The tradition of a “Golden Age”
is widespread over the world, and it is not necessary
to go at any length into the story of the Garden of
Eden and the other legends which in almost every country
illustrate this tradition. Without indulging
in sentiment on the subject we may hold it not unlikely
that the tradition is justified by the remembrance,
among the people of every race, of a precivilization
period of comparative harmony and happiness when two
things, which today we perceive to be the prolific
causes of discord and misery, were absent or only weakly
developed namely, property and selfconsciousness.
During the first century B.C. there
was a great spread of Messianic Ideas over the Roman
world, and Virgil’s 4th Eclogue, commonly called
the Messianic Eclogue, reflects very clearly this state
of the public mind. The expected babe in the
poem was to be the son of Octavian (Augustus) the
first Roman emperor, and a messianic halo surrounded
it in Virgil’s verse. Unfortunately it
turned out to be a girl! However there is
little doubt that Virgil did in that very
sad age of the world, an age of “misery and
massacre,” and in common with thousands of others look
for the coming of a great ‘redeemer.’
It was only a few years earlier about B.C.
70 that the great revolt of the shamefully
maltreated Roman slaves occurred, and that in revenge
six thousand prisoners from Spartacus’ army
were nailed on crosses all the way from Rome to Capua
(150 miles). But long before this Hesiod had recorded
a past Golden Age when life had been gracious in communal
fraternity and joyful in peace, when human beings
and animals spoke the same language, when death had
followed on sleep, without old age or disease, and
after death men had moved as good daimones or genii
over the lands. Pindar, three hundred years after
Hesiod, had confirmed the existence of the Islands
of the Blest, where the good led a blameless, tearless,
life. Plato the same, with further references
to the fabled island of Atlantis; the Egyptians believed
in a former golden age under the god R[a^] to which
they looked back with regret and envy; the Persians
had a garden of Eden similar to that of the Hebrews;
the Greeks a garden of the Hesperides, in which dwelt
the serpent whose head was ultimately crushed beneath
the heel of Hercules; and so on. The references
to a supposed farback state of peace and happiness
are indeed numerous.
So much so that latterly, and partly
to explain their prevalence, a theory has been advanced
which may be worth while mentioning. It is called
the “Theory of intrauterine Blessedness,”
and, remote as it may at first appear, it certainly
has some claim for attention. The theory is that
in the minds of mature people there still remain certain
vague memories of their prenatal days in the maternal
womb memories of a life which, though full
of growing vigor and vitality, was yet at that time
one of absolute harmony with the surroundings, and
of perfect peace and contentment, spent within the
body of the mother the embryo indeed standing
in the same relation to the mother as St. Paul says
we stand to God, “In whom we live
and move and have our being”; and that these
vague memories of the intrauterine life in the individual
are referred back by the mature mind to a past age
in the life of the race. Though it would
not be easy at present to positively confirm this theory,
yet one may say that it is neither improbable nor
unworthy of consideration; also that it bears a certain
likeness to the former ones about the Edengardens,
etc. The wellknown parallelism of the Individual
history with the Racehistory, the “recapitulation”
by the embryo of the development of the race, does
in fact afford an additional argument for its favorable
reception.
These considerations, and what we
have said so often in the foregoing chapters about
the unity of the Animals (and Early Man) with Nature,
and their instinctive and agelong adjustment to the
conditions of the world around them, bring us up hard
and fast against the following conclusions, which
I think we shall find difficult to avoid.
We all recognize the extraordinary
grace and beauty, in their different ways, of the
(wild) animals; and not only their beauty but the extreme
fitness of their actions and habits to their surroundings their
subtle and penetrating Intelligence in fact.
Only we do not generally use the word “Intelligence.”
We use another word (Instinct) and rightly
perhaps, because their actions are plainly not the
result of definite selfconscious reasoning, such
as we use, carried out by each individual; but are
(as has been abundantly proved by Samuel Butler and
others) the systematic expression of experiences gathered
up and sorted out and handed down from generation
to generation in the bosom of the race an
Intelligence in fact, or Insight, of larger subtler
scope than the other, and belonging to the tribal
or racial Being rather than to the isolated individual a
superconsciousness in fact, ramifying afar in space
and time.
