What is the true place of Fetichism,
to use a common but unscientific term, in the history
of religious evolution? Some theorists have made
fetichism, that is to say, the adoration of odds and
ends (with which they have confused the worship of
animals, of mountains, and even of the earth), the
first moment in the development of worship. Others,
again, think that fetichism is ’a corruption
of religion, in Africa, as elsewhere.’
The latter is the opinion of Mr. Max Mueller, who has
stated it in his Hibbert Lectures, on ’The
Origin and Growth of Religion, especially as illustrated
by the Religions of India.’ It seems probable
that there is a middle position between these two
extremes. Students may hold that we hardly know
enough to justify us in talking about the origin
of religion, while at the same time they may believe
that Fetichism is one of the earliest traceable steps
by which men climbed to higher conceptions of the
supernatural. Meanwhile Mr. Max Mueller supports
his own theory, that fetichism is a ‘parasitical
growth,’ a ‘corruption’ of religion,
by arguments mainly drawn from historical study of
savage creeds, and from the ancient religious documents
of India.
These documents are to English investigators
ignorant of Sanskrit ’a book sealed with seven
seals.’ The Védas are interpreted in
very different ways by different Oriental scholars.
It does not yet appear to be known whether a certain
word in the Vedic funeral service means ‘goat’
or ‘soul’! Mr. Max Mueller’s
rendering is certain to have the first claim on English
readers, and therefore it is desirable to investigate
the conclusions which he draws from his Vedic studies.
The ordinary anthropologist must first, however, lodge
a protest against the tendency to look for primitive
matter in the Védas. They are the elaborate
hymns of a specially trained set of poets and philosophers,
living in an age almost of civilisation. They
can therefore contain little testimony as to what
man, while still ‘primitive,’ thought
about God, the world, and the soul. One might
as well look for the first germs of religion, for
primitive religion strictly so called, in Hymns
Ancient and Modern as in the Védas. It
is chiefly, however, by way of deductions from the
Védas, that Mr. Max Mueller arrives at ideas
which may be briefly and broadly stated thus:
he inclines to derive religion from man’s sense
of the Infinite, as awakened by natural objects calculated
to stir that sense. Our position is, on the other
hand, that the germs of the religious sense in early
man are developed, not so much by the vision of the
Infinite, as by the idea of Power. Early religions,
in short, are selfish, not disinterested. The
worshipper is not contemplative, so much as eager to
gain something to his advantage. In fétiches,
he ignorantly recognises something that possesses
power of an abnormal sort, and the train of ideas
which leads him to believe in and to treasure fétiches
is one among the earliest springs of religious belief.
Mr. Mueller’s opinion is the
very reverse: he believes that a contemplative
and disinterested emotion in the presence of the Infinite,
or of anything that suggests infinitude or is mistaken
for the Infinite, begets human religion, while of
this religion fetichism is a later corruption.
In treating of fetichism Mr. Mueller
is obliged to criticise the system of De Brosses,
who introduced this rather unfortunate term to science,
in an admirable work, Le Culte des Dieux Fétiches
(1760). We call the work ‘admirable,’
because, considering the contemporary state of knowledge
and speculation, De Brosses’ book is brilliant,
original, and only now and then rash or confused.
Mr. Mueller says that De Brosses ’holds that
all nations had to begin with fetichism, to be followed
afterwards by polytheism and monotheism.’
This sentence would lead some readers to suppose that
De Brosses, in his speculations, was looking for the
origin of religion; but, in reality, his work is a
mere attempt to explain a certain element in ancient
religion and mythology. De Brosses was well aware
that heathen religions were a complex mass, a concretion
of many materials. He admits the existence of
regard for the spirits of the dead as one factor, he
gives Sabaeism a place as another. But what chiefly
puzzles him, and what he chiefly tries to explain,
is the worship of odds and ends of rubbish, and the
adoration of animals, mountains, trees, the sun, and
so forth. When he masses all these worships together,
and proposes to call them all Fetichism (a term derived
from the Portuguese word for a talisman), De Brosses
is distinctly unscientific. But De Brosses is
distinctly scientific when he attempts to explain
the animal-worship of Egypt, and the respect paid
by Greeks and Romans to shapeless stones, as survivals
of older savage practices.
The position of De Brosses is this:
Old mythology and religion are a tissue of many threads.
Sabaeism, adoration of the dead, mythopoeic fancy,
have their part in the fabric. Among many African
tribes, a form of theism, Islamite, or Christian,
or self-developed, is superimposed on a mass of earlier
superstitions. Among these superstitions, is
the worship of animals and plants, and the cult of
rough stones and of odds and ends of matter. What
is the origin of this element, so prominent in the
religion of Egypt, and present, if less conspicuous,
in the most ancient temples of Greece? It is the
survival, answers De Brosses, of ancient practices
like those of untutored peoples, as Brazilians, Samoyeds,
Negroes, whom the Egyptians and Pelasgians once resembled
in lack of culture.
