Cicada, and praise thy Lord.”
-And having received his permission she sang her song. The biographies
-that were written without the inquisition into facts which we demand,
-gave a living idea of the man, not a photograph of his skeleton. What
-mattered if romance were mixed with truth when the total was true? We
-know St. Francis of Assisi as if he had been our next-door neighbour. It
-would have needed unbounded genius to invent such a character, and there
-was nothing to be gained by inventing it. The legends which represent
-him as one who consistently treated animals as creatures endowed with
-reason are in discord with orthodox teaching; they skirt dangerously
-near to heresy. Giordano Bruno was accused of having said that men and
-animals had the same origin; to hold such an opinion qualified you for
-the stake. But the Church that canonised Buddha under the name of St.
-Josephat has had accesses of toleration which must have made angels
-rejoice.
-
-Some think that Francis was at one time a troubadour, and troubadours
-had many links with those Manichæan heretics whom Catholics charged with
-believing in the transmigration of souls. This may interest the curious,
-but the doctrine of metempsychosis has little to do with the vocation of
-the Asiatic recluse as a beast-tamer, and St. Francis of Assisi was true
-brother to that recluse. He was the Fakeer or Dervish of the West. When
-the inherent mysticism in man’s nature brought the Dervishes into
-existence soon after Mohammed’s death, in spite of the Prophet’s
-well-known dislike for religious orders, they justified themselves by
-quoting the text from the Koran, “Poverty is my pride.” It would serve
-the Franciscan equally well. The begging friar was an anachronism in the
-religion of Islam as he is an anachronism in modern society, but what
-did that matter to him? He thought and he thinks that he will outlive
-both.
-
-The Abdâl or pre-eminently holy Dervish who lived in the desert with
-friendly beasts over whom he exercised an extraordinary power, became
-the centre of a legend, almost of a cult, like his Christian
-counterpart. There were several Abdâls of high repute during the reigns
-of the early Ottoman Sultans. Perhaps there was more confidence in their
-sanctity than in their sanity, for while the Catholic historian finds it
-inconvenient to admit the hypothesis of madness as accounting for even
-the strangest conduct of the saints of the desert or their mediæval
-descendants, a devout Oriental sees no irreverence in recognising the
-possible affinity between sainthood and mental alienation. In India the
-holy recluse who tames wild beasts is as much alive to-day as in any
-former time. Whatever is very old is still a part of the everyday life
-of the Indian people. Accordingly the native newspapers frequently
-report that some prince was attacked by a savage beast while out
-hunting, when, at the nick of time, a venerable saint appeared at whose
-first word the beast politely relaxed his hold. Those who know India
-best by no means think that all such stories are invented. Why should
-they be? Cardinal Massaia (who wore, by the by, the habit of Francis)
-stated that the lions he met in the desert had very good manners. A few
-years ago an old lady met a large, well-grown lioness in the streets of
-Chatres; mistaking it for a large dog, she patted it on the head and it
-followed her for some time until it was observed by others, when the
-whole town was seized with panic and barred doors and windows. Even with
-the provocation of such mistrust the lioness behaved well, and allowed
-itself to be reconducted to the menagerie from which it had escaped.
-
-Those who try to divest themselves of human nature rarely succeed, and
-the reason nearest to the surface why, over all the world, the lonely
-recluse made friends with animals was doubtless his loneliness. On their
-side, animals have only to be persuaded that men are harmless for them
-to meet their advances half-way. If this is not always true of wild
-beasts, it is because (as St. Francis apprehended) unfortunately they
-are sometimes hungry; but man is not the favourite prey of any wild
-beast who is in his right mind. Prisoners who tamed mice or sparrows
-followed the same impulse as saints who tamed lions or buffaloes. How
-many a prisoner who returned to the fellowship of men must have
-regretted his mouse or his sparrow! Animals can be such good company.
-Still, it follows that if their society was sought as a substitute, they
-were, in a certain sense, vicarious objects of affection. We forget that
-even in inter-human affections much is vicarious. The sister of charity
-gives mankind the love which she would have given to her children. The
-ascetic who will never hear the pattering feet of his boy upon the
-stairs loves the gazelle, the bird fallen from its nest, the lion cub
-whose mother has been slain by the hunter. And love, far more than
-charity (in the modern sense), blesses him that gives as well as him
-that takes.
-
-But human phenomena are complex, and this explanation of the sympathy
-between saint and beast does not cover the whole ground. Who can doubt
-that these men, whose faculties were concentrated on drawing nearer to
-the Eternal, vaguely surmised that wild living creatures had unperceived
-channels of communication with spirit, hidden _rapports_ with the
-Fountain of Life which man has lost or has never possessed? Who can
-doubt that in the vast cathedral of Nature they were awed by “the
-mystery which is in the face of brutes”?
-
-Beside the need to love and the need to wonder, some of them knew the
-need to pity. Here the ground widens, for the heart that feels the pang
-of the meanest thing that lives does not beat only in the hermit’s cell
-or under the sackcloth of a saint.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XIII
-
- VERSIPELLES
-
-
-THE snake and the tiger are grim realities of Indian life. They mean a
-great deal—they mean India with its horror and its splendour; above all,
-with its primary attention given to things which for most Europeans are
-_nil_ or are kept for Sunday. And Sunday, the day most calm, most
-bright, has only a little portion of them, only the light not the
-darkness of the Unknown.
-
-To the despair of the English official, the Hindu, like his forefathers
-in remotest antiquity, respects the life of tiger and snake. In doing so
-he is not governed simply by the feeling that makes him look on serenely
-whilst all sorts of winged and fleet-footed creatures eat up his growing
-crops—another tolerance which exasperates the Western beholder: in that
-instance it is, in the main, the rule of live and let live which
-dictates his forbearance, the persuasion that it is wrong to monopolise
-the increase of the earth to the uttermost farthing’s-worth. His
-sentiment towards tiger and snake is of a more profound nature.
-
-The Hindu will not kill a cobra if he can help it, and if one is killed
-he tries to expiate the offence by honouring it with proper funeral
-rites. The tiger, like the snake, gives birth to those ancient twins,
-fear and admiration. The perception of the beautiful is one of the
-oldest as it is one of the most mysterious of psychological phenomena in
-man and beast. Why should the sheen of the peacock’s tail attract the
-peahen? Why should the bower-bird and the lyre-bird construct a lovely
-pleasance where they may dance? Man perceived the beautiful in fire and
-wind, in the swift air, the circle of stars, the violent water, the
-lights of heaven: “being delighted with the beauty of these things, he
-took them to be gods”—as was said by the writer of the Wisdom of Solomon
-about two hundred years before Christ. He also perceived the beautiful
-in the lithe movements of the snake and in the tiger’s symmetry.
-
-As to the sense of fear, how is it that this fear is unaccompanied by
-repulsion? To this question the more general answer would seem to be
-that Nature, if regarded as divine, cannot repel. But the snake and
-tiger are in some special way divine, so that they become still further
-removed from the range of human criticism. They are manifestations of
-divinity—a safer description of even the lowest forms of zoolatry than
-the commoner one which asserts that they are “gods.” Deity, if
-omnipresent, “must be able to occupy the same space as another body at
-the same time,” which was said in a different connexion, but it is the
-true base of all beliefs involving the union of spirit and matter from
-the lowest to the highest.
-
-The animal which is a divine agent, ought to behave like one. If it
-causes destruction, such destruction should have the fortuitous
-appearance of havoc wrought by natural causes. The snake or tiger should
-not wound with malice prepense, but only in a fine, casual way. This is
-just what, as a rule, they are observed to do. I have seen many snakes,
-but I never saw one run after a man, though I have seen men run after
-snakes. Now and then the Italian peasant is bitten by vipers because he
-walks in the long grass with naked feet. He treads on the snake or
-pushes against it, and it bites him. So it is with the Indian peasant.
-It is much the same in the case of the normal tiger; unless he is
-disturbed or wounded, he most rarely attacks. But there are abnormal
-tigers, abnormal beasts of every sort—there is the criminal class of
-beast. What of him? It might be supposed that primitive man would take
-such a beast to be an angry or vindictive spirit. By no means. He
-detects in him a fellow-human. The Indian forestalled Lombroso; the
-man-eating tiger is a degenerate, really not responsible for his
-actions, and still less is the god behind him responsible for them.
-
-Little need be said of the natural history of the man-eating tiger; yet
-a few words may not be out of place. To his abnormality every one who
-has studied wild beasts bears witness. All agree that the loss of life
-from tigers is almost exclusively traceable to individuals of tiger-kind
-which prey chiefly or only on man. The seven or eight hundred persons
-killed annually by tigers in British India are victims of comparatively
-few animals. Not many years ago a single man-eating tigress was
-certified to have killed forty-eight persons. While the ordinary tiger
-has to be sought out with difficulty for the sport of those who wish to
-hunt him, the man-eater night after night waylays the rural postman or
-comes boldly into the villages in search of his unnatural food. During
-great scarcity caused by the destruction or disappearance of small game
-in the forests, the carnivora are forced out of their habits as the
-wolves in the Vosges are induced to come down to the plains in periods
-of intense cold. Such special causes do not affect the question of the
-man-eater, which eats man’s flesh from choice, not from necessity. Why
-he does so Europeans have tried to explain in various ways. One is, that
-the unfamiliar taste of human flesh creates an irresistible craving. In
-South America they say that a jaguar after tasting man’s flesh once
-becomes an incorrigible man-eater for ever after. Others think
-man-eating is a form of madness, a disease, and they point to the fact
-that the man-eater is always in bad condition; his skin is useless. But
-it is not sure if this be cause or effect, since man’s flesh is said to
-be unwholesome. A third and plausible theory would attribute man-eating
-to the easy capture of the prey: a tiger that has caught one man will
-hunt no other fleeter game. Especially in old age, a creature that has
-neither horns nor tusks nor yet swift feet must appear an attractive
-prey. This coincides with an observation made by Apollonius of Tyana: he
-says that lions caught and ate monkeys for medicine when they were sick,
-but that when they were old and unable to hunt the stag and the wild
-boar, they caught them for food. Aristotle said that lions were more
-disposed to enter towns and attack man when they grew old, as old age
-made their teeth defective, which was a hindrance to them in hunting.
-
-Another possible clue may be deduced from a belief which exists in
-Abyssinia about the man-eating lion. In that country the people dislike
-to have Europeans hunt the lion, not only because they revere him as the
-king of beasts (though this is one reason, and it shows how natural to
-man is the friendly feeling towards beasts, and how it flourishes along
-with any sort of religion, provided the religion has been left Oriental
-and not Westernised), but also because they are convinced that a lion
-whose mate has been killed becomes ferocious and thirsts for human
-blood. This belief is founded on accurate observation of the capacity of
-wild beasts for affection. The love of the lion for his mate is no
-popular error. That noble hunter, Major Leveson, told a pathetic story
-of how he witnessed in South Africa a fight between two lions, while the
-lioness, palm and prize, stood looking on. A bullet laid her low, but
-the combatants were so hotly engaged that neither of them perceived what
-had happened. Then another bullet killed one of them: the survivor,
-after the first moment of surprise as to why his foe surrendered, turned
-round and for the first time saw the hunters who were quite near. He
-seemed about to spring on them, when he caught sight of the dead
-lioness: “With a peculiar whine of recognition, utterly regardless of
-our presence, he strode towards her, licked her face and neck with his
-great rough tongue and patted her gently with his huge paw, as if to
-awaken her. Finding that she did not respond to his caresses, he sat
-upon his haunches like a dog and howled most piteously....” Finally the
-mourning lion fled at the cries of the Kaffirs and the yelping of the
-dogs close at hand. He had understood the great, intolerable fact of
-death. Would any one blame him if he became an avenger of blood?
-
-Supposing that this line of defence could be transferred to the tiger,
-instead of being branded as lazy, decrepit, mad, or bad, he might hope
-to appear before the public with a largely rehabilitated character.
-
-The natives of the jungle resort to none of these hypotheses to account
-for the man-eater: a different bank of ideas can be drawn on by them to
-help them out of puzzling problems. The free force of imagination is far
-preferable, if admitted, as a solver of difficulties, to all our patient
-and plodding researches. The jungle natives tell many stories of the
-man-eater, of which the following is a typical example. It was told to a
-British officer, from whom I had it.
-
-Once upon a time there was a man who had the power of changing himself
-into a tiger whenever he liked. But for him to change back into the
-shape of a man it was necessary that some human being should pronounce a
-certain formula. He had a friend who knew the formula, and to him he
-went when he wished to resume human shape. But the friend died.
-
-The man was obliged, therefore, to find some one else to pronounce the
-formula. At last he decided to confide the secret to his wife; so, one
-day, he said to her that he should be absent for a short time and that
-when he came back it would be in the form of a tiger; he charged her to
-pronounce the proper formula when she should see him appear in
-tiger-shape, and he assured her that he would then, forthwith, become a
-man again.
-
-In a few days, after he had amused himself by catching a few antelopes,
-he trotted up to his wife, hoping all would be well. But the woman, in
-spite of all that he had told her, was so dreadfully frightened when she
-saw a large tiger running towards her, that she began to scream. The
-tiger jumped about and tried to make her understand by dumb-show what
-she was to do, but the more he jumped the more she screamed, and at last
-he thought in his mind, “This is the most stupid woman I ever knew,” and
-he was so angry that he killed her. Directly afterwards he recollected
-that no other human being knew the right formula—hence he must remain
-for ever a tiger. This so affected his spirits that he acquired a hatred
-for the whole human race, and killed men whenever he saw them.
-
-This diverting folk-tale shows a root-belief in the stage of becoming a
-branch-belief. In the present case the root is the ease with which men
-are thought to be able to transform themselves (or be transformed by
-others) into animals. The branch is the presumption that a very wicked
-animal must be human. The corresponding inference that a very virtuous
-animal must be human, throws its reflection upon innumerable
-fairy-tales. I think it was the more primitive of the two. Even the
-tiger is not everywhere supposed to be the worse for human influence. In
-the Sangor and Nerbrudda territories people say that if a tiger has
-killed one man he will never kill another, because the dead man’s spirit
-rides on his head and guides him to more lawful prey. Entirely primitive
-people do not take an evil view of human nature—which is proved by their
-confidence in strangers: the first white man who arrives among them is
-well received. Misanthropy is soon learnt, but it is not the earliest
-sentiment. The bad view of the man-tiger prevails in the Niger delta,
-where the negroes think that “some souls which turn into wild beasts
-give people a great deal of trouble.” Other African tribes hold that
-tailless tigers are men—tigers which have lost their tails in fighting
-or by disease or accident. I do not know if these are credited with good
-or bad qualities.
-
-By the rigid Totemist all this is ascribed to Totemism. Men called other
-tribesmen by the names of their totems; then the totem was forgotten and
-they mistook the tiger-totem-man for a man-tiger _et sic de ceteris_. My
-Syrian guide on Mount Carmel told me that the ravens which fed Elijah
-were a tribe of Bedouins called “the Ravens,” which still existed. If
-this essay in the Higher Criticism was original it said much for his
-intelligence. But because such confusions may happen, and no doubt do
-happen, are they to be taken as the final explanation of the whole vast
-range of man and animal mutations? What have they to do with such a
-belief as that vouched for by St. Augustine—to wit, that certain witch
-innkeepers gave their guests drugs in cheese which turned them into
-animals? These witches had a sharp eye to business, for they utilised
-the oxen, asses, and horses thus procured, for draught or burden, or let
-them out to their customers, nor were they quite without a conscience,
-as when they had done using them they turned them back into men. Magic,
-the old rival of religion, lies at the bottom of all this order of
-ideas. Magic may be defined as the natural supernatural, since by it man
-_unaided_ commands the occult forces of nature. The theory of demoniacal
-assistance is of later growth.
-
-A story rather different from the rest is told by Pausanias, who records
-that, at the sacrifice of Zeus on Mount Lycæus, a man was always turned
-into a wolf, but if for nine years in wolf-shape he abstained from
-eating human flesh, he would regain his human form. This suggests a
-Buddhist source. The infiltration of Buddhist folk-lore into Europe is a
-subject on which we should like to know more. Buddhism was the only
-missionary religion before Christianity, and there is every probability
-that it sent missionaries West as well as East.
-
-The early Irish took so favourable a view of wolves that they were
-accustomed to pray for their salvation, and chose them as godfathers for
-their children. In Druidical times the wolf and other animals were
-divine manifestations, and the Celts were so attached to their
-beast-gods that they did not maledict what they had worshipped, but
-found it a refuge somewhere. In the earliest Gallic sculpture the
-dispossessed animals are introduced as companions of the new Saints.
-
-It will be noticed that in the Indian folk-tale, though the
-identification of the man with the man-eater is clear, a very lenient
-view is taken of him: he was not always so; even his excursions in
-tiger-skin were, at first, purely innocent; he was a good husband and a
-respectable citizen till his wife’s nerves made him lose his temper.
-
-In early Christian times, the man-wolf might be not only innocent but a
-victim. He might be a particularly good man turned by a sorcerer into a
-wolf, and in such cases he preserves his good tendencies. In the seventh
-century such a man-wolf defended the head of St. Edward the Martyr from
-other wild beasts.
-
-On the other hand, there are stories of Christian saints who turned
-evil-disposed persons into beasts by means of the magical powers which,
-at first, _all_ baptized persons were thought to possess potentially if
-not actively. St. Thomas Aquinas believed in the possibility of doing
-this. In a Russian folk-tale the apostles Peter and Paul turned a bad
-husband and wife into bears.
-
-In Europe by degrees the harmless were-wolf entirely disappeared but the
-evil one survived. The superstition of lycanthropy concentrated round
-one point (as superstitions often do): the self-transformation of a
-perverse man or sorcerer into an animal for nefarious purposes. The
-object of the transformation might be the opportunity for giving free
-range to sanguinary appetites; but there was another object lurking in
-the background, and this was the acquirement of second sight, which some
-animals (if not all) are supposed to be endowed with. Just as Varro and
-Virgil believed in lycanthropy, so the most highly educated Europeans in
-the time of Louis XIV. and after, believed in were-wolves. The choice of
-the animal was immaterial, but it fell naturally on the most prominent
-and feared wild animal which was locally extant. A fancy or exotic
-animal would not do, which illustrates the link there is between popular
-beliefs and _facts_; distorted facts, it may be, but real and not
-imaginary things. If a bear of bad morals appears in Norway, people
-declare that it can be “no Christian bear”—it must be a Lapp or a Finn,
-both these peoples, who are much addicted to magic, being supposed to
-have the power of changing into bears when they choose. Instead of
-seeking the wild beast in man, people sought the man in the wild beast.
-
-As in Asia so in Europe, it was noticed and pondered that the normal
-wild beast is dangerous, perhaps, but not from a human point of view
-perverse. The normal wolf like the normal tiger does not attack or
-destroy for the love of destruction. Wolves attack in packs, but the
-instinct of the single individual is to keep out of man’s way. He does
-not kill even animals indiscriminately. In the last times when there
-were wolves in the Italian valleys of the Alps, the news spread that a
-wolf had killed a number of sheep. What had really happened was this,
-which an old hunter told at Edolo to a relative of mine. The wolf jumped
-down into a sheepfold sunk in the ground. He killed a sheep and ate some
-of it and then found, to his dismay, that he could not get up the wall
-of the sheepfold. Nothing daunted, however, he killed a sufficient
-number of sheep to form a mound, up which he climbed and so effected his
-escape. No one thought such a clever wolf as this a _lupo manaro_. But
-some wolves, like some dogs, are subject to fits of mental alienation,
-in which they slay without rhyme or reason. Sheep are found killed all
-over the countryside, and men or children may be among the victims. The
-question arises of who did it—a wolf, a man, or both in one? The
-material fact is there, and it is a fact calculated to excite terror,
-surprise, curiosity. That the fact may remain always a mystery recent
-experience shows. When the were-wolf mania was rampant in France,
-honestly conducted judicial inquiry succeeded in a few cases, in tracing
-the outrages to a real wolf or to a real man. At last, in 1603, a French
-court of law pronounced the belief in were-wolves to be an insane
-delusion, and from that date it slowly declined. Heretics were suspected
-of being were-wolves. As late as fifty years ago, a reminiscence of the
-_loup garou_ existed in most parts of France, in the shape of the
-_meneux des loups_, who were supposed to charm or tame whole packs of
-wolves which they led across the waste lands on nights when the moon
-shone fitfully through rifts in hurrying clouds. The village recluse,
-the poacher, the man who simply “knew more than he should,” fell under
-the suspicion of being a “wolf-leader,” and, of course, the usual
-“eye-witness” was forthcoming to declare that he had _seen_ the
-suspected individual out upon his midnight rambles with his wolves
-trotting after him. In some provinces all the fiddlers or bag-pipers
-were thought to be “wolf-leaders.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Maurice Sand._
- “LE MENEUR DES LOUPS.”]
-
-If the wolf turnskin died out sooner in England than in France, it was
-because there were no wolves to fasten it upon. Throughout the horrible
-witch-mania British sorcerers were supposed to turn into cats, weasels,
-or innocent hares! Italian witches still turn into cats. I remember how
-graphically C. G. Leland described to me a visit he had paid to a Tuscan
-witch; her cottage contained three stools, on one of which sat the
-witch, on the second her familiar jet-black cat, and on the third my old
-friend, who, I feel sure, had come to believe a good deal in the “old
-religion,” and who, in his last years, might have sat for a perfect
-portrait of a magician! The connexion of the witch and the cat is a form
-of turnskin-belief in which the feature of the acquirement of second
-sight is prominent. No witch without a cat! The essential _fact_ in the
-superstition is the fondness of poor, old friendless women for
-cats—their last friends. A contributing fact lay in the mysterious
-disappearances and reappearances of cats and in their half-wild nature.
-The cat in Indian folk-lore is the tiger’s aunt.
-
-The mode of effecting transformation into animals is various, but always
-connected with fixed magical procedure. A root or food, or still oftener
-an ointment, is resorted to: ointments played a great part in
-superstition; it was by ointments that the unlucky persons accused of
-being wizards were held to have spread the plague of Milan. But the
-surest method of transformation was a girdle made of the skin of the
-animal whose form it was desired to take. This is regarded as a
-makeshift for not being able to put on the whole skin. An old French
-record tells of a man who buried a black cat in a box where four roads
-met, with enough bread soaked in holy water and holy oil to keep it
-alive for three days. The man intended to dig the cat up and, after
-killing it, to make a girdle of its skin by which means he expected to
-obtain the gift of second sight; but the burial-place of the cat was
-discovered by some dogs that were scratching the earth, before the three
-days had elapsed. The man, put to the torture, confessed all. In this
-case, it will be noticed that the spiritual powers of the cat were to be
-obtained without assuming its outward form. The turnskin who wishes to
-go back into his human shape, has also to follow fixed rules: a formula
-must be pronounced by some one else, as in the jungle tiger story, or
-the man-beast must eat some stated food as in Lucian’s skit (if Lucian
-wrote it) of the man who, by using the wrong salve, turned himself into
-a donkey instead of into a bird as he had wished, and who could only
-resume his own form by eating roses, which he did not accomplish until
-he had undergone all sorts of adventures.
-
-The belief that beasts were inhabited by depraved men has a certain
-affinity with the belief that depraved men were inhabited by demons.
-Dante maintains that some persons have actually gone to their account
-while their bodies are still above-ground, the lodgings of evil spirits.
-
-The history of the turnskin leads up to several conclusions, of which
-the most important is, that superstitions often grow uglier as they grow
-older. They descend, they rarely ascend. This experience should make us
-pause before we pronounce hideous beliefs to be, in a true sense,
-primitive. The idea of transformation is one of the oldest of human
-ideas, much older than transmigration, but at the outset, far from
-lending itself to such repulsive applications as man-tigers and
-demon-men, it gave birth to some of the fairest passages in the poetry
-of mankind which he calls his religion. It is impossible to imagine a
-more beautiful myth than the Vedic belief in the swan-maidens, the
-Apsarases who, by putting on skirts of swan feathers, could become
-swans. Their swan-skirts stretch from the hot East to the cold North,
-for they are the same that are worn by the Valkyries. All these early
-legends of swans bring into particularly clear light the moral identity
-of the impressions received from things seen by man at the bottom and at
-the top of the ladder of intellectual progress. Natural objects, lovely
-or terrible, raise archetypal images of things lovely or terrible which
-in our minds remain shapeless but to which the primitive man gives a
-local habitation and a name. Swans, sailing on still waters or circling
-above our heads, inspire us with indefinite longings which took form in
-the myth of the Apsarases and appear again in the Vedic story of the
-sage who, by deep knowledge and holiness, became a golden swan and flew
-away to the sun. To this day, if the Hindu sees a flight of swans
-wending its mysterious way across the sky, he repeats the saying almost
-mechanically (as a Catholic crosses himself if he pass a shrine): “The
-soul flies away, and none can go with it.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XIV
-
- THE HORSE AS HERO
-
-
-FIFTY years ago the knell of the horse was rung, with due solemnity, by
-the American statesman, Charles Sumner. The age of chivalry, he said,
-was gone—an age of humanity had come; “the horse, whose importance more
-than human, gave the name to that period of gallantry and war, now
-yields his foremost place to man.” As a matter of fact, the horse is
-yielding his foremost place to the motor-car, to the machine; and this
-is the topsy-turvy way in which most of the millennial hopes of the
-mid-nineteenth century are being fulfilled by the twentieth; the big
-dream of a diviner day ends in a reality out of which all that is ideal
-is fading. But the reason why I quote the passage is the service which
-it renders as a reminder of the often forgotten meaning of the word
-“chivalry.” The horse was connected with the ideals no less than with
-the realities of the phase in human history that was called after him;
-the mental consequences of the partnership between man and that noble
-beast were not less far reaching than the physical. There are a hundred
-types of human character, some of them of the highest, in the making of
-which the horse counts for nothing; but this type, this figure of the
-very perfect gentle knight, cannot be imagined in a horseless world. We
-hear of what man taught animals, but less of what animals taught man. In
-the unity of emotion between horse and rider something is exchanged.
-Even the epithets which it is natural to apply to the knightly hero, one
-and all fit his steed: defiant and gentle, daring and devoted, trusty
-and tireless, a scorner of obstacles, of a gay, brave spirit—the list
-could be lengthened at will. And the qualities and even the defects they
-had in common were not so much the result of accident as the true fruit
-of their mutual interdependence.
-
-In the aftermath of chivalry which produced the song-writers and the
-splendid adventurers of the Elizabethan age, horsemanship came again to
-the fore as a passion rather than as a mere necessary pursuit. We know
-that, not satisfied with what England could provide, the fashionable
-young men frequented the schools of skilled Italians, generally of noble
-birth, such as Corte da Pavia, who was Queen Elizabeth’s riding-master.
-The prevailing taste is reflected in Shakespeare, who, though he was for
-all time, was yet, essentially of his own; his innumerable allusions to
-horses show, in the first place, that he knew all about them, as he did
-about most things, and in the second, that he knew that these allusions
-would please his audience, which no born dramatist ever treated as a
-negligible quantity, and the least of all Shakespeare. Even the
-performing or “thinking” horse does not escape his notice; “the dancing
-horse will tell you,” in “Love’s Labour Lost,” refers to the “Hans” or
-“Trixie” of the period who also attracted the attention of Ben Jonson,
-Downe, Sir Kenelm Digby, Sir Walter Raleigh, Hall, and John Taylor, the
-water-poet. This animal’s name was “Morocco” but he was often called
-“Bankes’ horse,” from his master who taught him to tell the number of
-pence in silver coins and the number of points in throws of dice, and on
-one occasion made him walk to the top of St. Paul’s. Alas, for the fate
-of “Morocco” and his master, “Being beyond the sea burnt for one witch,”
-as chronicled by Ben Jonson! Like Esmeralda and her goat, they were
-accused of magic, and the charge, first started at Orleans, was followed
-by condemnation and death in Rome. Greater tragedies of superstition
-hardly come with such a shock as this stupid slaughter of a poor showman
-and his clever beast.
-
-In Elizabethan society interest in horses was directed chiefly to the
-turnings and windings, the “shapes and tricks” of the riding-school, and
-this lighter way of looking on them as affording man his most splendid
-diversion is, in the main, Shakespeare’s way—though he does not forget
-that, at times, a horse may be worth a kingdom. Not to him, however, or
-to any modern poet, do we go for the unique, incomparable description of
-the truly heroic horse, the uncowed charger of the East, created to awe
-rather than to be awed by man, whom no image of servility would fit.
-Here is this specimen of the world’s greatest poetry, in case any one be
-so unfortunate as not to know it by heart:—
-
-“He paweth in the valley and rejoiceth in his strength; he goeth on to
-meet the armed men. He mocketh at fear, and is not affrighted; neither
-turneth he back from the sword. The quiver rattleth against him, the
-glittering spear and the shield. He swalloweth the ground with
-fierceness and rage: neither believeth he that it is the sound of the
-trumpet. He saith among the trumpets, Ha! ha! He smelleth the battle
-afar off, the thunder of the captains and the shouting.”
-
-How the portrait leaps out of the page into life as Velasquez’s horse in
-the Prado leaps out of his frame! We feel the pulse of a passion which
-throbs through every vein from head to hoof. This Triumph of the
-War-horse is one of the points of affinity in the Book of Job with Arab
-rather than with Hebrew civilisation. The text itself is nearer Arabic
-than any other Biblical book, and the life of the protagonist is very
-like the life of an ancient Arabian chieftain. The Jews proper cared
-little for horses; when they fell into their hands they knew no better
-than to destroy them. They were a pastoral people, at no time fond of
-sport, which was hardly recognised as lawful by their religious
-ordinances. They do not seem to have ridden on horseback. Zechariah,
-indeed, speaks of the war-horse, but only to represent him as the
-beautiful image of peace, no more mixing in the fray, but bearing on his
-bell (which was meant to affright the foe) the inscription: “Holiness
-unto the Lord.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo:_ _Mansell._
- THE ASSYRIAN HORSE.
- British Museum.]
-
-On the other hand, the Arab, and, most of all, the Nomadic Arab, has a
-dual existence with his horse. He could not live without it; it is a
-part of himself—of all that makes him himself and not another. The same
-is true of the Todas and their buffaloes, the Lapps and their reindeer.
-In summer when the reindeer are in the hills, to save them from what is
-there called the heat, a Lapp seems only half a Lapp; but his thoughts
-are still of reindeer and his fingers are busy with scratching its
-likeness on his spoons, his milk-bowls, his implements of all sorts, all
-of which are made of reindeer-horn. His songs are still of reindeer:
-“While the reindeer lasts, the Lapp will last; when the reindeer fails,
-the Lapp will fail,” as ran the infinitely pathetic ditty I heard sung
-by a Lapp woman who was shown to me as the best singer of the tribe.
-
-With all these people the flesh of the beloved animal is esteemed the
-greatest delicacy; a fact in which there seems to lie suggestions of
-cannibalism in its real psychological aspect—the eating of the hero in
-order to acquire his attributes. Sometimes, however, the reason may be
-simply that they were for long periods in the impossibility of obtaining
-other meat; since the natural man prefers food to which he has grown
-familiar.
-
-In what is probably the oldest version of Boccaccio’s Falcon story, the
-Emperor of Constantinople sends to ask a very generous præ-Islamic Arab
-Chief, by name Hatem Tai (celebrated as the type of chivalry over all
-the Moslem world), to give him a horse which Hatem is known to value
-beyond all his possessions. The object of the demand was to put his
-reputation for generosity to the test. The officer, who is the bearer of
-the Emperor’s request, is regaled sumptuously on the evening of his
-arrival; and, according to the laws of Oriental courtesy, he puts off
-speaking of the business in hand till next day. When he delivers his
-message Hatem replies that he would have complied gladly, but that the
-officer had eaten the horse last night for supper! The horse was the
-most costly and coveted food which the chief could offer his guest, and
-the story becomes thus more intelligible than when the victim is an
-uneatable bird like a hawk.
-
-In Oriental poetry the camel “who asks but a thorn from the bed of roses
-of the world” takes a well-merited share of attention, but the animal
-which is before all others the Eastern poets’ beast is, of course, the
-horse: he might himself be called the poet as well as the prince among
-beasts, for if any living thing incarnates the poetry “of form, of
-motion, of glad devotion,” it is surely the high-bred Arab steed.
-Innumerable tributes credit him with three parts human qualities:—
-
- “The courser looks his love as plainly as if he could speak,
- He waves his mane, his paws, he curls his nostrils and his lips;
- He makes half-vocal sounds, uprears or droops his neck and hips,
- His deep and pensive eyes light up with lambent flame, then seem
- As if they swam in the desires of some mysterious dream.”[8]
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- Translated by W. R. Alger.
-
-Of the true Arab horse it is said that his foot is so light that he
-could dance on a woman’s breast without leaving a bruise. Some of the
-Arabian ballads of horses are among the very few Oriental poems which
-have acquired universal fame, as that which tells of how the peerless
-Lahla picked up his captured and bound master and carried him with his
-teeth back to the tribe, on reaching which he sinks dead, amidst the
-tears and lamentations of all. Horses, the Koran expressly says, were
-created for man’s use, but also “to be an ornament unto him”: all the
-romance, the valour, the deep-seated aristocratic instinct of the Arab,
-proudest of mankind, is bound up with his horse. The splendid Arab chief
-who stands aside motionless to let go by an automobile carrying a party
-of tourists across the Sahara reflects, as he draws his burnoose closer
-over his mouth, “_This_ is the ‘_ornament_’ of Western man!” And,
-looking at his horse, which stands motionless as he (for the Arab steed
-fears nothing when his master is near), he adds to himself: “These
-pass—we remain.” False it may be as a prophecy, but he believes it
-_because convinced of his superiority_.
-
-Still by the camp-fires in the desert they tell the old story of a great
-chief who, in præ-Gallic times, was taken prisoner by the Emir’s
-horsemen. He escaped, but hardly had he reached his tent when in the
-desert air, in which sounds are heard afar off, a clattering of hoofs
-could be distinguished—the Sultan’s men were coming! The chief sprang on
-his mare and fled. When the men came up they knew that only one horse
-could overtake the mare, her beautiful sister, not less swift than she.
-A soldier leapt from his own horse intending to mount her, but the
-chiefs son, yet a child, instantly shot her dead with a pistol. And so
-the chief was saved.
-
-The Ulemas of Algeria say that when God wished to create the mare He
-spoke to the wind: “I will cause thee to bring forth a creature that
-shall bear all My worshippers, that shall be loved by My slaves, and
-that will cause the despair of all who will not follow My laws.” And
-when He had created her He said: “I have made thee without an equal: the
-goods of this world shall be placed between thy eyes; everywhere I will
-make thee happy and preferred above all the beasts of the field, for
-tenderness shall everywhere be in the heart of thy master; good alike
-for the chase and retreat, thou shalt fly though wingless, and I will
-only place on thy back the men who know me, who will offer ME prayers
-and thanksgivings; men who shall be My worshippers from one generation
-to another.”
-
-For the Arab the horse was not only the means of performing great
-enterprises but the very object of life, the thing in itself most
-precious, the care, the preoccupation, and the prize. The Arab’s horse
-is his kingdom.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ARABIAN HORSE OF THE SAHARA.]
-
-I suppose that there is no doubt that the knightly type was a flower
-transported from the East, though, like many other Eastern flowers, it
-grew to its best in European gardens. The Crusaders learnt more than
-they taught. Coming down later, the national hero of Spain, for all his
-pure Gothic blood, is an Eastern not a Western hero. He will be
-understood far better when he is tried by this standard. If we weigh him
-in Eastern rather than in Western scales, a more lenient and above all a
-juster judgment will be the result, and we shall see how the fine
-qualities with which legend credits him were not disproved by some acts
-which the modern Western conscience condemns. On the whole it may be
-taken for granted, in spite of all that has been said to the contrary,
-that tradition which easily errs about facts, is rarely wrong about
-character.
-
-Ruy Diaz de Bivar was a hero after the Arab’s own heart:—
-
- “Noble y leal, soldado y Caballero,
- Señor te apellido la gente Mora,”
-
-as the lines run on his coffin in the town-hall at Burgos. Nothing being
-sacred to a critic, it has been contested that he was first called “Myo
-Cid,” or “My Lord,” by the Moors, but tradition and etymology agree too
-well for this to be reasonably doubted. It is certain that both Moors
-and Christians called him by his other title of Campeador in Spanish and
-Al-kambeyator in the form the Arabic writers gave it. It was derived
-from his gallantry in single combats and did not mean, as some have
-thought, “Champion of the Christians.”
-
-It is entirely in keeping with the Cid’s Arab affinities that his horse
-should have attained a fame almost as great as his own. From Bucephalus
-to Copenhagen never was there a European horse equal in renown to
-Bavieca. His glory, is it not writ in nearly every one of the hundred
-ballads of the Cid? The choosing of Bavieca is one of the most striking
-events in the Cid’s youth. The boy asked his godfather, a fat,
-good-natured old priest, to give him a colt. The priest took him to a
-field where the mares and their colts were being exercised and told him
-to take the best. They were driven past him and he let all the
-handsomest go by; then a mare came up with an ugly and miserable-looking
-colt—“This,” he cried, “is the one for me!” His godfather was angry and
-called him a simpleton, but the lad only answered that the horse would
-turn out well and that “Simpleton” (“Bavieca”) should be his name.
-
-Horses which begin as ugly ducklings and end as swans are an extensive
-breed. Count de Gubernatis, in his valuable work on “Zoological
-Mythology,” mentions Hatos, the magical horse of the Hungarians, as
-belonging to this class. If as old as the oldest legend, they are, in a
-sense, as new as the “outsider” which carries off one of the greatest
-prizes of the Turf. The choosing of Bavieca was in the mind of Cervantes
-when he described in his inimitable way the choosing of Rozinante
-(“ex-jade”), who never became anything but a _rozin_ in the most present
-tense, except in the imagination of his master, but who will live for
-ever in his company, to bear witness to the indivisible oneness of the
-knight and his horse.
-
-Completely Oriental in sentiment is the splendid ballad which relates
-how the Cid offered Bavieca to his king because it was not meet that a
-subject should have a horse so far more precious than any possessed by
-his lord. There is in this not only the act of homage but also the
-absorbing pride which made the Arab who was overtaking a horse-stealer,
-shout to him the secret sign at which his stolen mare would go her best,
-preferring to lose her than to vanquish her.
-
- “O king, the thing is shameful that any man beside
- The liege lord of Castile himself should Bavieca ride.
- For neither Spain nor Araby could another charger bring
- So good as he, and certes, the best befits the king.”
-
-The gorgeous simplicity of the original is missed by Lockhart in the
-succeeding verses, in which the Cid, before giving up the horse, mounts
-him to show his worth, his ermine mantle hanging from his shoulders. He
-will do, he says, in the presence of the king what he has not done for
-long except in battle with the Moor: he will touch Bavieca with his
-spurs. Then comes the maddest, wildest, yet most accomplished display of
-noble horsemanship that ever witched the world. One rein breaks and the
-beholders tremble for his life, but with ease and grace he guides the
-foaming and panting horse before the king and prepares to yield him up.
-Then Alfonso cries, God forbid that he should take him: he shall be
-accounted, indeed, as his, but shameful would it be
-
- “That peerless Bavieca should ever be bestrid
- By any mortal but Bivar—‘Mount, mount again, my Cid!’”
-
-There is a spot in Spain where we still seem to breathe the very air of
-chivalrous romance: the royal armoury at Madrid, in which the mail-clad
-knights with their plumes, their housings, their lances, their trophies,
-sit their fine horses as gallantly as if they were riding straight into
-the lists. There, and there alone, we can invoke the proper _mise en
-scène_ for the gestes and jousts described in the Spanish ballads.
-
-Historically, it seems certain that the Cid died at Valencia in July,
-1099, an access of grief that his captains—who, owing to his ill-health,
-were obliged to replace him—had failed to hold the Moors in check. King
-Alfonso came to the assistance of his noble widow, Jimena, but finally
-Valencia had to be abandoned; all the Christians left the town and the
-Cid’s body was borne to his distant Northern home. Such is the
-historical outline, sufficiently pathetic in itself but adorned with
-additions, not all of them, perhaps, invented in the sublime legend of
-the Last Ride. It is said that the Cid, knowing that his last hour was
-near, refrained from any food except certain draughts of rose-water in
-which were dissolved the myrrh and balsam sent to him by the great
-Sultan of Persia. He gave particular instructions as to how his body was
-to be anointed with the myrrh and balsam which remained in the golden
-caskets, and how it was to be set upright on Bavieca, fully saddled and
-armed, to be still a terror to the Moors, who were to be kept in
-complete ignorance of his death. All this was done and a great victory
-was won over the Moors, who thought they saw their dreaded enemy once
-more commanding in person. Then the victors started on the long journey
-to San Pedro de Cardeña, near Burgos, the Cid riding his horse by day,
-supported by an artful contrivance, and by night placed on a dummy horse
-wrought by Gil Diaz, his devoted servitor. Jimena, with all the Cid’s
-men, followed in his train. On the way the procession is joined by the
-Cid’s two daughters and by a great mass of people who mourned in their
-hearts for Spain’s greatest hero, but they wore rich and gay apparel,
-for the Cid had forbidden the wearing of mourning. So Cardeña was
-reached, and tenderly and lovingly Ruy Diaz lifted the Cid’s body for
-the last time from Bavieca’s back—never more to bear a man. The glorious
-war-horse lived for two years, led to water each day by Gil Diaz. On his
-death, at more than forty years of age and leaving not unworthy
-descendants behind him, he was buried, according to the Cid’s express
-desire, in a deep and ample grave, “so that no dog might disturb his
-bones,” near the gate of the Convent, and two elms were planted to mark
-the spot. When Gil Diaz died, full of years and richly provided for by
-the Cid’s daughters, he was laid to rest beside the horse he had loved
-and tended so faithfully.
-
-In this narrative, condensed from the Chronicles, the curious particular
-will have been noticed of the gift by the “Great Sultan of Persia” to
-the Christian warrior of those precious spices and aromatic gums which
-seem to have been the secret treasure of old Persia, forming a priceless
-offering reserved for the very greatest personages. The strangeness of
-bringing in the Sultan of Persia almost suggests that there was truth in
-the assertion that he had sent presents to the Cid. Over the sea and
-over the fruitful fields the radiance of noble deeds travels, as Pinder
-said of old. A little after the march of the Thousand, the Arabs of the
-desert were heard discussing round their camp-fires the exploits of
-Garibaldi. If the fame of the Cid reached Persia, as it is very likely
-that it did, he would have found fervent admirers among a people which
-was still electrified by the epic poem of Firdusi, who died within a
-year or two of the Cid’s birth. In that epic is told the story of the
-Persian Campeador—the Champion Rustem, who not only in his title but in
-all we know of his general bearings has so great a resemblance to the
-Cid that it is a wonder if no historical “discoverer” has derived one
-from the other, the more so since there have not been wanting writers
-who denied the Cid’s existence. And if Ruy Diaz de Bivar has his
-analogue in Rustem, has not Bavieca a perfect counterpart in Rakush?
-
-It is the horse not his master that leads me into the mazes of the _Shah
-Nameh_, but something of Rustem must be told to make Rakush’s story
-intelligible. Like Siegfried, Rustem was of extraordinary size and
-strength: he looked a year old on the day of his birth. When he was
-still a child a white elephant broke loose and began trampling the
-people to death: Rustem ran to the rescue and slew it. A little time
-after this his father, whose name was Zal, called the boy and showed him
-all his horses, desiring him to choose that which pleased him best, but
-not one was powerful enough or spirited enough to satisfy him. Unlike
-the Cid, Rustem wanted a horse that looked as perfect as he really was.
-After examining them all and trying many, he noticed at a little
-distance a mare followed by a marvellously beautiful foal. Rustem got
-ready his noose to throw about the foal’s neck, and while he did so, a
-stable-man whispered to him that this foal was, indeed, worth anything
-to secure; the dam, named Abresh, was famous, while the sire had been no
-mortal creature but a djinn. The foal’s name was Rakush (“Lightning”), a
-name given to a dappled or piebald horse, and his coat, that was as soft
-as silk, looked like rose-leaves strewn on a saffron ground. Several
-persons who had tried already to capture the foal had been killed by the
-mare, who allowed no one to go near it.
-
-In fact, no sooner has Rustem lassoed the foal than its mother rushes
-towards him ready to seize him with her white teeth, which glisten in
-the sun. Rustem utters a loud cry which so startles the mare that she
-pauses for an instant: then, with clenched fist, he rains blow on blow
-on her head and neck till she drops down to die. It was done in
-self-defence: still, it is a barbaric prelude.
-
-Rustem continued to hold Rakush with his free hand while he conquered
-the mare, but now the colt drags him hither and thither like an
-inanimate object: the dauntless youth has to strive long for the
-mastery, but he does not rest till the end is achieved. The horse is
-broken in at one breath, after the fashion of American cow-boys. It
-should be noticed that legendary heroes always break in their own
-horses—no other influence has been ever brought to bear on the horse but
-their own. Rakush has found a master indeed, but a master worthy of him.
-He has recognised that there is one—only one—fit to rule him. Like all
-true heroes’ horses, he will suffer no other mortal to mount him: if
-Barbary really allowed Bolingbroke to ride him it was a sure sign that
-his poor royal master was no hero. This same characteristic belonged
-also to Julius Cæsar’s horse, which was a remarkable animal in more ways
-than one, as he was reported to have feet like a human being. I have no
-doubt that Soloman’s white mare, Koureen, followed the same rule as well
-as the angel Gabriel’s reputed steed, Haziûm, though I have not found
-record of the fact.
-
-When the colt is broken in, he stands before his master perfect and
-without flaw. “Now I and my horse are ready to join the fighting-men in
-the field,” says Rustem as he places the saddle on his back, to the
-boundless joy of Zal, whose old, withered heart becomes as green as
-springtide with the thrill of fatherly pride.
-
-So Rakush is richly caparisoned and Rustem rides away on him, beardless
-youth though he is, to command great armies, slay fearsome dragons,
-defeat the wiles of sorcerers, and do all the other feats with which the
-fresh fancy of a young nation embroidered the story of its favourite
-hero—for, it must be remembered, Firdusi did not invent Rustem any more
-than Tennyson invented Lancelot. I think there is every reason to
-believe that there was a real Rustem just as there was a real Cid; and
-that the first, like the second, was a combination of the _guerrillero_,
-the _condottiere_, the magnificent free-booter, with the knight-errant
-or paladin—a stamp which was impressed upon the other _rôle_ by the
-personal quality of noble-mindedness possessed by the individual in each
-case. For years unnumbered the exploits of Rustem have entertained the
-Persian listener from prince to peasant, but the story will ever remain
-young because it is of those which reflect that which holds mankind
-spell-bound: the magnetic power of human personality.
-
-One hears the clear, crisp clatter of the horse’s hoofs as they gallop
-through the epic. Docile as Rakush has become, his spirit is unbent; he
-is eager to fight his own battles and his master’s too. Like Baiardo,
-the horse in Ariosto, he uses his hoofs with deadly effect, and on one
-occasion there is a regular duel between him and another horse while
-Rustem is fighting its rider. His rashness inspires Rustem with much
-anxiety in their earlier journeys together. Quite at the beginning, when
-Rustem is on his way to liberate his captive king—his first “labour”—he
-lies down to sleep in a forest, leaving Rakush free to graze, and what
-is not his surprise when he wakes to find a large lion extended dead on
-the grass close by. Rakush killed the savage beast with teeth and heels
-while his master slept tranquilly. Rustem remonstrates with his too
-venturesome steed: Why did he fight the lion all alone? Why did he not
-neigh loudly and call for assistance? Had he reflected how terribly
-unfortunate it would be for Rustem if anything were to happen to him?
-Who would carry his heavy battle-axe and all his other accoutrements? He
-conjures Rakush to fight no more lions single-handed. Then and at other
-times Rustem talks to Rakush, but Rakush does not answer like the horse
-of Achilles. The Persians of the eleventh century had reached the stage
-of people who take their marvels with discrimination; they accepted
-Simurghs, white demons, phantom elks, giants, dragons, but they might
-have hesitated about a talking horse. Another of Rustem’s addresses to
-his horse was spoken after one of his first victories when the enemy was
-in full retreat: “My valued friend,” he said, “put forth thine utmost
-speed and bear me after the foe.” The noble animal certainly understood,
-for he bounded over the plain snorting as he flew along and tossing up
-his mane, and great was the booty which fell into his master’s hands.
-Rustem once said that with his arms and his trusty steed he would not
-mind fighting thirty thousand men. As a matter of fact, he never lacked
-followers, for he was of those captains who have only to stamp on the
-ground for there to spring up soldiers.
-
-In the nineteenth century a “legendary hero” wandered with his horse
-over the plains of Uruguay much as Rustem wandered with Rakush. “In my
-nomad life in America,” writes Garibaldi, “after a long march or a day’s
-fighting, I unsaddled my poor tired horse and smoothed and dried his
-coat ... rarely could I offer him a handful of oats since those
-illimitable fields provide so little grain that oats are not often given
-to horses. Then, after leading him to water, I settled him for the night
-near my own resting-place. Well, when all this was done, which was no
-more than a duty to my faithful companion of toil and peril, I felt
-content, and if by chance he neighed, refreshed, or rolled on the green
-turf—oh, then I tasted _la gentil voluttà d’esser pio_!” Marvels are out
-of date, but feeling remains unchanged, and the “sweets of kindness”
-were known, surely, even to the earliest hero who made a friend of his
-horse and found him, in the solitude of the wild, no bad substitute for
-human friends.
-
-In the story of Sohrab, one of the finest episodes in epic poetry,
-Rakush is introduced as the primary cause of it all. Tired with hunting
-in the forest, and perhaps inclined to sleep by a meal of roasted wild
-ass, which seems to have been his favourite game, Rustem lay down to
-rest under a tree, turning Rakush free to graze as was his wont. When he
-awoke the horse was nowhere to be seen! Rustem looked for his prints, a
-way of recovering stolen animals still practised with astonishing
-success in India. He found the prints and guessed that his favourite had
-been carried off by robbers, which was what had actually happened: a
-band of Tartar marauders lassoed the horse with their kamunds and
-dragged him home. Rustem followed the track over the border of the
-little state of Samengan, the king of which, warned of the approach of
-the hero of the age, went out to meet him on foot with great deference.
-The hero, however, was in no mood for compliments; full of wrath, he
-told the king that his horse had been stolen and that he had traced his
-footprints to Samengan. The king kept his presence of mind better than
-might have been expected; he made profuse excuses and declared that no
-effort should be spared to recover the horse—meanwhile he prayed Rustem
-to become his honoured guest.
-
-Emissaries were sent in all directions in search of Rakush and a grand
-entertainment was prepared for his master. Pleased and placated, Rustem,
-who had spared little time for luxury in his adventurous life, finally
-lay down on a delightful and beautifully adorned bed. How poetic was
-sleep when it was associated, not with an erection on four legs, but
-with a low couch spread with costly furs and rich Eastern stuffs! So
-Rustem reposed, when his eyes opened on a living dream, a maiden
-standing by his side, her lovely features illuminated by a lamp which a
-slave girl held. “I am the daughter of the king,” says the fair vision;
-“no one man has ever seen my face or even heard my voice. I have heard
-of thy wondrous valour....” Rustem, still wondering if he slept or woke,
-asked her what was her will? She answered that she loved him for his
-fame and glory, and that she had vowed to God she would wed no other
-man. Behold, God has brought him to her! She desires him to ask her hand
-to-morrow of her father and so departs, lighted on her way by the little
-slave.
-
-Was ever anything more chaste in its self-abandonment than the avowal of
-this love, holy as Desdemona’s and irresistible as Senta’s? Nowhere in
-fiction can be found a more convincing illustration of the truth that
-the essential spring of woman’s love for man is hero-worship. On which
-truth, in spite of the illusions it covers, what is best in human
-evolution is largely built.
-
-The king gave glad assent to the marriage, which was celebrated
-according to the rites of that country. Rustem tarried but one night
-with his bride: in the morning with weeping eyes she watched him
-galloping away on the recovered Rakush. Long she grieved, and only when
-a son was born was her sad heart comforted. The grandfather gave the boy
-the name of Sohrab. Rustem had left an amulet to be placed in the hair
-if God gave her a daughter but bound round the arm if a son were born.
-
-In due course Rustem sent a gift of costly jewels to his wife Tahmineh,
-with inquiries whether the birth of a child had blessed the marriage?
-And now the mother of Sohrab made the fatal mistake of a deception which
-led to all the evil that followed; she sent word that a girl had been
-born because she was afraid that if Rustem knew that he had a son, he
-would take him from her. Rustem, disappointed in his hopes, thought no
-more about Samengan.
-
-There is no hint that Tahmineh’s fibbing, which, like very many other
-“white lies,” ended in dire disaster, was in the slightest degree the
-moral as well as the actual cause of the fatality. Herodotus said that
-every Persian child was taught to ride and to speak the truth; by
-Firdusi’s time the second part of the instruction seems to have been
-neglected, for in the _Shah Nameh_ he makes everybody give full rein to
-his powers of invention without the slightest scruple. The bad
-consequences are attributed to blind fate, not to seeing Nemesis.
-
-What is so agonising in the doom of Sohrab is precisely the lack of
-moral cause such as exists in the Greek tragedies. Though we do not
-accept as a reality the Greek theory of retribution, we do accept it as
-a point of view, and it helps us, as it helped them, to endure the
-unspeakable horror of the Ædipus story.
-
-Sohrab goes forth, with a boy’s enthusiasm, to conquer Persia as a
-present to his unknown father. The two meet, and are incited to engage
-in single combat, each not knowing the other. After a Titanic contest,
-Sohrab falls fatally wounded, and only then does Rustem discover his
-identity. Matthew Arnold’s poem has familiarised English readers with
-this wonderful scene, and though the “atmosphere” with which he
-surrounded it, is rather classical than Eastern, his “Sohrab and Rustum”
-remains the finest rendering of an Eastern story in English poetry. Some
-blind guide blamed him for “plagiarising” Firdusi: in a few points he
-might have done wisely to follow his original still more closely; at
-least, it is a pity that he did not enshrine in his own beautiful poem
-Sohrab’s touching words of comfort to his distracted father: “None is
-immortal—why this grief?” Brave, spotless, kind, Firdusi’s hero-victim
-who “came as the lightning and went as the wind” will always rank with
-the highest in the House of the Youthful Dead.
-
-Sohrab had a horse as well as Rustem. This sort of repetition or
-variation which is often met with in Eastern literature pleases
-children, who like an incident much the better if they are already
-acquainted with it, but to the mature sense of the West it seems a fault
-in art. No doubt for this reason Matthew Arnold does not mention
-Sohrab’s horse, while doing full justice to Rakush. But connected with
-the young man’s charger there is a scene of the deepest human interest
-and pathos, when it is led back to his mourning, sonless mother who had
-watched him ride forth on it, rejoicing in its strength and in his own.
-It was chosen by him and saddled by him for the first time in his glad
-boyhood; now it is led back alone, with his arms and trappings hanging
-from the saddle-bows. In an agony of grief Tahmineh presses its hoofs to
-her breast and kisses head and face, covering them with her tears.
-
-The mother dies after a year of ceaseless heartbreak; the father and
-slayer grieves with a strong man’s mighty grief, but he lives to
-struggle and fight. He and his Rakush have many more wondrous
-adventures, passing through enchantments and disenchantments and
-undergoing wounds and marvellous cures both of men and beast, till their
-hour too comes. Rustem had a base-born half-brother, named Shughad, who
-was carefully brought up and wedded to a king’s daughter, though the
-astrologers had foretold that he would bring ruin to his house. This
-evil genius invites his invincible kinsman to a day’s hunting, having
-secretly prepared hidden pits bristling with swords. The wise Rakush
-stops short at the brink of the first pit, refusing to advance; Rustem
-is stirred to anger and strikes his favourite, who, urged thus, falls
-into the pit, but with superhuman energy, though cruelly cut about,
-emerges from it with his rider safely on his back. It is in vain, for
-another and another pit awaits them—seven times they come up, hacked
-about with wounds, but on rising out of the seventh pit they both sink
-dying at the edge. Faintness clouds Rustem’s brain; then, for a little
-space, it grows clear and cool and he utters the accusing cry, “_Thou,
-my brother!_” The wretch’s answer is no defence of him—there can exist
-none—but strangely, unexpectedly, in spite of the impure lips that speak
-it, it gives the justification of God’s ways. “God has willed Rustem’s
-end for all the blood he has shed.” From his own stern faith with its
-Semitic roots, Firdusi took this great, solemn conception of
-blood-guiltiness which allowed no compromise. “Thou hast shed blood
-abundantly and hast made great wars.” One thinks, too, of the wail of
-one who was of modern men, the most like the old Hebrew type: “All I
-have done,” said Bismarck in his old age, “is to cause many tears to
-flow.”
-
-The king, who is the father-in-law of Shughad, offers to send for a
-magic balm to cure Rustem’s wounds, but the hero will have none of it.
-He is now quite collected, though his life-blood is ebbing away. In a
-quiet voice he asks Shughad to do him the kindness of stringing his bow
-and placing it in his hands, so that when dead he may be a scarecrow to
-keep away wolves and wild beasts from devouring his body. With a hateful
-smile of triumph Shughad complies; Rustem grasps the bow, and taking
-unerring aim lets go the arrow, which nails the traitor to the tree,
-whither he rushed to hide himself. So Rustem dies, thanking the Almighty
-for giving him the power to avenge his murder.
-
-There are few better instances of the long survival of a traditional
-sentiment than the fact of the king’s (or the chief’s) stable being
-regarded in modern Persia as an inviolable sanctuary. This must have
-originated in the veneration once felt for the horse. The misfortunes
-which befell the grandson of Nadir Shah were attributed to his having
-put to death a man who took refuge in his stable. No horse will carry to
-victory a master who profanes his stable with bloodshed. Even political
-offenders or pretenders to the throne were safe if they could reach the
-stable for as long as they remained in it.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- XV
-
- ANIMALS IN EASTERN FICTION
-
-
-I WAS looking idly at the motley Damascus crowd behind whose outward
-strangeness to my eyes I knew there lay a deeper strangeness of ideas,
-when in the middle of a clearing I saw a monkey in a red fez which began
-to go through its familiar tricks. I thought to myself, “How very near
-that monkey seems to me!” It was like the well-known figure of an old
-friend. So it is with the animal-lore of Eastern fiction; it seems very
-near to us; its heroes are our familiar friends. Perhaps we would lose
-everything in the treasure-house of Oriental tales sooner than the
-stories of beasts. If those stories had a hidden meaning which escapes
-us we are not troubled by their hidden meaning. In their obvious sense
-they appeal to us directly, without any effort to call up conditions of
-life and mind far removed from our own. We take them to our hearts and
-keep them there.
-
-Indeed, the West liked the Eastern stories of beasts so well that it
-borrowed not a few without any acknowledgment. We all know that the
-Welsh dog, Gellert, whose grave is shown to this day, had a near
-relative in the mungoose of a Chinese Buddhist story which exists in a
-collection dating from the fifth century. The same motive reappears in
-the _Panchatantra_, a Sanscrit collection to which is assigned a
-slightly later date. These are the earliest traces of it that have come
-to light, but its subsequent wanderings are endless. The theme does not
-vary much; a faithful animal saves a child from imminent peril: it is
-seen with marks of blood or signs of a struggle upon it, and on the
-supposition that it has killed or hurt the child, it is killed before
-the truth is discovered. The animal varies according to the locality,
-and amongst the other points of interest in this world-legend is that of
-reminding us of the universal diffusion of pet animals. We learn, too,
-which was the characteristically household animal with the people who
-re-tell the story: in Syria, Greece, Spain, as in Wales, and also
-(rather to our surprise) among the Jews, we hear of a dog. The weasel
-tribe prevails in India and China, the cat in Persia. Probably in India
-and in China dogs were not often admitted inside the houses; in a
-Chinese analogous tale, of which I shall speak presently, there is a
-dog, but the incidents take place on the highway. The mungoose was the
-traditional pet of India because its enmity to snakes must have gained
-for it admittance into dwelling-places from very early times, and
-wherever man lives in domesticity with any animal that he does not look
-upon as food, he cannot save himself from becoming attached to it only a
-little less than he is attached to the human members of his household.
-To this rule there are no exceptions.
-
-In the matter of folk-tales, even when we seem to have a clue to their
-origin, it is rash to be dogmatic. It has been remarked that the origin
-of this story was probably Buddhist, because it is unquestionable that
-Buddhist monks purposely taught humanity to animals. Supposing that the
-story was diffused with a fixed purpose over the vast area covered at
-one time or another by Buddhism, it would have started with a wide base
-whence to spread. Moreover, as I mentioned, we find it first in a
-Buddhist collection of stories. But I am far from sure that the story
-did not exist—nay, that the fact may not have happened—long before
-Gautama preached his humane morality. Why should not the fact have
-happened over and over again? It is one of those stories that are more
-true than truth. I can tell a perfectly true tale which, though not
-quite the same as “Gellert’s hound,” deserves no less to go round the
-world. A few years ago a man went out in a boat on a French river to
-drown his dog. In mid stream he threw the dog into the water and began
-to row away. The dog followed and tried to clamber up into the boat. The
-man gave it some severe blows about the head with the oar, but the dog
-still followed the boat. Then the man lost his temper and lost his
-balance: just as he aimed what he thought would be the final blow he
-tumbled into the water, and as he did not know how to swim he was on the
-point of being drowned. Then the dog played his part: he grasped the
-man’s clothes with his teeth and held him up till assistance came. That
-dog was never drowned!
-
-Things are soon forgotten now, but if this had only happened on a
-Chinese canal three thousand years ago we might still have been hearing
-about it. More folk-tales arose in such a way than an unbelieving world
-suspects.
-
-In the Chinese Buddhist version of Gellert we are told that a very poor
-Brahman who had to beg his bread possessed a pet mungoose, which, as he
-had no children, became as fondly loved as if it had been his son. How
-true is this touch which shows the love of animals as the _katharsis_ of
-the heart-ache or heartbreak of the childless! But, by and by, to the
-great joy of the Brahman, his wife bore him a son; after this happy
-event he cherished the mungoose even more than ever, for he said to
-himself that it was the fact of his having treated it as if it had been
-his child which had brought him the unhoped-for good luck of having a
-real child of his own. One day the Brahman went out to beg, but before
-he went out he told his wife to be sure and take good care of the child
-and carry it with her if she left the house even for a minute. The woman
-fed the child with cream and then remembered that she had to grind some
-rice; she went into the garden to grind it and forgot to take the little
-boy with her. After she was gone, a snake, attracted by the smell of the
-cream, crept quite close to where the child lay and was going to bite
-it, when the mungoose perceived what was going on and reflected: “My
-father has gone out and my mother too and now this poisonous snake
-wishes to kill my little brother.” So the mungoose attacked the
-poisonous snake and tore it into seven pieces. Then it thought that,
-since it had killed the snake and saved the child, it ought to acquaint
-its father and mother of what had happened and rejoice their hearts.
-Therefore it went to the door and waited for them to return, its mouth
-still covered with blood. Just then the Brahman came home and he was not
-pleased to see his wife without the child in the out-house, where the
-mill was. Thus, though this is left for the hearer to infer, he was
-already vexed and anxious, when he met the mungoose waiting by the door
-with blood on its mouth. The thought rushed into his mind, “This
-creature, being hungry, has slain and eaten the child! “He took up a
-stick and beat the mungoose to death. (Such a little thing, it is so
-easily killed!) After that he went into the house, where he found the
-baby sitting up in his cradle playing merrily with his fingers, while
-the seven pieces of the dead snake lay beside him! Sorrow filled the
-Brahman now; alas, for his folly! The faithful creature had saved his
-child and he, thoughtless wretch that he was, had killed it!
-
-Only in this version are we informed of just what the devoted animal
-thought; which may be a sign of its Buddhist origin. In the modern
-Indian variant, the mungoose, tied by a string, does not succeed in
-getting free till after the child has been bitten by the snake with
-which he had been playing, thinking it a new toy. The cobra took the
-play in good part till the child accidentally hurt it; then, angry with
-the pain, it bit him in the neck. When the mungoose got loose the deed
-was done and the cobra had slunk back into its hole. Off ran the
-mungoose into the jungle to find the antidote which the Indian natives
-believe that this creature always uses when it is itself bitten by
-snakes. The mother comes in at the moment when the mungoose is returning
-with the antidote: she sees the child lying motionless, and thinking
-that the mungoose has killed it she seizes it and dashes it to the
-ground. It quivers for a few seconds, then it dies. Only when it is
-dead, does the mother notice the snake-root which it still holds tightly
-in its mouth. She guesses the whole truth and quickly administers the
-antidote to the child, who recovers consciousness. The mungoose “had
-been a great pet with all the children and was greatly mourned for.”
-
-In the Sanscrit version preserved in the _Panchatantra_ collection the
-mother has brought up an ichneumon with her only child, as if it had
-been his brother; nevertheless, a sort of fear has always haunted her
-that the animal might hurt the child sooner or later. I must interrupt
-the story to remark how often the inglorious Shakespeare of these poor
-little folk-tales traces with no mean art the psychological process
-which leads up to the tragic crisis. What more true to life than the
-observation of the two opposing feelings balancing each other in the
-same mind till some accident causes one of them to gain uncontrollable
-mastery?
-
-When the woman has killed her innocent little favourite she is bitterly
-unhappy, but instead of blaming her own hastiness, she says it was all
-her husband’s fault: what business had he to go out begging, “through a
-greedy desire of profit,” instead of minding the baby as she had told
-him to do, while she went to the well to fetch water? And now the
-reprobate has caused the death of the ichneumon, the darling of the
-house!
-
-The touching trait of the creature, which runs to its master or mistress
-after saving the child, with the charming confidence and pride which any
-animal shows when it knows that it deserves praise, appears in nearly
-all the versions. Prince Llewellyn’s greyhound goes out to meet him “all
-bloody and _wagging his tail_.” The ichneumon ran joyously to meet its
-mistress, and the cat, in the Persian version, came up to its master
-“rubbing against his legs.” In the Persian tale the child’s mother dies
-at its birth, and it is stated that she was very fond of the cat, which
-made the man even more grieved that he had killed it.
-
-In German folk-lore the story of the dog “Sultan” sounds as if it were
-invented by some happy-souled humorist who had the Llewellyn motive in
-his mind, but who wanted to tell a merry tale instead of a sad one.
-“Sultan” is so old that his master wishes to kill him, though much
-against the advice of his wife. So “Sultan” consults a wolf of his
-acquaintance, who proposes the stratagem of pretending that he is going
-to eat the good people’s child, while “Sultan” pretends to come up just
-at the nick of time to save it. The plan is carried out with complete
-success, and “Sultan” lives out his days surrounded by respect and
-gratitude.
-
-There are several Eastern tales which are of the same family as
-Llewellyn’s hound, but in which the animal, instead of saving a child,
-confers some other benefit on its possessor. In a Persian fable a king
-kills his falcon because it spilled a cup of water which he is about to
-drink: of course, the water was really poisoned. A current folk-tale of
-Bengal makes a horse the victim of its devotion in preventing its master
-from drinking poisonous water.
-
-Rather different is the following Chinese tale, which is to be found,
-told at more length, in Dr. Herbert H. Giles’s delightful book, “Strange
-Stories from a Chinese Studio”:—
-
-There was a man of Lu-ngan who had scraped together enough money to
-release his father from prison, where he was like to die of all the
-untold miseries of Chinese durance. He got on a mule and set out for the
-town where his father was languishing, taking the silver with him. When
-he was well on his way, he was much annoyed to see that a black dog
-which belonged to the family was following him; he tried in vain to make
-it go back. After riding on for some time, he got off the mule to rest
-and he took the opportunity for throwing a large stone at the dog, which
-ran away, but as soon as he was on the road again the dog trotted up and
-took hold of the mule’s tail, as if trying to stop it. The man beat it
-off with the whip, but it only ran round in front of the mule, and
-barked frantically so as to impede its progress. The man now reflected,
-“This is a very bad omen,” and he got fairly into a rage and beat the
-dog off with such violence that it did not come back. So he continued
-his journey without further incidents, but when he reached the city in
-the dark of the evening, what was not his despair on finding about half
-his money gone! He did not doubt that he must have dropped it on the
-way, and after passing a night of terrible distress he remembered,
-towards dawn, the strange way in which the dog behaved, and he began to
-think that there might be some connexion between this and the loss of
-his money. Directly the gates were open he retraced his steps along the
-road, though he hardly hoped to find any clue to his loss, as the route
-was traversed by many travellers. But at the spot where, on the previous
-day he dismounted from his mule to rest, he saw the dog stretched dead
-on the ground, its hair still moist with perspiration, and when he
-lifted up the body by one of its ears, he found his lost silver safely
-concealed underneath it! His gratitude was great, and he bought a
-coffin, in which he placed the dog and then buried it. The place is
-known as “the Grave of the Faithful Dog.”
-
-It is not true that every one in China eats dogs, but some do, and the
-trade in such animals is a recognised business. There are several cat
-and dog restaurants at Canton. This unenviable habit gives rise to the
-story of a merchant who had made a good stroke of business at Wu-hu and
-was going home in a canal boat, when he noticed on the bank a butcher
-who was tying up a dog previous to killing it. It is not stated if the
-merchant had always a tender heart or if his good fortune in the town
-made him wish to do a good turn to some living thing; anyhow, he
-proposed to buy the dog. The butcher was no fool; he guessed that the
-trader would never leave the dog to its fate after thinking about
-rescuing it—what dreadful sleepless nights such a proceeding would cost
-any of us! So he boldly asked a great deal more than the dog was worth,
-which was paid down, and the animal was untied and put on the boat with
-his new master. Now it so happened that the boatman had been a brigand,
-and, though partially reformed, the feeling that he had on board a
-traveller with a large sum of money was too strong a temptation for him.
-So he stopped the boat by running it among the rushes and drew out a
-long knife, with which he prepared to murder his passenger. The merchant
-begged the brigand not to mutilate him or cut off his head, because such
-treatment causes the victim to appear in the next world as no one would
-like to. Brigands are generally religious, and this one was no
-exception; he was willing to oblige the merchant and tied him up, quite
-whole, in a carpet, which he threw into the river. The dog, which had
-been looking on, was in the water in a moment, hugging and tugging at
-the bundle till he got it to a shallow place. Then he barked and barked
-till people came to see what was the matter, and they undid the carpet
-and found the trader still alive. The first thought of the rescued man
-was to track the thief, for which purpose he started at once to go back
-to Wu-hu. At the time of starting, much to his distress, he missed the
-dog. On arriving at Wu-hu he hunted among the endless boats and shipping
-for the boat by which he had travelled, but unfortunately he could see
-nothing of it, and at last he gave up the search and was going home with
-a friend when what should he see but his lost dog, which barked in a
-curious way as if to invite him to follow it. The merchant did so, and
-the dog led him to a boat that was lying close to the quay. Into this
-boat the dog jumped and seized hold of one of the boatmen by the leg. In
-spite of blows the animal would not let go, and then the merchant, on
-looking hard at the boatman, recognised him as the very man who tried to
-murder him, though he had a nice new suit of clothes and a new boat. The
-thief was arrested and the money found at the bottom of the boat. “To
-think,” says the story-teller, “that a dog could show gratitude like
-that!” To which Dr. Giles adds that dogs in China are usually “ill-fed,
-barking curs” which, if valued as guardians of house and chattels, are
-still despised. But beautiful moral qualities have the power to conquer
-loathing, and even in those countries where the dog is regarded
-generally with aversion it is still the chosen type of sublime fidelity
-and love.
-
-I can never think of Chinese dogs without remembering a story told by my
-cousin, Lord Napier of Magdala, of an incident which, he said, gave him
-more pain than anything that had ever happened to him in his life. When
-he was in China he chanced to admire a dog, which was immediately
-offered to him as a gift. He could not accept the offer, and next day he
-heard that the owner of the dog with all his family, five persons, had
-drowned himself in a well. Probably they imagined that he was offended
-by their offering him a mere dog.
-
-In India, to return to that home of legend, the two most sublime Beast
-Stories are to be found in the Great Epic of the Hindu race, the
-_Mahabharata_. They are both stories of the faithfulness of man to
-beast, and they afford consolation for the sorry figure presented by the
-human actor in the martyred mungoose tale. The first of these stories is
-the legend of the Hawk and the Pigeon. A pigeon pursued by a hawk flies
-for protection to the precinct of sacrifice, where a very pious king is
-about to make his offering. It clings to the king’s breast, motionless
-with fright. Then up comes the hawk, which, perching on a near
-vantage-ground, begins to argue the case. All the princes of the earth
-declare the king to be a magnanimous chief; why, therefore, should he
-fly in the face of natural laws? Why keep its destined food from the
-hawk, which feels very hungry? The king answers that the pigeon came
-flying to him, overcome by fear and seeking to save its life. How can he
-possibly give it up? A trembling bird which enters his presence begging
-for its life? How ignoble it would be to abandon it! Surely it would be
-a mortal sin! In fact, that is exactly what the Law calls it!
-
-The hawk retorts that all creatures must eat to live. You can sustain
-life on very little, but how are you going to live on nothing at all? If
-the hawk has nothing to eat, his vital breath will depart this very day
-“on the road where nothing more affrights.” If he dies, his wife and
-children will die too for want of their protector. Such an eventuality
-cannot be contemplated by the Law: a law which contradicts itself is a
-very bad law and cannot be in accordance with eternal truth. In
-theological difficulties one has to consider what seems just and
-reasonable and interpret the point in that sense.
-
-“There is a great deal to be said for what you say, best of fowls,”
-replies the king, who is impressed by the hawk’s forensic skill and
-begins to think him a person not to be trifled with; “you are very well
-informed; in fact, I am inclined to think that you know everything. How
-_can_ you suppose, then, that it would be a decent thing to give up a
-creature that seeks refuge? Of course, I understand that with you it is
-a question of a dinner, but something much more substantial than this
-pigeon can be prepared for you immediately; for instance, a wild boar,
-or a gazelle or a buffalo—anything that you like.”
-
-The hawk answers that he never, by any chance, touches meat of that
-sort: why does the king talk to him about such unsuitable diet? By an
-immutable rule hawks feed on pigeons, and this pigeon is the very thing
-he wants and to which he has a perfect right. In a delicate metaphor he
-hints that the king had better leave off talking nonsense.
-
-The king, who sees that arguments are no good, now declares that
-anything and everything he will give the hawk by way of compensation,
-but that as to the pigeon, he will not give it up, so it is no good
-going on discussing the matter.
-
-The hawk says, in return, that if the king is so tenderly solicitous on
-the pigeon’s account, the best thing he can do is to cut out a piece of
-his own flesh and weigh it in the scales with the pigeon—when the
-balance is equal, then and then only will the hawk be satisfied. “As you
-ask that as a favour,” says the king, “you shall have what you wish”—a
-consent which seems to contain a polite hint that the hawk might have
-been a little less arrogant, for in the hawk’s demand there was no
-mention of favours.
-
-The king himself cuts out the piece of his flesh (no one else would have
-dared do it). But, alas! when it is weighed with the pigeon, the pigeon
-weighs the most! The king went on cutting pieces of his flesh and
-throwing them into the scales, but the pigeon was still the heaviest. At
-last, all lacerated as he was, he threw himself into the scales. Then,
-with a blast of revelation, the esoteric sense of the story is made
-plain. There is something grand in the sudden antithesis.
-
-The hawk said: “I am Indra, O prince, thou that knowest the Law! And
-this pigeon is Agni! Since thou hast torn thy flesh from thy limbs, O
-thou Prince of Men, thy glory shall shine throughout all worlds. As long
-as there be men on earth they will remember thee, O king. As long as the
-eternal realms endure thy fame shall not grow dim.”
-
-So the gods returned to heaven, to which the pious Wusinara likewise
-ascended with his renovated body, luminously bright. He needs not to
-complete his sacrifice—himself has he offered up.
-
-The listeners (Eastern stories are for listeners, not for readers) are
-exhorted to raise their eyes and behold with the mind’s vision that pure
-and holy abode where the righteous dwell with the gods in glory
-ineffable.
-
-This beautiful fable belongs to the general class of the ancient stories
-of Divine visitants, but it has a more direct affinity with the lovely
-legends of the Middle Ages, in which pious people who give their beds to
-lepers or others suffering from loathsome disease find that it was
-Christ they harboured. Though the story of the Hawk and the Pigeon may
-be used simply as a fairy tale, the moral of it is what forms the
-essential kernel of other-worldly religions. Through the mazes of Indian
-thought emerges the constant conviction—like a Divine sign-post—that
-martyrdom is redemption. The gods themselves are less than the man who
-resigns everything for what his conscience tells him to be right. Indra
-bows before Wusinara and seeks to learn the Law from him. India’s gods
-are Nature-gods, and Nature teaches no such lesson:—
-
- “There is no effort on _my_ brow—
- I do not strive, I do not weep,
- I rush with the swift spheres and glow
- For joy, and when I will, I sleep.”
-
-Higher religions are a criticism of Nature: they “occupy the sphere that
-rational interpretation seeks to occupy and fails, and fails the more
-the more it seeks,” and if they change with the change of moral
-aspirations they are still the passionate endeavour of the soul to
-satisfy them.
-
-The Buddhists took the story of the Hawk and the Pigeon and adapted it
-to their own teaching. Indra, chief of the gods, feels that his god-life
-is waning—for the gods of India labour, too, under the sense of that
-mysterious fatality of doom which haunted Olympus and Walhalla. Indra,
-knowing his twilight to be near, desired to consult a Buddha, but there
-was not one at that time upon the earth. There was, however, a virtuous
-king of the name of Sivi, and Indra decides to put him to the ordeal,
-which forms the subject of the other story, because, if he comes out
-scathless, he will be qualified to become a full Buddha. King Sivi had a
-severe struggle with himself, but he conquered his weakness, and when he
-feels the scale sink under him he is filled with indescribable joy and
-heaven and earth shake, which always happens when a Buddha is coming
-into existence. A crowd of gods descended and rested on the air: the
-sight of Sivi’s endurance caused them to weep tears that fell like rain
-mingled with divine flowers, which the gods threw down on the voluntary
-victim.
-
-Indra puts off the form of a dove and resumes his god-like shape. What,
-he asks, does the king desire? Would he be universal monarch? Would he
-be king of the Genii? _Would he be Indra?_ There is a fine touch in this
-offer from the god of his godship to the heroic man, and, like most
-Buddhist amplifications of older legends, it might be justified from
-Brahmanical sources, as by incredible self-denial it was always held to
-be possible to dethrone a god and put oneself in his place. But Sivi
-replies that the only state he craves is that of a Buddha. Indra
-inquires if no shade of regret crosses the king’s mind when he feels the
-anguish reaching to his bones? The king replies, “I regret nothing.”
-“How can I believe it,” says Indra, “when thy body trembles and shivers
-so that thou canst hardly speak?” Sivi repeats that from beginning to
-end he has felt no shadow of regret; all has happened as he wished. In
-proof that he speaks truth, may his body be as whole as before! He had
-scarcely spoken when the miracle was effected, and in the same instant
-King Sivi became a Buddha.
-
-There is a Russian folk-tale which seems to belong to this cycle. A
-horse which was ill-treated and half-starved saves the child of one of
-his masters from a bear. He has a friend, a cat, who is also
-half-starved. After he has saved the child he is better fed and he gives
-the cat part of his food. The masters notice this and again ill-treat
-him. He resolves to kill himself so that the cat may eat him, but the
-cat will not eat her friend and resolves to die likewise.
-
-The second great story of man and beast contained in the _Mahabharata_
-is that of Yudishtira and his dog. Accompanied by his wife and by his
-brethren, the saintly king started upon a pilgrimage of unheard-of
-difficulty which he alone was able to complete, as, on account of some
-slight imperfections that rendered them insufficiently meritorious to
-reach the goal, the others died upon the way. Only a dog, which followed
-Yudishtira from his house, remains with him still. At the final stage he
-is met by Indra, who invites him to mount his car and ascend to heaven
-in the flesh. The king asks if his brethren and the “tender king’s
-daughter,” his wife, are to be left lying miserably upon the road? Indra
-points out that the souls of these have already left their mortal coil
-and are even now in heaven, where Yudishtira will find them when he
-reaches it in his corporeal form. Then the king says, “And the dog, O
-lord of what Is and Is to be—the dog which has been faithful to the end,
-may I bring him? It is not my nature to be hard.” Indra says that since
-the king has this day obtained the rank of a god together with
-immortality and unbounded happiness, he had better not waste thoughts on
-a dog. Yudishtira answers that it would be an abominably unworthy act to
-forsake a faithful servant in order to obtain felicity and fortune.
-Indra objects that no dogs are allowed in heaven; what is a dog? A
-rough, ill-mannered brute which often runs away with the sacrifices
-offered in the temples. Let Yudishtira only reflect what wretched
-creatures dogs are, and he will give up all idea of taking his dog to
-heaven. Yudishtira still asserts that the abandonment of a servant is an
-enormous sin; it is as bad as murdering a Brahman. He is not going to
-forsake his dog whatever the god may say. Besides, it is not violent at
-all, but a gentle and devoted creature, and now that it is so weak and
-thin from all it has undergone on the journey and yet so eager to live,
-he would not leave it, even if it cost him his life. That is his final
-resolve.
-
-Arguing in rather a feminine way, Indra returns to the charge that dogs
-are rough, rude brutes and quite ignores the good personal character
-given to this dog by its master. He goes on to twit Yudishtira with
-having abandoned his beloved Draupadi and his brothers on the road down
-there, while he makes all this stand about a dog. He winds up with
-saying, “You must be quite mad to-day.”
-
-Repelling the disingenuous charge of abandoning his wife and brethren,
-Yudishtira remarks with dignity that he left not them but their dead
-bodies on the road: he could not bring them to life again. He might have
-said that Indra himself had pointed out to him this very fact. The
-refusal of asylum, the murder of a woman, the act of kidnapping a
-sleeping Brahman, the act of deceiving a friend—there is nothing, says
-Yudishtira, to choose between these four things and the abandonment of a
-faithful servant.
-
-The trial is over and the god admits his defeat. “Since thou hast
-refused the divine chariot with the words, ‘This dog is devoted,’ it is
-clear, O Prince of Men, that there is no one in heaven equal to thee.”
-Yudishtira, alone among mortals, ascends to bliss in his own body. And
-the dog—what of the dog? One is sorry to hear that the dog vanished and
-in his place stood Yama, King of Death.
-
-To us, far away from the glamour of Eastern skies, the
-god-out-of-the-machine or out of the beast-skin is not always a welcome
-apparition. We cannot help being glad when, sometimes, the animals just
-remain what they are, as in the charming Indian fable of the Lion and
-the Vulture. A lion who lived in a forest became great friends with a
-monkey. One day the monkey asked the lion to look after its two little
-ones while it was away. But the lion happened to go to sleep and a
-vulture that was hovering overhead seized both the young monkeys and
-took them up into a tree. When the lion awoke he saw that his charges
-were gone, and gazing about he perceived the vulture holding them tight
-on the top branches of the nearest tree. In great distress of mind the
-lion said, “The monkey placed its two children under my care, but I was
-not watchful enough and now you have carried them off. In this way I
-have missed keeping my word. I do beg you to give them back; I am the
-king of beasts, you are the chief of birds: our nobility and our power
-are equal. It would be only fair to let me have them.” Alas!
-compliments, though they will go very far, do little to persuade an
-empty stomach. “You are totally unacquainted with the circumstances of
-the case,” replied the vulture; “I am simply dying of hunger: what is
-the equality or difference of rank to me?” Then the lion with his claws
-tore out some of his own flesh to satisfy the vulture’s appetite and so
-ransomed the little monkeys.
-
-In this fable we have the Hawk and the Pigeon motive with the miraculous
-kept in but the mythological left out.
-
-Like a great part of the Buddhist stories of which the Lion and the
-Vulture is one, we owe its preservation to the industrious Chinese
-translator. In the same work that contains it, the _Tatchi-lou-lun_, we
-are told how, when a bird laid her eggs on the head of the first Buddha
-which she mistook for the branch of a tree, he plunged himself into a
-trance so as not to move till the eggs were hatched and the young birds
-had flown. The Buddha’s humanity is yet again shown by the story of how
-he saved the forest animals that were fleeing from a conflagration. The
-jungle caught fire and the flames spread to the forest, which burnt
-fiercely on three sides; one side was safe, but it was bounded by a
-great river. The Buddha saw the animals huddling in terror by the
-water’s edge. Full of pity, he took the form of a gigantic stag and
-placing his fore-feet on the further bank and his hind-feet on the
-other, he made a bridge over which the creatures could pass. His skin
-and flesh were cruelly wounded by their feet, but love helped him to
-bear the pain. When all the other animals had passed over, and when the
-stag’s powers were all but gone, up came a panting hare. The stag made
-one more supreme effort; the hare was saved, but hardly had it crossed,
-when the stag’s backbone broke and it fell into the water and died. The
-author of the fable may not have known that hares swim very well, so
-that the sacrifice was not necessary, unless, indeed, this hare was too
-exhausted to take to the water.
-
-We can picture the first Buddhist missionaries telling such stories over
-the vast Chinese empire to a race which had not instinctively that
-tender feeling for animals which existed from the most remote times in
-the Indian peninsula. A good authority attributes the present Chinese
-sensitiveness about animals wholly to those early teachers.
-
-A Sanscrit story akin to the preceding ones tells how a saint in the
-first stage of Buddhahood was walking in the mountains with his disciple
-when he saw in a cavern in the rock a tigress and her newly-born little
-ones. She was thin and starving and exhausted by suffering, and she cast
-unnatural glances on her children as they pressed close to her,
-confident in her love and heedless of her cruel growls. Notwithstanding
-his usual self-control, the saint trembled with emotion at the sight.
-Turning to his disciple, he cried, “My son, my son, here is a tigress,
-which, in spite of maternal instinct, is being driven by hunger to
-devour her little ones. Oh! dreadful cruelty of self-love, which makes a
-mother feed upon her children!”
-
-He bids the young man fly in search of food, but while he is gone he
-reflects that it may be too late when he returns, and to save the mother
-from the dreadful crime of killing her children, and the little ones
-from the teeth of their famished mother, he flings himself down the
-precipice. Hearing the noise, and curious as to what it might mean, the
-tigress is turned from the thought of killing her young ones, and on
-looking round she sees the body of the saint and devours it.
-
-The most remarkable of all the many Buddhist animal stories is that of
-the Banyan Deer, which is in the rich collection of old-world lore known
-as the _Jātaka Book_. The collection is not so much an original Buddhist
-work as the Buddhist redaction of much older tales. It was made in about
-the third century B.C. The Banyan Deer story had the additional interest
-that illustrations of it were discovered among the bas-reliefs of the
-stupa of Bharhut. I condense the story from the version of it given in
-Professor T. W. Rhys Davids’ “Buddhist India.”
