It is perhaps necessary, at the commencement
of this chapter, to say a few more words about the
nature and origin of the belief in Magic. Magic
represented on one side, and clearly enough, the beginnings
of Religion i.e. the instinctive sense
of Man’s inner continuity with the world around
him, taking shape: a fanciful shape
it is true, but with very real reaction on his practical
life and feelings. On the other side it represented
the beginnings of Science. It was his first attempt
not merely to feel but to understand the
mystery of things.
Inevitably these first efforts to
understand were very puerile, very superficial.
As E. B. Tylor says of primitive folk in general,
“they mistook an imaginary for a real connection.”
And he instances the case of the inhabitants of the
City of Ephesus, who laid down a rope, seven furlongs
in length, from the City to the temple of Artemis,
in order to place the former under the protection
of the latter! We should lay down a telephone
wire, and consider that we established a much more
efficient connection; but in the beginning, and quite
naturally, men, like children, rely on surface associations.
Among the Dyaks of Bornéo when the men are away
fighting, the women must use a sort of telepathic
magic in order to safeguard them that is,
they must themselves rise early and keep awake all
day (lest darkness and sleep should give advantage
to the enemy); they must not oil their hair (lest
their husbands should make any slips); they must
eat sparingly and put aside rice at every meal (so
that the men may not want for food). And so on.
Similar superstitions are common. But they gradually
lead to a little thought, and then to a little more,
and so to the discovery of actual and provable influences.
Perhaps one day the cord connecting the temple with
Ephesus was drawn tight and it was found that
messages could be, by tapping, transmitted along it.
That way lay the discovery of a fact. In an age
which worshiped fertility, whether in mankind or animals,
twins were ever counted especially blest, and were credited with a magic
power. (The Constellation of the Twins was thought peculiarly lucky.) Perhaps
after a time it was discovered that twins sometimes run in families, and in such
cases really do bring fertility with them. In cattle it is known nowadays that
there are more twins of the female sex than of the male sex.
Observations of this kind were naturally
made by the ablest members of the tribe who
were in all probability the medicinemen and wizards and
brought in consequence power into their hands.
The road to power in fact and especially
was this the case in societies which had not yet developed
wealth and property lay through Magic.
As far as magic represented early superstition land
religion it laid hold of the hearts of men their
hopes and fears; as far as it represented science and
the beginnings of actual knowledge, it inspired their
minds with a sense of power, and gave form to their
lives and customs. We have no reason to suppose
that the early magicians and medicinemen were peculiarly
wicked or bent on mere selfaggrandizement any
more than we have to think the same of the average
country vicar or country doctor of today. They
were merely men a trifle wiser or more instructed than
their flocks. But though probably in most cases
their original intentions were decent enough, they
were not proof against the temptations which the possession
of power always brings, and as time went on they became
liable to trade more and more upon this power for
their own advancement. In the matter of Religion
the history of the Christian priesthood through the
centuries shows sufficiently to what misuse such power
can be put; and in the matter of Science it is a warning
to us of the dangers attending the formation of a
scientific priesthood, such as we see growing up around
us today. In both cases whether Science
or Religion vanity, personal ambition,
lust of domination and a hundred other vices, unless
corrected by a real devotion to the public good, may
easily bring as many evils in their train as those
they profess to cure.
The Medicineman, or Wizard, or Magician,
or Priest, slowly but necessarily gathered power into
his hands, and there is much evidence to show that
in the case of many tribes at any rate, it was he
who became ultimate chief and leader and laid the
foundations of Kingship. The Basileus was
always a sacred personality, and often united in himself
as head of the clan the offices of chief in warfare
and leader in priestly rites like Agamemnon
in Homer, or Saul or David in the Bible. As a
magician he had influence over the fertility of the
earth and, like the blameless king in the Odyssey,
under his sway
“the
dark earth beareth in season
Barley and wheat, and
the trees are laden with fruitage, and
alway
Yean unfailing
the flocks, and the sea gives fish in
abundance.