This, briefly stated, is the hypothesis
of De Brosses. If he had possessed our wider
information, he would have known that, among savage
races, the worships of the stars, of the dead, and
of plants and animals, are interlaced by the strange
metaphysical processes of wild men. He would,
perhaps, have kept the supernatural element in magical
stones, feathers, shells, and so on, apart from the
triple thread of Sabaeism, ghost-worship, and totemism,
with its later development into the regular worship
of plants and animals. It must be recognised,
however, that De Brosses was perfectly well aware of
the confused and manifold character of early religion.
He had a clear view of the truth that what the religious
instinct has once grasped, it does not, as a rule,
abandon, but subordinates or disguises, when it reaches
higher ideas. And he avers, again and again, that
men laid hold of the coarser and more material objects
of worship, while they themselves were coarse and
dull, and that, as civilisation advanced, they, as
a rule, subordinated and disguised the ruder factors
in their system. Here it is that Mr. Max Mueller
differs from De Brosses. He holds that the adoration
of stones, feathers, shells, and (as I understand
him) the worship of animals are, even among the races
of Africa, a corruption of an earlier and purer religion,
a ’parasitical development’ of religion.
However, Mr. Max Mueller himself held
‘for a long time’ what he calls ‘De
Brosses’ theory of fetichism.’ What
made him throw the theory overboard? It was ’the
fact that, while in the earliest accessible documents
of religious thought we look in vain for any very clear
traces of fetichism, they become more and more frequent
everywhere in the later stages of religious development,
and are certainly more visible in the later corruptions
of the Indian religion, beginning with the Atharva_n_a,
than in the earliest hymns of the Rig Veda.’
Now, by the earliest accessible documents of religious
thought, Professor Max Mueller means the hymns of
the Rig Veda. These hymns are composed in the
most elaborate metre, by sages of old repute, who,
I presume, occupied a position not unlike that of
the singers and seers of Israel. They lived in
an age of tolerably advanced cultivation. They
had wide geographical knowledge. They had settled
government. They dwelt in States. They had
wealth of gold, of grain, and of domesticated animals.
Among the metals, they were acquainted with that which,
in most countries, has been the latest worked they
used iron poles in their chariots. How then can
the hymns of the most enlightened singers of a race
thus far developed be called ’the earliest religious
documents’? Oldest they may be, the oldest
that are accessible, but this is a very different
thing. How can we possibly argue that what is
absent in these hymns, is absent because it had not
yet come into existence? Is it not the very office
of pii vates et Phoebo digna locuti to purify
religion, to cover up decently its rude shapes, as
the unhewn stone was concealed in the fane of Apollo
of Delos? If the race whose noblest and oldest
extant hymns were pure, exhibits traces of fetichism
in its later documents, may not that as easily result
from a recrudescence as from a corruption? Professor
Max Mueller has still, moreover, to explain how the
process of corruption which introduced the same fetichistic
practices among Samoyeds, Brazilians, Kaffirs, and
the people of the Atharva_n_a Veda came to be everywhere
identical in its results.
Here an argument often urged against
the anthropological method may be shortly disposed
of. ‘You examine savages,’ people
say, ’but how do you know that these savages
were not once much more cultivated; that their whole
mode of life, religion and all, is not debased and
decadent from an earlier standard?’ Mr. Mueller
glances at this argument, which, however, cannot serve
his purpose. Mr. Mueller has recognised that
savage, or ‘nomadic,’ languages represent
a much earlier state of language than anything that
we find for example, in the oldest Hebrew or Sanskrit
texts. ‘For this reason,’ he says,
’the study of what I call nomad languages,
as distinguished from State languages, becomes
so instructive. We see in them what we can no
longer expect to see even in the most ancient Sanskrit
or Hebrew. We watch the childhood of language
with all its childish freaks.’ Yes, adds
the anthropologist, and for this reason the study of
savage religions, as distinguished from State religions,
becomes so instructive. We see in them what we
can no longer expect to see even in the most ancient
Sanskrit or Hebrew faiths. We watch the childhood
of religion with all its childish freaks. If this
reasoning be sound when the Kaffir tongue is contrasted
with ancient Sanskrit, it should be sound when the
Kaffir faith is compared with the Vedic faith.
By parity of reasoning, the religious beliefs of peoples
as much less advanced than the Kaffirs as the Kaffirs
are less advanced than the Vedic peoples, should be
still nearer the infancy of faith, still ‘nearer
the beginning.’
We have been occupied, perhaps, too
long with De Brosses and our apology for De Brosses.
Let us now examine, as shortly as possible, Mr. Max
Mueller’s reasons for denying that fetichism
is ’a primitive form of religion.’
The negative side of his argument being thus disposed
of, it will then be our business to consider (1) his
psychological theory of the subjective element in religion,
and (2) his account of the growth of Indian religion.
The conclusion of the essay will be concerned with
demonstrating that Mr. Max Mueller’s system
assigns little or no place to the superstitious beliefs
without which, in other countries than India, society
could not have come into organised existence.
In his polemic against Fetichism,
it is not always very easy to see against whom Mr.