-
-In the king’s park there were two herds of deer, and every day either
-the king or his cook hunted them for venison. So every day a great many
-were harassed and wounded for one that was killed. Then the golden-hued
-Banyan Deer, who was the monarch of one herd, went to the Branch Deer,
-who was king of the other herd, and proposed an arrangement by which
-lots were to be cast daily, and one deer on whom the lot fell should go
-and offer himself to the cook, voluntarily laying his head on the block.
-In this way there would be no unnecessary suffering and slaughter.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo:_ _Griggs._
- THE BANYAN DEER.
- (_From “Stûpa of Bharhut,” by General Cunningham._)]
-
-The somewhat lugubrious proposition met with assent, and all seems to
-have gone well till one day the lot fell to a doe of the Branch king’s
-herd, who was expecting soon to become a mother. She begged her king to
-relieve her of the duty, as it would mean that two at once should
-suffer, which could never have been intended. But with harsh words the
-Branch king bade her be off to the block. Then the little doe went
-piteously to the Banyan king as a last hope. No sooner had he heard her
-tale than he said he would look to the matter, and what he did was to go
-straight to the block himself and lay his royal head upon it. But as the
-king of the country had ordered that the monarchs of both herds should
-be spared, the cook was astonished to see King Banyan with his head on
-the block, and went off in a hurry to tell his lord. Mounted in a
-chariot with all his men around him, the sovereign rode straight to the
-place. Then he asked his friend, the king of the deer, why had he come
-there? Had he not granted him his life? The Banyan Deer told him all.
-The heart of the king of men was touched, and he commanded the deer to
-rise up and go on his way, for he gave him his life and hers also to the
-doe. But the Banyan Deer asked how it would be with all the others: were
-two to be saved and the rest left to their peril? The king of men said
-that they too should be respected. Even then the Banyan Deer had more to
-ask: he pleaded for the safety of all living, feeling things, and the
-king of men granted his prayer. (What will not a man grant when his
-heart is touched by some act of pure abnegation?)
-
-There is a curious epilogue to the story. The doe gave birth to a most
-beautiful fawn, which went playing with the herd of the Branch Deer. To
-it the mother said:—
-
- “Follow rather the Banyan Deer,
- Cultivate not the Branch!
- Death with the Banyan were better far
- Than with the Branch long life.”
-
-The verse is haunting in its vagueness, as a music which reaches us from
-far away. “Follow rather the Banyan Deer!” ... follow the ideal, follow
-the merciful, he who loses his life shall find it.
-
-The Indian hermit of whatsoever sect has always been, and is still, good
-friends with animals, and when he can, he gives asylum to as many as he
-is able, around his hermitage. This fact, which is familiar to all,
-becomes the groundwork of many stories. One of the best is the elaborate
-Chinese Buddhist tale of Sama, an incarnation of Buddha, who chose to be
-born as a son to two old, blind, childless folks, in order to take care
-of their forlornness. When the child was ten years old he begged his
-parents respectfully to go with him into the solitary mountains where
-they might practise the life of religious persons who have forsaken the
-world. His parents agreed; they had been thinking about becoming hermits
-before his birth, but that happy event made them put the thought away.
-Now they were quite willing to go with him. So they gave their worldly
-goods to the poor and followed where he led.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo:_ _Mansell._
- EGYPTIAN FOWLING SCENE.
- British Museum.
- (_Mural painting._)]
-
-There is a beautiful description of the life in the mountains. Sama made
-a shelter of leaves and branches, and brought his old parents sweet
-fruits and cool water—all that they needed. The birds and beasts of the
-forest, showing no fear, delighted the blind couple with their song and
-friendship, and all the creatures came at Sama’s call and followed him
-about. Herds of deer and feathered fowl drank by the river’s bank while
-he drew water. Unhappily one day the king of Kasi was out hunting in
-those wilds and he saw the birds and the deer, but Sama he did not see
-and an arrow he aimed at the herd pierced the boy’s body. The wounded
-boy said to the king, “They kill an elephant for its ivory teeth, a
-rhinoceros for its horn, a kingfisher for its feathers, a deer for its
-skin, but why should I be killed?”
-
-The king dismounted, and asked him who he was—consorting with the wild
-herds of the forest. Sama told him that he was only a hermit boy, living
-an innocent life with his blind parents. No tiger or wolf had harmed
-them, and now the arrow of his king laid him low.
-
-The forest wailed; the wild beasts and birds, the lions, tigers, and
-wolves uttered dismal cries. “Hark, how the beasts of the forest cry!”
-Said the old couple to one another, “Never before have we heard it so.
-How long our son has been gone!”
-
-Meanwhile, the king, overcome by sorrow and remorse, tried in vain to
-draw the arrow from the boy’s breast. The birds flew round and round
-screaming wildly; the king trembled with fear. Sama said, “Your Majesty
-is not to blame; I must have done ill in a former life, and now suffer
-justly for it: I do not grieve for myself but for my blind parents ...
-what will they do? May heavenly guardians protect them!”
-
-Then the king said, “May I undergo the torments of hell for a hundred
-æons, but O! may this youth live!” It was not to be; Sama expired, while
-all the wood birds flocking together tried tenderly to staunch the blood
-flowing from his breast.
-
-I cannot tell the whole story, which has a strong suggestion of some
-poetic fancy of Maeterlinck. In the end Sama is brought back to life,
-and the eyes of his parents are opened. The king is admonished to return
-to his dominions and no longer take life in the chase.
-
-In a Jaina hermit story a king goes hunting with a great attendance of
-horses, elephants, chariots, and men on foot. He pursues the deer on
-horseback, and, keen on his sport, he does not notice, as he aims the
-arrow, that the frightened creature is fleeing to a holy ascetic who is
-wise in the study of sacred things. Of a sudden, he beholds the dead
-deer and the holy man standing by it. A dreadful fear seizes the king:
-he might have killed the monk! He gets off his horse, bows low, and
-prays to be forgiven. The venerable saint was plunged in thought and
-made no answer; the king grew more and more alarmed at his silence.
-“Answer me, I pray, Reverend Sir,” he said. “Be without fear, O king,”
-replied the monk, “but grant safety to others also. In this transient
-world of living things, why are you prone to cruelty?” Why should the
-king cling to kingly power, since one day he must part with everything?
-Life and beauty pass, wife and children, friends and kindred—they will
-follow no man in death: what do follow him are his deeds, good or evil.
-When he heard that, the king renounced his kingdom and became an
-ascetic. “A certain nobleman who had turned monk said to him, ‘As you
-look so happy, you must have peace of mind.’”
-
-It may be a wrong conception of life that makes men seek rest on this
-side of the grave, but one can well believe that the finding of it
-brings a happiness beyond our common ken. For one thing, he who lives
-with Nature surely never knows _ennui_. The most marvellous of dramatic
-poems unfolds its pages before his eyes. Nor does he know loneliness;
-even one little creature in a prisoner’s cell gives a sense of
-companionship, and the recluse in the wild has the society of all the
-furred and feathered hosts. The greatest poet of the later literature of
-India, Kálidása, draws an exquisite picture of the surroundings of an
-Indian heritage:—
-
-“See under yon trees the hallowed grains which have been scattered on
-the ground, while the tender female parrots were feeding their unfledged
-young ones in their pendant nests.... Look at the young fawns, which,
-having acquired confidence in man, and accustomed themselves to the
-sound of his voice, frisk at pleasure, without varying their course.
-See, too, where the young roes graze, without apprehension from our
-approach, on the lawn before yonder garden, where the tops of the
-sacrificial grass, cut for some religious rite, are sprinkled round.”[9]
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- Sir William Jones’s translation.
-
-In the play of _Sacontala_—which filled Goethe with a delight
-crystallised in his immortal quatrain—no scene is so impressed by
-genuine feeling and none so artistic in its admirable simplicity as that
-in which the heroine takes leave of her childhood’s pet.
-
-The hermit, who has been the foster-father of Sacontala, is dismissing
-her upon her journey to the exalted bridegroom who awaits her. At the
-last moment she says to him: “My father, see you there my pet deer,
-grazing close to the hermitage? She expects soon to fawn, and even now
-the weight of the little ones she carries hinders her movements. Do not
-forget to send me word when she becomes a mother.”
-
-The hermit, Canna, promises that it shall be done; then as Sacontala
-moves away, she feels herself drawn back, and turning round, she says,
-“What can this be fastened to my dress?”
-
-Canna answers:—
-
- “My daughter,
- It is the little fawn, thy foster child.
- Poor helpless orphan! It remembers well
- How with a mother’s tenderness and love
- Thou didst protect it, and with grains of rice
- From thine own hand didst daily nourish it,
- And ever and anon when some sharp thorn
- Had pierced its mouth, how gently thou didst tend
- The bleeding wound and pour in healing balm.
- The grateful nursling clings to its protectress,
- Mutely imploring leave to follow her.”
-
-Sacontala replies, weeping, “My poor little fawn, dost thou ask to
-follow an unhappy wretch who hesitates not to desert her companions?
-When thy mother died, soon after thy birth, I supplied her place and
-reared thee with my own hands, and now that thy second mother is about
-to leave thee, who will care for thee? My father, be thou a mother to
-her. My child, go back and be a daughter to my father!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is the fatality of the dramatist that he cannot stamp with truth
-sentiments which are not sure of a response from his audience: he must
-strike the keyboard of his race. We can imagine how thoroughly an Indian
-audience would enter into the sentiment of this charming scene. To the
-little Indian girl, who was still only a child of thirteen or fourteen,
-the favourite animal did not appear as a toy, or even as a simple
-playmate. It was the object of grave and thoughtful care, and it
-received the first outpouring of what would one day be maternal love.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XVI
-
- THE GROWTH OF MODERN IDEAS ON ANIMALS
-
-
-THE last age of antiquity was an age of yeast. Ideas were in
-fermentation; religious questions came to be regarded as
-“interesting”—just as they are now. The spirit of inquiry took the place
-of placid acceptance on the one hand, and placid indifference on the
-other. It was natural that there should be a rebound from the effort of
-Augustus to re-order religion on an Imperial, conventional, and
-unemotional basis. Then, too, Rome, which had never been really Italian
-except in the sublime previsions of Virgil, grew every day more
-cosmopolitan: the denizens of the discovered world found their way
-thither on business, for pleasure, as slaves—the influence of these last
-not being the least important factor, though its extent and character
-are not easy to define. Everything tended to foment a religious unrest
-which took the form of one of those “returns to the East” that are ever
-destined to recur: the spiritual sense of the Western world became
-Orientalised. The worship of Isis and Serapis and much more of Mithra
-proved to be more exciting than the worship of the Greek and Roman gods
-which represented Nature and law, while the new cults proposed to raise
-the veil on what transcends natural perception. No doubt the atmosphere
-of the East itself favoured their rapid development; the traveller in
-North Africa must be struck by the extraordinary frequency with which
-the symbols of Mithraism recur in the sculpture and mosaics of that once
-great Roman dependency. Evidently the birthland of St. Augustine bred in
-the matter-of-fact Roman colonist the same nostalgia for the Unknowable
-which even now a lonely night under the stars of the Sahara awakes in
-the dullest European soul. Personal immortality as a paramount doctrine;
-a further life more real than this one; ritual purification, redemption
-by sacrifice, mystical union with deity; these were among the un-Roman
-and even anti-Roman conceptions which lay behind the new, strange
-propaganda, and prepared the way for the diffusion of Christianity. With
-the Italian peasants who clung to the unmixed older faith no progress
-was made till persecution could be called in as an auxiliary.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo:_ _Mansell._
- ASSYRIAN LION AND LIONESS IN PARADISE PARK.
- British Museum.]
-
-In such a time it was a psychological certainty that among the other
-Eastern ideas which were coming to the fore, would be those ideas about
-animals which are roughly classed under the head of Pythagoreanism. The
-apostles of Christ in their journeys East or West might have met a
-singular individual who was carrying on an apostolate of his own, the
-one clear and unyielding point of which was the abolition of animal
-sacrifices. This was Apollonius, of Tyana, our knowledge of whom is
-derived from the biography, in part perhaps fanciful, written by
-Philostratus in the third century to please the Empress Julia Domna, who
-was interested in occult matters. Apollonius worked wonders as well
-attested as those, for instance, of the Russian Father John, but he
-seems to have considered his power the naturally produced result of an
-austere life and abstinence from flesh and wine which is a thoroughly
-Buddhist or Jaina theory. He was a theosophist who refrained from
-attacking the outward forms and observances of established religion when
-they did not seem to him either to be cruel or else incongruous to the
-degree of preventing a reverential spirit. He did not entirely
-understand that this degree is movable, any more than do those persons
-who want to substitute Gregorian chants for opera airs in rural Italian
-churches. He did not mind the Greek statues which appealed to the
-imagination by suggestions of beauty, but he blamed the Egyptians for
-representing deity as a dog or an ibis; if they disliked images of stone
-why not have a temple where there were no images of any kind—where all
-was left to the inner vision of the worshipper? In which question,
-almost accidentally, Apollonius throws out a hint of the highest form of
-spiritual worship.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Photo:_ _Alinari._
- LAMBS.
- (_Relief on fifth century tomb at Ravenna._)]
-
-The keenly intellectual thinkers whom we call the Fathers of the Church
-saw that the majority of the ideas then agitating men’s minds might find
-a quietus in Christian dogma which suited them a great deal better than
-the vague and often grotesque shape they had worn hitherto. But there
-was a residuum of which they felt an instinctive fear, and peculiar
-notions about animals had the ill-luck of being placed at the head of
-these. It could not have been a fortunate coincidence that two of the
-most prominent men who held them in the early centuries were declared
-foes of the new faith—Celsus and Porphyry.
-
-When the Church triumphed, the treatise written by Celsus would have
-been no doubt entirely destroyed like other works of the same sort, had
-not Origen made a great number of quotations from it for the purpose of
-confutation. Celsus was no _borné_ disputant after the fashion of the
-Octavius of Minucius, but a man of almost encyclopædic learning; if he
-was a less fair critic than he held himself to be, it was less from want
-of information than from want of that sympathy which is needful for true
-comprehension. The inner feeling of such a man towards the Christian
-Sectaries was not near so much that of a Torquemada in regard to
-heretics as that of an old-fashioned Tory upholder of throne and altar
-towards dissent fifty years ago. It was a feeling of social aloofness.
-
-Yet Celsus wished to be fair, and he had studied religions to enough
-purpose not to condemn as delusion or untruth everything that a
-superficial adversary would have rejected at once; for instance, he was
-ready to allow that the appearances of Christ to His disciples after the
-Crucifixion might be explained as psychical phenomena. Possibly he
-believed that truth, not falsehood, was the ultimate basis of all
-religions as was the belief of Apollonius before him. In some respects
-Celsus was more unprejudiced than Apollonius; this can be observed in
-his remarks on Egyptian zoomorphism; it causes surprise, he says, when
-you go inside one of the splendid Egyptian temples to find for divinity
-a cat, a monkey or a crocodile, but to the initiated they are symbols
-which under an allegorical veil turn people to honour imperishable
-ideas, not perishable animals as the vulgar suppose.
-
-It may have been his recondite researches which led Celsus to take up
-the question of the intelligence of animals and the conclusions to be
-drawn from it. He only touches lightly on the subject of their origin;
-he seems to lean towards the theory that the soul, life, mind, only, is
-made by God, the corruptible and passing body being a natural growth or
-perhaps the handiwork of inferior spirits. He denied that reason
-belonged to man alone, and still more strongly that God created the
-universe for man rather than for the other animals. Only absurd pride,
-he says, can engender such a thought. He knew very well that this, far
-from being a new idea, was the normal view of the ancient world from
-Aristotle to Cicero; the distinguished men who disagreed with it had
-never won more than a small minority over to their opinion. Celsus takes
-Euripides to task for saying—
-
- “The sun and moon are made to serve mankind.”
-
-Why mankind? he asks; why not ants and flies? Night serves them also for
-rest and day for seeing and working. If it be said that we are the king
-of animals because we hunt and catch them or because we eat them, why
-not say that we are made for them because they hunt and catch us?
-Indeed, they are better provided than we, for while we need arms and
-nets to take them and the help of several men and dogs, Nature furnishes
-them with the arms they require, and we are, as it were, made dependent
-on them. You want to make out that God gave you the power to take and
-kill wild animals, but at the time when there were no towns or
-civilisation or society or arms or nets, animals probably caught and
-devoured men while men never caught animals. In this way, it looks more
-as if God subjected man to animals than _vice versâ_. If men seem
-different from animals because they build cities, make laws, obey
-magistrates and rulers, you ought to note that this amounts to nothing
-at all, since ants and bees do just the same. Bees have their “kings”;
-some command, others obey; they make war, win battles, take prisoner the
-vanquished; they have their towns and quarters; their work is regulated
-by fixed periods, they punish the lazy and cowardly—at least they expel
-the drones. As to ants, they practise the science of social economy just
-as well as we do; they have granaries which they fill with provisions
-for the winter; they help their comrades if they see them bending under
-the weight of a burden; they carry their dead to places which become
-family tombs; they address each other when they meet: whence it follows
-that they never lose their way. We must conclude, therefore, that they
-have complete reasoning powers and common notions of certain general
-truths, and that they have a language and know how to express fortuitous
-events. If some one, then, looked down from the height of heaven on to
-the earth, what difference would he see between our actions and those of
-ants and bees? If man is proud of knowing magical secrets, serpents and
-eagles know a great deal more, for they use many preservatives against
-poisons and diseases, and are acquainted with the virtues of certain
-stones with which they cure the ailments of their young ones, while if
-men find out such a cure they think they have hit on the greatest wonder
-in the world. Finally, if man imagines that he is superior to animals
-because he possesses notion of God, let him know that it is the same
-with many of them; what is there more divine, in fact, than to foresee
-and to foretell the future? Now for that purpose men have recourse to
-animals, especially to birds, and all our soothsayers do is to
-understand the indications given by these. If, therefore, birds and
-other prophetic animals show us by signs the future as it is revealed to
-them by God, it proves that they have closer relations with the deity
-than we; that they are wiser and more loved by God. Very enlightened men
-have thought that they understood the language of certain animals, and
-in proof of this they have been known to predict that birds would do
-something or go somewhere, and this was observed to come true. No one
-keeps an oath more religiously or is more faithful to God than the
-elephant, which shows that he knows Him.
-
-Hence, concludes Celsus, the universe has _not_ been made for man any
-more than for the eagle or the dolphin. Everything was created not in
-the interest of something else, but to contribute to the harmony of the
-whole in order that the world might be absolutely perfect. God takes
-care of the universe; it is that which His providence never forsakes,
-that which never falls into disorder. God no more gets angry with men
-than with rats or monkeys: everything keeps its appointed place.
-
-In this passage Celsus rises to a higher level than in any other of the
-excerpts preserved for us by Origen. The tone of irony which usually
-characterises him disappears in this dignified affirmation of supreme
-wisdom justified of itself not by the little standards of men—or ants.
-It must be recognised as a lofty conception, commanding the respect of
-those who differ from it, and reconciling all apparent difficulties and
-contradictions forced upon us by the contemplation of men and Nature.
-But it brings no water from the cool spring to souls dying of thirst; it
-expounds in the clearest way and even in the noblest way the very
-thought which drove men into the Christian fold far more surely than the
-learned apologies of controversialists like Origen; the thought of the
-crushing unimportance of the individual.
-
-The least attentive reader must be struck by the real knowledge of
-natural history shown by Celsus: his ants are nearly as conscientiously
-observed as Lord Avebury’s. Yet a certain suspicion of conscious
-exaggeration detracts from the seriousness of his arguments; he strikes
-one as more sincere in disbelieving than in believing. A modern writer
-has remarked that Celsus in the second half of the second century
-forestalled Darwin in the second half of the nineteenth by denying human
-ascendancy and contending that man may be a little lower than the brute.
-But it scarcely seems certain whether he was convinced by his own
-reasoning or was not rather replying by paradoxes to what he considered
-the still greater paradoxes of Christian theology.
-
-The shadow of no such doubt falls on the pages of the neoplatonists
-Plotinus and Porphyry. To them the destiny of animals was not an
-academic problem but an obsession. The questions which Heine’s young man
-asked of the waves: “What signifies man? Whence does he come? Whither
-does he go?” were asked by them with passionate earnestness in their
-application to all sentient things. Plotinus reasoned, with great force,
-that intelligent beast-souls must be like the soul of man since in
-itself the essence of the soul could not be different. Porphyry (born at
-Tyre, A.D. 233), accepting this postulate that animals possess an
-intelligent soul like ours, went on to declare that it was therefore
-unlawful to kill or feed on them under any circumstances. If justice is
-due to rational beings, how is it possible to evade the conclusion that
-we are also bound to act justly towards the races below us? He who loves
-all animated nature will not single out one tribe of innocent beings for
-hatred; if he loves the whole he will love every part, and, above all,
-that part which is most closely allied to ourselves. Porphyry was quite
-ready to admit that animals in their own way made use of words, and he
-mentions Melampus and Apollonius as among the philosophers who
-understood their language. He quoted with approval the laws supposed to
-have been framed by Triptolemus in the reign of Pandion, fifth king of
-Athens: “Honour your parents; make oblations of your fruits to the gods;
-hurt not any living creature.”
-
-Neoplatonism penetrated into the early Church, but divested of its views
-on animal destiny; even the Catholic neoplatonist Boëthius, though he
-was sensitively fond of animals (witness his lines about caged birds),
-yet took the extreme view of the hard-and-fast line of separation, as
-may be seen by his poem on the “downward head,” which he interpreted to
-indicate the earth-bound nature of all flesh save man. Birds, by the by,
-and even fishes, not to speak of camel-leopards, can hardly be said to
-have a “downward head.” Meanwhile, the other manner of feeling, if not
-of thinking, reasserted its power as it always will, for it belongs to
-the primal things. Excluded from the broad road, it came in by the
-narrow way—the way that leads to heaven. In the wake of the Christian
-Guru came a whole troop of charming beasts, little less saintly and
-miraculous than their holy protectors, and thus preachers of the
-religion of love were spared the reproach of showing an all-unloving
-face towards creatures that could return love for love as well as most
-and better than many of the human kind. The saint saved the situation,
-and the Church wisely left him alone to discourse to his brother fishes
-or his sister turtle-doves, without inquiring about the strict orthodoxy
-of the proceeding.
-
-Unhappily the more direct inheritors of neoplatonist dreams were not
-left alone. A trend of tendency towards Pythagoreanism runs through
-their different developments from Philo to the Gnostics, from the
-Gnostics, through the Paulicians to the Albigenses. It passes out of our
-sight when these were suppressed in the thirteenth century by the most
-sanguinary persecution that the world has seen, but before long it was
-to reappear in one shape or another, and we may be sure that the thread
-was never wholly lost.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- “IL BUON PASTORE.”
- (_Mosaic at Ravenna._)]
-
-An effort has been made to prove that the official as well as the
-unofficial Church always favoured humanity to animals. The result of
-this effort has been wholly good; not only has it produced a delightful
-volume,[10] but, indirectly, it was the cause of Pope Pius X.
-pronouncing a blessing on every one who is working for the prevention of
-cruelty to animals throughout the world. _Roma locuta est._ To me this
-appears to be a landmark in ethics of first-class importance.
-Nevertheless, historically speaking, it is difficult to resist the
-conclusion that the diametrically opposite view expressed by Father
-Rickaby in a manual intended for use in the Jesuit College at
-Stonyhurst,[11] more correctly gives the measure of what had been the
-practical teaching of the Church in all these ages. Even now,
-authoritative Catholics, when enjoining humanity to animals, are careful
-to add that man has “no duties” towards them, though they may modify
-this by saying with Cardinal Manning (the most kind-hearted of men) that
-he owes “a sevenfold obligation” to their Creator to treat them well.
-Was it surprising that the Neapolitan peasant who heard from his priest
-that he had no duties to his ass went home, not to excogitate the
-sevenfold obligation but to belabour the poor beast soundly? Though the
-distinction is capable of philosophical defence, granted the premises,
-to plain people it looks like a juggling with words. When St. Philip
-Neri said to a monk who put his foot on a lizard, “What has the poor
-creature done to you?” he implied a duty to the animal, the duty of
-reciprocity. He spoke with the voice of Nature and forgot, for the
-moment, that animals were not “moral persons” nor “endowed with reason,”
-and that hence they could have “no rights.”
-
-Footnote 10:
-
- “L’Église et la Pitié envers les animaux,” Paris, 1903. An English
- edition has been published by Messrs. Burns and Oates.
-
-Footnote 11:
-
- “Moral Philosophy,” p. 250.
-
-At an early date, in the heart of official Catholicism, an inconsistency
-appeared which is less easily explained than homilies composed for
-fishes or hymns for birds; namely, the strange business of animal
-prosecutions. Without inquiring exactly what an animal is, it is easy to
-bestow upon it either blessings or curses. The beautiful rite of the
-blessing of the beasts which is still performed once a year in many
-places involves no doctrinal crux. In Corsica the priest goes up to the
-high mountain _plateaux_ where the animals pasture in the summer, and
-after saying Mass in presence of all the four-footed family, he solemnly
-blesses them and exhorts them to prosper and multiply. It is a
-delightful scene, but it does not affect the conception of the moral
-status of animals, nor would that conception be affected by a right-down
-malediction or order to quit. What, however, can be thought of a regular
-trial of inconvenient or offending animals in which great care is taken,
-to keep up the appearance of fair-play to the defendants? Our first
-impression is, that it must be an elaborate comedy; but a study of the
-facts makes it impossible to accept this theory.
-
-The earliest allusions to such trials that seem to exist belong to the
-ninth century, which does not prove that they were the first of the
-kind. One trial took place in 824 A.D. The Council of Worms decided in
-866 that if a man has been killed by bees they ought to suffer death,
-“but,” added the judgment, “it will be permissible to eat their honey.”
-A relic of the same order of ideas lingers in the habit some people have
-of shooting a horse which has caused a fatal accident, often the direct
-consequence of bad riding or bad driving. The earlier beast trials of
-which we have knowledge were conducted by laymen, the latter by
-ecclesiastics, which suggests their origin in a folk-practice. A good,
-characteristic instance began on September 5, 1370. The young son of a
-Burgundian swineherd had been killed by three sows which seemed to have
-feared an attack on one of their young ones. All members of the herd
-were arrested as accomplices, which was a serious matter to their
-owners, the inmates of a neighbouring convent, as the animals, if
-convicted, would be burnt and their ashes buried. The prior pointed out
-that three sows alone were guilty; surely the rest of the pigs ought to
-be acquitted. Justice did not move quickly in those times; it was on
-September 12, 1379, that the Duke of Burgundy delivered judgment; only
-the three guilty sows and one young pig (what had _it_ done?) were to be
-executed; the others were set at liberty “notwithstanding that they had
-seen the death of the boy without defending him.” Were the original ones
-all alive after nine years? If so, would so long a respite have been
-granted them had no legal proceedings been instituted?
-
-An important trial took place in Savoy in the year 1587. The accused was
-a certain fly. Two suitable advocates were assigned to the insects, who
-argued on their behalf that these creatures were created before man, and
-had been blessed by God, who gave them the right to feed on grass, and
-for all these and other good reasons the flies were in their right when
-they occupied the vineyards of the Commune; they simply availed
-themselves of a legitimate privilege conformable to Divine and natural
-law. The plaintiffs’ advocate retorted that the Bible and common sense
-showed animals to be created for the utility of man; hence they could
-not have the right to cause him loss, to which the counsel for the
-insects replied that man had the right to command animals, no doubt, but
-not to persecute, excommunicate and interdict them when they were merely
-conforming to natural law “which is eternal and immutable like the
-Divine.”
-
-The judges were so deeply impressed by this pleading that to cut the
-case short, which seemed to be going against him, the Mayor of St.
-Julien hastened to propose a compromise; he offered a piece of land
-where the flies might find a safe retreat and live out their days in
-peace and plenty. The offer was accepted. On June 29, 1587, the citizens
-of St. Julien were bidden to the market square by ringing the church
-bells, and after a short discussion they ratified the agreement which
-handed over a large piece of land to the exclusive use of the insects.
-Hope was expressed that they would be entirely satisfied with the
-bargain. A right of way across the land was, indeed, reserved to the
-public, but no harm whatever was to be done to the flies on their own
-territory. It was stated in the formal contract that the reservation was
-ceded to the insects in perpetuity.
-
-All was going well, when it transpired that, in the meantime, the flies’
-advocates had paid a visit to that much-vaunted piece of land, and when
-they returned, they raised the strongest objection to it on the score
-that it was arid, sterile, and produced nothing. The mayor’s counsel
-disputed this; the land, he said, produced no end of nice small trees
-and bushes, the very things for the nutrition of insects. The judges
-intervened by ordering a survey to find out the real truth, which survey
-cost three florins. There, alas! the story ends, for the winding up of
-the affair is not to be found in the archives of St. Julien.
-
-Records of 144 such trials have come to light. Of the two I have
-described, it will be remarked that one belongs, as it were, to criminal
-and the other to civil law. The last class is the most curious. No doubt
-the trial of flies or locusts was resorted to when other means of
-getting rid of them had failed; it was hoped, somehow, that the
-elaborate appearance of fair-play would bring about a result not to be
-obtained by violence. We can hardly resist the inference that they
-involved some sort of recognition or intuition of animals’ rights and
-even of animal intelligence.
-
-In the dawn of modern literature animals played a large, though
-artificial, part which must not be quite ignored on account of its
-artificiality, because in the Bestiaries as in the Æsopic and Oriental
-fables from which they were mainly derived, there was an inextricable
-tangle of observations of the real creature and arbitrary ascription to
-him of human qualities and adventures. At last they became a mere method
-for attacking political or ecclesiastical abuses, but their great
-popularity was as much due to their outer as to their inner sense. There
-is not any doubt that at the same time floods of Eastern fairy-tales
-were migrating to Europe, and in these the most highly appreciated hero
-was always the friendly beast. In a romance of the thirteenth century
-called “Guillaume de Palerme” all previous marvels of this kind were
-outdone by the story of a Sicilian prince who was befriended by a
-were-wolf!
-
-It is not generally remembered that the Indian or Buddhist view of
-animals must have been pretty well known in Europe at least as early as
-the fourteenth century. The account of the monastery “where many strange
-beasts of divers kinds do live upon a hill,” which Fra Odoric, of
-Pordenone, dictated in 1330, is a description, both accurate and
-charming, of a Buddhist animal refuge, and in the version given of it in
-Mandeville’s “Travels,” if not in the original, it must have been read
-by nearly every one who could read, for no book ever had so vast a
-diffusion as the “Travels” of the elusive Knight of St. Albans.
-
-With the Italian Renaissance came the full modern æsthetic enjoyment of
-animals; the admiration of their beauty and perfection which had been
-appreciated, of course, long before, but not quite in the same spirit.
-The all-round gifted Leo Battista Alberti in the fifteenth century took
-the same critical delight in the points of a fine animal that a modern
-expert would take. He was a splendid rider, but his interest was not
-confined to horses; his love for his dog is shown by his having
-pronounced a funeral oration over him. We feel that with such men
-humanity towards animals was a part of good manners. “We owe justice to
-men,” said the intensely civilised Montaigne, “and grace and benignity
-to other creatures that are capable of it; there is a natural commerce
-and mutual obligation between them and us.” Sir Arthur Helps, speaking
-of this, called it “using courtesy to animals,” and when one comes to
-think of it, is not such “courtesy” the particular mark and sign of a
-man of good breeding in all ages?
-
-The Renaissance brought with it something deeper than a wonderful
-quickening of the æsthetic sense in all directions; it also brought that
-spiritual quickening which is the co-efficient of every really upward
-movement of the human mind. Leonardo da Vinci, greatest of
-artist-humanists, inveighed against cruelty in words that might have
-been written by Plutarch or Porphyry. His sympathies were with the
-vegetarian. Meanwhile, Northern Churchmen who went to Rome were
-scandalised to hear it said in high ecclesiastical society that there
-was no difference between the souls of men and beasts. An attempt was
-made to convert Erasmus to this doctrine by means of certain extracts
-from Pliny. Roman society, at that time, was so little serious that one
-cannot believe it to have been serious even in its heterodoxy. But
-speculations more or less of the same sort were taken up by men of a
-very different stamp; it was to be foreseen that animals would have
-their portion of attention in the ponderings of the god-intoxicated
-musers who have been called the Sceptics of the Renaissance. For the
-proof that they did receive it we have only to turn to the pages of
-Giordano Bruno. “Every part of creation has its share in being and
-cognition.” “There is a difference, not in quality, but in quantity,
-between the soul of man, the animal and the plant.” “Among horses,
-elephants and dogs there are single individuals which appear to have
-almost the understanding of men.”
-
-Bruno’s prophetic guess that instinct is inherited habit might have
-saved Descartes (who was much indebted to the Nolan) from giving his
-name an unenviable immortality in connexion with the theory which is
-nearly all that the ignorant know now of Cartesian philosophy. This was
-the theory that animals are automata, a sophism that may be said to have
-swept Europe, though it was not long before it provoked a reaction.
-Descartes got this idea from the very place where it was likely to
-originate, from Spain. A certain Gomez Pereira advanced it before
-Descartes made it his own, which even led to a charge of plagiarism.
-“Because a clock marks time and a bee makes honey, we are to consider
-the clock and the bee to be machines. Because they do one thing better
-than man and no other thing so well as man, we are to conclude that they
-have no mind, but that Nature acts within them, holding their organs at
-her disposal.” “Nor are we to think, as the ancients do, that animals
-speak, though we do not know their language, for, if that were so, they,
-having several organs related to ours, might as easily communicate with
-us as with each other.”
-
-About this, Huxley showed that an almost imperceptible imperfection of
-the vocal chord may prevent articulated sounds. Moreover, the click of
-the bushmen, which is almost their only language, is exceedingly like
-the sounds made by monkeys.
-
-Language, as defined by an eminent Italian man of science, Professor
-Broca, is the faculty of making things known, or expressing them by
-signs or sounds. Much the same definition was given by Mivart, and if
-there be a better one, we have still to wait for it. Human language is
-evolved; at one time man had it not. The babe in the cradle is without
-it; the deaf mute, in his untaught state, is without it; _ergo_ the babe
-and the deaf mute cannot feel. Poor babes and poor deaf mutes should the
-scientific Loyolas of the future adopt this view!
-
-I do not know if any one has remarked that rural and primitive folk can
-never bring themselves to believe of any foreign tongue that it is real
-human language like their own. To them it seems a jargon of meaningless
-and uncouth sounds.
-
-Chanet, a follower of Descartes, said that he would believe that beasts
-thought when a beast told him so. By what cries of pain, by what looks
-of love, have not beasts told men that they thought! Man himself does
-not think in words in moments of profound emotion, whether of grief or
-joy. _He cries out_ or he _acts_. Thought in its absolutely elementary
-form is _action_. The mother thinks in the kiss she gives her child. The
-musician thinks in music. Perhaps God thinks in constellations. I asked
-a man who had saved many lives by jumping into the sea, “What did you
-think of at the moment of doing it?” He replied: “You do not think, or
-you might not do it.”
-
-The whole trend of philosophic speculation worthy of the name lies
-towards unity, but the Cartesian theory would arbitrarily divide even
-man’s physical and sensational nature from that of the other animals. To
-remedy this, Descartes admitted that man was just as much an automatic
-machine as other creatures. By what right, then, does he complain when
-he happens to have a toothache? Because, says Descartes triumphantly,
-man has an immortal soul! The child thinks in his mother’s womb, but the
-dog, which after scenting two roads takes the third without demur, sure
-that his master must have gone that way, this dog is acting “by springs”
-and neither thinks nor feels at all.
-
-The misuse of the ill-treated word “Nature” cannot hide the fact that
-the beginning, middle, and end of Descartes’ argument rests on a
-perpetually recurrent miracle. Descartes confessed as much when he said
-that God _could_ make animals as machines, so why should it be
-impossible that He _had_ made them as machines? Voltaire’s clear reason
-revolted at this logic; he declared it to be absurd to imagine that God
-had given animals organs of feeling in order that they might _not_ feel.
-He would have endorsed Professor Romanes’ saying that “the theory of
-animal automatism which is usually attributed to Descartes can never be
-accepted by common sense.”
-
-On the other hand, while Descartes was being persecuted by the Church
-for opinions which he did _not_ hold, this particular opinion of his was
-seized upon by Catholic divines as a vindication of creation. Pascal so
-regarded it. The miraculous element in it did not disturb him.
-Malebranche said though opposed by reason it was approved by faith.
-
-Descartes said that the idea that animals think and feel is a relic of
-childhood. The idea that they do _not_ think and feel might be more
-truly called a relic of that darkest side of perverse childhood, the
-existence of which we are all fain to forget. Whoever has seen a little
-child throwing stones at a toad on the highway—and sad because his hands
-are too small to take up the bigger stones to throw—will understand what
-I mean. I do not wish to allude more than slightly to a point which is
-of too much importance to pass over in silence. Descartes was a
-vivisector: so were the pious people at Port Royal who embraced his
-teaching with enthusiasm, and liked to hear the howls of the dogs they
-vivisected. M. Émile Ferrière, in his work “L’âme est la fonction du
-cerveau,” sees in the “souls” of beasts exactly the same nature as in
-the “soul” of man; the difference, he maintains, is one of degree;
-though generally inferior, it is sometimes superior to “souls” of
-certain human groups. Here is a candid materialist who deserves respect.
-But there is a school of physiologists nowadays which carries on an
-unflagging campaign in favour of belief in unconscious animal machines
-which work by springs, while denying that there is a God to wind up the
-springs, and in conscious human machines, while denying that there is a
-soul, independent of matter, which might account for the difference.
-“The wish is father to the thought.” _Non ragionam di lor ma guarda e
-passa._
-
-The strongest of all reasons for dismissing the machine theory of
-animals is their variety of idiosyncrasy. It is said that to the
-shepherd no two sheep look alike; it is certain that no two animals of
-any kind have the same characters. Some are selfish, some are unselfish,
-some are gentle, some irretrievably ill-tempered both to each other and
-to man. Some animals do not show much regret at the loss of their
-offspring, with others it is manifestly the reverse. Édouard Quinet
-described how on one occasion, when visiting the lions’ cage in the
-Jardin des Plantes, he observed the lion gently place his large paw on
-the forehead of the lioness, and so they remained, grave and still, all
-the time he was there. He asked Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, who was with
-him, what it meant. “Their lion cub,” was the answer, “died this
-morning.” “Pity, benevolence, sympathy, could be read on those rugged
-faces.” That these qualities are often absent in sentient beings what
-man can doubt? But they are not to be found in the best mechanical
-animals in all Nuremberg!
-
-Nor do machines commonly act as did the dog in the following true story
-which relates to something that happened during the earthquake of Ash
-Wednesday, 1887. At a place called Ceriana on the Italian Riviera a poor
-man who earned his living as a milk-carrier was supposed to have gone on
-his ordinary rounds, on which he was used to start at four o’clock in
-the morning. No one, therefore, thought of inquiring about him, but the
-fact was, that having taken a glass or two of wine in honour of the last
-night of the Carnival, he had overslept himself, and was still asleep
-when his cottage fell down upon him. He had a large dog which drew the
-little cart bearing the milk up the mountain paths, and the dog by
-chance was outside and safe. He found out where his master lay and
-succeeded in clearing the masonry so as to uncover his head, which was
-bleeding. He then set to work to lick the wounds; but, seeing that they
-went on bleeding, and also that he could not liberate the rest of the
-body, he started in search of help, running up and down among the
-surrounding ruins till he met some one, whom he caught hold of by the
-clothes. The man, however, thought that the dog was mad and fled for his
-life. Luckily, another man guessed the truth and allowed himself to be
-guided to the spot. History repeats itself, at least the history of
-devoted dogs. The same thing happened after the greater earthquake at
-Messina, when a man, one of the last to be saved, was discovered through
-the insistence of his little dog, who approached a group of searchers
-and whined piteously till he persuaded them to follow him to the ruins
-which concealed his master.
-
-Nor, again, do machines act like a cockatoo I heard of from a witness of
-the scene. A lady was visiting the zoological gardens in a German town
-with her daughter, when the little girl was seized with the wish to
-possess a pretty moulted feather which was lying on the ground in the
-parrots’ cage. She made several attempts to reach it, but in vain.
-Seeing which, an old cockatoo hopped solemnly from the back of the cage
-and taking up the feather in his beak, handed it to the child with an
-air of the greatest politeness.
-
-One of the first upholders of the idea of legislative protection of
-animals was Jeremy Bentham, who asked why the law should refuse its
-protection to any sensitive being? Most people forget the degree of
-opposition which was encountered by the earlier combatants of cruel
-practices and pastimes in England. Cobbett made a furious attack on a
-clergyman who (to his honour) was agitating for the suppression of
-bull-baiting, “the poor man’s sport,” as Cobbett called it. That it
-demoralised the poor man as well as tormented the bull never entered
-into the head of the inimitable wielder of English prose, pure and
-undefiled, who took it under his (happily) ineffectual protection. “The
-common law fully sanctions the baiting of bulls,” he wrote, “and, I
-believe, that to sell the flesh of a bull which has _not_ been baited is
-an offence which is punishable by that very law to which you appeal”
-(“_Political Register_,” June, 1802).
-
-Societies for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals had, in their day, to
-undergo almost as much criticism and ridicule in England as they now
-meet with in some parts of the Continent. Even the establishment of the
-Dogs’ Home in London raised a storm of disapproval, as may be seen by
-any one who turns over the files of the _Times_ for October, 1860. If
-the friends of humanity persevere, the change of sentiment which has
-become an accomplished fact in England will, in the end, triumph
-elsewhere.
-
-Unfortunately, humane sentiment and humane practice do not progress on a
-level line. As long ago as 1782 an English writer named Soame Jenyns
-protested against the wickedness of shooting a bear on an inaccessible
-island of ice, or an eagle on the mountain’s top. “We are unable to give
-life and therefore ought not to take it away from the meanest insect
-without sufficient reason.” What would he say if he came back to earth
-to find whole species of beautiful winged creatures being destroyed to
-afford a barbarous ornament for women’s heads?
-
-The “discovery” of Indian literature brought prominently forward in the
-West the Indian ideas of animals of which the old travellers had given
-the earliest news. The effect of familiarity with those ideas may be
-traced in many writers, but nowhere to such an extent as in the works of
-Schopenhauer, for whom, as for many more obscure students, they formed
-the most attractive and interesting part of Oriental lore. Schopenhauer
-cannot speak about animals without using a tone of passionate vehemence
-which was, without doubt, genuine. He felt the intense enjoyment in
-observing them which the lonely soul has ever felt, whether it belonged
-to saint or sinner. All his pessimism disappears when he leaves the
-haunts of man for the retreats of beasts. What a pleasure it is, he
-says, to watch a wild animal going about undisturbed! It shows us our
-own nature in a simpler and more sincere form. “There is only one
-mendacious being in the world, and that is man. Every other is true and
-sincere.” It strikes me that total sincerity did not shine on the face
-of a dog which I once saw trotting innocently away, after burying a
-rabbit he had caught in a ploughed field near a tree in the hedge—the
-only tree there was—which would make it easy for him to identify the
-spot. But about that I will say no more. The German “Friend of the
-Creature” was indignant at “the unpardonable forgetfulness in which the
-lower animals have hitherto been left by the moralists of Europe.” The
-duty of protecting them, neglected by religion, falls to the police.
-Mankind are the devils of the earth and animals the souls they torment.
-
-Full of these sentiments, Schopenhauer was prepared to welcome
-unconditionally the Indian conception of the Wheel of Being and to close
-his eyes to its defects. Strauss, too, hailed it as a doctrine which
-“unites the whole of Nature in one sacred and mysterious bond”—a bond in
-which, he goes on to say, a breach has been made by the Judaism and
-dualism of Christianity. He might have observed that the Church derived
-her notions on the subject rather from Aristotle than from Semitic
-sources.
-
-Schopenhauer came to the conclusion that the ill-treatment of animals
-arose directly from the denial to them of immortality, while it was
-ascribed to men. There is and there is not truth in this. When all is
-said, the well-conditioned man always was and always will be humane;
-“the righteous man regardeth the life of his beast.” And since people
-reason to fit their acts rather than act to fit their reasoning, he will
-even find a motive for his humanity where others find an excuse for the
-lack of it. Humphry Primatt wrote in 1776: “Cruelty to a brute is an
-injury irreparable because there is no future life to be a compensation
-for present afflictions.”
-
-Mr. Lecky, in his “History of European Morals,” tells of a Cardinal who
-let himself be bitten by gnats because “_we_ have heaven, but these poor
-creatures only present enjoyment!” Could Jaina do more?
-
-Strauss thought that the rising tide of popular sentiment about animals
-was the direct result of the abandonment by science of the
-spiritualistic isolation of man from Nature. I suspect that those who
-have worked hardest for animals in the last half-century cared little
-about the origin of species, while it is certain that some professed
-evolutionists have been their worst foes. The fact remains, however,
-that by every rule of logic the theory of evolution _ought_ to produce
-the effect which Strauss thought that it had produced. The discovery
-which gives its name to the nineteenth century revolutionises the whole
-philosophic conception of the place of animals in the Universe.
-
-Lamarck, whom Cuvier so cruelly attacked, was the first to discern the
-principle of evolution. At one time he held the Chair of Zoology at the
-University of Paris; but the opposition which his ideas met with crushed
-him in body, though not in soul, and he died blind and in want in 1829,
-only consoled by the care of an admirable daughter. His last words are
-said to have been that it is easier to discover a truth than to convince
-others of it.
-
-An Italian named Carlo Lessona was one of the first to be convinced. He
-wrote a work containing the phrase, “The intelligence of animals”—which
-work, by the rule then in force, had to be presented to the
-ecclesiastical Censor at Turin to receive his permit before publication.
-The canon who examined the book fell upon the words above mentioned, and
-remarked: “This expression, ‘intelligence of animals,’ will never do!”
-“But,” said Lessona, “it is commonly used in natural history books.”
-“Oh!” replied the canon, “natural history has much need of
-revision.”[12]
-
-Footnote 12:
-
- See Dr. F. Franzolini’s interesting monograph on animal psychology
- from the point of view of science (“Intelligenza delle Bestie,” Udine,
- 1899).
-
-The great and cautious Darwin said that the senses, intuitions,
-emotions, and faculties, such as love, memory, attention, curiosity,
-imitation, reason, of which man boasts, may be found in an incipient, or
-even, sometimes, in a well-developed condition in the lower animals.
-“Man, with all his noble qualities, his God-like intellect, still bears
-in his bodily frame the indelible stamp of his lowly origin. Our
-brethren fly in the air, haunt the bushes, and swim in the sea.” Darwin
-agreed with Agassiz in recognising in the dog something very like the
-human conscience.
-
-Dr. Arnold said that the whole subject of the brute creature was such a
-painful mystery that he dared not approach it. Michelet called animal
-life a “sombre mystery,” and shuddered at the “daily murder,” hoping
-that in another globe “these base and cruel fatalities may be spared to
-us.” It is strange to find how many men of very different types have
-wandered without a guide in these dark alleys of speculation. A few of
-them arrived at, or thought they had arrived at, a solution. Lord
-Chesterfield wrote that “animals preying on each other is a law of
-Nature which we did not make, and which we cannot undo, for if I do not
-eat chickens my cat will eat mice.” But the appeal to Nature will not
-satisfy every one; our whole human conscience is a protest against
-Nature, while our moral actions are an attempt to effect a compromise.
-Paley pointed out that the law was not good, since we could live without
-animal food and wild beasts could not. He offered another justification,
-the permission of Scripture. This was satisfactory to him, but he must
-have been aware that it waives the question without answering it.
-
-Some humane people have taken refuge in the automata argument, which is
-like taking a sleeping-draught to cure a broken leg. Others, again, look
-for justice to animals in the one and only hope that man possesses of
-justice to himself; in compensation after death for unmerited suffering
-in this life. Leibnitz said that Eternal Justice _ought_ to compensate
-animals for their misfortunes on earth. Bishop Butler would not deny a
-future life to animals.
-
-Speaking of her approaching death, Mrs. Somerville said: “I shall regret
-the sky, the sea, with all the changes of their beautiful colouring; the
-earth with its verdure and flowers: but far more shall I grieve to leave
-animals who have followed our steps affectionately for years, without
-knowing for certainty their ultimate fate, though I firmly believe that
-the living principle is never extinguished. Since the atoms of matter
-are indestructible, as far as we know, it is difficult to believe that
-the spark which gives to their union life, memory, affection,
-intelligence, and fidelity, is evanescent.”
-
-In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, seven or eight small works,
-written in Latin in support of this thesis, were published in Germany
-and Sweden. Probably in all the world a number, unsuspectedly large, of
-sensitive minds has endorsed the belief expressed so well in the lines
-which Southey wrote on coming home to find that a favourite old dog had
-been “destroyed” during his absence:—
-
- ... “Mine is no narrow creed;
- And He who gave thee being did not frame
- The mystery of life to be the sport
- Of merciless man! There is another world
- For all that live and move—a better one!
- Where the proud bipeds, who would fain confine
- Infinite Goodness to the little bounds
- Of their own charity, may envy thee!”
-
-The holders of this “no narrow creed” start with all the advantages from
-the mere point of view of dialectics. They can boast that they have
-placed the immortality of the soul on a scientific basis. For truly, it
-is more reasonable to suppose that the soul is natural than
-supernatural, a word invented to clothe our ignorance; and, if natural,
-why not universal?
-
-They have the right to say, moreover, that they and they alone have
-“justified the ways of God.” They alone have admitted all creation that
-groaneth and travaileth to the ultimate guerdon of the “Love which moves
-the sun and other stars.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- INDEX
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- Abdâls, 261-262
-
- Abu Djafar al Mausur, Caliph, 232
-
- Abu Jail, 241-243
-
- Achilles, 26-27, 298
-
- Adi Granth, 201
-
- _Æsop’s fables_, 25, 29-30, 80-81
-
- Aethe, 26
-
- Aethon, 26
-
- Afghan ballad, 241-243
-
- African pastoral tribes, 95
-
- Agamemnon, 25-26, 29
-
- Agassiz, 364
-
- Agora Temple, 77
-
- _Ahimsa_, 166-167, 172, 193
-
- Ahriman, 124-126, 143, 145-146, 149-151, 158-159
-
- Ahriman, hymn to, 125
-
- Ahuna-Vairya, 138
-
- Ahura Mazda, 116, 121-122, 136, 138-139, 143, 154, 158-159
-
- Alberti, Leo Battista, 154, 158-159, 352
-
- Albigenses, 346
-
- Alexander the Great, 75, 133
-
- Alfonso, King of Spain, 291-292
-
- Alger, W. R., 286
-
- Alhambra, 229
-
- Al Rakîm, 230
-
- Amatongo, 107-109
-
- Amazulu, 107
-
- _L’âme est la fonction du cerveau_, 357
-
- Ammon, Temple of, 31
-
- Amon Ra, 103
-
- Amritsar, 201
-
- Anaxandrides, 82
-
- Anchorites, 179, 252-254
-
- Andromache, 26
-
- Animals, treatment of, in India, 19;
- the purgatory of men, 21;
- slaying of, by Greeks, 24-25;
- naming of, 26;
- prophetic powers of, 27-28;
- talking, 29;
- Roman treatment of, 45-46;
- butchery of, at Colosseum, 51;
- imported for arena, 51-52;
- humanity of, 53-54;
- performing, 54-55;
- Plutarch on kindness to, 64-71;
- Plutarch on animal intelligence, 67-71;
- instances of discrimination of, 75-76;
- domestication of, 90-91;
- value of, 94-95;
- excuses for killing, 100;
- attitude of savages to, 107-108;
- killing of, by priests, 148-150;
- Zoroastrian treatment of, 147-157;
- in sacred books, 188;
- Hebrew treatment of, 212-220;
- hunting of, by Moslems, 224-225, 232, 241-243;
- musical instinct in, 245-246;
- and the Messiah, 247-252;
- and saints, 259;
- stories of, 306-316;
- theory of Celsus as to intelligence of, 340-344;
- theory of Porphyry, 344;
- the Church and humanity, 346;
- animal prosecutions, 347-351;
- Renaissance admiration of, 352-353;
- animals and thought, 355;
- automata
- theory, 353-359, 365;
- societies to protect, 359-360;
- ill-treatment and immortality, 362;
- principle of evolution, 363
-
- Antelope, 240
-
- Ants, wisdom of, 76-77;
- killing of, 149-150;
- Hebrew proverb, 216;
- in the Koran, 227;
- social economy of, 341-342
-
- Apis, 102, 144
-
- Apollo, 246
-
- Apollonius of Tyana, 268-269; 337-340; 345
-
- Apsarases, the, 279-280
-
- Apuleius, 55
-
- Archæological Congress, 95
-
- Archetypes (_see_ Fravashi)
-
- Ardâ Vîrâf, 159-165
-
- Arena, cruelties of the, 45-46
-
- Ariosto, 297
-
- Aristophanes, 28
-
- Aristotle, 58, 78, 80, 269, 340, 362
-
- Arnold, Dr., 364
-
- Arnold, Sir Matthew, 302-303
-
- Aryans, 13, 18, 113-115
-
- Asceticism, 179-183
-
- Astrachan, 258
-
- Ataro, 162
-
- Atharva-Veda, 208
-
- Atman, 14
-
- Augustus, 336
-
- Automata theory, 353-359, 365
-
- Avebury, Lord, 343
-
- Avesta, 113, 116, 120, 123, 125, 128, 131, 133-140, 143, 145-148, 153,
- 155, 159, 163, 233-234
-
-
- Bactria, 131
-
- Baiardo, 297
-
- Balaam’s ass, 212-213, 219
-
- Balius, 26-27
-
- Balkis, Queen, 229
-
- Bankes’ horse, 283
-
- Banyan deer, 327-230
-
- Barbary, 296
-
- Basan, Bulls of, 144
-
- Basri, Hasan, 234
-
- _Battle of the frogs and mice_, 29
-
- Baudelaire, 18
-
- Bavieca, 289-294
-
- Bears, legends of, 88-89
-
- Beast tales, 28, 317, 351
-
- Beaver (_see_ Udra)
-
- Bedouins, 272
-
- Behkaa, 104
-
- Benares, 183
-
- Benedict XII., 49
-
- Bentham, Jeremy, 359
-
- Bhagavad, Gita, 14
-
- Bion, 64
-
- Birds, in captivity, 56-57;
- Plutarch’s views on, 78;
- language of, 226-227;
- and St. Francis, 259-260
-
- Bismarck, 304
-
- Bi’sm-illah, custom of saying, 224
-
- Bivar, Ruy Diaz de, 289-294
-
- Blackbird, White, 51
-
- Blake, Wm., 251
-
- Bleeck, 153
-
- Blessing the beast, rite of, 347
-
- Boccaccio’s falcon, 285
-
- Bœotia, 62
-
- Boëthius, 345
-
- Bolingbroke, 296
-
- Bosanquet, Dr. R. C., 95
-
- Brahmans, 14, 21, 169, 175, 183, 309
-
- _Breath from the veldt, A_, 240
-
- British school at Athens, 95
-
- Broca, Professor, 354
-
- Browning, Robert, 138
-
- Bruno, Giordano, 216, 260-261, 353
-
- Bubastis, 81
-
- Bucephalus, 75
-
- Buddhism, 21, 105-106, 124, 130, 167-173, 187, 190-196, 261, 273, 308,
- 321-328
-
- _Buddhist India_, 328
-
- Buffalo of Karileff, 254
-
- Bull-baiting, 50, 359-360
-
- Bull-fights, 32, 47-50
-
- Bulls, 143-146
-
- _Bundehesh_, 142-143
-
- Burgundy, Duke of, 349
-
- Burial, methods of, 123-124
-
- Burkitt, Prof. F. C., 135-136
-
- Burns and Oates, 346
-
- Burns, Robert, 59
-
-
- Cæsar, Julius, 51, 53, 55, 296
-
- Cagliari, 248
-
- Callaway, Canon, 109
-
- Cambaleth, 195
-
- Cambyses, 144
-
- Camels, 286
-
- Canna, 333-334
-
- Carbonaria, 49
-
- Carlyle, Thos., 33
-
- Cartesian philosophy, 353-355
-
- Carthage, 211
-
- Cassandra, 29
-
- Cato, 45
-
- Cats, 80-83, 155, 222, 258, 278, 314, 322
-
- Celsus, 73, 339-344
-
- Celts, 273-274
-
- Ceriana, 358
-
- Cervantes, 290
-
- Chanet, 355
-
- Chantal, Mdme. de, 178
-
- Chariot-racing, 30
-
- Charles, King (the Peace), 50
-
- Chesterfield, Lord, 364
-
- Childebert, 254-255
-
- _China, religion of_, 327
-
- Chinese, belief and folk-lore, 104-106;
- saving of animal life, 194;
- folk-lore stories, 306-308, 313-316, 326-330.
-
- Chinvat, 154, 158, 162
-
- Choo-Foo-Tsze, 104
-
- Christianity, approach of, 337-338
-
- Cicada, 260
-
- Cicero, 16, 50, 58-59, 128, 340
-
- Cignani, 208
-
- Cimon, 31
-
- Circuses, 54-55
-
- _Clothilde’s God_, 93
-
- Clovis, 93
-
- Clytemnestra, 29
-
- Cobbett, 359
-
- Cockatoo, Story of a, 359
-
- Colonna, Cardinal, 49
-
- Colosseum, Butchery at inauguration of, 51
-
- Comte, Auguste, 133
-
- Concha, 57-58
-
- Confucianism, 104-105, 130
-
- Constantinople, 233
-
- Constantinople, Council at, 14
-
- _Contemporary Review_, 6
-
- Copenhagen National Museum, 47
-
- Corinna, Parrot of, 56
-
- Corsica, 347
-
- Crete, 32, 77, 95
-
- Cuvier, 363
-
- Cyrus, 118, 121-122
-
-
- Daevas, 116
-
- d’Alviella, Count Goblet, 5
-
- Damascus, 231, 306
-
- Dante, 13, 160, 162-163, 187
-
- Darmesteter, James, 241
-
- Darius, 119, 121-122
-
- Darwin, Charles, 150-151, 206, 344, 363-364
-
- Darwin, Francis, 175
-
- Davids, Professor T. W. Rhys, 328
-
- Deathlessness of souls, 91-92
-
- Deer (_see_ Banyan deer)
-
- Dervishes, 234-235, 261
-
- Descartes, 16, 353-357
-
- Deucalion, dove of, 78
-
- Diaz, Gil, 293
-
- Digby, Sir Kenelm, 283
-
- Dog, grave of a faithful, 314
-
- Dogs, 57-59, 79-80, 114-115, 151-153, 158, 229-233, 244, 306-308, 312,
- 314-316, 322-324, 358-359
-
- Dog’s Grave, the, 79
-
- Dolmen-builders, 92-93, 96
-
- Domestication of animals, 90-91
-
- Doughty, Charles M., 236
-
- Doukhobors, 32
-
- Downe, 283
-
- Draupadi, story of, 322-324
-
- Dravidians, 18-19, 163
-
- Duperron, Anquetil, 135, 152
-
-
- Eden, Garden of, 208-209
-
- Eden, Garden of (picture by Rubens), 247
-
- Edkins, Joseph, D.D., 327
-
- _l’Église et la Pitié envers les Animaux_, 346
-
- Egyptian cosmogony, 103-104
-
- El Djem, well at, 109
-
- Elephants, legend of, 74-75, 77;
- in Oriental books, 188;
- white elephant killed by Rustem, 294
-
- Eleusinian mysteries, 32
-
- Elisha and the she-bears, 248-249
-
- Elmocadessi, Azz’Eddin, 236
-
- Empedocles, 14-15, 34, 72
-
- Epictetus, 73-74
-
- Epirus, 57
-
- Erasmus, 16, 353
-
- Eskimo, the, 88-89, 92
-
- Euripides, 78, 190, 246, 340
-
- Evolution, theory of, 363-365
-
-
- Falcon, Persian fable of a, 313
-
- Faliscus, Gratius, 57
-
- Fargard XIII., 152
-
- Ferrière, Émile, 357
-
- _Fioretti_, 74, 258
-
- Firdusi, 141, 225, 240, 294, 296, 301-304
-
- Flesh-eating, 24-25, 31-32, 61-64, 71, 85-86, 148, 193-194, 217-218
-
- Folk-lore Association of Chicago, 102
-
- _Folk-Songs of Southern India_, 17
-
- Foxes, 106
-
- Franzolini, Dr. F., 363
-
- Fravashi, 117, 145, 162
-
-
- Games, Roman, 47-48, 51-52
-
- Gargantuan feasts, 148
-
- Garibaldi, 294, 298
-
- Gâthâs, 134, 139, 144-145
-
- Gautama, 308
-
- Gayatri, 117-118, 138
-
- Gayo Marathan, 143
-
- Gellert, Beth, 306-307, 309, 312
-
- Geus Urva, 143-144
-
- Ghusni, 241
-
- Giles, Dr., 105, 313, 316
-
- Gladiators, importation of, 52-53
-
- Gnostics, 346
-
- Goat, Story of a, 245
-
- Goethe, 333
-
- Gover, Charles E., 17
-
- Gray, Asa, 150-151
-
- Gubernatis, Count de, 290
-
- _Guillaume de Palerme_, 351
-
- Gunádhya, 245
-
- Guru, 168, 181, 345
-
- Gymnosophists, 172
-
-
- Hall, 283
-
- Hallal, custom of the, 224
-
- Hatem, Tai, 285-286
-
- Hatos, 290
-
- Hawk and the pigeon, legend of, 317-321, 325
-
- Haziûm, 296
-
- Heber, Bishop, 231
-
- Hebrews, the, 114, 145, 149, 159, 161, 207-208, 212-220, 284
-
- Hector, 26
-
- Hedgehog, appreciation of the, 79
-
- Heine, 344
-
- _Helena_, 190
-
- Helps, Sir Arthur, 352
-
- Henotheism, 118
-
- Hera, 25-27
-
- Heraclites, 72
-
- Herakles, 24
-
- Hermits (_see_ Anchorites)
-
- Herodotus, 31, 81, 128, 148-149, 301
-
- Hero-worship, 299-300
-
- Hidery, 102
-
- Hinduism, 13, 17, 218-219, 265-266
-
- _History of European Morals_, 362
-
- Homa, 148-149
-
- Homer, 23-26, 77, 79, 241
-
- Homizd IV., 161
-
- Honover, 138
-
- Horace, 76
-
- Horses, famous, 26-27;
- sacrifice of, 114;
- in Oriental books, 188;
- St. Columba’s horse, 255;
- in chivalrous age, 281-282;
- thinking, 283;
- Arab and his horse, 285-288;
- Hatem’s horse, 285-286;
- the Cid’s horse, 289-294;
- horse of Rustem, 294;
- talking, 298;
- Bengal fable, 313;
- Russian folk-lore tale, 322
-
- Hugo, Victor, 19, 45, 57, 164
-
- Humanitarianism, 145-147, 175, 198-200, 243, 308, 346
-
- Húsheng, 141-142
-
- Huxley, Professor, 354
-
-
- Iblís, 142
-
- Ibsen, 186
-
- Ichneumon, 311-312
-
- “Iliad,” 25
-
- Immortality, 159, 362
-
- Improta, Leandro, 22
-
- Indian doctrine of transmigration, 14-17
-
- Indra, 116-117, 319-323
-
- Insects, killing of, 149
-
- _Intelligenza delle Bestie_, 363
-
- Iranians, 113-134, 155
-
- Isaiah, 249
-
- Isis, 336
-
- Islam, 160, 221
-
- Issaverdens, Padre Giacomo, 209
-
- Itongo, 107, 259
-
- Itvara, 186
-
-
- Jacobi, Professor Hermann, 169, 199
-
- Jaina hermit’s story, 332
-
- Jainism, 168-193, 196-200
-
- _Jātaka Book_, 328
-
- Jebb, Sir Richard, 135
-
- Jenyns, Soame, 360
-
- Jesus Christ, 130, 145, 188, 216, 231, 244, 249-252, 320
-
- Jews (_see_ Hebrews)
-
- Jinas, 170
-
- Joghi, 181
-
- John, Father, 338
-
- John XXII., Pope, 49
-
- Jones, Sir William, 135, 152, 225, 333
-
- Jonson, Ben, 283
-
- Joseph of Anchieta, 255-256
-
- Josephus, 24
-
- Julia Domna, Empress, 338
-
-
- Kálidása, 333
-
- Kambôga, 188
-
- Karileff, 254
-
- Karman, 175-177
-
- Kasi, King of, 330-331
-
- Katmir, 230
-
- Keats, John, 207
-
- Kempis, Thomas à, 171
-
- Keshub Chunder Sen, 25
-
- Khordah Avesta, 134, 137, 159
-
- Kirghis, the, 85
-
- Koran, 136, 221-223, 226-230, 237, 261, 287
-
- Koureen, 296
-
-
- Lahore Zoological Gardens, 236
-
- Lake dwellers, 90
-
- Lamarck, 363
-
- Lamartine, 69
-
- Lampus, 26
-
- Lancelot, 296
-
- Lane, 224
-
- Language, definition of, 354-355
-
- Laplander, the, 87-90
-
- Lapwing, Solomon and the, 228-229
-
- Lebid, 237-239
-
- Lecky, 362
-
- _Legenda Aurea_, 249, 258
-
- Leibnitz, 365
-
- Leland, C. G., 277
-
- Leopardi, 59, 125, 187
-
- Lesbia’s sparrow, 56
-
- Lessona, Carlo, 363
-
- Leveson, Major, 269
-
- Lion, legend of a humane, 53;
- Christ in the lions’ den, 250-251;
- St. Jerome and the, 253;
- lioness at Chartres, 262;
- eating of monkeys and men by, 268-269;
- love for his mate, 269-270;
- legend of vulture and, 325;
- sympathy of, 358
-
- _Lion’s Kingdom_, 30
-
- _Lives_, Plutarch’s, 65, 74
-
- Lizard, sacredness of, 108-110
-
- Lockhart, 291
-
- Lombroso, 267
-
- Long, Rev. J., 168
-
- Lotus-flower, white, 176
-
- Lucian, 15, 56, 278
-
- Lucretius, 84, 206, 239
-
- Lyall, Sir Alfred, 180
-
- Lyall, Sir Chas., 238
-
- Lycæus, Mount, 273
-
- Lycanthropy, 274-275
-
-
- Maeterlinck, 331
-
- Magians, the, 119, 124, 127-129, 148, 226
-
- Magic, 273-280
-
- Magpie, legend of a, 77-78
-
- _Mahabharata_, 317, 322
-
- Mahavira, 169-173, 197-198
-
- Mahmoud, 241
-
- _Malay Magic_, 224
-
- Malebranche, 356
-
- Man, ages of, 84
-
- Mandeville, 196, 352
-
- Man-eating animals, 268, 270-272
-
- Manichæism, 127, 261
-
- Manning, Cardinal, 347
-
- Manu, Institutes of, 29
-
- Marcellus, Theatre of, 55
-
- Marcus Aurelius, 59
-
- Mare, story of the creation of, 288
-
- Marne, 254
-
- Marriage in the East, 139-140
-
- Martial, 58
-
- Massaia, Cardinal, 262
-
- Matreya, 170
-
- Mazdaism, 116-119, 124, 129, 133-139, 155, 157-158, 159, 160-161, 225,
- 233
-
- Mecca, 231
-
- Media, 129
-
- Medina, 232
-
- Melampus, 344
-
- Melior, parrot of, 56-57
-
- Menelek, Emperor, 229
-
- Merodach, 122
-
- Metempsychosis (_see_ Transmigration)
-
- Michelet, 364
-
- Mill, J. S., 127
-
- Millais, Guille, 240
-
- Milton, John, 205
-
- Minotaur legend, 30
-
- Mithra, 120, 147, 158, 336
-
- Mivart, 354
-
- Modi, Jivanji Jamsedji, 45
-
- Mohammedanism, 109, 130, 216-217, 221-222, 248
-
- Monkeys, 306
-
- Monotheism, 118-123, 128
-
- Montaigne, 352
-
- _Moral Philosophy_, 346
-
- “Morocco,” 283
-
- Moslemism, 221-236
-
- Moti (tiger at Lahore), 236
-
- Moufflons, 85
-
- Muklagerri Hills, 171
-
- Mule of the Parthenon, 66-67
-
- Mungoose stories, 306-307, 309-311
-
- Murad, Sultan, 223
-
-
- Nanak, Baba, 201
-
- Napier, Lord, of Magdala, 316
-
- Naples, gladiatorial shows at, 49
-
- Natural History Museum, S. Kensington, 240
-
- Natural History Society, Bombay, 45
-
- Nedrotti, the, 98
-
- Ne-kilst-lass, 102
-
- Nemesianus, 57
-
- Nennig, mosaic at, 47-48
-
- Neolithic Age, 91-92
-
- Neoplatonism, 344-346
-
- Newman, Cardinal, 11
-
- _Nibelungenlied_, 140
-
- Nirvana, 178, 190-192
-
- Nizami, 243-244
-
- Nobarnus, 52
-
- Non-killing (_see_ _Ahimsa_)
-
-
- Oakesmith, Dr., 63
-
- Octavius, 339
-
- Odoric, Fra, 194-196, 351
-
- _Odyssey_, 23, 25
-
- Okubo, 122
-
- Oppert, Prof. Jules, 118
-
- _Oriental Proverbs_, 168
-
- _Orientalists, Congress of_, 47, 168
-
- Origen, 14, 339, 343
-
- Origin of man and animals, 84-86
-
- _Origin of Species_, 85
-
- Ormuzd, 124, 126
-
- Orpheus, 32, 246-247
-
- Orphic sect, 31
-
- Oseberg, 94
-
- Ovid, 15
-
- Owls, 112
-
-
- Pahlavi, 134-135
-
- Paley, 364
-
- Pallas Athene, 112
-
- _Panchatantra_, the, 307, 311
-
- Pandion, King of Athens, 345
-
- _Paradise Lost_, 205
-
- Paris, University of, 363
-
- Parrots, 56-57, 359
-
- Parsis, food of the, 119-120;
- burial customs of, 124;
- and the Avesta, 133-135;
- and the Ardâ Vîrâf, 164-165
-
- Parthenon, the, 66-67
-
- Pascal, 356
-
- Patmore, Coventry, 174
-
- Patmos, Seer of, 160
-
- Paul the Hermit, 254
-
- Paulicians, 346
-
- Pausanias, 50-51, 128, 273
-
- Pavia, Corte da, 282
-
- Peace in Nature, 210-212, 231-232, 332-333
-
- Pelicans, legend of, 92
-
- Pereira, Gomez, 354
-
- Pericles, 30, 66
-
- Persepolis, 121, 133
-
- Persians of the eleventh century, 298
-
- Petrarch, 49
-
- Petronius, 51, 58
-
- Philo, 346
-
- Philostratus, 338
-
- Piet, Om, 240
-
- Pigs, 115, 232
-
- Pinder, 294
-
- Pius X., 346
-
- Plato, 15-16, 20
-
- Pliny, 66-67, 353
-
- Plotinus, 344
-
- Plutarch, 45, 62-69, 74, 353
-
- Pluto, 20
-
- Podarges, 26
-
- _Political Register_ (1802), 360
-
- Pompeii, mosaic at, 83
-
- Porphyry, 28, 339, 344, 353
-
- Portionuculo, 260
-
- Primatt, Humphry, 362
-
- Prometheus, 65
-
- Prosecution of animals, 347-351
-
- Provence, 90
-
- Psalms, quotation from, 219-220
-
- Punishment in the Ardâ Vîrâf, 163-164
-
- Purgatory and animal incarnation, 21
-
- Pythagoreanism, 14-15, 33-34, 59-60, 72, 175, 337, 346
-
-
- Quartenary Age, 86-88
-
- Quinet, Édouard, 357-358
-
-
- Rakush, 294-300
-
- Raleigh, Sir Walter, 283
-
- Ravenna, mosaic at, 73
-
- Ravens, 272
-
- Reasoning power of animals, 158-159;
- Plutarch’s views on, 67-69
-
- Reinach, M. S., 80, 101
-
- Reindeer hunters, 86-89, 96;
- and the Lapps, 285
-
- _Religion of Plutarch_, 63
-
- Religions, Congress for History of, 120
-
- Religious knowledge in animals, 72-74;
- early religions, 93
-
- Renan, 225
-
- Reptiles, killing of, 149
-
- Réville, Albert, 136
-
- Rhinoceroses, 51
-
- Rickaby, Father, 346
-
- Rig-Veda, 113-115, 117, 139
-
- Romanes, Professor, 356
-
- “Rooh Allah,” 231
-
- Rozinante, 290
-
- Rustem, 294-305
-
-
- Sacerdotalism, 168
-
- Sacontala, 233-234
-
- Sacred birds, animals, and reptiles, 100-101, 104-110
-
- Sacred carpet, 222, 227
-
- Sacrifices, funeral, 12-13;
- Greek, 24-25;
- bloodless, 31;
- belief in, 94;
- of domestic animals, 95-96;
- Gift and Pact, 96;
- Totemism, 97-98;
- of Persians, 119;
- in the _Bundehesh_, 143;
- to Homa, 148-149;
- for Udra-killing, 156;
- the “True Sacrifice” legend, 183-184;
- apostolate for abolition of animal, 337
-
- Sadi, 225
-
- St. Anthony, 254, 259
-
- St. Augustine, 273, 337
-
- St. Bernard, 256-257
-
- St. Columba, 255
-
- St. Edward the Martyr, 274
-
- St. Francis, 74, 167, 234, 257-263
-
- St. François de Sale, 178
-
- St. James, 54
-
- St. Jerome, 253-254
-
- St. Josephat, 261
-
- St. Julien, town of, 349-350
-
- St. Marculphe, 255
-
- St. Martin, 259
-
- St. Paul, 211-212
-
- St. Philip Neri, 347
-
- St. Teresa, 184
-
- St. Thomas Aquinas, 275
-
- Saint-Calais, 255
-
- Saint-Hilaire, Geoffroy, 358
-
- Sakya Muni, 129, 169, 197
-
- Sama, Legend of, 330-332
-
- Samengan, 299-301
-
- Sásánians, 119, 139-140
-
- _Satyricon_, 51
-
- Schopenhauer, 206, 258, 361
-
- Sebectighin, 240-241
-
- Secundra Orphanage, 45
-
- Semites (_see_ Hebrews)
-
- Seneca, 59-61, 82
-
- _Sensitive Plant, The_, 174
-
- Serapeum, 102
-
- Serapis, 336
-
- Serpent, the, 110-111
-
- Sestius, 61
-
- _Seven Sleepers of Ephesus_, 229-230
-
- _Shah Nameh_, 141, 294, 301
-
- Shakespeare, William, 256, 282-283
-
- She-wolves of Rome, 44-45
-
- Sheba, 228
-
- Sheikh of Tús, 141
-
- Shughdad, 303
-
- Siam, 194
-
- Siegemund and Siegelind, 140
-
- Siegfried, 294
-
- Siena, 208
-
- Sikhs, 201
-
- Simurghs, 298
-
- Sivi, King, 321-322
-
- Smith, Dr. H. P., 110
-
- Snakes, in India, 265-266;
- and the mungoose, 309-311
-
- Societies to protect animals, 356-360
-
- Socrates, 156, 162
-
- Sohrab, 299-305
-
- Solomon in the Valley of Ants, 227
-
- Soma, 148
-
- Somerville, Mrs., 100
-
- Sophocles, 90
-
- Sotio, 60-61
-
- Southey, Robert, 365-366
-
- Srosh, 162
-
- Stable, a sanctuary, 305
-
- Stag, fable of a, 326
-
- Statius, 53, 56-57
-
- _Stelæ_, 80
-
- Stevenson, R. L., 196
-
- Stoics, the, 65, 71
-
- Stork, legend of a, 255
-
- _Strange Stories from a Chinese Studio_, 313
-
- Strauss, 362-363
-
- Sufism, 225
-
- Suicide in India, 186
-
- “Sultan,” 312
-
- Sumner, Charles, 281
-
- Sutras, 11-12
-
- Suttees, 12
-
- Swan-maidens (_see_ Apsarases)
-
- Swine-flesh, forbidding of, 232
-
- Sycamore-tree at Matarea, 248
-
- Symmachus, 52-53
-
-
- Tahmineh, 301, 303
-
- Taliumen, 142
-
- Taoism, 105-106
-
- _Tatchi-lou-lun_, 326
-
- Taylor, John, 283
-
- Taylor, Canon Isaac, 91
-
- Temple, building, 121-122;
- Jaina temples, 171
-
- Tennyson, 296
-
- Thaumaturgy, 181-183
-
- Thebaid, 181
-
- Theogony, 128
-
- Theophrastus, 56
-
- Theocritus, 83
-
- Thomas, Pseudo-, 248
-
- _Three Merchants, Parable of the_, 176
-
- Tiberius, 61
-
- Tigers in India, 265-268, 270-272
-
- Tigress, fable of the, 327
-
- _Times, The_, 360
-
- Tirthakaras, 170-171
-
- Titus, 52
-
- Tobias, 92-93
-
- Tobit’s dog, 114
-
- Todas, 285
-
- Torquemada, 151, 339
-
- Totemism, 96-102, 107, 272
-
- Transformation, 270-280
-
- Transmigration, 11-21, 186-189, 261
-
- Tribal system, 129
-
- Triptolemus, 345
-
- Troglodite Age, 88-89
-
- _Trusty Lydia_, 58
-
-
- Udra, the 155-156
-
- Ulemas, 234, 288
-
- Upanishads, 12-13
-
- Uruguay, 298
-
-
- Valencia, 292
-
- Varro, 275
-
- Varuna, 116
-
- Vedas, 13-14, 20, 93, 117-178, 183, 279-280
-
- Vegetarianism, 167, 172, 193
-
- Velasquez’s horse, 284
-
- Venidâd, 134, 152, 156-157
-
- Vespasian, 55
-
- Viking ship, 13, 94
-
- Vinci, Leonardo da, 353
-
- Virgil, 25, 275, 336
-
- Vispered, 134
-
- Vivisection, 29, 357
-
- Voltaire, 247, 356
-
-
- Walaric, 255
-
- Were-wolves, 274-277, 351
-
- Wildebeest and Om Piet, 240
-
- Witchcraft (_see_ Magic)
-
- Wolf, the, 149, 268, 273-277
-
- Wolf of Agobio, 257-258
-
- Women and Jainism, 184-186
-
- Wordsworth, William, 65
-
- Worms, Council of, 348
-
- Wu-hu, 314-315
-
- Wusinara, 317-319
-
-
- Xanthus, 26-28
-
- Xantippus, 79
-
- Xenocrates, 30
-
-
- Yama, 20, 158, 203, 324
-
- Yasna, 134-135
-
- Yogis, legend of two, 235
-
- Yudishthira, story of, 322-324
-
-
- Zal, 294-296
-
- Zarathustra (_see_ Zoroaster)
-
- Zechariah’s war-horse, 284
-
- Zend (_see_ Avesta)
-
- Zoolatry, 144
-
- _Zoological Mythology_, 290
-
- Zoomorphism in Egypt, 102, 340
-
- Zorák, 142
-
- Zeus, 25, 273
-
- Zoroaster, teaching of, 113, 118-125, 129-165, 225
-
-
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-<h1 class="pgx" title="">The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Place of Animals in Human Thought, by
-Contessa Evelyn Lilian Hazeldine Carrington Martinengo-Cesaresco</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
-restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at <a
-href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: The Place of Animals in Human Thought</p>
-<p>Author: Contessa Evelyn Lilian Hazeldine Carrington Martinengo-Cesaresco</p>
-<p>Release Date: June 29, 2021 [eBook #65720]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PLACE OF ANIMALS IN HUMAN THOUGHT***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4 class="pgx" title="">E-text prepared by Turgut Dincer, Barry Abrahamsen,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (https://www.pgdp.net)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (https://archive.org)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/cu31924028931629
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div>
- <h1 class='c001'>THE PLACE OF ANIMALS IN<br />HUMAN THOUGHT</h1>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div id='frontis' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/frontis.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='sc'>The Emperor Akbar</span> personally directing the tying up of a wild Elephant.<br />Tempera painting by Abu’l Fazl. (1597-98.)<br /><span class='small'>Photographed for this work from the original in the India Museum</span>.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_I'>I</span><span class='c004'>THE PLACE OF ANIMALS</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='c004'>IN HUMAN THOUGHT</span></div>
- <div class='c002'>BY</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='c005'>THE COUNTESS EVELYN</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='c005'>MARTINENGO CESARESCO</span></div>
- <div class='c002'>“On ne connait rien que par bribes.”—<span class='sc'>M. Berthelot</span></div>
- <div class='c002'>NEW YORK</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='c005'>CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>153-157 FIFTH AVENUE</div>
- <div class='c000'>1909</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>“C’est l’éternel secret qui veut être gardé.”</div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='small'>(<i>All rights reserved.</i>)</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>PREFACE</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c007'>AT the Congress held at Oxford in September,
-1908, those who heard Count Goblet
-d’Alviella’s address on the “Method and Scope
-of the History of Religions” must have felt the
-thrill which announces the stirring of new ideas,
-when, in a memorable passage, the speaker asked
-“whether the psychology of animals has not equally
-some relation to the science of religions?” At any
-rate, these words came to me as a confirmation of the
-belief that the study which has engaged my attention
-for several years, is rapidly advancing towards recognition
-as a branch of the inquiry into what man is
-himself. The following chapters on the different
-answers given to this question when extended from
-man to animals, were intended, from the first, to form
-a whole, not complete, indeed, but perhaps fairly
-comprehensive. I offer them now to the public with
-my warmest acknowledgments to the scholars whose
-published works and, in some cases, private hints
-have made my task possible. I also wish to thank
-the Editor of the <i>Contemporary Review</i> for his kindness
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>in allowing me to reprint the part of this book
-which appeared first in that periodical.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Some chapters refer rather to practice than to
-psychology, and others to myths and fancies rather
-than to conscious speculation, but all these subjects
-are so closely connected that it would be difficult to
-divide their treatment by a hard-and-fast line.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>With regard to the illustrations, I am glad to bear
-grateful testimony to the facilities afforded me by
-the Directors of the British Museum, the Victoria
-and Albert Museum, the Hague Gallery, the
-National Museum at Copenhagen, the Egypt Exploration
-Fund, and by the Secretary of State for
-India. H.E. Monsieur Camille Barrère, French
-Ambassador at Rome, has allowed me to include
-a photograph of his remarkably fine specimen of a
-bronze cat; and I have obtained the sanction of
-Monsieur Marcel Dieulafoy for the reproduction
-of one of Madame Dieulafoy’s photographs which
-appeared in his magnificent work on “L’Art
-Antique de la Perse.” Messrs. Macmillan &amp; Co.,
-Limited, and Messrs. Chapman and Hall, Limited,
-have permitted photographs to be taken of two
-plates in books published by them. Finally, Dr. C.