But if we allow (as we must) this
unity and perfection of nature, and this somewhat
cosmic character of the mind, to exist among the Animals,
we can hardly refuse to believe that there must have
been a period when Man, too, hardly as yet differentiated
from them, did himself possess these same qualities perhaps
even in greater degree than the animals of
grace and beauty of body, perfection of movement and
action, instinctive perception and knowledge (of course
in limited spheres); and a period when he possessed
above all a sense of unity with his fellows and with
surrounding Nature which became the ground of a common
consciousness between himself and his tribe, similar
to that which Maeterlinck, in the case of the Bees,
calls the Spirit of the Hive. It would be difficult,
nay impossible, to suppose that human beings on their
first appearance formed an entire exception in the
process of evolution, or that they were completely
lacking in the very graces and faculties which we
so admire in the animals only of course
we see that (like the animals) they would not
be selfconscious in these matters, and what
perception they had of their relations to each other
or to the world around them would be largely inarticulate
and subconscious though none the
less real for that.
Let us then grant this preliminary
assumption and it clearly is not a large
or hazardous one and what follows?
It follows since today discord is the
rule, and Man has certainly lost the grace, both physical
and mental, of the animals that at some
period a break must have occurred in the evolutionprocess,
a discontinuity similar perhaps to that
which occurs in the life of a child at the moment when
it is born into the world. Humanity took a new
departure; but a departure which for the moment was
signalized as a loss the loss of its
former harmony and selfadjustment. And the cause
or accompaniment of this change was the growth of
Selfconsciousness. Into the general consciousness
of the tribe (in relation to its environment) which
in fact had constituted the mentality of the animals
and of man up to this stage, there now was intruded
another kind of consciousness, a consciousness centering
round each little individual self and concerned almost
entirely with the interests of the latter. Here
was evidently a threat to the continuance of the former
happy conditions. It was like the appearance of
innumerable little ulcers in a human body a
menace which if continued would inevitably lead to
the breakup of the body. It meant loss of tribal
harmony and natureadjustment. It meant instead
of unity a myriad conflicting centres; it meant alienation
from the spirit of the tribe, the separation of man
from man, discord, recrimination, and the fatal unfolding
of the sense of sin. The process symbolized itself
in the legend of the Fall. Man ate of the Tree
of the knowledge of good and evil. Sometimes
people wonder why knowledge of any kind and
especially the knowledge of good and evil should
have brought a curse. But the reason is obvious.
Into, the placid and harmonious life of the animal
and human tribes fulfilling their days in obedience
to the slow evolutions and agelong mandates of nature,
Selfconsciousness broke with its inconvenient and
impossible query: “How do these arrangements
suit me? Are they good for me, are they evil
for me? I want to know. I will know!”
Evidently knowledge (such knowledge as we understand
by the word) only began, and could only begin, by
queries relating to the little local self. There
was no other way for it to begin. Knowledge and
selfconsciousness were born, as twins, together.
Knowledge therefore meant Sin ; for selfconsciousness
meant sin (and it means sin today). Sin is Separation.
That is probably (though disputed) the etymology of
the word that which sunders. The essence
of sin is one’s separation from the whole (the
tribe or the god) of which one is a part. And
knowledge which separates subject from object,
and in its inception is necessarily occupied with
the ‘good and evil’ of the little local
self, is the great engine of this separation. (Mark!
I say nothing against this association of Selfconsciousness
with ‘Sin’ (socalled) and ‘Knowledge’
(socalled). The growth of all three together
is an absolutely necessary part of human evolution,
and to rail against it would be absurd. But we
may as well open our eyes and see the fact straight
instead of blinking it.) The culmination of the process
and the fulfilment of the ‘curse’ we may
watch today in the towering expansion of the selfconscious
individualized Intellect science as the
handmaid of human Greed devastating the habitable
world and destroying its unworthy civilization.
And the process must go on necessarily must
go on until Selfconsciousness, ceasing
its vain quest (vain in both senses) for the separate
domination of life, surrenders itself back again into
the arms of the Motherconsciousness from which it
originally sprang surrenders itself back,
not to be merged in nonentity, but to be affiliated
in loving dependence on and harmony with the cosmic
life.
All this I have dealt with in far
more detail in Civilization: its Cause and Cure,
and in The Art of Creation; but I have only repeated
the outline of it as above, because some such outline
is necessary for the proper ordering and understanding
of the points which follow.
We are not concerned now with the
ultimate effects of the ‘Fall’ of Man
or with the presentday fulfilment of the Edencurse.