Mueller is contending. It is one thing to say
that fetichism is a ‘primitive form of religion,’
and quite another to say that it is ‘the very
beginning of all religion.’ Occasionally
he attacks the ‘Comtian theory,’ which,
I think, is not now held by many people who study
the history of man, and which I am not concerned to
defend. He says that the Portuguese navigators
who discovered among the negroes ‘no other trace
of any religious worship’ except what they called
the worship of feiticos, concluded that this
was the whole of the religion of the negroes .
Mr. Mueller then goes on to prove that ‘no religion
consists of fetichism only,’ choosing his examples
of higher elements in negro religion from the collections
of Waitz. It is difficult to see what bearing
this has on his argument. De Brosses
shows that he, at least, was well aware that
many negro tribes have higher conceptions of the Deity
than any which are implied in fetich-worship.
Even if no tribe in the world is exclusively devoted
to fétiches, the argument makes no progress.
Perhaps no extant tribe is in the way of using unpolished
stone weapons and no others, but it does not follow
that unpolished stone weapons are not primitive.
It is just as easy to maintain that the purer ideas
have, by this time, been reached by aid of the stepping-stones
of the grosser, as that the grosser are the corruption
of the purer. Mr. Max Mueller constantly asserts
that the ’human mind advanced by small and timid
steps from what is intelligible, to what is at first
sight almost beyond comprehension’ .
Among the objects which aided man to take these small
and timid steps, he reckons rivers and trees, which
excited, he says, religious awe. What he will
not suppose is that the earliest small and timid steps
were not unaided by such objects as the fetichist
treasures stones, shells, and so forth,
which suggest no idea of infinity. Stocks he
will admit, but not, if he can help it, stones, of
the sort that negroes and Kanekas and other tribes
use as fétiches. His reason is, that he
does not see how the scraps of the fetichist can appeal
to the feeling of the Infinite, which feeling is,
in his theory, the basis of religion.
After maintaining (what is readily
granted) that negroes have a religion composed of
many elements, Mr. Mueller tries to discredit the
evidence about the creeds of savages, and discourses
on the many minute shades of progress which exist
among tribes too often lumped together as if they
were all in the same condition. Here he will have
all scientific students of savage life on his side.
It remains true, however, that certain elements of
savage practice, fetichism being one of them, are
practically ubiquitous. Thus, when Mr. Mueller
speaks of ‘the influence of public opinion’
in biassing the narrative of travellers, we must not
forget that the strongest evidence about savage practice
is derived from the ‘undesigned coincidence’
of the testimonies of all sorts of men, in all ages,
and all conditions of public opinion. ’Illiterate
men, ignorant of the writings of each other, bring
the same reports from various quarters of the globe,’
wrote Millar of Glasgow. When sailors, merchants,
missionaries, describe, as matters unprecedented and
unheard of, such institutions as polyandry, totemism,
and so forth, the evidence is so strong, because the
witnesses are so astonished. They do not know
that any one but themselves has ever noticed the curious
facts before their eyes. And when Mr. Mueller
tries to make the testimony about savage faith still
more untrustworthy, by talking of the ’absence
of recognised authority among savages,’ do not
let us forget that custom (nomos) is a recognised
authority, and that the punishment of death is inflicted
for transgression of certain rules. These rules
generally speaking, are of a religious nature, and
the religion to which they testify is of the sort
known (too vaguely) as ‘fetichistic.’
Let us keep steadily before our minds, when people
talk of lack of evidence, that we have two of the
strongest sorts of evidence in the world for the kind
of religion which least suits Mr. Mueller’s argument (1)
the undesigned coincidences of testimony, (2) the
irrefutable witness and sanction of elementary criminal
law. Mr. Mueller’s own evidence is that
much-disputed work, where ’all men see what they
want to see, as in the clouds,’ and where many
see systematised fetichism the Veda.
The first step in Mr. Max Mueller’s
polemic was the assertion that Fetichism is nowhere
unmixed. We have seen that the fact is capable
of an interpretation that will suit either side.
Stages of culture overlap each other. The second
step in his polemic was the effort to damage the evidence.
We have seen that we have as good evidence as can
be desired. In the third place he asks, What are
the antecedents of fetich-worship? He appears
to conceive himself to be arguing with persons who ’have taken for granted that every human
being was miraculously endowed with the concept of
what forms the predicate of every fetich, call it
power, spirit, or god.’ If there are reasoners
so feeble, they must be left to the punishment inflicted
by Mr. Mueller. On the other hand, students who
regard the growth of the idea of power, which is the
predicate of every fetich, as a slow process, as the
result of various impressions and trains of early
half-conscious reasoning, cannot be disposed of by
the charge that they think that ‘every human
being was miraculously endowed’ with any concept
whatever. They, at least, will agree with Mr.
Max Mueller that there are fétiches and fétiches,
that to one reverence is assigned for one reason,
to another for another. Unfortunately, it is less
easy to admit that Mr. Max Mueller has been happy
in his choice of ancient instances. He writes
: ’Sometimes a stock or a stone was
worshipped because it was a forsaken altar or an ancient
place of judgment, sometimes because it marked the
place of a great battle or a murder, or the burial
of a king.’ Here he refers to Pausanias,
book , 5, and vii, 2. In both of these
passages, Pausanias, it is true, mentions stones in
the first passage stones on which men stood hosoi
dikas hypechousi kai hoi diokontes, in the second,
barrows heaped up in honour of men who fell in battle.