-Waldstein and Mr. E. B. Havell have been most
-kind in helping me to give the correct description
-of some of the plates.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='sc'>Salò, Lago di Garda.</span></p>
-<p class='c009'><i>February 15, 1909.</i></p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>I</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='86%' />
-<col width='13%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c011'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>SOUL-WANDERING AS IT CONCERNS ANIMALS</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch01'>11</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>II</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='86%' />
-<col width='13%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>THE GREEK CONCEPTION OF ANIMALS</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch02'>22</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>III</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='86%' />
-<col width='13%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>ANIMALS AT ROME</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch03'>44</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>IV</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='86%' />
-<col width='13%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>PLUTARCH THE HUMANE</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch04'>62</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>V</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='86%' />
-<col width='13%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>MAN AND HIS BROTHER</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch05'>84</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>VI</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='86%' />
-<col width='13%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>THE FAITH OF IRAN</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch06'>113</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>VII</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='86%' />
-<col width='13%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>ZOROASTRIAN ZOOLOGY</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch07'>141</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>VIII</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='86%' />
-<col width='13%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>A RELIGION OF RUTH</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch08'>166</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>IX</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='86%' />
-<col width='13%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>LINES FROM THE ADI GRANTH</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch09'>201</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span></div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>X</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='86%' />
-<col width='13%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>THE HEBREW CONCEPTION OF ANIMALS</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch10'>205</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>XI</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='86%' />
-<col width='13%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>“A PEOPLE LIKE UNTO YOU”</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch11'>221</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>XII</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='86%' />
-<col width='13%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>THE FRIEND OF THE CREATURE</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch12'>245</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>XIII</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='86%' />
-<col width='13%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>VERSIPELLES</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch13'>265</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>XIV</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='86%' />
-<col width='13%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>THE HORSE AS HERO</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch14'>281</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>XV</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='86%' />
-<col width='13%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>ANIMALS IN EASTERN FICTION</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch15'>306</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>XVI</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='86%' />
-<col width='13%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>THE GROWTH OF MODERN IDEAS ABOUT ANIMALS</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch16'>336</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>INDEX</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#idx'>367</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>
- <h2 class='c006'>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-<div class='std-table'>
-
-<table class='table1' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='90%' />
-<col width='9%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>THE EMPEROR AKBAR PERSONALLY DIRECTING THE TYING UP OF A WILD ELEPHANT. Tempera painting in the “Akbar Namah,” by Abu’l Fazl (1597-98). India Museum. <span class='c013'><i>Photographed for this work.</i></span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#frontis'><span class='c013'><i>Frontispiece</i></span></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>DEER WORSHIPPING THE WHEEL OF THE LAW. Tope of Sanchi, drawn by Lieut.-Col. Maisey<br /> <span class='c013'><i>From Fergusson’s “Tree and Serpent Worship.” By permission of the India Office.</i></span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i011'>11</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>THE BUDDHISTIC TIGER<br /> <span class='c013'><i>From a painting on silk by Ko-Tō in the British Museum. Photographed for this work.<br /> In Japanese Buddhism the Tiger is the type of Wisdom.</i></span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i021'>21</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>ORPHEUS<br /> <span class='c013'><i>Fresco found at Pompeii.</i> (<i>Sommer.</i>)</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i032'>32</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>STELE WITH CAT AND BIRD<br /> <span class='c013'><i>Athens Museum.</i></span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i040'>40</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>CAPITOLINE SHE-WOLF<br /> <span class='c013'>(<i>Bruckmann.</i>) Bronze statue. Early Etruscan style. The twins are modern.</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i044'>44</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>LION BEING LED FROM THE ARENA BY A SLAVE<br /> <span class='c013'><i>From the mosaic pavement of a Roman villa at Nennig.</i></span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i047'>47</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>BACCHUS RIDING ON A PANTHER<br /> <span class='c013'><i>Mosaic found at Pompeii.</i> (<i>Sommer.</i>) </span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i074'>74</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>BRONZE STATUE OF AN EGYPTIAN CAT<br /> <span class='c013'><i>From the Collection of H.E. Monsieur Camille Barrère, French Ambassador at Rome</i></span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i082'>82</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>REINDEER BROWSING. OLDER STONE AGE<br /> <span class='c013'><i>Found in a cave at Thayngen in Switzerland.</i></span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i086a'>86</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>HORSE DRAWING DISC OF THE SUN. OLDER BRONZE AGE<br /> <span class='c013'><i>National Museum at Copenhagen.</i></span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i086b'>86</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>HATHOR COW<br /> <span class='c013'><i>Found in 1906 by Dr. Édouard Naville at Deir-el-bahari. By permission of the Egypt Exploration Fund.</i></span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i102'>102</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>WILD GOATS AND YOUNG<br /> <span class='c013'><i>Assyrian Relief. British Museum.</i> (<i>Mansell.</i>) </span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i108'>108</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>ASSYRIAN GOD CARRYING ANTELOPE AND WHEAT-EAR<br /> <span class='c013'><i>British Museum.</i> (<i>Mansell.</i>)</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i116'>116</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>COUNTING CATTLE<br /> <span class='c013'><i>Egyptian Fresco. British Museum.</i> (<i>Mansell.</i>)</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i128'>128</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'><span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>KING FIGHTING GRIFFIN (“BAD ANIMAL”)<br /> <span class='c013'><i>Relief in Palace of Darius at Persepolis. Photographed by Jane Dieulafoy. From “L’Art Antique de la Perse.” By permission of M. Marcel Dieulafoy.</i></span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i142'>142</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>THE REAL DOG OF IRAN<br /> <span class='c013'><i>Bronze Statuette found at Susa. Louvre. From Perrot’s “History of Art in Ancient Persia.” By permission of Messrs. Chapman &amp; Hall, Ltd.</i></span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i152'>152</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>BUDDHA PACIFYING AN INTOXICATED ELEPHANT WHICH HAD BEEN SENT TO DESTROY HIM. THE ELEPHANT STOOPS IN ADORATION<br /> Græco-Buddhist sculpture from a ruined monastery at Takt-i-Bahi. <span class='c013'><i>India Museum. Photographed for this work.</i></span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i188'>188</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>RECLINING BULL<br /> <span class='c013'><i>Ancient Southern Indian sculpture. From a photograph in the India Museum.</i></span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i192'>192</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>WILD BULLS AND TAMED BULLS<br /> <span class='c013'><i>Reliefs on two gold cups found in a tomb at Vapheio near Amyclae. Fifteenth century <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> (possibly earlier). From Schuckhardt’s “Schliemann’s Excavations.” By permission of Messrs. Macmillan &amp; Co., Ltd.</i></span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i201'>201</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>THE GARDEN OF EDEN<br /> <span class='c013'><i>By Rubens. Hague Gallery.</i> (<i>Bruckmann.</i></span>)</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i208'>208</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>GENESIS VIII.<br /> <span class='c013'><i>Loggie di Raffaello. In the Vatican. Drawn by N. Consoni.</i></span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i212'>212</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>DANIEL AND THE LIONS<br /> <span class='c013'><i>From an early Christian Sarcophagus in S. Vitale, Ravenna.</i> (<i>Alinari.</i></span>)</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i216'>216</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>“AN INDIAN ORPHEUS”<br /> <span class='c013'><i>Inlaid marble work panel originally surmounting a doorway in the Great Hall of Audience in the Mogul Palace at Delhi (about 1650). Photographed for this work from a painting by a native artist in the India Museum. Imitated from a painting by Raphael.</i></span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i222'>222</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>MOSLEM BEGGAR FEEDING DOGS AT CONSTANTINOPLE<br /> <span class='c013'><i>From life.</i></span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i226'>226</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>ST. JEROME EXTRACTING A THORN FROM THE PAW OF A LION<br /> <span class='c013'><i>By Hubert van Eyck. Naples Museum.</i> (<i>Anderson.</i></span>)</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i253'>253</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>ST. EUSTACE (OR ST. HUBERT) AND THE STAG<br /> <span class='c013'><i>By Vittore Pisano. National Gallery.</i> (<i>Hanfstängl.</i>)</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i256'>256</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>“LE MENEUR DES LOUPS”<br /> <span class='c013'><i>Designed and drawn by Maurice Sand.</i></span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i276'>276</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>THE ASSYRIAN HORSE<br /> <span class='c013'><i>From a relief in the British Museum.</i> (<i>Mansell.</i></span>)</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i284'>284</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>ARABIAN HORSE OF THE SAHARA<br /><span class='c013'><i>From life.</i></span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i288'>288</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>THE BANYAN DEER<br /> <span class='c013'><i>From “Stûpa of Bharhut.” By General Cunningham. By permission of the India Office.</i> (<i>Griggs.</i>)</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i328'>328</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>EGYPTIAN OFFICIAL, WITH HIS WIFE, ENGAGED IN FOWLING IN THE PAPYRUS SWAMP. HIS HUNTING CAT HAS SEIZED THREE BIRDS.<br /> <span class='c013'><i>Mural painting in British Museum.</i> (<i>Mansell.</i>)</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i330'>330</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>ASSYRIAN LION AND LIONESS IN PARADISE PARK<br /> <span class='c013'><i>British Museum.</i> (<i>Mansell.</i>) The King’s reservations for big game were called “paradises.”</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i336'>336</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>LAMBS<br /> <span class='c013'><i>Relief on a fifth century tomb at Ravenna.</i> (<i>Alinari.</i>)</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i338'>338</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c012'>“IL BUON PASTORE”<br /> <span class='c013'><i>Mosaic in the Mausoleum of Galla Placidia at Ravenna.</i></span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i346'>346</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div id='i011' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i011.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='small'>LT COL. MAISEY DEL. W. BRIGGS, LITH.</span><br />DEER WORSHIPPING THE WHEEL OF THE LAW.<br /><span class='small'>Tope of Sanchi.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span><span class='c014'>The Place of Animals in Human Thought</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='ch01' class='c006'>I<br /> <br />SOUL-WANDERING AS IT CONCERNS ANIMALS</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c007'>IN one of these enigmatic sayings which launch
-the mind on boundless seas, Cardinal Newman
-remarked that we know less of animals than of
-angels. A large part of the human race explains
-the mystery by what is called transmigration,
-metempsychosis, <i>Samsara</i>, <i>Seelenwanderung</i>; the last
-a word so compact and picturesque that it is a pity
-not to imitate it in English. The intelligibility of
-ideas depends much on whether words touch the
-spring of the picture-making wheel of the brain;
-“Soul-wandering” does this.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Ancient as the theory is, we ought to remember
-what is commonly forgotten—that somewhere in the
-distance we catch sight of a time when it was
-unknown, at least in the sense of a procession of
-the soul from death to life through animal forms.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>Traces of it are to be found in the Sutras and it is
-thoroughly developed in the Upanishads, but if the
-Sutras belong to the thirteenth century and the
-Upanishads to about the year 700 before Christ, a
-long road still remains to the Vedas with their
-fabulous antiquity.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the Vedas it is stated that the soul may wander,
-even during sleep, and that it will surely have a
-further existence after death, but there is nothing to
-show that in this further existence it will take the
-form of an animal. Man will be substantially man,
-able to feel the same pleasures as his prototype on
-earth; but if he goes to a good place, exempt from
-the same pains. What, then, was the Vedic opinion
-of animals? On the whole, it is safe to assume that
-the authors of the Vedic chants believed that animals,
-like men, entered a soul-world in which they preserved
-their identity. The idea of funeral sacrifices,
-as exemplified in these earliest records, was that of
-sending some one before. The horse and the goat
-that were immolated at a Vedic funeral were intended
-to go and announce the coming of the man’s soul.
-Wherever victims were sacrificed at funerals, they
-were originally meant to do something in the after-life;
-hence they must have had souls. The origin
-of the Suttee was the wish that the wife should
-accompany her husband, and among primitive peoples
-animals were sacrificed because the dead man might
-have need of them. Not very long ago an old Irish
-woman, on being remonstrated with for having killed
-her dead husband’s horse, replied with the words,
-“Do you think I would let my man go on foot in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>next world?” On visiting that wonderfully emotion-awakening
-relic, the Viking ship at Christiania, I was
-interested to see the bones of the Chief’s horses and
-dogs as well as his own. Did the Norsemen, passionately
-devoted to the sea as they were, suppose, that
-not only the animals, but also the vessel in which
-they buried their leader, would have a ghostly second
-existence? I have no doubt that they did. Apart
-from what hints may be gleaned from the Vedas,
-there is an inherent probability against the early
-Aryans, any more than the modern Hindu, believing
-that the soul of man or beast comes suddenly to a
-full stop. To destroy spirit seems to the Asiatic
-mind as impossible as to destroy matter seems to
-the biologist.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Leaving the Vedas and coming down to the Sutras
-and Upanishads, we discover the transmigration of
-souls at first suggested and then clearly defined.
-Whence came it? Was it the belief of those less
-civilised nations whom the Aryans conquered, and
-did they, in accepting it from them, give it a moral
-complexion by investing it with the highly ethical
-significance of an upward or downward progress
-occasioned by the merits or demerits of the soul in a
-previous state of being?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A large portion of mankind finds it as difficult to
-conceive a sudden beginning as a sudden end of
-spirit. We forget difficulties which we are not in
-the habit of facing; those who have tried to face this
-one have generally stumbled over it. Even Dante
-with his subtle psychophysiological reasoning hardly
-persuades. The ramifications of a life before stretched
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>far: “Whosoever believes in the fabled prior existence
-of souls, let him be anathema,” thundered the
-Council of Constantinople, <span class='fss'>A.D.</span> 543. Which shows
-that many Christians shared Origen’s views on this
-subject.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>From the moment that soul-wandering became,
-in India, a well-established doctrine, some three
-thousand years ago, the conception of the status of
-animals was perfectly clear. “Wise people,” says
-the Bhagavad Gita, “see the same soul (Atman) in
-the Brahman, in worms and insects, in the outcasts,
-in the dog and the elephant, in beasts, cows, gadflies,
-and gnats.” Here we have the doctrine succinctly
-expounded, and in spite of subtleties introduced by
-later philosophers (such as that of the outstanding
-self) the exposition holds good to this day as a statement
-of the faith of India. It also described the
-doctrine of Pythagoras, which ancient traditions
-asserted that he brought from Egypt, where no such
-doctrine ever existed. Pythagoras is still commonly
-supposed to have borrowed from Egypt; but it is
-strange that a single person should continue to hold
-an opinion against which so much evidence has been
-produced; especially as it is surely very easy to
-explain the tradition by interpreting Egypt to have
-stood for “the East” in common parlance, exactly
-as in Europe a tribe of low caste Indians came to be
-called gypsies or Egyptians. Pythagoras believed
-that he had been one of the Trojan heroes, whose
-shield he knew at a glance in the Temple of Juno
-where it was hung up. After him, Empedocles
-thought that he had passed through many forms,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>amongst others those of a bird and a fish. Pythagoras
-and his fire-spent disciple belong to times which seem
-almost near if judged by Indian computations: yet
-they are nebulous figures; they seem to us, and
-perhaps they seemed to men who lived soon after
-them, more like mysterious, half Divine bearers of a
-word than men of flesh and blood. But Plato, who
-is real to us and who has influenced so profoundly
-modern thought, Plato took their theory and displayed
-it to the Western world as the most logical explanation
-of the mystery of being.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The theory of transmigration did not commend
-itself to Roman thinkers, though it was admirably
-stated by a Roman poet:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Omnia mutantur: nihil interit. Errat, et illinc</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Huc venit, hinc illuc, et quoslibet occupat artus</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Spiritus, eque feris, humana in corpora transit,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Inque feras noster, nec tempore deperit ullo.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Utque novis facilis signatur cera figuris,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Nec manet ut fuerat, nec formas servat easdem,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Sed tamen ipsa eadem est: animam sic semper eandem</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Esse.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>This description is as accurate as it is elegant; but
-it remains a question whether Ovid had anything
-deeper than a folk-lorist’s interest in transmigration
-joined to a certain sympathy which it often inspires
-in those who are fond of animals. The enthusiastic
-folk-lorist finds himself believing in all sorts of things
-at odd times. Lucian’s admirers at Rome doubtless
-enjoyed his ridiculous story of a Pythagorean cock
-which had been a man, a woman, a prince, a subject,
-a fish, a horse and a frog, and which summed up its
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>varied experience in the judgment that man was the
-most wretched and deplorable of all creatures, all
-others patiently grazing within the enclosures of
-Nature while man alone breaks out and strays beyond
-those safe limits. This story was retold with great
-gusto by Erasmus. The Romans were a people with
-inclusive prejudices, and they were not likely to
-welcome a narrowing of the gulf between themselves
-and the beasts of the field. Cicero’s dictum that,
-while man looks before and after, analysing the past
-and forecasting the future, animals have only the
-perception of the present, does not go to the excess
-of those later theorists who, like Descartes, reduced
-animals to automata, but it goes farther than scientific
-writers on the subject would now allow to be justified.</p>
-<p class='c008'>It is worth while asking, what was it that so powerfully
-attracted Plato in the theory of transmigration?
-I think that Plato, who made a science of the moral
-training of the mind, was attracted by soul-wandering
-as a scheme of soul-evolution. Instead of looking
-at it as a matter of fact which presupposed an ethical
-root (which is the Indian view), he looked upon it as
-an ethical root which presupposed a matter of fact.
-He was influenced a little, no doubt, by the desire to
-get rid of Hades, “an unpleasant place,” as he says,
-“and not true,” for which he felt a peculiar antipathy,
-but he was influenced far more by seeing in soul-wandering
-a rational theory of the ascent of the soul,
-a Darwinism of the spirit. “We are plants,” he said,
-“not of earth but of heaven,” but it takes the plants
-of heaven a long time to grow.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We ought to admire the Indian mind, which first
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>seized the idea of time in relation to development
-and soared out of the cage of history (veritable or
-imaginary) into liberal æons to account for one perfect
-soul, one plant that had accomplished its heavenly
-destiny. But though the Indian seer argues with
-Plato that virtue has its own reward (not so much an
-outward reward of improved environment as an inward
-reward of approximation to perfection), he disagrees
-with the Greek philosopher with regard to the practical
-result of all this as it affects any of us personally.
-Plato found the theory of transmigration entirely
-consoling; the Indian finds it entirely the reverse.
-Can the reason be that Plato took the theory as a
-beautiful symbol while the Indian takes it as a dire
-reality?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Hindu is as much convinced that the soul is
-re-born in different animals as we are that children
-are born of women. He is convinced of it, but he
-is not consoled by it. Let us reflect a little: does
-not one life give us time to get somewhat tired of it;
-how should we feel after fifteen hundred lives? The
-wandering Jew has never been thought an object
-of envy, but the wandering soul has a wearier lot;
-it knows the sorrows of all creation.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“How many births are past I cannot tell,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>How many yet may be no man may say,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>But this alone I know and know full well,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>That pain and grief embitter all the way.”<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c017'><sup>[1]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-<div class='footnote c000' id='f1'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r1'>1</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>“Folk-Songs of Southern India,” by Charles E. Gover, a
-fascinating but little-known work.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Rather than this—death. How far deeper the
-gloom revealed by these lines from the folk-songs of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>an obscure Dravidian tribe living in the Nilgiri Hills,
-than any which cultured Western pessimism can
-show! Compared with them, the despairing cry of
-Baudelaire seems almost a hymn of joy:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“’Tis death that cheers and gives us strength to live,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>’Tis life’s chief aim, sole hope that can abide,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Our wine, elixir, glad restorative</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Whence we gain heart to walk till eventide.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'>Through snow, through frost, through tempests it can give</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Light that pervades th’ horizon dark and wide;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>The inn which makes secure when we arrive</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Our food and sleep, all labour laid aside.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'>It is an Angel whose magnetic hand</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Gives quiet sleep and dreams of extasy,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>And strews a bed for naked folk and poor.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'>’Tis the god’s prize, the mystic granary,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>The poor man’s purse and his old native land,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>And of the unknown skies the opening door.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>Folk-songs are more valuable aids than the higher
-literature of nations in an inquiry as to what they really
-believe. The religion of the Dravidian mountaineers
-is purely Aryan (though their race is not); their songs
-may be taken, therefore, as Aryan documents. They
-are particularly characteristic of the dual belief as to
-a future state which is, to this day, widely diffused.
-How firmly these people believe in transmigration
-the quatrain quoted above bears witness; yet they
-also believe that souls are liable to immediate judgment.
-This contradiction is explained by the theory
-that a long interval may elapse between death and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>re-incarnation and that during this interval the
-soul meets with a reward or punishment. To say the
-truth, the explanation sounds a rather lame one. Is
-it not more likely that the idea of immediate judgment,
-wherever it appears, is a relic of Vedic belief which
-has to be reconciled, as best it can, with the later
-idea of transmigration? The Dravidian songs are
-remarkable for their strong inculcation of regard for
-animals. In their impressive funeral dirge which
-is a public confession of the dead man’s sins, it is
-owned that he killed a snake, a lizard and a harmless
-frog. And that not mere lifetaking was the point
-condemned, is clearly proved by the further admission
-that the delinquent put the young ox to the plough
-before it was strong enough to work. In a Dravidian
-vision of Heaven and Hell certain of the Blest are
-perceived milking their happy kine, and it is explained
-that these are they who, when they saw the lost kine
-of neighbour or stranger in the hills, drove them
-home nor left them to perish from tiger or wolf.
-Surely in this, as in the Jewish command which it
-so closely resembles, we may read mercy to beast as
-well as to man.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is sometimes said that there is as much cruelty
-to animals in India as anywhere. Some of this
-cruelty (as it seems to us) is caused directly by
-reluctance to take life; of the other sort, caused by
-callousness, it can be only said that the human brute
-grows under every sky. One great fact is admitted:
-children are not cruel in India: Victor Hugo could
-not have written his terrible poem about the tormented
-toad in India. I think it a mistake to attribute the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>Indian sentiment towards animals wholly to transmigration;
-nevertheless, it may be granted that such
-a belief fosters such a sentiment. Indeed, if it were
-allowable to look upon the religion of the many as
-the morality of the one, it would seem natural to
-suppose that the theory of transmigration was invented
-by some creature-loving sage on purpose to give men
-a fellow-feeling for their humbler relations. Even
-so, many a bit of innocent folk-fable has served as
-“protective colouration” to beast or bird: the legend
-of the robin who covered up the Babes in the Wood;
-the legend of the swallow who did some little service
-to the crucified Saviour, and how many other such
-tender fancies. Who invented them, and why?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If Plato had wished simply to find a happy
-substitute for Hades, he might have found it—had
-he looked far enough—in the Vedic kingdom of the
-sun, radiant and eternal, where sorrow is not, where
-the crooked are made straight, ruled over by Yama
-the first man to die and the first to live again, death’s
-bright angel, lord of the holy departed—how far from
-Pluto and the “Tartarean grey.” It would not have
-provided a solution to the mystery of being, but it
-might have made many converts, for after a happy
-heaven all antiquity thirsted.</p>
-
-<div id='i021' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i021.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>THE BUDDHISTIC TIGER.<br />British Museum.<br /><span class='small'>(<i>From a painting on silk by Ko-Tō.</i>)</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is not sure if the scheme of existence mapped out
-in soul-wandering is really more consoling for beast
-than for man. It is a poor compliment to some dogs
-to say that they have been some men. Then again,
-it is recognised as easier for a dog to be good than for
-a man to be good, but after a dog has passed his little
-life in well-doing he dies with the prospect that his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>spirit, which by his merits becomes again a man, will
-be sent down, by that man’s transgressions, to the
-society of jackals. According to the doctrine of soul-wandering,
-animals are, in brief, the Purgatory of
-men. Just as prayers for the dead (which means,
-prayers for the remission to them of a merited period
-of probation) represent an important branch of
-Catholic observances, so prayers for the remission
-of a part of the time which souls would otherwise
-spend in animal forms constitute the most vital and
-essential feature in Brahmanical worship.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Of course, this is also true of Buddhism, to which
-many people think that the theory of soul-wandering
-belongs exclusively, unmindful that the older faith has
-it as well. The following hymn, used in Thibet,
-shows how accurately the name of Purgatory applies
-to the animal incarnations of the soul:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“If we [human beings] have amassed any merit</div>
- <div class='line in1'>In the three states,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>We rejoice in this good fortune when we consider</div>
- <div class='line in1'>The unfortunate lot of the poor [lower] animals,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Piteously engulphed in the ocean of misery;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>On their behalf, we now turn the Wheel of Religion.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>There are grounds for thinking that the purgatorial
-view of animals was part of the religious beliefs of
-the highly civilised native races of South America.
-The Christianised Indians are very gentle in their
-ways towards animals, while among the savage
-tribes in Central Peru (which are probably degraded
-off-shoots from the people of the Incas) the belief
-still survives that good men become monkeys or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>jaguars, and bad men parrots or reptiles. For the
-rest, soul-wandering has an enduring fascination for
-the human mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In January, 1907, Leandro Improta, a young man
-well furnished with worldly goods, shot himself in a
-café at Naples. His pocket was found to contain
-a letter in which he said that the act was prompted by
-a desire to study metempsychosis; much had been
-written on the subject, but it pleased him better to
-discover than to talk: “so I determined to die and see
-whether I shall be re-born in the form of some animal.
-It would be delightful to return to this world as a lion
-or a rat.” It might not prove delightful after all!</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>
- <h2 id='ch02' class='c006'>II<br /> <br />THE GREEK CONCEPTION OF ANIMALS</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c007'>“THE heralds brought a sacred hecatomb to the
-gods through the city and the long-haired
-Grecians were assembled under the shady grove of
-far-darting Apollo, but when they had tasted the
-upper flesh and had drawn it out, having divided
-the shares, they made a delightful feast.” In this
-description the poet of the Odyssey not only calls up
-a wonderfully vivid picture of an ancient fête-day, but
-also shows the habit of mind of the Homeric Greeks
-in regard to animal food. They were voracious
-eaters—although the frequent reference to feasts
-ought not to make us suppose that meat was their
-constant diet; rather the reverse, for then it would
-not have been so highly rated. But when they had
-the chance, they certainly did eat with unfastidious
-copiousness and unashamed enjoyment. It is not
-pleasant to read about, for it sets one thinking of
-things by no means far away or old; for instance,
-of the disappearance of half-cooked beef at some
-Continental <i>tables d’hôte</i>. We find that Homer is
-painfully near us. But in Homeric times the ghost
-of a scruple had to be laid before the feast could be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>enjoyed. Animal food was still closely connected
-with the idea of sacrifice. Sacrifice lends distinction
-to subject as well as object; it was some atonement
-to the animal to dedicate him to the gods. He was
-covered with garlands and attended by long-robed
-priests; his doom was his triumph. The devoted
-heifer or firstling of the flock was glorified beyond
-all its kind. Some late sceptic of the <i>Anthology</i>
-asked what possible difference it could make to the
-sheep whether it were devoured by a wolf or sacrificed
-to Herakles so that he might protect the sheepfold
-from wolves? But scepticism is a poor thing. From
-immolation to apotheosis there is but a step; how
-many human victims willingly bowed their heads
-to the knife!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The sacrificial aspect of the slaughter of domestic
-animals took a strong hold of the popular imagination.
-It is still suggested by the procession of garlanded
-beasts which traverses the Italian village on the
-approach of Easter: the only time of year when the
-Italian peasant touches meat. In the tawdry travesty
-of the <i>Bœuf gras</i>, though the origin is the same,
-every shred of the old significance is lost, but among
-simple folk south of the Alps, unformed thoughts
-which know not whence they come still contribute a
-sort of religious glamour to that last pageant. Far back,
-indeed, stretches the procession of the victims, human
-and animal—for wherever there was animal sacrifice,
-at some remote epoch, “the goat without horns” was
-also offered up.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Homeric Greeks had no butchers; they did
-the slaying of beasts themselves or their priests did it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>for them. Agamemnon kills the boar sacrificed to
-Zeus with his own hands, which are first uplifted in
-prayer. The commonest meat was the flesh of swine,
-as may be seen by the pig of Æsop which replied, on
-being asked by the sheep why he cried out when
-caught, “They take you for your wool or milk, but
-me for my life.” In Homer, however, there is much
-talk of fatted sheep, kids and oxen, and there is even
-mention of killing a cow. The Athenians had qualms
-about slaughtering the ox, the animal essential to
-agriculture—though they did it—but the Homeric
-Greek was not troubled by such thoughts. He was
-not over nice about anything; he was his own cook,
-and he did not lose his appetite while he roasted his
-bit of meat on the spit. A Greek repast of that age
-would have shocked the abstemious Indian as much
-as the Hindu reformer, Keshub Chunder Sen, confessed
-to have been shocked by the huge joints on
-English sideboards.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Putting aside his meat-eating proclivities, for which
-we cannot throw stones at him, the Greek of the Iliad
-and of the Odyssey is the friend of his beast. He
-does not regard it as his long-lost brother, but he sees
-in it a devoted servant; sometimes more than human
-in love if less than human in wit. His point of view,
-though detached, was appreciative. Practically it
-was the point of view of the twentieth century.
-Homer belongs to the Western world, and in a great
-measure to the modern Western world. He had no
-racial fellow-feeling with animals; yet he could feel
-for the sparrow that flutters round its murdered young
-ones and for the vulture that rends the air with cries
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>when the countryman takes its fledglings from the
-nest. He could shed one immortal tear over the
-faithful hound that recognises his master and dies.
-“There lay the dog Argus, full of vermin.” If it had
-not been a living creature, what sight could have
-more repelled human eyes? But with dog as with
-man, the miserable body is as naught beside—what
-in the man we call the soul. “He fawned with his
-tail and laid down both his ears, but he could no
-more come nearer his master.” All the sense of
-disgust is gone and there is something moist, perhaps,
-in our eyes too, though it is not the ichor of immortality.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Giving names to animals is the first instinctive
-confession that they are not <i>things</i>. What sensible
-man ever called his table Carlo or his inkpot Trilby?
-Homer gives his horses the usual names of horses
-in his day; this is shown by the fact that he calls
-more than one horse by the same name. Hector’s
-steeds were Xanthus, Æthon and noble Lampus;
-often would Andromache mix wine for them even
-before she attended to the wants of her husband,
-or offer them the sweet barley with her own white
-hands. Æthe is the name of Agamemnon’s graceful
-and fleet-footed mare. Xanthus and Balius, offspring
-of Podarges, are the horses which Achilles received
-from his father. He bids them bring their charioteer
-back in safety to the body of the Greeks—and then
-follows the impressive incident of the warning given
-to him of his impending fate. The horse Xanthus
-bends low his head: his long mane, which is collected
-in a ring, droops till it touches the ground. Hera
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>gives him power of speech and he tells how, though
-the steeds of Achilles will do their part right well,
-not all their swiftness, not all their faithful service
-can save their master from the doom that even
-now is drawing near. “The furies restrain the
-voice”: the laws which govern the natural order
-of things must not be violated. “O Xanthus,” cries
-Achilles, “O Xanthus, why dost thou predict my
-death?... Well do I know myself that it is
-my fate to perish here, far away from my dear father
-and mother!” It is the passionate cry of the Greek,
-the lover of life as none has loved it, the lover of
-the sweet air gladdened by the sun.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Many a soldier may have spoken to his horse,
-half in jest, as Achilles spoke to Xanthus and Balius:
-“bring me safely out of the fray.” The supernatural
-and terrible reply comes with the shock of the
-unforeseen, like a clap of thunder on a calm day.
-This incident is a departure from the usual Homeric
-conventionality, for it takes us into the domain of
-real magic. The belief that animals know things
-that we know not, and see things that we see not,
-is scattered over all the earth. Are there not still
-good people who feel an “eerie” sensation when
-a cat stares fixedly into vacancy in the twilight?
-“Eerie” sensations count for much in early beliefs,
-but what counts for more is the observation of actual
-facts which are not and, perhaps, cannot be explained.
-The uneasiness of animals before an earthquake,
-or the refusal of some animals to go to sea
-on ships which afterwards come to grief—to refer
-to only two instances of a class of phenomena the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>existence of which cannot be gainsaid—would be
-sufficient to convince any savage or any primitive
-man that animals have foreknowledge. If they know
-the future on one point, why should they not know
-it on others? The primitive man generally starts
-from something which he deems <i>certain</i>; he deals in
-“certainties” far more than in hypotheses, and when
-he has seized a “certainty” in his own fashion he
-draws logical deductions from it. Savages and
-children have a ruthless logic of their own.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The prophetic power of animals has important
-bearings on the subject of divination. In cases of
-animal portents the later theory may have been
-that the animal was the passive instrument or
-medium of a superior power; but it is not likely
-that this was the earliest theory. The goddess
-did not use Xanthus as a mouthpiece: she simply
-gave him the faculty of speech so that he could say
-what he already knew. The second sight of animals
-was believed to be communicable to man through
-their flesh, and especially through their blood.
-Porphyry says plainly that diviners fed on the hearts
-of crows, vultures, and moles (the heart being the
-fountain of the blood), because in this manner they
-partook of the souls of these animals, and received
-the influence of the gods who accompanied these
-souls. The blood conveyed the qualities of the spirit.
-In my opinion the Hebrew ordinance against partaking
-of the blood was connected with this idea;
-the soul was not to be meddled with. I do not know
-if attention has been paid to the remarkable juxtaposition
-of the blood prohibition with enchantment
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>in Leviticus xix. 26. The Institutes of Manu clearly
-indicate that the blood was not to be swallowed
-because, by doing so, could be procured an illicit
-mixing up of personality: the most awful of sins,
-more awful because so much more mysterious than
-our mediæval “pact,” or selling the soul to the
-devil. A knowledge of magic is essential to the
-true comprehension of all sacred writings.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>That animals formerly talked with human voices
-was the genuine belief of most early races, but there
-are few traces of it in Greek literature. A hint of a
-real folk-belief is to be found, perhaps, in the remark
-of Clytemnestra, who says of Cassandra, when she
-will not descend from the car that has brought her,
-a prisoner, to Agamemnon’s palace:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“I wot—unless like swallows she doth use</div>
- <div class='line in1'><i>Some strange barbarian tongue from over sea</i>,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>My words must bring persuasion to her soul.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>But such hints are not frequent. The stories of
-“talking beasts” which enjoyed an immense popularity
-in Greece were founded on as conscious “make-believe”
-as the Beast tales of the Middle Ages.
-From the “Battle of the Frogs and Mice” to Æsop’s
-fables, and from these to the comedies of Aristophanes,
-the animals are meant to hold up human
-follies to ridicule or human virtues to admiration.
-The object was to instruct while amusing when it
-was not to amuse without instructing. Æsop hardly
-asks the most guileless to believe that his stories
-are of the “all true” category—which is why children
-rarely quite take them to their hearts. At the same
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>time, he shows a close study of the idiosyncrasies
-of animals, so close that there is little to alter in
-his characterisation. Out of the mass of stories in
-the collection attributed to him, one or two only
-seem to carry us back to a more ingenuous age.
-The following beautiful little tale of the “Lion’s
-Kingdom” is vaguely reminiscent of the world-tradition
-of a “Peace in Nature.”</p>
-<p class='c008'>“The beasts of the field and forest had a lion
-as their king. He was neither wrathful, cruel, nor
-tyrannical, but just and gentle as a king could
-be. He made during his reign a proclamation for
-a general assembly of all the birds and beasts, and
-drew up conditions for an universal league in which
-the Wolf and the Lamb, the Panther and the Kid,
-the Tiger and the Stag, the Dog and the Hare,
-should live together in perfect peace and amity.
-The Hare said, ‘Oh, how I have longed to see
-this day, in which the weak shall take their place
-with impunity by the side of the strong.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The temper of a people towards animals can be
-judged from its sports. It has been well said, Who
-could imagine Pericles presiding over a “Roman
-holiday”? Wanton cruelty to animals seemed to
-the Greeks an outrage to the gods. The Athenians
-inflicted a fine on a vivisector of the name of Xenocrates
-(he called himself a “philosopher”) who had
-skinned a goat alive. In Greece, from Homeric
-times downwards, the most favourite sport was the
-chariot-race which, at first, possessed the importance
-of a religious event, and always had a dignity above
-that of a mere pastime. The horses received their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>full share of honour and glory; for many centuries
-the graves of Cimon’s mares, with which he had
-thrice conquered at the Olympian games, were pointed
-out to the stranger, near his own tomb.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the ancient Greek as in the modern world,
-while the majority held the views about animals
-which I have briefly sketched, a small minority
-held views of quite a different kind. It may be
-that no outward agency is required to cause the
-periodical appearance of men who are driven from
-the common road by the nostalgia of a state in
-which the human creature had not learnt to shed
-blood. The earliest tradition agrees with the latest
-science in testifying that man did not always eat
-flesh. It seems as if sometimes, in every part of
-the earth, an irresistible impulse takes hold of him to
-resume his primal harmlessness. It is natural,
-however, that students should have sought some
-more definite explanation for the introduction of the
-Orphic sect into Greece, where it can be traced
-to about the time generally given to Buddha—the
-sixth century <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> Some have conjectured that
-dark-skinned, white-robed missionaries from India
-penetrated into Europe as we know that they penetrated
-into China, bringing with them the gospel
-of the unity of all sentient things. Others agree with
-what seems to have been thought by Herodotus:
-that wandering pilgrims brought home treasured
-secrets from the temple of Ammon or some other
-of those Egyptian shrines with which the Greeks
-constantly kept up certain <i>rapports</i>. It may be,
-now, that these two theories will be abandoned in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>favour of a third which would refer the origin of
-the Orphists to Ægean times and suppose them to
-be the last followers of an earlier faith. When
-they do come into history, it is as poor and ignorant
-people—like the Doukhobors of to-day—whose
-obscurity might well account for their having remained
-long unobserved. But this is no reason for
-concluding that their beginnings were obscure.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>What is best understood about them is that they
-abstained rigorously from flesh except during the
-rare performance of some rite of purification, in
-which they tasted the blood of a bull which was
-supposed to procure mystic union with the divine.
-As happened with the performers of other cruel
-or horrid rites, the transcendent significance they
-ascribed to the act paralysed their power of recognising
-its revolting nature. A diseased spiritualism
-which ignores matter altogether is the real key to
-such phenomena. It is too soon to say whether any
-link can be established between the Orphic practices
-and the so-called “bull-fights” of which traces
-have been found in Crete. Despised and tabooed
-though they were in historical Greece, the Orphists
-are still held to have exercised some sure though
-undefined influence on the development of the
-greatest spiritual fact of Hellenic civilisation, the
-Eleusinian Mysteries.</p>
-
-<div id='i032' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i032.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='small'>(<i>Photo:</i> <i>Sommer</i>)</span><br />ORPHEUS.<br /><span class='small'>(<i>Fresco at Pompeii.</i>)</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The popular description of Orpheus as founder
-of the Orphists must be taken for what it is worth.
-The sect may have either evolved or borrowed the
-legend. Christianity itself appropriated the myth of
-Orpheus, pictorially, at least, in those rude tracings in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>the Roman catacombs showing the Good Shepherd
-in that character, which inspired Carlyle to write
-one of the most impassioned passages in English
-prose. The sweet lute-player who held entranced
-lion and lamb till the one forgot his wrath and the
-other his fear, was the natural symbol of the prototype
-of a humane religion.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Out of the nebulous patches of Greek enthusiasts
-who cherished tender feelings towards animals,
-emerges the intellectual sun of the Samian sage.
-It is difficult not to connect Pythagoras in some
-way with the Orphists, nor would such a connexion
-make it the less probable that he journeyed to the
-sacred East in search of fuller knowledge. Little,
-indeed, do we know about this moulder of minds. He
-passed across the world’s stage dark “with excess of
-light”—an influence rather than a personality. Yet
-he was as far as possible from being only a dreamer
-of dreams; he was the Newton, the Galileo, perhaps
-the Edison and Marconi of his epoch. And it was this
-double character of moral teacher and man of science
-which caused the extraordinary reverence with which
-he was regarded. Science and religion were not
-divorced then; the Prophet could present no credentials
-so valid as an understanding of the laws which
-govern the universe. Mathematics and astronomy
-were revelations of divine truth. It was the scientific
-insight of Pythagoras, the wonderful range and depth
-of which is borne out more and more by modern
-discoveries, that lent supreme importance to whatever
-theories he was known to have held. The doctrine
-of transmigration had not been treated seriously
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>while it was only preached by the Orphists, but
-after it was adopted by Pythagoras it commanded
-a wide attention, though it never won a large acceptance.
-One expounder it had, who was too remarkable
-an original thinker to be called a mere disciple—the
-greatly-gifted Empedocles, who denounced
-the eaters of flesh as no better than cannibals, which
-was going further than Pythagoras himself had ever
-gone.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Even in antiquity, there were some who suspected
-that at the bottom of the Pythagorean propaganda
-was the wish to make men more humane. Without
-taking that view, it may be granted that a strong
-love of animals prepares the mind to think of them
-as not so very different from men. A thing that
-tends in the same direction is the unfavourable comparison
-of some men with some beasts: the sort of
-sentiment which made Madame de Staël say that
-the more she knew of men the more she liked dogs.
-Did not Darwin declare that he would as soon be
-descended from that heroic little monkey who braved
-his dreaded enemy to save the life of his keeper, or
-from that old baboon who, descending from the
-mountains, carried away in triumph his young comrade
-from a crowd of astonished dogs, as from various
-still extant races of mankind? Darwinism is really
-the theory of Pythagoras with the supernatural
-element left out. The homogeneity of living things
-is one of the very old beliefs from which we strayed
-and to which we are returning.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Among the Greeks, sensitive and meditative minds
-which did not place faith in the Pythagorean system
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>of life were attracted, nevertheless, by its speculative
-possibilities which they bent to their own purposes.
-Thus Socrates borrowed from Pythagoras when he
-suggested that imperfect and earth-bound spirits
-might be re-incorporated in animals whose conventionally
-ascribed characteristics corresponded with
-their own moral natures. Unjust, tyrannical, and
-violent men would become wolves, hawks, and kites,
-while good commonplace people—virtuous Philistines—would
-take better forms, such as ants, bees, and
-wasps, all of which live harmoniously in communities.
-It is pleasant to find that Socrates did justice to
-that intelligent insect, the undeservedly aspersed
-wasp. Men who are good in all respects save the
-highest, may re-assume human forms. Socrates does
-not explain why it is that humanity progresses so
-slowly if it is always being recruited from such good
-material? He passes on from these righteous men
-to the super-excellent man to whom alone he allots
-translation into a divine and wholly immaterial
-sphere; he it is who departs from this world completely
-pure of earthly dross; who cannot be moved
-by ill-fortune, poverty, disgrace; who has “overcome
-the world” in the Pauline sense, who has died while
-living, in the Indian sense. Though Socrates does
-not say so, it is this super-excellent man who really
-convinces him of the immortality of the soul according
-to the meaning which we attach to these words.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>That the more tender and poetic aspects of Pythagorean
-speculations had deeply impressed Socrates
-can be seen by the fact that they recurred to his
-mind in the most solemn hour of his life. From
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>these he drew the lovely parable with which he
-gently reproved the friends who were come to take
-leave of him for their surprise at finding him no wise
-depressed. He asks if he appears to them inferior
-in divination to the swans, who, when they perceive
-that they must die, though given to song before, then
-sing the most of all, delighted at the prospect of their
-departure to the deity whose ministers they are.
-Mankind has said falsely of the swans that they sing
-through dread of death and from grief. Those who
-say this do not reflect that no bird sings when it is
-hungry or cold or afflicted with any other pain, not
-even the nightingale or swallow or hoopoe, which are
-said to sing a dirge-like strain, “but neither do they
-appear to me to sing for grief nor do the swans, but
-as pertaining to Apollo they are skilled in the
-divining art, and having a foreknowledge of the bliss
-in Hades, they express their joy in song on that day
-rather than at any previous time. But I believe
-myself to be a fellow-servant of the swans and consecrated
-to the same divinity, and that I am no less
-gifted by my master in the art of divination, nor am
-I departing with less good grace than they.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Socrates would not have been “the wisest of men”
-if he had dogmatised about the unknowable; to
-insist, he says, that things were just as he described
-them, would not become an intelligent being; he
-only claimed an approximate approach to the truth.
-In appearance Plato went nearer to dogmatic acceptance
-of the theory of the transmigration of souls,
-but probably it was in appearance only. Like his
-master, he thought it reasonable to suppose that the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>human soul ascended if it had done well, and descended
-if it had done ill, and of this ascent and descent
-he took as symbol its attirement in higher or lower
-corporeal forms till, freed from the corruptible, it
-joined the incorruptible.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Greeks were the first people to have an insatiable
-thirst for exact knowledge; they showed themselves
-true precursors of the modern world by their researches
-into scientific zoology, which were carried
-on with zeal long before Aristotle took the subject
-in hand. We cannot judge of these early researches
-because they are nearly all lost; but Aristotle’s
-“History of Animals,” even after the revival of
-learning, was still consulted as a text-book, and
-perhaps nothing that he wrote contributed more to
-win for him the fame of</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“... maestro di color che sanno.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>The story goes that this work was written by desire
-of Alexander the Great or, as some say, Philip of
-Macedon, and that the writer was given a sum which
-sounds fabulous in order that he might obtain the
-best available information. What interest most the
-modern reader are the “sayings by the way” on
-the moral qualities or the intelligence of animals.
-“Man and the mule,” says Aristotle, “are always
-tame”—a classification not very complimentary to
-man. The ox is gentle, the wild boar is violent, crafty
-the serpent, noble and generous the lion. Except
-in the senses of touch and taste, man is far surpassed
-by the other animals—a remark that was endorsed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>by St. Thomas Aquinas, who inferred from the limitation
-of man’s senses that he would have made bad
-use of them if they had been more acute. Aristotle
-laid down the axiom that man alone can reason,
-though other animals can remember and learn, but
-he never pursued this theory as far as it was pushed
-by Descartes, much less by Malebranche. He believed
-that the soul of infants differed in no respect
-from that of animals. All animals present traces of
-their moral disposition, though these distinctions are
-more marked in man. Animals understand signs
-and sounds, and can be taught. The females are less
-ready to help the males in distress than the males
-are to help the females. Bears carry off their cubs
-with them if they are pursued. The dolphin is
-remarkable for the love of its young ones; two
-dolphins were seen supporting a small dead dolphin
-on their backs, that was about to sink, as if in pity
-for it, to keep it from being devoured by wild
-creatures. In herds of horses, if a mare dies, other
-mares will bring up the foal, and mares without foals
-have been known to entice foals to follow them and to
-show much affection to them, though they die for
-want of their natural sustenance.</p>
-<p class='c008'>Aristotle says that music attracts some animals;
-for instance, deer can be captured by singing and
-playing on the pipe. Animals sometimes show fore-thought,
-as the ichneumon, which does not attack the
-asp till it has called others to help it—which reminds
-one of the dog whose master took him to Exeter,
-where he was badly treated by the yard-dog of the
-inn; on this, he escaped and went to London, whence
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>he returned with a powerful dog-friend who gave
-the yard-dog a lesson which he must have long remembered.
-Hedgehogs are said by Aristotle and
-other ancient authors to change the entrance of their
-burrows according as the wind blows from north or
-south; a man in Byzantium got no small fame as
-a weather prophet by observing this habit. He
-thinks that small animals are generally cleverer than
-larger ones. A tame woodpecker placed an almond
-in a crevice of wood so as to be able to break it,
-which it succeeded in doing with three blows. Aristotle
-does not mention the similar ingenuity of the
-thrush which I have noticed myself; it brings snails
-to a good flat stone on which it breaks the shell
-by knocking it up and down. He admired the skill
-of the swallow in making her nest. Although he
-knew of the migrations of birds, and declared that
-cranes go in winter to the sources of the Nile, “where
-there is a race of pigmies—no fable, but a fact,”
-he was not free from the erroneous idea (which is
-to be found in modern folk-lore) that some birds
-hybernate in caves, out of which they emerge, almost
-featherless, in the spring. Of the nightingale, he says
-that it sings ceaselessly for fifteen days and nights
-when the mountains are thick with leaves.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The spider’s art and graceful movements receive
-due praise, as do the cleanly habits of bees, which
-are said to sting people who use unguents because
-they dislike bad smells. “Bright and shiny bees”
-Aristotle asserts to be idle, “like women.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Of all animals his favourites are the lion and the
-elephant. The lion is gentle when he is not hungry
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>and he is not jealous or suspicious. He is fond of
-playing with animals that are brought up with him,
-and he gets to have a real affection for them. If a
-blow aimed at a lion fails, he only shakes and
-frightens his attacker, and then leaves him without
-hurting him. He never shows fear or turns
-his back on a foe. But old lions that are unable
-to hunt sometimes enter villages and attack mankind.
-This is the first observation of the “man-eating”
-lion or tiger, and the reason given for his
-perverse conduct is still believed to be the right one.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Aristotle assigned the palm of wisdom to the
-elephant, a creature abounding in intellect, tame,
-gentle, teachable, and one which can even learn how
-to “worship the king”—which is what many of us
-saw the elephants do at the Delhi Durbar.</p>
-
-<div id='i040' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i040.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>STELE WITH CAT AND BIRD.<br />Athens Museum.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>In a later age, Apollonius of Tyana confirmed
-from personal observation all Aristotle’s praise; he
-watched with admiration the crossing of the Indus
-by a herd of thirty elephants which were being pursued
-by huntsmen; the light and small ones went
-first, then the mothers, who held up their cubs with
-tusk and trunk, and lastly the old and large elephants.
-Pliny gave a similar account of the way in which
-elephants cross rivers, and it is, I believe, still noticed
-as a fact that the old ones send the young ones before
-them. The officer whose duty it was to superintend
-the embarcation of Indian elephants for Abyssinia
-during the campaign of Sir Robert Napier told me
-how a very fine old elephant, who perfectly understood
-the business in hand, drove all the others on board,
-but after performing this useful service, when it came
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>to be his turn, he refused resolutely to move an inch,
-and had to be left behind. The sympathy with
-animals for which Apollonius was remarkable made
-him feel for these great beasts brought into subjection;
-he declares that at night they mourn over their
-lost liberty with peculiar piteous sounds unlike those
-which they make usually; if a man approaches,
-however, they cease their wailing out of respect for
-him. He speaks of their attachment to their keeper,
-how they eat bread from his hand like a dog and
-caress him with their trunks. He saw an elephant
-at Taxila which was said to have fought against
-Alexander the Great three hundred and fifty years
-before. Alexander named it Ajax, and it bore golden
-bracelets on its trunk with the words: “Ajax. To
-the Sun from Alexander son of Jove.” The people
-decked it with garlands and anointed it with precious
-salves. Several classical writers bore witness to the
-pleasure which elephants took in music; they could
-be made to dance to the pipe. It was also said that
-they could write. Their crowning merit—that of
-helping away wounded comrades, which is vouched
-for by no less an authority than Mr. F. C. Selous—does
-not seem to have been observed in ancient times.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In Greek mythology the familiar animals of the
-gods occupy a place half-way between legend and
-natural history. Viewed by one school as totems,
-as the earlier god of which the later is only an appendix,
-to more conservative students they may appear
-to be, in the main, the outgrowth of the same fondness
-for coupling man and beast and fitting man with a
-beast-companion suited to his character, which gave
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>St. Mark his lion and St. John his eagle. The
-panther of Bacchus is the most attractive of the
-divine <i>menagerie</i>, because Bacchus, in this connexion,
-is generally shown as a child and the friendships of
-beasts and children are always pleasing.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The affection of Bacchus for panthers has been
-attributed to the fact that he wore a panther-skin,
-but there seems no motive for deciding that the one
-tradition was earlier than the other; the rationale
-of a myth is often evolved long after the myth itself.
-Perhaps, after all, the stories of gods and animals
-often originated in the simple belief that gods, like
-men, had a weakness for pets!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the Pompeian collections at Naples there are
-several designs of Bacchus and his panther; one
-of them shows the panther and the ass of Silenus
-lying down together; in another, a very fine
-mosaic, the winged genius of Bacchus careers
-along astride of his favourite beast; in a third, a
-chubby little boy, with no signs of godhead about
-him, clambers on to the back of a patient panther,
-which has the long-suffering look of animals that are
-accustomed to be teased by children. It may be
-noticed that children and animals, both somewhat
-neglected in the older art, attained the highest
-popularity with the artists of the age of Pompeii.
-Children were represented in all sorts of attitudes,
-and all known animals, from the cat to the octopus
-and the elephant to the grasshopper, were drawn not
-only with general correctness but with a keen insight
-into their humours and temperaments.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is said that a panther was once caught in Pamphylia
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>which had a gold chain round its neck with
-the inscription in Armenian letters: “Arsaces the
-king to the Nysæan god.” Oriental nations called
-Bacchus after Nysa, his supposed birthplace. It
-was concluded that the king of Armenia had given
-its freedom to this splendid specimen to do honour
-to the god. The panther became very tame and
-was fondled by every one, but when the spring came
-it ran away, chain and all, to seek a mate in the
-mountains and never more came back.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>
- <h2 id='ch03' class='c006'>III<br /> <br />ANIMALS AT ROME</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c007'>ROME, the eternal, begins with a Beast-story.
-However much deeper in the past the spade
-may dig than the reputed date of the humanitarian
-She-wolf, her descendant will not be expelled from
-the grotto on the Capitol, nor will it cease to be
-the belief of children (the only trustworthy authorities
-when legends are concerned) that the grandeur
-that was Rome would have never existed but for
-the opportune intervention of a friendly beast!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The fame of the She-wolf shows how eagerly
-mankind seizes on some touch of nature, fact or
-fable, that seems to make all creatures kin. Rome
-was as proud of her She-wolf as she was of ruling
-the world. It was the “luck” of Rome; even now,
-something of the old sentiment exists, for I remember
-that during King Edward’s visit old-fashioned
-Romans were angry because this emblem was not
-to be seen in the decorations.</p>
-
-<div id='i044' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i044.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='small'>(<i>Photo: Bruckmann.</i>)</span><br />CAPITOLINE SHE-WOLF.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The story did not make such large demands on
-credulity as sceptics pretend. The wolf is not so
-much the natural enemy of man as the cat is of the
-mouse: yet cats have been known to bring up families
-of mice or rats which they treated with affection.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>In recent times a Russian bear was stated to have
-carried away to the woods a little girl whom it fed
-with nuts and fruits. The evidence seemed good,
-though the story did sound a little as if it were suggested
-by Victor Hugo’s “Épopée du Lion.” But in
-India there are stories of the same sort—stories
-actually of She-wolves—which appear to be impossible
-to set aside. In a paper read before the Bombay
-Natural History Society, the well-known Parsi scholar,
-Jivanji Jamsedji Modi, described how he had seen one
-such “wolf-boy” at the Secundra Orphanage: the boy
-had remained with wolves up to six years old when he
-was discovered and captured, not without vigorous
-opposition from his vulpine protectors.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The historical record of Rome as regards animals is
-not a bright one. The cruelty of the arena does not
-stain the first Roman annals; the earliest certified
-instance of wild-beast baiting belongs to 186 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, and
-after the practice was introduced it did not reach at
-once the monstrous proportions of later times. Still,
-one does not imagine that the Roman of republican
-times was very tender-hearted towards animals. Cato
-related, as if he took a pride in it, that when he was
-Consul he left his war-horse in Spain to spare the
-public the cost of its conveyance to Rome. “Whether
-such things as these,” says Plutarch, who tells the story,
-“are instances of greatness or littleness of soul, let the
-reader judge for himself!” When the infatuation for
-the shows in the arena was at its height, the Romans
-felt an enormous interest in animals: indeed, there
-were moments when they thought of nothing else. It
-was an interest which went along with indifference to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>their sufferings; it may be said to have been worse
-than no interest at all, but it existed and to ignore it,
-as most writers have done, is to make the explicable
-inexplicable. If the only attraction of these shows
-had been their cruelty we should have to conclude that
-the Romans were all afflicted with a rare though not
-unknown form of insanity. Much the same was true
-of the gladiatorial shows. Up to a certain point, what
-led people to them was what leads people to a football
-match or an assault-at-arms. Beyond that point—well,
-beyond it there entered the element that makes
-the tiger in man, but for the most part it was inconscient.</p>
-
-<div id='i047' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i047.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>LION BEING LED FROM THE ARENA BY A SLAVE.<br /><span class='small'>(<i>Nennig Mosaic.</i>)</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>When we see Pola or Verona or Nîmes; when we
-tread the crowded streets to the Roman Colosseum or
-traverse the deserted high-road to Spanish Italica;
-most of all, when we watch coming nearer and nearer
-across the wilderness between Kairouan and El Djem
-the magnificent pile that stands outlined against the
-African sky—we all say the same thing: “What a
-wonderful race the Romans were!” It is an exclamation
-that forces itself to the lips of the most ignorant
-as to those of the scholar or historical student. At
-such moments, it may be true, that the less we think
-of the games of the arena the better; the remembrance
-of them forms a disturbing element in the majesty of
-the scene. But they cannot be put out of mind entirely,
-and if we do think of them, it is desirable that we
-should think of them correctly. It so happens that it
-is possible to reconstruct them into a lifelike picture.
-There exists one, though, as far as I know, only one,
-faithful, vivid, and complete contemporary representation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>of the Roman Games. This is the superb mosaic
-pavement which was discovered in the middle of the
-last century by a peasant striking on the hard surface
-with his spade, at the village of Nennig, not far from
-the Imperial city of Treves. The observer of this
-mosaic perceives at once that the games were of the
-nature of a “variety” entertainment. There was the
-music which picturesque-looking performers played on
-a large horn and on a sort of organ. (The horn closely
-resembles the pre-historic horns which are preserved in
-the National Museum at Copenhagen, where they were
-blown with inspiring effect before the members of the
-Congress of Orientalists in 1908.) There was the
-bloodless contest between a short and tall athlete, armed
-differently with stick and whip. In the central division,
-because the most important, is shown the mortal
-earnest of the gladiatorial fight, strictly controlled
-by the Games-master. In the sexagion above this is
-a hardly less deadly struggle between a man and a
-bear: the bear has got the man under him but is being
-whipped off so that the “turn” may not end too quickly,
-and, perhaps, also to give the more expensive victim
-another chance. To the right hand, a gladiator who has
-run his lance through the neck of a panther, holds up
-his hand to boast the victory and claim applause:
-the dying panther tries vainly to free itself from the
-weapon. To the left is a fight between a leopard and
-an unfortunate wild ass, which has already received a
-terrible wound in its side and is now having its head
-drawn down between the fore-paws of the leopard. I
-hear that in beast-fights organised by Indian princes,
-these unequal combatants are still pitted against each
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>other. Lastly, the Nennig Mosaic depicts a fat lion
-that has also conquered a wild ass, of which the head
-alone seems to remain: it has been inferred, though I
-think rashly, that the lion has eaten up all the rest; at
-any rate he now seems at peace with the world and is
-being led back to his cage by a slave.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Everything is quiet, orderly, and a model of good
-management. The custodian of the little museum
-told me that the (surprisingly few) visitors to Nennig
-were in the habit of remarking of this representation
-of the Roman Games that it made them understand
-for the first time how the cultivated Romans could
-endure such sights. Unhappily, conventional propriety
-joined to the sanction of authority will make
-the majority of mankind endure anything that causes
-no danger or inconvenience to themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Except with a few, at whom their generation looks
-askance, the sense of cruelty more than any other
-moral sense is governed by habit, by convention.
-It is even subject to latitude and longitude; in Spain
-I was surprised to find that almost all the English
-and American women whom I met had been to, at
-least, one bull-fight. Insensibility spreads like a
-pestilence; new or revived forms of cruelty should
-be stopped at once or no one can say how far they
-will reach or how difficult it will be to abolish them.
-One might have supposed that the sublime self-sacrifice
-of the monk who threw himself between two
-combatants—which brought the tardy end of gladiatorial
-exhibitions in Christian Rome—would have
-saved the world for ever from that particular barbarity;
-but in the fourteenth century we actually
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>find gladiatorial shows come to life again and in full
-favour at Naples! This little-known fact is attested
-in Petrarch’s letters. Writing to Cardinal Colonna
-on December 1, 1343, the truly civilised poet
-denounces with burning indignation an “infernal
-spectacle” of which he had been the involuntary
-witness. His gay friends (there has been always a
-singular identity between fashion and barbarism)
-seem to have entrapped him into going to a place
-called Carbonaria, where he found the queen, the
-boy-king, and a large audience assembled in a sort
-of amphitheatre. Petrarch imagined that there was
-to be some splendid entertainment, but he had hardly
-got inside when a tall, handsome young man fell dead
-just below where he was standing, while the audience
-raised a shout of applause. He escaped from the
-place as fast as he could, horror-struck by the
-brutality of spectacle and spectators, and spurring
-his horse, he turned his back on the “accursed spot”
-with the determination to leave Naples as soon as
-possible. How can we wonder, he asks, that there
-are murders in the streets at night when in broad
-daylight, in the presence of the king, wretched
-parents see their sons stabbed and killed, and when
-it is considered dishonourable to be unwilling to
-present one’s throat to the knife just as if it were
-a struggle for fatherland or for the joys of Heaven?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Very curious was the action of the Vatican in this
-matter; Pope John XXII. excommunicated every
-one who took part in the games as actor or spectator,
-but since nobody obeyed the prohibition, it was
-rescinded by his successor, Benedict XII., to prevent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>the scandal of a perpetual disregard of a Papal
-ordinance. So they went on cutting each other’s
-throats with the tacit permission of the Church until
-King Charles of the Peace succeeded in abolishing
-the “sport.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The action of the Church in respect to bull-fights
-has been much the same; local opinion is generally
-recognised as too strong for opposition. The French
-bishops, however, did their best to prevent their
-introduction into the South of France, but they failed
-completely.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I have strayed rather far from the Roman shows,
-but the savagery of Christians in the fourteenth
-century (and after) should make us wonder less at
-Roman callousness. All our admiration is due to
-the few finer spirits who were repelled by the
-slaughter of man or beast to make a Roman’s
-holiday. Cicero said that he could never see what
-there was pleasurable in the spectacle of a noble
-beast struck to the heart by its merciless hunter or
-pitted against one of our weaker species! For a
-single expression of censure such as this which has
-come down to us, there must have been many of
-which we have no record. Of out-spoken censure
-there was doubtless little because violent condemnation
-of the arena would have savoured of treason
-to the State which patronised and supported the
-games just as Queen Elizabeth’s ministers supported
-bull-baiting.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Rome must have been one vast zoological garden,
-and viewing the strange animals was the first duty
-of the tourist. Pausanias was deeply impressed by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>the “Ethiopian bulls which they call rhinoceroses”
-and also by Indian camels in colour like leopards.
-He saw an all-white deer, and very much surprised
-he was to see it, but, to his subsequent regret, he
-forgot to ask where it came from. He was reminded
-of this white deer when he saw white blackbirds on
-Mount Cyllene in Arcadia. I remember a white
-blackbird which stayed in the garden of my old
-English home for more than two years: a wretched
-“sportsman” lay in wait for it when it wandered into
-a neighbouring field and shot it.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The feasibility of the transport of the hosts of
-animals destined to the arena will always remain a
-mystery. At the inauguration of the Colosseum,
-five thousand wild beasts and six thousand tame
-ones were butchered, nor was this the highest figure
-on a single occasion. Probably a great portion of the
-animals was sent by the Governors of distant provinces
-who wished to stand well with the home
-authorities. But large numbers were also brought
-over by speculators who sold them to the highest or
-the most influential bidder. One reason why Cassius
-murdered Julius Cæsar was that Cæsar had secured
-some lions which Cassius wished to present to the
-public. Every one who aimed at political power or
-even simply at being thought one of the “smart set”
-(the odious word suits the case) spent king’s ransoms
-on the public games. For vulgar ostentation the
-wealthy Roman world eclipsed the exploits of the
-modern millionaire. If any one deem this impossible,
-let him read, in the <i>Satyricon</i> of Petronius, the account
-of the fêtes to be given by a leader of fashion of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>name of Titus. Not merely gladiators, but a great
-number of freedmen would take part in them: it would
-be no wretched mock combat but a real carnage!
-Titus was so rich that he could afford such liberality.
-Contempt is poured upon the head of a certain
-Nobarnus who offered a spectacle of gladiators hired
-at a low price and so old and decrepit that a breath
-threw them over. They all ended by wounding themselves
-to stop the contest. You might as well have
-witnessed a mere cock-fight!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I should think that not more than one animal in
-three survived the voyage. This would vastly increase
-the total number. The survivors often arrived in such
-a pitiable state that they could not be presented in the
-arena, or that they had to be presented immediately
-to prevent them from dying too soon. Symmachus,
-last of the great nobles of Rome, who, blinded by
-tradition, thought to revive the glories of his beloved
-city by reviving its shame, graphically describes the
-anxieties of the preparations for one of these colossal
-shows on which he is said to have spent what would
-be about £80,000 of our money. He began a year in
-advance: horses, bears, lions, Scotch dogs, crocodiles,
-chariot-drivers, hunters, actors, and the best gladiators
-were recruited from all parts. But when the time
-drew near, nothing were ready. Only a few of the
-animals had come, and these were half dead of hunger
-and fatigue. The bears had not arrived and there was
-no news of the lions. At the eleventh hour the crocodiles
-reached Rome, but they refused to eat and had
-to be killed all at once in order that they might not
-die of hunger. It was even worse with the gladiators,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>who were intended to provide, as in all these beast
-shows, the crowning entertainment. Twenty-nine of
-the Saxon captives whom Symmachus had chosen on
-account of the well-known valour of their race,
-strangled one another in prison rather than fight to
-the death for the amusement of their conquerors.
-And Symmachus, with all his real elevation of mind,
-was moved to nothing but disgust by their sublime
-choice! Rome in her greatest days had gloried in
-these shows: how could a man be a patriot who set
-his face against customs which followed the Roman
-eagles round the world? How many times since then
-has patriotism been held to require the extinction of
-moral sense!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Sometimes the humanity of beasts put to shame
-the inhumanity of man. There was a lion, commemorated
-by Statius, which had “unlearnt murder
-and homicide,” and submitted of its own accord to
-a master “who ought to have been under its feet.”
-This lion went in and out of its cage and gently
-laid down unhurt the prey which it caught: it even
-allowed people to put their hands into its mouth. It
-was killed by a fugitive slave. The Senate and people
-of Rome were in despair, and Imperial Cæsar, who
-witnessed impassible the death of thousands of animals
-sent hither to perish from Africa, from Scythia, from
-the banks of the Rhine, had tears in his eyes for a
-single lion! In later Roman times a tame lion was
-a favourite pet: their masters led them about wherever
-they went, whether much to the gratification of the
-friends on whom they called is not stated.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Another instance of a gentle beast was that of a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>tiger into whose cage a live doe had been placed
-for him to eat. But the tiger was not feeling well
-and, with the wisdom of sick animals, he was observing
-a diet. So two or three days elapsed, during which
-the tiger made great friends with the doe and when he
-recovered his health and began to feel very hungry,
-instead of devouring his fellow-lodger he beat with his
-paws against the bars of the cage in sign that he
-wanted food. These stories were, no doubt, true,
-and there may have been truth also in the well-known
-story of the lion which refused to attack a
-man who had once succoured him. Animals have
-good memories.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One pleasanter feature of the circus was the exhibition
-of performing beasts. Though the exhibitors of such
-animals are now sometimes charged with cruelty, it
-cannot be denied that the public who goes to look at
-them is composed of just the people who are most
-fond of animals. All children delight in them because,
-to their minds, they seem a confirmation of the strong
-instinctive though oftenest unexpressed belief, which
-lurks in every child’s soul, that between man and animals
-there is much less difference than is the correct,
-“grown-up” opinion; this is a part of the secret lore of
-childhood which has its origins in the childhood of the
-world. The amiable taste for these exhibitions—in
-appearance, at least, so harmless—strikes one as
-incongruous in the same persons who revelled in
-slaughter. Such a taste existed, however, and when
-St. James said that there was not a single beast,
-bird or reptile which had not been tamed, he may
-have been thinking of the itinerant showmen’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>“learned” beasts which perambulated the Roman
-empire.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Horses and oxen were among the animals commonly
-taught to do tricks. I find no mention of
-monkeys as performing in the arena, though Apuleius
-says that in the spring fêtes of Isis, the forerunners of
-the Roman carnival, he saw a monkey with a straw hat
-and a Phrygian tunic—we can hardly keep ourselves
-from asking: <i>what had it done with the grind-organ?</i>
-But in spite of this startlingly modern apparition,
-monkeys do not seem to have been popular in
-Rome; I imagine even, that there was some fixed
-prejudice against them. The cleverest of all the
-animal performers were, of course, the dogs, and one
-showman had the ingenious idea of making a dog act
-a part in a comedy. The effects of a drug were tried
-on him, the plot turning on the suspicion that the drug
-was poisonous, while, in fact, it was only a narcotic.
-The dog took the piece of bread dipped in the liquid,
-swallowed it, and began to reel and stagger till he
-finally fell flat on the ground. He gave himself a
-last stretch and then seemed to expire, making no
-sign of life when his apparently dead body was
-dragged about the stage. At the right moment, he
-began to move very slightly as if waking out of a
-deep sleep; then he raised his head, looked round,
-jumped up and ran joyously to the proper person.
-The piece was played at the theatre of Marcellus
-in the reign of old Vespasian, and Cæsar himself
-was delighted. I wonder that no manager of our
-days has turned the incident to account; I never
-yet saw an audience serious enough not to become
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>young again at the sight of four-footed comedians.
-Even the high art-loving public at the Prince Regent’s
-theatre at Munich cannot resist a murmur of discreet
-merriment when the pack of beautiful stag-hounds led
-upon the stage in the hunting scene in “Tannhäuser”
-gravely wag their tails in time with the music!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The pet lions were only one example of the aberrations
-of pet-lovers in ancient Rome. Maltese lap-dogs
-became a scourge: Lucian tells the lamentable tale of
-a needy philosopher whom a fashionable lady cajoles
-into acting as personal attendant to her incomparable
-Mirrhina. The Maltese dog was an old fad; Theophrastus,
-in the portrait of an insufferable <i>élégant</i>,
-mentions that, when his pet dog dies, he inscribes
-“pure Maltese” on its tombstone.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Many were the birds that fell victims to the desire
-to keep them in richly ornamented cages in which they
-died of hunger, says Epictetus, sooner than be slaves.
-The canary which takes more kindly to captivity was
-unknown till it was brought to Italy in the sixteenth
-century. Parrots there were, but Roman parrots were
-not long-lived: they shared the common doom: “To
-each his sufferings, all are <i>pets</i>.” The parrots of
-Corinna and of Melior which ought to have lived to a
-hundred or, at any rate, to have had the chance of
-dying of grief at the loss of their possessors (as a
-parrot did that I once knew), enjoyed fame and fortune
-for as brief a span as Lesbia’s sparrow. Melior’s
-parrot not only had brilliant green feathers but also
-many accomplishments which are described by its
-master’s friend, the poet Statius. On one occasion, it
-sat up half the night at a banquet, hopping from one
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>guest to another and talking in a way that excited
-great admiration; it even shared the good fare and on
-the morrow it died—which was less than surprising.
-I came across an old-fashioned criticism of this poem
-in which Statius is scolded for showing so much
-genuine feeling about ... a parrot! The critic
-was right in one thing—the genuine feeling is there;
-those who have known what a companion a bird may
-be, will appreciate the little touch: “You never felt
-alone, dear Melior, with its open cage beside you!”
-Now the cage is empty; it is “<i>la cage sans oiseaux</i>”
-which Victor Hugo prayed to be spared from seeing.
-Some translator turned this into “a nest without birds,”
-because he thought that a cage without birds sounded
-unpoetical, but Victor Hugo took care of truth and
-left poetry to take of itself. And whatever may be
-the ethics of keeping cage birds, true it is that few
-things are more dismal than the sight of the little
-mute, tenantless dwelling which was yesterday alive
-with fluttering love.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We owe to Roman poets a good deal of information
-about dogs, and especially the knowledge that
-the British hound was esteemed superior to all others,
-even to the famous breed of Epirus. This is
-certified by Gratius Faliscus, a contemporary of Ovid.
-He described these animals as remarkably ugly, but
-incomparable for pluck. British bull-dogs were used
-in the Colosseum, and in the third century Nemesianus
-praised the British greyhound. Most of the
-valuable dogs were brought from abroad; it is to be
-inferred that the race degenerated in the climate of
-Rome, as it does now. Concha, whose epitaph was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>written by Petronius, was born in Gaul. While
-Martial’s too elaborate epitaph on “The Trusty
-Lydia” is often quoted and translated, the more
-sympathetic poem of Petronius has been overlooked.
-He tells the perfections of Concha in a simple,
-affectionate manner; like Lydia, she was a mighty
-huntress and chased the wild boar fearlessly through
-the dense forest. Never did chain hamper her liberty
-and never a blow fell on her shapely, snow-white
-form. She reposed softly, stretched on the breast of
-her master or mistress, and at night a well-made bed
-refreshed her tired limbs. If she lacked speech, she
-could make herself understood better than any of her
-kind—yet no one had reason to fear her bark. A
-hapless mother, she died when her little ones saw the
-light, and now a narrow marble slab covers the earth
-where she rests.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Cicero’s tribute to canine worth is well known:
-“Dogs watch for us faithfully; they love and worship
-their masters, they hate strangers, their powers of
-tracking by scent is extraordinary; great is their
-keenness in the chase: what can all this mean but
-that they were made for man’s advantage?” It
-was as natural to the Roman mind to regard man as
-the lord of creation as to regard the Roman as the
-lord of man. For the rest, his normal conception of
-animals differed little from that of Aristotle. Cicero
-says that the chief distinction between man and
-animals, is that animals look only to the present,
-paying little attention to the past and future, while
-man looks before and after, weighs causes and effects,
-draws analogies and views the whole path of life,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>preparing things needful for passing along it.
-Expressed in the key of antique optimism instead of
-in the key of modern pessimism, the judgment is the
-same as that of Burns in his lines to the field-mouse:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Still thou art blest, compared wi’ me!</div>
- <div class='line in1'>The present only touches thee:</div>
- <div class='line in1'>But, och! I backward cast my e’e</div>
- <div class='line in1'>On prospects drear!</div>
- <div class='line in1'>And forward, tho’ I canna see,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>I guess and fear.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>And of Leopardi in the song of the Syrian shepherd
-to his flock:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“O flock that liest at rest, O blessed thou</div>
- <div class='line in1'>That knowest not thy fate, however hard,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>How utterly I envy thee!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Cicero’s more virile mind would have spurned
-this craving to renounce the distinguishing human
-privilege for the bliss of ignorance.</p>
-<p class='c008'>Wherever we fix the limits of animal intelligence,
-there is no question of man’s obligation to treat sentient
-creatures with humanity. This was recognised
-by Marcus Aurelius when he wrote the golden
-precept: “As to animals which have no reason ...
-do thou, since thou hast reason, and they have
-none, make use of them with a generous and liberal
-spirit.” Here we have the broadest application of the
-narrowest assumption. From the time, at least, that
-Rome was full of Greek teachers, there were always
-some partisans of a different theory altogether. What
-Seneca calls “the illustrious but unpopular school
-of Pythagoras” had a little following which made up
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>by its sincere enthusiasm for the fewness of its
-members. Seneca’s own master Sotio was of this
-school, and his teaching made a deep impression
-on the most illustrious of his pupils, who sums up
-its chief points with his usual lucidity: Pythagoras
-gave men a horror of crime and of parricide by telling
-them that they might unawares kill or devour their
-own fathers; all sentient beings are bound together
-in a universal kinship and an endless transmutation
-causes them to pass from one form to another; no
-soul perishes or ceases its activity save in the moment
-when it changes its envelope. Sotio took for granted
-that the youths who attended his classes came to him
-with minds unprepared to receive these doctrines, and
-he aimed more at making them accept the consequences
-of the theory than the theory itself. What if
-they believed none of it? What if they did not
-believe that souls passed through different bodies and
-that the thing we call death is a transmigration?
-That in the animal which crops the grass or which
-peoples the sea, a soul resides which once was human?
-That, like the heavenly bodies, every soul traverses
-its appointed circle? That nothing in this world
-perishes, but only changes scene and place? Let
-them remember, nevertheless, that great men have
-believed all this: “Suspend your judgment, and
-in the meantime, respect whatever has life.” If the
-doctrine be true, then to abstain from animal flesh
-is to spare oneself the committal of crimes; if it be
-false, such abstinence is commendable frugality; “all
-you lose is the food of lions and vultures.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Sotio himself was a thorough Pythagorean, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>there was another philosopher of the name of Sestius
-who was an ardent advocate of abstinence from
-animal food without believing in the transmigration
-of souls. He founded a sort of brotherhood, the
-members of which took the pledge to abide by this
-rule. He argued that since plenty of other wholesome
-food existed, what need was there for man to shed
-blood? Cruelty must become habitual when people
-devour flesh to indulge the palate: “let us reduce the
-elements of sensuality.” Health would be also the
-gainer by the adoption of a simpler and less various
-diet. Sotio used these arguments of one whom he
-might have called an unbeliever, to reinforce his own.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Seneca does not say if many of his schoolfellows
-were as much impressed as he was by this teaching.
-For a year he abstained from flesh, and when he got
-accustomed to it, he even found the new diet easy and
-agreeable. His mind seemed to grow more active.
-That he was allowed to eat what he liked without
-encountering interference or ridicule shows the considerable
-freedom in which the youth of Rome was
-brought up: this made them men. But at the
-beginning of the reign of Tiberius there went forth
-an edict against foreign cults, and abstinence from
-flesh was held to show a leaning towards religious
-novelties. For this reason the elder Seneca advised
-his son to give up vegetarianism. Seneca honestly
-confesses that he went back to better fare without
-much urging; yet he always remained frugal, and
-he seems never to have felt quite sure that his youthful
-experiment did not agree best with the counsels of
-perfection.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>
- <h2 id='ch04' class='c006'>IV<br /> <br />PLUTARCH THE HUMANE</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c007'>PLUTARCH was the Happy Philosopher—and
-there were not many that were happy. A
-life of travel, a life of teaching, an honoured old age
-as the priest of Apollo in his native village in Bœotia:
-what kinder fate than this? He was happy in the
-very obscurity which seems to have surrounded his
-life at Rome, for it saved him from spite and envy.
-He was happy, if we may trust the traditional effigies,
-even in that thing which likewise is a good gift of
-the gods, a gracious outward presence exactly corresponding
-with the soul within. A painter who wished
-to draw a type of illimitable compassionateness would
-choose the face attributed to Plutarch. Finally, this
-gentle sage is happy still after eighteen hundred years
-in doing more than any other writer of antiquity
-to build up character by diffusing the radiance of
-noble deeds. Nevertheless, were he to come back
-to life he would have one disappointment, and that
-would be to find how few people read his essays
-on kindness to animals: they would stand a better
-chance of being read if they were printed alone,
-but to arrive at them you must dive in the formidable
-depths of the <i>Moralia</i>: a very storehouse of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>interesting things, but hardly attractive to the general
-in a hurried age. Some of its treasures have been
-revealed by Dr. Oakesmith in his admirable monograph
-on “The Religion of Plutarch.” The mine
-of nobly humane sentiment remains, however, almost
-unexplored.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The essays devoted to animals are three in number,
-with the titles: “Whether terrestrial or aquatic
-animals are the more intelligent?” “That animals
-have the use of Reason”; “On the habit of eating
-flesh.” The two first are in the form of dialogues, and
-the third is a familiar discourse, a <i>conférence</i>, such
-as those which now form a popular feature of the
-Roman season. Through these studies there runs
-a vein of transparent sincerity: we feel that they were
-composed not to show the author’s cleverness or to
-startle by paradoxes, but with the real wish to make
-the young men for whom they were intended a little
-more humane. Plutarch did not take up the claims
-of animals because good “copy” could be made
-out of them. As his wish is to persuade, he does not
-ask for the impossible. It is the voice of the highly
-civilised Greek addressing the young barbarians of
-Rome: for to the Greek’s inmost mind the Roman
-must have always remained somewhat of a barbarian.
-There is great restraint: though Plutarch must have
-loathed the games of the arena, he speaks of them
-with guarded deprecation. He makes one of his
-characters say that the chase (which he did not himself
-like) was useful in keeping people from worse things,
-“such as the combats of gladiators.” He is genuinely
-anxious by all means to persuade some, and for this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>reason he refrains from scaring away his hearers
-or readers by extreme demands. Though he has
-a strong personal repugnance to flesh-eating, he does
-not insist on every one sharing it. Anyhow, he says,
-Be as humane as you can; cause as little suffering
-as is possible; no doubt it is not easy, all at once,
-to eradicate a habit which has taken hold of our
-sensual nature, but, at least, let us deprive it of its
-worst features. Let us eat flesh if we must, but for
-hunger, not for self-indulgence; let us kill animals
-but still be compassionate—not heaping up outrages
-and tortures “as, alas, is done every day.” He
-mentions how swans were blinded and then fattened
-with unnatural foods, which is only a little worse than
-things that are done now. What is certain is, that
-extreme and habitual luxury in food has spelt decadence
-from the banquets of Babylon downwards.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Plutarch goes on to ask whether it is impossible
-to amuse ourselves without all these excesses? Shall
-we expire on the spot, are the resources of men
-totally exhausted, if the table be not supplied with
-<i>pâtés de foies gras</i>? Is life not worth living without
-slaughter to make a feast, slaughter to find a pastime;
-cannot we exist without asking of certain animals that
-they show courage, and fight in spite of themselves,
-or that they massacre other animals which have not
-the natural energy to defend themselves? Must we
-for our sport tear the mother from the little ones
-which she suckles or hatches? Plutarch implores
-us not to imitate the children of whom Bion speaks,
-who amused themselves by throwing stones at the
-frogs, but the frogs were not at all amused—they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>simply died. “When we take our recreation, those
-who help in the fun ought to share in it and be
-amused as well.” Thus does the kind Greek
-philosopher exhort us</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Never to blend our pleasure or our pride</div>
- <div class='line in1'>With sorrow of the meanest thing that feels.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>Did Wordsworth know that his thought had been
-expressed so long before? It matters little; the
-counsels of mercy never grow old.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>With good sense and in that spirit of compromise
-which is really the basis of morality, Plutarch argued
-that cruelty to animals does not lie in the use but
-in the abuse of them; it is not cruel to kill them
-if they are incompatible with our own existence; it
-is not cruel to tame and train to our service those
-made by nature gentle and loving towards man which
-become the companions of our toil according to their
-natural aptitude. “Horse and ass are given to us,”
-as Prometheus says, “to be submissive servants and
-fellow-workers; dogs to be guardians and watchers,
-goats and sheep to give us milk and wool.” (Cow’s
-milk seems to have been rarely drunk, as is still
-the case in the Mediterranean islands and in Greece.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“The Stoics,” says Plutarch, “made sensibility
-towards animals a preparation to humanity and compassion
-because the gradually formed habit of the
-lesser affections is capable of leading men very far.”
-In the “Lives” he insists on the same point:
-“Kindness and beneficence should be extended to
-creatures of every species, and these still flow from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>the breast of a well-natured man as streams that issue
-from the living fountain. A good man will take care
-of his horses and dogs not only when they are young,
-but when old and past service.... We certainly
-ought not to treat living creatures like shoes or
-household goods, which, when worn out with use,
-we throw away, and were it only to learn benevolence
-to human kind, we should be merciful to other
-creatures. For my own part I would not sell even
-an old ox.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Here I may say that Plutarch should have thanked
-Fate which made him a philosopher and not a farmer.
-For how, alas, can the farmer escape from becoming
-the accomplice of that which the Italian poet apostrophizes
-in the words—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Natura, illaudabil maraviglia,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Che per uccider partorisci e nutri!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>How can well-cared-for old age be the lot of more
-than a very few of the animals that serve us so faithfully?
-The exception must console us for the rule.
-The beautiful story of one such exception is told by
-both Plutarch and Pliny the Elder. When Pericles
-was building the Parthenon a great number of mules
-were employed in drawing the stones up the hill of
-the Acropolis. Some of them became too old for the
-work, and these were set at liberty to pasture at large.
-But one old mule gravely walked every day to the
-stone-yard and accompanied, or rather led, the procession
-of mule-carts to and fro. The Athenians
-were delighted with its devotion to duty, and decided
-that it should be supported at the expense of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>State for the rest of its days. According to Pliny,
-the mule of the Parthenon lived till it had attained
-its eightieth year, a record that seems startling even
-having regard to the proverbial longevity of pensioners.
-Plutarch does not mention it, perhaps,
-because he had some doubts about its accuracy. In
-other respects the story may be accepted as literally
-true; and does it not do us good to think of it, as we
-look at the most glorious work of man’s hands bathed
-in the golden afterglow? Does it not do us good to
-think that at the zenith of her greatness Athens</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in22'>“... Mother of arts</div>
- <div class='line'>And eloquence, native to famous wits”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>stooped—nay, rose—to generous appreciation of the
-willing service of an old mule?</p>
-<p class='c008'>In dealing with animal psychology Plutarch makes
-a strong point of the inherent improbability that,
-while feeling and imagination are the common share
-of all animated beings, reason should be apportioned
-only to a single species. “How can you say such
-things? Is not every one convinced that no being
-can feel without also possessing understanding, that
-there is not a single animal which has not a sort
-of thought and reason just as he comes into the
-world with senses and instinct?” Nature, which is
-said to make all things from one cause and to one
-end, has not given sensibility to animals simply in
-order that they should be capable of sensations.
-Since some things are good for them, and others bad,
-they would not exist for a single instant if they did
-not know how to seek the good and shun the bad.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>The animal learns by his senses what things are good
-and what are bad for him, but when, in consequence
-of these indications, of his senses, it is a question of
-taking and seeking what is useful and of avoiding and
-flying from what is harmful, these same animals
-would have no means of action if Nature had not
-made them up to a certain point capable of reason,
-of judgment, of memory, and of attention. Because,
-if you completely deprived them of the spirit of
-conjecture, memory, foresight, preparation, hope, fear,
-desire, grief, they would cease to derive the slightest
-utility from the eyes or ears which they possess.
-Plutarch might have added that a mindless animal
-would resemble not a child or a savage, but an idiot.
-He does point out that they would be better off with
-no senses at all than with the power of feeling and no
-power of acting upon it. But, he adds, could sensation
-exist without intelligence? He quotes a line
-from I do not know what poet:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“The spirit only hears and sees—all else</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Is deaf and blind.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>If we look with our eyes at a page of writing without
-seizing the meaning of a word of it, because our
-thoughts are preoccupied, is it not the same as if we
-had never seen it? But even were we to admit that
-the senses suffice to their office, would that explain
-the phenomena of memory and foresight? Would
-the animal fear things, not present, which harm him,
-or desire things, not present, which are to his advantage?
-Would he prepare his retreat or shelter or
-devise snares by which to catch other animals? Only
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>one theory can be applied to mind in man and mind
-in animals.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It will be seen from this summary that Plutarch
-traversed the whole field of speculation on animal
-intelligence which has not really extended its
-boundaries since the time when he wrote, though
-it is possible that we are now on the verge, if not
-of new discoveries, at least of the admission of a new
-point of view. The study of the dual element in
-man, the endeavour to establish a line of demarcation
-between the conscious and subliminal self, may lead
-to the inquiry, how far the conscious self corresponds
-with what was meant, when speaking of animals,
-by “reason,” and the subliminal self with what
-was meant by “instinct”? But the use of a
-new terminology would not alter the conclusion:
-call it reason, consciousness, spirit; some of it the
-“paragon of animals” shares with his poor relations.
-The case is put in a homely way but not without
-force by the heroine of a forgotten novel by Lamartine:
-the speaker is an old servant who is in despair
-at losing her goldfinch: “Ah! On dit que les bêtes
-n’ont pas l’âme,” she says. “Je ne veux pas offenser
-le bon Dieu, mais si mon pauvre oiseau n’avait pas
-d’âme, avec quoi done n’aurait-il tant aimée? Avec
-les plumes ou avec les pattes, peut-être?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Plutarch reviews—to reject—the “Automata”
-argument, which had already some supporters. Certain
-naturalists, he says, try to prove that animals
-feel neither pleasure nor anger nor yet fear; that the
-nightingale does not meditate his song, that the bee
-has no memory, that the swallow makes no preparations,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>that the lion never grows angry, nor is the stag
-subject to fear. Everything, according to these
-theorists, is merely delusive appearance. They might
-as well assert that animals cannot see or hear;
-that they only appear to see or hear; that they have
-no voice, only the semblance of a voice; in short, that
-they are not alive but only seem to live.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The moral aspects of any problem are those which
-to a moralist seem the most important, and Plutarch
-did not seek to deny the force of the objection: If
-virtue be the true aim of reason, how can Nature
-have bestowed reason on creatures which cannot
-direct it to its true object? But he denied the
-postulate that animals have no ethical potentialities.
-If the love of men for their children is granted to be
-the corner-stone of all human society, shall we say
-that there is no merit in the affection of animals for
-their offspring? He sums up the matter by remarking
-that the limitation of a faculty does not show that
-it does not exist. To pretend that every being not
-endowed at birth with perfect reason is, by its nature,
-incapable of reason of any kind, would be to ignore
-the fact that although reason is a natural gift the
-degree in which it is possessed by any individual
-depends on his training and on his teachers. Perfect
-reason is possessed by none because none has perfect
-rectitude and moral excellence.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Animals exhibit examples of sociability, courage,
-resource, and again, of cowardice and viciousness.
-Why do we not say of one tree that it is less
-teachable than another, as we say that a sheep is
-less teachable than a dog? It is, of course, because
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>plants cannot think, and where the faculty of thought
-is wholly wanting, there cannot be more or less quickness
-or slowness, more or less of good qualities or
-of bad.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Yet it must be allowed that man’s intelligence is
-amazingly superior to that of animals. But what
-does that prove? Do not some animals leave man
-far behind in the keenness of their sight and the
-sharpness of their hearing? Shall we say, therefore,
-that man is blind or deaf? We have some strength
-in our hands and in our bodies although we are not
-elephants or camels. In the same way, we should be
-careful not to infer that animals lack all reasoning
-faculties from the fact that their intelligence is duller
-and more defective than man’s. “Boatfuls” of true
-stories can be cited to show the docility and special
-aptitudes of the different children of creation. And
-a very amusing occupation it is, says Plutarch, for
-young people to collect such stories. In the course
-of his work, he sets them a good example, for he
-brings together a real “boatful” of anecdotes of
-clever beasts, but at this point he contents himself
-with observing that madness in dogs and other animals
-would be alone sufficient to show that they had
-some mind: otherwise, how could they go out of it?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The stoics who taught the strictest humanity to
-animals rejected, nevertheless, the supposition that
-animals had reason, for how, they asked, can such a
-theory be reconciled with the idea of eternal justice?