What we want to understand is how the ‘Fall’
into selfconsciousness led to that great panorama
of Ritual and Religion which we have very briefly described
and summarized in the preceding chapters of this book.
We want for the present to fix our attention on the
commencement of that process by which man lapsed
away from his living community with Nature and his
fellows into the desert of discord and toil, while
the angels of the flaming sword closed the gates of
Paradise behind him.
It is evident I think that in that
‘golden’ stage when man was simply the
crown and perfection of the animals and
it is hardly possible to refuse the belief in such
a stage he possessed in reality all the
essentials of Religion. It is not necessary to
sentimentalize over him; he was probably raw and crude
in his lusts of hunger and of sex; he was certainly
ignorant and superstitious; he loved fighting with
and persecuting ‘enemies’ (which things
of course all religions today except perhaps
the Buddhist love to do); he was dominated
often by unreasoning Fear, and was consequently cruel.
Yet he was full of that Faith which the animals have
to such an admirable degree unhesitating
faith in the inner promptings of his own nature;
he had the joy which comes of abounding vitality,
springing up like a fountain whose outlet is free
and unhindered; he rejoiced in an untroubled and unbroken
sense of unity with his Tribe, and in elaborate social
and friendly institutions within its borders; he had
a marvelous senseacuteness towards Nature and a gift
in that direction verging towards “secondsight”;
strengthened by a conviction which had never
become conscious because it had never been questioned of
his own personal relation to the things outside him,
the Earth, the Sky, the Vegetation, the Animals.
Of such a Man we get glimpses in the far past though
indeed only glimpses, for the simple reason that all
our knowledge of him comes through civilized channels;
and wherever civilization has touched these early
peoples it has already withered and corrupted them,
even before it has had the sense to properly observe
them. It is sufficient, however, just to mention
peoples like some of the early Pacific Islanders,
the Zulus and Kafirs of South Africa, the Fans of the
Congo Region (of whom Winwood Reade speaks so highly),
some of the Malaysian and Himalayan tribes, the primitive
Chinese, and even the evidence with regard to the
neolithic peoples of Europe, in order to show
what I mean.
Perhaps one of the best ideas of the
gulf of difference between the semicivilized and
the quite primal man is given by A. R. Wallace in
his Life (Vol. i, : “A most unexpected
sensation of surprise and delight was my first meeting
and living with man in a state of nature with absolute
uncontaminated savages! This was on the Uaupes
river.... They were all going about their own
work or pleasure, which had nothing to do with the
white men or their ways; they walked with the free
step of the independent forestdweller... original
and selfsustaining as the wild animals of the forests,
absolutely independent of civilization... living their
own lives in their own way, as they had done for countless
generations before America was discovered. Indeed
the true denizen of the Amazonian forests, like the
forest itself, is unique and not to be forgotten.”
Elsewhere Wallace speaks of the quiet, goodnatured,
inoffensive character of these coppercolored peoples,
and of their quickness of hand and skill, and continues:
“their figures are generally superb; and I have
never felt so much pleasure in gazing at the finest
statue as at these living illustrations of the beauty
of the human form.”
Though some of the peoples just mentioned
may be said to belong to different grades or stages
of human evolution and physically some no doubt were
far superior to others, yet they mostly exhibit this
simple grace of the bodily and mental organism, as
well as that closeness of tribal solidarity of which
I have spoken. The immense antiquity, of the
clan organization, as shown by investigations into
early marriage, points to the latter conclusion.
Travellers among Bushmen, Hottentots, Fuegians, Esquimaux,
Papuans and other peoples peoples who have
been pushed aside into unfavorable areas by the invasion
of more warlike and betterequipped races, and who
have suffered physically in consequence confirm
this. Kropotkin, speaking of the Hottentots, quotes
the German author P. Kolben who travelled among
them in 1275 or so. “He knew the Hottentots
well and did not pass by their defects in silence,
but could not praise their tribal morality highly enough.
Their word is sacred, he wrote, they know nothing
of the corruption and faithless arts of Europe.