In neither case, however, do I find anything to show
that the stones were worshipped. These stones,
then, have no more to do with the argument than the
milestones which certainly exist on the Dover road,
but which are not the objects of superstitious reverence.
No! the fetich-stones of Greece were those which occupied
the holy of holies of the most ancient temples, the
mysterious fanes within dark cedar or cypress groves,
to which men were hardly admitted. They were the
stones and blocks which bore the names of gods, Hera,
or Apollo, names perhaps given, as De Brosses says,
to the old fetichistic objects of worship, after
the anthropomorphic gods entered Hellas. This,
at least, is the natural conclusion from the fact
that the Apollo and Hera of untouched wood or stone
were confessedly the oldest. Religion,
possessing an old fetich, did not incur the risk of
breaking the run of luck by discarding it, but wisely
retained and renamed it. Mr. Max Mueller says
that the unhewn lump may indicate a higher power of
abstraction than the worship paid to the work of Phidias;
but in that case all the savage adorers of rough stones
may be in a stage of more abstract thought
than these contemporaries of Phidias who had such
very hard work to make Greek thought abstract.
Mr. Mueller founds a very curious
argument on what he calls ’the ubiquity of fetichism.’
Like De Brosses, he compiles (from Pausanias) a list
of the rude stones worshipped by the early Greeks.
He mentions various examples of fetichistic superstitions
in Rome. He detects the fetichism of popular
Catholicism, and of Russian orthodoxy among the peasants.
Here, he cries, in religions the history of which is
known to us, fetichism is secondary, ’and why
should fétiches in Africa, where we do not know
the earlier development of religion, be considered
as primary?’ What a singular argument! According
to Pausanias, this fetichism (if fetichism it is)
was primary, in Greece. The oldest
temples, in their holiest place, held the oldest fetich.
In Rome, it is at least probable that fetichism, as
in Greece, was partly a survival, partly a new growth
from the primal root of human superstitions.
As to Catholicism, the records of Councils, the invectives
of the Church, show us that, from the beginning, the
secondary religion in point of time, the religion of
the Church, laboured vainly to suppress, and had in
part to tolerate, the primary religion of childish
superstitions. The documents are before the world.
As to the Russians, the history of their conversion
is pretty well known. Jaroslaf, or Vladimir,
or some other evangelist, had whole villages baptised
in groups, and the pagan peasants naturally kept up
their primary semi-savage ways of thought and worship,
under the secondary varnish of orthodoxy. In
all Mr. Max Mueller’s examples, then, fetichism
turns out to be primary in point of time; secondary
only, as subordinate to some later development of faith,
or to some lately superimposed religion. Accepting
his statement that fetichism is ubiquitous, we have
the most powerful a priori argument that fetichism
is primitive. As religions become developed they
are differentiated; it is only fetichism that you
find the same everywhere. Thus the bow and arrow
have a wide range of distribution: the musket,
one not so wide; the Martini-Henry rifle, a still narrower
range: it is the primitive stone weapons that
are ubiquitous, that are found in the soil of England,
Egypt, America, France, Greece, as in the hands of
Dieyries and Admiralty Islanders. And just as
rough stone knives are earlier than iron ones (though
the same race often uses both), so fetichism is more
primitive than higher and purer faiths, though the
same race often combines fetichism and theism.
No one will doubt the truth of this where weapons
are concerned; but Mr. Max Mueller will not look at
religion in this way.
Mr. Max Mueller’s remarks on
‘Zoolatry,’ as De Brosses calls it, or
animal-worship, require only the briefest comment.
De Brosses, very unluckily, confused zoolatry with
other superstitions under the head of Fetichism.
This was unscientific; but is it scientific of Mr.
Max Mueller to discuss animal-worship without any
reference to totemism? The worship of sacred
animals is found, in every part of the globe, to be
part of the sanction of the most stringent and important
of all laws, the laws of marriage. It is an historical
truth that the society of Ashantees, Choctaws, Australians,
is actually constructed by the operation of laws which
are under the sanction of various sacred plants and
animals. There is scarcely a race so barbarous
that these laws are not traceable at work in its society,
nor a people (especially an ancient people) so cultivated
that its laws and religion are not full of strange
facts most easily explained as relics of totemism.
Now note that actual living totemism is always combined
with the rudest ideas of marriage, with almost repulsive
ideas about the family. Presumably, this rudeness
is earlier than culture, and therefore this form of
animal-worship is one of the earliest religions that
we know. The almost limitless distribution of
the phenomena, their regular development, their gradual
disappearance, all point to the fact that they are
all very early and everywhere produced by similar
causes.