As a magician too he was trusted for
success in warfare; and Schoolcraft, in a passage
quoted by Andrew Lang, says of the Dacotah Indians
“the warchief who leads the party to war is
always one of these medicinemen.” This
connection, however, by which the magician is transformed
into the king has been abundantly studied, and need
not be further dwelt upon here.
And what of the transformation of
the king into a god or of the Magician
or Priest directly into the same? Perhaps in order
to appreciate this, one must make a further digression.
For the early peoples there were,
as it would appear, two main objects in life:
to promote fertility in cattle and crops, for food;
and to placate or ward off Death; and it seemed very obvious even before any
distinct figures of gods, or any idea of prayer, had arisen to attain these
objects by magic ritual. The rites of Baptism, of Initiation (or Confirmation)
and the many ceremonies of a Second Birth, which we associate with fullyformed
religions, did belong also to the age of Magic; and they all implied a belief in
some kind of reincarnation in a life going forward continually and being
renewed in birth again and again. It is curious that we find such a belief among
the lowest savages even today. Dr. Frazer, speaking of the Central Australian
tribes, says the belief is firmly rooted among them that the human soul
undergoes an endless series of reincarnations the living men and women of one
generation being nothing but the spirits of their ancestors come to life again,
and destined themselves to be reborn in the persons of their descendants. During
the interval between two reincarnations the souls live in their nanja spots, or
local totemcentres, which are always natural objects such as trees or rocks.
Each totemclan has a number of such totemcentres scattered over the country.
There the souls of the dead men and women of the totem, but no others,
congregate, and are born again in human form when a favorable opportunity
presents itself.
And what the early people believed
of the human spirit, they believed of the cornspirits
and the tree and vegetation spirits also. At the
great Springritual among the primitive Greeks “the
tribe and the growing earth were renovated together:
the earth arises afresh from her dead seeds, the tribe
from its dead ancestors.” And the whole
process projects itself in the idea of a spirit of
the year, who “in the first stage is living,
then dies with each year, and thirdly rises again from
the dead, raising the whole dead world with him.
The Greeks called him in this stage ‘The Third
One’ (Tritos Soter) or ‘the Saviour’;
and the renovation ceremonies were accompanied by
a castingoff of the old year, the old garments, and
everything that is polluted by the infection of death.”
Thus the multiplication of the crops and the renovation of the tribe, and at
the same time the evasion and placation of death, were all assured by similar
rites and befitting ceremonial magic.
In all these cases, and many others
that I have not mentioned of the magical
worship of Bulls and Bears and Rams and Cats and Émus
and Kangaroos, of Trees and Snakes, of Sun and Moon
and Stars, and the spirit of the Corn in its yearly
and miraculous resurrection out of the ground there
is still the same idea or moving inspiration, the sense
mentioned in the foregoing chapter, the feeling (hardly
yet conscious of its own meaning) of intimate relationship
and unity with all this outer world, the instinctive
conviction that the world can be swayed by the spirit
of Man, if the man can only find the right ritual,
the right word, the right spell, wherewith to move
it. An aura of emotion surrounded everything of
terror, of tabu, of fascination, of desire. The
world, to these people, was transparent with presences
related to themselves; and though hunger and sex may
have been the dominant and overwhelmingly practical
needs of their life, yet their outlook on the world
was essentially poetic and imaginative.
Moreover it will be seen that in this
age of magic and the belief in spirits, though there
was an intense sense of every thing being alive, the
gods, in the more modern sense of the world, hardly
existed that is, there was no very
clear vision, to these people, of supramundane beings,
sitting apart and ordaining the affairs of earth,
as it were from a distance. Doubtless this conception
was slowly evolving, but it was only incipient.
For the time being though there might be
orders and degrees of spirits (and of gods) every
such being was only conceived of, and could only be
conceived of, as actually a part of Nature, dwelling
in and interlaced with some phenomenon of Earth and
Sky, and having no separate existence.