-Would it not make abstinence from their flesh
-imperative and entail consequences which would
-make our life impracticable? If we were to give
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>up using animals for our own purposes, we should
-be reduced ourselves almost to the condition of
-brutes. “What works would be left for us to do
-by land or sea, what industries to cultivate, what
-embellishments of our way of living, if we regarded
-animals as reasonable beings and our fellow-creatures,
-and hence adopted the rule (which, clearly, would be
-only proper) to do them no harm and to study their
-convenience.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Many a sensitive modern soul has pondered over
-this crux without finding a satisfactory solution.
-Plutarch says that Empedocles and Heraclites
-admitted the injustice, and laid it to the door of
-Nature which permits or ordains a state of war and
-necessity, in which nothing is accomplished without
-the weaker going to the wall. For himself, he would
-propose to those “who, instead of disputing, gently
-follow and learn” the better way out of the difficulty—which
-was introduced by the Sages of Antiquity,
-then long lost, and found again by Pythagoras. This
-better way is to use animals as our helpers but to
-refrain from taking life.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Plutarch here evades a stumbling-block which he
-does not remove. The dialogue, as it has come down
-to us, breaks off suddenly after one final objection:
-how can beings have reason which have no notion
-of God? Some scholars imagine that Plutarch
-hurried the dialogue to a close because this query
-completely baffled him; others (and they are the
-majority) attribute the abrupt finish to the loss of
-the concluding part. Would Plutarch have contented
-himself with citing the analogy of young children
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>who, although not without the elements of reason,
-know very little of theology, or would not he rather
-have contended with Celsus, that animals <i>do</i> possess
-religious knowledge? If he took the last course, it
-may well be that the disappearance of the end of the
-dialogue was not accidental. At Ravenna there is a
-terrible mosaic, alive with wrath and energy, which
-shows a Christ we know not (for He looks like a
-grand Inquisitor) thrusting into the flames heretical
-books. As I looked at it, I thought how many
-valuable classical works, vaguely suspected on the
-score of faith or morals, must have shared the fate
-of “unorthodox” polemics in the merry bonfires
-which this mosaic holds up for imitation!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The argument “that it sounds unnatural to ascribe
-reason to creatures ignorant of God,” suggests familiarity
-with a passage in Epictetus (Plutarch’s contemporary),
-where he says that man alone was made
-to have the understanding which recognises God—a
-recognition which he elsewhere explains by the
-hypothesis that every man has in him a small portion
-of the divine. Having this intuitive sense, man is
-bound, without ceasing, to praise his Creator, and,
-since others are blind and neglect to do it, Epictetus
-will do it on behalf of all: “for what else can I do,
-a lame old man, than sing hymns to God? If I was
-a nightingale, I should do the part of a nightingale;
-if I were a swan, I would do like a swan; but now
-I am a <i>rational creature</i>, and I ought to praise God:
-this is my work; I do it, nor will I desert this post
-so long as I am allowed to keep it, and I exhort
-you to join in this song.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>The words are among the sweetest and most solemn
-that ever issued from human lips; yet those who
-care to pursue the subject farther may submit that
-there was some one before Epictetus, who called
-upon the beasts, the fishes and the fowls to join him
-in blessing the name of the Lord, and there was
-some one after him who commanded the birds of
-the air to sing the praises of their Maker and
-Preserver! It is strange that, despite the hard-and-fast
-line which the moulders of the Catholic Faith
-were at pains to trace between man and beast, if
-we would find the most emphatic assertion of their
-common privilege of praising God, we must leave
-the Pagan world and take up the Bible and the
-“Fioretti” of St. Francis!</p>
-
-<div id='i074' class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/i074.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='small'>(<i>Photo: Sommer.</i>)</span><br />BACCHUS RIDING ON A PANTHER.<br />Naples Museum.<br /><span class='small'>(<i>Mosaic found at Pompeii.</i>)</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Of the anecdotes with which Plutarch enlivens
-his pages, he says himself that he puts on one side
-fable and mythology, and limits his choice to the
-“all true” category, and if he appears to be at times
-a little credulous, one may well believe that he is
-always candid. Just as in his “Lives” he tried to
-ennoble his readers by making noble deeds interesting,
-so in his writings on animals, he tried to make
-people humane by making his dumb clients interesting.
-He did not start with thinking the task an
-easy one, for he was convinced that man is more
-cruel than the most savage of wild beasts. But he
-aims at pouring, if not a full draught of mercy, at
-least some drops, into the heart that never felt a
-pang, the mind that never gave a thought. Many
-of his stories are taken straight from the common
-street life of the Rome of his day, as that of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>elephant which passed every day along a certain
-street where the schoolboys teased it by pricking
-its trunk with their writing stylets (men may come
-and go, but the small boy is a fixed quantity!). At
-last, the elephant, losing patience, picked up one
-of his tormentors and hoisted him in the air; a cry
-of horror rose from the spectators, no one doubted
-that in another moment the child would be dashed
-to the ground. But the elephant set the offender
-down very gently and walked away, thinking, no
-doubt, that a good fright had been a sufficient punishment.
-The Syrian elephant, of whom Plutarch tells
-how he made his master understand that in his
-absence he had been cheated of half his rations,
-was not cleverer than some of his kind on service
-in India, who would not begin to eat till all three
-cakes which formed their rations were set before
-each of them—a fact that was told me by the officer
-whose duty it was to preside at their dinner.
-Plutarch speaks of counting oxen that knew when
-the number of turns was finished which constituted
-their daily task at a saw-mill: they refused to perform
-one more turn than the appointed figure. As
-an instance of the discrimination of animals, he tells
-how Alexander’s horse, Bucephalus, when unsaddled,
-would allow the grooms to mount him, but when
-he had on all his rich caparisons, no one on earth
-could get on his back except his royal master.
-There is no doubt that animals take notice of dress.
-I have been told that when crinolines were worn,
-all the dogs barked at any woman not provided
-with one. Plutarch was among the earliest to observe
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>that animals discover sooner than man when
-ice will not bear, which he thinks that they find
-out by noticing if there is any sound of running
-water. He says truly that to draw such an inference
-presupposes not only sharp ears, but a real power
-of weighing cause and effect. Plutarch mentions
-foxes as particularly clever in this respect, but dogs
-possess the same gift. The French Ambassador
-at Rome—who, like all persons of superior intelligence,
-is very fond of animals—told me the following
-story. One winter day, when he was French
-Minister at Munich, he went alone with his gun and
-his dog to the banks of the Isar. Having shot a
-snipe, he ordered the dog to go on to the ice to
-fetch it, but, to his surprise, the animal, which
-had never disobeyed him, refused. Annoyed at its
-obstinacy, he went himself on to the ice, which immediately
-gave way, and had he not been a good
-swimmer he might not be now at the Palazzo Farnese.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The two creatures that have been most praised
-for their wisdom are the elephant and the ant, but
-of the ant’s admirers from Solomon to Lord Avebury,
-not one was ever so enthusiastic as Plutarch. Horace,
-indeed, had discoursed of her foresight: “She carries
-in her mouth whatever she is able, and piles up her
-heap, by no means ignorant or careless of the future;
-then, when Aquarius saddens the inverted year, never
-does she creep abroad, wisely making use of the
-stores which were provided beforehand.” But such
-a tribute sounds cold beside Plutarch’s praise of her
-as the tiny mirror in which the greatest marvels of
-Nature are reflected, a drop of the purest water,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>containing every Virtue, and, above all, what Homer
-calls “the sweetness of loving qualities.” Ants, he
-declares, show the utmost solicitude for their comrades,
-alive and dead. They exhibit their ingenuity
-by biting off the ends of grains to prevent them
-from sprouting and so spoiling the provender. He
-speaks, though not from his own observation, of
-the beautiful interior arrangements of ant-hills which
-had been examined by naturalists who divided the
-mount into sections, “A thing I cannot approve of!”
-Tender-hearted philosopher, who had a scruple about
-upsetting an ant-hill! Of other insects, he most
-admires the skill of spiders and bees. It is said
-that the bees of Crete, when rounding a certain
-promontory, carried tiny stones as ballast to avoid
-being blown away by the wind. I have seen more
-than once a tiny stone hanging from the spider-threads
-which crossed and re-crossed an avenue—it
-seemed to me that these were designed to steady the
-suspension bridge.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Plutarch insists that animals teach themselves even
-things outside the order of their natural habits, a
-fact which will be confirmed by all who have observed
-them closely. Just as no two animals have the same
-disposition, so does each one, though in greatly varying
-degree, display some little arts or accomplishments
-peculiar to itself. Plutarch mentions a trained
-elephant that was seen practising its steps when it
-thought that no one was looking. But he allots
-the palm of self-culture to an incomparable magpie
-that belonged to a barber whose shop faced the
-temple called the Agora of the Greeks. The bird
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>could imitate to perfection any sort of sound, cry or
-tune; it was renowned in the whole quarter. Now
-it happened one morning that the funeral of a wealthy
-citizen went past, accompanied by a very fine band
-of trumpeters which performed an elaborate piece
-of music. After that day, to every one’s surprise,
-the magpie grew mute! Had it become deaf or
-dumb or both! Endless were the surmises, and
-what was not the general amazement when, at last,
-it broke its long silence by bursting forth with a flood
-of brilliant notes the exact reproduction of the difficult
-trills and cadences executed by the funeral band!
-Evidently it had been practising it in its head all
-that while, and only produced it when it had got it
-quite perfect. Several Romans and several Greeks
-witnessed the facts and could vouch for the truth
-of the narrative.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The swallow’s nest and the nightingale’s song
-make Plutarch pause and wonder; he believes, with
-Aristotle, that the old nightingales teach the young
-ones, remarking that nightingales reared in captivity
-never sing so well as those that have profited by
-the parental lessons. He gives a word to the dove
-of Deucalion which returned a first time to the ark
-because the deluge continued, but disappeared when
-it was set free again, the waters having subsided.
-Plutarch confesses, however, that this is “mythical,”
-and though he admits that birds deserved the name
-by which Euripides calls them of “Messengers of
-the gods,” he is inclined to attribute their warnings
-to the direct intervention of an over-ruling deity of
-whom they are the inconscient agents.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>It is a pleasure to find that Plutarch had a high
-appreciation of the hedgehog—the charming “urchin”
-which represents to many an English child an epitome
-of wild nature, friendly yet untamed, familiar
-yet mysterious. He does not say that it milks cows—a
-calumny which is an article of faith with the
-British ploughman—but he relates that when the
-grapes are ripe, the mother urchin goes under the
-vines and shakes the plants till some of the grapes
-fall off; then, rolling herself over them, she attaches
-a number of grapes to her spines and so marches
-back to the hole where she keeps her nurslings.
-“One day,” says Plutarch, “when we were all together,
-we had the chance of seeing this with our
-own eyes—it looked as if a bunch of grapes was
-shuffling along the ground, so thickly covered was
-the animal with its booty.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Dogs that threw themselves on their masters’ pyre,
-dogs that caused the arrest of assassins or thieves,
-dogs that remained with and protected the bodies
-of their dead masters, clever dogs, devoted dogs,
-magnanimous dogs—these will be all found in Plutarch’s
-gallery. How high-minded, he says, it is in
-the dog when, as Homer advises, you lay down your
-stick, even an angry dog ceases to attack you. He
-praises the affectionate regard which many have
-shown in giving decent burial to the dogs they
-cherished, and recalls how Xantippus of old, whose
-dog swam by his galley to Salamis when the
-Athenians were forced to abandon their city, buried
-the faithful creature on a promontory which “to this
-day” is known as the Dog’s Grave. Very desolate
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>was the case of the other animals that ran up and
-down distraught when their masters embarked, like
-the poor cats and dogs which helped the English
-soldiers in the block-houses to while away the weary
-hours, and which, by superior orders, were left to
-their fate, though their comrades in khaki were
-anxious enough to carry them away. As a proof
-of the affection of the Greeks for their dogs Plutarch
-might have spoken of the not uncommon representation
-of them on the <i>Stelæ</i> in the family group which
-brings together all the dearest ties between life and
-death.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One animal is missing from Plutarch’s portrait
-gallery—the cat, to which he only concedes the
-ungracious allusion “that man had not the excuse
-of hunger for eating flesh, like the weasel or
-cat.” Can we make good the omission from other
-sources?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There is a general notion that cats “were almost unknown
-to Greek and Roman antiquity”—these are the
-words of so well-informed a writer as M. S. Reinach.
-Yet instances exist of paintings of cats on Greek
-vases of the fifth century, and I was interested to see
-in the Museum at Athens a well-carved cat on a stele.
-Aristotle, who, like Plutarch, mentions cats in connexion
-with weasels (both, he says, catch birds),
-reckons the time they live at six years, less than
-half the life of an average modern cat; this may
-indicate that though known, they were not then
-acclimatised in Europe. Æsop has four fables of
-cats: 1. A cat dressed as a physician offers his
-services to an aviary of birds; they are declined.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>2. A cat seeks an excuse for eating a cock; he fails
-to find the excuse, but eats the cock all the same.
-3. A cat pretends to be dead so that mice may
-come near her. 4. A cat falls in love with a handsome
-young man and induces Venus to change her
-into a lovely maiden. But on a mouse coming into
-the room, she scampers after it. Venus, being displeased,
-changes her back into a cat. This belongs
-to a large circle of folk-tales, and probably all these
-fables came from the East.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Herodotus tells as a “very marvellous thing” that
-cats are apt to rush back into a burning house, and
-that the Egyptians try to save them, even at the risk
-of their lives, but rarely succeed: hence great lamentation.
-Also, that if a cat die in a house all the
-dwellers in it shave their eyebrows; “the cats, when
-they are dead, they carry for burial to the city of
-Bubastis.” The Egyptian name for light (and for
-cat) is <i>Mau</i>, and the inference is irresistible, that
-the Egyptians supposed the cat to be constantly
-apostrophizing the sacred light of which she was
-the symbol. Nothing shows the strength of tradition
-better than the existence of an endowment at
-Cairo for the feeding and housing of homeless
-cats.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If the cat in Europe had been a rarity so great
-as most people think, it would have been more highly
-prized. It seems nearer the truth to say that it
-was not admired. Its incomplete domestication which
-attracts us, did not attract the ancient world. Tame
-only so far as it suits their own purposes, cats
-patronize man, looking down upon him from a higher
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>plane, which, if only the house-top, they make a
-golden bar.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in14'>“Chat mystérieux,</div>
- <div class='line'>Chat séraphique, chat étrange ...</div>
- <div class='line'>Peut-être est-il fée, est-il dieu?”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Greeks and Romans preferred a plain animal to this
-half-elf, half-god.</p>
-<p class='c008'>The Greek comic writer, Anaxandrides, said to
-the Egyptians: “You weep if you see a cat ailing,
-but I like to kill and skin it.” The fear lest cats
-should be profanely treated in Europe led the
-Egyptians to do all they could to prevent their
-exportation; they even sent missions to the Mediterranean
-to ransom the cats borne into slavery and
-carry them back to Egypt. But these missions could
-not have reached the cats that had been taken inland,
-and as the animal increases rapidly, it may have been
-fairly common from early times. There is no doubt,
-however, that the number went up with a bound when
-Egypt became Christian, and every monk who came
-to Europe brought shoals of cats, the date corresponding
-with that of the first invasion of the rat in
-the trail of the Huns.</p>
-
-<div id='i082' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i082.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>BRONZE STATUE OF AN EGYPTIAN CAT.<br /><span class='small'>(<i>Collection of H.E. Monsieur Camille Barrère, French Ambassador at Rome.</i>)</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Antiquity regarded the cat, before all things, as a
-little beast of prey. Nearly every reference to it
-gives it this character. In the stele at Athens the
-cat is supposed to be looking at a bird-cage to which
-the man is pointing; the man holds a bird in his left
-hand, presumably the pet of the child who stands by
-him. It seems as if the cat meditated if it had not
-performed some fell deed. Seneca observed that
-young chickens feel an instinctive fear of the cat but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>not of the dog. The fine mosaic at Pompeii shows
-a tabby kitten in the act of catching a quail.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Only one ancient poet, by a slight magician-like
-touch, calls up a different vision: Theorcitus makes
-the voluble Praxinœ say to her maid: “Eunœ, pick
-up your work, and take care, lazy girl, how you
-leave it lying about again; the cats find it just the
-bed they like.” There—at last—is the cat we know!
-But after all, it is an Egyptian cat: a cat sure
-of her privileges, a cat who relies on her goddess
-prototype, and has but a modicum of respect for the
-chattering little Syracusan woman in whose house
-she condescends to reside. Such were not cats of
-ancient Greece and Rome, who, from being un-appreciated,
-fell back to the morals of the simple
-ravager.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>
- <h2 id='ch05' class='c006'>V<br /> <br />MAN AND HIS BROTHER</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c007'>TRADITIONAL beliefs are like the <i>coco de mer</i>
-which was found floating, here and there, on
-the sea, or washed up on the shore, and which gave
-birth to the strangest conjectures; it was supposed
-to tell of undiscovered continents or to have dropped
-from heaven itself. Then, one day, some one saw
-this peculiar cocoanut quietly growing on a tall palm-tree
-in an obscure islet of the Indian Ocean. All we
-gather of primitive traditions is the fruit. Yet the
-fruit did not grow in the air, it grew on branches and
-the branches grew on a trunk and the trunk had a
-root. To get to the root of even the slightest of our
-own prejudices—let alone those of the savage—we
-should have to travel back far into times when
-history was not.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Lucretius placed at the beginning of the ages of
-mankind a berry-eating race, innocent of blood. The
-second age belonged to the hunter who killed animals,
-at first, and possibly for a long time, for their skins,
-before he used their flesh as food. In the third age
-animals were domesticated; first the sheep, because
-that was gentle and easily tamed (which one may see
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>by the moufflons at Monte Carlo), then, by degrees,
-the others.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>This classification was worthy of the most far-seeing
-mind of antiquity. Had not human originally
-meant humane we should not have been here to tell
-the tale. The greater traditions of a bloodless age
-are enshrined in sacred books; minor traditions of
-it abound in the folk-lore of the world. Man was
-home-sick of innocence; his conscience, which has
-gone on getting more blunted, not more sensitive,
-revolted at the “daily murder.” So mankind called
-upon heaven to provide an excuse for slaughter.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Kirghis of Mongolia say that in the beginning
-only four men and four animals were made: the camel,
-the ox, the sheep, and the horse, and all were told
-to live on grass. The animals grazed, but the men
-pulled up the grass by the roots and stored it. The
-animals complained to God that the men were pulling
-up all the grass, and that soon there would be none
-left. God said: “If I forbid men to eat grass, will
-you allow them to eat you?” Fearing starvation, the
-animals consented.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>From the first chapter of Genesis to the last of the
-“Origin of Species” there is one long testimony to
-our vegetarian ancestor, but beyond the fact that
-he existed, what do we know about him? We may
-well believe that he lived in a good climate and on
-a plenteous earth. Adam and Eve or their representatives
-could not have subsisted in Greenland.
-I think that the killing of wild animals, and especially
-the eating of them, began when man found himself
-confronted by extremes of cold and length of winter
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>nights. The skins of animals gave him the only
-possibility of keeping warm or even of living at all,
-if he was to brave the outer air, while their flesh
-may have been often the only food he could find.
-He was obliged to eat them to keep alive, as
-Arctic explorers have been obliged to eat their
-sledge-dogs. Not preference, but hard necessity,
-made him carnivorous.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>These speculations are confirmed by the doings
-of the earliest man of whom we have any sure knowledge;
-<i>not</i> the proto-man who must have developed,
-as I have said, under very different climatic conditions.
-Perhaps he sat under the palm-trees growing on the
-banks of the Thames, but though the palm-trees have
-left us their fruit, man, if he was there, left nothing
-to speak of his harmless sojourn. By tens of thousands
-of years the earliest man with whom we can
-claim acquaintance is the reindeer hunter of Quartenary
-times. He hunted and fed upon the reindeer,
-but he had not tamed them. He wore reindeer skins,
-but he could not profit by reindeer milk; no children
-were brought up by hand, possibly to the advantage
-of the children. It is likely, by the by, that the period
-of human lactation was very long. The horse also
-was killed for food at a time infinitely removed from
-the date of his first service to man.</p>
-
-<div id='i086a' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i086a.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>REINDEER BROWSING.<br />Older Stone Age.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div id='i086b' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i086b.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>HORSE DRAWING DISC OF THE SUN.<br />Older Bronze Age.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The reindeer hunter was a most intelligent observer
-of animals. He was an artist and a very good one.
-The best of his scratchings on reindeer horn and
-bone of horses and reindeer in different attitudes are
-admirable for freedom, life, and that intuition of
-character which makes the true animal painter. For
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>a time which makes one dizzy to look down upon, no
-such draughtsman appeared as the pre-historic cave
-dweller. The men of the age of Polished Stone and
-of the early ages of metals produced nothing similar
-in the way of design. They understood beauty of
-form and ornament or, rather, perhaps, they still
-shared in that Nature’s own unerring touch; it took
-millenniums of civilisation for man to make one
-ugly pot or pan. But these men had not the gift
-or even the idea of sitting down to copy a grazing
-or running animal.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We need not go far, however, to find a man who,
-living under nearly the same conditions as the reindeer
-hunter of Southern France, has developed the same
-artistic aptitude. I shall always recall with pleasure
-my visit to a Laplander’s hut; it was in the broad
-daylight of Arctic midnight—no one slept in the hut,
-except an extraordinarily small baby in a canoe-shaped
-cradle. The floor was spread with handsome furs,
-and its aspect was neither untidy nor comfortless. I
-reflected that this was how the cave dweller arranged
-his safe retreat. Much more strongly was he brought
-to my mind by the domestic objects of every sort
-made of reindeer horn and adorned with drawings.
-As I write I have one of them before me, a large
-horn knife, the sheath of which ends with the branching
-points. It is beautifully decorated with <i>graffiti</i>,
-showing the good and graceful creature without whom
-the Laplander cannot live. The school of art is distinctly
-Troglodite.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A theory has been started that the man of the
-Quartenary age drew his horses and his reindeer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>solely as a magical decoy from the idea that the
-pictures “called” the game as whistling (<i>i.e.</i>, imitating
-the sound of the wind) “calls” the wind. I do not
-know that the Lapps, though practised in magic, have
-any such purpose in view. It is said that it would be
-absurd to attribute a motive of mere artistic pleasure
-to the Troglodite. Why? Some races have as
-natural a tendency to artistic effort as the bower-bird
-has to decorate its nest. Conditions of climate
-may have given the hunter periods of enforced idleness,
-and art, in its earliest form, was, perhaps, always
-an escape from <i>ennui</i>, a mode of passing the time.
-That the early hunter dealt in magic is likely enough;
-he is supposed, though not on altogether conclusive
-grounds, to have been a fetich-worshipper, and fetich-worship
-is akin to some kinds of magic. But it does
-not follow that <i>all</i> his art had this connexion. How
-animals appeared to his eyes we know; what he
-thought about them he has not told us. The Eskimo,
-the modern pre-historic man who is believed to be
-a better-preserved type than even the Lapp, may be
-asked to speak for him.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Eskimo can say that he had a friendly feeling
-towards all living things, notwithstanding that he fed
-on flesh, and that wild beasts sometimes fed on him.
-Not that he had ever talked of wild beasts, for he had
-no tame ones. He had not a vocabulary of rude
-terms about animals. He was inclined to credit every
-species with many potential merits. The Eskimo is
-afraid—very much afraid—of bears. Yet he is the
-first to admit that the bear is capable of acting like
-the finest of fine gentlemen. A woman was in a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>fright at seeing a bear and so gave him a partridge;
-that bear never forgot the trifling service, but brought
-her newly killed seals ever after. Another bear saved
-the life of three men who wished to reward him. He
-politely declined their offer, but if, in winter time, they
-should see a bald-headed bear, will they induce their
-companions to spare him? After so saying, he plunged
-into the sea. Next winter a bear was sighted and
-they were going to hunt him, when these men,
-remembering what had happened, begged the hunters
-to wait till they had had a look at him. Sure enough
-it was “their own bear”! They told the others to
-prepare a feast for him, and when he had refreshed
-himself, he lay down to sleep and <i>the children played
-around him</i>. Presently he awoke and ate a little
-more, after which he went down to the sea, leapt in,
-and was never seen again.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Even such lovely imaginings, we may believe,
-without an excessive stretch of fancy, gilded the
-mental horizon of the Troglodite. He had long
-left behind the stage of primal innocence, but no
-supernatural chasm gaped between him and his
-little brothers.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The reindeer hunters were submerged by what is
-more inexorable than man—Nature. The reindeer
-vanished, and with him the hunter, doomed by the
-changed conditions of climate. He vanished as the
-Lapp is vanishing; the poignantly tragic scene which
-was chronicled by two lines in the newspapers
-during the early summer of 1906—the suicide of
-a whole clan of Lapps whose reindeer were dead
-and who had nothing to do but to follow them—may
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>have happened in what we call fair Provence.
-Thousands of men paid with their lives for its
-becoming a rose garden.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The successors of the reindeer hunters, Turanian
-like them, but far more progressive, were the lake
-dwellers, the dolmen-builders, with their weaving
-and spinning, their sowing and reaping, their pottery
-and their baskets, their polished flints and their
-domestic animals. Man’s greatest achievement, the
-domestication of animals, had been reached in the
-unrecorded ages that divide the rough and the
-polished stone. Man, “excellent in art,” had
-mastered the beast whose lair is in the wilds; “he
-tames the horse of shaggy mane, he puts the yoke
-upon its neck; he tames the tireless mountain bull.”
-The great mind of Sophocles saw and saw truly
-that these were the mighty works of man; the
-works which made man, man. We know that when
-the Neolithic meat-eater of what is now Denmark
-threw away the bones after he had done his meal,
-these bones were gnawed by house-dogs. A simple
-thing, but it tells a wondrous tale. Did these dogs
-come with their masters from Asia, or had they been
-tamed in their Northern home? The answer
-depends on whether the dog is descended from
-jackal or wolf. In either case it is unlikely that
-the most tremendous task of domestication was the
-first.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Not everywhere has man domesticated animals,
-though we may be sure that he took them everywhere
-with him after he had domesticated them.
-If man walked on dry land across the Atlantic as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>some enthusiastic students of sub-oceanic geography
-now believe that he did, he led no sheep, no horses,
-no dogs. In America, when it was discovered,
-there was only one domestic animal, and in Australia
-there was none. Of native animals, the American
-buffalo could have been easily tamed. It may be
-said that in Australia there was no suitable animal,
-but the dog’s ancestor could not have seemed a
-suitable animal for a household protector; a jackal
-is not a promising pupil, still less a wolf, unless there
-was some more gentle kind of wolf than any which
-now survives. Might not a good deal have been
-made out of the kangaroo? Possibly the whole task
-of domestication was the work of one patient, intelligent
-and widely-spread race, kindred of the
-Japanese, who in making forest trees into dwarfs
-show the sort of qualities that would be needed to
-make a wild animal not only unafraid (that is nothing),
-but also a willing servant.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Neolithic man’s eschatology of animals and
-of himself was identical. He contemplated for both
-a future life which reproduced this one. “The
-belief in the deathlessness of souls,” said Canon
-Isaac Taylor, “was the great contribution of the
-Turanian race to the religious thought of the
-world.” This appears to claim almost too much.
-Would any race have had the courage to start upon
-its way had it conceived death as real?</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“It is a modest creed and yet</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Pleasant if one considers it,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>To own that death itself must be</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Like all the rest, a mockery.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'><span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>It is a creed which springs from the very instinct
-of life. Two pelicans returning to their nest found
-their two young ones dead from sunstroke. The
-careful observer who was watching them has recorded
-that they <i>did not seem to recognise</i> the inert, fluffy
-heap as what <i>was</i> their fledglings; they hunted for
-them for a long while, moving the twigs of the nest,
-and at last threw one of the dead birds out of it.
-So the primitive man in presence of the dead knows
-that this is not <i>he</i> and he begins to ask: where is he?</p>
-<p class='c008'>But if every race in turn has asked that question,
-it was asked with more insistence by some peoples
-than by others, and above all, it was answered by
-some with more assurance. The Neolithic Turanians
-had nothing misty in their vision of another world.
-It was full of movement and variety: the chase,
-the battle, the feast, sleep and awakening, night
-and day—these were there as well as here. Animals
-were essential to the picture, and it never struck
-the Neolithic man that there was any more difficulty
-about their living again than about his living again.
-If he philosophised at all, it was probably after the
-fashion of the Eskimo who holds the soul to be the
-“owner” of the body: the body, the flesh, dies and
-may be devoured, but he who kills the body does
-not kill its “owner.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Vast numbers of bones have been found near the
-dolmens in Southern France. The steed of the
-dead man galloped with him into the Beyond. The
-faithful dog trotted by the little child, comrade and
-guardian. In the exquisite Hebrew idyll Tobias
-has his dog as well as the angel to accompany him
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>on his adventurous earthly journey. The little
-Neolithic boy had only the dog and his journey was
-longer; but to some grieving fathers would it not
-be a rare comfort to imagine their lost darlings
-guarded by loving four-footed friends along the Path
-of Souls?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Celtic conquerors of the dolmen-builders
-took most of their religious ideas. When successful
-aid in mundane matters was what was chiefly sought
-in religion, a little thing might determine conversion
-<i>en masse</i>. If the divinities of one set of people
-seemed on some occasion powerless, it was natural
-to try the divinities of somebody else. When success
-crowned the experiment, the new worship was
-formally adopted. This is exactly what happened
-in the historic case of Clovis and “Clothilde’s God,”
-and it doubtless happened frequently before the dawn
-of history. Druidism is believed to have arisen in
-this way in a grafting of the new on the old. The
-Celts had the same views about the next world as
-the dolmen-builders. They are thought to have
-taken them from the conquered with the rest of
-their religious system, but to me it seems unlikely
-that they had not already similar views when they
-arrived from Asia. In the early Vedas goats and
-horses were sacrificed to go before and announce
-the coming of the dead; Vedic animals kept their
-forms, the renewed body was perfect and incorruptible,
-but it was the real body. A celebrated
-racehorse was deified after death. Such beliefs have
-a strong affinity to the theory that animals (or slaves)
-killed at the man’s funeral will be useful to him in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>the after-life. However derived, our European
-ancestors embraced that theory to the full.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Only a few years ago a second Viking ship was
-found at Oseberg, in Norway, in which were the
-remains of ten horses, four dogs, a young ox, and the
-head of an old ox. Three more horses were found
-outside. The dogs had on their own collars with
-long chains. There were also sledges with elaborately
-carved animals’ heads. It was a queen’s grave;
-her distaff and spinning-wheel told of simple womanly
-tasks amidst so much sepulchral splendour. In those
-late times the law by which religious forms grow
-more sumptuous as the faith behind them grows
-less, may have come into operation. Lavish but
-meaningless tributes may have taken the place of
-a provision full of meaning for real wants.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>So the sacrifices to the gods may have been once
-intended to stock the pastures of heaven. It cannot
-be doubted that the victim was never <i>killed</i> in the
-mind of the original sacrificer, it was merely transferred
-to another sphere. The worser barbarity
-comes in when the true significance of the act is
-lost and when it is repeated from habit.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>After animals were domesticated they were not
-killed at all for a long time—still less were they
-eaten. Of this there can be no shadow of doubt.
-The first domestic animals were far too valuable
-possessions for any one to think of killing them. As
-soon would a showman kill a performing bull which
-had cost him a great deal of trouble to train.
-Besides this, and more than this, the natural man,
-who is much better than he is painted, has a natural
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>horror of slaying the creature that eats out of his
-hand and gives him milk and wool and willing
-service.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There are pastoral tribes now in South Africa
-which live on the milk, cheese and butter of their
-sheep, but only kill them as the last necessity. In
-East Africa the cow is never killed, and if one falls
-ill, it is put into a sort of infirmary and carefully
-tended. We all know the divinity which hedges
-round the Hindu cow. The same compunction once
-saved the labouring ox. When I was at Athens
-for the Archæological Congress of 1905, Dr. R. C.
-Bosanquet, at that time head of the British school,
-told me that he had observed among the peasants
-in Crete the most intense reluctance to kill the ox
-of labour. In several places in Ancient Greece all
-sorts of devices were resorted to in order that the
-sacrificial knife might seem to kill the young bull
-accidentally, and the knife—the guilty thing—was
-afterwards thrown into the sea. This last custom
-is important; it marks the moment when the slaughter
-of domestic animals, <i>even</i> for sacrificial purposes,
-still caused a scruple. The case stands thus: at first
-they were not killed at all; then, for a long time,
-they were killed only for sacrifice. Then they were
-killed for food, but far and wide relics of the original
-scruple may be detected as in the common invocation
-of divine permission which every Moslem butcher
-utters before killing an animal.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Animal and human sacrifices are one phenomenon
-of early manners, not two. The people who sacrificed
-domestic animals to accompany their dead
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>generally, if not always, also sacrificed slaves for
-the same purpose, and the sacrifice of fair maidens
-at the funerals of heroes was to give them these
-as companions in another world.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I am not aware that Gift Sacrifice ever led to
-cannibalism nor, in its primitive forms, did it lead
-to eating the flesh of the animal victim which was
-buried or burnt with the body of the person whom
-it was intended to honour. This is what was done
-by the dolmen-builders. The earlier reindeer hunters
-had no domestic animals to sacrifice, and it is unlikely
-that they sacrificed men. At all events, they
-were not cannibals.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>On the other hand, cannibalism is closely connected
-with Pact Sacrifice, which there is a tendency
-now to regard as antecedent to Gift Sacrifice, especially
-among those scholars who think that the whole
-human race has passed through a stage of Totemism.
-Psychologically the Totemist’s sacrifice of a reserved
-animal to which all the sanctity of human life is
-ascribed, resembles the sacrifice by some African
-tribes of a human victim—as in both cases not only
-is a pact of brotherhood sealed, but also those who
-partake of the flesh are supposed to acquire the
-physical, moral, or supersensual qualities attributed
-to the victim. Indeed, it would be possible to argue
-that the Totem was a substitute for a human victim,
-and a whole new theory of Totemism might be
-evolved from that postulate, but it is wiser to observe
-such affinities without trying to derive one thing
-from another which commonly proves a snare and
-a delusion. It is sufficient to note that among
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>fundamental human ideas is the belief that man
-grows like what he feeds upon.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The sacrifice of the Totem, though found scattered
-wherever Totemism prevails, is not an invariable
-or even a usual accompaniment of it. When
-it does occur, the Totem is not supposed to
-die, any more than the victim was supposed to die
-in the primitive Gift Sacrifice. It changes houses
-or goes to live with “our lost others,” or returns
-to eternal life in the “lake of the dead.” The
-death of the soul is the last thing that is thought of.
-The majority of Totemists do not kill their Totems
-under any circumstances, and when the Totem is
-a wild beast they believe that it shows a like respect
-for the members of its phratry. If one dies they
-deplore its loss; in some parts of East Africa where
-the Totem is a hyena not even the chief is mourned
-for with equal ceremony.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Totemism is the adoption of an animal (or plant)
-as the visible badge of an invisible bond. The
-word Totem is an American Indian word for
-“badge,” and the word Taboo a Polynesian term
-meaning an interdiction. The Totemist generally
-says that he is descended from his Totem: hence
-the men and the beasts of each Totem clan are
-brothers. But the beast is something more than a
-brother, he is the perpetual reincarnation of the race-spirit.
-Numerical problems never trouble the natural
-human mind; all the cats of Bubastis were equally
-sacred, and all the crows of Australia are equally
-sacred to the clans who have a crow for Totem. To
-the mass of country folks every cow is <i>the</i> cow, every
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>mouse is <i>the</i> mouse; the English villager is practically
-as much convinced of this as the American Indian
-or the Australian native is convinced that every
-Totem is <i>the</i> Totem.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Men and women of the same Totem are <i>taboo</i>:
-they cannot intermarry. But I need not speak of
-Totemism here as a social institution. My business
-with it is limited to its place in the history of ideas
-about animals.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In Totemism we find represented not one idea,
-but an aggregation of most of the fundamental ideas
-of mankind. This is why the attempt to trace it
-to one particular root has failed to dispose of the
-question of its origin in a final and satisfactory
-manner. For a time there seemed to be a general
-disposition to accept what is called the “Nickname
-theory” by which Totemism was attributed to the
-custom of giving animal nicknames. We have a
-peasant called Nedrott (in the Brescian dialect
-“duck”); I myself never heard his real name—his
-wife is “la Nedrott” and his children are “i
-Nedrotti.” It is alleged that his father or grandfather
-had flat feet. But I never heard of a confusion
-between the Nedrotti and their nicknamesakes.
-It may be said that this would be sure to happen
-were they less civilised. How can we be sure
-that it would be sure to happen? An eminent
-scholar who objects to the nickname theory on the
-ground that it assigns too much importance to “verbal
-misunderstanding,” proposes as an alternative the
-“impregnation theory.” A woman, on becoming aware
-of approaching motherhood, mentally connects the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>future offspring with an animal or plant which
-happens to catch her eye at that moment. This
-is conceivable, given the peculiar notions of some
-savages on generation, but if all Totemism sprang
-from such a cause, is it not strange that in Australia
-there are only two Totems, the eagle-hawk and crow?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>As a mere outward fact, the Totem is what its
-name implies, a badge or sign; just as the wolf was
-the badge of Rome, or as the lion is taken to represent
-the British Empire. The convenience of
-adopting a common badge or sign may have appeared
-to men almost as soon as they settled into separate
-clans or communities. Besides public Totems there
-exist private and secret Totems, and this suggests
-that the earliest communities may have consisted
-of a sort of freemasonry, a league of mutual help
-of the nature of a secret society. Around the outward
-and so to speak heraldic fact of Totemism are
-gathered the impressions and beliefs which make
-it a rule of life, a morality and a religion.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The time may come when the desire to give a
-reason for an emotion will be recognised as one of
-the greatest factors in myth-making. The Totemist
-thinks that he spares his Totem because it is his
-Totem. But man is glad to find an excuse for
-sparing something. Altruism is as old as the day
-when the first bird took a succulent berry to its mate
-or young ones instead of eating it. Where men see
-no difference between themselves and animals, what
-more natural than that they should wish to spare
-them? When it was found difficult or impossible
-to spare all, it was a katharsis of the wider sentiment
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>to spare one, and Totemism gave a very good excuse.
-It appealed to a universal instinct. This is not the
-same as to say that it had its origin in keeping pets;
-it would be nearer the truth to describe the love
-of pets as a later birth of the same instinctive
-tendency which the Totemist follows when he
-cherishes and preserves his Totem.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The primitive man is a child in the vast zoological
-garden of Nature; a child with a heart full of love,
-curiosity and respect, anxious to make friends with
-the lion which looks so very kind and the white bear
-who must want some one to comfort him. The whole
-folk-lore of the world bears witness to this temper,
-even leaving Totemism out of the question.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Bechuanas make excuses to the lion before
-killing him, the Malays to the tiger, the Red Indians
-to the bear—he says that his children are hungry
-and need food—would the bear kindly not object to
-be killed? Some writers see Totemism in all this,
-and so it may be, but there is something in it deeper
-than even Totemism—there is human nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Take the robin—has any one said it was a Totem?
-Yet Mrs. Somerville declared she would as soon eat
-a child as a robin, a thoroughly Totemist sentiment.
-A whole body of protective superstition has crystallised
-around certain creatures which, because of their
-confiding nature, their charming ways, their welcome
-appearance at particular seasons, inspired man with
-an unusually strong impulse to spare them. I was
-interested to find the stork as sacred to the Arabs
-in Tunis and Algeria as he is to his German friends
-in the North. A Frenchman remarked that “sacred
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>birds are never good to eat,” but he might have
-remembered the goose and hen of the ancient
-Bretons which Cæsar tells us were kept “for pleasure”
-but never killed; not to speak of the pigeons of
-Moscow and of Mecca.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It should be observed how quickly the spared or
-cherished bird or beast becomes “lucky.” In
-Germany and Scandinavia it is lucky to have a
-stork’s nest on the roof. The regimental goat is the
-“luck of his company.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>M. S. Reinach’s opinion that in Totemism is to
-be found the secret of the domestication of animals
-offers an attractive solution to that great problem,
-but it has not been, nor do I think that it will ever
-be, generally accepted. It, is however, plain, that
-where population is sparse, and dogs and guns
-undreamt of, wild animals would be far less wild
-than in countries with all the advantages of civilisation;
-the tameness of birds on lonely islands when
-the explorer first makes his descent is a case in
-point. No doubt, therefore, with the encouragement
-they received, the animal Totems acquired a considerable
-degree of tameness, but from that to
-domestication there is a long step. Our household
-“Totem,” the robin, is relatively tame; he will even
-eat crumbs on the breakfast-table, but he flies away
-in springtime and we see him no more.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Besides being a social institution and a friendly
-bond between man and beast, Totemism is an attempt
-to explain the universe. Its spiritual vitality depends
-on the widely rooted belief in archetypes; the things
-seen are the mirror of the things unseen, the material
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>is unreal, the immaterial the only reality. We are
-ourselves but cages of immortal birds. The real “I”
-is somewhere else; it may be in a fish, as in the
-Indian folk-tale, or it may be in a god. I do not
-know, by the by, if it has been remarked that a man
-can be a Totem: the incarnation of the indwelling
-race-spirit. The Emperor of Japan corresponds
-exactly to this description. The deified Cæsar was
-a Totem. A god can be a Totem: among the
-Hidery (islanders of the North Pacific whose interesting
-legends were published by the Chicago Folk-lore
-Association) the raven, which is their Totem, is
-the manifestation of the god Ne-kilst-lass who created
-the world. Here Totemism approaches till it touches
-Egyptian zoomorphism. Was this form an earlier
-or a later development than that in which the Totem
-is merely an ancestor? Our inability to reply shows
-our real want of certainty as to whether Totemism
-is a body of belief in a state of becoming or <i>in a state
-of dissolution</i>.</p>
-
-<div id='i102' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i102.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='small'><i>Photo:</i> <i>Egypt Exploration Fund.</i></span><br />HATHOR COW.<br />Cairo Museum.<br /><span class='small'>(<i>Found in 1906 by Dr. E. Naville at Deir-el-bahari.</i>)</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>We do know that Egyptian zoomorphism is not
-old, at least in the exaggerated shape it assumed
-in the worship of the bull Apis. It is a cult which
-owed its success to the animistic tendency of the
-human mind, but its particular cause is to be looked
-for in crystallised figurative language. The stupendous
-marble tombs of the sacred bulls that seem
-to overpower us in the semi-obscurity of the
-Serapeum remind one of how easy it is to draw
-false conclusions relative to the past if we possess
-only half-lights upon it: had Egyptian hieroglyphics
-never yielded up their secret we might have judged
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>the faith of Egypt to have been the most material,
-instead of one of the most spiritual of religions.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In Egyptian (as in Assyrian) cosmogony the visible
-universe is the direct creation of God. “The god
-who is immanent in all things is the creator of every
-animal: under his name of Ram, of the sheep, Bull,
-of the cows: he loves the scorpion in his hole, he
-is the god of the crocodile who plunges in the water:
-he is the god of those who rest in their graves.
-Amon is an image, Atmee is an image, Ra is an
-image: HE alone maketh himself in millions of
-ways.” Amon Ra is described in another grand
-hymn as the maker of the grass for the cattle, of
-fruitful trees for men yet unborn; causing the fish
-to live in the river, the birds to fill the air, giving
-breath to those in the egg, giving food to the bird
-that perches, to the creeping thing and to the flying
-thing alike, providing food for the rats in their holes,
-feeding the flying things in every tree. “Hail to
-thee, say all creatures. Hail to thee for all these
-things: the One, Alone with many hands, awake
-while all men sleep, to seek out the good of
-all creatures, “Amon Sustainer of all!” This is,
-indeed, a majestic psalm of universal life.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Contrary to what was long the impression, the
-Wheel of Being was not an Egyptian doctrine, but
-the dead, or rather some of them, were believed to
-have the power of transforming themselves into
-animals for limited periods. It was a valued
-privilege of the virtuous dead: the form of a heron,
-a hawk or a swallow was a convenient travelling
-dress. Four-footed beasts were reserved to gods.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>There was no prejudice against sport if carried
-on with due regard to vested sacred rights. The
-first hunting-dog whose name we know was Behkaa,
-who was buried with his master, his name being
-inscribed over his picture on the tomb. The injury
-of animals sacred to the gods was, of course, a grave
-sin. Among the protests of innocence of a departing
-soul we read: “I have not clipped the skins of the
-sacred beasts; I have not hunted wild animals in their
-pasturages; I have not netted the sacred birds; I
-have not turned away the cattle of the gods; I have
-not stood between a god and his manifestation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Egyptian mind, which was essentially religious,
-saw the “god who is immanent in all things” yet
-standing outside these things to sustain them with a
-guiding providence; the highly trained Chinese mind,
-with its philosophic trend, saw the divine indivisible
-intelligence without volition illuminating all that lived:
-“The mind of man and the mind of trees, birds and
-beasts, is just the one mind of heaven and earth,
-only brighter or duller by reflection: as light looks
-brighter when it falls on a mirror than when it falls
-on a dark surface, so divine reason is less bright
-in cow or sheep than in man.” This fine definition
-was given by Choo-Foo-Tsze, the great exponent of
-Confucianism, who, when he was four years old, surprised
-his father by asking, on being told that the sky
-was heaven, “What is above it?” Choo-Foo-Tsze
-in the thirteenth century anticipated some modern
-conclusions of geology by remarking that since sea
-shells were found on lofty mountains as if generated
-in the middle of stones, it was plain “that what was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>below became lifted up, what was soft became
-hard”; it was a deep subject, he said, and ought
-to be investigated. Long before the Nolan, Confucius
-had conceived the idea of the great Monad:
-“one God who contains and comprehends the whole
-world.” It was an idea entirely incomprehensible to
-all but a few educated men in any age. Confucianism,
-Buddhism and Taoism left the Chinese masses
-what they found them—a people whose folk-lore
-was their religion. Were they asked to believe in the
-Wheel of Being? They made that folk-lore too. Dr.
-Giles tells the folk-tale of a certain gentleman who,
-having taken a very high degree, enjoyed the privilege
-(which is admitted to be uncommon) of recollecting
-what happened between his last death and birth.
-After he died, he was cited before a Judge of
-Purgatory and his attention was attracted by a
-quantity of skins of sheep, dogs, oxen, horses, which
-were hanging in a row. These were waiting for
-the souls which might be condemned to wear them;
-when one was wanted, it was taken down and the
-man’s own skin was stripped off and the other put
-on. This gentleman was condemned to be a sheep;
-the attendant demons helped him on with his sheep-skin
-when the Recording Officer suddenly mentioned
-that he had once saved a man’s life. The Judge,
-after looking at his books, ruled that such an act
-balanced all his misdoings: then the demons set to
-work to pull off the sheep-skin bit by bit, which
-gave the poor gentleman dreadful pain, but at last
-it was all got off except one little piece which was
-still sticking to him when he was born again as a man.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>This story is amusing as showing what a mystical
-doctrine may come to when it gets into the hands of
-the thoroughgoing realist. For the Chinese peasant
-the supernatural has no mystery. To him it is a mere
-matter of ordinary knowledge that beasts, birds, fishes
-and insects not only have ghosts but also ghosts
-of ghosts—for the first ghost is liable to die. If
-any of these creatures do not destroy life in three
-existences, they may be born as men—a belief no
-doubt due to the Buddhists, who in China seem to
-have concentrated all their energies on humanitarian
-propaganda and let metaphysics alone. Taoism has
-been called an “organised animism.” Organised or
-unorganised, animism is still the popular faith of
-China. It is too convenient to lightly abandon, for
-it explains everything. For instance, whatever is
-odd, unexpected, very lucky, very unlucky, can be
-made as plain as day by mentioning the word “fox.”
-Any one may be a fox without your knowing it: the
-fox is a jinnee, an elf who can work good or harm
-to man; who can see the future, get possession of
-things at a distance, and generally outmatch the
-best spiritualist medium. In Chinese folk-lore the
-fox has, as it were, made a monopoly of the world-wide
-notion that animals have a more intimate knowledge
-of the supernatural than men. Soothsayers are
-thought to be foxes because they know what is going
-to happen.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Man’s speculations about himself and the universe
-arrange themselves under three heads: those which
-have not yet become a system, those which are a
-system, those which are the remains of a system. It
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>is impossible that any set of ideas began by being
-a system unless it were revealed by an angel from
-heaven. But no sooner do ideas become systematic
-than they pass into the stage of dogma which is
-accepted not discussed. Everything is made to fit in
-with them. Thus to find the free play of the human
-mind one must seek it where there are the fewest
-formulæ, written or unwritten, for tradition is as
-binding as any creed or code. There are savage
-races which, if they ever had Totemism, have preserved
-few if any traces of it. To take them one by
-one and inquire into their views on animals would
-be well worth doing, but it is beyond my modest
-scope. I will say this, however—show me a savage
-who has not some humane and friendly ideas about
-animals! The impulse to confess brotherhood with
-man’s poor relations is everywhere the same: the
-excuses or reasons given for it vary a little. The
-animal to be kindly treated is the sanctuary of a god,
-the incarnation of a tribe, or simply the shelter of a
-poor wandering ghost.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Amazulu, one of the finest of savage races,
-believe that <i>some</i> snakes are Amatongo—some, not
-all. In fact, these snakes which are dead men are
-rather rare. One kind is black and another green.
-An Itongo does not come into the house by the door,
-nor does it eat frogs or mice. It does not run away
-like other snakes. Some say, “Let it be killed.”
-Others interfere, “What, kill a man?” If a man
-die who had a scar and you see a snake with a scar,
-ten to one it is that man. Then, at night, the
-village chief <i>dreams</i> and the dead man speaks to him.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>“Do you now wish to kill me? Do you already
-forget me? I thought I would come and ask you
-for food, and do you kill me?” Then he tells him
-his name.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Without any teaching, without any system, the
-savage thinks that the appearances which stand
-before him in sleep are real. If they are not real,
-what are they? The savage may not be a reasonable
-being, but he is a being who reasons.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the morning the village chief tells his dream and
-orders a sin-offering to the Itongo (ghost) lest he be
-angry and kill them. A bullock or a goat is sacrificed
-and they eat the flesh. Afterwards they look everywhere
-for the snake, but it has vanished.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A snake that forces its way rapidly into a house is
-known to be a liar and he is a liar still. Do they
-turn him out of doors with a lecture on the beauty
-of veracity? Far from that. “They sacrifice something
-to such an Itongo.” A few men turn into
-poisonous snakes, but this is by no means common.
-If offended, the Amatongo cause misfortune, but even
-if pleased they do not seem to confer many benefits;
-perhaps they cannot, for surely it is easier to do evil
-than good. Once, however, a snake which was really
-the spirit of a chief, placed its mouth on a sore which
-a child had; the mother was in a great fright, but
-happily she did not interfere and the snake healed the
-sore and went silently away.</p>
-
-<div id='i108' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i108.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='small'><i>Photo:</i> <i>Mansell.</i></span><br />WILD GOATS AND YOUNG.<br />British Museum.<br /><span class='small'>(<i>Assyrian Relief.</i>)</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Other animals are sometimes human beings as well
-as snakes. The lizard is often the Itongo of an old
-woman. A boy killed some lizards in a cattle-pen
-with stones. Then he went and told his grandmother,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>who said he had done very wrong—those lizards
-were chiefs of the village and should have been
-worshipped. I think the grandmother was a humane
-old person; I even suspect that she said the lizards
-were chiefs and not old women to make the admonition
-more awful. The man who told this story to
-Canon Callaway (from whose valuable work on the
-Amazulu I take these notes) added that, looking back
-to the incident, he doubted if the lizards were Amatongo
-after all, because no harm came of their murder.
-He thought that they must have been merely wild
-animals which had become tame owing to people
-mistakenly thinking that they were Amatongo.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>What can one say to boys who ill-treat lizards? I
-own that I have threatened them with ghostly treatment
-of the same sort. I even tried the supernatural
-argument with a little Arab boy, otherwise a nice
-intelligent child, who was throwing stones at a lizard
-which was moving at the bottom of the deep Roman
-well at El Djem: I did not know then that the
-persecution of lizards in Moslem lands is supposed (I
-hope erroneously) to have been ordered by Mohammed
-“because the lizard mimics the attitude of the
-Faithful at prayer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The lizard, one of the most winsome of God’s
-creatures, has suffered generally from the prejudice
-which made reptile a word of reproach. It is the
-more worthy of remark, therefore, that in a place
-where one would hardly expect it, protective superstition
-has done its work of rescue: Sicilian children
-catch lizards, but let them go unhurt to intercede for
-them before the Lord, as the lizard is held to be “in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>the presence of the Lord in heaven.” One wonders
-if this is some distant echo of the text about the
-angels of the children (their archetypes) who always
-see God.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Not always were reptiles scorned, but, possibly,
-they were always feared. Man’s first idea is to
-worship what he fears; his second idea, which may
-not come for many thousand years, is to throw a
-stone at it. The stone, besides representing physical
-fear, at a given moment also represents religious
-reprobation of what had been an object of worship
-in a forsaken faith. Primitive man took the interest
-of a wondering child in the great Saurian tribe.
-How did he know that they <i>flew</i>, that there were
-“dragons” on the earth? How did he know that
-the snake once had legs?—for if the snake of Eden
-was ordered to go on its belly, the inference seems
-to be that he was thought once to have moved in
-another way. The snake has lost his legs and
-the lizard his wings, and how the ancient popular
-imagination of the world made such accurate guesses
-about them must be left a riddle, unless we admit
-that it was guided by the fossil remains of extinct
-monsters.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The serpent of the Biblical story was, says Dr.
-H. P. Smith, “simply a jinnee—a fairy if you will—possessed
-of more knowledge than the other animals,
-but otherwise like them.” Here, again, we meet in
-the most venerable form, the belief that animals know
-more than men. Can we resist the conclusion that
-to people constantly inclined towards magic like the
-old-world Jews, it must have appeared that Eve was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>dabbling in magic—by every rule of ancient religion,
-the sin of sins?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The cult of the serpent in its many branches is the
-greatest of animal cults, and it is the one in which we
-see most clearly the process by which man from being
-an impressionist became a symbolist, and from being
-a symbolist became a votary. We have only to read
-the Indian statistics of the number of persons annually
-killed by snake-bite to be persuaded that fear must
-have been the original feeling with which man
-regarded the snake. Fear is a religious feeling in
-primitive man, but other religious feelings were added
-to it—admiration, for the snake, as all who have had
-the good luck to observe it in its wild state must
-agree, is a beautiful, graceful, and insinuating creature;
-a sense of mystery, a sense of fascination which comes
-from those keen eyes fixed fearlessly upon yours, the
-simple secret, perhaps, of the much discussed power
-of snakes to fascinate their prey. What wonder if
-man under the influence of these combined impressions,
-symbolised in the serpent a divine force which
-could be made propitious by worship!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the forming of cults there has always been this
-unconscious passage from impressions to symbols,
-from symbols to “manifestations.” But there has
-been also the conscious use of symbols by the priests
-and sages of ancient religions, in imparting as much
-of divine knowledge to the uninitiated as they thought
-that the uninitiated could bear. The origin of
-serpent worship has a probable relationship with
-this conscious use of symbols as well as with their
-unconscious growth.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>Besides the prejudice against reptiles, modern
-popular superstition has placed several animals under
-a ban, and especially the harmless bat and the useful
-barn owl. Traditional reasons exist, no doubt, in
-every case; but stronger than these are the associations
-of such creatures with the dark in which the
-sane man of a certain temperament becomes a partial
-lunatic; a prey to unreal terrors which the flap of a
-bat’s wing or the screech of an owl is enough to work
-up to the point of frenzy. It is a most unfortunate
-thing for an animal if it be the innocent cause of a
-<i>frisson</i>, a feeling of uncanny dread. The little Italian
-owl, notwithstanding that it too comes out at dusk,
-has escaped prejudice. This was the owl of Pallas
-Athene and of an earlier cult. As in the case of the
-serpent, its wiles to fascinate its prey were the groundwork
-of its reputation for wisdom. Of this there
-cannot be, I think, any doubt, though the droll bobs
-and curtesies which excite an irresistible and fatal
-curiosity in small birds, have suggested in the mind
-of the modern man a thing so exceedingly far from
-wisdom as <i>civetteria</i>, which word is derived from
-<i>civetta</i>—“the owl of Minerva” as Italian class-books
-say. The descent from the goddess of wisdom to the
-coquette is the cruellest decadence of all!</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>
- <h2 id='ch06' class='c006'>VI<br /> <br />THE FAITH OF IRAN</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c007'>THE Zoroastrian theory of animals cannot be
-severed from the religious scheme with which
-it is bound up. It is not a side-issue, but an integral
-part of the whole. It would be useless to attempt to
-treat it without recalling the main features in the
-development of the faith out of which it grew.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the first place, who were the people, occupying
-what we call Persia, to whom the Sage, who was not
-one of them, brought his interpretation of the knowledge
-of good and evil? The early Iranians must
-have broken off from the united body of the Aryans
-at a time when they spoke a common language, which
-though not Sanscrit, was very like it. The affinities
-between Sanscrit and the dialect called with irremediable
-inaccuracy “Zend” are of the strongest. From
-this we conclude that, on their establishment in their
-new home, the Iranians differed little from the race
-of whose customs the Rig-Veda gives—not a full
-picture—but a faithful outline. Pastoral folk, devoted
-to their flocks and herds, but not unlearned in the
-cultivation of the earth and the sowing of grain, they
-had reached what may be called the highest stage
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>of primitive civilisation. Though milk, butter and
-cooked corn formed their principal food, on feast days
-they also ate meat, chiefly the flesh of oxen and
-buffaloes, which they were careful to cook thoroughly.
-The progressive Aryans, who called half-raw meat
-by a term exactly corresponding to the too familiar
-“rosbif saignant,” denounced the more savage peoples
-who consumed it as “wild men” or “demons.” They
-kept horses, asses and mules; horses were sacrificed
-occasionally; for instance, kings sacrificed a horse to
-obtain male issue. The wild boar was hunted, if not in
-the earliest, at least in very early times. The dog was
-prized for its fidelity as guardian of the house and
-flocks, but there is no trace of its having been protected
-by extraordinary regulations such as those
-which later came into force in Iran. On the other
-hand, the name of dog had never yet been used in
-reproach. It seems to have been among Semitic
-races that the contempt for man’s best friend arose,
-but it is morally certain that it arose nowhere till
-dogs became scavengers of cities. It was the homeless
-pariah cur that gave the dog the bad name from
-which have sprung so many ugly words registered
-in modern vocabularies. Even now, when Jew or
-Moslem uses “dog” in a bad sense, he means
-“cur”; he knows quite well the other kind of dog—he
-knows Tobit’s dog, which, bounding on before
-the young man and the angel, told the glad tidings
-of his master’s return; Tobit’s dog which was one
-of the animals admitted by Mohammed into highest
-heaven. But “pariah dog” became synonymous of
-pariah, and notwithstanding the present tendency to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>attribute the opprobrium of the pig to original sanctity
-(and consequent reservation), I am inclined to think
-that the pig likewise came to be scorned because he
-was a scavenger. In some Indian cities herds of wild
-pigs still enter the gates just before they are closed at
-dusk, to pass out of them as soon as they are opened
-in the morning: during the night they do their work
-excellently, and by day they take a well-earned sleep
-in the jungle. They deserve gratitude, for they keep
-the cities free from disease, but, like other public
-servants, they scarcely get it.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In Vedic times every home had its watch-dog,
-whose warning bark was as unwelcome to lovers as
-it was to robbers. The Rig-Veda preserves the
-prayer of a young girl who asks that her father, her
-mother, her grandfather, <i>and the watch-dog</i> may sleep
-soundly while she meets her expected lover: a
-charming glimpse of the chaste freedom of early
-Aryan manners. The newly-wedded wife enters her
-husband’s house as mistress, not as slave; the elders
-say to the young couple: “You are master and
-mistress of this house; though there be father-in-law
-and mother-in-law, they are placed under you.” If
-that was not quite what happened, yet the principle
-was granted, and there is much in that. The bride
-rode to her new home in a car drawn by four milk-white
-oxen; when she alighted at the threshold, these
-golden words were spoken to her: “Make thyself loved
-for the sake of the children that will come to thee;
-guard this house, be as one with thy husband; may
-you grow old here together. Cast no evil looks, hate
-not thy spouse, be gentle in thought and deed <i>even</i>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span><i>to the animals of this home</i>.” Bride and bridegroom
-are exhorted to be of one heart, of one mind, “to
-love each other as a cow loves her calf,” a simple and
-true metaphor full of the country-side, full of the
-youth of the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If these were the customs and this was the life
-which the Iranians may be supposed to have taken
-with them, what was the religion? The early Aryans
-had a Nature-cult more spiritualised under the form
-of Varuna and more materialised under the form of
-Indra. Some students of the Avesta have thought
-that here could be found the elements of the Dualism
-which formed the essential doctrine of Mazdaism.
-But it is almost certain that no real Dualism existed
-in oldest Iran. The Avesta once contrasts the worshippers
-of God with the worshippers of Daevas, of
-those who breed the cow and have the care of it with
-those who ill-treat it and slaughter it at their sacrifices.
-But Indra-worship has no connexion with devil-worship,
-nor does this or similar texts prove that
-devil-worship, properly so called, ever flourished in
-Iran. Other religious reformers than Zoroaster have
-named the devotees of former religions “devil-worshippers.”
-For the rest, there is reason to think
-that in the Avesta the term was applied to Turanian
-raiders, not to true Iranians.</p>
-
-<div id='i116' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i116.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><i>Photo:</i> <i>Mansell.</i><br />ASSYRIAN GOD CARRYING ANTELOPE AND WHEAT-EAR.<br />British Museum.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>In an Assyrian inscription, Ahura Mazda is said
-to have created joy for <i>all</i> creatures: a belief which
-Mazdean Dualism impugns. So far as can be guessed,
-the earliest Iranian faith was the worship of good
-spirits—of a Good Spirit. Less pure extra-beliefs may,
-or rather must, have existed contemporaneously, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>they remained in the second rank. The cult of good
-spirits was the home-cult of shepherd and herdsman
-offered to the genii of their flocks and herds. While
-these genii answered the purpose of the lares or little
-saints everywhere dear to humble hearts, it is
-probable that in character they already resembled
-the Fravashis or archetypes that were to play so great
-a part in Mazdean doctrine. The cult of the Good
-Spirit, the national and kingly cult, was the worship
-of one God whose most worthy symbol, before
-Zoroaster as after, was the sun and whose sacrament
-with men was fire. The early Iranian had no temple,
-no altar: he went up into a high place and offered his
-prayer and sacrifice without priest or pomp. If we
-wish to trace his faith back to an Indian source,
-instead of bringing on the scene Varuna and Indra,
-it will be better to inquire whether there were
-elements of the same faith underlying the unwieldy
-fabric of Vedic religion. The answer is, that there
-were. The grandest text in the Rig-Veda, the one
-text recognised from farthest antiquity as of incalculable
-value, is the old Persian religion contained in
-a formula: “That Sun’s supremacy—God—let us
-adore Which may well direct.”</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Enable with perpetual light,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>The dulness of our blinded sight.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>So great a virtue was attributed to the Gayatri that
-the mind which thought it was supposed to unite with
-the object of thought: the eyes of the soul looked on
-Truth, of which all else is but the shadow. This is
-the spirit in which it is still repeated every day by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>every Hindu. The sacrosanct words were “Vishnu,
-Brahma, and Shiva,” or, yet more often, they are
-described as “the mother of the Vedas,” which, if it
-means anything, means that they are older than the
-Vedas. The point most to be noticed about the
-Gayatri is that its importance cannot be set aside
-by saying that this text is to be explained by
-Henotheism: the habit of referring to each god
-immediately addressed as supreme. Nor was the
-text selected arbitrarily by Western monotheists: for
-thousands of years before any European knew it,
-the natives of India had singled it out as the most
-solemn affirmation of man’s belief in the Unseen.</p>
-<p class='c008'>It is open to argument, though not to proof, that
-the Gayatri crystallises a creed which the Iranians
-took with them in their migration. Peoples then
-moved in clans, not in a motley crowd gathered on
-an emigrant steamer. The clan or clans to which
-the Iranians belonged may have clung to a primordial
-faith, not yet overlaid by myths which
-materialised symbols and mysteries which made
-truth a secret.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Such speculations are guess-work, but that the
-primitive religion of Persia was essentially monotheistic
-is an opinion which is likely to survive all
-attacks upon it. On less sure grounds stands the
-identification of that primitive religion with Zoroastrianism.
-The great authorities of a former
-generation, and amongst them my distinguished old
-friend, Professor Jules Oppert, believed that Cyrus
-was a Mazdean. But there is a good deal to support
-the view that Zoroastrianism did not become the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>State religion till the time of the Sásánians, who,
-as a new dynasty, grasped the political importance
-of having under them a strong and organised priesthood.
-Before that time the Magians seem to have
-been rather a sort of Salvation Army or Society of
-Jesus than the directors of a national Church.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>As late as the reign of Darius the Persians frequently
-buried their dead, a practice utterly repugnant
-to the Mazdean. Again, from Greek sources we
-know that the Persian kings sacrificed hecatombs of
-animals; thousands of oxen, asses, stags, &amp;c., were
-immolated every day. Darius ordered one hundred
-bullocks, two hundred rams, four hundred lambs to
-be given to the Jews on the dedication of the new
-Temple (as well as twelve he-goats as sin-offerings
-for the twelve tribes) so that they might offer
-“sacrifices of sweet savours unto the God of heaven
-and pray for the life of the king and his sons.”
-Evidently Darius considered profuse animal sacrifices
-as a natural part of any great religious ceremony.
-Can it be supposed that such slaughter would have
-pleased a strict Zoroastrian? The Mazdeans retained
-the sacrifice of flesh as food: a small piece of the
-cooked meat eaten at table was included in the daily
-offering with bread, grain, fruits and the Homa juice,
-which was first drunk by the officiating priest, then
-by the worshippers, and finally thrown on the sacred
-fire. The small meat-offering was not animal sacrifice
-or anything at all like it. The Parsis substitute milk
-even for this small piece of meat, perhaps because
-the meat was usually beef, which would have caused
-offence to their Hindu fellow-citizens. I asked a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>Parsi High Priest who lunched with me at Basle
-during the second Congress for the History of Religions,
-what viands were eschewed by his community?
-He replied that they avoided both beef and the flesh
-of swine, but only out of respect for their neighbours’
-rules: to them oil alone was forbidden—probably
-because of its virtue as a light-giver. In the Zoroastrian
-sacrifice it was never lost sight of that the
-outward act was but one of piety and obedience;
-the true sacrifice was of the heart: “I offer good
-thoughts, good words, good deeds.” It is hardly
-needful to say that the Mithraic taurobolium was in
-sheer contradiction to Mazdean law. Heretical sects
-were the bane of Zoroastrianism, and with one of
-these sprang up the strange practices which the
-Romans brought into Europe. Possibly its origin
-should be sought in some infiltration from the West,
-for it is more suggestive of Orphic rites than of
-any form of Eastern ceremonies. A Christian writer
-of the name of Socrates, who lived in the fifth century,
-said that at Alexandria, in a cavern consecrated
-to Mithra, human skulls and bones were found, the
-inference being that human sacrifice was the real
-rite, symbolised by the slaying of the bull. The
-source of this information is suspect, but even if not
-guilty of such excesses, the Mithra-worshippers of
-Western Persia must have been rank corrupters of
-the faith. In the Avesta, Mithra is the luminous
-æther; sometimes he appears as an intercessor;
-sometimes he dispenses the mercy or wields the
-vengeance of God. But in reality he is an attribute,
-about the nature of which members of the faith had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>less excuse for making mistakes than we have. It
-is difficult for the Indian or Japanese not to make
-analogous mistakes concerning some forms of worship
-in Southern Europe.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In Old Iran the Sacred Fire was kept perpetually
-alight. Sweet perfumes were spread around the
-place of prayer, for which a little eminence was
-chosen, but there were no images and no temples.
-Archæologists have failed to find traces of a building
-set apart for religious worship among the splendid
-ruins of Persepolis: the “forty towers” only tell
-of the pleasure-palace of an Eastern king. Was it
-that the profound spirituality of this people shrank
-not only from carving a graven image of the deity,
-but also from giving him a house made with hands?
-What could the maker of the firmament want with
-human fanes? Some such thought may have caused
-the Iranians to suppress for so long a time the instinct
-which impels man to build temples. In any
-case, it seems as if Cyrus and after him Darius threw
-themselves into the scheme for rebuilding the Hebrew
-temple with all the more enthusiasm from the fact
-that immemorial custom held them back from temple-building
-at home. The cuneiform inscriptions bear
-witness that these kings were monotheists: they
-believed in one sole creator of heaven and earth,
-by whose will kings reign and govern, and if they
-invoked the aid of heavenly hierarchs they never
-confused the creatures, however powerful, with the
-creator. That Creator they called by the name of
-Ahura Mazda, but they recognised that he was one,
-whatever the name might be by which he was called.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>“Thus saith Cyrus, king of Persia: the Lord God
-of Heaven hath given me all the kingdoms of the
-earth, and He hath charged me to build Him a
-house at Jerusalem, which is Judah.” In the uncanonical
-Book of Esdras, it is said more significantly
-that King Cyrus “commanded to have the house of
-the Lord in Jerusalem built where they should
-worship with eternal fire.” The recently deciphered
-Babylonian inscriptions have been brought forward
-to show that the Jews were mistaken in thinking
-that Cyrus was a monotheist, because he honoured
-Merodach in Babylon just as he had honoured
-Jehovah at Jerusalem. He was, it is said, a “polytheist
-at heart.” If he was, his honouring Merodach
-does not prove it. To my mind it proves exactly
-the reverse. Cyrus understood the monotheism which
-was at the bottom of the Babylonian religious system
-and which these very tablets have revealed to modern
-scholarship. He understood that “however numerous
-and diversified the nations of the earth may be,
-the God who reigns over them all can never be
-more than one.”<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c017'><sup>[2]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r2'>2</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Words written by a Japanese reformer named Okubo about
-fifty years ago.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>He was governed by expediency in his respect
-for the faiths of his subject peoples, but he was
-governed also by something higher than expediency.
-That Darius Hystaspis, who is allowed to have been
-a monotheist, continued his policy, shows that it was
-not thought to involve disloyalty to Ahura Mazda since
-of such disloyalty Darius would have been incapable.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If we grant that the Iranians were, in the main,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>monotheistic at a date when not more than a part
-of the population professed Zoroastrianism, the question
-follows, of what was the difference between the
-reformed and the unreformed religion? To answer
-this satisfactorily, we must remember that the paramount
-object of Zoroaster was less change than
-conservation. Like Moses whom an attractive if not
-well-founded theory makes his contemporary, he saw
-around a world full of idolatry, and he feared lest
-the purer faith of Iran should be swamped by the
-encroachments of polytheism and atheism (for,
-strangely enough, the Avesta abounds in references
-to sheer negation). The aim of every doctrine or
-practice which he introduced was to revivify, to
-render more comprehensible, more consistent, the
-old monotheistic faith.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>With regard to practice, the most remarkable innovation
-was that which concerned the disposal of
-the dead. It cannot be explained as a relic of barbarism:
-it was introduced with deliberation and with
-the knowledge that it would shock human sensibility
-then, just as much as it does now. The avowed
-reason for giving the dead to vultures or animals
-is that burial defiles the earth. It was recognised
-that this argument was open to the objection that
-birds or beasts were likely to drop portions of dead
-bodies on the earth. The objection was met with
-scholastic resourcefulness not to say casuistry: it was
-declared that “accidents” do not count. Though so
-strongly insisted on in the Avesta, the practice only
-became general at a late period: even after Mazdeism
-had made headway, bodies were often enveloped in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>wax to avoid defilement of the earth while evading
-the prescribed rite. Cremation, the natural alternative
-to burial, would have polluted the sacred
-fire. It was observed, no doubt, that the consumption
-of the dead by living animals was the
-means employed by Nature for disposing of the
-dead. Why do we so rarely see a dead bird or
-hare or rabbit or squirrel? The fact is not
-mysterious when we come to look into it. It may
-have been thought that what Nature does must be
-well done. The Parsis themselves seem to suppose
-that this and other prescriptions of their religious
-law were inspired by sanitary considerations, and
-they attribute to them their comparative immunity
-from plague during the recent epidemics at Bombay.
-Defilement of water by throwing any impurity into
-rivers is as severely forbidden as the defilement of
-the earth. Possibly another reason against burial
-was the desire to prevent anything like the material
-cult of the dead and the association of the fortunes
-of the immortal soul with those of the mortal body,
-such as prevailed among the Egyptians, whose
-practices doubtless were known to the Magi by
-whom, rather than by any one man, the Mazdean
-law was framed. Finally, the last rites provided a
-recurrent object-lesson conducive to the mental habit
-of separating the pure from the impure. They reminded
-the Mazdean that life is pure because given
-by Ormuzd; death impure because inflicted by
-Ahriman. The rule of every religion is designed
-largely, if not chiefly, as a moral discipline.<a id='r3' /><a href='#f3' class='c017'><sup>[3]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r3'>3</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Among the Buddhists of Thibet the dead are given to dogs
-and birds of prey as a last act of charity—to feed the hungry.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>The true originality of Zoroastrianism as a religious
-system lies in the dualistic conception of creation
-which is the nexus that connects all its parts. This
-was seen at once, when the Avesta became known
-in Europe, but the idea was so entirely misunderstood
-and even travestied, that Zoroaster was represented
-as a believer in two gods whose power was equal,
-if, indeed, the power of the evil one were not the
-greater. Recently among the manuscripts of Leopardi
-were found these opening lines of an unfinished
-“Hymn to Ahriman”:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Re delle cose, autor del mondo, arcana</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Malvagità, sommo potere e somma</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Intelligenza, eterno</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Dator de’ mali e regitor del moto....”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>They are fine lines, but if Anro-Mainyus might
-fitly be called “arcana malvagità” and “dator de’
-mali,” nothing could be farther removed from the
-Zoroastrian idea than the rest of the description.
-Ahriman possessed neither supreme power nor
-supreme intelligence, nor was he author of the world,
-but only of a small portion of it. To this day, however,
-it has pleased pessimists to claim Zoroaster, the
-most optimist of prophets, as one of their fraternity.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The real Ahriman gains in tremendous force from
-the vagueness of his personality. Sometimes he <i>acts</i>
-as a person: as in the Temptation of Zoroaster when
-he offers him the kingdoms of the world if he will but
-serve him. But no artist would have dared to give him
-human form. And surely no one in Iran would have
-alluded to him by mild or good-humoured euphemisms.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>He shares this, however, with the mediæval devil,
-that he works at an eternally pre-destined disadvantage.
-He is fore-doomed to failure. Good is
-stronger than Evil, and Good is lasting, Evil is
-passing. In the end, Evil must cease to be.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Though not immortal, Ahriman was primordial.
-Unlike the fallen star of the morning, what he is,
-that he was. He did not choose Evil: he <i>is</i> Evil
-as Ormuzd <i>is</i> Good. He can create, but only things
-like himself. The notion that both Ormuzd and
-Ahriman proceeded from a prior entity, Boundless
-Time, is a late legend. Ormuzd and Ahriman existed
-always, the one in eternal light, the other in beginningless
-darkness. An immense vacuum divided the
-light from the darkness and Ahriman knew not
-Ormuzd, Evil knew not Good, till Good was externalised
-in the beneficent creation.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Young life lowed through the meadows, the woods and the echoing mountains,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Wandered bleating in valleys and warbled on blossoming branches.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>The sight of created things gave Ahriman the will
-to create corresponding things, evil instead of good.
-He made sin, disease, death, the flood, the earthquake,
-famine, slaughter, noxious animals. So the
-pieces were set down on the chess-board of being,
-and, as in all religions, man’s soul was the stake.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The difference from other religions lay in the
-determined effort to grapple with the problem of
-the origin of evil. The tribe of divine students
-among whom Mazdeism sprang up saw in that unsolved
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>problem the great cause of unbelief, and they
-set themselves to solve it by the theory which
-J. S. Mill said was the only one which could reconcile
-philosophy with religion—the theory of primal forces
-at war. The Indian did not attempt to fathom it;
-the Egyptian and Assyrian set it aside; we know
-the offered Hebrew solution: “I form the light and
-create darkness; I make peace and create evil, I,
-the Lord, do all these things.” But this is a statement,
-not a solution, because though it may be
-believed, it cannot be thought. The attraction of
-the dualistic conception is shown by nothing more
-clearly than by the extraordinary vitality of Manichæism
-in the face of every kind of persecution both
-in the East and West, although Manichæism, with
-its ascription of the creation of mankind to the Evil
-Principle, its depreciation of woman, its out-and-out
-asceticism which included abstinence from animal
-food (a rule borrowed by Mani from the Buddhists
-in his journey in India) contrasts unfavourably with
-the faith that did not make a single demand on
-human nature except to be good, even as its Creator
-was good.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The origin of the Magians was Semitic, or, as
-some think, præ-Semitic and præ-Aryan. Travellers
-brought tales of them to the ancient world which
-listened with a fascinated interest, while it failed
-to see the importance of the mighty religious phenomenon
-of Israel. The “Wise men of the East”
-had a charm for antiquity, as they were to have for
-the Infant Church which never tired of depicting
-them in its earliest art. Mention of the “Persarum
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>Magos” is frequent from Herodotus to Cicero, who
-speaks of them under that name. According to
-Herodotus the Magi sang the Theogony, and
-Pausanias describes them as reading from a book
-which was certainly the Avesta, though it must
-not be overlooked that never but once does it
-contain the smallest reference to them. This tribe
-of divine students enjoyed a high reputation at the
-Babylonian Court, which seems less unexpected by
-the light of recent research than it did when the
-Babylonians and Assyrians were thought to be
-destitute of any trace of an esoteric religion tending
-to monotheism. That the Magians were monotheists
-cannot be disputed. Probably they were skilled in
-astronomy and in medicine, the two sciences which
-almost covered what was meant then by learning
-in the East. Probably also they were astrologers
-like other searchers of the heavens, but they were
-not magic-workers, a calling that had a bad name.
-The Magi in the Gospel story are supposed to have
-been guided by astronomical calculations; whatever
-these may have been, they could not have been
-ignorant of the prophecy in their own Scriptures of
-a Virgin who should give birth to the Saviour and
-Judge of men. The ante-natal soul of this Virgin
-had been venerated for centuries in Iran. An infiltration
-of Messianic prophecies might induce them
-to conclude that the Child would be “King of the
-Jews.” It was not likely that they would take so
-long a journey to do homage to any new-born
-earthly king, but it was quite possible that they
-might go in search of the promised Saviour.</p>
-
-<div id='i128' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i128.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='small'><i>Photo:</i> <i>Mansell.</i></span><br />COUNTING CATTLE.<br />British Museum.<br /><span class='small'>(<i>Egyptian Fresco.</i>)</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>In Media we know that the people lived at one
-time in tribes, without kings. In one form or
-another, the tribal organisation existed and exists
-everywhere in the East. What is caste but a
-petrified tribal system? The first discovery which
-a European makes on landing on the skirts of the
-East, is that everything is done by tribes. The
-Algerian conjurors who swallow fire, drive nails
-into their heads and do other gruesome feats
-are a semi-religious tribe which has thrived
-from time immemorial on the exercise of the same
-profession. The dwarfs of the late Bey of Tunis,
-whom I saw at Bardo, belonged to a tribe which
-does nothing but furnish dwarfs. Apply to a high
-or worthy end this corporate pursuit of a given
-object and it must produce remarkable results.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The unanimous belief of the Greeks that Zoroaster
-was founder of the Magians is held no longer, but
-he is still thought to have been one of them. Moslem
-tradition made him the servant of a Hebrew prophet,
-and even serious Western students were inclined
-to trace Mazdeism to the Jewish prisoners who were
-brought into Media by the Assyrians. It is unnecessary
-to say that at present the Jews are
-regarded as the debtors.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There is no figure of a religious teacher so elusive
-as that of Zoroaster, and they are all elusive. But
-in the case of Zoroaster it is not only the man that
-eludes us—it is also his environment. Brahmanical
-India of to-day reflects as in a glass the society
-into which Sakya Muni cast his seed; in fact,
-we understand the seed-sowing better than the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>harvest; Buddhism at its apogee seems of the
-nature of an interlude in the history of the changeless
-East. China still throws light on its passionless
-sage, passionless in a sense so far deeper than the
-Indian recluses, who, though they knew it not, did
-but substitute for the passion of the flesh the more
-inebriating passion of the spirit. From the splendid
-treasury of præ-Islamic poetry, we know that the
-Arab race had acquired its specialised type before
-the Muezzin first called the faithful to prayer. The
-moral petrifaction of the many and the religious and
-patriotic ferment of the few which formed the
-<i>milieu</i> of nascent Christianity, can be realised without
-any stretch of the imagination. Buddha, Confucius,
-and He that was greater than they, came into highly
-civilised societies in organised states; Mohammed
-came into an unorganised state which lacked political
-and religious cohesion, but the unity of race was
-already developed: the Emirs of the Soudan whose
-star set at Omdurman were the living pictures of the
-Arabs who first rallied to the Prophet’s banner. Of
-the society of Old Iran to which Zoroaster spoke,
-it is difficult to form a distinct idea and to judge how
-far it had moved away from early Aryan simplicity.
-We gather that it was still a society in which sheep-raising
-and dairy-farming played a preponderant part.
-Those modern expressions may serve us better than
-to say “shepherds” and “herdsmen,” since fixity of
-dwelling with the possession of what then was
-considered wealth seems to have been a very
-common case. Nomadic life lasted on, but it was
-held in disrepute. There appears to have been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>nothing like a national or warlike spirit such as that
-possessed by the Jews, though occasional Turanian
-incursions had to be repelled. There were few towns
-and many scattered villages and homesteads. We
-are conscious that these impressions derived from
-the Avesta may be partially erroneous. Teachers
-of religion only take note of political or other circumstances
-so far as it suits their purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Zoroaster (the Greek reading of Zarathustra,
-which in modern Persian becomes Zardusht), was
-born, as far as can be guessed, in Bactria, which
-became the stronghold of Avestic religion and the
-last refuge of the national monarchy on the Arab
-invasion. There was a time when his existence was
-denied, but no one doubts it now. Eight hundred
-years before Christ is the date which most modern
-scholars assign to him, though some place him much
-farther back, while others think they discern reasons
-for his having appeared after Buddha. The legend
-of his life (not to be found in the Avesta) begins in
-the invariable way: he was descended from kings;
-as a young man he retired to a grotto in the desert,
-where he lived an austere life of reflection for seven
-years. Zoroaster never taught asceticism, but tradition
-attributes to him the season of solitude and
-self-collection without which perhaps, in fact as well
-as in fable, the supreme power over other men’s
-minds was never wielded by man.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Various marvellous particulars are related: he was
-suckled by two ewes; wild animals obeyed his voice;
-when thrown under the feet of oxen and horses,
-they avoided hurting him. In his seven years’
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>retirement he meditated on idol-worship, on false
-gods and false prophets. The people of Iran, substantially
-monotheist but prone to sliding into degrading
-superstition, offered a field for his mission. He
-took to him a few disciples and began to preach to
-as many as would hear, but he met with great
-difficulties. At last, he found favour with a king
-by curing his favourite horse, and he might have
-ended his days in peace but the spirit urged him to
-continue his apostolate. Not to princes but to
-peasants did he chiefly address himself; he did not
-call them away from their work but exhorted them
-to pursue it diligently. “He who cultivates the earth
-will never lack, but he who does not, will stand idly
-at the doors of others to beg food.” Labour is not
-an evil, man who earns his bread by the sweat of his
-brow is not under a curse: he is the fellow-worker
-with God! This was the grandest thing that
-Zoroaster taught. It is singular to note the affinity
-between his teaching and the Virgilian conception
-of the husbandman as half a priest. In the Middle
-Ages the same thought arose where one would not
-look for it: among those religious orders which had
-the luminous inspiration that in work not in indolence
-lay the means of salvation: “<i>Laborare est orare.</i>”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The care of the God-created animals brought with
-it a special blessing: it was actually a way to heaven.
-If a friend gave us a cherished animal, should not we
-treat it well for that friend’s sake as well as for its
-own value? Would not it remind us of the giver?
-Would not we be anxious that he should find it in
-good health if by chance he came on a visit? This
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>is how Zoroaster wished man to feel about the cow,
-the sheep, the dog. Auguste Comte considered
-domestic animals as a part of humanity. Zoroaster
-considered them as a trust from God.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Moslem traditions finish the story of the Mazdean
-prophet by telling that he was beaten to death by
-“devil-worshippers,” probably Turanian raiders.
-Zoroastrian authorities are silent about his end,
-which is thought to bear out the legend that it was
-unfortunate.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Parsis hold that the whole Avesta was the
-work of Zoroaster. Much of the original material
-has disappeared, and although Western writers are
-disposed to throw all the blame on the Moslem
-invaders, the steady Persian tradition which accuses
-“Alexander the Rûman” of having caused the
-destruction of an important part of it, cannot be
-well answered by saying that such barbarism was
-not likely to be committed by the Macedonian
-conqueror. When Persepolis was reduced to ruins
-some of the sacred books “written with gold ink on
-prepared cow-skins” may have been destroyed by
-accident, but as it was certain that the Zoroastrian
-priests would do all they could to foment resistance
-to the hated idolater, we cannot be too sure that the
-deed was not done on purpose. The way of disposing
-of the dead set the Greeks against the
-Zoroastrians, and they even thought or affected to
-think that the dying as well as the dead were given
-to dogs. The Arabs, no doubt, burnt what they
-could lay their hands on of what was left, and it
-tells much for the devotion of the faithful few, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>persecuted remnant in Persia, and the band of exiles
-who found a happier fate in India, that nevertheless
-the Avesta has been preserved in a representative
-though incomplete form, to take its place in among
-the sacred literatures of the world. When the Parsis
-return, as they hope to do, to a free Persia, they
-may carry the Avesta proudly before them as the
-Sikhs carried the Granth to the prophet-martyr’s
-tomb at Delhi: they have done more than keep the
-faith, they have <i>lived it</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The present Avesta consists of five books. The
-Gâthâs or hymns alone really claim to have been
-composed by Zoroaster himself, and this claim is
-admitted by European scholars who disagree with
-the Parsis in denying that the other four books are
-by the same author. They are: the “Yasna,” a
-ceremonial liturgy, the “Vispered,” a work resembling
-the “Yasna,” but apparently less ancient; the “Vendîdâd,”
-which contains the Mazdean religious law,
-and the “Khordah Avesta,” a household prayer-book
-for the laity. The original text was written in an
-Aryan dialect related to Sanscrit; after a time, this
-tongue was understood by no one but the priests
-and not much by them; it was decided, therefore,
-to make a translation, which was called the “Zend,”
-or “interpretation,” or, as we should say, “the
-authorised version.” At first Europeans thought
-that “Zend” meant the original tongue in which
-the work was written. Curiously enough, the language
-into which the Scriptures were rendered was
-not Iranian or Old Persian, but Pahlavi, a <i>lingua
-franca</i> full of Semitic words, which had been coined
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>for convenience in communicating with the Assyrians
-and Syrians when they were under one king.