They live in great tranquillity and are seldom at war
with their neighbors, and are all kindness and goodwill
to one another.” Kropotkin further says:
“Let me remark that when Kolben says ’they
are certainly the most friendly, the most liberal
and the most benevolent people to one another that
ever appeared on the earth’ he wrote a sentence
which has continually appeared since in the description
of savages. When first meeting with primitive
races, the Europeans usually make a caricature of
their life; but when an intelligent man has stayed
among them for a longer time he generally describes
them as the ‘kindest’ or the ‘gentlest’
race on the earth. These very same words have
been applied to the Ostyaks, the Samoyèdes, the Eskimos, the Dyaks,
the Aleuts, the Papuans, and so on, by the highest authorities. I also remember
having read them applied to the Tunguses, the Tchuktchis, the Sioux, and several
others. The very frequency of that high commendation already speaks volumes in
itself.
Many of the tribes, like the Aleuts,
Eskimos, Dyaks, Papuans, Fuegians, etc., are
themselves in the Neolithic stage of culture though
for the reason given above probably degenerated physically
from the standard of their neolithic ancestors; and
so the conclusion is forced upon one that there must
have been an immense period, prior to
the first beginnings of ‘civilization,’
in which the human tribes in general led a peaceful
and friendly life on the earth, comparatively little
broken up by dissensions, in close contact with Nature
and in that degree of sympathy with and understanding
of the Animals which led to the establishment of the
Totem system. Though it would be absurd to credit
these tribes with any great degree of comfort and wellbeing
according to our modern standards, yet we may well
suppose that the memory of this long period lingered
on for generations and generations and was ultimately
idealized into the Golden Age, in contrast to the succeeding
period of everlasting warfare, rancor and strife, which
came in with the growth of Property with its greeds
and jealousies, and the accentuation of Selfconsciousness
with all its vanities and ambitions.
I say that each tribe at this early
stage of development had within it the essentials
of what we call Religion namely a bedrock
sense of its community with Nature, and of the Common
life among its members a sense so intimate
and fundamental that it was hardly aware of itself
(any more than the fish is aware of the sea in which
it lives), but yet was really the matrix of tribal
thought and the spring of tribal action. It was
this sense of unity which was destined by the growth
of selfconsciousness to come to light and
evidence in the shape of all manner of rituals and
cérémonials; and by the growth of the imaginative
intellect to embody itself in the figures and
forms of all manner of deities.
Let us examine into this a little
more closely. A lark soaring in the eye of the
sun, and singing rapt between its “heaven and
home” realizes no doubt in actual fact all that
those two words mean to us; yet its realization is
quite subconscious. It does not define its own
experience: it feels but it does not think.
In order to come to the stage of thinking it
would perhaps be necessary that the lark should be
exiled from the earth and the sky, and confined in
a cage. Early Man felt the great truths
and realities of Life often I believe more
purely than we do but he could not give
form to his experience. That stage came
when he began to lose touch with these realities; and
it showed itself in rites and cérémonials.
The inbreak of selfconsciousness brought out
the facts of his inner life into ritualistic and afterwards
into intellectual forms.
Let me give examples. For a long
time the Tribe is all in all; the individual is completely
subject to the ‘Spirit of the Hive’; he
does not even think of contravening it. Then
the day comes when selfinterest, as apart from the
Tribe, becomes sufficiently strong to drive him against
some tribal custom. He breaks the tabu; he eats
the forbidden apple; he sins against the tribe, and
is cast out. Suddenly he finds himself an exile,
lonely, condemned and deserted. A horrible sense
of distress seizes him something of which
he had no experience before. He tries to think
about it all, to understand the situation, but is
dazed and cannot arrive at any conclusion. His
one necessity is Reconciliation, Atonement.
He finds he cannot live outside of and alienated
from his tribe. He makes a Sacrifice, an offering
to his fellows, as a seal of sincerity an
offering of his own bodily suffering or precious blood,
or the blood of some foodanimal, or some valuable
gift or other if only he may be allowed
to return. The offering is accepted. The
ritual is performed; and he is received back.
I have already spoken of this perfectly natural evolution
of the twinideas of Sin and Sacrifice, so I need
not enlarge upon the subject. But two things
we may note here: that the ritual, being so
concrete (and often severe), graves itself on the
minds of those concerned, and expresses the feelings
of the tribe, with an intensity and sharpness of outline
which no words could rival, and that such rituals
may have, and probably did, come into use even while
language itself was in an infantile condition and
incapable of dealing with the psychological situation
except by symbols. They, the rituals, were the
first effort of the primitive mind to get beyond,
subconscious feeling and emerge into a world of forms
and definite thought.