How was it then, it will be asked,
that the belief in separate and separable gods and
goddesses each with his or her wellmarked
outline and character and function, like the divinities
of Greece, or of India, or of the Egyptian or Christian
religions, ultimately arose? To this question
Jane Harrison (in her Themis and other books) gives
an ingenious answer, which as it chimes in with my
own speculations (in the Art of Creation and elsewhere)
I am inclined to adopt. It is that the figures
of the supranatural gods arose from a process in the
human mind similar to that which the photographer
adopts when by photographing a number of faces on
the same plate, and so superposing their images on
one another, he produces a socalled “composite”
photograph or image. Thus, in the photographic
sphere, the portraits of a lot of members of the same
family superposed upon one another may produce a composite
image or ideal of that family type, or the portraits
of a number of Aztecs or of a number of Apache Indians
the ideals respectively of the Aztec or of the Apache
types. And so in the mental sphere of each member
of a tribe the many images of the wellknown Warriors
or Priests or wise and gracious Women of that tribe
did inevitably combine at last to composite figures
of gods and goddesses on whom the enthusiasm
and adoration of the tribe was concentrated. Miss
Harrison has ingeniously suggested how the leading
figures in the magic rituals of the past being
the figures on which all eyes would be concentrated;
and whose importance would be imprinted on every mind lent
themselves to this process. The suffering Victim,
bound and scourged and crucified, recurring year after
year as the centrefigure of a thousand ritual processions,
would at last be dramatized and idealized in the great
raceconsciousness into the form of a Suffering God a
Jesus Christ or a Dionysus or Osiris dismembered
or crucified for the salvation of mankind. The
Priest or MedicineMan or rather the succession
of Priests or MedicineMen whose figures
would recur again and again as leaders and ordainers
of the ceremonies, would be glorified at last into
the compositeimage of a God in whom were concentrated
all magic powers. “Recent researches,”
says Gilbert Murray, “have shown us in abundance
the early Greek medicinechiefs making thunder and
lightning and rain.” Here is the germ of
a Zeus or a Jupiter. The particular medicineman
may fail; that does not so much matter; he is only
the individual representative of the glorified and
composite being who exists in the mind of the tribe
(just as a presentday King may be unworthy, but is
surrounded all the same by the agelong glamour of Royalty).
“The real [gr qeos], tremendous, infallible,
is somewhere far away, hidden in clouds perhaps, on
the summit of some inaccessible mountain. If the
mountain is once climbed the god will move to the upper
sky. The medicinechief meanwhile stays on earth,
still influential. He has some connection with
the great god more intimate than that of other men...
he knows the rules for approaching him and making
prayers to him.” Thus did the Medicineman,
or Priest, or Magician (for these are but three names
for one figure) represent one step in the evolution
of the god.
And farther back still in the evolutionary
process we may trace (as in chapter iv above) the
divinization or deification of fourfooted animals
and birds and snakes and trees and the like, from the
personification of the collective emotion of the tribe
towards these creatures. For people whose chief
food was bearmeat, for instance, whose totem was a
bear, and who believed themselves descended from an
ursine ancestor, there would grow up in the tribal
mind an image surrounded by a halo of emotions emotions
of hungry desire, of reverence, fear, gratitude and
so forth an image of a divine Bear in whom
they lived and moved and had their being. For
another tribe or group in whose yearly ritual a Bull
or a Lamb or a Kangaroo played a leading part there
would in the same way spring tip the image of a holy
bull, a divine lamb, or a sacred kangaroo. Another
group again might come to worship a Serpent as its
presiding genius, or a particular kind of Tree, simply
because these objects were and had been for centuries
prominent factors in its yearly and seasonal Magic.
As Reinach and others suggest, it was the Taboo (bred
by Fear) which by first forbidding contact with the
totemanimal or priest or magicianchief gradually
invested him with Awe and Divinity.
According to this theory the god the
fullgrown god in human shape, dwelling apart and
beyond the earth did not come first, but
was a late and more finished product of evolution.