-Pahlavi was also used for official inscriptions, for
-coinage, for commerce; it was a sort of Esperanto.
-The text and the translation enjoyed equal authority,
-but the former was called “the Avesta of Heaven”
-and the latter “the Avesta of Earth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The first fragment of the “Avesta” that reached
-Europe was a copy of the “Yasna” brought to
-Canterbury by an unknown Englishman in 1633.
-Other scraps followed, but no real attempt to translate
-it was made till the adventurous Anquetil
-Duperron published in 1771 the version which he
-had made with the assistance of Parsi priests and
-which was rejected in unwise haste by Sir William
-Jones as a <i>supercherie littéraire</i>, chiefly on the score
-that its contents were for the most part pure nonsense,
-and hence could not be the work of Zoroaster.
-Germany at once was more just than England to
-the man who, though he had not succeeded in making
-a good translation, deserved the highest honour as
-a pioneer.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Even now that better translations are available,
-the Avesta is apt to dishearten the reader on his
-first acquaintance with it. Many passages have
-remained obscure, and the desire to be literal in this
-as in some other Oriental works has hindered the
-translators from writing their own languages well. It
-needs a Sir Richard Jebb to produce a translation
-which is a classic and is yet microscopically accurate.
-I once asked Professor F. C. Burkitt why the Septuagint
-did not make more impression on the Hellenic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>and Roman students of Alexandria by mere force
-of the literary power of the Bible? He replied that
-he thought it was to be explained by the poor degree
-of literary skill possessed by the Greek translators
-or by most of them. Another reminiscence comes
-to my mind here: I recollect that eminent scholar
-and deeply religious-minded man, Albert Réville,
-saying to me: “The Bible is so much more amusing
-than the Koran!” I am afraid one must confess
-that the Koran is so much “more amusing” than the
-Avesta. It is a good rule, however, to approach
-all religious books with patience and with reverence,
-for they contain, even if concealed under a bushel,
-the finest thoughts of man.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>When we have grown accustomed to the outward
-frame of the Avesta, the inner sense becomes
-clearer. It is like a piece of music by Tschaikowsky:
-at first the modulations seem bizarre, the themes
-incoherent; then, by degrees, a consecutive plan
-unwinds itself and we know that what appeared
-meaningless sound was divine harmony.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The essential teaching of the Avesta is summed
-up in the text: “Adore God with a pure mind and
-a pure body, and honour Him in His works.” Force,
-power, energy, waters and stagnant pools, springs,
-running brooks, plants that shoot aloft, plants that
-cover the ground, the earth, the heavens, stars, sun,
-moon, the everlasting lights, the flocks, the kine,
-the water-tribes, those that are of the sky, the flying,
-the wild ones—“We honour all these, Thy holy
-and pure creatures, O Ahura Mazda, divine artificer!”</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“The Voice said: Call My works thy friends.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>If the lyric note of great religious expression is
-rarely reached (only, perhaps, in a few pieces, such
-as the noble hymn to the sun-symbol), the sustained
-exposition of life is so reasonable and yet so lofty
-that to contemplate it after gazing at the extravagances
-of pillar-saints and Indian Yogi, signals, as
-it were, a return to sanity and health after the <i>nuit
-blanche</i> of fever.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The “Khordah Avesta” contains this counsel or
-good wish: “Be cheerful; live thy life the whole
-time which thou wilt live.” Man is not asked to
-do the impossible or even the difficult: he is asked
-to <i>enjoy</i>. To the extreme spirituality which shrank
-from making even a mental image of God is joined
-a “this worldliness” which saw in rational enjoyment
-a religious duty. Instead of choosing poverty,
-man was ordered to make good use of wealth; instead
-of mortifying the flesh, he was to avoid calumny,
-evil-speaking, quarrels, to give clothes to the poor,
-to pray not only for himself but for others. If he
-does wrong, let him repent honestly in his heart and
-do some practical good work as a pledge of his
-repentance. The soul which grieves for its wrongdoing
-and sins no more comes back into the light
-of “God the giver, Forgiver, rich in Love, who
-always is, always was, always will be!” When it
-was asked, “What is in the first place most acceptable
-to this earth?” the answer came: “When a
-holy man walks on it, O Zarathustra!” Good men
-work <i>with</i> God, who, sure of ultimate triumph, is
-yet Himself struggling now against the Power of
-Darkness. There is no religion without a good
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>life: “All have not the Faith who do not hear
-it; all hear it not who are unclean; all are unclean
-who are sinners.” God did not send calamities to
-His servants, but He compassionates them in their
-trials: “The voice of him weeping, however low,
-mounts up to the star-lights, comes round the whole
-world.” It is no sin to desire riches: “Thy kingdom
-come, O Ahura, when the virtuous poor shall inherit
-the earth.” In spite of the sufferings of good people,
-even on this fair earth there is more of pleasantness
-for the good than for the wicked, and in the next
-world there is bliss eternal. I do not think that
-Robert Browning studied the Avesta, but to the
-thoroughly Zoroastrian line quoted above I am
-tempted to add this other which is not less so:—</p>
-
-<p class='c020'>“Never dreamed, though right were worsted, wrong would
-triumph.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>For the individual, as for the universe, Right must
-triumph. If the prophet of optimism has a harder
-task than the oracle of despair, it is, perhaps, a more
-profitable task.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Parsi repeats daily, as his ancestors did before
-him, the so-called Honover or “Ahuna-Vairya,” or
-<i>logos</i> which brings God down to man as the Gayatri
-lifts man up to God: “One Master and Lord, all
-holy and supreme; one teacher of His Law, appointed
-by God’s almighty will as shepherd to the weak.”
-The Mazdean “law” was a thought-out system to
-prevent idolatry and atheism, and to make men lead
-good lives. There is no racial exclusiveness in it:
-the Mazdeans had no shibboleth or peculiar sign;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>Zoroaster, himself a foreigner, did not appeal to a
-chosen people or to a miraculously evolved caste: he
-only knew of good men and bad. A really good man,
-truthful and charitable in all his ways, had three
-heavens open to him even though he “offered no
-prayers and chanted no Gâthâs”; only the fourth
-heaven, a little nearer the presence of God, was
-reserved for those who had devoted their lives to
-religion. Temperance was enjoined, as without temperance
-there could not be health. The family was
-sacred and marriage meritorious: children, the gift of
-Ahura Mazda, were recruits for the great Salvation
-Army of the future. Immorality was severely censured,
-but the victims of it were befriended.
-Stringent and most humane religious laws protected
-the <i>fille-mère</i> from being driven “by her shame” to
-destroy herself or her offspring. Girls were married
-at sixteen: the address to young brides may be compared
-with that in the Rig-Veda: “I speak these
-words to you, maidens who wed. I say them unto
-you—imprint them on your hearts. Learn to know
-the world of the Holy Spirit according to the Law.
-Even so, let one of you take the other as the Law
-ordains, for it will be to you a source of perfect joy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>At the time when Zoroastrianism was the State
-religion, the Sásánian period, we find that the kings
-frequently had harems. It is certain, however, that if
-in this as in other things the priests were complacent,
-they were untrue to orthodox Zoroastrian doctrine
-and custom, which only permitted the taking of a
-second wife in some rare cases, as when there was
-no issue by the first.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>Even then, it does not seem to have been encouraged.
-The blot on Avestic morality is the strange recommendation
-of consanguineous marriages, which the
-Parsis interpret as far as possible in a figurative sense,
-but it must have been intended to be followed, though
-it is plain that such unions were never popular. The
-declared object was the hypothetical maximum purity
-of race: exactly the same object as that contemplated
-in the union of Siegemund and Siegelind in the
-Nibelungenlied—a curious parallel. To my mind,
-the desire to keep agricultural property together may
-have had something to do with it. The present
-moral ideas of the Parsis do not differ from those
-of Europeans, and when they requested to be placed
-under the English instead of the Hindu marriage
-law, their wish was granted.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In Avesta times the priests both married and
-toiled like the rest of the people. When their prosperity
-under the Sásánians tended to make them a class
-apart, they seem to have become less faithful to
-the ideals of their master, less stern in opposing
-evil in high places. It is a common experience of
-history. Originally they were true citizen-priests,
-mixing with the people as being of them. There
-was no life better or holier than the common life
-of duty and work. Isolation of any kind was contrary
-to the central Zoroastrian view of man as a
-social being. Among the wicked souls in hell, each
-one thinks itself utterly alone: it has no sight or
-knowledge of the host around it. Nothing could
-illustrate more powerfully than this the saying of a
-great French writer: “<i>Seul a un synonyme: mort!</i>”
-Solitude is the death of the soul.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>
- <h2 id='ch07' class='c006'>VII<br /> <br />ZOROASTRIAN ZOOLOGY</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c007'>NO investigator of early Iran can afford to
-neglect the <i>Shahnameh</i> of Firdusi, which
-was as good history as he could make it; that is
-to say, it was founded on extremely old legendary
-lore collected by him with a real wish to revive the
-memory of the past. Firdusi sang the glories of
-the “fire-worshippers” with such enthusiasm that
-one cannot be surprised if, when he died, the Sheikh
-of Tús doubted whether he ought receive orthodox
-Moslem burial: a doubt removed by an opportune
-dream in which the Sheikh saw the poet in Paradise.
-In Firdusi’s epic we are told that the earliest
-Persian king (who seems to have been not very
-far off the first man) lived in peace with all creation.
-Wild animals came round and knew him for their
-lord. He had a son who was killed by demons and
-a grandson named Húsheng, who, as soon as he was
-old enough, made war on the demons (Turanians?)
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>to avenge his father’s murder. Every species of wild
-and tame beast obeyed Húsheng:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“The savage beasts, and those of gentler kind,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Alike reposed before him and appeared</div>
- <div class='line in1'>To do him homage.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>In his war on the demon’s brood, Húsheng was
-helped by wolf, tiger, lion, and even by the fowls
-of the air. All this while mankind had lived on
-fruit and the leaves of trees. Húsheng taught his
-people to bake bread. He was succeeded by his
-son Taliumen, in whose reign panthers, hawks, and
-falcons were tamed. The next king introduced
-weaving and the use of armour. His successor was
-remembered for having kept a herd of 1,000 cows
-whose milk he gave to the poor. Then came Zorák,
-who owned 10,000 horses. Zorák was seduced by
-Iblís, the evil spirit, who, in order to accomplish it,
-became his chief cook. Iblís was the real founder
-of the culinary art; till then, people lived still almost
-entirely on bread and fruit, but the king’s new <i>chef</i>
-prepared the most savoury dishes, for which he
-used the flesh of all kinds of birds and beasts.
-Finally, he sent to table a partridge and a pheasant,
-after which Zorák promised the devil to grant him
-any request he might make.</p>
-
-<div id='i142' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i142.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='small'><i>Photo:</i> <i>J. Dieulafoy.</i></span><br />KING FIGHTING GRIFFIN WITH SCORPION’S TAIL.<br />Palace of Darius.<br /><span class='small'>(<i>By permission of M. Marcel Dieulafoy.</i>)</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Here there are fugitive reminiscences of parallel
-legends in the <i>Bundehesh</i>, a Parsi religious book
-belonging to post-Avestic times. The first human
-couple served God faithfully till, for some unexplained
-reason, they were induced to ascribe creation and
-supreme power to the daevas. This was the “unforgivable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>sin,” the ascription of the miraculous power
-of God to the devil. Ahriman rejoiced at their
-treason, though it is not said that he was the cause
-of it: man could choose between good and evil.
-After their defection, the man and the woman clothed
-themselves in leaves and took to hunting. Ahriman
-put it into their heads to kill a goat and then to
-light a fire by rubbing two sticks: they blew on
-the fire to fan the flame and roasted a piece of the
-goat. One bit they threw in the air as a sacrifice
-to the Nature spirits, saying, “This for the Yazatas!”
-A kite flew past and carried off the sacrifice. Afterwards,
-the man and woman dressed in skins and
-told innumerable lies. Going from bad to worse,
-they engendered a large family whence sprang the
-twenty-five races of mankind.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>How this story got into the <i>Bundehesh</i> I do not
-know, but I am sure that Zoroaster would have
-disowned it. He knew of no collective “fall of
-man,” whether in connexion with partridges,
-pheasants, or goat-flesh.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Avesta, in its sober cosmogony, is content
-to speak of the proto-man, Gayo Marathan (mortal
-life), and the proto-good-animal, Geus Urva, from
-whom all human beings and all animals of the good
-creation are derived. Nevertheless, Ahura Mazda
-is described frequently as <i>creating</i> each animal; the
-proto-creature was only the <i>modus operandi</i> of the
-divine power. As in biology, divided sex was a
-secondary development. From the bull, Geus Urva,
-proceeded first his own species, and then sheep,
-camels, horses, asses, birds, water-animals.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>The distinguishing qualification given him of <i>good
-and laborious</i> is the most striking proof of the
-originality of Magian ideas: instead of the strong
-bulls of Basan roaring in their might, the bull we
-have here is one with the ploughing ox:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“T’amo, o pio bove; e mite un sentimento</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Di vigore e di pace al cor m’infondi....”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>—the patient, the long-suffering, the gentle, though
-strong-limbed helper of man in his daily toil, good
-in his vigour, good in his mildness, but good most
-of all in his labour, for Zoroaster called labour a holy
-thing. The animal which did most to cultivate God’s
-earth and make the desert flower like a rose, was
-the paragon of creatures. It must not be thought
-that to the Geus Urva or his kind was ever rendered
-the homage due to their Creator. If there was one
-thing more abhorrent, to the Zoroastrian mind than
-idolatry it was zoolatry: when Cambyses killed a
-new Apis with many of his followers in Egypt, he
-had no reason to fear Mazdean criticism.</p>
-<p class='c008'>The soul of the bull receives <i>dulia</i> not <i>latria</i>.
-“We honour the soul of the bull ... and also
-our own souls and our cattle’s souls who help to
-preserve our life; the souls by which they exist and
-which exist for them.” So runs one of the Gâthâs,
-one of the hymns of Zoroaster himself. “We honour
-the souls of the swift, wild animals; we honour the
-souls of just men and women in whatever place they
-are born, whose pure natures have overcome evil.
-We honour saintly men and saintly women, living
-immortal, always living, always increasing in glory—all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>man and woman souls faithful to the Spirit
-of God.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In this song of praise we have brought before us
-vividly a fundamental doctrine of the Avesta which
-pervades every page of it: the belief in the Fravashi,
-the soul-partner, the double or angel, which exists
-before birth as during life and after death. This
-belief has a great interest for us as it would seem
-that it was only by chance that it did not pass into
-the body of Christian dogma. The Jews of the
-new school had held it for quite two hundred years
-before Christ. Besides other allusions, are the three
-distinct references to the soul-partner in the New
-Testament. Christ Himself speaks of the angels of
-the children who are always in the presence of God
-and who complain to Him if the children are ill-treated.
-Secondly, when Peter issued from prison,
-those who saw him said, “It is his angel.” Thirdly,
-it is stated that the Sadducees believed that there
-was no resurrection, “neither angel nor Spirit,” but
-that the Pharisees, of whom Paul was one, “confessed
-both.” These three references become intelligible
-for the first time after reading the Gâthâs. True it
-is that he who knows only one religion, knows
-none.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Ahriman inflicted every sort of suffering on the
-primal creature—this was the beginning of cruelty
-to animals. At last, he caused its death. The soul
-of the Bull dwells in the presence of God, and to it,
-as intercessor, all suffering creatures lift their plaints.
-Why were they made to suffer wrath, ill-usage,
-hunger? Will no one lead them to sweet pastures?
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>The creature-soul carries the cry of the creatures
-to God. Ahura Mazda promises the advent of
-Zoroaster, redresser of all wrongs. But the Bull-soul
-weeps and complains: how can the voice of
-one weak man avail to help? It invokes stronger
-and more effectual aid.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The hymn is really a litany of suffering animals,
-the grandeur of the thought flashing across obscurities
-which make it almost impossible to translate. Very
-mysterious is the expression of incredulity in the
-efficacy of the help of Zoroaster, an expression which
-stands quite alone, and in which some have seen
-a proof that this hymn was not written by the
-Prophet. But would any one else have dared to
-question his power or to call him “one weak man”?
-Can it be that Zoroaster was distressed to find his
-efforts to prevent cruelty so unavailing, and that he
-here covertly invokes the “strong arm of the law”
-to do what he had failed in doing?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the pages of the Avesta everything is tried
-to enforce humanity: hopes of reward, threats of
-punishment, appeals to religious obedience, common
-gratitude, self-interest. It cannot but appear singular
-that among an Eastern pastoral and agricultural
-people such reiterated admonitions should have been
-needful. The cow and the horse, “animals manifestly
-pure which bring with them words of blessing,”
-inflict terrible anathemas on their tormentors:—</p>
-
-<p class='c020'>The cow curses him who keeps her: “Mayest thou remain
-without posterity, ever continuing of evil report, thou who dost
-not distribute me food, and yet causest me to labour for thy wife,
-thy children and thy own sustenance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c020'><span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>The horse curses his owner: “Mayest thou not be he who
-harnesses swift horses, not one of those who sit on swift horses,
-not one who makes swift horses hasten away. Thou dost not
-wish strength to me in the numerous assembly, in the circle of
-many men.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>The cow which is led astray by robbers calls to
-Mithra “ever with unlifted hands, thinking of the
-stall,” and Mithra, here figuring as the vengeance
-of God, destroys the house, the clan, the confederacy,
-the region, the rule of him who injured her. She
-is the type of prosperity: “O thou who didst create
-the cow, give us immortal life, safety, power, plenty.”
-She is dear to her Creator: “Thou hast given the
-earth as a sweet pasture for the cow.” She is praised
-because she furnishes the offerings, flesh, milk, and
-butter.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>This reminds us of the differences of point of view
-between the Persian and the Indian humanitarian.
-The Indian, in theory at least, simply forbade taking
-animal life. He had the great advantage of the
-argument of the straight line. The Zoroastrian was
-handicapped by his moderation. It is easier far to
-teach extraordinary than ordinary well-doing; every
-moralist who has set out to improve mankind has
-found that. Zoroaster had not the smallest doubt
-about his contention that man has imperative duties
-in regard to what used to be called “the brute creation.”
-Man could not live as man at all without it:
-we who have harnessed steam and trapped the electric
-spark might entertain such a possibility, but to
-Zoroaster the idea would have seemed absurd. As
-we owe so much to animals, the least we can do
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>is to treat them well. Yet, though he included
-wanton and useless slaughter in “ill-treatment,” he
-allows the killing of animals for food. Herodotus
-remarked that, unlike the Egyptians, the Magian
-priests did not think it pollution to kill animals with
-their own hands—except dogs and oxen.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is to be supposed that the framers of Zoroastrian
-law believed that animal food was necessary for man’s
-health and strength, perfect health being the state
-most acceptable to the Creator. Believing this, they
-could not forbid the temperate use of it. Gargantuan
-feasts were not dreamt of; if they had been, they
-would have received the condemnation given to all
-excesses. We are apt to fall into the way of thinking
-of sacred books which is that of their own adepts; we
-think of them as written by unpremeditated impulse.
-But commonly this was not the case. The Avesta,
-especially, bears signs of conclusions reached by
-patient reasoning. While, however, the Magians
-permitted the slaughter of animals, they bowed to
-the original scruple which has no race-limits, by
-ordering that such slaughter should be accompanied
-by an expiatory rite without the performance of which
-it was unlawful. This was the offering of the head of
-the animal to Homa: regarded, in this instance, as
-the archetype of the “wine of life”—the sacred or
-sacramental juice of the plant which has been identified
-with the Indian Soma. The Homa juice was much
-the most sacred thing that could be eaten or drunk;
-if it is true that it contained alcohol, the little jet of
-flame that would start upwards as it was thrown on
-the sacrificial fire might seem actually to bear with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>it the spirit of the offering. Whatever was the exact
-idea implied by the dedication of slaughtered animals
-to Homa, the fact that they were killed for food did
-not, of course, in any way affect their extra-mortal
-destiny. The “souls of our cattle”—their archetypes—could
-not suffer death.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>As a careful observer, which he is now allowed to
-have been, Herodotus remarked that not only might
-the priests take animal life, but that they thought it
-highly meritorious to take the life of certain animals
-such as ants, serpents, and some kinds of birds. It
-required no profound knowledge of the East to notice
-something unusual in this. Even the Jews, with their
-classification of clean and unclean beasts, cast no
-moral slur on the forbidden category, and if the serpent
-of Eden was cursed, later snakes regained their
-character and inspired no loathing; the snake-charmer
-with his crawling pupils was a well known and popular
-entertainer. Farther East, every holy man respected
-the life of an ant as much as of an elephant. Zoroaster
-alone banned the reptile and the major part of the
-insect world. No penance was more salutary than
-to kill ten thousand scorpions, snakes, mosquitoes, ants
-that walk in single file, harvesting ants, wasps, or a
-kind of fly which was the very death of cattle. The
-innocent lizard suffered by reason of his relationship
-with the crocodile; the harmless frog and tortoise
-excited a wrath which they had done nothing to
-merit. Among mammals, the mouse is singled out
-for destruction: although the wolf is a legionary of
-Ahriman, he is more often classed with the “wicked
-two-legged one”—perverse man—than with the evil
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>creation properly so called. In one place Ahriman
-is said to have created “devouring beasts,” but on
-closer examination these devouring beasts proved to
-be only the harvesting ants which were reckoned
-deadly foes of the agriculturist. Any one who has
-seen how much newly-sown grass seed these favourites
-of Solomon will remove in a shining hour will understand
-the prejudice, though he will not, I hope, share
-it. Roughly speaking, the diligent, old-fashioned
-gardener who puzzles his pious mind as to why “those
-things” were ever created, is a born Zoroastrian. To
-tell him with Paul that “every creature of God is
-good” does not comfort him much. Zoroaster’s
-answer is as philosophically complete as it is scientifically
-weak. Certain creatures are noxious to man; a
-good Creator would not have made creatures noxious
-to men, ergo, such creatures were not made by a good
-Creator. Besides the scientific objection to any hard-and-fast
-line of division between animals, there is
-another: the pity of it. I wonder that some velvet-coated
-field-mouse, approaching softly on tip-toe as
-Zoroaster lay in his grotto, did not inquire with its
-appealing eyes: “Do you really think that I look as
-if I were made by the Evil One?” In spite of the
-numerous advantages of a theory which, in a literal
-sense, makes a virtue of necessity (a sad necessity
-to some of us), the theological ban of creatures for
-no other reason than that they are inconvenient to
-man detracts from the ideal beauty of Zoroastrian
-faith.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Darwin, in a letter to Asa Gray, the American
-botanist, said that the sufferings of caterpillars and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>mice made him doubt the existence of “a beneficent
-and omnipotent Creator.” How often does doubt
-seem more religious than belief!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The eschatology of the creatures deemed of darkness
-is not clear, but I believe there is no mention
-of their Fravashis: it is permissible to suppose, therefore,
-that, all along, they are rather appearances than
-realities: things that cannot feel, though Ahriman
-feels defeat in their destruction. For the rest, though
-Zoroaster treated wasps or mice much as Torquemada
-treated heretics, he made it no merit to torment
-them: he simply desired their extermination as every
-fruit-grower or farmer desires it to this day.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Students of Zoroastrianism have been mystified
-by the seeming detachment of the dog from the
-other “good” animals and the separate jurisdiction
-designed for it. In my opinion this arose only from
-the fact that the dog was not a food-providing animal.
-Hence it could be made penal (by religious, not by
-civil, law, it must be remembered) to kill a dog, and
-it was natural that his body should be disposed of
-in the same way as a man’s. What else could be
-done with it? It was natural also that since his death
-was inflicted by Ahriman (since it came of itself),
-purification ceremonials should be performed to remove
-the pollution. The religious scope of such
-ceremonials was like that of reconsecrating a church
-in which suicide or murder has been committed.
-That the dog was highly appreciated, that he was
-valued as an essential helper in the existing conditions
-of life, is amply proved, but that he was “reverenced”
-more than some other animals—<i>e.g.</i>, the cow—is open
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>to doubt. The dog was recognised as more human
-which made him more liable to err. It was the
-celebrated chapter on the dog which convinced Sir
-W. Jones that Anquetil Duperron’s translation was
-a forgery. It should have struck him that this was
-not how a European would have made Zoroaster
-speak about the favoured animal. In the comparisons
-of canine qualities with those of certain human beings,
-there is more of satire than of panegyric. The whole
-Fargard XIII. has been interpreted as purely mystical:
-the dog symbolising the “will,” a meaning which,
-according to this argument, fits the term “Dog” in
-all passages of the scriptures of Iran. This is a hard
-saying. More reasonable is the supposition that Fargard XIII.
-formed part of a treatise on animals and
-got into the Vendîdâd by chance. However that
-may be, the “eight characters” of the dog show
-observation though not reverence: he loves darkness
-like a thief, and at times has been known to be one;
-he fawns like a slave, he is a self-seeker like a
-courtezan, he eats raw meat like a beast of prey.
-The words relative to his “chasing about the well-born
-cow” have been interpreted to mean that he
-chased her back home when she had strayed, but I
-seem to have seen dogs chasing about well-born cows
-from no such benevolent motive. Some of the comparisons
-are neither flattering nor critical but descriptive:
-the dog loves sheep like a child, he runs here
-and there in front, like a child; he dodges in and out
-like a child.</p>
-
-<div id='i152' class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/i152.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>THE REAL DOG OF IRAN.<br /><span class='small'>Louvre.<br />(<i>By permission of Messrs. Chapman &amp; Hall, Ltd.</i>)</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The <i>jeu d’esprit</i> of the “eight characters” is followed
-by what appears to be a serious statement of how
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>to treat the dog which misconducts himself. There
-is no capital punishment, nothing like the stoning of
-the ox which gores a man or woman, in the Bible.
-If a dog attacks man or cattle he is to lose an ear; if he
-does it a third time his foot is to be cut off, or, as Bleeck
-humanely suggests, he is to be rendered so far lame
-that it is easy to escape from him. The “dumb dog”
-of vicious disposition is to be tied up. If a dog is
-no longer sane in his mind and has become dangerous
-on that account, you are to try and cure him as you
-would a man, but if this fails, you must chain him up
-and muzzle him, using a sort of wooden pillory which
-prevents him from biting. This passage is curious,
-because, while it seems to allude plainly to hydrophobia,
-it contains no hint of the worser consequences
-to man than a simple bite.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We find that there were four if not more breeds of
-dogs, each of which was carefully trained for its work.
-The house-dog, the personal dog (which may have
-been a blood-hound), sheep and herd-dogs are all
-mentioned, but there is no mention of sporting-dogs
-or of sport in the Avesta. The dogs must have been
-powerful, as they were required to be a match for the
-wolf, “the growing, the flattering, the deadly wolf,”
-which was the dread of every homestead in Iran.
-There were also “wolves with claws” (tigers), but
-they were comparatively few. The kinship of wolf
-and dog was recognised, and there was an impression
-that the most murderous wolf was the half-breed of
-a wolf and a bitch. Perhaps the wolf of dog-descent
-came more boldly to the dwelling of man, having no
-instinctive fear of him. It is said, too, that the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>deadliest kind of dog was the dog that had a wolf-mother.
-Possibly such cross-breeding was tried
-experimentally in the hope of obtaining dogs which
-could best resist the wolf.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If the dog is never represented as a creature of
-faultless perfection, it yet remains an established
-truth that “dwellings would not stand fast on the
-earth created by Ahura Mazda were there not dogs
-which pertain to the cattle and to the village.”
-It is the Lord of Creation who says: “The dog I
-have made, O Zarathustra, with his own clothing and
-his own shoes; with keen scent and sharp teeth,
-faithful to men, as a protector to the folds. For I
-have made the dog, I who am Ahura Mazda!” To
-attack the dog was like an attack on the police.
-Slitting the ear of the house or sheep-dog out of
-malice, or cutting off his foot, or belabouring him
-so that thieves got at the sheep, were not unfrequent
-crimes and they are dealt with no more severely than
-they deserve. Who killed a house-dog outright, or
-a sheep-dog or personal dog or well-trained dog, was
-warned that in the next world his soul would go
-howling worse than a wolf in the depths of the forest;
-shunned by all other souls, growled at by the dogs
-that guard the bridge Chinvat. Eight hundred blows
-with a horse-goad are adjudged to the wretch who so
-injures a dog that it die. To strike or chase a bitch
-with young brings a dreadful curse. Much is said
-about the proper care of the mother and the puppies.
-To give a dog too hot food or too hard bones is as
-bad as turning apostate. His right food is milk and
-fat and lean meat. “Of all known creatures that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>which ages soonest is the dog left foodless among
-people who eat—who seeks here and there his food
-and finds it not.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>As a rule unnamed wild animals may be supposed
-to have been protected. The fox was considered a
-powerful daeva-scarer, which shows that not only in
-China did the fox seem an “uncanny” beast. In Iran
-his supernatural services made him highly esteemed.
-There seem to have been no cats though so many
-mice. The later Iran was destined to be a great
-admirer of cats, witness the praise of them by Persian
-poets, but it is not easy to fix the date when they
-were introduced. Monkeys were known and were
-attributed by a post-Avestic superstition to the union
-of human women and daevas. Vultures were sacred
-because they devoured good Mazdeans. On the
-whole, not much attention was paid to wild nature,
-with one striking exception: the extraordinary respect
-for the water-dog, beaver or otter. Suddenly the
-solid utilitarian basis of Zoroastrian zoology gives way
-and we behold a fabric of dreams. We might understand
-it better could we know the early animistic
-beliefs of Iran, though the trend of the Avesta
-apparently ran <i>counter</i> to old popular credences far
-more than with them. It should be remembered
-that water was only a little less sacred than fire
-in the Zoroastrian system; the defilement of rivers
-was strictly forbidden. The Udra, or beaver, became
-the “luck” of the rivers: to destroy it would provoke
-a drought. If it was found roaming on the land, the
-Mazdean was bound to carry it to the nearest stream.
-In later legend, the Udra, even more than the fox,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>was a daeva-foe. But by far its most important
-characteristic is its mythical connexion with the dog.
-To the question: “What becomes of the aged dog
-when his strength fails him and he dies?” follows the
-answer: “He goes to the dwelling in the water, where
-he is met by two water-dogs.” These are his conductors
-to the dogs’ paradise. A fair sward beneath
-the waters, cool and fresh in the summer heat, is at
-least a pleasant idea, but when the two water-dogs
-are described as consisting of one thousand male and
-one thousand female dogs, the myth seems to lose
-its balance which no proper myth ought to do. Myths
-have the habit of proceeding rationally enough in
-their own orbit. Later commentators reject this
-fantastic interpretation and suppose the verse to
-mean that the dog-soul is received, not by two, but
-by two thousand water-dogs, which in Oriental hyperbole
-would mean merely “a great many.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Be this as it may, Udra-murder was a frightful sin,
-and frightful were the penalties attached to it.
-Besides undergoing the usual blows with a horse-goad
-(to be self inflicted?) the murderer must kill ten
-thousand each of some half-dozen insects and reptiles:
-this, at least, is how it looks, but as a matter of fact
-the long lists of penalties in the Vendîdâd must be
-taken not as cumulative, but as alternative. This is
-evident, though it is never stated, and it explains many
-things. A large number of the alternative punishments
-for beaver-killing take the form of offerings
-to the priests. Arms, whips, grindstones, handmills,
-house-matting, wine and food, a team of oxen, cattle
-both small and large, <i>a suitable wife</i>—the young
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>sister of the sinner—these are among the specified
-offerings. The culprit may also build a bridge,
-or breed fourteen dogs as an act of expiation; in
-short, he may do any kind of meritorious deed,
-but something he must do, or it will be the worse for
-him in the world to come.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Vendîdâd was not a code of criminal law
-enforced by the civil power, but an adjugation of
-penances for the atonement of sin. This was not
-understood at first, which caused the selection of
-punishments to appear more extravagant than it really
-is. For the most part the penances were active good
-works or things which were reckoned as such.
-Charity and alms-giving were always contemplated
-among the means of grace, and if they were not dwelt
-upon more continually, it was because there existed
-nothing comparable to modern destitution. Moreover,
-it was understood better than in other parts of the
-East that not every beggar was a saint: too often he
-was a lazy fellow who had shirked the common
-obligation of labour. The repetition of certain prayers
-was another practice recommended to the repentant
-sinner. But no good work or pious exercise was
-of any avail unless accompanied by sincere sorrow
-for having done wrong. The Law opened the door
-of grace, but to obtain it the heart must have become
-changed. God forgives those who truly desire His
-forgiveness. It is impossible to doubt that the
-spurious Mazdeism which got into Europe, distorted
-though it was, yet took with it the two great Mazdean
-doctrines of repentance and the remission of sin.
-Great ideas conquer, and it was by these two doctrines
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>that Mithraism so nearly conquered the Western
-world—not by its unlovely rites.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>On one or two points the human eschatology of
-Zoroastrianism is associated with dogs. A dog is
-brought into the presence of the dying man. This
-has been explained by reference to the dogs of Yama,
-the Vedic lord of death, and the European superstition
-about the howling of a dog being a death-portent
-is explained in the same way, but in both instances
-the immediate cause seems nearer at hand. An
-Indian officer once remarked to me that any one who
-had heard the true “death-howl” of a dog would
-never need any recondite reason for the uncomfortable
-feeling which it arouses. As regards the Zoroastrian
-dog, the immediate cause of the belief that he drives
-away evil spirits lies in the fact that he drives away
-thieves and prowlers in the night. Death being a
-pollution as the work of Ahriman, evil spirits beset
-the dying, but they flee at the sight of the dog,
-created by Ahura Mazda to protect man. The dead
-wander for three days near the tenantless body: then
-they go to the bridge Chinvat, where the division
-takes place between the good and the wicked. The
-bridge is guarded by dogs, who drive away all things
-evil from the path of the righteous, but do nothing
-to prevent bad spirits from tripping up sinners so that
-they fall into the pit.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The good go into light, sinners into darkness, where
-Ahriman, “whose religion is evil,” mocks them, saying:
-“Why did you eat the bread of Ahura Mazda and do
-my work? and thought not of your own Creator but
-practised my will?” Nothing is told of the punishment
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>of Ahriman—the doom of Evil is to be Evil—but
-in the end he will be utterly extinguished.
-Through time, <i>but not</i> through eternity the wicked
-remain in his power. In the Khordah Avesta it
-is said that God, after purifying all the obedient,
-will purify the wicked out of hell. In the words
-of a living Parsi writer: “The reign of terror, at the
-end of the stipulated time, vanishes into oblivion, and
-its chief factor, Ahriman, goes to meet his doom of
-total extinction, whilst Ahura Mazda, the Omnipotent
-Victor, remains the Great All in All.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Zoroastrian was as free as Socrates himself
-from the materialism which looks upon the body after
-death as if it were still the being that tenanted it.
-Some kind of renewed body the dead will have:
-meanwhile, this is not they! The hope of immortality
-was so firm that it was thought an actual sin to give
-way to excessive mourning: the wailing and keening
-of the Jews seem to be here condemned, though they
-are not mentioned, there being no direct allusion
-to the religions of other peoples in the Avesta.
-There is a river of human tears which hinders souls
-on their way to beatitude: the dead would fain that
-the living check their tears which swell the river and
-make it hard to cross over in safety. The same idea
-is to be found in one of the most beautiful of Scandinavian
-folk-songs.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The small work known as the Book of Ardâ Vîrâf
-is a document of priceless worth to the student of
-Mazdean eschatology, and it is also of the greatest
-interest in its relation to ideas about animals. If
-printed in a convenient form, every humane person
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>would carry it in his pocket. Like the vision of
-the Seer of Patmos this work is purely religious; it
-attempts no criticism of life and man such as that embodied
-in the “Divina Commedia,” but in spite of this
-difference in aim, there is an astonishing resemblance
-between its general plan and that of the poem of
-Dante. Without going into this subject, I may say
-that I cannot feel convinced that with the geographical,
-astronomical, and other knowledge of the East which
-is believed to have reached Dante by means of
-conversations with merchants, pilgrims and perhaps
-craftsmen (for that Italian artists worked in India at
-an early date the Madonna-like groups in many a
-remote Hindu temple bear almost certain testimony),
-there did not come to him also some report of the
-travels of the Persian visitant to the next world.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The author of the Persian vision was a pious
-Mazdean whose whole desire was to revive religious
-feeling amid growing indifference. He is supposed
-to have lived not earlier than 500, and not later than
-700 <span class='fss'>A.D.</span> The former is the likelier date. Had the
-assault of Islam begun, the book must have borne
-traces of the struggle with invaders who threatened
-to annihilate the faith. The author states that the
-work was intended as an antidote in the first place to
-atheism and in the second to “the religions of many
-kinds” that were springing up. This probably contains
-a reference to Christian sects, but it is not the
-way that allusion would have been made to propagandists
-with a sword in their hands. Christian sects
-managed to recover from the first persecution in
-344 <span class='fss'>A.D.</span>, after which they were more often than not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>tolerated, though the Zoroastrian priesthood feared
-a Church that possessed an organisation so much like
-their own. They were accused, moreover, as at
-Rome, of being anti-national: everywhere the sentiment
-against the Christians took a form closely
-resembling the anti-Semiticism of our days. Such
-accusations can hardly fail to create, to some extent,
-the thing they predicate, and it is no great wonder if
-in the end the Persian Christians received the
-Moslem invaders with favour. Though the essence
-of Mazdeism is peace to men of good-will, it is to be
-feared that the Zoroastrian priests (like others) were
-less tolerant than their creed, and that the harassing
-of the Christians generally originated with them. They
-are known to have counselled this policy to Homizd
-IV., who gave them the memorable answer that his
-royal throne could not stand on its front legs alone,
-but needed the support of the Christians and other
-sectaries as well as of the faithful. It was one of the
-wisest sayings that ever fell from the lips of a king
-and more Mazdean than all the bigotry of Zoroastrian
-clericalism.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The author of Ardâ Vîrâf tried the perfectly legitimate
-means of persuasion in rallying his countrymen
-to their own religion. He tells the story of
-how, in an age of doubt, it was agreed that the best
-thing would be to send some one into the next world
-to see if Mazdeism were, indeed, the true religion.
-Lots fell on a very virtuous man named Ardâ Vîrâf,
-who was commissioned to make the journey in a
-trance-state produced by the administration of a
-narcotic. Even now, in India, children and others
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>are given narcotics, sometimes of a dangerous sort,
-in order to obtain knowledge which is supposed to
-come to them whilst insensible. To a Mazdean the
-ordeal would be particularly terrible, because sleep,
-like death, was created by Ahriman. The calm
-fortitude with which Ardâ Vîrâf submits, while his
-family break into loud weeping, almost reminds one
-of the bearing of Socrates on the eve of a similar
-departure but one with no return. “It is the custom
-that I should pray to the departed souls and make
-a will,” he says; “when I have done that, give me
-the narcotic.” His body was treated as though dead,
-being kept at the proper distance from fire and other
-sacred things, but priests stayed near it night and
-day, praying and reading the Scriptures, that the
-powers of ill might not prevail.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>At the end of seven days the wandering spirit of
-Ardâ Vîrâf re-entered his inanimate form, and after
-he had taken food and water and wine he called for
-a ready writer, to whom he dictated the tale of what
-he had seen. Guided by Srosh the Pious and Ataro
-the Angel (Virgil and Beatrice) the traveller visited
-heaven and hell. At the outset he saw the meeting
-of a righteous soul and its Fravashi. This soul
-crosses the Chinvat bridge in safety, and on the other
-side passes into an atmosphere laden with an ineffably
-sweet perfume which emanates from the direction of
-the presence of God. Here it meets a damsel more
-wondrously fair than aught it has beheld in the land
-of the living. Enraptured at the sight, it asks her
-name and receives the answer: “I am thine own
-good actions.” Every good deed embellishes the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>human soul’s archetype, every evil deed mars and
-stains it with the hideousness of sin. This poetic
-and beautiful conception was not due to the author
-of Ardâ Vîrâf: it is taken from the venerable pages
-of the Avesta itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the abode of Punishment the most impressive
-penalties are those undergone by the souls which
-have tortured helpless infants or dumb animals. The
-mother who feeds another’s child from greed and
-starves her own, is seen digging into an iron hill
-with her breasts while the cry of her child for food
-comes ever from the other side of the hill, “but the
-infant comes not to the mother nor the mother to
-the infant.” Here the supreme anguish is mental:
-it is caused by the awakening of that maternal instinct
-which the woman stifled on earth. Has the <i>Inferno</i>
-any thought so luminously subtle as this? The
-woman-soul will never reach her child “till the renewal
-of the world.” Till the renewal of the world!
-Across the hell-fog penetrates the final hope!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The unfaithful wife who destroys the fruit of her
-illicit love suffers a horrible punishment. It is
-strange that if we wish to find an analogy to these
-severe judgments on offences against infancy, we
-must go to a small tribe of Dravidian mountaineers
-in the Nilgiri hills, among whose folk-songs is one
-which describes a vision of heaven and hell. In
-this a woman is shown who is condemned to see
-her own child continually die, because she refused
-help to a stranger’s child, saying: “It is not mine!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Those who treated their beasts cruelly, who overworked
-them, overloaded them, gave them insufficient
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>food, continued to work them when they suffered
-from sores caused by leanness instead of trying to
-cure the sores, are seen by Ardâ Vîrâf hung up head
-downwards while a ceaseless rain of stones falls on
-their backs. Those who wantonly killed animals
-have a knife driven ceaselessly into their hearts.
-Those who muzzled the ox which ploughed the
-furrows are dashed under the feet of cattle. The
-same punishment falls to those who forget to give
-water to the oxen in the heat of the day or who
-worked them when hungry and thirsty. Demons
-like dogs constantly tear the man who kept back
-food from shepherds’-dogs and house-dogs or who
-beat or killed them: he offers bread to the dogs,
-but they eat it not and only tear the more.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Ardâ Vîrâf tells a story which belongs to the cycle
-of “Sultan Murad,” immortalised by Victor Hugo.
-A certain lazy man named Davânôs, who never did
-any other thing of good during all the years when
-he governed many provinces, once cast a bundle of
-grass with his right foot to within the reach of a
-ploughing-ox. Hence his right foot is exempted
-from torment while the rest of his body is gnawed
-by noxious creatures.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is easy to imagine that the realistic picture of
-heaven and hell by a poet of no little power produced
-the deepest effect on the minds of people, who for
-the most part took it to be literally true. No Oriental
-work ever became more popular or was more widely
-read and translated. People still living can remember
-the time when it was the habit of the Parsis at
-Bombay to have public readings of Ardâ Vîrâf, on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>which occasions the audience, especially the feminine
-part of it, broke into violent sobbing from the excitement
-caused by the description of the punishment
-of the wicked. The Parsis have abandoned now the
-theory that the book is other than a work of imagination,
-but it may be hoped that they will not cease
-to regard it as a cherished legacy from their fathers
-and a precious bequest to their children.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>
- <h2 id='ch08' class='c006'>VIII<br /> <br />A RELIGION OF RUTH</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c007'>AN Englishman who went to see a Hindu saint
-was deterred from entering the cave where
-the holy man lived by the spectacle of numerous rats.
-The hermit, observing his hesitation, inquired what
-was the matter? “Don’t you see them?” answered
-his visitor. “Yes,” was the brief reply. “Why
-don’t you kill them?” asked the Englishman.
-“Why should I kill them?” said the native of the
-land. Finding the whole onus of the discussion
-thrown on his shoulders, the English traveller felt
-that it would be difficult with his limited knowledge
-of the language to express a European’s ideas about
-rats. He thought to sum up the case in one sentence:
-“We people kill them.” To which the saint
-answered: “We people don’t kill them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In another country, but still among a race which
-has inherited the habit of looking at questions between
-man and animals not exclusively from the
-man’s point of view, a learned professor proposed
-to an old gardener at Yezd that they should dig up
-an ant-hill to ascertain if the local prejudice were true
-which insisted that inside each ant-hill there lodged
-two scorpions. The old Persian declined to be a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>party to any such proceeding. “As long as the
-scorpions stay inside,” he said with decision, “we
-have no right to molest them and to do so would
-bring ill-luck.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>These anecdotes show, amusingly and convincingly,
-the wall of demarcation between Eastern and Western
-thought by which the son of the West is apt to find
-his passage barred. They serve my purpose in quoting
-them the better because they are not connected
-with the religious sect whose precepts I am going
-to sketch. They illustrate what I believe to be true,
-namely, that this sect and Buddhism itself would not
-have made their way in so wonderful a manner,
-seemingly almost without effort, had they not found
-the ground prepared by a racial tendency to fly to
-the doctrine of <i>Ahimsa</i>, or “non-killing,” which forms
-part of their systems.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>No religion prevails unless it appeals to some
-chord, if not of the human heart everywhere, at least
-of the particular human hearts to which it is directed.
-In the West a religion based on Vegetarianism would
-not have a chance. Not that there exists no trace
-of the life-preserving instinct among Western peoples—far
-from that. All nice children have it and all
-saints of the type of him of Assisi. Other people
-have it who are neither children, nor saints, nor yet
-lunatics (“though by your smiling you seem to say
-so”). I know an old hero of the Siege of Delhi
-who to this day would stoop to lift a worm from
-his path. But the sentiment, which in the West is
-rather a secret thing, forming a sort of freemasonry
-among those who feel it, asserts its sway in the East
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>in the broad light of day. No one there would mind
-giving the fullest publicity to his opinion that the
-scorpion has as good a right to live undisturbed in
-his domestic ant-hill as you have in your suburban
-villa.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Long before the Jainas made <i>Ahimsa</i> a gateway
-to perfection, innumerable Asiatics practised and even
-preached the very same rule. It was the bond of
-union between all the religious teachers and ascetics
-who constituted a well-defined feature in Indian life
-from remote if not from the earliest antiquity. The
-founders of Jainism and of Buddhism, too, were
-Gurus like the rest, only they possessed an intensified
-magnetic influence and, at least in Buddha’s case, an
-unique genius. Every Eastern religion has been
-taught by a Guru, not excepting the most divine of
-them all.<a id='r4' /><a href='#f4' class='c017'><sup>[4]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r4'>4</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>“It is stated of the Divine Founder of the Christian religion
-that without a parable spoke He not to the people. Christ, in
-fact, acted and taught as an <i>Oriental Guru</i>, a character which
-none of the European writers of Christ’s life has invested Him
-with” (Rev. J. Long: v. “Oriental Proverbs” in the Report
-of the Proceedings of the Second Congress of Orientalists).</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the occurrence of a new religious evolution
-much depends on the individual, but much also on
-the fulness of time. When Buddhism and Jainism
-arose, the psychological moment was come for a
-change or modification in the current faith. To
-some degree, both were a revolt against Sacerdotalism.
-Men were told that they could work out
-their salvation without priestly aid or intervention.
-The new teachers, though each springing from the
-class of the feudal nobility, won to their side the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>surging wave of the only kind of democratic yearning
-which, till now, Asia has known—the yearning for
-religious equality. Professor Hermann Jacobi (the
-foremost authority on Jainism, to whom all who study
-the subject owe an unbounded debt) suggests that
-there was a certain friction between the highly meritorious
-of the noble and the priestly castes because
-the priests were inclined to look down on the layman
-saint. To this category belonged Sakya Muni, who
-was the younger son of a prince, or, as we should
-say, a feudal lord, and who renounced rank and riches
-to become a recluse. The same family history is
-told of Mahavira, whom the Jainas claim to be their
-founder. For a long time Europeans believed the
-two religions to have but one source, and Jainism
-was dismissed as a Buddhist sect. The Jainas,
-however, always strongly held that they had a founder
-of their own, namely, Mahavira, and they even
-declared that Buddha was not his master but his
-disciple. After much research, Professor Jacobi decided
-the case in their favour by assigning to them
-a separate origin. Both Sakya Muni and Mahavira
-are generally believed to have flourished in the sixth
-century <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The confusion of the Jainas with the Buddhists
-and even with the Brahmans has made it difficult
-to reckon their present numbers: in the census of
-1901 they are estimated at 1,334,138, chiefly living
-in the Bombay Presidency, but this does not tell us
-their real number. Jainas are to be found almost
-everywhere in Upper India, in the West and South
-and along the Ganges. They inhabit the towns
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>more than the country. In treating ancient Indian
-religions the living document is always round the
-corner, ready to be called into the witness-box, and
-the Jainas of to-day can give a good account of
-themselves. Every one has a good word for them;
-a friend of mine, than whom few know India better,
-describes them thus: “A tall, fair, handsome, good
-and humble lot they are and terribly bullied they are
-by their more bellicose fellow-countrymen, who all
-look on Jainas as made for them to pilfer, but the
-Jainas never turn on their persecutors.” In spite
-of their meekness, they are good men of business,
-which is proved by their remarkable success in
-commerce. Perhaps it is not such bad policy to be
-peaceful, and helpful, and honest as a cynical century
-supposes.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Jainas say of Mahavira that he was one of
-a long line of holy ascetics twenty-four of whom are
-venerated in their temples under the name of Tirthakaras
-or Jinas, “Conquerors” in the sense of having
-conquered the flesh. Needless to point out that the
-founders of great religious systems invariably accept
-this principle of evolution: they complete what others
-began, and in due time a new manifestation will
-arrive either in the form of a more perfect revelation
-of themselves or in that of a fore-destined successor.
-The Buddhists now await Matreya, or “the Buddha
-of kindness.” The Jainas have not added to their
-twenty-four glorified beings, but there is nothing to
-prevent them from doing so. To these specimens
-of perfected humanity they have raised some of the
-most glorious temples ever lifted by the hand of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>man towards heaven. Tier on tier mount the exquisitely
-beautiful towers of the Jaina cathedrals in
-the most lonely part of the Muklagerri hills. They
-seem like the Parsifal music turned into stone: an
-allegory of the ascent of the soul from corruption
-to incorruption, from change to permanency. The
-desire to worship something finds a vent in the
-reverence paid to the Tirthakaras, but the Jaina
-religion admits neither relics nor the iteration of
-prayers. The building of splendid shrines and of
-refuges for man and beast are the particular means
-of grace open to the Jaina who cannot comply in
-all respects with the exacting demands of his scriptures,
-which, were they literally fulfilled, would leave
-no one on the world but ascetics. The wealthy
-Jaina is only too glad to avail himself of the chance
-of acquiring some merit, however far it must fall
-short of the highest. Besides this, in moments of
-religious fervour temple-building becomes a frenzy:
-whole races are swept along by the blind impulse
-to incarnate their spiritual cravings in spires or
-pagodas or minarets pointing to the sky—the eternal
-symbol. The greatest of Jaina temples mark the
-epoch of some such wave of spiritual emotion.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Jaina scriptures, which were first collected from
-aural report and written down by a learned man in
-the sixth century <span class='fss'>A.D.</span>, are really a Rule of Discipline
-for monks, and not a guide for the mass of mankind.
-If we could imagine the only Christian Scripture
-being the immortal book of Thomas à Kempis, we
-should form the idea of a very similar state of things.
-It is surprising not how little but how much of this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>rigid rule is followed by every Jaina to this day, be
-he monk or layman. The vegetarian principle involved
-in <i>Ahimsa</i> is observed rigorously by all—clearly
-with no bad effect on health after a trial of
-about twenty-four centuries, for the Jainas’ physique
-is excellent, and they are less subject to disease than
-the other communities. They strain and boil water
-before drinking, and whatever may be said of the
-motive, the practice must be highly commended.
-They are also often to be seen wearing a mouth-cloth
-to prevent them from swallowing flies, and they carry
-little brooms with which they sweep insects out of
-their path. The hospitals for sick animals begin to
-be better managed than formerly, when they incurred
-much censure as mere conglomerations of hopeless
-suffering to relieve which practical means were not
-taken. A folly adopted by the more fanatical Jainas
-at the time of their origin was that of going “sky-clad,”
-which makes it probable that they were the
-gymnosophists known to the Greeks. They saw
-well later to limit this practice to certain times and
-occasions or to abandon it for the far more pleasant
-one of wearing white garments. Buddha warned his
-followers against the “sky-clad” aberration. He
-disagreed with the Jainas on a more vital point in
-the view he took of penance and self-inflicted torture.
-It shows the high intellectuality of the man that
-towards the end of his life he pronounced penance,
-though he had gone through much of it himself, to
-be vanity of vanities. The Jainas took the opposite
-view: “Subdue the body just as fire consumes old
-wood.” They hold that merit is bound up with a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>certain definite and tangible thing: the Buddhist,
-more philosophically, makes it consist in intention.
-This is the chief doctrinal difference between Jaina
-and Buddhist, and though each is bound to charity
-and the Jaina is particularly enjoined by his scriptures
-not to turn other people’s religion into ridicule, it has
-to be confessed that in their frequent disputes they
-spare no pains and neglect no arts of Socratic reasoning
-to reduce each other’s theories to an absurdity.
-Irony is a weapon always used in Indian religious
-discussion.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Mahavira himself “fulfilled the law” by allowing
-gnats, flies, and other things to bite him and crawl
-over him for four months without ever once losing
-his equanimity. It is told that he met all sorts of
-pleasant or unpleasant events with an even mind
-whether they arose from divine powers, men, or
-animals. The Jainas did not deny that there were
-divine powers: there might be any number of them,
-and the influence they wielded for good or for ill
-(I think especially for ill) was not inconsiderable.
-Only they were not morally admirable like a man
-victorious through suffering. The greater willingness
-of the Jainas to admit gods into the wheel of being,
-and even to allow some homage to be paid to them,
-was one reason why they clashed less with the
-Brahmans. After the subsidence of Buddhism the
-Jainas managed to go on existing, somewhat despised
-and annoyed, but tolerated.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>While both Buddhists and Jainas place the prohibition
-to take life at the head of their law, its application
-is infinitely more thoroughgoing among the Jainas,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>who also attach to it ideas which have no place in
-Buddhist metaphysics. From the Jaina position, it
-seems to imply a tendency to primitive animism,
-though it is hard to say whether this comes from
-a real process of retrogression or simply from the
-Indo-Aryan desire for a synthesis—the more easily
-attained the more you assume. It is startling to hear
-that in the last census over eight millions were
-returned as animists—it proves that the old credences
-die hard. The Jainas took into their soul-world fire,
-water, wind, shooting plants and germinating seeds.
-The disciplinary results must have been inconvenient,
-but a religion was never less popular because it put
-its devotees to inconvenience. Those who still clung
-to animistic beliefs were already prepared to see a
-soul in the flickering fire, the rushing water, the growing
-blade. We all have odds and ends of animism;
-did not Coventry Patmore say: “There is something
-human in a tree?” With more detail the Jaina
-observes that trees and plants are born and grow
-old; they distinguish the seasons, they turn towards
-the sun, the seeds grow up: how, then, shall we deny
-all knowledge to them? “The asoka buds and
-blossoms when touched by a fair girl’s feet.” Can
-we help recalling the familiar lines in the “Sensitive
-Plant?”—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“I doubt not the flowers of that garden sweet</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Rejoiced in the sound of her gentle feet;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>I doubt not they felt the spirit that came</div>
- <div class='line in1'>From her glowing fingers thro’ all their frame.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Now, Science, which is on the way to becoming very
-kind to man’s early beliefs, comes forward in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>person of Mr. Francis Darwin to tell us that plants
-<i>have</i> “mind” and “intelligence,” especially the hop
-and the bryony. All fairy-tales will come true if we
-wait long enough.</p>
-<p class='c008'>Once, and once only, in Jaina writings I have
-noticed it given as a distinct reason for sparing plants
-and trees, that they may contain the transmigrated
-soul of a man. Even in the case of animals the
-doctrine of transmigration is rarely adduced as the
-reason for not killing them, though it is fully accepted
-by Jainas in common with all the Indian sects sprung
-from Brahmanism by which it was started. Coming
-to the Indian views of animals from those which
-antiquity represented as the preaching of Pythagoras,
-we expect to see this argument put forward at every
-turn, but it is not. In Jaina writings the incentive is
-humanity: to do to others as we would be done by.
-It is true that as an aid to this incentive, the cruel
-are threatened with the most awful punishments. In
-Indian sacred writings one is wearied by the nice
-balance constantly drawn between every deed and its
-consequences to the doer for a subsequent millennium.
-In mediæval monkish legends we find exactly the
-same device for keeping the adept in the paths of
-virtue, but wherever we find it, we sigh for the
-spontaneous emotion of pity of the Good Samaritan
-who never reflected “If I do not get off my ass and
-go to help that Jew, how very bad it will be for my
-Karman!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We ought not to forget in this connexion that
-rewards and punishments have not the same meaning
-to the Indian as to us: they are not extraneous prizes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>or penalties, but the working out of a mathematical
-problem which we both set and solve for ourselves.
-It is utterly impossible to escape from the consequences
-of our evil acts: they are debts which
-must be paid, though we may set about performing
-good acts which will make our future happiness
-exceed our future misery in time and extent. The
-highest good comes of itself, automatically, to him
-who merits it, as is illustrated with great beauty in
-the Jaina story of the White Lotus. This flower, the
-symbol of perfection, bloomed in the centre of a pool
-and was descried by many who made violent efforts to
-reach it, but they were all set fast in the mud. Then
-came a holy ascetic who stood motionless on the
-bank. “O white Lotus, fly up!” he said, and the
-White Lotus flew to his breast. Even among Indian
-sects which all abound in this kind of composition the
-Jainas are remarkable for their wealth of moral tales
-and apothegms. As is well known, they possess a
-parable called “The Three Merchants,” closely
-resembling the parable of the Talents as told by
-Matthew and Luke, and still more exactly agreeing
-with the version given in the so-called “Gospel
-according to the Hebrews.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The theory of Karman suggests several modern
-scientific speculations such as the idea that the brain
-retains an ineffaceable print of every impression
-received by it, and again, the extreme view of
-heredity which makes the individual the moral and
-physical slave of former generations. It is a theory
-which has the advantage of disposing of many
-riddles. Different sects have slightly varying opinions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>about the nature of the Karman: the Jainas see in
-this receptacle of good and evil deeds a material,
-though supersensual, reality with a physical basis.
-Each individual consists of five parts: the visible
-body, the vital energy thought to consist of fire,
-or, as we might say, of electricity, the Karman and
-two subliminal selves which appear to be only latent
-in most persons, but by which, when called into
-activity, the individual can transform himself, travel
-to distances and do other unusual things. That each
-man is provided with a wraith or double is an old
-and widely-spread belief; but in Western lore the
-double does not seem to be commanded by its pair:
-it rather moves like an unconscious, wandering photograph
-of him.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Jainas have the same word for the soul and
-for life: <i>gîva</i>, and this name they bestow on the
-whole range of things which they consider as living:
-the elements, seeds, plants, animals, men, gods. One
-would think that the sense of personal identity would
-become vague in the contemplation of voyages over
-so vast a sea of being, but, on the contrary, this
-identity is the one thing about which the individual
-seems perfectly sure. We have frequently such
-utterances as: “My own self is the doer and the
-undoer of misery and happiness; my own self is
-friend and foe.” A sort of void seems spread round
-the individual which even family affection, very strong
-though it has always been in India, is powerless to
-bridge. A lovely testimony to this affection, and at
-the same time an avowal of its unavailingness, is
-to be found in the one single exception to the Jaina
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>law that the wholly virtuous man must desire nothing,
-not even Nirvana must he desire, much less earthly
-love or friendship. But he may desire to take upon
-him the painful illness of one of his dear kindred.
-It is added sadly, however, that never has such a
-desire been fulfilled, for one man cannot take upon
-him the pains of another, neither can he feel what
-another feels.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Man is born alone, he dies alone, he falls alone,
-he rises alone. His passions, consciousness, intellect,
-perceptions and impressions belong to him exclusively.
-Another cannot save him or help him. He grows
-old, his hair turns white, even this dear body he must
-relinquish—none can stay the hour.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Again it is written:—</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Man! thou art thy own friend, why wishest thou
-for a friend beyond thyself?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The isolation of the soul with its paramount importance
-to its owner (that is to say, to itself) makes
-it obligatory to pursue its interests even at the
-expense of the most sacred affections. The Pagan,
-the Jew, the Moslem could not have been brought
-to yield assent to this doctrine, but it meets us continually
-in Catholic hagiology; for instance, St.
-François de Sales told Madame de Chantal that she
-ought, if needful, to walk into the cloister over the
-dead body of her son. So in a Jaina story, father,
-mother, wife, child, sister, brother try in vain to
-wrest a holy young man from his resolve to leave
-them. In vain the old people say: “We will do
-all the work if you will only come home; come, child!
-We will pay your debts; you need not stay longer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>than you like—only come home!” The quite admirable
-young man (who sets one furiously wishing for
-a stout birch rod) proceeds on his way unmoved.
-But it is remarked, “At such appeals the weak break
-down like old, worn-out oxen going up hill.” We
-prefer the weak.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Who was the first anchorite? Perhaps in very
-early states of society a few individuals got lost in
-the mountain or forest, where they lived on fruits and
-nuts, and then, after a long time, some of them were
-re-discovered, and, because they seemed so strange
-and mysterious after their long seclusion, they were
-credited with supernatural gifts. Animals do not go
-away alone except in the rare case of being seized
-with mania, or in the universal case of feeling the
-approach of death. The origin of hermits cannot,
-therefore, be explained by analogy with animals.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One can conceive that a hermit’s life may have
-great attractions, but scarcely that of a Jaina hermit,
-who is expected to employ his leisure in the most
-painful mortification of the flesh. Though other-worldly
-advantages form the great object which
-spurs men to choose such a lot we must not forget
-that this sort of life is held to confer powers which
-are, by no means, other-worldly. By it the Brahman
-becomes superior to caste, being incapable of pollution:
-if he wished he could drink after the most
-miserable Western had touched the cup.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The theory of asceticism is very much alike everywhere,
-and the extraordinary faculties claimed by the
-Jainas for their holy men are the portion, more or
-less, of the Indian holy man in general. These
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>faculties may be briefly described as an abnormal
-development of the subliminal self, but that is not
-an adequate account of the vastness of their range.
-One feels often inclined to ask—without granting
-revelation or, indeed, the existence of an omniscient
-being who could give it—<i>how</i> does the Buddhist or
-Jaina acquire perfect certainty that he knows all about
-his own and man’s destiny? The question of authority
-is of primary importance in all religions: in what way
-does Buddhist or Jaina solve it? It is evident that
-scepticism based on this very ground does sometimes
-harass the soul of the Jaina novice: “The weak,” we
-are told, “when bitten by a snarling dog or annoyed
-by flies and gnats, will begin to say: ‘<i>I have not seen
-the next world, all may end with death.</i>’” It startles
-one to hear from the mouth of the devil’s advocate
-in an ancient Eastern homily a cry so modern, so
-Western:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Death means heaven, he longs to receive it,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>But what shall I do if I don’t believe it?”<a id='r5' /><a href='#f5' class='c017'><sup>[5]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-<div class='footnote c000' id='f5'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r5'>5</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>“Verses written in India,” p. 13.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<p class='c018'>Sir Alfred Lyall’s questioner found none to answer
-him, but the Jaina has an answer which, if accepted,
-must prove entirely satisfactory. The superlatively
-virtuous individual possesses an effortless certainty
-about the secrets of life. In a state superinduced by
-means which, though arduous, are at the disposal of
-all, the soul can view itself, read its history, past,
-present and to come, know the souls of others,
-remember what happened in former births, understand
-the heavenly bodies and the universe. Here is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>nothing miraculous: a veil is lifted, and hidden things
-become plain. It is as if a man who had cataract
-in both eyes underwent a successful operation—after
-which he sees.</p>
-<p class='c008'>The supersensual perception of Jaina, or Joghi,
-or Guru is much akin to the “infused knowledge”
-ascribed to the saints of the Thebaid. He knows—because
-he knows. By the devout, information derived
-from these persons is accepted as readily as
-we should accept information about radium from a
-qualified scientific man. The most confident of all
-that the information is true is he who gives it:
-fraud must be dismissed finally as the key to any
-such phenomena.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Indian mind has grasped a great idea in
-referring what we call spirit to fixed laws no less
-than what we call matter. But in spirit it sees
-a force infinitely exceeding the force of matter.
-“The holy monk,” say the Jaina scriptures, “might
-reduce millions to ashes by the fire of his wrath.”
-Besides such tremendous powers as these he has all
-the minor accomplishments of the spiritualist or
-hypnotist: thought-reading, levitation, clairvoyance,
-&amp;c., and he can always tame wild beasts. He is
-under strict obligations to use his powers with
-discretion. It is not right to make profit out of them:
-that man is anathema who lives by divination from
-dreams, diagrams, sticks, bodily changes, the cries
-of animals. The Jainas denounce magic not less
-strongly than the other religious teachers of the
-East. This is interesting because the reasons are
-lacking which are commonly held to explain the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>world-wide prejudice against magic: the Jainas do not
-attribute it to the agency of evil spirits, nor can their
-dislike of it be attributed to the professional jealousy
-of priests in regard to rival thaumaturgists. For the
-Jaina the power of magic-working lies in every one,
-and those who have developed their other spiritual
-powers have also this one at their command, but
-to avail themselves of it is an enormous sin. There
-is a weird story showing what infamies a magic-working
-“ascetic” may perpetrate. A monk carried
-off, by magical arts, all the women he met, till the
-king of that country trapped him in a hollow tree
-and had him put to death. The women were set
-free and returned to their husbands, except one, who
-refused to go back because she had fallen desperately
-in love with her seducer. A very wise man suggested
-that the monk’s bones should be pounded and mixed
-with milk, and then given to the woman to drink:
-this was done and she was cured of her passion.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Over the whole East, the report that some one
-was working miracles, even the most beneficent,
-raised both suspicion and jealousy. This was why
-secrecy was recommended about all such acts.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>How far the belief in the extraordinary gifts of
-the ascetic rests on hallucination, and how far men
-in an artificially created abnormal condition can do
-things of which hypnotic manifestations are but the
-outer edge, it is not my purpose to inquire. The
-Jaina monks are said sometimes to fast for four
-days, and no doubt the stimulus of starvation
-(especially when the brain has not been weakened by
-long disease), produces an ecstatic state which men
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>have everywhere supposed to indicate religious
-perfection. This may be observed even in birds,
-which from some difficulty in swallowing, die of
-starvation: I had a canary that sang for days before
-it died a sweet incessant song, the like of which I
-never heard: it seemed not earthly.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The best side in Eastern religions is not their
-thaumaturgy but the steady ethical tendency which
-pushes itself up out of the jungle of extravagance and
-self-delusion. Though we may not have much
-sympathy with the profession of a “houseless” saint,
-it is impossible to deny the moral elevation of such a
-picture of him as is drawn in the Jaina conversion
-story of “The True Sacrifice.” A holy man, born in
-the highest Brahmanical caste, but who had found
-wisdom in Jaina vows, went on a long journey and
-walked and walked till he came to Benares, where
-he found a very learned Brahman who was deeply
-versed in astronomy and in the Vedas. When the
-“Houseless” arrived, the priest was about to offer up
-sacrifice, and perhaps because he did not wish to be
-disturbed at such a moment, he told him rudely to go
-away—he would have no beggars there. The holy
-man was not angry; he had not come to extort food
-or water, but from the pure desire to save souls. He
-quietly told the priest that he was ignorant of the
-essence of the Vedas, of the true meaning of sacrifice,
-of the government of the heavenly bodies. There
-must have been a peculiar effluence of sanctity flowing
-from the “Houseless” as the priest took his rebukes
-with meekness, and merely asked for enlightenment.
-Then the seer delivered his message. It is not the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>tonsure that makes the priest or repetition of the
-sacred syllable <i>om</i> that makes the saint. It is not
-by dwelling in woods or by wearing clothes of bark
-or grass that salvation may be reached. Equanimity,
-chastity, knowledge, and penance are the ways to
-holiness. His actions alone colour a man’s soul: as
-his works are, so is he. Persuaded of the truth, the
-priest addressed the “Houseless” as the truest of
-sacrificers, the most learned of all who know the
-Vedas, the inspired exponent of Brahmanhood, and
-begged him to accept his alms. But the mendicant
-refused: he only conjured the priest out of pity for
-his own soul to join the order of the “Houseless.”
-After having been rightly schooled in Jaina precepts,
-the Brahman followed his advice, and in due time
-he became a very great saint like his instructor.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>As the Jaina scriptures are in effect a manual of
-discipline for monks, it is natural that they should
-be severe on womankind. Not that a woman’s soul
-is worth less than a man’s or, rather, since spirit is
-sexless, the distinction does not exist. A woman
-may be as good a saint as a man; a nun may be as
-meritorious as a monk. The identity of mysticism
-independent of creed was never more apparent than
-in the beautiful saying of a Jaina nun: “As a bird
-dislikes the cage, so do I dislike the world,” which
-might have been uttered by any of the self-consumed
-spirits of the Latin Church from St. Teresa downwards.
-I have never come across an allusion to
-being born again as a woman as a punishment. But
-though the fullest potentiality of merit is allowed to
-woman in the abstract, the Eternal Feminine is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>looked upon in the concrete as man’s worst snare.
-“Women are the greatest temptation in the world.”
-The Jaina books are Counsels of Perfection and not
-a Decalogue framed for common humanity: they
-give one the idea of being intended for preternaturally
-good people, and never more so than in the
-manner in which they treat the dreadful snares and
-temptations for which women are answerable: instead
-of a Venusberg, we are shown—the domestic
-hearth! The story in question might be called “The
-Woes of the Model Husband!” A girl who vowed
-that she would do anything rather than be parted
-from the dear object of her affections, has no sooner
-settled the matter once for all by marriage than she
-begins to scold and trample on the poor man’s head.
-Her spouse is sent on a thousand errands, not one
-moment can he call his own. Countless are the
-lady’s wants and her commands keep pace with
-them: “Do look for the bodkin; go and get some
-fruit; bring wood to cook the vegetables; why don’t
-you come and rub my back instead of standing there
-doing nothing? Are my clothes all right? Where
-is the scent-bottle? I want the hair-dresser. Where
-is my basket to put my things in? And my trinkets?
-There, I want my shoes and my umbrella. Bring
-me my comb and the ribbon to tie up my hair. Get
-the looking-glass and a tooth-brush. I must have
-a needle and thread. You really ought to look after
-the stores, the rainy season will be here in no time.”
-These and many more are the young wife’s behests,
-the appalling list of which might well intimidate
-those about to marry, but there is worse to come.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>When “the joy of their lives, the crown of their
-wedded bliss” arrives in the shape of a baby, it
-is the unfortunate husband who is set to mind it:
-he has to get up in the night to sing lullabies to it
-“just as if he were a nurserymaid,” and ashamed
-though he is of such a humiliation, he is actually put
-to wash the baby-linen! “All this has been done by
-many men who for the sake of pleasure have stooped
-so low; they become the equals of slaves, animals,
-beasts of burden, <i>mere nobodies</i>.” Would not most
-readers take this for a quotation from one of Ibsen’s
-plays rather than from a sacred volume which was
-composed a considerable time before the beginning
-of our era?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Indian pessimist is withheld from suicide by
-the dread of a worse existence beyond the pyre.
-He is the coward of conscience to a much greater
-extent than the weary Occidental, because his sense
-of the unseen is so much stronger. In the Jaina
-system, however, suicide is permitted under certain
-circumstances. After twelve years of rigorous penance
-a man is allowed the supreme favour of “a
-religious death”—in other words, he may commit
-suicide by starvation. This is called Itvara. The
-civilised Indian does not seem to have the power
-of dying when he pleases without the assistance of
-starvation which is possessed by some of the higher
-savage races.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The soul may be re-born in any earthly form from
-the lowest to the highest, but there are other possibilities
-before it when it leaves its mortal coil. Those
-who are very bad, too bad to disgrace the earth
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>again—above all, the cruel—are consigned to an
-<i>Inferno</i> more awful than Dante’s, though not without
-points of striking resemblance to it. The very good
-who abounded in charity and in truth, but who yet
-lived in the world the life of the world, become gods,
-glorified beings enjoying a great measure of happiness
-and power, but not eternal. Far beyond the joys of
-this heaven, which are still thinkable, is the unthinkable
-bliss of the Perfect, of the Conquerors, of the
-Changeless. The human mind could not adjust the
-idea of evolution more scientifically to the soul’s
-destiny.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is unnecessary to say that the number who
-become even gods is very small. A great deal is
-achieved if a man is simply born again as a man,
-for though Jaina and Buddhist thinks that man’s lot
-is wretched (or, at least that it ought to be when we
-consider its inherent evils), yet it must be distinctly
-remembered that he thinks the life of beasts far
-more wretched. Leopardi’s “Song of the Nomadic
-Shepherd in Asia,” in which he makes the world-weary
-shepherd envy the fate of his sheep, is steeped
-in Western not in Eastern pessimism: only in the
-last lines, which really contradict the rest, we find
-the true Eastern note:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Perchance in every form</div>
- <div class='line in3'>That Nature may on everything bestow</div>
- <div class='line in1'>The day of birth brings everlasting woe.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>The Indian seems never to be struck by what to
-us seems (perhaps in error, but I hope not) the
-inconscient joy of creatures, nor yet that of children.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>He is constantly sure that all creation groaneth and
-travaileth. Nothing is young in Asia, all is very
-old. Every one is tired. In our minds thoughtless
-joy is connected with innocency, and in these Indian
-creeds there is no innocency as there is no effortless
-All-Good. Perfection is the result of labour. No
-other religious teacher spoke of little children as
-Christ did—Christ, whose incomprehensible followers
-were one day to consign the larger part of them,
-as a favour, “to the easiest room in hell.” Ardently
-as children are desired and lovingly as they are
-treated in the East, something essential to the charm
-of childhood eludes the Oriental perception of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the sacred books of those Indian communities
-which concern themselves most about animals, they
-are very rarely shown in an attractive light. The
-horse, almost alone, is spoken of with genuine
-admiration; for instance, there is this simile: “As
-the trained Kambôga steed whom no noise frightens,
-exceeds all other horses in speed, so a very learned
-monk is superior to all others.” An elephant is
-extolled for having knelt down before a holy recluse
-though only newly tamed, and we hear that Mahavira’s
-words were understood by all animals.
-Folk-lore tells much that scriptures do not tell, and
-if we had a collection of Jaina folk-lore we should
-find, no doubt, records of charming friendships
-between beasts and saints, but in the Jaina sacred
-books pity, not love, is the feeling shown towards
-animals.</p>
-
-<div id='i188' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i188.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>BUDDHA PACIFYING AN INTOXICATED ELEPHANT.<br />India Museum.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>As a rule, Indian philosophical writers shirk the
-question of how far the soul which was and may
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>be again a man’s retains its consciousness during
-its residence in lower forms. Probably the answer,
-were it given, would be: “Not very far,” but the
-higher animals are credited with a fuller share of
-reflection than in the West. Hence it is preferable
-to assume the shape of one of the higher than of one
-of the lower organisms, but still it is far better to be
-re-born as the lowest of men than as the highest of
-animals.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If it is something to be re-born as a man at all,
-it is a great deal to be re-born as a fortunate man,
-healthy, wealthy, and surrounded by troops of
-friends: at least, to the simple-minded such a prospect
-must appear to hold out a very splendid hope.
-It is remarkable what good care the framers of the
-intensely ascetic Jaina faith took of people who
-could not pretend to walk in the path of the elect.
-The mere “householder” (so called to distinguish
-him from the more admirable “Houseless”) has
-the promise of an ample recompense if he is only
-truthful, and humane, and liberal in alms-giving and
-temple-building. He may win very great promotion
-on earth or even a place in the Jaina heaven, the
-abode of light, where happy beings live long and
-enjoy great power and energy, and never grow old.
-Such a state agrees with the logical evolution of a
-virtuous but still this-worldly man. Could he aspire
-sincerely to a more spiritual state, and can the soul
-outsoar its own aspirations? The Jaina heaven is
-not eternal, but does every one wish for eternity?
-Most people wish for ten or fifteen years of tolerable
-freedom from care on this side of the grave. If they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>knew for certain that they were going to enjoy one
-thousand years of heaven, they would not think
-much of what would happen at the end of that time.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There remain the pure and separated spirits who
-in this present life have climbed beyond the plane
-of mortality. They are in the world, not of it, and
-they, indeed, “have a glimpse of incomprehensibles
-and thoughts of things which thoughts but tenderly
-touch.” For these, the Jaina, like the Buddhist,
-keeps Nirvana.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The extreme reticence of Buddha and even of
-Buddhist commentators on the inner significance of
-this word—meaning literally “liberation”—is not
-observed by the Jainas, though it must not be inferred
-that there was any doctrinal difference of it
-in the view taken by the two sects. The Jainas show
-a great anxiety to tell what Nirvana is; if they fail
-it is because it baffles all description. They repudiate
-the idea that it signified annihilation, but
-admit that the subject oversteps the bounds of the
-thinkable. “The liberated soul perceives and knows,
-but there is no analogy by which to describe it—without
-body, re-birth, sex, dimensions.” We think
-of the wonderful lines in the <i>Helena</i> of Euripides:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“... the mind</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Of the dead lives not, but immortal sense</div>
- <div class='line in1'>When to immortal ether gone, possesses;”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>lines which, like not a few others in Euripides, seem
-to reflect a light not cast from Grecian skies.</p>
-<p class='c008'>Like every stage in the history of the life-soul
-(<i>giva</i>) Nirvana is governed by an immutable law of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>evolution. When all the dross is eliminated only
-pure spirit is left: a distilled essence not only indestructible,
-for spirit is always indestructible, but
-also changeless. All the rest dies, which means that
-it changes, that it is re-born: this part can die
-no more, and hence can be born no more. It has
-gained the liberty of which the soul goes seeking
-in the Dantesque sense. It has gained safety, rest,
-peace.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>How familiar the words sound! Here am I in
-Asia, and I could dream myself back under the roof
-of the village church where generations of simple
-folk had sought a rest-cure for their minds: where
-I, too, first listened to those words <i>safety</i>, <i>rest</i>, <i>peace</i>,
-with the strange home-sickness they awaken in
-young children or in the very old who have preserved
-their childhood’s faith. There are words
-that, by collecting round them inarticulate longings
-and indefinite associations, finally leave the order of
-language and enter that of music; they evoke an
-emotion, not an idea. The emotions which sway
-the human heart are few, and they are very much
-alike. The self-same word-music transports the
-English child to the happy land, far, far away, and
-the Indian mystic to Nirvana.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Almost everything which the Jainas say of Nirvana
-might have been said by any follower of any spiritual
-religion who attempted to suggest a place of final
-beatitude. “There is a safe place in view of all,
-but hard to approach, where there is no old age, nor
-death, nor pain, nor disease. This place which is in
-view of all is called Nirvana or freedom from pain,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>or it is called perfection; it is the safe, happy, quiet
-place. It is the eternal haven which is in view of
-all, but is difficult to approach.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Nirvana is the getting-well of the soul. “He will
-put away all the misery which always afflicts mankind;
-as it were, <i>recovered from a long illness</i>, he
-becomes infinitely happy and obtains the final aim.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We are told that the Buddhas that were and the
-Buddhas that will be, have peace for their foundation,
-even as all things have the earth for their foundation.
-(The term Buddha, or “Enlightened,” is used by
-Jainas as well as by Buddhists for super-excellent
-beings.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Nirvana may or rather must be possessed before
-the death of the visible body: it must be obtained
-by the living if it is to be enjoyed by the dead.
-Detachment from the world, self-denial, selflessness,
-help the soul on its way, but the two moral qualities
-which are absolutely essential are kindness and
-veracity. Ruth and truth are written over the portals
-of eternity. “He should cease to injure living things
-whether they move or not, on high, below or on
-earth, for this has been called Nirvana, which consists
-in peace.” “A sage setting out for Nirvana should
-not speak untruth: this rule comprises Nirvana and
-the whole of carefulness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If a novice does anything wrong, he should never
-deny it: if he has not done it he should say, “I
-have not done it.” A lie must never be told—“not
-even in jest or in anger.” Were there nothing else
-of good in Jaina discipline this devotion to truth
-would place it high on mankind’s mountain.</p>
-
-<div id='i192' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i192.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='small'><i>Photo in</i> <i>India Museum.</i></span><br />COLOSSAL RECLINING BULL<br /><span class='small'>(<i>Southern India.</i>)</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>The law of <i>Ahimsa</i>, “non-killing,” which stands
-at the head of the precepts of both Buddhist and
-Jaina, is not only far more rigidly observed by the
-Jaina, but also invested by him with a greater positive
-as well as relative value. One might say that with
-the Buddhists it is more a philosophic deduction,
-with the Jainas more a moral necessity. The
-position of Buddhists in this matter of <i>Ahimsa</i> is
-one of compromise. There never was a Buddhist
-who did not think cruelty to animals an abominable
-sin, there is no compromise on that point, but, in
-respect to animal food, the usual Buddhist layman
-is not really more strict than any very humane person
-in the West; he abjures sport, he will not kill
-animals himself, but he does not refuse to eat meat
-if it is set before him. The Buddhists declare that
-the Lord Buddha was prayed to forbid animal food
-absolutely, but he would not. It is argued that in
-the flesh itself, when the life is gone from it, there
-is nothing particularly sacred: therefore it is permissible
-to sustain life on it. Your servants may
-buy meat ready for sale in the market: it would be
-there just the same if you did not send to buy it,
-but you ought not to tell them to give an order
-for some sort of meat which is not on sale; still less
-should you incite people to snare or shoot wild
-animals for your table. The Buddhists of to-day
-say with the opponents to vegetarianism in Europe,
-that total abstention from the flesh of animals would
-lead to the disappearance of the chief part of them;
-though it might be answered that sheep would still
-be wanted for their wool, goats and cows for their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>milk, oxen for ploughing. But a harder question is,
-What would happen to these animals when they
-grew old? The Jainas seek to settle this crux by
-building hospitals for them, but the result has been
-indifferently encouraging.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In Siam even monks are allowed animal food within
-certain limits, but as a rule what I have said of
-the Buddhist view of <i>Ahimsa</i> does not apply to the
-religious, who leans to the strictest Jaina principle
-of having nothing to do with shedding blood on
-any pretence. The Buddhist monks in China teach
-the virtue of “fang sheng” (“life-saving”) by object-lessons
-in the shape of tanks built near the convents
-to which people bring tortoises, fishes and snakes
-to save them from death, and the monks also keep
-homes for starving or lost animals. Favoured
-European visitors are invited to witness the custom
-of feeding the wild birds before the morning meal
-is served: the brothers sit silently at the refectory-table
-with their bowls of rice and vegetables in
-front of them, but none begins to eat till one brother
-rises, after a sort of grace has been said, and goes
-to the door with a little rice in his hands which he
-places on a low stone pillar. All the birds are
-waiting on the roofs and fly down delighted to
-partake of their breakfast.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Fra Odoric, the Venetian Franciscan who dictated
-an account of his travels in 1330, describes a convent
-scene which was shown to him as a most interesting
-thing, so that when he went home he might say
-that he had seen “this strange sight or novelty.”
-To win the consent of the monks his native friend,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>who acted as cicerone, informed them that this Raban
-Francus, this religious “Frenchman” (Europeans
-were all “Frenchmen”) was going to the city of
-Cambaleth to pray for the life of the great Can.
-Thus recommended he was admitted, and the
-“religious man” with whom they had spoken “took
-two great basketsful of broken relics which remained
-on the table and led me into a little walled park,
-the door whereof he unlocked with his key, and
-there appeared unto us a pleasant fair green plot,
-into the which we entered. In the said green stands
-a little mount in form of a steeple, replenished with
-fragrant herbs and fine shady trees. And while we
-stood there, he took a cymbal or bell and rang
-therewith, as they use to ring to dinner or bevoir
-in cloisters, at the sound thereof many creatures of
-divers kinds came down from the mount, some like
-apes, some like cats, some like monkeys, and some
-having faces like men. And while I stood beholding
-of them, they gathered themselves together about him,
-to the number of 4,200 of these creatures, putting
-themselves in good order, before whom he set a platter
-and gave them the said fragments to eat. And when
-they had eaten he rang upon his cymbal a second time
-and they all returned to their former places. Then,
-wondering greatly at the matter, I demanded what
-kind of creatures those might be. They are (quoth he)
-the souls of noble men which we do here feed for the
-love of God who governeth the world, and as a man
-was honourable or noble in this life, so his soul after
-death entereth the body of some excellent beast or
-other, but the souls of simple and rustical people
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>do possess the bodies of more vile and brutish
-creatures.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Odoric’s informant was in error if he really said that
-distinctions of rank influenced the soul’s destiny, as
-this is no Buddhist doctrine. The charming description
-of the “strange sight or novelty” was imitated
-by Mandeville, who adds, with a sympathetic tolerance
-which is very characteristic of him, that the
-monks were “good religious men after their faith
-and law.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>That the stricter was also the more primitive
-Buddhist rule seems probable, and it may be that
-Buddha’s alleged defence of meat-eating was an
-invention meant to cover later latitudinarianism.
-Nevertheless, <i>Ahimsa</i> was, from the first, a more
-integral part of the Jaina religion than of the
-Buddhist. The true keynote of either faith can be
-detected in their respective conversion stories. In
-all outbursts of religious revivalism (of which nature
-both Buddhism and Jainism largely partook) the
-moment of conversion is the hinge on which everything
-turns.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the Buddhist story, a young prince, born on the
-steps of the throne, nursed in luxury and happily
-wedded, sees consecutively a broken-down old man,
-a man with a deadly disease, and a decomposing
-corpse. These dreadful and common realities were
-brought home to his mind with intolerable force.
-We seem to hear the despairing cry of R. L. Stevenson:
-“Who would find heart to begin to live if he
-dallied with the consideration of death”? We live
-because we drug ourselves with the waters of a new
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>Lethe which make us forget future as well as past.
-Sakya Muni could not forget what he had seen or
-the lesson which it taught: the rest of his life was
-devoted to freeing himself and others from being
-endlessly subject to a like doom.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Now let us recall the Jaina conversion story. The
-son of a powerful king was on his way to marry a
-beautiful princess. At a certain place he saw a great
-many animals in cages and enclosures looking frightened
-and miserable. He asked his charioteer why
-all those animals which desired to be free and happy
-were penned up in cages and enclosures? The
-charioteer replied that they were not to be pitied, they
-were “lucky animals” which were to furnish a feast
-for a great multitude at His Highness’s wedding.