Of all these facts, Mr. Max Mueller
only mentions one that many races have
called themselves Snakes, and he thinks they might
naturally adopt the snake for ancestor, and finally
for god. He quotes the remark of Diodorus that
’the snake may either have been made a god because
he was figured on the banners, or may have been figured
on the banners because he was a god’; to which
De Brosses, with his usual sense, rejoins: ’We
represent saints on our banners because we revere
them; we do not revere them because we represent them
on our banners.’
In a discussion about origins, and
about the corruption of religion, it would have been
well to account for institutions and beliefs almost
universally distributed. We know, what De Brosses
did not, that zoolatry is inextricably blent with
laws and customs which surely must be early, if not
primitive, because they make the working faith of
societies in which male descent and the modern family
are not yet established. Any one who wishes to
show that this sort of society is a late corruption,
not an early stage in evolution towards better things,
has a difficult task before him, which, however, he
must undertake, before he can prove zoolatry to be
a corruption of religion.
As to the worship of ancestral and
embodied human spirits, which (it has been so plausibly
argued) is the first moment in religion, Mr. Max Mueller
dismisses it, here, in eleven lines and a half.
An isolated but important allusion at the close of
his lectures will be noticed in its place.
The end of the polemic against the
primitiveness of fetichism deals with the question,
’Whence comes the supernatural predicate of the
fetich?’ If a negro tells us his fetich is a
god, whence got he the idea of ‘god’?
Many obvious answers occur. Mr. Mueller says,
speaking of the Indians : ’The
concept of gods was no doubt growing up while
men were assuming a more and more definite attitude
towards these semi-tangible and intangible objects’ trees,
rivers, hills, the sky, the sun, and so on, which
he thinks suggested and developed, by aid of a kind
of awe, the religious feeling of the infinite.
We too would say that, among people who adore
fétiches and ghosts, the concept of gods no doubt
silently grew up, as men assumed a more and more definite
attitude towards the tangible and intangible objects
they held sacred. Again, negroes have had the
idea of god imported among them by Christians and
Islamites, so that, even if they did not climb (as
De Brosses grants that many of them do) to purer religious
ideas unaided, these ideas are now familiar to them,
and may well be used by them, when they have to explain
a fetich to a European. Mr. Max Mueller explains
the origin of religion by a term (’the Infinite’)
which, he admits, the early people would not have comprehended.
The negro, if he tells a white man that a fetich is
a god, transposes terms in the same unscientific way.
Mr. Mueller asks: ’How do these people,
when they have picked up their stone or their shell,
pick up, at the same time, the concepts of a supernatural
power, of spirit, of god, and of worship paid to some
unseen being?’ But who says that men picked
up these ideas at the same time? These
ideas were evolved by a long, slow, complicated process.
It is not at all impossible that the idea of a kind
of ‘luck’ attached to this or that object,
was evolved by dint of meditating on a mere series
of lucky accidents. Such or such a man, having
found such an object, succeeded in hunting, fishing,
or war. By degrees, similar objects might be believed
to command success. Thus burglars carry bits
of coal in their pockets, ‘for luck.’
This random way of connecting causes and effects which
have really no inter-relation, is a common error of
early reasoning. Mr. Max Mueller says that ’this
process of reasoning is far more in accordance with
modern thought’; if so, modern thought has little
to be proud of. Herodotus, however, describes
the process of thought as consecrated by custom among
the Egyptians. But there are many other practical
ways in which the idea of supernatural power is attached
to fétiches. Some fetich-stones have a superficial
resemblance to other objects, and thus (on the magical
system of reasoning) are thought to influence these
objects. Others, again, are pointed out as worthy
of regard in dreams or by the ghosts of the dead.
To hold these views of the origin of the supernatural
predicate of fétiches is not ’to take for
granted that every human being was miraculously endowed
with the concept of what forms the predicate of every
fetich.’
Thus we need not be convinced by Mr.
Max Mueller that fetichism (though it necessarily
has its antecedents in the human mind) is ’a
corruption of religion.’ It still appears
to be one of the most primitive steps towards the
idea of the supernatural.
What, then, is the subjective element
of religion in man? How has he become capable
of conceiving of the supernatural? What outward
objects first awoke that dormant faculty in his breast?
Mr. Max Mueller answers, that man has ’the faculty
of apprehending the infinite’ that
by dint of this faculty he is capable of religion,
and that sensible objects, ‘tangible, semi-tangible,
intangible,’ first roused the faculty to religious
activity, at least among the natives of India.
He means, however, by the ‘infinite’ which
savages apprehend, not our metaphysical conception
of the infinite, but the mere impression that there
is ‘something beyond.’ ’Everything
of which his senses cannot perceive a limit, is to
a primitive savage or to any man in an early stage
of intellectual activity unlimited or infinite.’
Thus, in all experience, the idea of ‘a beyond’
is forced on men. If Mr. Max Mueller would adhere
to this theory, then we should suppose him to mean
(what we hold to be more or less true) that savage
religion, like savage science, is merely a fanciful
explanation of what lies beyond the horizon of experience.