He grew up by degrees and out of the preceding animalworships
and totemsystems. And this theory is much supported
and corroborated by the fact that in a vast number
of early cults the gods are represented by human figures
with animal heads. The Egyptian religion was
full of such divinities the jackalheaded
Anubis, the ramheaded Ammon, the bullfronted Osiris,
or Muth, queen of darkness, clad in a vulture’s
skin; Minos and the Minotaur in Crete; in Greece,
Athena with an owl’s head, or Herakles masked
in the hide and jaws of a monstrous lion. What
could be more obvious than that, following on the
tribal worship of any totemanimal, the priest or
medicineman or actual king in leading the magic ritual
should don the skin and head of that animal, and wear
the same as a kind of mask this partly
in order to appear to the people as the true representative
of the totem, and partly also in order to obtain from
the skin the magic virtues and mana of the beast,
which he could then duly impart to the crowd?
Zeus, it must be remembered, wears the aegis, or goatskin said
to be the hide of the goat Amaltheia who suckled him
in his infancy; there are a number of legends which
connected the Arcadian Artemis with the worship of
the bear, Apollo with the wolf, and so forth.
And, most curious as showing similarity of rites between
the Old and New Worlds, there are found plenty of
examples of the wearing of beastmasks in religious
processions among the native tribes of both North and
South America. In the Atlas of Spix and Martius
(who travelled together in the Amazonian forests about
1820) there is an understanding and characteristic
picture of the men (and some women) of the tribe of
the Tecunas moving in procession through the woods
mostly naked, except for wearing animal heads and
masks the masks representing Cranes of various
kinds, Ducks, the Opossum, the Jaguar, the Parrot,
etc., probably symbolic of their respective clans.
By some such process as this, it may
fairly be supposed, the forms of the Gods were slowly
exhaled from the actual figures of men and women,
of youths and girls, who year after year took part
in the ancient rituals. Just as the Queen of
the May or Father Christmas with us are idealized
forms derived from the many happy maidens or whitebearded
old men who took leading parts in the May or December
mummings and thus gained their apotheosis in our literature
and tradition so doubtless Zeus with his
thunderbolts and arrows of lightning is the idealization
into Heaven of the Priestly rainmaker and stormcontroller;
Ares the god of War, the similar idealization of the
leading warrior in the ritual wardance preceding
an attack on a neighboring tribe; and Mercury of the
footrunning Messenger whose swiftness in those days
(devoid of steam or electricity) was so precious a
tribal possession.
And here it must be remembered that
this explanation of the genesis of the gods only applies
to the shapes and figures of the various
deities. It does not apply to the genesis of
the widespread belief in spirits or a Great Spirit
generally; that, as I think will become clear, has
quite another source. Some people have jeered
at the ‘animistic’ or ‘anthropomorphic’
tendency of primitive man in his contemplation of the
forces of Nature or his imaginations of religion and
the gods. With a kind of superior pity they speak
of “the poor Indian whose untutored mind sees
God in clouds and hears him in the wind.”
But I must confess that to me the “poor Indian”
seems on the whole to show more good sense than his
critics, and to have aimed his rude arrows at the philosophic
mark more successfully than a vast number of his learned
and scientific successors. A consideration of
what we have said above would show that early people
felt their unity with Nature so deeply and intimately
that like the animals themselves they
did not think consciously or theorize about it.
It was just their life to be like the beasts
of the field and the trees of the forest a
part of the whole flux of things, nondifferentiated
so to speak. What more natural or indeed more
logically correct than for them to assume (when they
first began to think or differentiate themselves)
that these other creatures, these birds, beasts and
plants, and even the sun and moon, were of the same
blood as themselves, their first cousins, so to speak,
and having the same interior nature? What more
reasonable (if indeed they credited themselves
with having some kind of soul or spirit) than to credit
these other creatures with a similar soul or spirit?
Im Thurn, speaking of the Guiana Indians, says that
for them “the whole world swarms with beings.”
Surely this could not be taken to indicate an untutored
mind unless indeed a mind untutored in
the nonsense of the Schools but rather a
very directly perceptive mind. And again what
more reasonable (seeing that these people themselves
were in the animal stage of evolution) than that they
should pay great reverence to some ideal animal first
cousin or ancestor who played an important
part in their tribal existence, and make of this animal
a totem emblem and a symbol of their common life?