-(This is the very thing that an English poor man
-would have said.) Full of compassion, the future
-“saviour of the world” reflected: “If for my sake
-all these living creatures are killed, how shall I obtain
-happiness in another world?” Then and there he
-renounces the pomps and vanities of human existence,
-and he means it, too. The poor little bride, forsaken
-in this life, and not much comforted by promised compensation
-in the next, “not knowing what she could
-do,” cuts off her pretty hair and goes to a nunnery.
-In time she becomes a model of perfection, and many
-of her kindred and servants are persuaded by her
-to join the order.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In this story the revulsion is caused by pity, not by
-loathing. The instant he sees these poor animals, the
-kind-hearted prince feels sorry for them; then comes
-that unlucky word “lucky” which to the man of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>ignorance seems to be so particularly appropriate; it
-jars on Mahavira’s nerves as it would on the nerves
-of any sensitive or refined person. Nothing moves
-men to tears or laughter so surely as the antithetical
-shock of the incongruous. A rush of emotion
-overpowers Mahavira: he will not be happy at the cost
-of so much misery; he would become odious in his
-own sight. So he renounces all for the eternity of
-one moment of self-approving joy.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Jainas carefully exclude every excuse for
-taking animal life: none is valid. Animals must not
-be killed for offering up in sacrifice, not for their
-skin, flesh, tail feathers, brush, horns, tusks, sinews,
-bones. They must not be killed with a purpose
-or without a purpose. If we have been wounded
-by them, or fear to be wounded by them, or if they
-eat our flesh or drink our blood, still we should not
-only bear it, but also feel no anger. “This is the
-quintessence of wisdom, not to kill anything
-whatever: know this to be the legitimate conclusion from
-the principle of reciprocity.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>No one denies that the principle of reciprocity is
-the basis of all morality, and by extending it from
-men to sentient things, the Jainas have safeguarded
-their doctrine of <i>Ahimsa</i> with a stronger wall of
-defence than any built on the fantastic fear of
-devouring one’s ancestors. Nor can it be said of the Jainas
-that to a superstitious repugnance to taking life they
-join indifference to causing suffering: inflicting
-suffering is hardly distinguished from inflicting death.
-“All breathing, existing, living, sentient creatures
-should not be slain nor treated with violence, nor
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>abused, nor tormented, nor driven away. This is the
-pure unchangeable law.” “Indifferent to worldly
-objects, a man should wander about treating all
-the creatures in the world as he himself would be
-treated.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Perhaps the most remarkable of Jaina stories is
-a real masterpiece of wit and wisdom in which this
-theory of reciprocity is enforced. For the whole
-of it I must refer the reader to Professor Jacobi’s
-translation; I can only give the leading points.
-Once upon a time three hundred and sixty-three
-philosophers, representing a similar number of
-philosophical schools, and differing in character, opinions,
-taste, undertakings and plans, stood round in a large
-circle, each one in his place. They discussed their
-various views, and at last one man took a vessel
-full of red-hot coals which he held at a distance from
-him with a pair of tongs. “Now, you philosophers,”
-said he, “just take this for a moment and hold it
-in your hands. No trickery, if you please; you are
-<i>not</i> to hold it with the tongs or to put the fire out.
-Fair and honest!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>With extreme unanimity the three hundred and
-sixty-two drew back their hands as fast as they could.
-Then the speaker continued: “How is this, philosophers;
-what <i>are</i> you doing with your hands?” “They
-will be burnt,” said the others. “And what does
-it matter if they are burnt?” “But it would hurt us
-dreadfully.” “So you do not want to suffer pain?”
-Well, this is the case with all animals. This maxim
-applies to every creature, this principle, this religious
-reflection, holds good of all living things. Therefore
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>those religious teachers who say that all sorts of living
-things may be beaten or ill-treated, or tormented,
-or deprived of life will, in time, suffer in the same
-way themselves, and have to undergo the whole round
-of the scale of earthly existence. They will be
-whirled round, put in irons, see their mothers, fathers,
-children die, have bad luck, poverty, the society
-of people they detest, separation from those they love,
-“they will again wander distraught in the beginningless
-and endless wilderness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Like a true orator the Jaina member of this early
-Congress of Religions, who has drifted from irony
-to fierce denunciation, does not leave his hearers with
-these visions of terror, but with the consoling promise
-to the merciful of everlasting beatitude.</p>
-
-<div id='i201' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i201.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>WILD BULLS AND TAMED BULLS.<br />Reliefs on two gold cups found at Vapheio.<br /><span class='small'>(<i>From Schuckhardt’s “Schliemann’s Excavations.” By permission of Messrs. Macmillan &amp; Co., Ltd.</i>)</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>
- <h2 id='ch09' class='c006'>IX<br /> <br />LINES FROM THE ADI GRANTH</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c007'>THE Adi Granth, or sacred Book of the Sikhs of
-the Punjab, was composed by the founder of
-their religion and their nationality, Baba Nanak
-(<i>b.</i> 1469), who abolished caste and idolatry, and
-established a pure monotheism. A striking incident
-at the Coronation Durbar was the arrival of the Sikh
-mission in charge of the Adi Granth, which was
-brought on a pilgrimage from its shrine in the
-exquisitely beautiful golden temple at Amritsar to
-the tomb of the disciple of Nanak, who, before suffering
-martyrdom at Delhi during the Mogul Empire,
-prophesied the advent of a fair race destined to sweep
-the Mogul power to the winds. I take these few
-sentences to show the essential continuity of Indian
-thought about animals. In the faith of Nanak none
-remains of the particular tenets of Buddhism or
-Jainism or Hinduism, but the animal is still <i>inside</i>,
-not <i>outside</i>, the pale of what may be called Pan-humanity:
-the whole family of earth-born creatures.</p>
-<h3 class='c021'>I.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Say not that this or that distasteful is,</div>
- <div class='line'>In all the dear Lord dwells,—they all are His</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>Grieve not the humblest heart; all hearts that are,</div>
- <div class='line'>Are priceless jewels, all are rubies rare.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Ah! If thou long’st for thy Beloved, restrain</div>
- <div class='line'>One angry word that gives thy brother pain.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c021'>II.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>All creatures, Lord, are Thine, and Thou art theirs,</div>
- <div class='line'>One bond Creator with created shares;</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>To whom, O Maker! must they turn and weep</div>
- <div class='line'>If not to Thee their Lord, who dost all keep?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>All living creatures, Lord, were made by Thee,</div>
- <div class='line'>Where Thou hast fixed their station, there they be.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>For them Thou dost prepare their daily bread,</div>
- <div class='line'>Out of Thy loving-kindness they are fed;</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>On each the bounties of Thy mercy fall,</div>
- <div class='line'>And Thy compassion reaches to them all.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c021'>III.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>One understanding to all flesh He gives,</div>
- <div class='line'>Without that understanding nothing lives;</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>As is their understanding,—they are so;</div>
- <div class='line'>The reckoning is the same. They come and go.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>The faithful watch-dog that does all he can,</div>
- <div class='line'>Is better far than the unprayerful man.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>Birds in their purse of silver have no store,</div>
- <div class='line'>But them the Almighty Father watches o’er.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>They say who kill, they do but what they may,</div>
- <div class='line'>Lawful they deem the bleating lamb to slay;</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>When God takes down the eternal Book of Fate,</div>
- <div class='line'>Oh, tell me what, what then will be their state?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>He who towards every living thing is kind,</div>
- <div class='line'>Ah! he, indeed, shall true religion find!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c021'>IV.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Great is the warrior who has killed within</div>
- <div class='line'>Self,—Self which still is root and branch of sin.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“I, I,” still cries the World, and gads about,</div>
- <div class='line'>Reft of the Word which Self has driven out.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c021'>V.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Thou, Lord, the cage,—the parrot, see! ’Tis I!</div>
- <div class='line'>Yama the cat: he looks and passes by.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>By Yama bound my mind can never be,</div>
- <div class='line'>I call on Him who Yama made and me.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>The Lord eternal is: what should I fear?</div>
- <div class='line'>However low I fall, He still will hear.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>He tends his creatures as a mother mild</div>
- <div class='line'>Tends with untiring love her little child.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>
- <h3 class='c021'>VI.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>I do not die: the world within me dies:</div>
- <div class='line'>Now, now, the Vivifier vivifies;</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Sweet is the world,—ah! very sweet it is,</div>
- <div class='line'>But through its sweets we lose the eternal bliss!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Perpetual joy, the inviolate mansion, where</div>
- <div class='line'>There is no grief, woe, error, sin, nor care;</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Coming and going and death, enter not in;</div>
- <div class='line'>The changeless only there an entrance win.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Whosoe’er dieth, born again must be,</div>
- <div class='line'>Die thou whilst living, and thou wilt be free!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c021'>VII.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>He, the Supreme, no limit has nor end,</div>
- <div class='line'>And what <span class='fss'>HE</span> is how can <i>we</i> comprehend?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Once did a wise man say: “He only knows</div>
- <div class='line'>God’s nature to whom God His mercy shows.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>
- <h2 id='ch10' class='c006'>X<br /> <br />THE HEBREW CONCEPTION OF ANIMALS</h2>
-</div>
-<h3 class='c021'>I</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>... “About them frisking played</div>
- <div class='line'>All beasts of the earth, since wild, and of all chase</div>
- <div class='line'>In wood or wilderness, forest or den;</div>
- <div class='line'>Sporting the lion ramped, and in his paw</div>
- <div class='line'>Dandled the kid; bears, tigers, ounces, pards,</div>
- <div class='line'>Gambolled before them; the unwieldy elephant,</div>
- <div class='line'>To make them mirth, used all his might, and wreathed</div>
- <div class='line'>His lithe proboscis.”</div>
- <div class='c022'><i>Paradise Lost</i>, Book IV.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c016'>THE idea of a condition of existence in which
-all creatures are happy and at peace implies
-a protest against the most patent fact of life as we
-see it. Western civilisation inherited from the
-Roman Empire the hardness of heart towards
-animals of which the popularity of beast-fights in
-the Arena was the characteristic sign. It was,
-however, a Roman poet who first pointed out in
-philosophical language that the sufferings of animals
-stand written in the great indictment against Nature
-no less than the sufferings of men. Not only man
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>is born to sorrow, said Lucretius; look at the cow
-whose calf bleeds before some lovely temple, while
-she wanders disconsolate over all the fields, lowing
-piteously, uncomforted by the image of other calves,
-because her own is not.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Eighteen hundred years later Schopenhauer said
-that by taking a very high standard it was possible
-to justify the sufferings of man but not those of
-animals. Darwin arrived at the same conclusion.
-“It has been imagined,” he remarks, “that the sufferings
-of man tend to his moral improvement, but the
-number of men in the world is nothing compared with
-the number of other sentient beings which suffer
-greatly without moral improvement.” To him, the
-man of the religious mind whom men lightly charged
-with irreligion, it was “<i>an intolerable thought</i>” that
-after long ages of toil all these sentient beings were
-doomed to complete annihilation.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Yes, and to the young conscience of mankind this
-was also an intolerable thought. And since it was
-intolerable the human conscience in the strength of its
-youth shook it off, cast it aside, awoke from it as we
-awake from a nightmare. Religion has been regarded
-too exclusively as a submission to Nature. At times
-it is a revolt against Nature, a repudiation of what
-our senses report to us, an assertion that things seen
-are illusions, and that things unseen are real.
-Religion is born of Doubt. The incredibility of the
-Known forced man to seek refuge in the Unknown.
-From that far region he brought back solutions good
-or bad, sublime or trivial, to the manifold problems
-which beset man’s soul.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>A poet, doomed to early death, who looked into
-Nature on a summer’s day and could discern nothing
-but “an eternal fierce destruction,” wrote, in his
-despair—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in15'>“Things cannot to the will</div>
- <div class='line'>Be settled, but they tease us out of thought.</div>
- <div class='line in22'>... It is a flaw</div>
- <div class='line'>In happiness to see beyond our bourn;</div>
- <div class='line'>It forces us in summer skies to mourn,</div>
- <div class='line'>It spoils the singing of the nightingale.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>But when the world was young things <i>could</i> be
-settled to the will. We are, of course, constantly
-regulating our impressions of phenomena by a
-standard of higher probability. If we see a ship
-upside down, we say, “This is not a ship, it is a
-mirage.” When the primitive man found himself
-face to face with seeming natural laws which offended
-his sense of inherent probability, he rejected the
-hypothesis that they were actual or permanent,
-and supposed them to be either untrustworthy
-appearances or deviations from a larger plan.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Every basic religion gave a large share of thought
-to animals. The merit, from a humane point of
-view, of the explanation of the mystery offered by
-the religious systems of India has been praised
-even to excess. In contrast to this, it was often
-repeated that the Hebrew religion ignored the
-claims of animals altogether. I wish to show that
-even if this charge were not open to other disproof,
-no people can be called indifferent to those claims
-which believes in a Nature Peace.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Traces of such a belief spread from the Mediterranean
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>to the Pacific, from the Equator to the Pole.
-But the Peace is not always complete; there are
-reservations. In the glowing prediction of a Peace
-in Nature in the Atharva-Veda, vultures and jackals
-are excluded. Mazdeans would exclude the “bad”
-animals. The Hebrew Scriptures, on the other
-hand, declare that all species are good in the
-sight of their Maker. Every beast enjoyed perfect
-content according to the original scheme of the
-Creator. But man fell, and all creation was involved
-in the consequences of his fall.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I remember seeing at the Hague an impressive
-painting by a little-known Italian artist<a id='r6' /><a href='#f6' class='c017'><sup>[6]</sup></a> which
-represents Adam about to take the apple from Eve
-while at their feet a tiger tenderly licks the wool
-of a lamb. Adam’s face shows that he is yielding—yielding
-for no better reason than that he cannot
-say “No”—to the beautiful woman at his side;
-and there, unconscious and happy, lie the innocent
-victims of his act: love to be turned to wrath,
-peace to war. The Nature Peace has been
-painted a hundred times, but never with such tragic
-significance.</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r6'>6</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Cignani. A singular sixteenth-century “Nature War” may
-be observed in a <i>graffito</i> on the pavement of the Chapel of St.
-Catherine in the church of St. Domenico, at Siena. A nude
-youth, resembling Orpheus, sits on a rock in a leafy grove, in
-the midst of various animals; with a disturbed air he looks into
-a mirror at the back of which is an eye, a leopard shows his
-teeth at him, while a vulture screams at a monkey, and another
-bird snatches a surprised rabbit or squirrel; the other creatures,
-unicorn, wolf, eagle, display signs of uneasiness. Endeavours
-to read this fable have not proved satisfactory.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div id='i208' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i208.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='small'><i>Photo:</i> <i>Bruckmann.</i></span><br />THE GARDEN OF EDEN.<br /><span class='small'>(<i>By Rubens.</i>)</span><br />Hague Gallery.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>The Miltonic Adam sees in the mute signs of
-Nature the forerunners of further change:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“The bird of Jove, stooped from his airy tour,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Two birds of gayest plume before him drove;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Down from a hill the beast that reigns in woods,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>First hunter then, pursued a gentle brace,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Goodliest of all the forest, hart and hind.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>In an uncanonical version of Genesis which was
-translated from an Armenian manuscript preserved
-at Venice, by my dear and sadly missed friend,
-Padre Giacomo Issaverdens, a still more dramatic
-description is given of the manner in which the
-Peace ended. When Adam and Eve were driven
-from the Garden of Eden they met a lion, which
-attacked Adam. “Why,” asked Adam, “do you
-attack me when God ordered you and all the animals
-to obey me?” “You disobeyed God,” replied the
-lion, “and we are no longer bound to obey you.”
-Saying which, the noble beast walked away without
-harming Adam. But war was declared.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>War was declared, and yet the scheme of the
-Creator could not be for ever defeated. Man who
-had erred might hope—and how much more
-must there be hope for those creatures that had
-done no harm.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>When the Prophets spoke of a Peace in Nature
-in connexion with that readjustment of the eternal
-scales which was meant by the coming of the
-Messiah, it cannot be doubted that they spoke of
-what was already a widely accepted tradition. But
-without their help we should have known nothing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>of it and we are grateful to them. Of all the
-radiant dreams with which man has comforted his
-heart, aching with realities, is there one to be
-compared with this? It is of the earth earthly, and
-that is the beauty of it. “The wolf shall dwell with
-the lamb, and the leopard lie down with the kid;
-and the calf and the young lion together; and a
-little child shall lead them; the cow and the bear
-shall feed; and their young ones lie down together;
-and the lion shall eat straw like the ox.”</p>
-
-<p class='c020'>“For behold I create new heavens and a new earth. They
-shall not hurt nor destroy in all My holy mountain, saith
-the Lord.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>Is not this the best of promised lands, the kindest
-of Elysiums, which leaves none out in the cold
-of cruelty and hatred? The importunate questioner
-may inquire, How can this primal and ultimate
-happiness compensate for the intervening ages of
-pain? About this, it may be observed that in
-religious matters people ought not to want to know
-too much. This is true of the faithful and even
-of the unfaithful. Scientific researches in the great
-storehouse which contains the religions of the world
-are more aided by a certain reserve, a certain
-reverence, than by the insatiable curiosity of the
-scalpel. Religions sow abroad <i>idées mères</i>; they
-tell some things, others they leave untold. They
-take us up into an Alpine height whence we see
-the broad configuration of the country and lose sight
-of the woods and the tortuous ravines among which
-we so often missed the track. Now, from the Alpine
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>height of faith, the idea of an original and final
-Nature Peace makes the intervening discord seem
-of no account—a false note between two harmonies.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Nature Peace as the emblem of perfect moral
-beauty became nearly the first Christian idea carried
-out in art. I remarked a rude but striking instance
-of it on one of the funereal monuments which have
-been found lately at Carthage, belonging to a date
-when Christian and pagan commemorated their dead
-in the same manner, the former generally only adding
-some slight symbolical indication of his faith. In this
-stele Christ, carrying the lamb across His shoulders,
-is attended by a panther and a lion. All such primitive
-attempts to represent a Nature Peace are chiefly
-interesting (and from this point of view their interest
-is great) from the fact that in child-like, stammering
-efforts they reveal the intrinsic idiosyncrasy of
-Christian thought after the Church had parted from
-the realities of proximity with its Founder, and had
-not reached the realities of a body corporate striving
-for supremacy. Christ the Divine Effluence was
-the faith which made men willing to face the
-lions.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Doubtless many of those martyrs clung to the
-sublime conception of a final Peace, the complement
-of the first. That this was accepted as no allegory
-by the later spiritualised Jews, and especially by the
-Pharisees, seems to be a well-established fact. It is
-difficult to interpret in any other way the solemn
-statement of St. Paul, that the “whole creation
-groaneth and travaileth in pain together <i>until now</i>,”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>waiting for redemption; or the beatific vision of
-Josephus: “The whole Creation also will lift up a
-perpetual hymn ... and shall praise Him that
-made them together with the angels and spirits and
-men, now freed from all bondage.” <i>Homines et
-jumenta salvabis Domine.</i></p>
-<h3 class='c021'>II.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>What was the view taken of animals by the Jewish
-people, apart from the fundamental ideas implied by
-a primordial Peace in Nature?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It was the habit of Hebrew writers to leave a good
-deal to the imagination; in general, they only cared
-to throw as much light on hidden subjects as was
-needful to regulate conduct. They gave precepts
-rather than speculations. There remain obscure
-points in their conception of animals, but we know
-how they did <i>not</i> conceive them: they did not look
-upon them as “things”; they did not feel towards
-them as towards automata.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>After the Deluge, there was established “the everlasting
-covenant between God and every living
-creature of all flesh that is upon the earth.” Evidently,
-you cannot make a covenant with “things.”</p>
-
-<div id='i212' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i212.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='small'><i>N. Consoni.</i></span><br />GENESIS VIII.<br /><span class='small'>(<i>Loggie di Raffaello.</i>)</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>That the Jews supposed the intelligence of animals
-to be not extremely different from the intelligence
-of man is to be deduced from the story of Balaam,
-for it is said that God opened the mouth—not the
-mind—of the ass. The same story illustrates the
-ancient belief that animals see apparitions which are
-concealed from the eyes of man. The great interest
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>to us, however, of the Scriptural narrative is its
-significance as a lesson in humanity. When the
-Lord opened the mouth of the ass, what did the
-ass say? She asks her master why he had smitten
-her three times? Balaam answers, with a frankness
-which, at least, does him credit, because he was
-enraged with the ass for turning aside and not
-minding him, and he adds (still enraged, and, strange
-to say, nowise surprised at the animal’s power of
-speech) that he only wishes he had a sword in his
-hand, as he would then kill her outright. How like
-this is to the voice of modern brutality! The ass,
-continuing the conversation, rejoins in words which
-it would be a shame to disfigure by putting them
-into the idiom of the twentieth century: “Am I not
-thine ass upon which thou hast ridden ever since I
-was thine unto this day? Was I ever wont to do
-so unto thee?” Balaam, who has the merit, as I
-have noticed, of being candid, replies, “No, you never
-were.” Then, for the first time, the Prophet sees
-the angel standing in the path with a drawn sword
-in his hand—an awe-inspiring vision! And what
-are the angel’s first words to the terrified prophet
-who lies prostrate on his face? They are a reproof
-for his inhumanity. “Wherefore hast thou smitten
-thine ass these three times?” Then the angel tells
-how the poor beast he has used thus has saved her
-master from certain death, for had she not turned
-from him, he would have slain Balaam and saved
-her alive. “And Balaam said unto the angel of
-the Lord, I have sinned.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Balaam was not a Jew; but the nationality of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>personages in the Bible and the origin or authorship
-of its several parts are not questions which affect
-the present inquiry. The point of importance is,
-that the Jews believed these Scriptures to contain
-Divine truth.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>With regard to animals having the gift of language,
-it appears from a remark made by Josephus that the
-Jews thought that all animals spoke before the Fall.
-In Christian folk-lore there is a superstition that
-animals can speak during the Christmas night: an
-obvious reference to their return to an unfallen state.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Solomon declares that the righteous man “regardeth
-the life of his beast”; a saying which is
-often misquoted, “merciful” being substituted for
-“righteous,” by which the proverb loses half its force.
-The Hebrew Scriptures contain two definite injunctions
-of humanity to animals. One is the command
-not to plough with the ox and the ass yoked together—in
-Palestine I have seen even the ass and the
-camel yoked together; their unequal steps cause inconvenience
-to both yoke-fellows and especially to
-the weakest. The other is the prohibition to muzzle
-the ox which treads out the corn: a simple humanitarian
-rule which it is truly surprising how any one,
-even after an early education in casuistry, could have
-interpreted as a metaphor. There are three other
-commands of great interest because they show how
-important it was thought to preserve even the mind
-of man from growing callous. One is the order
-not to kill a cow or she-goat or ewe and her young
-both on the same day. The second is the analogous
-order not to seethe the kid in its mother’s milk.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>The third refers to bird-nesting: if by chance you
-find a bird’s nest on a tree or on the ground and
-the mother bird is sitting on the eggs or on the
-fledglings, you are on no account to capture her when
-you take the eggs or the young birds (one would
-like bird-nesting to have been forbidden altogether,
-but I fear that the human boy in Syria had too much
-of the old Adam in him for any such law to have
-proved effectual!). Let the mother go, says the
-sacred writer, and if you must take something, take
-only the young ones. This command concludes in
-a very solemn way, for it ends with the promise
-(for what may seem a little act of unimportant sentiment)
-of the blessing promised to man for honouring
-his own father and mother—that it will be well with
-him and that his days will be long in the land.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the law relative to the observance of the Seventh
-Day, not only is no point insisted on more strongly
-than the repose of the animals of labour, but in one
-of the oldest versions of the fourth commandment
-the repose of animals is spoken of as if it were the
-chief object of the Sabbath: “Six days shalt thou do
-thy work, and on the seventh day thou shalt rest: <i>that</i>
-thine ox and thine ass may rest” (Exodus xxiii. 12).
-Moreover, it is expressly stated of the Sabbath of
-the Lord, the seventh year when no work was to
-be done, that all which the land produces of itself
-is to be left to the enjoyment of the beasts that are
-in the land. The dominant idea was to give animals
-a chance—to leave something for them—to afford
-them some shelter, as in the creation of bird-sanctuaries
-in the temples.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>In promises of love and protection to man, to the
-Chosen People, animals are almost always included.
-“The heavens shall tremble: the sun and moon shall
-be dark, and the stars shall withdraw their shining”
-(Joel ii. 10). “Be not afraid, ye beasts of the field:
-for the pastures of the wilderness do spring, for the
-tree beareth her fruit, the fig-tree and the vine do
-yield their strength. Be glad, ye children of Zion,
-and rejoice in the Lord your God” (Joel ii. 22, 23).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The wisdom of animals is continually praised.
-“Go to the ant, thou sluggard; consider her ways
-and be wise: which having no guide, overseer, or
-ruler, provideth her meat in the summer, and gathereth
-her food in the harvest.” So said the wisest of the
-Jews. I am tempted to quote here a passage from
-the writings of Giordano Bruno: “With what understanding
-the ant gnaws her grain of wheat lest it
-should sprout in her underground habitation. The
-fool says this is instinct, but we say it is a species
-of understanding.” If Solomon did not make the
-same reflection, it was only because that wonderful
-word “instinct” had not yet been invented.</p>
-
-<div id='i216' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i216.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='small'><i>Photo:</i> <i>Alinari.</i></span><br />DANIEL AND THE LIONS.<br /><span class='small'>(<i>Early Christian Sarcophagus at Ravenna.</i>)</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>We have seen that the Jews supposed animals
-to be given to men for use not for abuse, and the
-whole of Scripture tends to the conclusion that the
-Creator—who had called good all the creatures of
-His hand—regarded none as unworthy of His providence.
-This view is plainly endorsed by the saying
-of Christ that not a sparrow falls to the ground
-without the will of the Father (or “not one of them
-is forgotten in the sight of God”), and by the saying
-of Mohammed, who likewise believed himself the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>continuer of Jewish tradition: “There is no beast
-that walks upon the earth but its provision is from
-God.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>But there is something more. Every one knows
-that the Jews were allowed to kill and eat animals.
-The Jewish religion makes studiously few demands
-on human nature. “The ways of the Lord were
-pleasant ways.” Since men craved for meat or, in
-Biblical language, since they lusted after flesh, they
-were at liberty to eat those animals which, in an
-Eastern climate, could be eaten without danger to
-health. But on one condition: the body they might
-devour—what was the body? It was earth. The
-soul they might not touch. The mysterious thing
-called life must be rendered up to the Giver of it—to
-God. The man who did not do this, when he
-killed a lamb, was a murderer. “The blood shall
-be imputed to him; he hath shed blood, and that
-man shall be cut off from among his people.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The inclination must be resisted to dispose of
-this mysterious ordinance as a mere sanitary measure.
-It was a sanitary measure, but it was much besides.
-The Jews believed that every animal had a soul, a
-spirit, which was beyond human jurisdiction, with
-which they had no right to tamper. When we ask,
-however, what this soul, this spirit, was, we find ourselves
-groping in the dark. Was it material, as the
-soul was thought to be by the Egyptians and by
-the earliest doctors of the Christian Church? Was
-it an immaterial, impersonal, Divine essence? Was
-its identity permanent, or temporary? We can give
-no decisive answer; but we may assume with considerable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>certainty that life, spirit, whatever it was,
-appeared at least to the majority of the Jews to
-possess one nature, whether in men or in animals.
-When a Jew denied the immortality of the soul, he
-denied it both for man and for beast. “I said in
-my heart,” wrote the author of Ecclesiastes, “concerning
-the estate of the sons of men that God might
-manifest them, and that they might see that they
-themselves are beasts. For that which befalleth the
-sons of men befalleth beasts; even one thing befalleth
-them; as the one dieth so the other dieth; yea, they
-have all one breath; so that a man hath no pre-eminence
-above a beast.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The mist which surrounds the Hebrew idea of
-the soul may proceed from the fact that they did
-not know themselves what they meant by it, or from
-the fact that they once knew what they meant by
-it so well as to render elucidation superfluous. If
-the teraphim represented the Lares or family
-dead, then the archaic Jewish idea of the soul was
-simple and definite. It is possible that in all later
-times two diametrically opposed opinions existed contemporaneously,
-as was the case with the Pharisees
-and Sadducees. The Jewish people did not feel the
-pressing need to dogmatise about the soul that other
-peoples have felt; they had one living soul which was
-immortal, and its name was Israel!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Still, through all ages, from the earliest times till
-now, the Jews have continued to hold sacred “the
-blood which is the life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In Hindu religious books, where similar ordinances
-are enforced, there are hints of a suspicion which, as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>I have said elsewhere, could not have been absent
-from the minds of Hebrew legislators—the haunting
-suspicion of a possible mixing-up of personality.
-Here we tread on the skirts of magic: a subject
-which belongs to starless nights.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We come back into the light of day when we
-glance at the relations which, according to Jewish
-tradition, existed between animals and their Creator.
-We see a beautiful interchange of gratitude on the
-one side and watchful care on the other. As the
-ass of Balaam recognised the angel, so do all animals—except
-man—at all times recognise their God.
-“But ask now the beasts and they shall teach thee;
-and the fowls of the air, and they shall tell thee....
-Who knoweth not of all these that the hand of the
-Lord hath wrought this? In whose hand is the
-soul of every living thing, and the breath of all
-mankind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I will only add to these words of Job a few verses
-taken here and there from the Psalms, which form
-a true anthem of our fellow-creatures of the earth
-and air:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Beasts and all cattle, creeping things and flying fowl, let them praise the name of the Lord.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>He giveth to the beast his food and to the young ravens which cry.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>He sendeth the springs into the valleys which run among the hills;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>They give drink to every beast of the field, the wild asses quench their thirst.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>By them shall the fowls of heaven have their habitation which sing among the branches:</div>
- <div class='line in1'>The trees of the Lord are full of sap, the cedars of Lebanon which He hath planted,</div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>Where the birds make their nests; as for the stork, the fir-trees are her house.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>The great hills are a refuge for the wild goats and the rocks for the conies.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Thou makest darkness, and it is night, wherein all the beasts of the forest do creep forth;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>The young lions roar after their prey, and seek their meat from God;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>The sun ariseth, they gather themselves together and lay them down in their dens.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>... Yea, the sparrow hath found an house, and the swallow a nest for herself where she may lay her young.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Even thine altars, O Lord of Hosts, my King and my God!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>
- <h2 id='ch11' class='c006'>XI<br /> <br />“A PEOPLE LIKE UNTO YOU”</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c007'>A FRIEND who was spending the winter at
-Tunis asked me if it were true that there was
-any teaching of kindness to animals in the religion
-of Islam? She had seen with pain the little humanity
-practised by the lower class of Arabs, and she had
-difficulty in believing that such conduct was contrary
-to the law of the Prophet. I replied, that if men are
-sometimes better than their creeds, at other times
-they are very much worse. At the head of every
-chapter of the Koran, it is written: “In the name
-of the most merciful God.” If God be merciful, shall
-man be unmerciful? Alas, that the answer should
-have been so often “yes”!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Inhumanity to animals is against the whole spirit
-of the Koran, and also against that of Moslem
-tradition. In the “Words of Mohammed,” of which
-one thousand four hundred and sixty-five collections
-exist, and which are looked upon as “the Moslem’s
-dictionary of morals and manners,” the Apostle is
-described as saying: “Fear God in these dumb
-animals, and ride them when they are fit to be rode,
-and get off them when they are tired.” Mohammed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>was asked by his disciples: “Verily, are there rewards
-for our doing good to quadrupeds and giving them
-water to drink? “He said: “There are rewards
-for benefiting every animal having a moist liver”
-(every sentient creature). He said again: “There
-is no Moslem who planteth a tree or soweth a field,
-and man, birds or beasts eat from them, but it is
-a charity for him.” Like all other religious teachers,
-he was made by legend the central figure of a Nature
-Peace. He had miraculous authority over beasts as
-well as over man, and beasts, more directly than
-man, knew him to be from God. Once he was
-standing in the midst of a crowd when a camel came
-and prostrated itself before him. His companions
-exclaimed, “O Apostle of God! Beasts and trees
-worship thee, then it is meet for us to worship thee.”
-Mohammed replied, “Worship God, and you may
-honour your brother—that is, me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Those who know nothing else about Mohammed
-know the story of how he cut away his sleeve rather
-than awaken his cat, which was sleeping upon it.
-He is reported to have told how a woman was once
-punished for a cat: she tied it till it died of hunger—she
-gave that cat nothing to eat, nor did she allow
-it to go free, so that it might have eaten “the reptiles
-of the ground.” (Cats do eat lizards and snakes too,
-even when they have plenty of food—very bad for
-them it is.) Mohammed’s fondness of cats has been
-suggested as the reason why two or three of them
-usually go with the Caravan which takes the Sacred
-Carpet from Cairo to Mecca, but perhaps the origin
-of that custom is far more remote.</p>
-
-<div id='i222' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i222.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>“AN INDIAN ORPHEUS.”<br />Royal Palace at Delhi.<br /><span class='small'>(<i>Imitated from a painting by Raphael.</i>)</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>In the words of Mohammed there is this beautiful
-version of the “Sultan Murad” cycle: an adulteress
-was passing by a well when she saw a dog which
-was holding out its tongue from the thirst which was
-killing him. The woman drew off her shoe and tied
-it to the end of her garment; then she drew up water
-and gave the dog to drink. The dog fawned on
-her and licked her hands. Now the Sultan was
-passing that way, and he saw the woman and the
-dog and inquired into the matter. When he had
-heard all, he told the guards to undo her chain and
-give her back her veil and lead her to her own
-home.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>On one occasion the Prophet met a man who had
-a nest of young doves, and the mother fluttered after
-and even down about the head of him that held it.
-The Prophet told him to put the nest back where
-he found it, for this wondrous love comes from
-God.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The verse which gives the keynote to Moslem
-ideas about animals occurs in the sixth chapter of
-the Koran, and runs thus: “There is no beast on
-earth nor bird which flieth with its wings but the same
-is a people like unto you, we have not omitted anything
-in the Book of our decrees; then unto their
-Lord shall they return.” In other texts where the
-word “creatures” is used there is a strong presumption
-that animals, as well as men, genii and
-angels, are included; as, for instance, “unto Him
-do all creatures which are in heaven and earth make
-petition,” and again, “all God’s creatures are His
-family, and he is the most beloved of God who trieth
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>to do the most good to God’s creatures”—which is
-almost word for word—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“He prayeth best, who loveth best</div>
- <div class='line in1'>All things both great and small;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>For the dear God who loveth us,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>He made and loveth all.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>The common grace after eating is “Praise be to
-the Lord of all creatures!” Moslem hunters and
-butchers have the custom, called the Hallal, of pronouncing
-a formula of excuse (Bi’sm-illah!) before
-slaying any animal. The author of “Malay Magic”
-mentions, that if a Malay takes a tiger in a pitfall,
-the Pawang, or medicine-man, has to explain to the
-quarry that it was not he that laid the snare but
-the Prophet Mohammed.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>By orthodox Moslem law hunting was allowed,
-provided it was for some definite end or necessity.
-It was legitimate to hunt for food, or for clothing,
-as when the skin was the object. Dangerous wild
-beasts, the incompatible neighbours of all but saints,
-might be hunted to protect the more precious lives
-of men. Beyond this, from an orthodox point of
-view, hunting was regarded as indefensible. Such
-was the rule, and there is no greater mistake than
-to undervalue the moral standard because every one
-does not attain to it. Perhaps few Moslems keep
-this rule rigidly, but it is true now as it was when
-Lane wrote on the subject, that a good Moslem who
-hunts for amusement does not seek to prolong the
-chase: he tries to take the game as quickly as he
-can, and if it is not dead when taken, it is instantly
-killed by having its throat cut. Such amusements
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>as shooting pigeons, or the unspeakable abomination
-of firing at wild birds from ships, which makes certain
-tourist steamers a curse in the Arctic regions, would
-inspire even the not too orthodox Moslem with profound disgust.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There were some Moslems who went far beyond
-the law—for whom taking life, when the fact of
-doing so came rudely before them, was a thing
-revolting in itself. Such sensibility was manifest in
-the Persian poets, and it has been attributed to their
-inherited Zoroastrian tendencies; but to think this
-is to misunderstand the groundwork of Mazdean
-humane teaching, which was not based on sensitiveness
-about taking life. Such sensitiveness is
-rarely found, except among Aryan races, and
-Zoroastrianism, though it spread among an Aryan
-people, was not an Aryan religion. It is more likely
-to be true that the Persian peculiar tenderness for
-animals was an atavistic revival of the old Aryan
-temperament. Renan said that Sufism was a racial
-Aryan reaction against <i>l’effroyable simplicité de
-l’esprit sémitique</i>. Sensitiveness about animals was
-a necessary ingredient, so to speak, of Sufism. Sadi,
-the Sufic poet <i>par excellence</i>, poured blessings on the
-departed spirit of Firdusi for the couplet which Sir
-William Jones translated so well and loved so
-much:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Ah, spare yon emmet, rich in hoarded grain;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>He lives with pleasure, and he dies with pain.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>That birds and many, if not all, animals have a
-language by which they can interchange their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>thoughts is a belief shared by Moslems, both
-learned and ignorant. The Koran says that the
-language of birds was understood by Solomon, and
-folk-lore gives many other persons credit for the
-same accomplishment. A person believed to have
-such powers could turn the belief, if not the powers,
-to uses both good and bad. An Arabian tale relates
-how a pleasure-loving Persian king summoned a
-Maubadz, a head Magian, to tell him what two owls
-were chattering about. The Maubadz told with considerable
-detail the plan which the female owl was
-unfolding to the male owl, of how each of their future
-numerous offspring might be set up in life as sole
-possessor of a forsaken village, if only the present
-“fortunate king” lived long enough. The monarch
-understood the rebuke, and resolved to mend his
-ways, and to encourage tillage and agriculture, instead
-of devoting himself to idle pastimes.</p>
-
-<div id='i226' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i226.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>MOSLEM BEGGAR FEEDING DOGS AT CONSTANTINOPLE.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Bird-trills mean sentences or words, chiefly
-religious. The pigeon cries continually, “Alláh!
-Alláh!” The common dove executes this long
-sentence: “Assert the unity of your Lord who
-created you, so will He forgive you your sin.”
-There was a parrot who could repeat the whole
-Koran by heart and could never be put out so as
-to make mistakes. I knew of an old priest who
-repeated the <i>Divina Commedia</i> from the first line
-to the last, and the knowledge of the whole of the
-<i>Iliad</i> was common in ancient Athens, where people
-were laughed at who gave themselves the airs of
-scholars on the ground of such feats of memory.
-But in the bird-world the Moslem parrot surely
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>stands alone, though we hear of a pious raven who
-could say correctly the thirty-second chapter and
-who always made the proper prostration when it
-came to the words: “My body prostrateth itself
-before Thee, and my heart confideth in Thee.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The chapter of the Koran entitled “the Ant” is
-full of charming zoology. God bestowed knowledge
-on David and Solomon, and Solomon, who was
-“David’s heir,” said to the people: “O men, we
-have been taught the speech of birds, and have
-had all things bestowed on us: this is manifest
-excellence.” The armies of Solomon consisted of
-men and genii and birds: they were arrayed in
-proper order on an immense carpet of green silk:
-the men were placed to the right, the genii to the
-left, and the birds flew overhead, making a canopy
-of shade from the burning rays of the sun. Solomon
-sat in the middle on his throne, and when it was
-desired to move, the wind transported the carpet
-with all on it from one place to another. This
-account, however, is not in the Koran, and need
-not be believed. But that the armies were of the
-three species of beings we have the highest authority
-for asserting. They arrived, one day, in the Valley
-of Ants. A sentinel ant beheld the approaching
-host and called to her companions to hasten into
-their habitations for fear that Solomon and his
-armies should crush them underfoot without perceiving
-it. This made Solomon smile, but while
-he laughed at her words, he yet remembered to
-thank the Lord for the favour wherewith He had
-favoured him: the privilege of knowing the language
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>of beasts. After blessing God, and praying that
-in the end He would take him into paradise among
-His righteous servants, the king looked around at
-his feathered army and lo! he missed the lapwing.
-Some say that the reason why he noticed her
-absence was because in that place water was lacking
-for the ablution, and, as every one knows, the lapwing
-is the water-finder. Be that as it may (it is not
-stated in the Koran), he cried in displeasure:
-“What is the reason I do not see the lapwing?
-Is she absent? Verily I will chastise her with
-a severe punishment, or I will put her to death
-unless she bring me a just excuse.” Not long
-did he have to wait before the lapwing appeared,
-nor was the just excuse wanting. She had seen
-a country which the king had not seen, and she
-brought hence a remarkable piece of news. In
-the land of Saba (Sheba) a woman reigned who
-received all the honour due to a great prince.
-She had a magnificent throne of gold and silver;
-she and her people worshipped the Sun besides
-God. Satan, added the lapwing, becoming controversial,
-had turned them away from the truth lest
-they should worship the true God, from whom
-nothing is hid. And then this little bird of a story
-like a fairy-tale ends her discourse with one of
-those sharp, sudden, antithetical organ-blasts which
-again and again lift the mind of the reader of
-the Koran into the highest regions of poetry and
-religion: “God! there is no God but He; the Lord
-of the Magnificent Throne!” What wonderful art
-there is in the repetition of the words which had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>been applied just before to earthly splendour! The
-effect is the same as that of the words in Arabic
-which we see carved at every turn in the splendid
-halls of the Alhambra: “God only is conqueror.”
-What is the splendour or the power of earthly
-kings?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The story resumes its course. Solomon tells the
-lapwing that they will see, by and by, if she has
-told the truth or is a liar. He writes a letter
-(which tradition says was perfumed with musk and
-sealed with the king’s signet), and he commands
-the bird to take it to the land of Saba. Some say
-that the lapwing delivered the letter by throwing
-it into the queen’s bosom as she sat surrounded
-by her army; others that she brought it to her
-through an open window when she was sitting in
-her chamber: at any rate, it reached its destination,
-and the lapwing’s character was completely rehabilitated.
-With regard to Queen Balkis, the
-Bible, the Koran, and the Emperor Menelek may
-be consulted.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One of the beasts most esteemed by Moslems,
-one of those who, with Balaam’s ass, Jonah’s whale,
-Abraham’s ram, Solomon’s ant, and several other
-favourite animals, are known to have been admitted
-into the highest heaven, is the dog in the Moslem
-version of the “Seven Sleepers of Ephesus,” the
-legend of the seven young men who hid in a cave
-and slept safely through a long period of persecution.
-The dog has a Divine command to say to the young
-men, “I love those who are dear to God, and I
-will guard you.” He lay stretched across the mouth
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>of the cave during the whole time that the persecution
-lasted. Moslems say of a very avaricious man,
-“He would not give a bone to the dog of the Seven
-Sleepers.” The dog’s name was Katmîr (though
-some said it was Al Rakîm), and people wrote it
-as a talisman on important letters sent to a distance
-or oversea, to make sure of their arriving safely: it
-was like registration without the fee. He appears
-to have slept, as did his masters, while he guarded
-the entrance to the cave: the protection which he
-afforded must be attributed to his supernatural gifts
-as a devil-scarer rather than to the watch he kept.
-Dogs were believed to see “things invisible to us”—<i>i.e.</i>,
-demons. If a dog barks in the night the
-Faithful ask God’s aid against Satan. The cock
-is also a devil-scarer and sees angels as well as
-demons: when he crows it is a sign that he has
-just seen one.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Sometimes genii take the form of certain animals
-such as cats, dogs, and serpents (animals which are
-not eaten). If a man would kill one of the animals in
-which genii often appear, he must first warn the genii
-to vacate its form. This means that there is a greater
-prejudice against taking the life of such animals than
-in the case of animals slaughtered for food, when it
-is sufficient (though necessary) to say “If it pleases
-God.” While non-mystical Moslems did not respect
-life as such, nevertheless they realised the great
-scientific truth that <i>life</i> is the supreme mystery.
-“The idols ye invoke besides God,” says the Koran,
-“can never create a single fly although they were
-all assembled for that purpose, and if the fly snatch
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>anything from them” (such as offerings of honey)
-“they cannot recover the same from it.” Moslems
-are fond of the legend from the Gospel of the
-Infancy of how the Child Jesus, when He and other
-children were playing at making clay sparrows,
-breathed on the birds made by Him and they flew
-away or hopped on His hands. The parents of the
-other children forbade them to play any more with
-the Holy Child, whom they thought to be a sorcerer.
-That the Jews really imagined the unusual things
-done by Christ to be magic-working, and that this
-belief entered more into their wish to compass His
-death than is commonly supposed, a knowledge of
-Eastern ideas on magic inclines one to think.
-Moslems readily admit the truth of the miracle of
-the sparrows as of the other miracles of Jesus; they
-add, however, that life came into the clay figures
-“by permission of God.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Towards the end of the world, animals will speak
-with human language. Before this happens will have
-come to pass the reign of the “Rooh Allah,” the
-Spirit of God, as all Moslems call Christ. It is
-told that He will descend near the White Tower east
-of Damascus and will remain on earth for forty (or
-for twenty-four) years, during which period malice
-and hatred will be laid aside and peace and plenty
-will rejoice the hearts of men. While Jesus reigns,
-lions and camels and bears and sheep will live in
-amity and a child will play with serpents unhurt.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A kind of perpetual local Nature Peace prevails at
-Mecca; no animals are allowed to be slaughtered
-within a certain distance of the sacred precinct. It
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>should be noted also that pilgrims are severely prohibited
-from hunting; the wording of the verse in
-the Koran which establishes this rule seems to imply
-the possibility that wild animals themselves are doing
-the pilgrimage; hence they must be held sacred.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The law forbidding Moslems to eat the flesh of
-swine was copied from the Jewish ordinance, without
-doubt from the conviction that it was unwholesome.
-Those who were driven by extreme hunger to eat
-of it were not branded as unclean. There is a curious
-Indian folk-tale which gives an account of why swine-flesh
-was forbidden. At the beginning Allah restrained
-man from eating any animals but those which
-died a natural death. As they did not die as quickly
-as they wished, men began to hasten their deaths by
-striking them and throwing stones at them. The
-animals complained to Allah, who sent Gabriel to
-order all the men and all the animals to assemble so
-that He might decide the case. But the obstinate
-pig did not come. So Allah said: “The pigs, the
-lowest of animals, are disobedient; let no one eat
-them or touch them.” There is no record whatever
-of the pigs having signed a protest.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is by no means clear when the prejudice against
-dogs took hold of the Moslem mind. At first their
-presence was even tolerated inside the Mosque, and
-the report that the Prophet ordered all the dogs at
-Medina to be killed, especially those of a dark colour,
-is certainly a fable. The Caliph Abu Djafar al
-Mausur asked a learned man this very question:
-why dogs were treated with scorn? The learned
-man was so worthy of that description that he had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>the courage to say he did not know. “Tradition
-said so.” The Caliph suggested that it might be
-because dogs bark at guests and at beggars. There
-is a modern saying that angels never go into a house
-where there is a dog or an image. Still, the ordinary
-kindness of the Turks to the pariah dogs at Constantinople,
-where the beggar shares his last crust
-with them, shows that the feeling belongs more to
-philology than to nature. The pariah dog is the
-type of the despised outcast, but when a European
-throws poisoned bread to him the act is not admired
-by the Moslem more than it deserves to be.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Several <i>savants</i> have thought that the dog is
-scorned by Moslems because he was revered by
-Mazdeans; that he suffered indignity at the hands
-of the new believers as a protest against the excess
-of honour he had received from the old. This
-theory, though ingenious, does not seem to be borne
-out by facts. The comparisons of the qualities of
-the good dervish and the dog, which is a sort of
-vade mecum of dervishes everywhere, was almost
-certainly suggested by the “Eight Characteristics”
-of the dog in the Avesta. It is singular that the
-dog gets far better treatment in the Moslem comparisons
-than in the Mazdean. “The dog is always
-hungry: so is it with the faithful; he sleeps but
-little by night: so is it with those plunged in divine
-Love; if he die, he leaves no heritage: so is it with
-ascetics; he forsakes not his master even if driven
-away: so is it with adepts; he is content with few
-temporal goods: so is it with the pursuers of
-temperance; if he is expelled from one place he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>seeks another: so is it with the humble; if he is
-chastised and dismissed and then called back he
-obeys: so is it with the modest; if he sees food he
-remains standing afar: so is it with those who are
-consecrated to poverty; if he go on a journey he
-carries no refreshment for the way: so is it with
-those who have renounced the world.” Some of
-these “Characteristics” are flung back in irony at
-the dervishes by those who bitterly deride them,
-as the friars in the ages of Faith were derided in
-Europe—without its making the least difference to
-their popularity—but the homily itself is quite
-serious and meant for edification. Hasan Basri,
-who died in 728 <span class='fss'>A.D.</span>, was the author or adapter.
-Its wide diffusion is due to the accuracy with
-which it depicts the wandering mystic, whether
-he be called a dervish or a Fakeer, or, in the
-Western translation of Fakeer, a “Poverello” of St.
-Francis.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A certain rich man apologised to a Dervish because
-his servants, without his knowledge, had often driven
-him away: the holy man showed, he said, great
-patience and humility in coming back after such ill-treatment.
-The dervish replied that it was no
-merit but only one of the “traits of the dog,” which
-returns however often it is driven off. The worst
-enemies to the dervish have ever been the Ulemas,
-for whom he is a kind of dangerous lunatic strongly
-tinged with heresy. Among his unconventional ideas
-was sure to penetrate, more or less, the neoplatonist
-or Sufic view of animals. Wherever transcendental
-meditations on the union of the created with the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>Creator begin to prevail, men’s minds take the
-direction of admitting a more intimate relation of
-all living things with God. We might be sure that
-the dervishes would follow this psychological law
-even if we could not prove it. To prove it, however,
-we need go no further than the great prayer,
-one of the noblest of human prayers, which is used
-by many of the Dervish orders. There we read:
-“Thy science is everlasting and knows even the
-numbers of the breaths of Thy creatures: Thou seest
-and hearest the movements of all Thy creatures;
-thou hearest even the footsteps of the ant when in
-the dark night she walks on black stones; even the
-birds of the air praise Thee in their nests; the wild
-beasts of the desert adore Thee; the most secret as
-well as the most exposed thoughts of Thy servants
-Thou knowest....”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the same way, it was natural that the Dervishes
-should be supposed to have the power attributed to
-all holy (or harmless) men over the kings of the
-desert and forest. It could not be otherwise.
-Bishop Heber heard of two Indian Yogis who lived
-in different parts of a jungle infested by tigers in
-perfect safety; indeed, it was reported that one of
-these ascetics had a nightly visit from a tiger, who
-licked his hands and was fondled by him. This is a
-Hindu jungle story, but it would be just as credible
-if it were told of a Dervish. Of the credibility of
-the first part of it, and probably of the last also,
-there is not a single wandering ascetic of any sort
-who would entertain a doubt. Some years ago a
-Moslem recluse deliberately put his arm into the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>cage of Moti, the tiger in the Lahore Zoological
-Gardens. The tiger lacerated the arm, and the poor
-man died in the hospital after some days’ suffering,
-during which he showed perfect serenity. He had made
-a mistake; the tiger, brought up as a cub by British
-officers and deprived of his liberty, was not endowed
-with the power of discrimination possessed by a king
-of the wild. This, I hope, the Fakeer reflected, but
-it is more likely that he deemed that cruel clutch a
-sign of his own unworthiness and accepted death
-meekly, hoping not for reward but for pardon.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One would like to know more of a book which
-Mr. Charles M. Doughty found a certain reputed
-saint “poring and half weeping over,” the argument
-of which was “God’s creatures the beasts,” while its
-purpose was to show that every beast yields life-worship
-unto God. Even if this Damascus saint
-was not very saintly (as the author of “Arabia
-Deserta” hints), yet it is interesting to note that
-this subject should have appeared to a would-be
-new Messiah the most important he could choose
-for his Gospel.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A Persian poet, Azz’ Eddin Elmocadessi, advises
-man to learn from the birds,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Virtues that may gild thy name;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>And their faults if thou wouldst scan,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Know thy failings are the same.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>The recognition in animals of most human qualities
-in a distinct though it may be a limited form underlies
-all Eastern animal-lore and gives it a force and a
-reality even when it deals with extravagant fancies.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>There is a broad difference between the power of
-feeling <i>for</i> animals and the power of feeling <i>with</i>
-them. The same difference moulds the sentiments of
-man to man: nine men in ten can feel for their fellow-humans,
-but scarcely one man in ten can feel with them.
-They even know it, and they say ungrammatically,
-“I feel the greatest sympathy <i>for</i> so and so.” An
-instance of true <i>mitempfindung</i>, of insight into the
-very soul of a creature, exists in an Arabian poem by
-Lebid, who was one of the most interesting figures
-of the period in which the destinies of the Arab race
-were cast. He was the glory of the Arabs, not only
-on account of his faultless verse, but also because
-of his noble character. It is told of him that whenever
-an east wind blew, he provided a feast for the
-poor. Himself a pre-Islamic theist, he hailed the
-Prophet as the inspired enunciator of the creed he
-had held imperfectly and in private. All his poems
-were composed in the “Ignorance”; on being asked
-for a poem after his conversion at ninety years of
-age, he copied out a chapter of the Koran, and said,
-“God has given me this in exchange for poesy.” I
-do not think this meant that he despised the poet’s
-art, but that now, when he could no longer exercise
-it, he had what was still more precious.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The passage in question is one of several which
-show Lebid’s surprisingly close acquaintance with the
-ways and thoughts of wild animals. It is one of
-those elaborate similes which were the pride of
-Arabian poets, who often preferred to take comparisons
-already in use than to invent new ones. Wherever
-literature became a living entertainment, something of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>this kind happened: witness the borrowings from the
-Classics by the poets of the Renaissance; people
-liked to recognise familiar ideas in a new dress.
-Lebid’s similes have been turned and re-turned by
-other poets, but none approached the art and truth
-he infused into them. I am indebted to Sir Charles
-Lyall for the following version, which is not included
-in his volume of splendid translations of early Arabian
-poetry. The subject of the passage is the grief
-of a wild cow that has lost her calf:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Flat-nosed is she—she has lost her calf and ceases not to roam</div>
- <div class='line in4'>About the marge of the sand meadows and cry</div>
- <div class='line in1'>For her youngling, just weaned, white, whose limbs have been torn</div>
- <div class='line in4'>By the ash-grey hunting wolves who lack not for food.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>They came upon it while she knew not, and dealt her a deadly woe:</div>
- <div class='line in4'>—Verily, Death, when it shoots, misses not the mark!</div>
- <div class='line in1'>The night came upon her, as the dripping rain of the steady shower</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Poured on and its continuous flow soaked the leafage through and through.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>She took refuge in the hollow trunk of a tree with lofty branches standing apart</div>
- <div class='line in4'>On the skirts of the sandhills where the fine sand sloped her way.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>The steady rain poured down, and the flood reached the ridge of her back,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>In a night when thick darkness hid away all the stars;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>And she shone in the face of the mirk with a white, glimmering light</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Like a pearl born in a sea-shell, that has dropped from its string.</div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>Until, when the darkness was folded away and morning dawned,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>She stood, her legs slipping in the muddy earth.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>She wandered distracted about all the pools of So’âid</div>
- <div class='line in4'>For seven nights twinned with seven whole long days,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Until she lost all hope, and her udders shrunk—</div>
- <div class='line in4'>The udders that had not failed in all the days of the suckling and weaning,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Then she heard the sound of men and it filled her heart with fear,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Of men from a hidden place; and men, she knew, were her bane.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>She rushed blindly along, now thinking the chase before,</div>
- <div class='line in6'>And now behind her: each was a place of dread.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Until, when the archers lost hope, they let loose on her</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Trained hounds with hanging ears, each with a stiff leather collar on its neck;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>They beset her and she turned to meet them with her horns</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Like to spears of Semhar in their sharpness and their length.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>To thrust them away: for she knew well, if she drove them not off,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>That the fated day of her death among the fates of beasts had come;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>And among them, Kesâb was thrust through and slain and rolled in blood lay there,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>And Sukhâm was left in the place where he made his onset.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>There the description breaks off. In spite of the
-haunting cry of the cow of Lucretius, in spite of
-the immortal tears of Shakespeare’s “poor sequester’d
-stag”—no vision of a desperate animal in all literature
-seems to me so charged with every element of pathos
-and dramatic intensity as this cow of Lebid. How
-fine is the altogether unforeseen close, which leaves
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>us wondering, breathless: Will she escape? Will no
-revengeful arrow reach her? Will the archers do as
-Om Piet did to the wildebeest?—</p>
-
-<p class='c020'>“A wildebeest cow and calf were pursued by Om Piet with
-three hunting-dogs. The Boer hunter tells the tale: ‘The old
-cow laid the first dog low; the calf is now tired. The second
-dog comes up to seize it; the cow strikes him down. Now the
-third dog tries to bite the little one, who can run no more, but
-the cow treats him so that there’s nothing to be done but
-to shoot him. Then Om Piet stands face to face with the
-wildebeest, who snorts but does not fly. Now though I come to
-shoot a wildebeest yet can I not kill a beast that has so
-bravely fought and will not run away; so Om Piet takes off his
-hat, and says, “Good-day to you, old wildebeest. You are a
-good and strong old wildebeest.” And we dine off springbuck
-that night at the farm.’”<a id='r7' /><a href='#f7' class='c017'><sup>[7]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-<div class='footnote c000' id='f7'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r7'>7</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>“A Breath from the Veldt,” by Guille Millais, 2nd
-edition, 1899.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>I ought to explain that, like the “cow” of Om
-Piet, Lebid’s “cow” is an antelope—the <i>Antilope
-defassa</i>—of which a good specimen may be seen in
-the Natural History Museum at South Kensington.
-The old Boer’s hunting yarn brings an unexpected
-confirmation of the Arabian poet’s testimony to its
-courage and maternal love.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Since the chase began, down to the blind brutality
-of the battue (which wiped it out) chivalry has been
-a trait of the genuine sportsman. In the golden
-legend of hunter’s generosity should be inscribed for
-ever the tale—the true tale as I believe it to be—of the
-Moslem prince Sebectighin, who rose from slave-birth
-to the greatest of Persian thrones—and more honour
-to him, notwithstanding the slur which Firdusi, stung
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>by Mahmoud’s want of appreciation, cast, in a foolish
-moment, on his father’s origin. Sebectighin was
-a horseman in the service of the Sultan and as a
-preparation for greater things he found a vent for his
-pent-up energies in the chase. One day he remarked
-a deer with her little fawn peacefully grazing in a
-glade of the forest. He galloped to the spot, and in
-less than a second he had seized the fawn, which,
-after binding its legs, he placed across his saddle-bows.
-Thus he started to go home, but looking back,
-he saw the mother following, with every mark of
-grief. Sebectighin’s heart was touched; he loosened
-the fawn and restored it to its dam. And in the night
-he had a vision in his dreams of One who said to
-him, “The kindness and compassion which thou hast
-this day shown to a distressed animal has been
-approved of in the presence of God; therefore in the
-records of Providence the kingdom of Ghusni is
-marked as a reward against thy name. Let not
-greatness destroy thy virtue, but continue thy benevolence
-to man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Among the Afghan ballads collected by James
-Darmesteter, of which it has been aptly said that
-they give an admirable idea of Homer in a state of
-becoming, there is one composed in a gentler mood
-than the songs of war and carnage which has
-a gazelle for heroine and the Prophet as <i>Deus ex
-machina</i>. As there is no translation of it into
-English I have attempted the following version:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“The Son of Abu Jail he set a snare for a gazelle,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Without a thought along she sped, and in the snare she fell.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>‘O woe is me!’ she weeping cried, ‘that I to look forgot!</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Fain would I live for my dear babes, but hope, alas! is not.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'>Then to the Merciful she made this short and fervent prayer:</div>
- <div class='line in1'>‘I left two little fawns at home; Lord, keep them in Thy care!’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'>The son of Abu Jail he came, in haste and glee he ran,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>‘Ah, now I’ve got you in my net, and who to save you can?’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'>He grasped her by her tender throat, his fearsome sword did draw,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>When lo! the Lord held back his hand! The Prophet’s self he saw!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'>‘The world was saved for love of thee, save for thy pity’s sake!’</div>
- <div class='line in1'>So breathed the trembling doe, and then the holy Prophet spake:</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'>‘Abu, my friend, this doe let go, and hark to my appeal;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>She has two tender fawns at home who pangs of hunger feel,</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'>‘Let her go back one hour to them, no longer will she stay,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>And when she comes, O heartless man, then mayest thou have thy way!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'>But if, by chance, she should not come, then by my faith will I</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Be unto thee a bonded slave until the day I die.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'>Then Abu the gazelle let go; to her dear young she went,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>‘Quick, children, take my breast,’ she said, ‘my life is almost spent;</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>‘The Master of the Universe for me a pledge I gave,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>But I must swift return and then no man my life can save.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'>Then said the little ones to her, ‘Mother, we dare not eat;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Go swiftly back, redeem the pledge, fast as can fly thy feet.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'>One hour had scarce run fully out when, panting, she was there;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Now, Abu, son of Abu, thou mayest take her life or spare!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'>Said Abu, ‘In the Prophet’s name, depart, I set you free ...</div>
- <div class='line in1'>But thou, our Helper, at God’s throne, do thou remember me!’</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'>So have I told, as long ago my father used to tell,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>How Pagan Abu Moslem turned and saved his soul from hell.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>This brief sketch will suffice to show that if the
-Moslem is not humane to animals it is his own fault,
-as I think it is his own fault if he is not humane to
-man. Teaching humanity to animals must always
-imply the teaching of humanity to men. This was
-perfectly understood well by all these Oriental tellers
-of beast-stories: they would all have endorsed the
-saying of one of my Lombard peasant-women (dear,
-good soul!), “Chi non è buono per le bestie, non
-è buono per i Cristiani”; <i>Cristiano</i> meaning, in
-Italian popular speech, a human being. Under the
-most varied forms, in fiction which while the world
-lasts, can never lose its freshness, the law of kindness
-is brought home. Perhaps the most beautiful of
-all humane legends is one preserved in a poem by
-Abu Mohammed ben Yusuf, Sheikh Nizan-eddin,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>known to Europeans as Nizami. This Persian poet,
-who died sixty-three years before Dante was born,
-may have taken the legend from some collection
-of Christ-lore, some uncanonical book impossible now
-to trace; it is unlikely that he invented it. As Jesus
-walks with His disciples through the market-place
-at evening, He comes upon a crowd which is giving
-vent to every expression of abhorrence at the sight
-of a poor dead dog lying in the gutter. When they
-have all had their say, and have pointed in disgust
-to his blear eyes, foul ears, bare ribs, torn hide,
-“which will not even yield a decent shoe-string,”
-Jesus says, “How beautifully white his teeth are!”
-No story of the Saviour outside the Gospels is so
-worthy to have been in them.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>
- <h2 id='ch12' class='c006'>XII<br /> <br />THE FRIEND OF THE CREATURE</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c007'>IN Hindu mythology Gunádhya attracts a whole
-forestful of beasts by reciting his poems to them.
-The power of Apollo and of Orpheus in taming
-beasts depended on a far less surprising <i>modus operandi</i>;
-like the greater part of myths, this one was
-not spun from the thin air of imagination. Music
-has a real influence on animals; in spite of theories
-to the contrary, it is probable that the sweet flute-playing
-of the snake-charmer—his “sweet charming”
-in Biblical phrase—is no mere piece of theatrical
-business, but a veritable aid in obtaining the desired
-results. I myself could once attract fieldmice
-by playing on the violin, and only lately, on
-the road near our house at Salò, I noticed that a
-goat manifested signs of wishing to stop before a
-grind-organ; its master pulled the string by which
-it was led, but it tugged at it so persistently that,
-at last, he stopped, and the goat, turning round
-its head, listened with evident attention. Independently
-of the pleasure music may give to animals,
-it excites their curiosity, a faculty which is extremely
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>alive in them, as may be seen by the way in which
-small birds are attracted by the pretty antics of the
-little Italian owl; they cannot resist going near to
-have a better view, and so they rush to their doom
-upon the limed sticks.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Legends have an inner and an outer meaning; the
-allegory of Apollo, Lord of Harmony, would have
-been incomplete had it lacked the beautiful incident
-of a Nature Peace—partial indeed, but still a fairer
-triumph to the god than his Olympian honours.
-For nine years he watched the sheep of Admetus, as
-Euripides described:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Pythean Apollo, master of the lyre,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Who deigned to be a herdsman and among</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Thy flocks on hills his hymns celestial sung;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>And his delightful melodies to hear</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Would spotted lynx and lions fierce draw near;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>They came from Othry’s immemorial shade,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>By charm of music tame and harmless made;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>And the swift, dappled fawns would there resort,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>From the tall pine-woods and about him sport.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>When Apollo gave Orpheus his lyre, he gave
-him his gift “to soothe the savage breast.” In the
-splendid Pompeian fresco showing a Nature Peace,
-the bay-crowned, central figure is said to be Orpheus,
-though its god-like proportions suggest the divinity
-himself. At any rate, nothing can be finer as the
-conception of an inspired musician: the whole body
-<i>sings</i>, not only the mouth. A lion and a tiger sit
-on either side; below, a stag and a wild boar listen
-attentively, and a little hare capers near the stream.
-In the upper section there are other wild beasts
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>sporting round an elephant, while oxen play with a
-tiger; an anticipation of the ox and tiger in Rubens’
-“Garden of Eden.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The power of Orpheus to subdue wild beasts was
-the reason why the early Christians took him as a
-type of Christ. Of all the prophecies which were
-believed to refer to the Messiah none so captivated
-the popular mind as those which could be interpreted
-as referring to His recognition by animals. The
-four Gospels which became the canon of the Church
-threw no light on the subject, but the gap was filled
-up by the uncanonical books; one might think that
-they were written principally for the purpose of
-dwelling on this theme, so frequently do they return
-to it. In the first place, they bring upon the scene
-those dear objects of our childhood’s affection, the
-ass and the ox of the stable of Bethlehem. Surely
-many of us cherish the impression that ass and
-ox rest on most orthodox testimony: an idea which
-is certainly general in Catholic countries, though,
-the other day, I heard of a French priest who was
-heartless enough to declare that they were purely
-imaginary. “Alas,” as Voltaire said, “people run
-after truth!” As a matter of fact, it appears evident
-that the ass and the ox were introduced to fulfil
-the prophecy of Isaiah: “The ox knoweth his owner
-and the ass his master’s manger, but Israel knoweth
-Me not.” But there arose what was thought a
-difficulty: the apocryphal Gospels, in harmony with
-the earliest traditions, place the birth of Christ, not
-in a stable, but in the grotto which is still shown to
-travellers. To reconcile this with the legend of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>the ass and ox and also with the narrative of St.
-Luke, it was supposed that the Holy Family moved
-from the grotto to a stable a few days after the
-Child was born. This is a curious case of finding
-a difficulty where there was none, for it is very likely
-that the caves near the great Khan of Bethlehem
-were used as stables. In every primitive country
-shepherds shelter themselves and their flocks in
-holes in rocks; I remember the “uncanny” effect
-of a light flickering in the depths of a Phœnician
-tomb near Cagliari; it was almost disappointing
-to hear that it was only a shepherd’s fire.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Thomas, “the Israelite philosopher,” as he called
-himself, author of the Pseudo-Thomas which is said
-to date from the second century, appears to have
-been a Jewish convert belonging to one of the
-innumerable “heretical” sects of the earliest times.
-It may be guessed, therefore, that the Pseudo-Thomas
-was first written in Syriac, though the
-text we possess is in Greek. It is considered the
-model on which all the other Gospels of the Infancy
-were founded, but the Arabic variant contains so
-much divergent matter as to make it probable that
-the writer drew on some other early source which
-has not been preserved. Mohammed was acquainted
-with this Arabian Gospel, and Mohammedans did not
-cease to venerate the sycamore-tree at Matarea under
-which the Arabian evangelist states that the Virgin and
-Child rested, till it died about a year ago. The Pseudo-Thomas
-contains some vindictive stories, which were
-modified or omitted in the other versions: probably
-they are all to be traced to Elisha and his she-bears:
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>a theory which I offer to those who cannot imagine
-how they arose. A curious feature in these writings
-is the scarcity of anything actually original; the most
-original story to be found in them is that of the
-clay sparrows, which captivated the East and penetrated
-into the folk-lore even of remote Iceland.
-Notwithstanding the fulminations of Councils, the
-apocryphal Gospels were never suppressed; they
-enjoyed an enormous popularity during the Middle
-Ages, and many details derived solely from these
-condemned books crept into the <i>Legenda Aurea</i> and
-other strictly orthodox works.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The “Little Child” of Isaiah’s prophecy was
-the cause of troops of wild beasts being convoked
-to attend the Infant Christ. Lions acted as guides
-for the flight into Egypt, and it is mentioned that
-not only did they respect the Holy Family, but also
-the asses and oxen which carried their baggage.
-Besides, the lions, leopards, and other creatures
-“wagged their tails with great reverence” (though
-all these animals are not of the dog species, but
-of the cat, in which wagging the tail signifies
-the reverse of content).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>This is the subject of an old English ballad:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“And when they came to Egypt’s land,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Amongst those fierce wild beasts,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Mary, she being weary,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Must needs sit down to rest.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>‘Come, sit thee down,’ said Jesus,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>‘Come, sit thee down by Me,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>And thou shall see how these wild beasts</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Do come and worship Me.’”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'><span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>First to come was the “lovely lion,” king of all
-wild beasts, and for our instruction the moral is
-added: “We’ll choose our virtuous princes of birth
-and high degree.” Sad rhymes they are, nor, it
-will be said, is the sense much better; yet,
-hundreds of years ago in English villages, where,
-perhaps, only one man knew how to read, this
-doggerel served the end of the highest poetry:
-it transported the mind into an ideal region; it
-threw into the English landscape deserts, lions, a
-Heavenly Child; it stirred the heart with the
-romance of the unknown; it whispered to the
-soul—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“The Now is an atom of sand,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And the Near is a perishing clod;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>But Afar is a Faëry Land,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And Beyond is the bosom of God.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>The pseudo-gospel of Matthew relates an incident
-which refers to a later period in the Holy Childhood.
-According to this narrative, when Jesus was
-eight years old He went into the den of a lioness
-which frightened travellers on the road by the
-Jordan. The little cubs played round His feet,
-while the older lions bowed their heads and fawned
-on Him. The Jews, who saw it from a distance,
-said that Jesus or His parents must have committed
-mortal sin for Him to go into the lion’s den. But
-coming forth, He told them that these lions were
-better behaved than they; and then He led the wild
-beasts across the Jordan and commanded them to
-go their way, hurting no one, neither should any one
-hurt them till they had returned to their own
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>country. So they bade Him farewell with gentle
-roars and gestures of respect.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>These stories are innocent, and they are even
-pretty, for all stories of great, strong animals and
-little children are pretty. But they fail to reveal
-the slightest apprehension of the deeper significance
-of a peace between all creatures. Turn from them
-to the wonderful lines of William Blake:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“And there the lion’s ruddy eyes</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Shall flow with tears of gold,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>And pitying the tender cries</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And walking round the fold</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Saying: Wrath by His meekness,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And by His health sickness,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Are driven away</div>
- <div class='line in2'>From our mortal day.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'>And now beside thee, bleating lamb,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>I can lie down and sleep,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Or think on Him who bore thy name,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Graze after thee, and weep;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>For, washed in life’s river,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>My bright mane for ever</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Shall shine like the gold</div>
- <div class='line in2'>As I guard o’er the fold.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>No one but Blake would have written this, and
-few things that he wrote are so characteristic of
-his genius. The eye of the painter seizes what
-the mind of the mystic conceives, and the poet
-surcharges with emotion words which, like the Vedic
-hymns, infuse thought rather than express it.</p>
-<p class='c008'>A single passage in the New Testament connects
-Christ with wild animals; in St. Mark’s Gospel we
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>are told that after His baptism in the Jordan Jesus
-was driven by the Spirit into the wilderness, where
-“He was with the wild beasts, and the angels
-ministered unto Him.” In the East the idea of
-the anchorite who leaves the haunts of men for
-the haunts of beasts was already fabulously old.
-In the Western world of the Roman Empire it was
-a new idea, and perhaps on that account, while it
-excited the horror of those who were faithful to
-the former order of things, it awoke an extraordinary
-enthusiasm among the more ardent votaries of the
-new faith. It led to the discovery of the inebriation
-of solitude, the powerful stimulus of a life with wild
-nature. Many tired brain-workers have recourse to
-mountain ascents as a restorative, but these can rarely
-be performed alone, and high mountains with their
-immense horizons tend to overwhelm rather than
-to collect the mind. But to wander alone in a
-forest, day after day, without particular aim, drinking
-in the pungent odours of growing things, fording
-the ice-cold streams, meeting no one but a bird
-or a hare—this will leave a memory as of another
-existence in some enchanted sphere. We have
-tasted an ecstasy that cities cannot give. We have
-tasted it, and we have come back into the crowded
-places, and it may be well for us that we have
-come back, for not to all is it given to walk in
-safety alone with their souls.</p>
-
-<div id='i253' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i253.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='small'><i>Photo:</i> <i>Anderson.</i></span><br />ST. JEROME EXTRACTING A THORN FROM THE PAW OF A LION.<br /><span class='small'>(<i>By Hubert van Eyck.</i>)</span><br />Naples Museum.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Of one of the earliest Christian anchorites in
-Egypt it is related that for fifty years he spoke
-to no one; he roamed in a state of nature, flying
-from the monks who attempted to approach him.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>At last he consented to answer some questions
-put by a recluse whose extreme piety caused him
-to be better received than the others. To the
-question of why he avoided mankind, he replied
-that those who dwelt with men could not be visited
-by angels. After saying this, he vanished again
-into the desert. I have observed that the idea of
-renouncing the world was not a Western idea, yet,
-at the point where it touches madness, it had
-already penetrated into the West—we know where
-to find its tragic record:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Ego vitam agam sub altis Phrygiae columinibus,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Ubi cerva silvicultrix, ubi aper nemorivagus?”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>The <i>point of madness</i> would have been reached
-more often but for the charity of the stag and the
-wild boar and the lion and the buffalo, who felt
-a sort of compassion for the harmless, weak human
-creatures that came among them, and who were
-ready to give that response which is the sustaining
-ichor of life.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The same causes produce the same effects—man
-may offer surprises but never men. Wherever there
-are solitaries there are friendships between the
-recluse and the wild beast. All sorts of stories of
-lions and other animals that were on friendly terms
-with the monks of the desert have come down to us
-in the legends of the Saints. The well-known legend
-of how St. Jerome relieved a lion of a thorn which
-was giving him great pain, and how the lion became
-tame, was really told of another saint, but Jerome,
-if he did not figure in a lion story, is the authority
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>for one: in his life of Paul the Hermit he relates
-that when that holy man died, two lions came out
-of the desert to dig his grave; they uttered a loud
-wail over his body and knelt down to crave a blessing
-from his surviving companion—none other than the
-great St. Anthony. He also says that Paul had
-subsisted for many years on food brought to him by
-birds, and when he had a visitor the birds brought
-double rations.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>As soon as the hermit appears in Europe his four-footed
-friends appear with him. For instance, there
-was the holy Karileff who tamed a buffalo. Karileff
-was a man of noble lineage who took up his abode
-with two companions in a clearing in the woods on
-the Marne, where he was soon surrounded by all
-sorts of wild things. Amongst these was a buffalo,
-one of the most intractable of beasts in its wild state,
-but this buffalo became perfectly tame, and it was a
-charming sight to see the aged saint stroking it softly
-between its horns. Now it happened that the king,
-who was Childebert, son of Clovis, came to know
-that there was a buffalo in the neighbourhood, and
-forthwith he ordered a grand hunt. The buffalo,
-seeing itself lost, fled to the hut of its holy protector,
-and when the huntsmen approached they found the
-monk standing in front of the animal. The king
-was furious, and swore that Karileff and his brethren
-should leave the place for ever; then he turned to
-go, but his horse would not move one step. This
-filled him with what was more likely panic fear than
-compunction; he lost no time in asking the saint
-for his blessing, and he presented him with the whole
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>domain, in which an abbey was built and ultimately
-a town, the present Saint-Calais. On another occasion
-the same Childebert was hunting a hare, which
-took refuge under the habit of St. Marculphe; the
-king’s huntsman rudely expostulated, and the monk
-surrendered the hare, but, lo and behold! the dogs
-would not continue the pursuit and the huntsman
-fell off his horse!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A vein of more subtle sensibility runs through the
-story of St. Columba, who, not long before his death,
-ordered a stork to be picked up and tended when
-it dropped exhausted on the Western shore of Iona.
-After three days, he said, the stork would depart,
-“for she comes from the land where I was born
-and thither would she return.” In fact, on the third
-day, the stork, rested and refreshed, spread out its
-wings and sailed away straight towards the saint’s
-beloved Ireland. When Columba was really dying
-the old white horse of the convent came and laid
-its head on his shoulder with an air of such profound
-melancholy that it seemed nigh to weeping. A
-brother wished to drive it away, but the saint said
-No; God had revealed to the horse what was hidden
-from man, and it was come to bid him goodbye.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Evidently there is only a slight element of the
-marvellous in these legends and none at all in others,
-such as the story of Walaric, who fed little birds
-and told the monks not to approach or frighten his
-“little friends” while they picked up the crumbs.
-To the same order belong several well-authenticated
-stories of the Venerable Joseph of Anchieta, apostle
-of Brazil. He protected the parrots that alighted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>on a ship by which he was travelling from the
-merciless sailors who would have caught and killed
-them. Whilst descending a river he would have
-saved a monkey which some fishermen shot at with
-their arrows, but he was not in time; the other
-monkeys gathered round their slain comrade with
-signs of mourning: “Come near,” said the holy
-man, “and weep in peace for that one of you who
-is no more.” Presently, fearing not to be able longer
-to restrain the cruelty of the men, he bade them
-depart with God’s blessing.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Here is no marvel; only sympathy which is sometimes
-the greatest of marvels. It needed the mind
-of a Shakespeare to probe just this secret recess of
-feeling for animals:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“—— What dost thou strike at, Marcus, with thy knife?</div>
- <div class='line in1'>—— At that I have killed, my Lord, a fly.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>—— Out on thee, murderer, thou killest my heart;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Mine eyes are cloyed with view of tyranny;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>A deed of death done on the innocent,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Becomes not Titus’ brother; get thee gone,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>I see thou art not for my company.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>—— Alas! my Lord, I have but killed a fly.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>—— But how if that fly had a father and mother?</div>
- <div class='line in1'>How would he hang his slender gilded wings</div>
- <div class='line in1'>And buz lamented doings in the air?</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Poor harmless fly!</div>
- <div class='line in1'>That with his pretty buzzing melody</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Came here to make us merry, and thou hast killed him.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>If St. Bernard saw a hare pursued by dogs or birds
-threatened by a hawk he could not resist making
-the sign of the cross, and his benediction always
-brought safety. It is to this saint that we owe the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>exquisite saying, “If mercy were a sin I think I
-could not keep myself from committing it.”</p>
-
-<div id='i256' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i256.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='small'><i>Photo:</i> <i>Hanfslängl.</i></span><br />ST. EUSTACE AND THE STAG.<br /><span class='small'>(<i>By Vittore Pisano.</i>)</span><br />National Gallery.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class='c008'>Apart from the rest, stands one saint who brought
-the wild to the neighbourhood of a bustling, trafficking
-little Italian town of the thirteenth century and
-peopled it with creatures which, whether of fancy
-or of fact, will live for ever. How St. Francis tamed
-the “wolf of Agobio” is the most famous if not
-altogether the most credible of the animal stories
-related of him. That wolf was a quadruped without
-morals; not only had he eaten kids but also men.
-All attempts to kill him failed, and the townsfolk
-were afraid of venturing outside the walls even in
-broad daylight. One day St. Francis, against the
-advice of all, went out to have a serious talk with
-the wolf. He soon found him and, “Brother Wolf,”
-he said, “you have eaten not only animals but men
-made in the image of God, and certainly you deserve
-the gallows; nevertheless, I wish to make peace
-between you and these people, brother Wolf, so that
-you may offend them no more, and neither they nor
-their dogs shall attack you.” The wolf seemed to
-agree, but the saint wished to have a distinct proof
-of his solemn engagement to fulfil his part in the
-peace, whereupon the wolf stood up on his hind legs
-and laid his paw on the saint’s hand. Francis then
-promised that the wolf should be properly fed for
-the rest of his days, “for well I know,” he said
-kindly, “that all your evil deeds were caused by
-hunger”—upon which text several sermons might
-be preached, for truly many a sinner may be reformed
-by a good dinner and by nothing else. The contract
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>was kept on both sides, and the wolf lived happily
-for some years—“notricato cortesemente dalla gente”—at
-the end of which he died of old age, sincerely
-mourned by all the inhabitants.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If any one decline to believe in the wolf of Gubbio,
-why, he must be left to his invincible ignorance.
-But there are other tales in the <i>Fioretti</i> and in the
-<i>Legenda Aurea</i> which are nowise hard to believe.
-What more likely than that Francis, on meeting a
-youth who had wood-doves to sell, looked at the
-birds “con l’occhio pietoso,” and begged the youth
-not to give them into the cruel hands that would
-kill them? The young man, “inspired by God,”
-gave the doves to the saint, who held them against
-his breast, saying, “Oh, my sisters, innocent doves,
-why did you let yourselves be caught? Now will
-I save you from death and make nests for you,
-so that you may increase and multiply according to
-the commandment of our Creator.” Schopenhauer
-mentions, with emphatic approval, the Indian merchant
-at the fair of Astrachan who, when he has a turn
-of good luck, goes to the market-place and buys birds,
-which he sets at liberty. The holy Francis not only
-set his doves free, but thought about their future,
-a refinement of benevolence which might “almost
-have persuaded” the humane though crusty old
-philosopher to put on the Franciscan habit.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>(At this point I chance to see from my window
-a kitten in the act of annoying a rather large snake.
-It is a coiled-up snake; probably an Itongo. It
-requires a good five minutes to induce the kitten to
-abandon its quarry and to convey the snake to a safe
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>place under the myrtles. This being done, I resume
-my pen.)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I have remarked that in some respects the Saint
-of Assisi stands apart from the other saints who took
-notice of animals. It was a common thing, for
-instance, for saints to preach to creatures, but there
-is an individual note in the sermon of Francis to
-the birds which is not found elsewhere. The reason
-why St. Anthony preached to the fishes at Rimini
-was that the “heretics” would not listen to him,
-and St. Martin addressed the water-fowl who were
-diving after fish in the Loire because, having compared
-them to the devil, seeking whom he may
-devour, he thought it necessary to order them to
-depart from those waters—which they immediately
-did, no doubt frightened to death by the apparition
-of a gesticulating saint and the wild-looking multitude.
-The motive of Francis was neither pique at not being
-listened to nor the temptation to show miraculous
-skill as a bird-scarer; he was moved solely by an
-effusion of tender sentiment. Birds in great quantities
-had alighted in a neighbouring field: a beautiful
-sight which every dweller in the country must have
-sometimes seen and asked himself, was it a parliament,
-a garden party, a halt in a journey? “Wait
-a little for me here upon the road,” said the saint
-to his companions; “I am going to preach to my
-sisters the birds.” And so, “<i>having greeted them
-as creatures endowed with reason</i>,” he went on to say:
-“Birds, my sisters, you ought to give great praise
-to your Creator, who dressed you with feathers,
-who gave you wings to fly with, who granted you
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>all the domains of the air, whose solicitude watches
-over you.” The birds stretched out their necks,
-fluttered their wings, opened their beaks, and looked
-at the preacher with attention. When he had done,
-he passed in the midst of them and touched them with
-his habit, and not one of them stirred till he gave
-them leave to fly away.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The saint lifted worms out of the path lest they
-should be crushed, and during the winter frosts, for
-fear that the bees should die in the hive, he brought
-honey to them and the best wines that he could
-find. Near his cell at Portionuculo there was a
-fig-tree, and on the fig-tree lived a cicada. One
-day the Servant of God stretched out his hand and
-said, “Come to me, my sister Cicada”; and at
-once the insect flew upon his hand. And he said
-to it, “Sing, my sister Cicada, and praise thy
-Lord.” And having received his permission she
-sang her song. The biographies that were written
-without the inquisition into facts which we demand,
-gave a living idea of the man, not a photograph
-of his skeleton. What mattered if romance were
-mixed with truth when the total was true? We
-know St. Francis of Assisi as if he had been our
-next-door neighbour. It would have needed unbounded
-genius to invent such a character, and
-there was nothing to be gained by inventing it.
-The legends which represent him as one who
-consistently treated animals as creatures endowed
-with reason are in discord with orthodox teaching;
-they skirt dangerously near to heresy. Giordano
-Bruno was accused of having said that men and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>animals had the same origin; to hold such an
-opinion qualified you for the stake. But the Church
-that canonised Buddha under the name of St.
-Josephat has had accesses of toleration which must
-have made angels rejoice.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Some think that Francis was at one time a
-troubadour, and troubadours had many links with
-those Manichæan heretics whom Catholics charged
-with believing in the transmigration of souls. This
-may interest the curious, but the doctrine of metempsychosis
-has little to do with the vocation of the
-Asiatic recluse as a beast-tamer, and St. Francis of
-Assisi was true brother to that recluse. He was
-the Fakeer or Dervish of the West. When the
-inherent mysticism in man’s nature brought the
-Dervishes into existence soon after Mohammed’s
-death, in spite of the Prophet’s well-known dislike for
-religious orders, they justified themselves by quoting
-the text from the Koran, “Poverty is my pride.”
-It would serve the Franciscan equally well. The
-begging friar was an anachronism in the religion of
-Islam as he is an anachronism in modern society, but
-what did that matter to him? He thought and he
-thinks that he will outlive both.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Abdâl or pre-eminently holy Dervish who
-lived in the desert with friendly beasts over whom
-he exercised an extraordinary power, became the
-centre of a legend, almost of a cult, like his Christian
-counterpart. There were several Abdâls of high
-repute during the reigns of the early Ottoman
-Sultans. Perhaps there was more confidence in
-their sanctity than in their sanity, for while the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>Catholic historian finds it inconvenient to admit the
-hypothesis of madness as accounting for even the
-strangest conduct of the saints of the desert or
-their mediæval descendants, a devout Oriental sees
-no irreverence in recognising the possible affinity
-between sainthood and mental alienation. In India
-the holy recluse who tames wild beasts is as much
-alive to-day as in any former time. Whatever is
-very old is still a part of the everyday life of the
-Indian people. Accordingly the native newspapers
-frequently report that some prince was attacked by
-a savage beast while out hunting, when, at the nick
-of time, a venerable saint appeared at whose first
-word the beast politely relaxed his hold. Those who
-know India best by no means think that all such
-stories are invented. Why should they be? Cardinal
-Massaia (who wore, by the by, the habit of Francis)
-stated that the lions he met in the desert had very
-good manners. A few years ago an old lady met a
-large, well-grown lioness in the streets of Chatres;
-mistaking it for a large dog, she patted it on the head
-and it followed her for some time until it was observed
-by others, when the whole town was seized with panic
-and barred doors and windows. Even with the
-provocation of such mistrust the lioness behaved
-well, and allowed itself to be reconducted to the
-menagerie from which it had escaped.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Those who try to divest themselves of human
-nature rarely succeed, and the reason nearest to the
-surface why, over all the world, the lonely recluse
-made friends with animals was doubtless his loneliness.