For example, if the Australians mentioned by Mr. Max
Mueller believe in a being who created the world, a
being whom they do not worship, and to whom they pay
no regard (for, indeed, he has become ’decrepit’),
their theory is scientific, not religious. They
have looked for the causes of things, and are no more
religious (in so doing) than Newton was when he worked
out his theory of gravitation. The term ‘infinite’
is wrongly applied, because it is a term of advanced
thought used in explanation of the ideas of men who,
Mr. Max Mueller says, were incapable of conceiving
the meaning of such a concept. Again, it is wrongly
applied, because it has some modern religious associations,
which are covertly and fallaciously introduced to
explain the supposed emotions of early men. Thus,
Mr. Mueller says he is giving
his account of the material things that awoke the
religious faculty ’the mere sight
of the torrent or the stream would have been enough
to call forth in the hearts of the early dwellers
on the earth ... a feeling that they were surrounded
on all sides by powers invisible, infinite, or divine.’
Here, if I understand Mr. Mueller, ‘infinite’
is used in our modern sense. The question is,
How did men ever come to believe in powers infinite,
invisible, divine? If Mr. Mueller’s words
mean anything, they mean that a dormant feeling that
there were such existences lay in the breast of man,
and was wakened into active and conscious life, by
the sight of a torrent or a stream. How, to use
Mr. Mueller’s own manner, did these people,
when they saw a stream, have mentally, at the same
time, ’a feeling of infinite powers’?
If this is not the expression of a theory of ‘innate
religion’ (a theory which Mr. Mueller disclaims),
it is capable of being mistaken for that doctrine
by even a careful reader. The feeling of ‘powers
infinite, invisible, divine,’ must be
in the heart, or the mere sight of a river could not
call it forth. How did the feeling get into the
heart? That is the question.
The ordinary anthropologist distinguishes
a multitude of causes, a variety of processes, which
shade into each other and gradually produce the belief
in powers invisible, infinite, and divine. What
tribe is unacquainted with dreams, visions, magic,
the apparitions of the dead? Add to these the
slow action of thought, the conjectural inferences,
the guesses of crude metaphysics, the theories of isolated
men of religious and speculative genius. By all
these and other forces manifold, that emotion of awe
in presence of the hills, the stars, the sea, is developed.
Mr. Max Mueller cuts the matter shorter. The early
inhabitants of the earth saw a river, and the ‘mere
sight’ of the torrent called forth the feelings
which (to us) seem to demand ages of the operation
of causes disregarded by Mr. Mueller in his account
of the origin of Indian religion.
The mainspring of Mr. Mueller’s
doctrine is his theory about ‘apprehending the
infinite.’ Early religion, or at least that
of India, was, in his view, the extension of an idea
of Vastness, a disinterested emotion of awe.
Elsewhere, we think, early religion has been a development
of ideas of Force, an interested search, not for something
wide and far and hard to conceive, but for something
practically strong for good and evil. Mr.
Mueller (taking no count in this place of fétiches,
ghosts, dreams and magic) explains that the sense
of ‘wonderment’ was wakened by objects
only semi-tangible, trees, which are taller
than we are, ’whose roots are beyond our reach,
and which have a kind of life in them.’
’We are dealing with a quartenary, it may be
a tertiary troglodyte,’ says Mr. Mueller.
If a tertiary troglodyte was like a modern Andaman
Islander, a Kaneka, a Dieyrie, would he stand and
meditate in awe on the fact that a tree was taller
than he, or had ‘a kind of life,’ ’an
unknown and unknowable, yet undeniable something’?
Why, this is the sentiment of modern Germany, and
perhaps of the Indian sages of a cultivated period!
A troglodyte would look for a ’possum in the
tree, he would tap the trunk for honey, he would poke
about in the bark after grubs, or he would worship
anything odd in the branches. Is Mr. Mueller not
unconsciously transporting a kind of modern malady
of thought into the midst of people who wanted to
find a dinner, and who might worship a tree if it
had a grotesque shape, that, for them, had a magical
meaning, or if boilyas lived in its boughs,
but whose practical way of dealing with the problem
of its life was to burn it round the stem, chop the
charred wood with stone axes, and use the bark, branches,
and leaves as they happened to come handy?
Mr. Mueller has a long list of semi-tangible
objects ’overwhelming and overawing,’
like the tree. There are mountains, where ’even
a stout heart shivers before the real presence of
the infinite’; there are rivers, those
instruments of so sudden a religious awakening; there
is earth. These supply the material for semi-deities.
Then come sky, stars, dawn, sun and moon: ’in
these we have the germs of what, hereafter, we shall
have to call by the name of deities.’
Before we can transmute, with Mr.
Mueller, these objects of a somewhat vague religious
regard into a kind of gods, we have to adopt Noire’s
philological theories, and study the effects of auxiliary
verbs on the development of personification and of
religion. Noire’s philological theories
are still, I presume, under discussion. They are
necessary, however, to Mr. Mueller’s doctrine
of the development of the vague ‘sense of the
infinite’ (wakened by fine old trees, and high
mountains) into devas, and of devas (which
means ‘shining ones’) into the Vedic gods.