And, further still, what more natural
than that when the tribe passed to some degree beyond
the animal stage and began to realize a life more
intelligent and emotional more specially
human in fact than that of the beasts of
the field, that it should then in its rituals and
ceremonies throw off the beastmask and pay reverence
to the interior and more human spirit. Rising
to a more enlightened consciousness of its own intimate
quality, and still deeply penetrated with the sense
of its kinship to external nature, it would inevitably
and perfectly logically credit the latter with an
inner life and intelligence, more distinctly human
than before. Its religion in fact would become
more ‘anthropomorphic’ instead of
less so; and one sees that this is a process that
is inevitable; and inevitable notwithstanding a certain
parenthesis in the process, due to obvious elements
in our ‘Civilization’ and to the temporary
and fallacious domination of a leadeneyed socalled
‘Science.’ According to this view
the true evolution of Religion and Man’s outlook
on the world has proceeded not by the denial by man
of his unity with the world, but by his seeing and
understanding that unity more deeply. And the
more deeply he understands himself the more certainly
he will recognize in the external world a Being or
beings resembling himself.
W. H. Hudson whose mind
is certainly not of a quality to be jeered at speaks of Animism as the
projection of ourselves into nature: the sense and apprehension of an
intelligence like our own, but more powerful, in all visible things; and
continues, old as I am this same primitive faculty which manifested itself in
my early boyhood, still persists, and in those early years was so powerful that
I am almost afraid to say how deeply I was moved by it. Nor will it be
quite forgotten that Shelley once said:
The moveless pillar
of a mountain’s weight
Is active living spirit.
Every grain
Is sentient both in
unity and part,
And the minutest atom
comprehends
A world of loves and
hatreds.
The tendency to animism and later
to anthropomorphism is I say inevitable, and perfectly
logical. But the great value of the work done
by some of those investigators whom I have quoted has
been to show that among quite primitive people (whose
interior life and ‘soulsense’ was only
very feeble) their projections of intelligence into
Nature were correspondingly feeble. The reflections
of themselves projected into the world beyond could
not reach the stature of eternal ‘gods,’
but were rather of the quality of ephemeral phantoms
and ghosts; and the cérémonials and creeds of
that period are consequently more properly described
as, Magic than as Religion. There have indeed
been great controversies as to whether there has or
has not been, in the course of religious evolution,
a preanimistic stage. Probably of course
human evolution in this matter must have been perfectly
continuous from stages presenting the very feeblest
or an absolutely deficient animistic sense to the
very highest manifestations of anthropomorphism; but
as there is a good deal of evidence to show that animals
(notably dogs and horses) see ghosts, the inquiry
ought certainly to be enlarged so far as to include
the prehuman species. Anyhow it must be remembered
that the question is one of consciousness that
is, of how far and to what degree consciousness of
self has been developed in the animal or the primitive
man or the civilized man, and therefore how far and
to what degree the animal or human creature has credited
the outside world with a similar consciousness.
It is not a question of whether there is an inner
life and subconsciousness common to all these
creatures of the earth and sky, because that, I take
it, is a fact beyond question; they all emerge or
have emerged from the same matrix, and are rooted in
identity; but it is a question of how far they are
aware of this, and how far by separation (which
is the genius of evolution) each individual creature
has become conscious of the interior nature both of
itself and of the other creatures and of the
great whole which includes them all.
Finally, and to avoid misunderstanding,
let me say that Anthropomorphism, in man’s conception
of the gods, is itself of course only a stage and
destined to pass away. In so far, that is, as
the term indicates a belief in divine beings corresponding
to our present conception of ourselves that
is as separate personalities having each a separate
and limited character and function, and animated by
the separatist motives of ambition, possession, power,
vainglory, superiority, patronage, selfgreed, selfsatisfaction,
etc. in so far as anthropomorphism
is the expression of that kind of belief it is of
course destined, with the illusion from which it springs,
to pass away. When man arrives at the final consciousness
in which the idea of such a self, superior or inferior
or in any way antagonistic to others, ceases to operate,
then he will return to his first and primal condition,
and will cease to need any special religion or
gods, knowing himself and all his fellows to be divine
and the origin and perfect fruition of all.