-On their side, animals have only to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>persuaded that men are harmless for them to
-meet their advances half-way. If this is not always
-true of wild beasts, it is because (as St. Francis apprehended)
-unfortunately they are sometimes hungry;
-but man is not the favourite prey of any wild
-beast who is in his right mind. Prisoners who tamed
-mice or sparrows followed the same impulse as saints
-who tamed lions or buffaloes. How many a prisoner
-who returned to the fellowship of men must
-have regretted his mouse or his sparrow! Animals
-can be such good company. Still, it follows that if
-their society was sought as a substitute, they were,
-in a certain sense, vicarious objects of affection.
-We forget that even in inter-human affections
-much is vicarious. The sister of charity gives
-mankind the love which she would have given to
-her children. The ascetic who will never hear
-the pattering feet of his boy upon the stairs loves
-the gazelle, the bird fallen from its nest, the lion
-cub whose mother has been slain by the hunter.
-And love, far more than charity (in the modern
-sense), blesses him that gives as well as him that
-takes.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>But human phenomena are complex, and this
-explanation of the sympathy between saint and
-beast does not cover the whole ground. Who can
-doubt that these men, whose faculties were concentrated
-on drawing nearer to the Eternal, vaguely
-surmised that wild living creatures had unperceived
-channels of communication with spirit, hidden
-<i>rapports</i> with the Fountain of Life which man has
-lost or has never possessed? Who can doubt that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>in the vast cathedral of Nature they were awed by
-“the mystery which is in the face of brutes”?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Beside the need to love and the need to wonder,
-some of them knew the need to pity. Here the
-ground widens, for the heart that feels the pang
-of the meanest thing that lives does not beat
-only in the hermit’s cell or under the sackcloth
-of a saint.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>
- <h2 id='ch13' class='c006'>XIII<br /> <br />VERSIPELLES</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c007'>THE snake and the tiger are grim realities of
-Indian life. They mean a great deal—they
-mean India with its horror and its splendour; above
-all, with its primary attention given to things which
-for most Europeans are <i>nil</i> or are kept for Sunday.
-And Sunday, the day most calm, most bright, has
-only a little portion of them, only the light not the
-darkness of the Unknown.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>To the despair of the English official, the Hindu,
-like his forefathers in remotest antiquity, respects
-the life of tiger and snake. In doing so he is
-not governed simply by the feeling that makes
-him look on serenely whilst all sorts of winged and
-fleet-footed creatures eat up his growing crops—another
-tolerance which exasperates the Western
-beholder: in that instance it is, in the main, the rule
-of live and let live which dictates his forbearance,
-the persuasion that it is wrong to monopolise the
-increase of the earth to the uttermost farthing’s-worth.
-His sentiment towards tiger and snake is of a more
-profound nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Hindu will not kill a cobra if he can help it,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>and if one is killed he tries to expiate the offence
-by honouring it with proper funeral rites. The tiger,
-like the snake, gives birth to those ancient twins,
-fear and admiration. The perception of the beautiful
-is one of the oldest as it is one of the most mysterious
-of psychological phenomena in man and beast. Why
-should the sheen of the peacock’s tail attract the
-peahen? Why should the bower-bird and the lyre-bird
-construct a lovely pleasance where they may
-dance? Man perceived the beautiful in fire and wind,
-in the swift air, the circle of stars, the violent water,
-the lights of heaven: “being delighted with the
-beauty of these things, he took them to be gods”—as
-was said by the writer of the Wisdom of Solomon
-about two hundred years before Christ. He also
-perceived the beautiful in the lithe movements of
-the snake and in the tiger’s symmetry.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>As to the sense of fear, how is it that this fear
-is unaccompanied by repulsion? To this question
-the more general answer would seem to be that
-Nature, if regarded as divine, cannot repel. But the
-snake and tiger are in some special way divine, so
-that they become still further removed from the range
-of human criticism. They are manifestations of
-divinity—a safer description of even the lowest forms
-of zoolatry than the commoner one which asserts
-that they are “gods.” Deity, if omnipresent, “must
-be able to occupy the same space as another body
-at the same time,” which was said in a different
-connexion, but it is the true base of all beliefs
-involving the union of spirit and matter from the
-lowest to the highest.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>The animal which is a divine agent, ought to
-behave like one. If it causes destruction, such
-destruction should have the fortuitous appearance
-of havoc wrought by natural causes. The snake
-or tiger should not wound with malice prepense, but
-only in a fine, casual way. This is just what, as a
-rule, they are observed to do. I have seen many
-snakes, but I never saw one run after a man, though
-I have seen men run after snakes. Now and then the
-Italian peasant is bitten by vipers because he walks
-in the long grass with naked feet. He treads on the
-snake or pushes against it, and it bites him. So it
-is with the Indian peasant. It is much the same in
-the case of the normal tiger; unless he is disturbed or
-wounded, he most rarely attacks. But there are
-abnormal tigers, abnormal beasts of every sort—there
-is the criminal class of beast. What of him? It
-might be supposed that primitive man would take
-such a beast to be an angry or vindictive spirit. By
-no means. He detects in him a fellow-human. The
-Indian forestalled Lombroso; the man-eating tiger is
-a degenerate, really not responsible for his actions,
-and still less is the god behind him responsible for
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Little need be said of the natural history of the
-man-eating tiger; yet a few words may not be out
-of place. To his abnormality every one who has
-studied wild beasts bears witness. All agree that
-the loss of life from tigers is almost exclusively
-traceable to individuals of tiger-kind which prey
-chiefly or only on man. The seven or eight hundred
-persons killed annually by tigers in British India are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>victims of comparatively few animals. Not many
-years ago a single man-eating tigress was certified
-to have killed forty-eight persons. While the
-ordinary tiger has to be sought out with difficulty
-for the sport of those who wish to hunt him, the
-man-eater night after night waylays the rural postman
-or comes boldly into the villages in search of
-his unnatural food. During great scarcity caused
-by the destruction or disappearance of small game
-in the forests, the carnivora are forced out of their
-habits as the wolves in the Vosges are induced to
-come down to the plains in periods of intense cold.
-Such special causes do not affect the question of
-the man-eater, which eats man’s flesh from choice,
-not from necessity. Why he does so Europeans
-have tried to explain in various ways. One is, that
-the unfamiliar taste of human flesh creates an irresistible
-craving. In South America they say that a
-jaguar after tasting man’s flesh once becomes an incorrigible
-man-eater for ever after. Others think
-man-eating is a form of madness, a disease, and
-they point to the fact that the man-eater is always
-in bad condition; his skin is useless. But it is not
-sure if this be cause or effect, since man’s flesh is
-said to be unwholesome. A third and plausible
-theory would attribute man-eating to the easy
-capture of the prey: a tiger that has caught one
-man will hunt no other fleeter game. Especially
-in old age, a creature that has neither horns nor
-tusks nor yet swift feet must appear an attractive
-prey. This coincides with an observation made by
-Apollonius of Tyana: he says that lions caught
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>and ate monkeys for medicine when they were sick,
-but that when they were old and unable to hunt the
-stag and the wild boar, they caught them for food.
-Aristotle said that lions were more disposed to enter
-towns and attack man when they grew old, as old
-age made their teeth defective, which was a hindrance
-to them in hunting.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Another possible clue may be deduced from a
-belief which exists in Abyssinia about the man-eating
-lion. In that country the people dislike to have
-Europeans hunt the lion, not only because they
-revere him as the king of beasts (though this is
-one reason, and it shows how natural to man is the
-friendly feeling towards beasts, and how it flourishes
-along with any sort of religion, provided the religion
-has been left Oriental and not Westernised), but
-also because they are convinced that a lion whose
-mate has been killed becomes ferocious and thirsts
-for human blood. This belief is founded on accurate
-observation of the capacity of wild beasts for affection.
-The love of the lion for his mate is no
-popular error. That noble hunter, Major Leveson,
-told a pathetic story of how he witnessed in South
-Africa a fight between two lions, while the lioness,
-palm and prize, stood looking on. A bullet laid
-her low, but the combatants were so hotly engaged
-that neither of them perceived what had happened.
-Then another bullet killed one of them: the survivor,
-after the first moment of surprise as to why his foe
-surrendered, turned round and for the first time saw
-the hunters who were quite near. He seemed about
-to spring on them, when he caught sight of the dead
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>lioness: “With a peculiar whine of recognition,
-utterly regardless of our presence, he strode towards
-her, licked her face and neck with his great rough
-tongue and patted her gently with his huge paw,
-as if to awaken her. Finding that she did not respond
-to his caresses, he sat upon his haunches like
-a dog and howled most piteously....” Finally
-the mourning lion fled at the cries of the Kaffirs
-and the yelping of the dogs close at hand. He had
-understood the great, intolerable fact of death.
-Would any one blame him if he became an avenger
-of blood?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Supposing that this line of defence could be transferred
-to the tiger, instead of being branded as lazy,
-decrepit, mad, or bad, he might hope to appear before
-the public with a largely rehabilitated character.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The natives of the jungle resort to none of these
-hypotheses to account for the man-eater: a different
-bank of ideas can be drawn on by them to help them
-out of puzzling problems. The free force of imagination
-is far preferable, if admitted, as a solver of difficulties,
-to all our patient and plodding researches.
-The jungle natives tell many stories of the man-eater,
-of which the following is a typical example.
-It was told to a British officer, from whom I
-had it.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Once upon a time there was a man who had the
-power of changing himself into a tiger whenever
-he liked. But for him to change back into the shape
-of a man it was necessary that some human being
-should pronounce a certain formula. He had a
-friend who knew the formula, and to him he went
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>when he wished to resume human shape. But the
-friend died.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The man was obliged, therefore, to find some one
-else to pronounce the formula. At last he decided
-to confide the secret to his wife; so, one day, he
-said to her that he should be absent for a short
-time and that when he came back it would be in
-the form of a tiger; he charged her to pronounce
-the proper formula when she should see him appear
-in tiger-shape, and he assured her that he would
-then, forthwith, become a man again.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In a few days, after he had amused himself by
-catching a few antelopes, he trotted up to his wife,
-hoping all would be well. But the woman, in spite
-of all that he had told her, was so dreadfully
-frightened when she saw a large tiger running
-towards her, that she began to scream. The tiger
-jumped about and tried to make her understand by
-dumb-show what she was to do, but the more he
-jumped the more she screamed, and at last he
-thought in his mind, “This is the most stupid
-woman I ever knew,” and he was so angry that he
-killed her. Directly afterwards he recollected that no
-other human being knew the right formula—hence he
-must remain for ever a tiger. This so affected his
-spirits that he acquired a hatred for the whole human
-race, and killed men whenever he saw them.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>This diverting folk-tale shows a root-belief in the
-stage of becoming a branch-belief. In the present
-case the root is the ease with which men are thought
-to be able to transform themselves (or be transformed
-by others) into animals. The branch is the presumption
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>that a very wicked animal must be human.
-The corresponding inference that a very virtuous
-animal must be human, throws its reflection upon
-innumerable fairy-tales. I think it was the more
-primitive of the two. Even the tiger is not everywhere
-supposed to be the worse for human influence.
-In the Sangor and Nerbrudda territories people say
-that if a tiger has killed one man he will never kill
-another, because the dead man’s spirit rides on his
-head and guides him to more lawful prey. Entirely
-primitive people do not take an evil view of human
-nature—which is proved by their confidence in
-strangers: the first white man who arrives among
-them is well received. Misanthropy is soon learnt,
-but it is not the earliest sentiment. The bad view
-of the man-tiger prevails in the Niger delta, where
-the negroes think that “some souls which turn into
-wild beasts give people a great deal of trouble.”
-Other African tribes hold that tailless tigers are
-men—tigers which have lost their tails in fighting
-or by disease or accident. I do not know if these
-are credited with good or bad qualities.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>By the rigid Totemist all this is ascribed to
-Totemism. Men called other tribesmen by the
-names of their totems; then the totem was forgotten
-and they mistook the tiger-totem-man for a
-man-tiger <i>et sic de ceteris</i>. My Syrian guide on
-Mount Carmel told me that the ravens which fed
-Elijah were a tribe of Bedouins called “the Ravens,”
-which still existed. If this essay in the Higher Criticism
-was original it said much for his intelligence.
-But because such confusions may happen, and no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>doubt do happen, are they to be taken as the final
-explanation of the whole vast range of man and
-animal mutations? What have they to do with such
-a belief as that vouched for by St. Augustine—to
-wit, that certain witch innkeepers gave their guests
-drugs in cheese which turned them into animals?
-These witches had a sharp eye to business, for they
-utilised the oxen, asses, and horses thus procured,
-for draught or burden, or let them out to their
-customers, nor were they quite without a conscience,
-as when they had done using them they turned them
-back into men. Magic, the old rival of religion, lies
-at the bottom of all this order of ideas. Magic may
-be defined as the natural supernatural, since by it man
-<i>unaided</i> commands the occult forces of nature. The
-theory of demoniacal assistance is of later growth.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A story rather different from the rest is told by
-Pausanias, who records that, at the sacrifice of Zeus
-on Mount Lycæus, a man was always turned into a
-wolf, but if for nine years in wolf-shape he abstained
-from eating human flesh, he would regain his human
-form. This suggests a Buddhist source. The infiltration
-of Buddhist folk-lore into Europe is a
-subject on which we should like to know more.
-Buddhism was the only missionary religion before
-Christianity, and there is every probability that it
-sent missionaries West as well as East.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The early Irish took so favourable a view of
-wolves that they were accustomed to pray for their
-salvation, and chose them as godfathers for their
-children. In Druidical times the wolf and other
-animals were divine manifestations, and the Celts
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>were so attached to their beast-gods that they did
-not maledict what they had worshipped, but found
-it a refuge somewhere. In the earliest Gallic sculpture
-the dispossessed animals are introduced as
-companions of the new Saints.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It will be noticed that in the Indian folk-tale,
-though the identification of the man with the man-eater
-is clear, a very lenient view is taken of him: he was
-not always so; even his excursions in tiger-skin were,
-at first, purely innocent; he was a good husband and
-a respectable citizen till his wife’s nerves made him
-lose his temper.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In early Christian times, the man-wolf might be
-not only innocent but a victim. He might be a
-particularly good man turned by a sorcerer into a
-wolf, and in such cases he preserves his good tendencies.
-In the seventh century such a man-wolf
-defended the head of St. Edward the Martyr from
-other wild beasts.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>On the other hand, there are stories of Christian
-saints who turned evil-disposed persons into beasts
-by means of the magical powers which, at first, <i>all</i>
-baptized persons were thought to possess potentially
-if not actively. St. Thomas Aquinas believed in
-the possibility of doing this. In a Russian folk-tale
-the apostles Peter and Paul turned a bad husband
-and wife into bears.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In Europe by degrees the harmless were-wolf
-entirely disappeared but the evil one survived. The
-superstition of lycanthropy concentrated round one
-point (as superstitions often do): the self-transformation
-of a perverse man or sorcerer into an animal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>for nefarious purposes. The object of the transformation
-might be the opportunity for giving free
-range to sanguinary appetites; but there was another
-object lurking in the background, and this was the
-acquirement of second sight, which some animals
-(if not all) are supposed to be endowed with. Just
-as Varro and Virgil believed in lycanthropy, so the
-most highly educated Europeans in the time of
-Louis XIV. and after, believed in were-wolves.
-The choice of the animal was immaterial, but it fell
-naturally on the most prominent and feared wild
-animal which was locally extant. A fancy or exotic
-animal would not do, which illustrates the link there
-is between popular beliefs and <i>facts</i>; distorted facts,
-it may be, but real and not imaginary things.
-If a bear of bad morals appears in Norway, people
-declare that it can be “no Christian bear”—it must
-be a Lapp or a Finn, both these peoples, who are
-much addicted to magic, being supposed to have
-the power of changing into bears when they choose.
-Instead of seeking the wild beast in man, people
-sought the man in the wild beast.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>As in Asia so in Europe, it was noticed and
-pondered that the normal wild beast is dangerous,
-perhaps, but not from a human point of view perverse.
-The normal wolf like the normal tiger does
-not attack or destroy for the love of destruction.
-Wolves attack in packs, but the instinct of the single
-individual is to keep out of man’s way. He does
-not kill even animals indiscriminately. In the
-last times when there were wolves in the Italian
-valleys of the Alps, the news spread that a wolf
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>had killed a number of sheep. What had really
-happened was this, which an old hunter told at
-Edolo to a relative of mine. The wolf jumped down
-into a sheepfold sunk in the ground. He killed a
-sheep and ate some of it and then found, to his
-dismay, that he could not get up the wall of the
-sheepfold. Nothing daunted, however, he killed
-a sufficient number of sheep to form a mound, up
-which he climbed and so effected his escape. No
-one thought such a clever wolf as this a <i>lupo manaro</i>.
-But some wolves, like some dogs, are subject to fits
-of mental alienation, in which they slay without rhyme
-or reason. Sheep are found killed all over the
-countryside, and men or children may be among
-the victims. The question arises of who did it—a
-wolf, a man, or both in one? The material fact
-is there, and it is a fact calculated to excite terror,
-surprise, curiosity. That the fact may remain always
-a mystery recent experience shows. When the
-were-wolf mania was rampant in France, honestly
-conducted judicial inquiry succeeded in a few cases,
-in tracing the outrages to a real wolf or to a real
-man. At last, in 1603, a French court of law pronounced
-the belief in were-wolves to be an insane
-delusion, and from that date it slowly declined.
-Heretics were suspected of being were-wolves. As
-late as fifty years ago, a reminiscence of the <i>loup
-garou</i> existed in most parts of France, in the shape
-of the <i>meneux des loups</i>, who were supposed to charm
-or tame whole packs of wolves which they led across
-the waste lands on nights when the moon shone fitfully
-through rifts in hurrying clouds. The village recluse,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>the poacher, the man who simply “knew more than
-he should,” fell under the suspicion of being a “wolf-leader,”
-and, of course, the usual “eye-witness” was
-forthcoming to declare that he had <i>seen</i> the suspected
-individual out upon his midnight rambles with his
-wolves trotting after him. In some provinces all the
-fiddlers or bag-pipers were thought to be “wolf-leaders.”</p>
-
-<div id='i276' class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/i276.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><i>Maurice Sand.</i><br />“LE MENEUR DES LOUPS.”</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>If the wolf turnskin died out sooner in England
-than in France, it was because there were no
-wolves to fasten it upon. Throughout the horrible
-witch-mania British sorcerers were supposed to turn
-into cats, weasels, or innocent hares! Italian witches
-still turn into cats. I remember how graphically
-C. G. Leland described to me a visit he had paid to a
-Tuscan witch; her cottage contained three stools, on
-one of which sat the witch, on the second her familiar
-jet-black cat, and on the third my old friend, who,
-I feel sure, had come to believe a good deal in
-the “old religion,” and who, in his last years, might
-have sat for a perfect portrait of a magician! The
-connexion of the witch and the cat is a form of
-turnskin-belief in which the feature of the acquirement
-of second sight is prominent. No witch without
-a cat! The essential <i>fact</i> in the superstition is
-the fondness of poor, old friendless women for cats—their
-last friends. A contributing fact lay in the
-mysterious disappearances and reappearances of cats
-and in their half-wild nature. The cat in Indian
-folk-lore is the tiger’s aunt.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The mode of effecting transformation into animals
-is various, but always connected with fixed magical
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>procedure. A root or food, or still oftener an ointment,
-is resorted to: ointments played a great part in
-superstition; it was by ointments that the unlucky
-persons accused of being wizards were held to have
-spread the plague of Milan. But the surest method
-of transformation was a girdle made of the skin of
-the animal whose form it was desired to take. This
-is regarded as a makeshift for not being able to put
-on the whole skin. An old French record tells of
-a man who buried a black cat in a box where four
-roads met, with enough bread soaked in holy water
-and holy oil to keep it alive for three days. The
-man intended to dig the cat up and, after killing it, to
-make a girdle of its skin by which means he expected
-to obtain the gift of second sight; but the burial-place
-of the cat was discovered by some dogs that
-were scratching the earth, before the three days
-had elapsed. The man, put to the torture, confessed
-all. In this case, it will be noticed that the spiritual
-powers of the cat were to be obtained without
-assuming its outward form. The turnskin who
-wishes to go back into his human shape, has also
-to follow fixed rules: a formula must be pronounced
-by some one else, as in the jungle tiger story, or the
-man-beast must eat some stated food as in Lucian’s
-skit (if Lucian wrote it) of the man who, by using
-the wrong salve, turned himself into a donkey instead
-of into a bird as he had wished, and who could only
-resume his own form by eating roses, which he did
-not accomplish until he had undergone all sorts of
-adventures.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The belief that beasts were inhabited by depraved
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>men has a certain affinity with the belief that depraved
-men were inhabited by demons. Dante
-maintains that some persons have actually gone to
-their account while their bodies are still above-ground,
-the lodgings of evil spirits.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The history of the turnskin leads up to several
-conclusions, of which the most important is, that superstitions
-often grow uglier as they grow older. They
-descend, they rarely ascend. This experience should
-make us pause before we pronounce hideous beliefs
-to be, in a true sense, primitive. The idea of transformation
-is one of the oldest of human ideas, much
-older than transmigration, but at the outset, far
-from lending itself to such repulsive applications as
-man-tigers and demon-men, it gave birth to some
-of the fairest passages in the poetry of mankind
-which he calls his religion. It is impossible to
-imagine a more beautiful myth than the Vedic belief
-in the swan-maidens, the Apsarases who, by putting
-on skirts of swan feathers, could become swans.
-Their swan-skirts stretch from the hot East to the
-cold North, for they are the same that are worn
-by the Valkyries. All these early legends of swans
-bring into particularly clear light the moral identity
-of the impressions received from things seen by
-man at the bottom and at the top of the ladder of
-intellectual progress. Natural objects, lovely or
-terrible, raise archetypal images of things lovely or
-terrible which in our minds remain shapeless but to
-which the primitive man gives a local habitation and
-a name. Swans, sailing on still waters or circling
-above our heads, inspire us with indefinite longings
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>which took form in the myth of the Apsarases
-and appear again in the Vedic story of the sage
-who, by deep knowledge and holiness, became a
-golden swan and flew away to the sun. To this
-day, if the Hindu sees a flight of swans wending
-its mysterious way across the sky, he repeats the
-saying almost mechanically (as a Catholic crosses
-himself if he pass a shrine): “The soul flies away,
-and none can go with it.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>
- <h2 id='ch14' class='c006'>XIV<br /> <br />THE HORSE AS HERO</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c007'>FIFTY years ago the knell of the horse was
-rung, with due solemnity, by the American
-statesman, Charles Sumner. The age of chivalry,
-he said, was gone—an age of humanity had come;
-“the horse, whose importance more than human,
-gave the name to that period of gallantry and war,
-now yields his foremost place to man.” As a
-matter of fact, the horse is yielding his foremost
-place to the motor-car, to the machine; and this
-is the topsy-turvy way in which most of the
-millennial hopes of the mid-nineteenth century are
-being fulfilled by the twentieth; the big dream of
-a diviner day ends in a reality out of which all
-that is ideal is fading. But the reason why I quote
-the passage is the service which it renders as a
-reminder of the often forgotten meaning of the
-word “chivalry.” The horse was connected with the
-ideals no less than with the realities of the phase
-in human history that was called after him; the
-mental consequences of the partnership between man
-and that noble beast were not less far reaching
-than the physical. There are a hundred types of
-human character, some of them of the highest, in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>the making of which the horse counts for nothing;
-but this type, this figure of the very perfect gentle
-knight, cannot be imagined in a horseless world.
-We hear of what man taught animals, but less of
-what animals taught man. In the unity of emotion
-between horse and rider something is exchanged.
-Even the epithets which it is natural to apply to
-the knightly hero, one and all fit his steed: defiant
-and gentle, daring and devoted, trusty and tireless,
-a scorner of obstacles, of a gay, brave spirit—the
-list could be lengthened at will. And the qualities
-and even the defects they had in common were
-not so much the result of accident as the true fruit
-of their mutual interdependence.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the aftermath of chivalry which produced the
-song-writers and the splendid adventurers of the
-Elizabethan age, horsemanship came again to the
-fore as a passion rather than as a mere necessary
-pursuit. We know that, not satisfied with what
-England could provide, the fashionable young men
-frequented the schools of skilled Italians, generally
-of noble birth, such as Corte da Pavia, who was
-Queen Elizabeth’s riding-master. The prevailing
-taste is reflected in Shakespeare, who, though he
-was for all time, was yet, essentially of his own;
-his innumerable allusions to horses show, in the
-first place, that he knew all about them, as he did
-about most things, and in the second, that he knew
-that these allusions would please his audience, which
-no born dramatist ever treated as a negligible
-quantity, and the least of all Shakespeare. Even
-the performing or “thinking” horse does not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>escape his notice; “the dancing horse will tell
-you,” in “Love’s Labour Lost,” refers to the
-“Hans” or “Trixie” of the period who also attracted
-the attention of Ben Jonson, Downe, Sir
-Kenelm Digby, Sir Walter Raleigh, Hall, and John
-Taylor, the water-poet. This animal’s name was
-“Morocco” but he was often called “Bankes’ horse,”
-from his master who taught him to tell the number
-of pence in silver coins and the number of points
-in throws of dice, and on one occasion made him
-walk to the top of St. Paul’s. Alas, for the fate
-of “Morocco” and his master, “Being beyond the
-sea burnt for one witch,” as chronicled by Ben
-Jonson! Like Esmeralda and her goat, they were
-accused of magic, and the charge, first started at
-Orleans, was followed by condemnation and death
-in Rome. Greater tragedies of superstition hardly
-come with such a shock as this stupid slaughter
-of a poor showman and his clever beast.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In Elizabethan society interest in horses was
-directed chiefly to the turnings and windings, the
-“shapes and tricks” of the riding-school, and this
-lighter way of looking on them as affording man
-his most splendid diversion is, in the main, Shakespeare’s
-way—though he does not forget that, at
-times, a horse may be worth a kingdom. Not to
-him, however, or to any modern poet, do we go
-for the unique, incomparable description of the
-truly heroic horse, the uncowed charger of the
-East, created to awe rather than to be awed by
-man, whom no image of servility would fit. Here
-is this specimen of the world’s greatest poetry, in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>case any one be so unfortunate as not to know it
-by heart:—</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“He paweth in the valley and rejoiceth in his
-strength; he goeth on to meet the armed men.
-He mocketh at fear, and is not affrighted; neither
-turneth he back from the sword. The quiver rattleth
-against him, the glittering spear and the shield.
-He swalloweth the ground with fierceness and rage:
-neither believeth he that it is the sound of the
-trumpet. He saith among the trumpets, Ha! ha!
-He smelleth the battle afar off, the thunder of
-the captains and the shouting.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>How the portrait leaps out of the page into
-life as Velasquez’s horse in the Prado leaps out of
-his frame! We feel the pulse of a passion which
-throbs through every vein from head to hoof. This
-Triumph of the War-horse is one of the points of
-affinity in the Book of Job with Arab rather than
-with Hebrew civilisation. The text itself is nearer
-Arabic than any other Biblical book, and the life
-of the protagonist is very like the life of an
-ancient Arabian chieftain. The Jews proper cared
-little for horses; when they fell into their hands
-they knew no better than to destroy them. They
-were a pastoral people, at no time fond of sport,
-which was hardly recognised as lawful by their
-religious ordinances. They do not seem to have
-ridden on horseback. Zechariah, indeed, speaks of
-the war-horse, but only to represent him as the
-beautiful image of peace, no more mixing in the fray,
-but bearing on his bell (which was meant to affright
-the foe) the inscription: “Holiness unto the Lord.”</p>
-
-<div id='i284' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i284.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='small'><i>Photo:</i> <i>Mansell.</i></span><br />THE ASSYRIAN HORSE.<br />British Museum.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>On the other hand, the Arab, and, most of all,
-the Nomadic Arab, has a dual existence with his
-horse. He could not live without it; it is a part
-of himself—of all that makes him himself and not
-another. The same is true of the Todas and their
-buffaloes, the Lapps and their reindeer. In summer
-when the reindeer are in the hills, to save them from
-what is there called the heat, a Lapp seems only
-half a Lapp; but his thoughts are still of reindeer
-and his fingers are busy with scratching its likeness
-on his spoons, his milk-bowls, his implements of all
-sorts, all of which are made of reindeer-horn. His
-songs are still of reindeer: “While the reindeer lasts,
-the Lapp will last; when the reindeer fails, the
-Lapp will fail,” as ran the infinitely pathetic ditty
-I heard sung by a Lapp woman who was shown
-to me as the best singer of the tribe.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>With all these people the flesh of the beloved
-animal is esteemed the greatest delicacy; a fact in
-which there seems to lie suggestions of cannibalism
-in its real psychological aspect—the eating of the
-hero in order to acquire his attributes. Sometimes,
-however, the reason may be simply that they were
-for long periods in the impossibility of obtaining
-other meat; since the natural man prefers food to
-which he has grown familiar.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In what is probably the oldest version of Boccaccio’s
-Falcon story, the Emperor of Constantinople
-sends to ask a very generous præ-Islamic Arab
-Chief, by name Hatem Tai (celebrated as the type
-of chivalry over all the Moslem world), to give
-him a horse which Hatem is known to value
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>beyond all his possessions. The object of the
-demand was to put his reputation for generosity to
-the test. The officer, who is the bearer of the
-Emperor’s request, is regaled sumptuously on the
-evening of his arrival; and, according to the laws
-of Oriental courtesy, he puts off speaking of the
-business in hand till next day. When he delivers
-his message Hatem replies that he would have
-complied gladly, but that the officer had eaten the
-horse last night for supper! The horse was the
-most costly and coveted food which the chief could
-offer his guest, and the story becomes thus more
-intelligible than when the victim is an uneatable
-bird like a hawk.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In Oriental poetry the camel “who asks but a
-thorn from the bed of roses of the world” takes a
-well-merited share of attention, but the animal which
-is before all others the Eastern poets’ beast is, of
-course, the horse: he might himself be called the
-poet as well as the prince among beasts, for if any
-living thing incarnates the poetry “of form, of
-motion, of glad devotion,” it is surely the high-bred
-Arab steed. Innumerable tributes credit him with
-three parts human qualities:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“The courser looks his love as plainly as if he could speak,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>He waves his mane, his paws, he curls his nostrils and his lips;</div>
- <div class='line in1'>He makes half-vocal sounds, uprears or droops his neck and hips,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>His deep and pensive eyes light up with lambent flame, then seem</div>
- <div class='line in1'>As if they swam in the desires of some mysterious dream.”<a id='r8' /><a href='#f8' class='c017'><sup>[8]</sup></a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-<div class='footnote c000' id='f8'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r8'>8</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Translated by W. R. Alger.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>Of the true Arab horse it is said that his foot
-is so light that he could dance on a woman’s breast
-without leaving a bruise. Some of the Arabian
-ballads of horses are among the very few Oriental
-poems which have acquired universal fame, as that
-which tells of how the peerless Lahla picked up
-his captured and bound master and carried him with
-his teeth back to the tribe, on reaching which he
-sinks dead, amidst the tears and lamentations of
-all. Horses, the Koran expressly says, were created
-for man’s use, but also “to be an ornament unto him”:
-all the romance, the valour, the deep-seated aristocratic
-instinct of the Arab, proudest of mankind,
-is bound up with his horse. The splendid Arab
-chief who stands aside motionless to let go by an
-automobile carrying a party of tourists across the
-Sahara reflects, as he draws his burnoose closer over
-his mouth, “<i>This</i> is the ‘<i>ornament</i>’ of Western
-man!” And, looking at his horse, which stands
-motionless as he (for the Arab steed fears nothing
-when his master is near), he adds to himself:
-“These pass—we remain.” False it may be as a
-prophecy, but he believes it <i>because convinced of his
-superiority</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Still by the camp-fires in the desert they tell the
-old story of a great chief who, in præ-Gallic times,
-was taken prisoner by the Emir’s horsemen. He
-escaped, but hardly had he reached his tent when
-in the desert air, in which sounds are heard afar off, a
-clattering of hoofs could be distinguished—the Sultan’s
-men were coming! The chief sprang on his mare and
-fled. When the men came up they knew that only
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>one horse could overtake the mare, her beautiful
-sister, not less swift than she. A soldier leapt from
-his own horse intending to mount her, but the chiefs
-son, yet a child, instantly shot her dead with a pistol.
-And so the chief was saved.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Ulemas of Algeria say that when God wished
-to create the mare He spoke to the wind: “I will
-cause thee to bring forth a creature that shall bear
-all My worshippers, that shall be loved by My slaves,
-and that will cause the despair of all who will not
-follow My laws.” And when He had created her
-He said: “I have made thee without an equal: the
-goods of this world shall be placed between thy
-eyes; everywhere I will make thee happy and
-preferred above all the beasts of the field, for
-tenderness shall everywhere be in the heart of thy
-master; good alike for the chase and retreat, thou
-shalt fly though wingless, and I will only place on
-thy back the men who know me, who will offer
-<span class='fss'>ME</span> prayers and thanksgivings; men who shall
-be My worshippers from one generation to another.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>For the Arab the horse was not only the means
-of performing great enterprises but the very object
-of life, the thing in itself most precious, the care, the
-preoccupation, and the prize. The Arab’s horse is
-his kingdom.</p>
-
-<div id='i288' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i288.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>ARABIAN HORSE OF THE SAHARA.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>I suppose that there is no doubt that the knightly
-type was a flower transported from the East, though,
-like many other Eastern flowers, it grew to its best
-in European gardens. The Crusaders learnt more
-than they taught. Coming down later, the national
-hero of Spain, for all his pure Gothic blood, is an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>Eastern not a Western hero. He will be understood
-far better when he is tried by this standard. If
-we weigh him in Eastern rather than in Western
-scales, a more lenient and above all a juster judgment
-will be the result, and we shall see how the fine
-qualities with which legend credits him were not
-disproved by some acts which the modern Western
-conscience condemns. On the whole it may be taken
-for granted, in spite of all that has been said to
-the contrary, that tradition which easily errs about
-facts, is rarely wrong about character.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Ruy Diaz de Bivar was a hero after the Arab’s
-own heart:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Noble y leal, soldado y Caballero,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Señor te apellido la gente Mora,”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>as the lines run on his coffin in the town-hall at
-Burgos. Nothing being sacred to a critic, it has
-been contested that he was first called “Myo Cid,”
-or “My Lord,” by the Moors, but tradition and
-etymology agree too well for this to be reasonably
-doubted. It is certain that both Moors and Christians
-called him by his other title of Campeador in
-Spanish and Al-kambeyator in the form the Arabic
-writers gave it. It was derived from his gallantry
-in single combats and did not mean, as some have
-thought, “Champion of the Christians.”</p>
-<p class='c008'>It is entirely in keeping with the Cid’s Arab
-affinities that his horse should have attained a fame
-almost as great as his own. From Bucephalus to
-Copenhagen never was there a European horse
-equal in renown to Bavieca. His glory, is it not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>writ in nearly every one of the hundred ballads of
-the Cid? The choosing of Bavieca is one of the most
-striking events in the Cid’s youth. The boy asked his
-godfather, a fat, good-natured old priest, to give
-him a colt. The priest took him to a field where
-the mares and their colts were being exercised and
-told him to take the best. They were driven past
-him and he let all the handsomest go by; then a
-mare came up with an ugly and miserable-looking
-colt—“This,” he cried, “is the one for me!” His
-godfather was angry and called him a simpleton, but
-the lad only answered that the horse would turn out
-well and that “Simpleton” (“Bavieca”) should be
-his name.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Horses which begin as ugly ducklings and end as
-swans are an extensive breed. Count de Gubernatis,
-in his valuable work on “Zoological Mythology,”
-mentions Hatos, the magical horse of the Hungarians,
-as belonging to this class. If as old as the oldest
-legend, they are, in a sense, as new as the “outsider”
-which carries off one of the greatest prizes
-of the Turf. The choosing of Bavieca was in the
-mind of Cervantes when he described in his inimitable
-way the choosing of Rozinante (“ex-jade”),
-who never became anything but a <i>rozin</i> in the most
-present tense, except in the imagination of his
-master, but who will live for ever in his company,
-to bear witness to the indivisible oneness of the
-knight and his horse.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Completely Oriental in sentiment is the splendid
-ballad which relates how the Cid offered Bavieca
-to his king because it was not meet that a subject
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>should have a horse so far more precious than any
-possessed by his lord. There is in this not only
-the act of homage but also the absorbing pride
-which made the Arab who was overtaking a horse-stealer,
-shout to him the secret sign at which his
-stolen mare would go her best, preferring to lose
-her than to vanquish her.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“O king, the thing is shameful that any man beside</div>
- <div class='line in1'>The liege lord of Castile himself should Bavieca ride.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>For neither Spain nor Araby could another charger bring</div>
- <div class='line in1'>So good as he, and certes, the best befits the king.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>The gorgeous simplicity of the original is missed
-by Lockhart in the succeeding verses, in which the
-Cid, before giving up the horse, mounts him to show
-his worth, his ermine mantle hanging from his
-shoulders. He will do, he says, in the presence of
-the king what he has not done for long except in
-battle with the Moor: he will touch Bavieca with his
-spurs. Then comes the maddest, wildest, yet most
-accomplished display of noble horsemanship that
-ever witched the world. One rein breaks and the
-beholders tremble for his life, but with ease and
-grace he guides the foaming and panting horse
-before the king and prepares to yield him up.
-Then Alfonso cries, God forbid that he should take
-him: he shall be accounted, indeed, as his, but
-shameful would it be</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“That peerless Bavieca should ever be bestrid</div>
- <div class='line in1'>By any mortal but Bivar—‘Mount, mount again, my Cid!’”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'><span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>There is a spot in Spain where we still seem to
-breathe the very air of chivalrous romance: the royal
-armoury at Madrid, in which the mail-clad knights
-with their plumes, their housings, their lances, their
-trophies, sit their fine horses as gallantly as if they
-were riding straight into the lists. There, and there
-alone, we can invoke the proper <i>mise en scène</i> for the
-gestes and jousts described in the Spanish ballads.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Historically, it seems certain that the Cid died at
-Valencia in July, 1099, an access of grief that his
-captains—who, owing to his ill-health, were obliged
-to replace him—had failed to hold the Moors in
-check. King Alfonso came to the assistance of his
-noble widow, Jimena, but finally Valencia had to
-be abandoned; all the Christians left the town and
-the Cid’s body was borne to his distant Northern
-home. Such is the historical outline, sufficiently
-pathetic in itself but adorned with additions, not all
-of them, perhaps, invented in the sublime legend of
-the Last Ride. It is said that the Cid, knowing
-that his last hour was near, refrained from any food
-except certain draughts of rose-water in which were
-dissolved the myrrh and balsam sent to him by the
-great Sultan of Persia. He gave particular instructions
-as to how his body was to be anointed with
-the myrrh and balsam which remained in the golden
-caskets, and how it was to be set upright on Bavieca,
-fully saddled and armed, to be still a terror to the
-Moors, who were to be kept in complete ignorance
-of his death. All this was done and a great victory
-was won over the Moors, who thought they saw their
-dreaded enemy once more commanding in person.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>Then the victors started on the long journey to San
-Pedro de Cardeña, near Burgos, the Cid riding his
-horse by day, supported by an artful contrivance, and
-by night placed on a dummy horse wrought by Gil
-Diaz, his devoted servitor. Jimena, with all the Cid’s
-men, followed in his train. On the way the procession
-is joined by the Cid’s two daughters and by
-a great mass of people who mourned in their hearts
-for Spain’s greatest hero, but they wore rich and gay
-apparel, for the Cid had forbidden the wearing of
-mourning. So Cardeña was reached, and tenderly
-and lovingly Ruy Diaz lifted the Cid’s body for the
-last time from Bavieca’s back—never more to bear
-a man. The glorious war-horse lived for two years,
-led to water each day by Gil Diaz. On his death, at
-more than forty years of age and leaving not unworthy
-descendants behind him, he was buried, according to
-the Cid’s express desire, in a deep and ample grave, “so
-that no dog might disturb his bones,” near the gate of
-the Convent, and two elms were planted to mark the
-spot. When Gil Diaz died, full of years and richly
-provided for by the Cid’s daughters, he was laid to
-rest beside the horse he had loved and tended so
-faithfully.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In this narrative, condensed from the Chronicles,
-the curious particular will have been noticed of
-the gift by the “Great Sultan of Persia” to the
-Christian warrior of those precious spices and
-aromatic gums which seem to have been the secret
-treasure of old Persia, forming a priceless offering
-reserved for the very greatest personages. The
-strangeness of bringing in the Sultan of Persia
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>almost suggests that there was truth in the assertion
-that he had sent presents to the Cid. Over the sea
-and over the fruitful fields the radiance of noble deeds
-travels, as Pinder said of old. A little after the
-march of the Thousand, the Arabs of the desert
-were heard discussing round their camp-fires the exploits
-of Garibaldi. If the fame of the Cid reached
-Persia, as it is very likely that it did, he would have
-found fervent admirers among a people which was still
-electrified by the epic poem of Firdusi, who died
-within a year or two of the Cid’s birth. In that
-epic is told the story of the Persian Campeador—the
-Champion Rustem, who not only in his title but
-in all we know of his general bearings has so great
-a resemblance to the Cid that it is a wonder if no
-historical “discoverer” has derived one from the
-other, the more so since there have not been wanting
-writers who denied the Cid’s existence. And
-if Ruy Diaz de Bivar has his analogue in Rustem,
-has not Bavieca a perfect counterpart in Rakush?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is the horse not his master that leads me into the
-mazes of the <i>Shah Nameh</i>, but something of Rustem
-must be told to make Rakush’s story intelligible.
-Like Siegfried, Rustem was of extraordinary size and
-strength: he looked a year old on the day of his
-birth. When he was still a child a white elephant
-broke loose and began trampling the people to death:
-Rustem ran to the rescue and slew it. A little time
-after this his father, whose name was Zal, called the
-boy and showed him all his horses, desiring him to
-choose that which pleased him best, but not one
-was powerful enough or spirited enough to satisfy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>him. Unlike the Cid, Rustem wanted a horse that
-looked as perfect as he really was. After examining
-them all and trying many, he noticed at a little
-distance a mare followed by a marvellously beautiful
-foal. Rustem got ready his noose to throw about
-the foal’s neck, and while he did so, a stable-man
-whispered to him that this foal was, indeed, worth
-anything to secure; the dam, named Abresh, was
-famous, while the sire had been no mortal creature
-but a djinn. The foal’s name was Rakush (“Lightning”),
-a name given to a dappled or piebald horse,
-and his coat, that was as soft as silk, looked like
-rose-leaves strewn on a saffron ground. Several
-persons who had tried already to capture the foal
-had been killed by the mare, who allowed no one
-to go near it.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In fact, no sooner has Rustem lassoed the foal
-than its mother rushes towards him ready to seize
-him with her white teeth, which glisten in the sun.
-Rustem utters a loud cry which so startles the mare
-that she pauses for an instant: then, with clenched
-fist, he rains blow on blow on her head and neck till
-she drops down to die. It was done in self-defence:
-still, it is a barbaric prelude.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Rustem continued to hold Rakush with his free
-hand while he conquered the mare, but now the colt
-drags him hither and thither like an inanimate object:
-the dauntless youth has to strive long for the mastery,
-but he does not rest till the end is achieved. The
-horse is broken in at one breath, after the fashion of
-American cow-boys. It should be noticed that
-legendary heroes always break in their own horses—no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>other influence has been ever brought to bear on
-the horse but their own. Rakush has found a master
-indeed, but a master worthy of him. He has recognised
-that there is one—only one—fit to rule him.
-Like all true heroes’ horses, he will suffer no other
-mortal to mount him: if Barbary really allowed
-Bolingbroke to ride him it was a sure sign that
-his poor royal master was no hero. This same
-characteristic belonged also to Julius Cæsar’s horse,
-which was a remarkable animal in more ways than
-one, as he was reported to have feet like a human
-being. I have no doubt that Soloman’s white mare,
-Koureen, followed the same rule as well as the angel
-Gabriel’s reputed steed, Haziûm, though I have not
-found record of the fact.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>When the colt is broken in, he stands before his
-master perfect and without flaw. “Now I and my
-horse are ready to join the fighting-men in the field,”
-says Rustem as he places the saddle on his back, to
-the boundless joy of Zal, whose old, withered heart
-becomes as green as springtide with the thrill of
-fatherly pride.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>So Rakush is richly caparisoned and Rustem
-rides away on him, beardless youth though he is,
-to command great armies, slay fearsome dragons,
-defeat the wiles of sorcerers, and do all the other
-feats with which the fresh fancy of a young nation
-embroidered the story of its favourite hero—for,
-it must be remembered, Firdusi did not invent
-Rustem any more than Tennyson invented Lancelot.
-I think there is every reason to believe that there
-was a real Rustem just as there was a real Cid; and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>that the first, like the second, was a combination of
-the <i>guerrillero</i>, the <i>condottiere</i>, the magnificent free-booter,
-with the knight-errant or paladin—a stamp
-which was impressed upon the other <i>rôle</i> by the
-personal quality of noble-mindedness possessed by
-the individual in each case. For years unnumbered
-the exploits of Rustem have entertained the Persian
-listener from prince to peasant, but the story will
-ever remain young because it is of those which
-reflect that which holds mankind spell-bound: the
-magnetic power of human personality.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One hears the clear, crisp clatter of the horse’s
-hoofs as they gallop through the epic. Docile as
-Rakush has become, his spirit is unbent; he is
-eager to fight his own battles and his master’s too.
-Like Baiardo, the horse in Ariosto, he uses his
-hoofs with deadly effect, and on one occasion there
-is a regular duel between him and another horse
-while Rustem is fighting its rider. His rashness
-inspires Rustem with much anxiety in their earlier
-journeys together. Quite at the beginning, when
-Rustem is on his way to liberate his captive king—his
-first “labour”—he lies down to sleep in a
-forest, leaving Rakush free to graze, and what is
-not his surprise when he wakes to find a large lion
-extended dead on the grass close by. Rakush killed
-the savage beast with teeth and heels while his
-master slept tranquilly. Rustem remonstrates with
-his too venturesome steed: Why did he fight the
-lion all alone? Why did he not neigh loudly and
-call for assistance? Had he reflected how terribly
-unfortunate it would be for Rustem if anything were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>to happen to him? Who would carry his heavy
-battle-axe and all his other accoutrements? He
-conjures Rakush to fight no more lions single-handed.
-Then and at other times Rustem talks to Rakush,
-but Rakush does not answer like the horse of
-Achilles. The Persians of the eleventh century had
-reached the stage of people who take their marvels
-with discrimination; they accepted Simurghs, white
-demons, phantom elks, giants, dragons, but they
-might have hesitated about a talking horse. Another
-of Rustem’s addresses to his horse was spoken after
-one of his first victories when the enemy was in
-full retreat: “My valued friend,” he said, “put
-forth thine utmost speed and bear me after the
-foe.” The noble animal certainly understood, for
-he bounded over the plain snorting as he flew along
-and tossing up his mane, and great was the booty
-which fell into his master’s hands. Rustem once
-said that with his arms and his trusty steed he
-would not mind fighting thirty thousand men. As
-a matter of fact, he never lacked followers, for he
-was of those captains who have only to stamp on
-the ground for there to spring up soldiers.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the nineteenth century a “legendary hero”
-wandered with his horse over the plains of Uruguay
-much as Rustem wandered with Rakush. “In my
-nomad life in America,” writes Garibaldi, “after
-a long march or a day’s fighting, I unsaddled my
-poor tired horse and smoothed and dried his coat
-... rarely could I offer him a handful of oats since
-those illimitable fields provide so little grain that oats
-are not often given to horses. Then, after leading
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>him to water, I settled him for the night near my
-own resting-place. Well, when all this was done,
-which was no more than a duty to my faithful
-companion of toil and peril, I felt content, and if
-by chance he neighed, refreshed, or rolled on the
-green turf—oh, then I tasted <i>la gentil voluttà d’esser
-pio</i>!” Marvels are out of date, but feeling remains
-unchanged, and the “sweets of kindness” were
-known, surely, even to the earliest hero who made
-a friend of his horse and found him, in the solitude
-of the wild, no bad substitute for human friends.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the story of Sohrab, one of the finest episodes
-in epic poetry, Rakush is introduced as the primary
-cause of it all. Tired with hunting in the forest, and
-perhaps inclined to sleep by a meal of roasted wild
-ass, which seems to have been his favourite game,
-Rustem lay down to rest under a tree, turning
-Rakush free to graze as was his wont. When he
-awoke the horse was nowhere to be seen! Rustem
-looked for his prints, a way of recovering stolen
-animals still practised with astonishing success in
-India. He found the prints and guessed that his
-favourite had been carried off by robbers, which was
-what had actually happened: a band of Tartar
-marauders lassoed the horse with their kamunds and
-dragged him home. Rustem followed the track over
-the border of the little state of Samengan, the king
-of which, warned of the approach of the hero of the
-age, went out to meet him on foot with great
-deference. The hero, however, was in no mood for
-compliments; full of wrath, he told the king that
-his horse had been stolen and that he had traced
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>his footprints to Samengan. The king kept his
-presence of mind better than might have been
-expected; he made profuse excuses and declared
-that no effort should be spared to recover the horse—meanwhile
-he prayed Rustem to become his
-honoured guest.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Emissaries were sent in all directions in search of
-Rakush and a grand entertainment was prepared
-for his master. Pleased and placated, Rustem, who
-had spared little time for luxury in his adventurous
-life, finally lay down on a delightful and beautifully
-adorned bed. How poetic was sleep when it was
-associated, not with an erection on four legs, but
-with a low couch spread with costly furs and rich
-Eastern stuffs! So Rustem reposed, when his eyes
-opened on a living dream, a maiden standing by
-his side, her lovely features illuminated by a lamp
-which a slave girl held. “I am the daughter of the
-king,” says the fair vision; “no one man has ever
-seen my face or even heard my voice. I have heard
-of thy wondrous valour....” Rustem, still wondering
-if he slept or woke, asked her what was her
-will? She answered that she loved him for his fame
-and glory, and that she had vowed to God she would
-wed no other man. Behold, God has brought him
-to her! She desires him to ask her hand to-morrow
-of her father and so departs, lighted on her way
-by the little slave.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Was ever anything more chaste in its self-abandonment
-than the avowal of this love, holy as Desdemona’s
-and irresistible as Senta’s? Nowhere in
-fiction can be found a more convincing illustration
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>of the truth that the essential spring of woman’s
-love for man is hero-worship. On which truth, in
-spite of the illusions it covers, what is best in human
-evolution is largely built.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The king gave glad assent to the marriage, which
-was celebrated according to the rites of that country.
-Rustem tarried but one night with his bride: in the
-morning with weeping eyes she watched him galloping
-away on the recovered Rakush. Long she
-grieved, and only when a son was born was her
-sad heart comforted. The grandfather gave the boy
-the name of Sohrab. Rustem had left an amulet
-to be placed in the hair if God gave her a daughter
-but bound round the arm if a son were born.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In due course Rustem sent a gift of costly jewels
-to his wife Tahmineh, with inquiries whether the
-birth of a child had blessed the marriage? And
-now the mother of Sohrab made the fatal mistake
-of a deception which led to all the evil that followed;
-she sent word that a girl had been born because she
-was afraid that if Rustem knew that he had a son,
-he would take him from her. Rustem, disappointed
-in his hopes, thought no more about Samengan.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There is no hint that Tahmineh’s fibbing, which,
-like very many other “white lies,” ended in dire
-disaster, was in the slightest degree the moral as
-well as the actual cause of the fatality. Herodotus
-said that every Persian child was taught to ride and
-to speak the truth; by Firdusi’s time the second part
-of the instruction seems to have been neglected, for
-in the <i>Shah Nameh</i> he makes everybody give full
-rein to his powers of invention without the slightest
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>scruple. The bad consequences are attributed to
-blind fate, not to seeing Nemesis.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>What is so agonising in the doom of Sohrab is
-precisely the lack of moral cause such as exists in
-the Greek tragedies. Though we do not accept
-as a reality the Greek theory of retribution, we do
-accept it as a point of view, and it helps us, as it
-helped them, to endure the unspeakable horror of
-the Ædipus story.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Sohrab goes forth, with a boy’s enthusiasm, to
-conquer Persia as a present to his unknown father.
-The two meet, and are incited to engage in single
-combat, each not knowing the other. After a Titanic
-contest, Sohrab falls fatally wounded, and only then
-does Rustem discover his identity. Matthew Arnold’s
-poem has familiarised English readers with this
-wonderful scene, and though the “atmosphere” with
-which he surrounded it, is rather classical than
-Eastern, his “Sohrab and Rustum” remains the
-finest rendering of an Eastern story in English
-poetry. Some blind guide blamed him for “plagiarising”
-Firdusi: in a few points he might have done
-wisely to follow his original still more closely; at
-least, it is a pity that he did not enshrine in his
-own beautiful poem Sohrab’s touching words of
-comfort to his distracted father: “None is immortal—why
-this grief?” Brave, spotless, kind, Firdusi’s
-hero-victim who “came as the lightning and went
-as the wind” will always rank with the highest in
-the House of the Youthful Dead.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Sohrab had a horse as well as Rustem. This sort
-of repetition or variation which is often met with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>in Eastern literature pleases children, who like an
-incident much the better if they are already
-acquainted with it, but to the mature sense of the
-West it seems a fault in art. No doubt for this
-reason Matthew Arnold does not mention Sohrab’s
-horse, while doing full justice to Rakush. But
-connected with the young man’s charger there is
-a scene of the deepest human interest and pathos,
-when it is led back to his mourning, sonless mother
-who had watched him ride forth on it, rejoicing in
-its strength and in his own. It was chosen by him
-and saddled by him for the first time in his glad
-boyhood; now it is led back alone, with his arms
-and trappings hanging from the saddle-bows. In an
-agony of grief Tahmineh presses its hoofs to her
-breast and kisses head and face, covering them with
-her tears.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The mother dies after a year of ceaseless heartbreak;
-the father and slayer grieves with a strong
-man’s mighty grief, but he lives to struggle and fight.
-He and his Rakush have many more wondrous
-adventures, passing through enchantments and disenchantments
-and undergoing wounds and marvellous
-cures both of men and beast, till their hour too
-comes. Rustem had a base-born half-brother, named
-Shughad, who was carefully brought up and wedded
-to a king’s daughter, though the astrologers had
-foretold that he would bring ruin to his house. This
-evil genius invites his invincible kinsman to a day’s
-hunting, having secretly prepared hidden pits bristling
-with swords. The wise Rakush stops short at the
-brink of the first pit, refusing to advance; Rustem
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>is stirred to anger and strikes his favourite, who,
-urged thus, falls into the pit, but with superhuman
-energy, though cruelly cut about, emerges from it
-with his rider safely on his back. It is in vain,
-for another and another pit awaits them—seven times
-they come up, hacked about with wounds, but on
-rising out of the seventh pit they both sink dying
-at the edge. Faintness clouds Rustem’s brain; then,
-for a little space, it grows clear and cool and he
-utters the accusing cry, “<i>Thou, my brother!</i>” The
-wretch’s answer is no defence of him—there can exist
-none—but strangely, unexpectedly, in spite of the
-impure lips that speak it, it gives the justification of
-God’s ways. “God has willed Rustem’s end for all
-the blood he has shed.” From his own stern faith
-with its Semitic roots, Firdusi took this great, solemn
-conception of blood-guiltiness which allowed no compromise.
-“Thou hast shed blood abundantly and
-hast made great wars.” One thinks, too, of the wail
-of one who was of modern men, the most like the
-old Hebrew type: “All I have done,” said Bismarck
-in his old age, “is to cause many tears to flow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The king, who is the father-in-law of Shughad,
-offers to send for a magic balm to cure Rustem’s
-wounds, but the hero will have none of it. He is
-now quite collected, though his life-blood is ebbing
-away. In a quiet voice he asks Shughad to do him
-the kindness of stringing his bow and placing it in
-his hands, so that when dead he may be a scarecrow
-to keep away wolves and wild beasts from
-devouring his body. With a hateful smile of triumph
-Shughad complies; Rustem grasps the bow, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>taking unerring aim lets go the arrow, which nails
-the traitor to the tree, whither he rushed to hide
-himself. So Rustem dies, thanking the Almighty
-for giving him the power to avenge his murder.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There are few better instances of the long survival
-of a traditional sentiment than the fact of the king’s
-(or the chief’s) stable being regarded in modern
-Persia as an inviolable sanctuary. This must have
-originated in the veneration once felt for the horse.
-The misfortunes which befell the grandson of Nadir
-Shah were attributed to his having put to death a
-man who took refuge in his stable. No horse will
-carry to victory a master who profanes his stable
-with bloodshed. Even political offenders or pretenders
-to the throne were safe if they could reach
-the stable for as long as they remained in it.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>
- <h2 id='ch15' class='c006'>XV<br /> <br />ANIMALS IN EASTERN FICTION</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c007'>I&nbsp;WAS looking idly at the motley Damascus crowd
-behind whose outward strangeness to my eyes
-I knew there lay a deeper strangeness of ideas, when
-in the middle of a clearing I saw a monkey in a red
-fez which began to go through its familiar tricks. I
-thought to myself, “How very near that monkey
-seems to me!” It was like the well-known figure
-of an old friend. So it is with the animal-lore of
-Eastern fiction; it seems very near to us; its heroes
-are our familiar friends. Perhaps we would lose
-everything in the treasure-house of Oriental tales
-sooner than the stories of beasts. If those stories
-had a hidden meaning which escapes us we are not
-troubled by their hidden meaning. In their obvious
-sense they appeal to us directly, without any effort
-to call up conditions of life and mind far removed
-from our own. We take them to our hearts and keep
-them there.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Indeed, the West liked the Eastern stories of beasts
-so well that it borrowed not a few without any acknowledgment.
-We all know that the Welsh dog, Gellert,
-whose grave is shown to this day, had a near relative
-in the mungoose of a Chinese Buddhist story which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>exists in a collection dating from the fifth century.
-The same motive reappears in the <i>Panchatantra</i>, a
-Sanscrit collection to which is assigned a slightly
-later date. These are the earliest traces of it that
-have come to light, but its subsequent wanderings
-are endless. The theme does not vary much; a
-faithful animal saves a child from imminent peril:
-it is seen with marks of blood or signs of a struggle
-upon it, and on the supposition that it has killed
-or hurt the child, it is killed before the truth is discovered.
-The animal varies according to the locality,
-and amongst the other points of interest in this world-legend
-is that of reminding us of the universal diffusion
-of pet animals. We learn, too, which was the
-characteristically household animal with the people
-who re-tell the story: in Syria, Greece, Spain, as
-in Wales, and also (rather to our surprise) among
-the Jews, we hear of a dog. The weasel tribe prevails
-in India and China, the cat in Persia. Probably
-in India and in China dogs were not often admitted
-inside the houses; in a Chinese analogous tale, of
-which I shall speak presently, there is a dog, but
-the incidents take place on the highway. The
-mungoose was the traditional pet of India because
-its enmity to snakes must have gained for it admittance
-into dwelling-places from very early times,
-and wherever man lives in domesticity with any
-animal that he does not look upon as food, he
-cannot save himself from becoming attached to it
-only a little less than he is attached to the human
-members of his household. To this rule there are
-no exceptions.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>In the matter of folk-tales, even when we seem to
-have a clue to their origin, it is rash to be dogmatic.
-It has been remarked that the origin of this story
-was probably Buddhist, because it is unquestionable
-that Buddhist monks purposely taught humanity to
-animals. Supposing that the story was diffused with
-a fixed purpose over the vast area covered at one
-time or another by Buddhism, it would have started
-with a wide base whence to spread. Moreover, as I
-mentioned, we find it first in a Buddhist collection
-of stories. But I am far from sure that the story did
-not exist—nay, that the fact may not have happened—long
-before Gautama preached his humane morality.
-Why should not the fact have happened over and
-over again? It is one of those stories that are more
-true than truth. I can tell a perfectly true tale which,
-though not quite the same as “Gellert’s hound,”
-deserves no less to go round the world. A few years
-ago a man went out in a boat on a French river to
-drown his dog. In mid stream he threw the dog
-into the water and began to row away. The dog
-followed and tried to clamber up into the boat. The
-man gave it some severe blows about the head with
-the oar, but the dog still followed the boat. Then
-the man lost his temper and lost his balance: just as
-he aimed what he thought would be the final blow
-he tumbled into the water, and as he did not know
-how to swim he was on the point of being drowned.
-Then the dog played his part: he grasped the man’s
-clothes with his teeth and held him up till assistance
-came. That dog was never drowned!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Things are soon forgotten now, but if this had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>only happened on a Chinese canal three thousand
-years ago we might still have been hearing about it.
-More folk-tales arose in such a way than an unbelieving
-world suspects.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the Chinese Buddhist version of Gellert we
-are told that a very poor Brahman who had to beg
-his bread possessed a pet mungoose, which, as he
-had no children, became as fondly loved as if it had
-been his son. How true is this touch which shows
-the love of animals as the <i>katharsis</i> of the heart-ache
-or heartbreak of the childless! But, by and by, to the
-great joy of the Brahman, his wife bore him a son;
-after this happy event he cherished the mungoose
-even more than ever, for he said to himself that it was
-the fact of his having treated it as if it had been his
-child which had brought him the unhoped-for good
-luck of having a real child of his own. One day
-the Brahman went out to beg, but before he went
-out he told his wife to be sure and take good care
-of the child and carry it with her if she left the house
-even for a minute. The woman fed the child with
-cream and then remembered that she had to grind
-some rice; she went into the garden to grind it and
-forgot to take the little boy with her. After she was
-gone, a snake, attracted by the smell of the cream,
-crept quite close to where the child lay and was going
-to bite it, when the mungoose perceived what was
-going on and reflected: “My father has gone out
-and my mother too and now this poisonous snake
-wishes to kill my little brother.” So the mungoose
-attacked the poisonous snake and tore it into seven
-pieces. Then it thought that, since it had killed the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>snake and saved the child, it ought to acquaint its
-father and mother of what had happened and rejoice
-their hearts. Therefore it went to the door and
-waited for them to return, its mouth still covered with
-blood. Just then the Brahman came home and he
-was not pleased to see his wife without the child in
-the out-house, where the mill was. Thus, though this
-is left for the hearer to infer, he was already vexed and
-anxious, when he met the mungoose waiting by the
-door with blood on its mouth. The thought rushed
-into his mind, “This creature, being hungry, has
-slain and eaten the child! “He took up a stick
-and beat the mungoose to death. (Such a little
-thing, it is so easily killed!) After that he went
-into the house, where he found the baby sitting up
-in his cradle playing merrily with his fingers, while
-the seven pieces of the dead snake lay beside him!
-Sorrow filled the Brahman now; alas, for his folly!
-The faithful creature had saved his child and he,
-thoughtless wretch that he was, had killed it!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Only in this version are we informed of just what
-the devoted animal thought; which may be a sign
-of its Buddhist origin. In the modern Indian
-variant, the mungoose, tied by a string, does not
-succeed in getting free till after the child has been
-bitten by the snake with which he had been playing,
-thinking it a new toy. The cobra took the
-play in good part till the child accidentally hurt it;
-then, angry with the pain, it bit him in the neck.
-When the mungoose got loose the deed was done
-and the cobra had slunk back into its hole. Off ran
-the mungoose into the jungle to find the antidote
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>which the Indian natives believe that this creature
-always uses when it is itself bitten by snakes. The
-mother comes in at the moment when the mungoose
-is returning with the antidote: she sees the child
-lying motionless, and thinking that the mungoose
-has killed it she seizes it and dashes it to the
-ground. It quivers for a few seconds, then it dies.
-Only when it is dead, does the mother notice the
-snake-root which it still holds tightly in its mouth.
-She guesses the whole truth and quickly administers
-the antidote to the child, who recovers consciousness.
-The mungoose “had been a great pet with all the
-children and was greatly mourned for.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the Sanscrit version preserved in the <i>Panchatantra</i>
-collection the mother has brought up an
-ichneumon with her only child, as if it had been
-his brother; nevertheless, a sort of fear has always
-haunted her that the animal might hurt the child
-sooner or later. I must interrupt the story to remark
-how often the inglorious Shakespeare of these poor
-little folk-tales traces with no mean art the psychological
-process which leads up to the tragic crisis.
-What more true to life than the observation of the
-two opposing feelings balancing each other in the
-same mind till some accident causes one of them
-to gain uncontrollable mastery?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>When the woman has killed her innocent little
-favourite she is bitterly unhappy, but instead of
-blaming her own hastiness, she says it was all
-her husband’s fault: what business had he to go
-out begging, “through a greedy desire of profit,”
-instead of minding the baby as she had told him
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>to do, while she went to the well to fetch water?
-And now the reprobate has caused the death of the
-ichneumon, the darling of the house!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The touching trait of the creature, which runs to
-its master or mistress after saving the child, with
-the charming confidence and pride which any animal
-shows when it knows that it deserves praise, appears
-in nearly all the versions. Prince Llewellyn’s
-greyhound goes out to meet him “all bloody and
-<i>wagging his tail</i>.” The ichneumon ran joyously
-to meet its mistress, and the cat, in the Persian
-version, came up to its master “rubbing against
-his legs.” In the Persian tale the child’s mother
-dies at its birth, and it is stated that she was very
-fond of the cat, which made the man even more
-grieved that he had killed it.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In German folk-lore the story of the dog “Sultan”
-sounds as if it were invented by some happy-souled
-humorist who had the Llewellyn motive in his
-mind, but who wanted to tell a merry tale instead of
-a sad one. “Sultan” is so old that his master
-wishes to kill him, though much against the advice
-of his wife. So “Sultan” consults a wolf of his
-acquaintance, who proposes the stratagem of pretending
-that he is going to eat the good people’s
-child, while “Sultan” pretends to come up just at
-the nick of time to save it. The plan is carried
-out with complete success, and “Sultan” lives out
-his days surrounded by respect and gratitude.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There are several Eastern tales which are of the
-same family as Llewellyn’s hound, but in which the
-animal, instead of saving a child, confers some other
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>benefit on its possessor. In a Persian fable a king
-kills his falcon because it spilled a cup of water
-which he is about to drink: of course, the water
-was really poisoned. A current folk-tale of Bengal
-makes a horse the victim of its devotion in preventing
-its master from drinking poisonous water.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Rather different is the following Chinese tale,
-which is to be found, told at more length, in Dr.
-Herbert H. Giles’s delightful book, “Strange Stories
-from a Chinese Studio”:—</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There was a man of Lu-ngan who had scraped
-together enough money to release his father from
-prison, where he was like to die of all the untold
-miseries of Chinese durance. He got on a mule
-and set out for the town where his father was
-languishing, taking the silver with him. When he
-was well on his way, he was much annoyed to
-see that a black dog which belonged to the family
-was following him; he tried in vain to make it go
-back. After riding on for some time, he got off
-the mule to rest and he took the opportunity for
-throwing a large stone at the dog, which ran away,
-but as soon as he was on the road again the dog
-trotted up and took hold of the mule’s tail, as if
-trying to stop it. The man beat it off with the
-whip, but it only ran round in front of the mule,
-and barked frantically so as to impede its progress.
-The man now reflected, “This is a very bad omen,”
-and he got fairly into a rage and beat the dog off
-with such violence that it did not come back. So
-he continued his journey without further incidents,
-but when he reached the city in the dark of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>evening, what was not his despair on finding about
-half his money gone! He did not doubt that he
-must have dropped it on the way, and after passing
-a night of terrible distress he remembered, towards
-dawn, the strange way in which the dog behaved,
-and he began to think that there might be some
-connexion between this and the loss of his money.
-Directly the gates were open he retraced his steps
-along the road, though he hardly hoped to find any
-clue to his loss, as the route was traversed by many
-travellers. But at the spot where, on the previous
-day he dismounted from his mule to rest, he saw
-the dog stretched dead on the ground, its hair
-still moist with perspiration, and when he lifted up
-the body by one of its ears, he found his lost silver
-safely concealed underneath it! His gratitude was
-great, and he bought a coffin, in which he placed the
-dog and then buried it. The place is known as
-“the Grave of the Faithful Dog.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is not true that every one in China eats dogs,
-but some do, and the trade in such animals is a
-recognised business. There are several cat and
-dog restaurants at Canton. This unenviable habit
-gives rise to the story of a merchant who had made
-a good stroke of business at Wu-hu and was going
-home in a canal boat, when he noticed on the bank
-a butcher who was tying up a dog previous to
-killing it. It is not stated if the merchant had
-always a tender heart or if his good fortune in
-the town made him wish to do a good turn to some
-living thing; anyhow, he proposed to buy the dog.
-The butcher was no fool; he guessed that the trader
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>would never leave the dog to its fate after thinking
-about rescuing it—what dreadful sleepless nights
-such a proceeding would cost any of us! So he
-boldly asked a great deal more than the dog was
-worth, which was paid down, and the animal was
-untied and put on the boat with his new master.
-Now it so happened that the boatman had been a
-brigand, and, though partially reformed, the feeling
-that he had on board a traveller with a large sum
-of money was too strong a temptation for him. So
-he stopped the boat by running it among the rushes
-and drew out a long knife, with which he prepared
-to murder his passenger. The merchant begged
-the brigand not to mutilate him or cut off his
-head, because such treatment causes the victim to
-appear in the next world as no one would like
-to. Brigands are generally religious, and this one
-was no exception; he was willing to oblige the
-merchant and tied him up, quite whole, in a carpet,
-which he threw into the river. The dog, which
-had been looking on, was in the water in a moment,
-hugging and tugging at the bundle till he got it
-to a shallow place. Then he barked and barked
-till people came to see what was the matter, and
-they undid the carpet and found the trader still alive.
-The first thought of the rescued man was to track
-the thief, for which purpose he started at once to
-go back to Wu-hu. At the time of starting, much
-to his distress, he missed the dog. On arriving
-at Wu-hu he hunted among the endless boats and
-shipping for the boat by which he had travelled,
-but unfortunately he could see nothing of it, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>at last he gave up the search and was going home
-with a friend when what should he see but his lost
-dog, which barked in a curious way as if to invite
-him to follow it. The merchant did so, and the
-dog led him to a boat that was lying close to the
-quay. Into this boat the dog jumped and seized
-hold of one of the boatmen by the leg. In spite
-of blows the animal would not let go, and then the
-merchant, on looking hard at the boatman, recognised
-him as the very man who tried to murder
-him, though he had a nice new suit of clothes and
-a new boat. The thief was arrested and the money
-found at the bottom of the boat. “To think,” says
-the story-teller, “that a dog could show gratitude like
-that!” To which Dr. Giles adds that dogs in China
-are usually “ill-fed, barking curs” which, if valued as
-guardians of house and chattels, are still despised.
-But beautiful moral qualities have the power to
-conquer loathing, and even in those countries where
-the dog is regarded generally with aversion it is
-still the chosen type of sublime fidelity and love.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I can never think of Chinese dogs without remembering
-a story told by my cousin, Lord Napier
-of Magdala, of an incident which, he said, gave
-him more pain than anything that had ever happened
-to him in his life. When he was in China he chanced
-to admire a dog, which was immediately offered to
-him as a gift. He could not accept the offer, and
-next day he heard that the owner of the dog with
-all his family, five persons, had drowned himself
-in a well. Probably they imagined that he was
-offended by their offering him a mere dog.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>In India, to return to that home of legend, the
-two most sublime Beast Stories are to be found
-in the Great Epic of the Hindu race, the <i>Mahabharata</i>.
-They are both stories of the faithfulness
-of man to beast, and they afford consolation for the
-sorry figure presented by the human actor in the
-martyred mungoose tale. The first of these stories
-is the legend of the Hawk and the Pigeon. A
-pigeon pursued by a hawk flies for protection to
-the precinct of sacrifice, where a very pious king is
-about to make his offering. It clings to the king’s
-breast, motionless with fright. Then up comes the
-hawk, which, perching on a near vantage-ground,
-begins to argue the case. All the princes of the
-earth declare the king to be a magnanimous chief;
-why, therefore, should he fly in the face of natural
-laws? Why keep its destined food from the hawk,
-which feels very hungry? The king answers that
-the pigeon came flying to him, overcome by fear
-and seeking to save its life. How can he possibly
-give it up? A trembling bird which enters his
-presence begging for its life? How ignoble it
-would be to abandon it! Surely it would be a
-mortal sin! In fact, that is exactly what the Law
-calls it!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The hawk retorts that all creatures must eat to
-live. You can sustain life on very little, but how
-are you going to live on nothing at all? If the
-hawk has nothing to eat, his vital breath will depart
-this very day “on the road where nothing more
-affrights.” If he dies, his wife and children will
-die too for want of their protector. Such an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>eventuality cannot be contemplated by the Law:
-a law which contradicts itself is a very bad law
-and cannot be in accordance with eternal truth.
-In theological difficulties one has to consider
-what seems just and reasonable and interpret the
-point in that sense.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“There is a great deal to be said for what you
-say, best of fowls,” replies the king, who is impressed
-by the hawk’s forensic skill and begins to think
-him a person not to be trifled with; “you are very
-well informed; in fact, I am inclined to think that
-you know everything. How <i>can</i> you suppose, then,
-that it would be a decent thing to give up a creature
-that seeks refuge? Of course, I understand that
-with you it is a question of a dinner, but something
-much more substantial than this pigeon can be
-prepared for you immediately; for instance, a wild
-boar, or a gazelle or a buffalo—anything that you
-like.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The hawk answers that he never, by any chance,
-touches meat of that sort: why does the king talk
-to him about such unsuitable diet? By an immutable
-rule hawks feed on pigeons, and this pigeon
-is the very thing he wants and to which he has a
-perfect right. In a delicate metaphor he hints that
-the king had better leave off talking nonsense.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The king, who sees that arguments are no good,
-now declares that anything and everything he will
-give the hawk by way of compensation, but that as to
-the pigeon, he will not give it up, so it is no good
-going on discussing the matter.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The hawk says, in return, that if the king is so
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>tenderly solicitous on the pigeon’s account, the best
-thing he can do is to cut out a piece of his own
-flesh and weigh it in the scales with the pigeon—when
-the balance is equal, then and then only will
-the hawk be satisfied. “As you ask that as a
-favour,” says the king, “you shall have what you
-wish”—a consent which seems to contain a polite
-hint that the hawk might have been a little less
-arrogant, for in the hawk’s demand there was no
-mention of favours.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The king himself cuts out the piece of his flesh
-(no one else would have dared do it). But, alas!
-when it is weighed with the pigeon, the pigeon
-weighs the most! The king went on cutting pieces
-of his flesh and throwing them into the scales, but
-the pigeon was still the heaviest. At last, all
-lacerated as he was, he threw himself into the scales.
-Then, with a blast of revelation, the esoteric sense
-of the story is made plain. There is something
-grand in the sudden antithesis.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The hawk said: “I am Indra, O prince, thou
-that knowest the Law! And this pigeon is Agni!
-Since thou hast torn thy flesh from thy limbs, O
-thou Prince of Men, thy glory shall shine throughout
-all worlds. As long as there be men on earth
-they will remember thee, O king. As long as the
-eternal realms endure thy fame shall not grow dim.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>So the gods returned to heaven, to which the pious
-Wusinara likewise ascended with his renovated body,
-luminously bright. He needs not to complete his
-sacrifice—himself has he offered up.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The listeners (Eastern stories are for listeners,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>not for readers) are exhorted to raise their eyes and
-behold with the mind’s vision that pure and holy
-abode where the righteous dwell with the gods in
-glory ineffable.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>This beautiful fable belongs to the general class
-of the ancient stories of Divine visitants, but it has
-a more direct affinity with the lovely legends of
-the Middle Ages, in which pious people who give
-their beds to lepers or others suffering from loathsome
-disease find that it was Christ they harboured.
-Though the story of the Hawk and the Pigeon may
-be used simply as a fairy tale, the moral of it is what
-forms the essential kernel of other-worldly religions.
-Through the mazes of Indian thought emerges the
-constant conviction—like a Divine sign-post—that
-martyrdom is redemption. The gods themselves are
-less than the man who resigns everything for what
-his conscience tells him to be right. Indra bows
-before Wusinara and seeks to learn the Law from
-him. India’s gods are Nature-gods, and Nature
-teaches no such lesson:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“There is no effort on <i>my</i> brow—</div>
- <div class='line in1'>I do not strive, I do not weep,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>I rush with the swift spheres and glow</div>
- <div class='line in1'>For joy, and when I will, I sleep.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>Higher religions are a criticism of Nature: they
-“occupy the sphere that rational interpretation seeks
-to occupy and fails, and fails the more the more
-it seeks,” and if they change with the change of
-moral aspirations they are still the passionate endeavour
-of the soul to satisfy them.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>The Buddhists took the story of the Hawk and the
-Pigeon and adapted it to their own teaching. Indra,
-chief of the gods, feels that his god-life is waning—for
-the gods of India labour, too, under the sense
-of that mysterious fatality of doom which haunted
-Olympus and Walhalla. Indra, knowing his twilight
-to be near, desired to consult a Buddha, but there
-was not one at that time upon the earth. There
-was, however, a virtuous king of the name of Sivi,
-and Indra decides to put him to the ordeal, which
-forms the subject of the other story, because, if he
-comes out scathless, he will be qualified to become
-a full Buddha. King Sivi had a severe struggle
-with himself, but he conquered his weakness, and
-when he feels the scale sink under him he is filled
-with indescribable joy and heaven and earth shake,
-which always happens when a Buddha is coming
-into existence. A crowd of gods descended and
-rested on the air: the sight of Sivi’s endurance
-caused them to weep tears that fell like rain mingled
-with divine flowers, which the gods threw down on
-the voluntary victim.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Indra puts off the form of a dove and resumes his
-god-like shape. What, he asks, does the king desire?
-Would he be universal monarch? Would he be king
-of the Genii? <i>Would he be Indra?</i> There is a fine touch
-in this offer from the god of his godship to the heroic
-man, and, like most Buddhist amplifications of older
-legends, it might be justified from Brahmanical
-sources, as by incredible self-denial it was always
-held to be possible to dethrone a god and put oneself
-in his place. But Sivi replies that the only state
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>he craves is that of a Buddha. Indra inquires if
-no shade of regret crosses the king’s mind when he
-feels the anguish reaching to his bones? The king
-replies, “I regret nothing.” “How can I believe
-it,” says Indra, “when thy body trembles and shivers
-so that thou canst hardly speak?” Sivi repeats that
-from beginning to end he has felt no shadow of
-regret; all has happened as he wished. In proof
-that he speaks truth, may his body be as whole
-as before! He had scarcely spoken when the miracle
-was effected, and in the same instant King Sivi
-became a Buddha.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There is a Russian folk-tale which seems to belong
-to this cycle. A horse which was ill-treated and
-half-starved saves the child of one of his masters
-from a bear. He has a friend, a cat, who is also
-half-starved. After he has saved the child he is
-better fed and he gives the cat part of his food.
-The masters notice this and again ill-treat him.
-He resolves to kill himself so that the cat may eat
-him, but the cat will not eat her friend and resolves
-to die likewise.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The second great story of man and beast contained
-in the <i>Mahabharata</i> is that of Yudishtira and
-his dog. Accompanied by his wife and by his
-brethren, the saintly king started upon a pilgrimage
-of unheard-of difficulty which he alone was able to
-complete, as, on account of some slight imperfections
-that rendered them insufficiently meritorious to reach
-the goal, the others died upon the way. Only a
-dog, which followed Yudishtira from his house,
-remains with him still. At the final stage he is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>met by Indra, who invites him to mount his car and
-ascend to heaven in the flesh. The king asks if
-his brethren and the “tender king’s daughter,” his
-wife, are to be left lying miserably upon the road?
-Indra points out that the souls of these have already
-left their mortal coil and are even now in heaven,
-where Yudishtira will find them when he reaches
-it in his corporeal form. Then the king says, “And
-the dog, O lord of what Is and Is to be—the dog
-which has been faithful to the end, may I bring him?
-It is not my nature to be hard.” Indra says that
-since the king has this day obtained the rank of a
-god together with immortality and unbounded happiness,
-he had better not waste thoughts on a dog.
-Yudishtira answers that it would be an abominably
-unworthy act to forsake a faithful servant in order
-to obtain felicity and fortune. Indra objects that
-no dogs are allowed in heaven; what is a dog? A
-rough, ill-mannered brute which often runs away with
-the sacrifices offered in the temples. Let Yudishtira
-only reflect what wretched creatures dogs are, and
-he will give up all idea of taking his dog to heaven.
-Yudishtira still asserts that the abandonment of
-a servant is an enormous sin; it is as bad as
-murdering a Brahman. He is not going to forsake
-his dog whatever the god may say. Besides, it is
-not violent at all, but a gentle and devoted creature,
-and now that it is so weak and thin from all it has
-undergone on the journey and yet so eager to live,
-he would not leave it, even if it cost him his life.
-That is his final resolve.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Arguing in rather a feminine way, Indra returns
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>to the charge that dogs are rough, rude brutes and
-quite ignores the good personal character given to
-this dog by its master. He goes on to twit
-Yudishtira with having abandoned his beloved
-Draupadi and his brothers on the road down there,
-while he makes all this stand about a dog. He
-winds up with saying, “You must be quite mad
-to-day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Repelling the disingenuous charge of abandoning
-his wife and brethren, Yudishtira remarks with
-dignity that he left not them but their dead bodies
-on the road: he could not bring them to life again.
-He might have said that Indra himself had pointed
-out to him this very fact. The refusal of asylum,
-the murder of a woman, the act of kidnapping a
-sleeping Brahman, the act of deceiving a friend—there
-is nothing, says Yudishtira, to choose between
-these four things and the abandonment of a faithful
-servant.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The trial is over and the god admits his defeat.
-“Since thou hast refused the divine chariot with the
-words, ‘This dog is devoted,’ it is clear, O Prince
-of Men, that there is no one in heaven equal to
-thee.” Yudishtira, alone among mortals, ascends
-to bliss in his own body. And the dog—what
-of the dog? One is sorry to hear that the dog
-vanished and in his place stood Yama, King of
-Death.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>To us, far away from the glamour of Eastern skies,
-the god-out-of-the-machine or out of the beast-skin
-is not always a welcome apparition. We cannot
-help being glad when, sometimes, the animals just
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>remain what they are, as in the charming Indian
-fable of the Lion and the Vulture. A lion who lived
-in a forest became great friends with a monkey.
-One day the monkey asked the lion to look after
-its two little ones while it was away. But the lion
-happened to go to sleep and a vulture that was
-hovering overhead seized both the young monkeys
-and took them up into a tree. When the lion awoke
-he saw that his charges were gone, and gazing about
-he perceived the vulture holding them tight on the
-top branches of the nearest tree. In great distress
-of mind the lion said, “The monkey placed its two
-children under my care, but I was not watchful
-enough and now you have carried them off. In
-this way I have missed keeping my word. I do
-beg you to give them back; I am the king of beasts,
-you are the chief of birds: our nobility and our
-power are equal. It would be only fair to let me
-have them.” Alas! compliments, though they will
-go very far, do little to persuade an empty stomach.
-“You are totally unacquainted with the circumstances
-of the case,” replied the vulture; “I am
-simply dying of hunger: what is the equality or
-difference of rank to me?” Then the lion with
-his claws tore out some of his own flesh to satisfy
-the vulture’s appetite and so ransomed the little
-monkeys.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In this fable we have the Hawk and the Pigeon
-motive with the miraculous kept in but the mythological
-left out.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Like a great part of the Buddhist stories of
-which the Lion and the Vulture is one, we owe its
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>preservation to the industrious Chinese translator.
-In the same work that contains it, the <i>Tatchi-lou-lun</i>,
-we are told how, when a bird laid her eggs on the
-head of the first Buddha which she mistook for the
-branch of a tree, he plunged himself into a trance so
-as not to move till the eggs were hatched and the
-young birds had flown. The Buddha’s humanity
-is yet again shown by the story of how he saved
-the forest animals that were fleeing from a conflagration.
-The jungle caught fire and the flames
-spread to the forest, which burnt fiercely on three
-sides; one side was safe, but it was bounded by a
-great river. The Buddha saw the animals huddling
-in terror by the water’s edge. Full of pity, he took
-the form of a gigantic stag and placing his fore-feet
-on the further bank and his hind-feet on the other,
-he made a bridge over which the creatures could
-pass. His skin and flesh were cruelly wounded by
-their feet, but love helped him to bear the pain.
-When all the other animals had passed over, and
-when the stag’s powers were all but gone, up came
-a panting hare. The stag made one more supreme
-effort; the hare was saved, but hardly had it crossed,
-when the stag’s backbone broke and it fell into the
-water and died. The author of the fable may not
-have known that hares swim very well, so that the
-sacrifice was not necessary, unless, indeed, this hare
-was too exhausted to take to the water.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We can picture the first Buddhist missionaries
-telling such stories over the vast Chinese empire
-to a race which had not instinctively that tender
-feeling for animals which existed from the most
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>remote times in the Indian peninsula. A good
-authority attributes the present Chinese sensitiveness
-about animals wholly to those early teachers.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A Sanscrit story akin to the preceding ones tells
-how a saint in the first stage of Buddhahood was
-walking in the mountains with his disciple when
-he saw in a cavern in the rock a tigress and her
-newly-born little ones. She was thin and starving
-and exhausted by suffering, and she cast unnatural
-glances on her children as they pressed close to
-her, confident in her love and heedless of her cruel
-growls. Notwithstanding his usual self-control, the
-saint trembled with emotion at the sight. Turning
-to his disciple, he cried, “My son, my son, here
-is a tigress, which, in spite of maternal instinct, is
-being driven by hunger to devour her little ones.