Our troglodyte ancestors, and their sweet feeling
for the spiritual aspect of landscape, are thus brought
into relation with the Rishis of the Védas, the
sages and poets of a pleasing civilisation. The
reverence felt for such comparatively refined or remote
things as fire, the sun, wind, thunder, the dawn, furnished
a series of stepping-stones to the Vedic theology,
if theology it can be called. It is impossible
to give each step in detail; the process must be studied
in Mr. Mueller’s lectures. Nor can we discuss
the later changes of faith. As to the processes
which produced the fetichistic ‘corruption’
(that universal and everywhere identical form of decay),
Mr. Mueller does not afford even a hint. He only
says that, when the Indians found that their old gods
were mere names, ’they built out of the scattered
bricks a new altar to the Unknown God’ a
statement which throws no light on the parasitical
development of fetichism. But his whole theory
is deficient if, having called fetichism a corruption,
he does not show how corruption arose, how it operated,
and how the disease attacked all religions everywhere.
We have contested, step by step, many
of Mr. Mueller’s propositions. If space
permitted, it would be interesting to examine the actual
attitude of certain contemporary savages, Bushmen and
others, towards the sun. Contemporary savages
may be degraded, they certainly are not primitive,
but their legends, at least, are the oldest
things they possess. The supernatural elements
in their ideas about the sun are curiously unlike
those which, according to Mr. Mueller, entered into
the development of Aryan religion.
The last remark which has to be made
about Mr. Mueller’s scheme of the development
of Aryan religion is that the religion, as explained
by him, does not apparently aid the growth of society,
nor work with it in any way. Let us look at a
sub-barbaric society say that of Zululand,
of New Zealand, of the Iroquois League, or at a savage
society like that of the Kanekas, or of those Australian
tribes about whom we have very many interesting and
copious accounts. If we begin with the Australians,
we observe that society is based on certain laws of
marriage enforced by capital punishment. These
laws of marriage forbid the intermixing of persons
belonging to the stock which worships this or that
animal, or plant. Now this rule, as already observed,
made the ‘gentile’ system (as Mr.
Morgan erroneously calls it) the system which gradually
reduces tribal hostility, by making tribes homogeneous.
The same system (with the religious sanction of a
kind of zoolatry) is in force and has worked to the
same result, in Africa, Asia, America, and Australia,
while a host of minute facts make it a reasonable
conclusion that it prevailed in Europe. Among
these facts certain peculiarities of Greek and Roman
and Hindoo marriage law, Greek, Latin, and English
tribal names, and a crowd of legends are the most
prominent. Mr. Max Mueller’s doctrine of
the development of Indian religion (while admitting
the existence of Snake or Naga tribes) takes no account
of the action of this universal zoolatry on religion
and society.
After marriage and after tribal institutions,
look at rank. Is it not obvious that the
religious elements (magic and necromancy) left out
of his reckoning by Mr. Mueller are most powerful in
developing rank? Even among those democratic
paupers, the Fuegians, ’the doctor-wizard of
each party has much influence over his companions.’
Among those other democrats, the Eskimo, a class of
wizards, called Angakuts, become ‘a kind of
civil magistrates,’ because they can cause fine
weather, and can magically detect people who commit
offences. Thus the germs of rank, in these cases,
are sown by the magic which is fetichism in action.
Try the Zulus: ‘the heaven is the chief’s,’
he can call up clouds and storms, hence the sanction
of his authority. In New Zealand, every Rangatira
has a supernatural power. If he touches an article,
no one else dares to appropriate it, for fear of terrible
supernatural consequences. A head chief is ’tapued
an inch thick, and perfectly unapproachable.’
Magical power abides in and emanates from him.
By this superstition, an aristocracy is formed, and
property (the property, at least, of the aristocracy)
is secured. Among the Red Indians, as Schoolcraft
says, ’priests and jugglers are the persons
that make war and have a voice in the sale of the land.’
Mr. E. W. Robertson says much the same thing about
early Scotland. If Odin was not a god with the
gifts of a medicine-man, and did not owe his chiefship
to his talent for dealing with magic, he is greatly
maligned. The Irish Brehons also sanctioned legal
decisions by magical devices, afterwards condemned
by the Church. Among the Zulus, ’the Itongo
(spirit) dwells with the great man; he who dreams is
the chief of the village.’ The chief alone
can ’read in the vessel of divination.’
The Kaneka chiefs are medicine-men.
Here then, in widely distant regions,
in early European, American, Melanesian, African societies,
we find those factors in religion which the primitive
Aryans are said to have dispensed with, helping to
construct society, rank, property. Is it necessary
to add that the ancestral spirits still ‘rule
the present from the past,’ and demand sacrifice,
and speak to ‘him who dreams,’ who, therefore,
is a strong force in society, if not a chief?
Mr. Herbert Spencer, Mr. Tylor, M. Fustel de Coulanges,
a dozen others, have made all this matter of common
notoriety. As Hearne the traveller says about
the Copper River Indians, ’it is almost necessary
that they who rule them should profess something a
little supernatural to enable them to deal with the
people.’ The few examples we have given
show how widely, and among what untutored races, the
need is felt. The rudimentary government of early
peoples requires, and, by aid of dreams, necromancy,
‘medicine’ (i.e., fétiches),
tapu, and so forth, obtains, a supernatural
sanction.
Where is the supernatural sanction
that consecrated the chiefs of a race which woke to
the sense of the existence of infinite beings, in
face of trees, rivers, the dawn, the sun, and had none
of the so-called late and corrupt fetichism that does
such useful social work?
To the student of other early societies,
Mr. Mueller’s theory of the growth of Aryan
religion seems to leave society without cement, and
without the most necessary sanctions. One man
is as good as another, before a tree, a river, a hill.
The savage organisers of other societies found out
fétiches and ghosts that were ’respecters
of persons.’ Zoolatry is intertwisted with
the earliest and most widespread law of prohibited
degrees. How did the Hindoos dispense with the
aid of these superstitions? Well, they did not
quite dispense with them. Mr. Max Mueller remarks,
almost on his last page (376), that ’in India
also ... the thoughts and feelings about those whom
death had separated from us for a time, supplied some
of the earliest and most important elements of religion.’
If this was the case, surely the presence of those
elements and their influence should have been indicated
along with the remarks about the awfulness of trees
and the suggestiveness of rivers. Is nothing
said about the spirits of the dead and their cult
in the Védas? Much is said, of course.
But, were it otherwise, then other elements of savage
religion may also have been neglected there, and it
will be impossible to argue that fetichism did not
exist because it is not mentioned. It will also
be impossible to admit that the Hibbert Lectures
give more than a one-sided account of the Origin of
Indian Religion.
The perusal of Mr. Max Mueller’s
book deeply impresses one with the necessity of studying
early religions and early societies simultaneously.
If it be true that early Indian religion lacked precisely
those superstitions, so childish, so grotesque, and
yet so useful, which we find at work in contemporary
tribes, and which we read of in history, the discovery
is even more remarkable and important than the author
of the Hibbert Lectures seems to suppose.
It is scarcely necessary to repeat that the negative
evidence of the Védas, the religious utterances
of sages, made in a time of what we might call ‘heroic
culture,’ can never disprove the existence of
superstitions which, if current in the former experience
of the race, the hymnists, as Barth observes, would
intentionally ignore. Our object has been to
defend the ‘primitiveness of fetichism.’
By this we do not mean to express any opinion as to
whether fetichism (in the strictest sense of the word)
was or was not earlier than totemism, than the worship
of the dead, or than the involuntary sense of awe and
terror with which certain vast phenomena may have affected
the earliest men. We only claim for the powerful
and ubiquitous practices of fetichism a place among
the early elements of religion, and insist that what
is so universal has not yet been shown to be ’a
corruption’ of something older and purer.
One remark of Mr. Max Mueller’s
fortifies these opinions. If fetichism be indeed
one of the earliest factors of faith in the supernatural;
if it be, in its rudest forms, most powerful in proportion
to other elements of faith among the least cultivated
races (and that Mr. Mueller will probably allow) among
what class of cultivated peoples will it longest hold
its ground? Clearly, among the least cultivated,
among the fishermen, the shepherds of lonely districts,
the peasants of outlying lands in short,
among the people. Neglected by sacred
poets in the culminating period of purity in religion,
it will linger among the superstitions of the rustics.
There is no real break in the continuity of peasant
life; the modern folklore is (in many points) the
savage ritual. Now Mr. Mueller, when he was minimising
the existence of fetichism in the Rig Veda (the oldest
collection of hymns), admitted its existence in the
Atharva_n_a . On , we read ’the
Atharva-veda-Sanhita is a later collection, containing,
besides a large number of Rig Veda verses, some
curious relics of popular poetry connected with charms,
imprecations, and other superstitious usages.’
The italics are mine, and are meant to emphasise this
fact: When we leave the sages, the Rishis,
and look at what is popular, look at what that
class believed which of savage practice has everywhere
retained so much, we are at once among the charms
and the fétiches! This is precisely what
one would have expected. If the history of religion
and of mythology is to be unravelled, we must examine
what the unprogressive classes in Europe have in common
with Australians and Bushmen, and Andaman Islanders.
It is the function of the people to retain in folklore
these elements of religion, which it is the high duty
of the sage and the poet to purify away in the fire
of refining thought. It is for this very reason
that ritual has (though Mr. Max Mueller curiously
says that it seems not to possess) an immense scientific
interest. Ritual holds on, with the tenacity
of superstition, to all that has ever been practised.
Yet, when Mr. Mueller wants to know about origins,
about actual ancient practice, he deliberately
turns to that ’great collection of ancient poetry’
(the Rig Veda) ’which has no special reference
to sacrificial acts,’ not to the Brahmanas which
are full of ritual.
To sum up briefly: (1)
Mr. Mueller’s arguments against the evidence
for, and the primitiveness of, fetichism seem to demonstrate
the opposite of that which he intends them to prove.
(2) His own evidence for primitive practice
is chosen from the documents of a cultivated
society. (3) His theory deprives that society of the
very influences which have elsewhere helped the Tribe,
the Family, Rank, and Priesthoods to grow up, and
to form the backbone of social existence.