-Oh! dreadful cruelty of self-love, which makes a
-mother feed upon her children!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>He bids the young man fly in search of food, but
-while he is gone he reflects that it may be too late
-when he returns, and to save the mother from the
-dreadful crime of killing her children, and the little
-ones from the teeth of their famished mother, he
-flings himself down the precipice. Hearing the
-noise, and curious as to what it might mean, the
-tigress is turned from the thought of killing her
-young ones, and on looking round she sees the
-body of the saint and devours it.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The most remarkable of all the many Buddhist
-animal stories is that of the Banyan Deer, which
-is in the rich collection of old-world lore known
-as the <i>Jātaka Book</i>. The collection is not so much
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>an original Buddhist work as the Buddhist redaction
-of much older tales. It was made in about the
-third century <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> The Banyan Deer story had the
-additional interest that illustrations of it were discovered
-among the bas-reliefs of the stupa of
-Bharhut. I condense the story from the version of
-it given in Professor T. W. Rhys Davids’ “Buddhist
-India.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the king’s park there were two herds of deer,
-and every day either the king or his cook hunted
-them for venison. So every day a great many
-were harassed and wounded for one that was killed.
-Then the golden-hued Banyan Deer, who was the
-monarch of one herd, went to the Branch Deer,
-who was king of the other herd, and proposed an
-arrangement by which lots were to be cast daily,
-and one deer on whom the lot fell should go and
-offer himself to the cook, voluntarily laying his head
-on the block. In this way there would be no unnecessary
-suffering and slaughter.</p>
-
-<div id='i328' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i328.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='small'><i>Photo:</i> <i>Griggs.</i></span><br />THE BANYAN DEER.<br /><span class='small'>(<i>From “Stûpa of Bharhut,” by General Cunningham.</i>)</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The somewhat lugubrious proposition met with
-assent, and all seems to have gone well till one
-day the lot fell to a doe of the Branch king’s herd,
-who was expecting soon to become a mother. She
-begged her king to relieve her of the duty, as it
-would mean that two at once should suffer, which could
-never have been intended. But with harsh words
-the Branch king bade her be off to the block. Then
-the little doe went piteously to the Banyan king
-as a last hope. No sooner had he heard her tale
-than he said he would look to the matter, and what
-he did was to go straight to the block himself and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>lay his royal head upon it. But as the king of the
-country had ordered that the monarchs of both herds
-should be spared, the cook was astonished to see
-King Banyan with his head on the block, and went
-off in a hurry to tell his lord. Mounted in a chariot
-with all his men around him, the sovereign rode
-straight to the place. Then he asked his friend,
-the king of the deer, why had he come there? Had
-he not granted him his life? The Banyan Deer
-told him all. The heart of the king of men was
-touched, and he commanded the deer to rise up and
-go on his way, for he gave him his life and hers also
-to the doe. But the Banyan Deer asked how it
-would be with all the others: were two to be saved
-and the rest left to their peril? The king of men
-said that they too should be respected. Even then
-the Banyan Deer had more to ask: he pleaded for
-the safety of all living, feeling things, and the king
-of men granted his prayer. (What will not a man
-grant when his heart is touched by some act of pure
-abnegation?)</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There is a curious epilogue to the story. The
-doe gave birth to a most beautiful fawn, which went
-playing with the herd of the Branch Deer. To it the
-mother said:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Follow rather the Banyan Deer,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Cultivate not the Branch!</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Death with the Banyan were better far</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Than with the Branch long life.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>The verse is haunting in its vagueness, as a music
-which reaches us from far away. “Follow rather
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>the Banyan Deer!” ... follow the ideal, follow the
-merciful, he who loses his life shall find it.</p>
-<p class='c008'>The Indian hermit of whatsoever sect has always
-been, and is still, good friends with animals, and when
-he can, he gives asylum to as many as he is able,
-around his hermitage. This fact, which is familiar to
-all, becomes the groundwork of many stories. One
-of the best is the elaborate Chinese Buddhist tale of
-Sama, an incarnation of Buddha, who chose to be
-born as a son to two old, blind, childless folks, in
-order to take care of their forlornness. When the
-child was ten years old he begged his parents respectfully
-to go with him into the solitary mountains where
-they might practise the life of religious persons who
-have forsaken the world. His parents agreed; they
-had been thinking about becoming hermits before
-his birth, but that happy event made them put the
-thought away. Now they were quite willing to go
-with him. So they gave their worldly goods to the
-poor and followed where he led.</p>
-
-<div id='i330' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i330.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='small'><i>Photo:</i> <i>Mansell.</i></span><br />EGYPTIAN FOWLING SCENE.<br />British Museum.<br /><span class='small'>(<i>Mural painting.</i>)</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>There is a beautiful description of the life in the
-mountains. Sama made a shelter of leaves and
-branches, and brought his old parents sweet fruits
-and cool water—all that they needed. The birds
-and beasts of the forest, showing no fear, delighted
-the blind couple with their song and friendship,
-and all the creatures came at Sama’s call and followed
-him about. Herds of deer and feathered fowl drank
-by the river’s bank while he drew water. Unhappily
-one day the king of Kasi was out hunting in those
-wilds and he saw the birds and the deer, but Sama he
-did not see and an arrow he aimed at the herd pierced
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>the boy’s body. The wounded boy said to the king,
-“They kill an elephant for its ivory teeth, a
-rhinoceros for its horn, a kingfisher for its feathers,
-a deer for its skin, but why should I be killed?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The king dismounted, and asked him who he was—consorting
-with the wild herds of the forest. Sama
-told him that he was only a hermit boy, living an
-innocent life with his blind parents. No tiger or
-wolf had harmed them, and now the arrow of his
-king laid him low.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The forest wailed; the wild beasts and birds, the
-lions, tigers, and wolves uttered dismal cries. “Hark,
-how the beasts of the forest cry!” Said the old couple
-to one another, “Never before have we heard it
-so. How long our son has been gone!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Meanwhile, the king, overcome by sorrow and
-remorse, tried in vain to draw the arrow from the
-boy’s breast. The birds flew round and round
-screaming wildly; the king trembled with fear. Sama
-said, “Your Majesty is not to blame; I must have
-done ill in a former life, and now suffer justly for
-it: I do not grieve for myself but for my blind parents
-... what will they do? May heavenly guardians
-protect them!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Then the king said, “May I undergo the torments
-of hell for a hundred æons, but O! may this youth
-live!” It was not to be; Sama expired, while all
-the wood birds flocking together tried tenderly to
-staunch the blood flowing from his breast.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I cannot tell the whole story, which has a strong
-suggestion of some poetic fancy of Maeterlinck. In
-the end Sama is brought back to life, and the eyes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>of his parents are opened. The king is admonished
-to return to his dominions and no longer take life
-in the chase.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In a Jaina hermit story a king goes hunting with
-a great attendance of horses, elephants, chariots, and
-men on foot. He pursues the deer on horseback,
-and, keen on his sport, he does not notice, as he
-aims the arrow, that the frightened creature is fleeing
-to a holy ascetic who is wise in the study of sacred
-things. Of a sudden, he beholds the dead deer and
-the holy man standing by it. A dreadful fear seizes
-the king: he might have killed the monk! He gets
-off his horse, bows low, and prays to be forgiven.
-The venerable saint was plunged in thought and
-made no answer; the king grew more and more
-alarmed at his silence. “Answer me, I pray, Reverend
-Sir,” he said. “Be without fear, O king,” replied
-the monk, “but grant safety to others also. In this
-transient world of living things, why are you prone
-to cruelty?” Why should the king cling to kingly
-power, since one day he must part with everything?
-Life and beauty pass, wife and children, friends and
-kindred—they will follow no man in death: what
-do follow him are his deeds, good or evil. When
-he heard that, the king renounced his kingdom and
-became an ascetic. “A certain nobleman who had
-turned monk said to him, ‘As you look so happy,
-you must have peace of mind.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It may be a wrong conception of life that makes
-men seek rest on this side of the grave, but one can
-well believe that the finding of it brings a happiness
-beyond our common ken. For one thing, he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>who lives with Nature surely never knows <i>ennui</i>.
-The most marvellous of dramatic poems unfolds
-its pages before his eyes. Nor does he know loneliness;
-even one little creature in a prisoner’s cell gives
-a sense of companionship, and the recluse in the
-wild has the society of all the furred and feathered
-hosts. The greatest poet of the later literature of
-India, Kálidása, draws an exquisite picture of the
-surroundings of an Indian heritage:—</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“See under yon trees the hallowed grains which
-have been scattered on the ground, while the tender
-female parrots were feeding their unfledged young
-ones in their pendant nests.... Look at the young
-fawns, which, having acquired confidence in man, and
-accustomed themselves to the sound of his voice,
-frisk at pleasure, without varying their course. See,
-too, where the young roes graze, without apprehension
-from our approach, on the lawn before
-yonder garden, where the tops of the sacrificial grass,
-cut for some religious rite, are sprinkled round.”<a id='r9' /><a href='#f9' class='c017'><sup>[9]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r9'>9</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Sir William Jones’s translation.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the play of <i>Sacontala</i>—which filled Goethe with
-a delight crystallised in his immortal quatrain—no
-scene is so impressed by genuine feeling and none
-so artistic in its admirable simplicity as that in which
-the heroine takes leave of her childhood’s pet.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The hermit, who has been the foster-father of
-Sacontala, is dismissing her upon her journey to the
-exalted bridegroom who awaits her. At the last
-moment she says to him: “My father, see you there
-my pet deer, grazing close to the hermitage? She
-expects soon to fawn, and even now the weight of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>the little ones she carries hinders her movements.
-Do not forget to send me word when she becomes
-a mother.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The hermit, Canna, promises that it shall be done;
-then as Sacontala moves away, she feels herself
-drawn back, and turning round, she says, “What
-can this be fastened to my dress?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Canna answers:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“My daughter,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>It is the little fawn, thy foster child.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Poor helpless orphan! It remembers well</div>
- <div class='line in1'>How with a mother’s tenderness and love</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Thou didst protect it, and with grains of rice</div>
- <div class='line in1'>From thine own hand didst daily nourish it,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>And ever and anon when some sharp thorn</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Had pierced its mouth, how gently thou didst tend</div>
- <div class='line in1'>The bleeding wound and pour in healing balm.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>The grateful nursling clings to its protectress,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Mutely imploring leave to follow her.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>Sacontala replies, weeping, “My poor little fawn,
-dost thou ask to follow an unhappy wretch who
-hesitates not to desert her companions? When thy
-mother died, soon after thy birth, I supplied her place
-and reared thee with my own hands, and now that
-thy second mother is about to leave thee, who will
-care for thee? My father, be thou a mother to her.
-My child, go back and be a daughter to my father!”</p>
-
-<hr class='c023' />
-
-<p class='c008'>It is the fatality of the dramatist that he cannot
-stamp with truth sentiments which are not sure
-of a response from his audience: he must strike
-the keyboard of his race. We can imagine how
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>thoroughly an Indian audience would enter into the
-sentiment of this charming scene. To the little
-Indian girl, who was still only a child of thirteen
-or fourteen, the favourite animal did not appear as
-a toy, or even as a simple playmate. It was the
-object of grave and thoughtful care, and it received
-the first outpouring of what would one day be
-maternal love.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>
- <h2 id='ch16' class='c006'>XVI<br /> <br />THE GROWTH OF MODERN IDEAS ON ANIMALS</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_7 c007'>THE last age of antiquity was an age of yeast.
-Ideas were in fermentation; religious questions
-came to be regarded as “interesting”—just as they
-are now. The spirit of inquiry took the place of
-placid acceptance on the one hand, and placid indifference
-on the other. It was natural that there
-should be a rebound from the effort of Augustus to
-re-order religion on an Imperial, conventional, and unemotional
-basis. Then, too, Rome, which had never
-been really Italian except in the sublime previsions
-of Virgil, grew every day more cosmopolitan: the
-denizens of the discovered world found their way
-thither on business, for pleasure, as slaves—the influence
-of these last not being the least important
-factor, though its extent and character are not easy
-to define. Everything tended to foment a religious
-unrest which took the form of one of those “returns
-to the East” that are ever destined to recur: the spiritual
-sense of the Western world became Orientalised.
-The worship of Isis and Serapis and much more of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>Mithra proved to be more exciting than the worship
-of the Greek and Roman gods which represented
-Nature and law, while the new cults proposed to
-raise the veil on what transcends natural perception.
-No doubt the atmosphere of the East itself favoured
-their rapid development; the traveller in North
-Africa must be struck by the extraordinary frequency
-with which the symbols of Mithraism recur in the
-sculpture and mosaics of that once great Roman dependency.
-Evidently the birthland of St. Augustine
-bred in the matter-of-fact Roman colonist the same
-nostalgia for the Unknowable which even now a
-lonely night under the stars of the Sahara awakes in
-the dullest European soul. Personal immortality as
-a paramount doctrine; a further life more real than
-this one; ritual purification, redemption by sacrifice,
-mystical union with deity; these were among the
-un-Roman and even anti-Roman conceptions which
-lay behind the new, strange propaganda, and prepared
-the way for the diffusion of Christianity. With
-the Italian peasants who clung to the unmixed older
-faith no progress was made till persecution could be
-called in as an auxiliary.</p>
-
-<div id='i336' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i336.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='small'><i>Photo:</i> <i>Mansell.</i></span><br />ASSYRIAN LION AND LIONESS IN PARADISE PARK.<br />British Museum.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>In such a time it was a psychological certainty
-that among the other Eastern ideas which were
-coming to the fore, would be those ideas about
-animals which are roughly classed under the head
-of Pythagoreanism. The apostles of Christ in their
-journeys East or West might have met a singular
-individual who was carrying on an apostolate of his
-own, the one clear and unyielding point of which
-was the abolition of animal sacrifices. This was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>Apollonius, of Tyana, our knowledge of whom is
-derived from the biography, in part perhaps fanciful,
-written by Philostratus in the third century to please
-the Empress Julia Domna, who was interested in
-occult matters. Apollonius worked wonders as well
-attested as those, for instance, of the Russian Father
-John, but he seems to have considered his power
-the naturally produced result of an austere life and
-abstinence from flesh and wine which is a thoroughly
-Buddhist or Jaina theory. He was a theosophist
-who refrained from attacking the outward forms and
-observances of established religion when they did
-not seem to him either to be cruel or else incongruous
-to the degree of preventing a reverential
-spirit. He did not entirely understand that this
-degree is movable, any more than do those persons
-who want to substitute Gregorian chants for opera
-airs in rural Italian churches. He did not mind the
-Greek statues which appealed to the imagination by
-suggestions of beauty, but he blamed the Egyptians
-for representing deity as a dog or an ibis; if they
-disliked images of stone why not have a temple
-where there were no images of any kind—where all
-was left to the inner vision of the worshipper? In
-which question, almost accidentally, Apollonius throws
-out a hint of the highest form of spiritual worship.</p>
-
-<div id='i338' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i338.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='small'><i>Photo:</i> <i>Alinari.</i></span><br />LAMBS.<br /><span class='small'>(<i>Relief on fifth century tomb at Ravenna.</i>)</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The keenly intellectual thinkers whom we call the
-Fathers of the Church saw that the majority of the
-ideas then agitating men’s minds might find a quietus
-in Christian dogma which suited them a great deal
-better than the vague and often grotesque shape
-they had worn hitherto. But there was a residuum
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>of which they felt an instinctive fear, and peculiar
-notions about animals had the ill-luck of being placed
-at the head of these. It could not have been a
-fortunate coincidence that two of the most prominent
-men who held them in the early centuries were declared
-foes of the new faith—Celsus and Porphyry.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>When the Church triumphed, the treatise written
-by Celsus would have been no doubt entirely destroyed
-like other works of the same sort, had not
-Origen made a great number of quotations from it
-for the purpose of confutation. Celsus was no <i>borné</i>
-disputant after the fashion of the Octavius of Minucius,
-but a man of almost encyclopædic learning; if
-he was a less fair critic than he held himself to be,
-it was less from want of information than from want
-of that sympathy which is needful for true comprehension.
-The inner feeling of such a man towards
-the Christian Sectaries was not near so much that
-of a Torquemada in regard to heretics as that of an
-old-fashioned Tory upholder of throne and altar
-towards dissent fifty years ago. It was a feeling of
-social aloofness.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Yet Celsus wished to be fair, and he had studied
-religions to enough purpose not to condemn as
-delusion or untruth everything that a superficial
-adversary would have rejected at once; for instance,
-he was ready to allow that the appearances of Christ
-to His disciples after the Crucifixion might be
-explained as psychical phenomena. Possibly he
-believed that truth, not falsehood, was the ultimate
-basis of all religions as was the belief of Apollonius
-before him. In some respects Celsus was more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>unprejudiced than Apollonius; this can be observed
-in his remarks on Egyptian zoomorphism; it causes
-surprise, he says, when you go inside one of the
-splendid Egyptian temples to find for divinity a cat,
-a monkey or a crocodile, but to the initiated they
-are symbols which under an allegorical veil turn
-people to honour imperishable ideas, not perishable
-animals as the vulgar suppose.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It may have been his recondite researches which
-led Celsus to take up the question of the intelligence
-of animals and the conclusions to be drawn from it.
-He only touches lightly on the subject of their origin;
-he seems to lean towards the theory that the soul,
-life, mind, only, is made by God, the corruptible and
-passing body being a natural growth or perhaps the
-handiwork of inferior spirits. He denied that reason
-belonged to man alone, and still more strongly that
-God created the universe for man rather than for the
-other animals. Only absurd pride, he says, can engender
-such a thought. He knew very well that
-this, far from being a new idea, was the normal view
-of the ancient world from Aristotle to Cicero; the
-distinguished men who disagreed with it had never
-won more than a small minority over to their opinion.
-Celsus takes Euripides to task for saying—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“The sun and moon are made to serve mankind.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Why mankind? he asks; why not ants and flies?
-Night serves them also for rest and day for seeing
-and working. If it be said that we are the king of
-animals because we hunt and catch them or because
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>we eat them, why not say that we are made for them
-because they hunt and catch us? Indeed, they are
-better provided than we, for while we need arms and
-nets to take them and the help of several men and
-dogs, Nature furnishes them with the arms they
-require, and we are, as it were, made dependent on
-them. You want to make out that God gave you
-the power to take and kill wild animals, but at the
-time when there were no towns or civilisation or
-society or arms or nets, animals probably caught and
-devoured men while men never caught animals. In
-this way, it looks more as if God subjected man to
-animals than <i>vice versâ</i>. If men seem different from
-animals because they build cities, make laws, obey
-magistrates and rulers, you ought to note that this
-amounts to nothing at all, since ants and bees do just
-the same. Bees have their “kings”; some command,
-others obey; they make war, win battles, take
-prisoner the vanquished; they have their towns
-and quarters; their work is regulated by fixed
-periods, they punish the lazy and cowardly—at least
-they expel the drones. As to ants, they practise
-the science of social economy just as well as we do;
-they have granaries which they fill with provisions
-for the winter; they help their comrades if they see
-them bending under the weight of a burden; they
-carry their dead to places which become family
-tombs; they address each other when they meet:
-whence it follows that they never lose their way. We
-must conclude, therefore, that they have complete
-reasoning powers and common notions of certain
-general truths, and that they have a language and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>know how to express fortuitous events. If some
-one, then, looked down from the height of heaven
-on to the earth, what difference would he see between
-our actions and those of ants and bees? If
-man is proud of knowing magical secrets, serpents
-and eagles know a great deal more, for they use
-many preservatives against poisons and diseases, and
-are acquainted with the virtues of certain stones with
-which they cure the ailments of their young ones,
-while if men find out such a cure they think
-they have hit on the greatest wonder in the
-world. Finally, if man imagines that he is superior
-to animals because he possesses notion of God, let
-him know that it is the same with many of them;
-what is there more divine, in fact, than to foresee
-and to foretell the future? Now for that purpose
-men have recourse to animals, especially to birds,
-and all our soothsayers do is to understand the
-indications given by these. If, therefore, birds
-and other prophetic animals show us by signs the
-future as it is revealed to them by God, it proves
-that they have closer relations with the deity than
-we; that they are wiser and more loved by God.
-Very enlightened men have thought that they understood
-the language of certain animals, and in proof
-of this they have been known to predict that birds
-would do something or go somewhere, and this was
-observed to come true. No one keeps an oath
-more religiously or is more faithful to God than the
-elephant, which shows that he knows Him.</p>
-<p class='c008'>Hence, concludes Celsus, the universe has <i>not</i>
-been made for man any more than for the eagle or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>the dolphin. Everything was created not in the
-interest of something else, but to contribute to the
-harmony of the whole in order that the world might
-be absolutely perfect. God takes care of the universe;
-it is that which His providence never forsakes,
-that which never falls into disorder. God no
-more gets angry with men than with rats or monkeys:
-everything keeps its appointed place.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In this passage Celsus rises to a higher level than in
-any other of the excerpts preserved for us by Origen.
-The tone of irony which usually characterises him
-disappears in this dignified affirmation of supreme
-wisdom justified of itself not by the little standards
-of men—or ants. It must be recognised as a lofty
-conception, commanding the respect of those who
-differ from it, and reconciling all apparent difficulties
-and contradictions forced upon us by the contemplation
-of men and Nature. But it brings no water
-from the cool spring to souls dying of thirst; it expounds
-in the clearest way and even in the noblest
-way the very thought which drove men into the
-Christian fold far more surely than the learned
-apologies of controversialists like Origen; the
-thought of the crushing unimportance of the individual.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The least attentive reader must be struck by the
-real knowledge of natural history shown by Celsus:
-his ants are nearly as conscientiously observed as
-Lord Avebury’s. Yet a certain suspicion of conscious
-exaggeration detracts from the seriousness of
-his arguments; he strikes one as more sincere in
-disbelieving than in believing. A modern writer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>has remarked that Celsus in the second half of the
-second century forestalled Darwin in the second half
-of the nineteenth by denying human ascendancy and
-contending that man may be a little lower than the
-brute. But it scarcely seems certain whether he was
-convinced by his own reasoning or was not rather
-replying by paradoxes to what he considered the
-still greater paradoxes of Christian theology.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The shadow of no such doubt falls on the pages
-of the neoplatonists Plotinus and Porphyry. To
-them the destiny of animals was not an academic
-problem but an obsession. The questions which
-Heine’s young man asked of the waves: “What
-signifies man? Whence does he come? Whither
-does he go?” were asked by them with passionate
-earnestness in their application to all sentient things.
-Plotinus reasoned, with great force, that intelligent
-beast-souls must be like the soul of man since in
-itself the essence of the soul could not be different.
-Porphyry (born at Tyre, <span class='fss'>A.D.</span> 233), accepting this
-postulate that animals possess an intelligent soul like
-ours, went on to declare that it was therefore unlawful
-to kill or feed on them under any circumstances. If
-justice is due to rational beings, how is it possible to
-evade the conclusion that we are also bound to act
-justly towards the races below us? He who loves
-all animated nature will not single out one tribe of
-innocent beings for hatred; if he loves the whole
-he will love every part, and, above all, that part
-which is most closely allied to ourselves. Porphyry
-was quite ready to admit that animals in their own
-way made use of words, and he mentions Melampus
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>and Apollonius as among the philosophers who
-understood their language. He quoted with approval
-the laws supposed to have been framed by
-Triptolemus in the reign of Pandion, fifth king of
-Athens: “Honour your parents; make oblations of
-your fruits to the gods; hurt not any living creature.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Neoplatonism penetrated into the early Church,
-but divested of its views on animal destiny; even
-the Catholic neoplatonist Boëthius, though he was
-sensitively fond of animals (witness his lines about
-caged birds), yet took the extreme view of the hard-and-fast
-line of separation, as may be seen by his
-poem on the “downward head,” which he interpreted
-to indicate the earth-bound nature of all flesh save
-man. Birds, by the by, and even fishes, not to speak
-of camel-leopards, can hardly be said to have a
-“downward head.” Meanwhile, the other manner
-of feeling, if not of thinking, reasserted its power
-as it always will, for it belongs to the primal things.
-Excluded from the broad road, it came in by the
-narrow way—the way that leads to heaven. In the
-wake of the Christian Guru came a whole troop of
-charming beasts, little less saintly and miraculous
-than their holy protectors, and thus preachers of the
-religion of love were spared the reproach of showing
-an all-unloving face towards creatures that could
-return love for love as well as most and better than
-many of the human kind. The saint saved the
-situation, and the Church wisely left him alone to
-discourse to his brother fishes or his sister turtle-doves,
-without inquiring about the strict orthodoxy
-of the proceeding.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>Unhappily the more direct inheritors of neoplatonist
-dreams were not left alone. A trend of tendency
-towards Pythagoreanism runs through their different
-developments from Philo to the Gnostics, from the
-Gnostics, through the Paulicians to the Albigenses.
-It passes out of our sight when these were suppressed
-in the thirteenth century by the most sanguinary
-persecution that the world has seen, but before long
-it was to reappear in one shape or another, and
-we may be sure that the thread was never wholly
-lost.</p>
-
-<div id='i346' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i346.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>“IL BUON PASTORE.”<br /><span class='small'>(<i>Mosaic at Ravenna.</i>)</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>An effort has been made to prove that the official
-as well as the unofficial Church always favoured
-humanity to animals. The result of this effort has
-been wholly good; not only has it produced a delightful
-volume,<a id='r10' /><a href='#f10' class='c017'><sup>[10]</sup></a> but, indirectly, it was the cause of
-Pope Pius X. pronouncing a blessing on every one
-who is working for the prevention of cruelty to
-animals throughout the world. <i>Roma locuta est.</i> To
-me this appears to be a landmark in ethics of first-class
-importance. Nevertheless, historically speaking,
-it is difficult to resist the conclusion that the diametrically
-opposite view expressed by Father Rickaby
-in a manual intended for use in the Jesuit College at
-Stonyhurst,<a id='r11' /><a href='#f11' class='c017'><sup>[11]</sup></a> more correctly gives the measure of what
-had been the practical teaching of the Church in all
-these ages. Even now, authoritative Catholics, when
-enjoining humanity to animals, are careful to add
-that man has “no duties” towards them, though
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>they may modify this by saying with Cardinal
-Manning (the most kind-hearted of men) that he
-owes “a sevenfold obligation” to their Creator to
-treat them well. Was it surprising that the Neapolitan
-peasant who heard from his priest that he
-had no duties to his ass went home, not to excogitate
-the sevenfold obligation but to belabour the poor
-beast soundly? Though the distinction is capable
-of philosophical defence, granted the premises, to
-plain people it looks like a juggling with words.
-When St. Philip Neri said to a monk who put his
-foot on a lizard, “What has the poor creature done
-to you?” he implied a duty to the animal, the duty
-of reciprocity. He spoke with the voice of Nature
-and forgot, for the moment, that animals were not
-“moral persons” nor “endowed with reason,” and
-that hence they could have “no rights.”</p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r10'>10</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>“L’Église et la Pitié envers les animaux,” Paris, 1903. An
-English edition has been published by Messrs. Burns and Oates.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r11'>11</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>“Moral Philosophy,” p. 250.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>At an early date, in the heart of official Catholicism,
-an inconsistency appeared which is less easily explained
-than homilies composed for fishes or hymns
-for birds; namely, the strange business of animal
-prosecutions. Without inquiring exactly what an
-animal is, it is easy to bestow upon it either blessings
-or curses. The beautiful rite of the blessing of the
-beasts which is still performed once a year in many
-places involves no doctrinal crux. In Corsica the
-priest goes up to the high mountain <i>plateaux</i> where
-the animals pasture in the summer, and after saying
-Mass in presence of all the four-footed family, he
-solemnly blesses them and exhorts them to prosper
-and multiply. It is a delightful scene, but it does
-not affect the conception of the moral status of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>animals, nor would that conception be affected by
-a right-down malediction or order to quit. What,
-however, can be thought of a regular trial of inconvenient
-or offending animals in which great care
-is taken, to keep up the appearance of fair-play to
-the defendants? Our first impression is, that it
-must be an elaborate comedy; but a study of the
-facts makes it impossible to accept this theory.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The earliest allusions to such trials that seem to
-exist belong to the ninth century, which does not
-prove that they were the first of the kind. One trial
-took place in 824 <span class='fss'>A.D.</span> The Council of Worms decided
-in 866 that if a man has been killed by bees
-they ought to suffer death, “but,” added the judgment,
-“it will be permissible to eat their honey.”
-A relic of the same order of ideas lingers in the
-habit some people have of shooting a horse which
-has caused a fatal accident, often the direct consequence
-of bad riding or bad driving. The earlier
-beast trials of which we have knowledge were conducted
-by laymen, the latter by ecclesiastics, which
-suggests their origin in a folk-practice. A good,
-characteristic instance began on September 5, 1370.
-The young son of a Burgundian swineherd had been
-killed by three sows which seemed to have feared
-an attack on one of their young ones. All members
-of the herd were arrested as accomplices, which was
-a serious matter to their owners, the inmates of a
-neighbouring convent, as the animals, if convicted,
-would be burnt and their ashes buried. The prior
-pointed out that three sows alone were guilty; surely
-the rest of the pigs ought to be acquitted. Justice
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>did not move quickly in those times; it was on
-September 12, 1379, that the Duke of Burgundy
-delivered judgment; only the three guilty sows and
-one young pig (what had <i>it</i> done?) were to be executed;
-the others were set at liberty “notwithstanding
-that they had seen the death of the boy without
-defending him.” Were the original ones all alive
-after nine years? If so, would so long a respite
-have been granted them had no legal proceedings
-been instituted?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>An important trial took place in Savoy in the year
-1587. The accused was a certain fly. Two suitable
-advocates were assigned to the insects, who argued
-on their behalf that these creatures were created
-before man, and had been blessed by God, who gave
-them the right to feed on grass, and for all these and
-other good reasons the flies were in their right when
-they occupied the vineyards of the Commune; they
-simply availed themselves of a legitimate privilege
-conformable to Divine and natural law. The plaintiffs’
-advocate retorted that the Bible and common
-sense showed animals to be created for the utility of
-man; hence they could not have the right to cause
-him loss, to which the counsel for the insects replied
-that man had the right to command animals, no
-doubt, but not to persecute, excommunicate and
-interdict them when they were merely conforming
-to natural law “which is eternal and immutable like
-the Divine.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The judges were so deeply impressed by this
-pleading that to cut the case short, which seemed
-to be going against him, the Mayor of St. Julien
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>hastened to propose a compromise; he offered a
-piece of land where the flies might find a safe retreat
-and live out their days in peace and plenty.
-The offer was accepted. On June 29, 1587, the
-citizens of St. Julien were bidden to the market
-square by ringing the church bells, and after a short
-discussion they ratified the agreement which handed
-over a large piece of land to the exclusive use of
-the insects. Hope was expressed that they would
-be entirely satisfied with the bargain. A right of
-way across the land was, indeed, reserved to the
-public, but no harm whatever was to be done to
-the flies on their own territory. It was stated in
-the formal contract that the reservation was ceded
-to the insects in perpetuity.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>All was going well, when it transpired that, in
-the meantime, the flies’ advocates had paid a visit
-to that much-vaunted piece of land, and when they
-returned, they raised the strongest objection to it
-on the score that it was arid, sterile, and produced
-nothing. The mayor’s counsel disputed this; the
-land, he said, produced no end of nice small trees
-and bushes, the very things for the nutrition of insects.
-The judges intervened by ordering a survey
-to find out the real truth, which survey cost three
-florins. There, alas! the story ends, for the winding
-up of the affair is not to be found in the archives
-of St. Julien.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Records of 144 such trials have come to light.
-Of the two I have described, it will be remarked
-that one belongs, as it were, to criminal and the
-other to civil law. The last class is the most
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>curious. No doubt the trial of flies or locusts
-was resorted to when other means of getting rid of
-them had failed; it was hoped, somehow, that the
-elaborate appearance of fair-play would bring about
-a result not to be obtained by violence. We can
-hardly resist the inference that they involved some
-sort of recognition or intuition of animals’ rights
-and even of animal intelligence.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the dawn of modern literature animals played
-a large, though artificial, part which must not be
-quite ignored on account of its artificiality, because
-in the Bestiaries as in the Æsopic and Oriental fables
-from which they were mainly derived, there was an
-inextricable tangle of observations of the real creature
-and arbitrary ascription to him of human
-qualities and adventures. At last they became a
-mere method for attacking political or ecclesiastical
-abuses, but their great popularity was as much due
-to their outer as to their inner sense. There is not
-any doubt that at the same time floods of Eastern
-fairy-tales were migrating to Europe, and in these
-the most highly appreciated hero was always the
-friendly beast. In a romance of the thirteenth century
-called “Guillaume de Palerme” all previous
-marvels of this kind were outdone by the story of
-a Sicilian prince who was befriended by a were-wolf!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is not generally remembered that the Indian
-or Buddhist view of animals must have been pretty
-well known in Europe at least as early as the fourteenth
-century. The account of the monastery
-“where many strange beasts of divers kinds do live
-upon a hill,” which Fra Odoric, of Pordenone,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>dictated in 1330, is a description, both accurate and
-charming, of a Buddhist animal refuge, and in the
-version given of it in Mandeville’s “Travels,” if
-not in the original, it must have been read by nearly
-every one who could read, for no book ever had so
-vast a diffusion as the “Travels” of the elusive
-Knight of St. Albans.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>With the Italian Renaissance came the full modern
-æsthetic enjoyment of animals; the admiration of
-their beauty and perfection which had been appreciated,
-of course, long before, but not quite in the
-same spirit. The all-round gifted Leo Battista
-Alberti in the fifteenth century took the same
-critical delight in the points of a fine animal that
-a modern expert would take. He was a splendid
-rider, but his interest was not confined to horses;
-his love for his dog is shown by his having pronounced
-a funeral oration over him. We feel that
-with such men humanity towards animals was a part
-of good manners. “We owe justice to men,” said
-the intensely civilised Montaigne, “and grace and
-benignity to other creatures that are capable of it;
-there is a natural commerce and mutual obligation
-between them and us.” Sir Arthur Helps, speaking
-of this, called it “using courtesy to animals,” and when
-one comes to think of it, is not such “courtesy” the
-particular mark and sign of a man of good breeding
-in all ages?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Renaissance brought with it something deeper
-than a wonderful quickening of the æsthetic sense
-in all directions; it also brought that spiritual quickening
-which is the co-efficient of every really upward
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>movement of the human mind. Leonardo da Vinci,
-greatest of artist-humanists, inveighed against cruelty
-in words that might have been written by Plutarch
-or Porphyry. His sympathies were with the vegetarian.
-Meanwhile, Northern Churchmen who went
-to Rome were scandalised to hear it said in high
-ecclesiastical society that there was no difference
-between the souls of men and beasts. An attempt
-was made to convert Erasmus to this doctrine by
-means of certain extracts from Pliny. Roman
-society, at that time, was so little serious that one
-cannot believe it to have been serious even in its
-heterodoxy. But speculations more or less of the
-same sort were taken up by men of a very different
-stamp; it was to be foreseen that animals would have
-their portion of attention in the ponderings of the
-god-intoxicated musers who have been called the
-Sceptics of the Renaissance. For the proof that
-they did receive it we have only to turn to the pages
-of Giordano Bruno. “Every part of creation has
-its share in being and cognition.” “There is a
-difference, not in quality, but in quantity, between
-the soul of man, the animal and the plant.” “Among
-horses, elephants and dogs there are single individuals
-which appear to have almost the understanding
-of men.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Bruno’s prophetic guess that instinct is inherited
-habit might have saved Descartes (who was much
-indebted to the Nolan) from giving his name an
-unenviable immortality in connexion with the theory
-which is nearly all that the ignorant know now of
-Cartesian philosophy. This was the theory that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span>animals are automata, a sophism that may be said
-to have swept Europe, though it was not long
-before it provoked a reaction. Descartes got this
-idea from the very place where it was likely to
-originate, from Spain. A certain Gomez Pereira
-advanced it before Descartes made it his own,
-which even led to a charge of plagiarism. “Because
-a clock marks time and a bee makes honey, we
-are to consider the clock and the bee to be machines.
-Because they do one thing better than man and no
-other thing so well as man, we are to conclude that
-they have no mind, but that Nature acts within
-them, holding their organs at her disposal.” “Nor
-are we to think, as the ancients do, that animals
-speak, though we do not know their language, for,
-if that were so, they, having several organs related
-to ours, might as easily communicate with us as
-with each other.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>About this, Huxley showed that an almost imperceptible
-imperfection of the vocal chord may prevent
-articulated sounds. Moreover, the click of the bushmen,
-which is almost their only language, is exceedingly
-like the sounds made by monkeys.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Language, as defined by an eminent Italian man
-of science, Professor Broca, is the faculty of making
-things known, or expressing them by signs or sounds.
-Much the same definition was given by Mivart,
-and if there be a better one, we have still to wait
-for it. Human language is evolved; at one time man
-had it not. The babe in the cradle is without it; the
-deaf mute, in his untaught state, is without it; <i>ergo</i>
-the babe and the deaf mute cannot feel. Poor babes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>and poor deaf mutes should the scientific Loyolas
-of the future adopt this view!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I do not know if any one has remarked that rural
-and primitive folk can never bring themselves to
-believe of any foreign tongue that it is real human
-language like their own. To them it seems a
-jargon of meaningless and uncouth sounds.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Chanet, a follower of Descartes, said that he
-would believe that beasts thought when a beast
-told him so. By what cries of pain, by what looks
-of love, have not beasts told men that they thought!
-Man himself does not think in words in moments
-of profound emotion, whether of grief or joy. <i>He
-cries out</i> or he <i>acts</i>. Thought in its absolutely
-elementary form is <i>action</i>. The mother thinks in
-the kiss she gives her child. The musician thinks in
-music. Perhaps God thinks in constellations. I
-asked a man who had saved many lives by jumping
-into the sea, “What did you think of at the moment
-of doing it?” He replied: “You do not think, or
-you might not do it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The whole trend of philosophic speculation worthy
-of the name lies towards unity, but the Cartesian
-theory would arbitrarily divide even man’s physical
-and sensational nature from that of the other animals.
-To remedy this, Descartes admitted that man was
-just as much an automatic machine as other creatures.
-By what right, then, does he complain when he
-happens to have a toothache? Because, says Descartes
-triumphantly, man has an immortal soul!
-The child thinks in his mother’s womb, but the
-dog, which after scenting two roads takes the third
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>without demur, sure that his master must have gone
-that way, this dog is acting “by springs” and
-neither thinks nor feels at all.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The misuse of the ill-treated word “Nature”
-cannot hide the fact that the beginning, middle, and
-end of Descartes’ argument rests on a perpetually
-recurrent miracle. Descartes confessed as much
-when he said that God <i>could</i> make animals as
-machines, so why should it be impossible that He
-<i>had</i> made them as machines? Voltaire’s clear reason
-revolted at this logic; he declared it to be absurd to
-imagine that God had given animals organs of feeling
-in order that they might <i>not</i> feel. He would have
-endorsed Professor Romanes’ saying that “the theory
-of animal automatism which is usually attributed to
-Descartes can never be accepted by common sense.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>On the other hand, while Descartes was being
-persecuted by the Church for opinions which he
-did <i>not</i> hold, this particular opinion of his was seized
-upon by Catholic divines as a vindication of creation.
-Pascal so regarded it. The miraculous element
-in it did not disturb him. Malebranche said though
-opposed by reason it was approved by faith.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Descartes said that the idea that animals think
-and feel is a relic of childhood. The idea that they
-do <i>not</i> think and feel might be more truly called a
-relic of that darkest side of perverse childhood,
-the existence of which we are all fain to forget.
-Whoever has seen a little child throwing stones at
-a toad on the highway—and sad because his hands
-are too small to take up the bigger stones to throw—will
-understand what I mean. I do not wish to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>allude more than slightly to a point which is of too
-much importance to pass over in silence. Descartes
-was a vivisector: so were the pious people at Port
-Royal who embraced his teaching with enthusiasm,
-and liked to hear the howls of the dogs they
-vivisected. M. Émile Ferrière, in his work “L’âme
-est la fonction du cerveau,” sees in the “souls”
-of beasts exactly the same nature as in the “soul”
-of man; the difference, he maintains, is one of
-degree; though generally inferior, it is sometimes
-superior to “souls” of certain human groups. Here
-is a candid materialist who deserves respect. But
-there is a school of physiologists nowadays which
-carries on an unflagging campaign in favour of belief
-in unconscious animal machines which work by
-springs, while denying that there is a God to wind
-up the springs, and in conscious human machines,
-while denying that there is a soul, independent
-of matter, which might account for the difference.
-“The wish is father to the thought.” <i>Non ragionam
-di lor ma guarda e passa.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The strongest of all reasons for dismissing the
-machine theory of animals is their variety of idiosyncrasy.
-It is said that to the shepherd no two sheep
-look alike; it is certain that no two animals of any
-kind have the same characters. Some are selfish,
-some are unselfish, some are gentle, some irretrievably
-ill-tempered both to each other and to
-man. Some animals do not show much regret
-at the loss of their offspring, with others it is
-manifestly the reverse. Édouard Quinet described
-how on one occasion, when visiting the lions’ cage
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>in the Jardin des Plantes, he observed the lion
-gently place his large paw on the forehead of the
-lioness, and so they remained, grave and still, all the
-time he was there. He asked Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire,
-who was with him, what it meant. “Their lion
-cub,” was the answer, “died this morning.” “Pity,
-benevolence, sympathy, could be read on those
-rugged faces.” That these qualities are often absent
-in sentient beings what man can doubt? But they
-are not to be found in the best mechanical animals
-in all Nuremberg!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Nor do machines commonly act as did the dog
-in the following true story which relates to something
-that happened during the earthquake of Ash
-Wednesday, 1887. At a place called Ceriana on the
-Italian Riviera a poor man who earned his living as
-a milk-carrier was supposed to have gone on his
-ordinary rounds, on which he was used to start at
-four o’clock in the morning. No one, therefore,
-thought of inquiring about him, but the fact was,
-that having taken a glass or two of wine in honour
-of the last night of the Carnival, he had overslept
-himself, and was still asleep when his cottage fell
-down upon him. He had a large dog which drew
-the little cart bearing the milk up the mountain paths,
-and the dog by chance was outside and safe. He
-found out where his master lay and succeeded
-in clearing the masonry so as to uncover his head,
-which was bleeding. He then set to work to lick the
-wounds; but, seeing that they went on bleeding, and
-also that he could not liberate the rest of the body, he
-started in search of help, running up and down among
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>the surrounding ruins till he met some one, whom he
-caught hold of by the clothes. The man, however,
-thought that the dog was mad and fled for his life.
-Luckily, another man guessed the truth and allowed
-himself to be guided to the spot. History repeats
-itself, at least the history of devoted dogs. The
-same thing happened after the greater earthquake at
-Messina, when a man, one of the last to be saved,
-was discovered through the insistence of his little dog,
-who approached a group of searchers and whined
-piteously till he persuaded them to follow him to the
-ruins which concealed his master.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Nor, again, do machines act like a cockatoo I heard
-of from a witness of the scene. A lady was visiting
-the zoological gardens in a German town with her
-daughter, when the little girl was seized with the wish
-to possess a pretty moulted feather which was lying on
-the ground in the parrots’ cage. She made several
-attempts to reach it, but in vain. Seeing which, an
-old cockatoo hopped solemnly from the back of the
-cage and taking up the feather in his beak, handed
-it to the child with an air of the greatest politeness.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One of the first upholders of the idea of legislative
-protection of animals was Jeremy Bentham, who
-asked why the law should refuse its protection to
-any sensitive being? Most people forget the degree
-of opposition which was encountered by the earlier
-combatants of cruel practices and pastimes in
-England. Cobbett made a furious attack on a
-clergyman who (to his honour) was agitating for
-the suppression of bull-baiting, “the poor man’s
-sport,” as Cobbett called it. That it demoralised
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>the poor man as well as tormented the bull never
-entered into the head of the inimitable wielder of
-English prose, pure and undefiled, who took it
-under his (happily) ineffectual protection. “The
-common law fully sanctions the baiting of bulls,”
-he wrote, “and, I believe, that to sell the flesh of
-a bull which has <i>not</i> been baited is an offence which
-is punishable by that very law to which you appeal”
-(“<i>Political Register</i>,” June, 1802).</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Societies for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
-had, in their day, to undergo almost as much criticism
-and ridicule in England as they now meet with in
-some parts of the Continent. Even the establishment
-of the Dogs’ Home in London raised a storm
-of disapproval, as may be seen by any one who
-turns over the files of the <i>Times</i> for October, 1860.
-If the friends of humanity persevere, the change of
-sentiment which has become an accomplished fact
-in England will, in the end, triumph elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Unfortunately, humane sentiment and humane
-practice do not progress on a level line. As long
-ago as 1782 an English writer named Soame Jenyns
-protested against the wickedness of shooting a bear
-on an inaccessible island of ice, or an eagle on the
-mountain’s top. “We are unable to give life and
-therefore ought not to take it away from the meanest
-insect without sufficient reason.” What would he
-say if he came back to earth to find whole species
-of beautiful winged creatures being destroyed to
-afford a barbarous ornament for women’s heads?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The “discovery” of Indian literature brought
-prominently forward in the West the Indian ideas
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>of animals of which the old travellers had given
-the earliest news. The effect of familiarity with
-those ideas may be traced in many writers, but
-nowhere to such an extent as in the works of
-Schopenhauer, for whom, as for many more obscure
-students, they formed the most attractive and interesting
-part of Oriental lore. Schopenhauer cannot
-speak about animals without using a tone of
-passionate vehemence which was, without doubt,
-genuine. He felt the intense enjoyment in observing
-them which the lonely soul has ever felt, whether
-it belonged to saint or sinner. All his pessimism
-disappears when he leaves the haunts of man for
-the retreats of beasts. What a pleasure it is, he
-says, to watch a wild animal going about undisturbed!
-It shows us our own nature in a simpler
-and more sincere form. “There is only one mendacious
-being in the world, and that is man. Every
-other is true and sincere.” It strikes me that total
-sincerity did not shine on the face of a dog which
-I once saw trotting innocently away, after burying
-a rabbit he had caught in a ploughed field near a
-tree in the hedge—the only tree there was—which
-would make it easy for him to identify the spot.
-But about that I will say no more. The German
-“Friend of the Creature” was indignant at “the
-unpardonable forgetfulness in which the lower animals
-have hitherto been left by the moralists of Europe.”
-The duty of protecting them, neglected by religion,
-falls to the police. Mankind are the devils of the
-earth and animals the souls they torment.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Full of these sentiments, Schopenhauer was prepared
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>to welcome unconditionally the Indian conception
-of the Wheel of Being and to close his
-eyes to its defects. Strauss, too, hailed it as a
-doctrine which “unites the whole of Nature in one
-sacred and mysterious bond”—a bond in which, he
-goes on to say, a breach has been made by the
-Judaism and dualism of Christianity. He might
-have observed that the Church derived her notions
-on the subject rather from Aristotle than from
-Semitic sources.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Schopenhauer came to the conclusion that the
-ill-treatment of animals arose directly from the denial
-to them of immortality, while it was ascribed to men.
-There is and there is not truth in this. When all is
-said, the well-conditioned man always was and always
-will be humane; “the righteous man regardeth the life
-of his beast.” And since people reason to fit their
-acts rather than act to fit their reasoning, he will
-even find a motive for his humanity where others
-find an excuse for the lack of it. Humphry Primatt
-wrote in 1776: “Cruelty to a brute is an injury
-irreparable because there is no future life to be a
-compensation for present afflictions.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Mr. Lecky, in his “History of European Morals,”
-tells of a Cardinal who let himself be bitten by gnats
-because “<i>we</i> have heaven, but these poor creatures
-only present enjoyment!” Could Jaina do more?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Strauss thought that the rising tide of popular
-sentiment about animals was the direct result of
-the abandonment by science of the spiritualistic
-isolation of man from Nature. I suspect that those
-who have worked hardest for animals in the last
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>half-century cared little about the origin of species,
-while it is certain that some professed evolutionists
-have been their worst foes. The fact remains,
-however, that by every rule of logic the theory
-of evolution <i>ought</i> to produce the effect which Strauss
-thought that it had produced. The discovery which
-gives its name to the nineteenth century revolutionises
-the whole philosophic conception of the place of
-animals in the Universe.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Lamarck, whom Cuvier so cruelly attacked, was
-the first to discern the principle of evolution. At
-one time he held the Chair of Zoology at the
-University of Paris; but the opposition which his
-ideas met with crushed him in body, though not in
-soul, and he died blind and in want in 1829, only
-consoled by the care of an admirable daughter. His
-last words are said to have been that it is easier
-to discover a truth than to convince others of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>An Italian named Carlo Lessona was one of the
-first to be convinced. He wrote a work containing
-the phrase, “The intelligence of animals”—which
-work, by the rule then in force, had to be presented
-to the ecclesiastical Censor at Turin to receive his
-permit before publication. The canon who examined
-the book fell upon the words above mentioned, and
-remarked: “This expression, ‘intelligence of animals,’
-will never do!” “But,” said Lessona, “it is commonly
-used in natural history books.” “Oh!” replied the
-canon, “natural history has much need of revision.”<a id='r12' /><a href='#f12' class='c017'><sup>[12]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='fn'>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r12'>12</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See Dr. F. Franzolini’s interesting monograph on animal
-psychology from the point of view of science (“Intelligenza delle
-Bestie,” Udine, 1899).</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span>The great and cautious Darwin said that the
-senses, intuitions, emotions, and faculties, such as
-love, memory, attention, curiosity, imitation, reason,
-of which man boasts, may be found in an incipient,
-or even, sometimes, in a well-developed condition
-in the lower animals. “Man, with all his noble
-qualities, his God-like intellect, still bears in his
-bodily frame the indelible stamp of his lowly origin.
-Our brethren fly in the air, haunt the bushes, and
-swim in the sea.” Darwin agreed with Agassiz in
-recognising in the dog something very like the
-human conscience.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Dr. Arnold said that the whole subject of the
-brute creature was such a painful mystery that he
-dared not approach it. Michelet called animal life
-a “sombre mystery,” and shuddered at the “daily
-murder,” hoping that in another globe “these base
-and cruel fatalities may be spared to us.” It is
-strange to find how many men of very different
-types have wandered without a guide in these
-dark alleys of speculation. A few of them arrived
-at, or thought they had arrived at, a solution.
-Lord Chesterfield wrote that “animals preying on
-each other is a law of Nature which we did not
-make, and which we cannot undo, for if I do not
-eat chickens my cat will eat mice.” But the
-appeal to Nature will not satisfy every one; our
-whole human conscience is a protest against Nature,
-while our moral actions are an attempt to effect
-a compromise. Paley pointed out that the law
-was not good, since we could live without animal
-food and wild beasts could not. He offered
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>another justification, the permission of Scripture.
-This was satisfactory to him, but he must have
-been aware that it waives the question without
-answering it.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Some humane people have taken refuge in the
-automata argument, which is like taking a sleeping-draught
-to cure a broken leg. Others, again, look
-for justice to animals in the one and only hope
-that man possesses of justice to himself; in compensation
-after death for unmerited suffering in this
-life. Leibnitz said that Eternal Justice <i>ought</i> to
-compensate animals for their misfortunes on earth.
-Bishop Butler would not deny a future life to
-animals.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Speaking of her approaching death, Mrs. Somerville
-said: “I shall regret the sky, the sea, with all the
-changes of their beautiful colouring; the earth with
-its verdure and flowers: but far more shall I grieve
-to leave animals who have followed our steps affectionately
-for years, without knowing for certainty
-their ultimate fate, though I firmly believe that the
-living principle is never extinguished. Since the
-atoms of matter are indestructible, as far as we know,
-it is difficult to believe that the spark which gives to
-their union life, memory, affection, intelligence, and
-fidelity, is evanescent.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, seven
-or eight small works, written in Latin in support of
-this thesis, were published in Germany and Sweden.
-Probably in all the world a number, unsuspectedly
-large, of sensitive minds has endorsed the belief
-expressed so well in the lines which Southey wrote
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_366'>366</span>on coming home to find that a favourite old dog
-had been “destroyed” during his absence:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c015'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>... “Mine is no narrow creed;</div>
- <div class='line'>And He who gave thee being did not frame</div>
- <div class='line'>The mystery of life to be the sport</div>
- <div class='line'>Of merciless man! There is another world</div>
- <div class='line'>For all that live and move—a better one!</div>
- <div class='line'>Where the proud bipeds, who would fain confine</div>
- <div class='line'>Infinite Goodness to the little bounds</div>
- <div class='line'>Of their own charity, may envy thee!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>The holders of this “no narrow creed” start with
-all the advantages from the mere point of view of
-dialectics. They can boast that they have placed the
-immortality of the soul on a scientific basis. For truly,
-it is more reasonable to suppose that the soul is
-natural than supernatural, a word invented to clothe
-our ignorance; and, if natural, why not universal?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>They have the right to say, moreover, that they
-and they alone have “justified the ways of God.”
-They alone have admitted all creation that groaneth
-and travaileth to the ultimate guerdon of the “Love
-which moves the sun and other stars.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_367'>367</span>
- <h2 id='idx' class='c006'>INDEX</h2>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<ul class='index c002'>
- <li class='c024'><span class='pageno' id='Page_368'>368</span>Abdâls, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>-<a href='#Page_262'>262</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Abu Djafar al Mausur, Caliph, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Abu Jail, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>-<a href='#Page_243'>243</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Achilles, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>-<a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Adi Granth, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Æsop’s fables</i>, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>-<a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>-<a href='#Page_81'>81</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Aethe, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Aethon, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Afghan ballad, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>-<a href='#Page_243'>243</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>African pastoral tribes, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Agamemnon, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>-<a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Agassiz, <a href='#Page_364'>364</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Agora Temple, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><a id='Ahimsa'></a><i>Ahimsa</i>, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>-<a href='#Page_167'>167</a>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Ahriman, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>-<a href='#Page_126'>126</a>, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>-<a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>-<a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>-<a href='#Page_159'>159</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Ahriman, hymn to, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Ahuna-Vairya, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Ahura Mazda, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>-<a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>-<a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>-<a href='#Page_159'>159</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Alberti, Leo Battista, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>-<a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Albigenses, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Alexander the Great, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Alfonso, King of Spain, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>-<a href='#Page_292'>292</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Alger, W. R., <a href='#Page_286'>286</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Alhambra, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Al Rakîm, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Amatongo, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>-<a href='#Page_109'>109</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Amazulu, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>L’âme est la fonction du cerveau</i>, <a href='#Page_357'>357</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Ammon, Temple of, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Amon Ra, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Amritsar, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><span class='pageno' id='Page_369'>369</span>Anaxandrides, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><a id='Anchorites'></a>Anchorites, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>, <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>-<a href='#Page_254'>254</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Andromache, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Animals, treatment of, in India, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>the purgatory of men, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>;</li>
- <li>slaying of, by Greeks, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>-<a href='#Page_25'>25</a>;</li>
- <li>naming of, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>;</li>
- <li>prophetic powers of, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>-<a href='#Page_28'>28</a>;</li>
- <li>talking, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>;</li>
- <li>Roman treatment of, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>-<a href='#Page_46'>46</a>;</li>
- <li>butchery of, at Colosseum, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>;</li>
- <li>imported for arena, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>-<a href='#Page_52'>52</a>;</li>
- <li>humanity of, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>-<a href='#Page_54'>54</a>;</li>
- <li>performing, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>-<a href='#Page_55'>55</a>;</li>
- <li>Plutarch on kindness to, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>-<a href='#Page_71'>71</a>;</li>
- <li>Plutarch on animal intelligence, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>-<a href='#Page_71'>71</a>;</li>
- <li>instances of discrimination of, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>-<a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;</li>
- <li>domestication of, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>-<a href='#Page_91'>91</a>;</li>
- <li>value of, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>-<a href='#Page_95'>95</a>;</li>
- <li>excuses for killing, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>;</li>
- <li>attitude of savages to, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>-<a href='#Page_108'>108</a>;</li>
- <li>killing of, by priests, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>-<a href='#Page_150'>150</a>;</li>
- <li>Zoroastrian treatment of, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>-<a href='#Page_157'>157</a>;</li>
- <li>in sacred books, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>;</li>
- <li>Hebrew treatment of, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>-<a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;</li>
- <li>hunting of, by Moslems, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>-<a href='#Page_225'>225</a>, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>-<a href='#Page_243'>243</a>;</li>
- <li>musical instinct in, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>-<a href='#Page_246'>246</a>;</li>
- <li>and the Messiah, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>-<a href='#Page_252'>252</a>;</li>
- <li>and saints, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>;</li>
- <li>stories of, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>-<a href='#Page_316'>316</a>;</li>
- <li>theory of Celsus as to intelligence of, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a>-<a href='#Page_344'>344</a>;</li>
- <li>theory of Porphyry, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>;</li>
- <li>the Church and humanity, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a>;</li>
- <li>animal prosecutions, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a>-<a href='#Page_351'>351</a>;</li>
- <li>Renaissance admiration of, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a>-<a href='#Page_353'>353</a>;</li>
- <li>animals and thought, <a href='#Page_355'>355</a>;</li>
- <li>automata</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_370'>370</span>theory, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a>-<a href='#Page_359'>359</a>, <a href='#Page_365'>365</a>;</li>
- <li>societies to protect, <a href='#Page_359'>359</a>-<a href='#Page_360'>360</a>;</li>
- <li>ill-treatment and immortality, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a>;</li>
- <li>principle of evolution, <a href='#Page_363'>363</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c024'>Antelope, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Ants, wisdom of, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>-<a href='#Page_77'>77</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>killing of, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>-<a href='#Page_150'>150</a>;</li>
- <li>Hebrew proverb, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>;</li>
- <li>in the Koran, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>;</li>
- <li>social economy of, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a>-<a href='#Page_342'>342</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c024'>Apis, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Apollo, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Apollonius of Tyana, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>-<a href='#Page_269'>269</a>; <a href='#Page_337'>337</a>-<a href='#Page_340'>340</a>; <a href='#Page_345'>345</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><a id='Apsarases'></a>Apsarases, the, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>-<a href='#Page_280'>280</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Apuleius, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Archæological Congress, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Archetypes (<i>see</i> <a href='#Fravashi'>Fravashi</a>)</li>
- <li class='c024'>Ardâ Vîrâf, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>-<a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Arena, cruelties of the, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>-<a href='#Page_46'>46</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Ariosto, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Aristophanes, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Aristotle, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a>, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Arnold, Dr., <a href='#Page_364'>364</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Arnold, Sir Matthew, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a>-<a href='#Page_303'>303</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Aryans, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>-<a href='#Page_115'>115</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Asceticism, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>-<a href='#Page_183'>183</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Astrachan, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Ataro, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Atharva-Veda, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Atman, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Augustus, <a href='#Page_336'>336</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Automata theory, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a>-<a href='#Page_359'>359</a>, <a href='#Page_365'>365</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Avebury, Lord, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><a id='Avesta'></a>Avesta, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>-<a href='#Page_140'>140</a>, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>-<a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>-<a href='#Page_234'>234</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Bactria, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Baiardo, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Balaam’s ass, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>-<a href='#Page_213'>213</a>, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Balius, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>-<a href='#Page_27'>27</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Balkis, Queen, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Bankes’ horse, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><a id='Banyandeer'></a>Banyan deer, <a href='#Page_327'>327</a>-<a href='#Page_230'>230</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Barbary, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><span class='pageno' id='Page_371'>371</span>Basan, Bulls of, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Basri, Hasan, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Battle of the frogs and mice</i>, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Baudelaire, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Bavieca, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>-<a href='#Page_294'>294</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Bears, legends of, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>-<a href='#Page_89'>89</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Beast tales, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_317'>317</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Beaver (<i>see</i> <a href='#Udra'>Udra</a>)</li>
- <li class='c024'>Bedouins, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Behkaa, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Benares, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Benedict XII., <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Bentham, Jeremy, <a href='#Page_359'>359</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Bhagavad, Gita, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Bion, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Birds, in captivity, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>-<a href='#Page_57'>57</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Plutarch’s views on, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>language of, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>-<a href='#Page_227'>227</a>;</li>
- <li>and St. Francis, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>-<a href='#Page_260'>260</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c024'>Bismarck, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Bi’sm-illah, custom of saying, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Bivar, Ruy Diaz de, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>-<a href='#Page_294'>294</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Blackbird, White, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Blake, Wm., <a href='#Page_251'>251</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Bleeck, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Blessing the beast, rite of, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Boccaccio’s falcon, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Bœotia, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Boëthius, <a href='#Page_345'>345</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Bolingbroke, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Bosanquet, Dr. R. C., <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Brahmans, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Breath from the veldt, A</i>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>British school at Athens, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Broca, Professor, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Browning, Robert, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Bruno, Giordano, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>-<a href='#Page_261'>261</a>, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Bubastis, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Bucephalus, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Buddhism, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>-<a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>-<a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>-<a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>, <a href='#Page_321'>321</a>-<a href='#Page_328'>328</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Buddhist India</i>, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Buffalo of Karileff, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Bull-baiting, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_359'>359</a>-<a href='#Page_360'>360</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><span class='pageno' id='Page_372'>372</span>Bull-fights, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>-<a href='#Page_50'>50</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Bulls, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>-<a href='#Page_146'>146</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Bundehesh</i>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>-<a href='#Page_143'>143</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Burgundy, Duke of, <a href='#Page_349'>349</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Burial, methods of, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>-<a href='#Page_124'>124</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Burkitt, Prof. F. C., <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>-<a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Burns and Oates, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Burns, Robert, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Cæsar, Julius, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Cagliari, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Callaway, Canon, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Cambaleth, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Cambyses, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Camels, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Canna, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a>-<a href='#Page_334'>334</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Carbonaria, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Carlyle, Thos., <a href='#Page_33'>33</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Cartesian philosophy, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a>-<a href='#Page_355'>355</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Carthage, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Cassandra, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Cato, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Cats, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>-<a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>, <a href='#Page_322'>322</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Celsus, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a>-<a href='#Page_344'>344</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Celts, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>-<a href='#Page_274'>274</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Ceriana, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Cervantes, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Chanet, <a href='#Page_355'>355</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Chantal, Mdme. de, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Chariot-racing, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Charles, King (the Peace), <a href='#Page_50'>50</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Chesterfield, Lord, <a href='#Page_364'>364</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Childebert, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>-<a href='#Page_255'>255</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>China, religion of</i>, <a href='#Page_327'>327</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Chinese, belief and folk-lore, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>-<a href='#Page_106'>106</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>saving of animal life, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;</li>
- <li>folk-lore stories, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>-<a href='#Page_308'>308</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>-<a href='#Page_316'>316</a>, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a>-<a href='#Page_330'>330</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c024'>Chinvat, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Choo-Foo-Tsze, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Christianity, approach of, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a>-<a href='#Page_338'>338</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Cicada, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Cicero, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>-<a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Cignani, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><span class='pageno' id='Page_373'>373</span>Cimon, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Circuses, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>-<a href='#Page_55'>55</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Clothilde’s God</i>, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Clovis, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Clytemnestra, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Cobbett, <a href='#Page_359'>359</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Cockatoo, Story of a, <a href='#Page_359'>359</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Colonna, Cardinal, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Colosseum, Butchery at inauguration of, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Comte, Auguste, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Concha, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>-<a href='#Page_58'>58</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Confucianism, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>-<a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Constantinople, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Constantinople, Council at, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Contemporary Review</i>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Copenhagen National Museum, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Corinna, Parrot of, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Corsica, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Crete, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Cuvier, <a href='#Page_363'>363</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Cyrus, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>-<a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Daevas, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>d’Alviella, Count Goblet, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Damascus, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Dante, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>-<a href='#Page_163'>163</a>, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Darmesteter, James, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Darius, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>-<a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Darwin, Charles, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>-<a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>, <a href='#Page_363'>363</a>-<a href='#Page_364'>364</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Darwin, Francis, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Davids, Professor T. W. Rhys, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Deathlessness of souls, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>-<a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Deer (<i>see</i> <a href='#Banyandeer'>Banyan deer</a>)</li>
- <li class='c024'>Dervishes, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>-<a href='#Page_235'>235</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Descartes, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a>-<a href='#Page_357'>357</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Deucalion, dove of, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Diaz, Gil, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Digby, Sir Kenelm, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Dog, grave of a faithful, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Dogs, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>-<a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>-<a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>-<a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>-<a href='#Page_153'>153</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>-<a href='#Page_233'>233</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>-<a href='#Page_308'>308</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>-<a href='#Page_316'>316</a>, <a href='#Page_322'>322</a>-<a href='#Page_324'>324</a>, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a>-<a href='#Page_359'>359</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Dog’s Grave, the, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><span class='pageno' id='Page_374'>374</span>Dolmen-builders, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>-<a href='#Page_93'>93</a>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Domestication of animals, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>-<a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Doughty, Charles M., <a href='#Page_236'>236</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Doukhobors, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Downe, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Draupadi, story of, <a href='#Page_322'>322</a>-<a href='#Page_324'>324</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Dravidians, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>-<a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Duperron, Anquetil, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Eden, Garden of, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>-<a href='#Page_209'>209</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Eden, Garden of (picture by Rubens), <a href='#Page_247'>247</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Edkins, Joseph, D.D., <a href='#Page_327'>327</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>l’Église et la Pitié envers les Animaux</i>, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Egyptian cosmogony, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>-<a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>El Djem, well at, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Elephants, legend of, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>-<a href='#Page_75'>75</a>, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Oriental books, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>;</li>
- <li>white elephant killed by Rustem, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c024'>Eleusinian mysteries, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Elisha and the she-bears, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>-<a href='#Page_249'>249</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Elmocadessi, Azz’Eddin, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Empedocles, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>-<a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Epictetus, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>-<a href='#Page_74'>74</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Epirus, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Erasmus, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Eskimo, the, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>-<a href='#Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Euripides, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Evolution, theory of, <a href='#Page_363'>363</a>-<a href='#Page_365'>365</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Falcon, Persian fable of a, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Faliscus, Gratius, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Fargard XIII., <a href='#Page_152'>152</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Ferrière, Émile, <a href='#Page_357'>357</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Fioretti</i>, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Firdusi, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>-<a href='#Page_304'>304</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Flesh-eating, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>-<a href='#Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>-<a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>-<a href='#Page_64'>64</a>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>-<a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>-<a href='#Page_194'>194</a>, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>-<a href='#Page_218'>218</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Folk-lore Association of Chicago, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Folk-Songs of Southern India</i>, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Foxes, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Franzolini, Dr. F., <a href='#Page_363'>363</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><a id='Fravashi'></a>Fravashi, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a></li>
- <li class='c003'><span class='pageno' id='Page_375'>375</span>Games, Roman, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>-<a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>-<a href='#Page_52'>52</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Gargantuan feasts, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Garibaldi, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Gâthâs, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>-<a href='#Page_145'>145</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Gautama, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Gayatri, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>-<a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Gayo Marathan, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Gellert, Beth, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>-<a href='#Page_307'>307</a>, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Geus Urva, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>-<a href='#Page_144'>144</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Ghusni, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Giles, Dr., <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>, <a href='#Page_316'>316</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Gladiators, importation of, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>-<a href='#Page_53'>53</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Gnostics, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Goat, Story of a, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Goethe, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Gover, Charles E., <a href='#Page_17'>17</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Gray, Asa, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>-<a href='#Page_151'>151</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Gubernatis, Count de, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Guillaume de Palerme</i>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Gunádhya, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Guru, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>, <a href='#Page_345'>345</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Gymnosophists, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Hall, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Hallal, custom of the, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Hatem, Tai, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a>-<a href='#Page_286'>286</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Hatos, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Hawk and the pigeon, legend of, <a href='#Page_317'>317</a>-<a href='#Page_321'>321</a>, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Haziûm, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Heber, Bishop, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><a id='Hebrews'></a>Hebrews, the, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>-<a href='#Page_208'>208</a>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>-<a href='#Page_220'>220</a>, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Hector, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Hedgehog, appreciation of the, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Heine, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Helena</i>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Helps, Sir Arthur, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Henotheism, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Hera, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>-<a href='#Page_27'>27</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Heraclites, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Herakles, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Hermits (<i>see</i> <a href='#Anchorites'>Anchorites</a>)</li>
- <li class='c024'>Herodotus, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>-<a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><span class='pageno' id='Page_376'>376</span>Hero-worship, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>-<a href='#Page_300'>300</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Hidery, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Hinduism, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>-<a href='#Page_219'>219</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>-<a href='#Page_266'>266</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>History of European Morals</i>, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Homa, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>-<a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Homer, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>-<a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Homizd IV., <a href='#Page_161'>161</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Honover, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Horace, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Horses, famous, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>-<a href='#Page_27'>27</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>sacrifice of, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>;</li>
- <li>in Oriental books, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>;</li>
- <li>St. Columba’s horse, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>;</li>
- <li>in chivalrous age, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a>-<a href='#Page_282'>282</a>;</li>
- <li>thinking, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>;</li>
- <li>Arab and his horse, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a>-<a href='#Page_288'>288</a>;</li>
- <li>Hatem’s horse, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a>-<a href='#Page_286'>286</a>;</li>
- <li>the Cid’s horse, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>-<a href='#Page_294'>294</a>;</li>
- <li>horse of Rustem, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>;</li>
- <li>talking, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>;</li>
- <li>Bengal fable, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>;</li>
- <li>Russian folk-lore tale, <a href='#Page_322'>322</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c024'>Hugo, Victor, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Humanitarianism, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>-<a href='#Page_147'>147</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>-<a href='#Page_200'>200</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Húsheng, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>-<a href='#Page_142'>142</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Huxley, Professor, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Iblís, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Ibsen, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Ichneumon, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>-<a href='#Page_312'>312</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>“Iliad,” <a href='#Page_25'>25</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Immortality, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Improta, Leandro, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Indian doctrine of transmigration, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>-<a href='#Page_17'>17</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Indra, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>-<a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a>-<a href='#Page_323'>323</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Insects, killing of, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Intelligenza delle Bestie</i>, <a href='#Page_363'>363</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Iranians, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>-<a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Isaiah, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Isis, <a href='#Page_336'>336</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Islam, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Issaverdens, Padre Giacomo, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Itongo, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Itvara, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Jacobi, Professor Hermann, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><span class='pageno' id='Page_377'>377</span>Jaina hermit’s story, <a href='#Page_332'>332</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Jainism, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>-<a href='#Page_193'>193</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>-<a href='#Page_200'>200</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Jātaka Book</i>, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Jebb, Sir Richard, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Jenyns, Soame, <a href='#Page_360'>360</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Jesus Christ, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>-<a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_320'>320</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Jews (<i>see</i> <a href='#Hebrews'>Hebrews</a>)</li>
- <li class='c024'>Jinas, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Joghi, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>John, Father, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>John XXII., Pope, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Jones, Sir William, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Jonson, Ben, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Joseph of Anchieta, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>-<a href='#Page_256'>256</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Josephus, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Julia Domna, Empress, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Kálidása, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Kambôga, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Karileff, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Karman, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>-<a href='#Page_177'>177</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Kasi, King of, <a href='#Page_330'>330</a>-<a href='#Page_331'>331</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Katmir, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Keats, John, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Kempis, Thomas à, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Keshub Chunder Sen, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Khordah Avesta, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Kirghis, the, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Koran, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>-<a href='#Page_223'>223</a>, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>-<a href='#Page_230'>230</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Koureen, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Lahore Zoological Gardens, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lake dwellers, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lamarck, <a href='#Page_363'>363</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lamartine, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lampus, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lancelot, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lane, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Language, definition of, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a>-<a href='#Page_355'>355</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Laplander, the, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>-<a href='#Page_90'>90</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lapwing, Solomon and the, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>-<a href='#Page_229'>229</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><span class='pageno' id='Page_378'>378</span>Lebid, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>-<a href='#Page_239'>239</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lecky, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Legenda Aurea</i>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Leibnitz, <a href='#Page_365'>365</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Leland, C. G., <a href='#Page_277'>277</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Leopardi, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lesbia’s sparrow, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lessona, Carlo, <a href='#Page_363'>363</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Leveson, Major, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lion, legend of a humane, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Christ in the lions’ den, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>-<a href='#Page_251'>251</a>;</li>
- <li>St. Jerome and the, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>;</li>
- <li>lioness at Chartres, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>;</li>
- <li>eating of monkeys and men by, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>-<a href='#Page_269'>269</a>;</li>
- <li>love for his mate, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>-<a href='#Page_270'>270</a>;</li>
- <li>legend of vulture and, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a>;</li>
- <li>sympathy of, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Lion’s Kingdom</i>, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Lives</i>, Plutarch’s, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lizard, sacredness of, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>-<a href='#Page_110'>110</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lockhart, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lombroso, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Long, Rev. J., <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lotus-flower, white, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lucian, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lucretius, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lyall, Sir Alfred, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lyall, Sir Chas., <a href='#Page_238'>238</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lycæus, Mount, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Lycanthropy, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>-<a href='#Page_275'>275</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Maeterlinck, <a href='#Page_331'>331</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Magians, the, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>-<a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><a id='Magic'></a>Magic, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>-<a href='#Page_280'>280</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Magpie, legend of a, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>-<a href='#Page_78'>78</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Mahabharata</i>, <a href='#Page_317'>317</a>, <a href='#Page_322'>322</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Mahavira, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>-<a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>-<a href='#Page_198'>198</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Mahmoud, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Malay Magic</i>, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Malebranche, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Man, ages of, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Mandeville, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Man-eating animals, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>-<a href='#Page_272'>272</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Manichæism, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><span class='pageno' id='Page_379'>379</span>Manning, Cardinal, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Manu, Institutes of, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Marcellus, Theatre of, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Marcus Aurelius, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Mare, story of the creation of, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Marne, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Marriage in the East, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>-<a href='#Page_140'>140</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Martial, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Massaia, Cardinal, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Matreya, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Mazdaism, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>-<a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>-<a href='#Page_139'>139</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>-<a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>-<a href='#Page_161'>161</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Mecca, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Media, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Medina, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Melampus, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Melior, parrot of, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>-<a href='#Page_57'>57</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Menelek, Emperor, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Merodach, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Metempsychosis (<i>see</i> <a href='#Transmigration'>Transmigration</a>)</li>
- <li class='c024'>Michelet, <a href='#Page_364'>364</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Mill, J. S., <a href='#Page_127'>127</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Millais, Guille, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Milton, John, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Minotaur legend, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Mithra, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_336'>336</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Mivart, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Modi, Jivanji Jamsedji, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Mohammedanism, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>-<a href='#Page_217'>217</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>-<a href='#Page_222'>222</a>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Monkeys, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Monotheism, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>-<a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Montaigne, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Moral Philosophy</i>, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>“Morocco,” <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Moslemism, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>-<a href='#Page_236'>236</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Moti (tiger at Lahore), <a href='#Page_236'>236</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Moufflons, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Muklagerri Hills, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Mule of the Parthenon, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>-<a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Mungoose stories, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>-<a href='#Page_307'>307</a>, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a>-<a href='#Page_311'>311</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Murad, Sultan, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a></li>
- <li class='c003'><span class='pageno' id='Page_380'>380</span>Nanak, Baba, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Napier, Lord, of Magdala, <a href='#Page_316'>316</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Naples, gladiatorial shows at, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Natural History Museum, S. Kensington, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Natural History Society, Bombay, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Nedrotti, the, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Ne-kilst-lass, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Nemesianus, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Nennig, mosaic at, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>-<a href='#Page_48'>48</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Neolithic Age, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>-<a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Neoplatonism, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>-<a href='#Page_346'>346</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Newman, Cardinal, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Nibelungenlied</i>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Nirvana, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>, <a href='#Page_190'>190</a>-<a href='#Page_192'>192</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Nizami, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>-<a href='#Page_244'>244</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Nobarnus, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Non-killing (<i>see</i> <i><a href='#Ahimsa'>Ahimsa</a></i>)</li>
- <li class='c003'>Oakesmith, Dr., <a href='#Page_63'>63</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Octavius, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Odoric, Fra, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>-<a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Odyssey</i>, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Okubo, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Oppert, Prof. Jules, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Oriental Proverbs</i>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Orientalists, Congress of</i>, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Origen, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a>, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Origin of man and animals, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>-<a href='#Page_86'>86</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Origin of Species</i>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Ormuzd, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Orpheus, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>-<a href='#Page_247'>247</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Orphic sect, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Oseberg, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Ovid, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Owls, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Pahlavi, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>-<a href='#Page_135'>135</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Paley, <a href='#Page_364'>364</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Pallas Athene, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Panchatantra</i>, the, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a>, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Pandion, King of Athens, <a href='#Page_345'>345</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Paradise Lost</i>, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><span class='pageno' id='Page_381'>381</span>Paris, University of, <a href='#Page_363'>363</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Parrots, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>-<a href='#Page_57'>57</a>, <a href='#Page_359'>359</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Parsis, food of the, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>-<a href='#Page_120'>120</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>burial customs of, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>;</li>
- <li>and the Avesta, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>-<a href='#Page_135'>135</a>;</li>
- <li>and the Ardâ Vîrâf, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>-<a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c024'>Parthenon, the, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>-<a href='#Page_67'>67</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Pascal, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Patmore, Coventry, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Patmos, Seer of, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Paul the Hermit, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Paulicians, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Pausanias, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>-<a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Pavia, Corte da, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Peace in Nature, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>-<a href='#Page_212'>212</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>-<a href='#Page_232'>232</a>, <a href='#Page_332'>332</a>-<a href='#Page_333'>333</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Pelicans, legend of, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Pereira, Gomez, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Pericles, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Persepolis, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Persians of the eleventh century, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Petrarch, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Petronius, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Philo, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Philostratus, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Piet, Om, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Pigs, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Pinder, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Pius X., <a href='#Page_346'>346</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Plato, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>-<a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Pliny, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>-<a href='#Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Plotinus, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Plutarch, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>-<a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Pluto, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Podarges, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Political Register</i> (1802), <a href='#Page_360'>360</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Pompeii, mosaic at, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Porphyry, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a>, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Portionuculo, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Primatt, Humphry, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Prometheus, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Prosecution of animals, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a>-<a href='#Page_351'>351</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Provence, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Psalms, quotation from, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>-<a href='#Page_220'>220</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><span class='pageno' id='Page_382'>382</span>Punishment in the Ardâ Vîrâf, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>-<a href='#Page_164'>164</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Purgatory and animal incarnation, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Pythagoreanism, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>-<a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>-<a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>-<a href='#Page_60'>60</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a>, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Quartenary Age, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>-<a href='#Page_88'>88</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Quinet, Édouard, <a href='#Page_357'>357</a>-<a href='#Page_358'>358</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Rakush, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>-<a href='#Page_300'>300</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Raleigh, Sir Walter, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Ravenna, mosaic at, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Ravens, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Reasoning power of animals, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>-<a href='#Page_159'>159</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Plutarch’s views on, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>-<a href='#Page_69'>69</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c024'>Reinach, M. S., <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Reindeer hunters, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>-<a href='#Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and the Lapps, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Religion of Plutarch</i>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Religions, Congress for History of, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Religious knowledge in animals, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>-<a href='#Page_74'>74</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>early religions, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c024'>Renan, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Reptiles, killing of, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Réville, Albert, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Rhinoceroses, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Rickaby, Father, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Rig-Veda, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>-<a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Romanes, Professor, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>“Rooh Allah,” <a href='#Page_231'>231</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Rozinante, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Rustem, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>-<a href='#Page_305'>305</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Sacerdotalism, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Sacontala, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>-<a href='#Page_234'>234</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Sacred birds, animals, and reptiles, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>-<a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>-<a href='#Page_110'>110</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Sacred carpet, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Sacrifices, funeral, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>-<a href='#Page_13'>13</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Greek, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>-<a href='#Page_25'>25</a>;</li>
- <li>bloodless, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>;</li>
- <li>belief in, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>;</li>
- <li>of domestic animals, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>-<a href='#Page_96'>96</a>;</li>
- <li>Gift and Pact, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>;</li>
- <li>Totemism, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>-<a href='#Page_98'>98</a>;</li>
- <li>of Persians, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>;</li>
- <li>in the <i>Bundehesh</i>, <a href='#Page_143'>143</a>;</li>
- <li>to Homa, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>-<a href='#Page_149'>149</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_383'>383</span>for Udra-killing, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;</li>
- <li>the “True Sacrifice” legend, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>-<a href='#Page_184'>184</a>;</li>
- <li>apostolate for abolition of animal, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c024'>Sadi, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>St. Anthony, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>St. Augustine, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>St. Bernard, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>-<a href='#Page_257'>257</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>St. Columba, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>St. Edward the Martyr, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>St. Francis, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>-<a href='#Page_263'>263</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>St. François de Sale, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>St. James, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>St. Jerome, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>-<a href='#Page_254'>254</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>St. Josephat, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>St. Julien, town of, <a href='#Page_349'>349</a>-<a href='#Page_350'>350</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>St. Marculphe, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>St. Martin, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>St. Paul, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>-<a href='#Page_212'>212</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>St. Philip Neri, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>St. Teresa, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>St. Thomas Aquinas, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Saint-Calais, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Saint-Hilaire, Geoffroy, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Sakya Muni, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Sama, Legend of, <a href='#Page_330'>330</a>-<a href='#Page_332'>332</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Samengan, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>-<a href='#Page_301'>301</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Sásánians, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>-<a href='#Page_140'>140</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Satyricon</i>, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Schopenhauer, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>, <a href='#Page_361'>361</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Sebectighin, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>-<a href='#Page_241'>241</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Secundra Orphanage, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Semites (<i>see</i> <a href='#Hebrews'>Hebrews</a>)</li>
- <li class='c024'>Seneca, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>-<a href='#Page_61'>61</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Sensitive Plant, The</i>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Serapeum, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Serapis, <a href='#Page_336'>336</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Serpent, the, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>-<a href='#Page_111'>111</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Sestius, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Seven Sleepers of Ephesus</i>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>-<a href='#Page_230'>230</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Shah Nameh</i>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Shakespeare, William, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a>-<a href='#Page_283'>283</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>She-wolves of Rome, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>-<a href='#Page_45'>45</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Sheba, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Sheikh of Tús, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><span class='pageno' id='Page_384'>384</span>Shughdad, <a href='#Page_303'>303</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Siam, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Siegemund and Siegelind, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Siegfried, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Siena, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Sikhs, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Simurghs, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Sivi, King, <a href='#Page_321'>321</a>-<a href='#Page_322'>322</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Smith, Dr. H. P., <a href='#Page_110'>110</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Snakes, in India, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>-<a href='#Page_266'>266</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>and the mungoose, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a>-<a href='#Page_311'>311</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c024'>Societies to protect animals, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a>-<a href='#Page_360'>360</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Socrates, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Sohrab, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>-<a href='#Page_305'>305</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Solomon in the Valley of Ants, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Soma, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Somerville, Mrs., <a href='#Page_100'>100</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Sophocles, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Sotio, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>-<a href='#Page_61'>61</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Southey, Robert, <a href='#Page_365'>365</a>-<a href='#Page_366'>366</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Srosh, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Stable, a sanctuary, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Stag, fable of a, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Statius, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>-<a href='#Page_57'>57</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Stelæ</i>, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Stevenson, R. L., <a href='#Page_196'>196</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Stoics, the, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Stork, legend of a, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Strange Stories from a Chinese Studio</i>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Strauss, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a>-<a href='#Page_363'>363</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Sufism, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Suicide in India, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>“Sultan,” <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Sumner, Charles, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Sutras, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>-<a href='#Page_12'>12</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Suttees, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Swan-maidens (<i>see</i> <a href='#Apsarases'>Apsarases</a>)</li>
- <li class='c024'>Swine-flesh, forbidding of, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Sycamore-tree at Matarea, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Symmachus, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>-<a href='#Page_53'>53</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Tahmineh, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#Page_303'>303</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Taliumen, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><span class='pageno' id='Page_385'>385</span>Taoism, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>-<a href='#Page_106'>106</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Tatchi-lou-lun</i>, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Taylor, John, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Taylor, Canon Isaac, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Temple, building, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>-<a href='#Page_122'>122</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Jaina temples, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c024'>Tennyson, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Thaumaturgy, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>-<a href='#Page_183'>183</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Thebaid, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Theogony, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Theophrastus, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Theocritus, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Thomas, Pseudo-, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Three Merchants, Parable of the</i>, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Tiberius, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Tigers in India, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>-<a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>-<a href='#Page_272'>272</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Tigress, fable of the, <a href='#Page_327'>327</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Times, The</i>, <a href='#Page_360'>360</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Tirthakaras, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>-<a href='#Page_171'>171</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Titus, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Tobias, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>-<a href='#Page_93'>93</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Tobit’s dog, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Todas, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Torquemada, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Totemism, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>-<a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Transformation, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>-<a href='#Page_280'>280</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><a id='Transmigration'></a>Transmigration, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>-<a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>-<a href='#Page_189'>189</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Tribal system, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Triptolemus, <a href='#Page_345'>345</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Troglodite Age, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>-<a href='#Page_89'>89</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Trusty Lydia</i>, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a></li>
- <li class='c003'><a id='Udra'></a>Udra, the <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>-<a href='#Page_156'>156</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Ulemas, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Upanishads, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>-<a href='#Page_13'>13</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Uruguay, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Valencia, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Varro, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Varuna, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Vedas, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>-<a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>-<a href='#Page_178'>178</a>, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>-<a href='#Page_280'>280</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Vegetarianism, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Velasquez’s horse, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><span class='pageno' id='Page_386'>386</span>Venidâd, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>-<a href='#Page_157'>157</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Vespasian, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Viking ship, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Vinci, Leonardo da, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Virgil, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_336'>336</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Vispered, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Vivisection, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_357'>357</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Voltaire, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Walaric, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Were-wolves, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>-<a href='#Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Wildebeest and Om Piet, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Witchcraft (<i>see</i> <a href='#Magic'>Magic</a>)</li>
- <li class='c024'>Wolf, the, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>-<a href='#Page_277'>277</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Wolf of Agobio, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>-<a href='#Page_258'>258</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Women and Jainism, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>-<a href='#Page_186'>186</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Wordsworth, William, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Worms, Council of, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Wu-hu, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>-<a href='#Page_315'>315</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Wusinara, <a href='#Page_317'>317</a>-<a href='#Page_319'>319</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Xanthus, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>-<a href='#Page_28'>28</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Xantippus, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Xenocrates, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Yama, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>, <a href='#Page_324'>324</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Yasna, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>-<a href='#Page_135'>135</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Yogis, legend of two, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Yudishthira, story of, <a href='#Page_322'>322</a>-<a href='#Page_324'>324</a></li>
- <li class='c003'>Zal, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>-<a href='#Page_296'>296</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Zarathustra (<i>see</i> <a href='#Zoroaster'>Zoroaster</a>)</li>
- <li class='c024'>Zechariah’s war-horse, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Zend (<i>see</i> <a href='#Avesta'>Avesta</a>)</li>
- <li class='c024'>Zoolatry, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><i>Zoological Mythology</i>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Zoomorphism in Egypt, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Zorák, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a></li>
- <li class='c024'>Zeus, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a></li>
- <li class='c024'><a id='Zoroaster'></a>Zoroaster, teaching of, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>-<a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>-<a href='#Page_165'>165</a>, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
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