Let us carry the particular instance,
given above, a stage farther, even to the confines
of abstract Thought and Philosophy. I have spoken
of “The Spirit of the Hive” as if the
term were applicable to the Human as well as to the
Bee tribe. The individual bee obviously has never
thought about that Spirit, nor mentally understood what Maeterlinck
means by it; and yet in terms of actual experience it is an intense reality to
the bee (ordaining for instance on some fateful day the slaughter of all the
drones), controlling beemovements and beemorality generally. The
individual tribesman similarly steeped in the agelong human life of his fellows
has never thought of the Tribe as an ordaining being or Spirit, separate from
himself till that day when he is exiled
and outcast from it. Then he sees himself
and the tribe as two opposing beings, himself of course
an Intelligence or Spirit in his own limited degree,
the Tribe as a much greater Intelligence or Spirit,
standing against and over him. From that day
the conception of a god arises on him. It may
be only a totemgod a divine GrizzlyBear
or what not but still a god or supernatural
Presence, embodied in the life of the tribe. This
is what Sin has taught him. This is what Fear,
founded on selfconsciousness, has revealed to him.
The revelation may be true, or it may be fallacious
(I do not prejudge it); but there it is the
beginning of that long series of human evolutions which
we call Religion.
(For when the human mind has reached
that stage of consciousness in which each man realizes
his own ‘self’ as a rational and consistent
being, “looking before and after,” then,
as I have said already, the mind projects on the background
of Nature similarly rational Presences which we may
call ‘Gods’; and at that stage ‘Religion’
begins. Before that, when the mind is quite unformed
and dreamlike, and consists chiefly of broken and
scattered rays, and when distinct selfconsciousness
is hardly yet developed, then the presences imagined
in Nature are merely flickering and intermittent phantoms,
and their propitiation and placation comes more properly
under, the head of ‘Magic.’)
So much for the genesis of the religious
ideas of Sin and Sacrifice, and the rites connected
with these ideas their genesis through the
inbreak of selfconsciousness upon the corporate
subconsciousness of the life of the Community.
But an exactly similar process may be observed in the
case of the other religious ideas.
I spoke of the doctrine of the second
birth, and the rites connected with it both in
Paganism and in Christianity. There is much to
show that among quite primitive peoples there is less
of shrinking from death and more of certainty about
a continued life after death than we generally find
among more intellectual and civilized folk. It
is, or has been, quite, common among many tribes for
the old and decrepit, who are becoming a burden to
their fellows, to offer themselves for happy dispatch,
and to take willing part in the ceremonial preparations
for their own extinction; and this readiness is encouraged
by their na[i:]ve and untroubled belief
in a speedy transference to “happy huntinggrounds”
beyond the grave. The truth is that when, as in
such cases, the tribal life is very whole and unbroken each
individual identifying himself completely with the
tribe the idea of the individual’s
being dropped out at death, and left behind by the
tribe, hardly arises. The individual is the tribe,
has no other existence. The tribe goes on, living
a life which is eternal, and only changes its huntinggrounds;
and the individual, identified with the tribe, feels
in some subconscious way the same about himself.
But when one member has broken faith
with the tribe, when he has sinned against it and
become an outcast ah! then the terrors of
death and extinction loom large upon him. “The
wages of sin is death.” There comes a period
in the evolution of tribal life when the primitive
bonds are loosening, when the tendency towards selfwill
and selfdetermination (so necessary of course
in the long run for the evolution of humanity) becomes
a real danger to the tribe, and a terror to the wise
men and elders of the community. It is seen that
the children inherit this tendency even
from their infancy. They are no longer mere animals,
easily herded; it seems that they are born in sin or
at least in ignorance and neglect of their tribal
life and calling. The only cure is that they
must be born again. They must
deliberately and of set purpose be adopted into the
tribe, and be made to realize, even severely, in their
own persons what is happening. They must go through
the initiations necessary to impress this upon them.
Thus a whole series of solemn rites spring up, different
no doubt in every locality, but all having the same
object and purpose. (And one can understand how the
necessity of such initiations and second birth may
easily have been itself felt in every race, at some
stage of its evolution and that quite
as a spontaneous growth, and independently of any contagion
of example caught from other races.)
The same may be said about the worldwide
practice of the Eucharist. No more effective
method exists for impressing on the members of a body
their community of life with each other, and causing
them to forget their jangling selfinterests, than
to hold a feast in common. It is a method which
has been honored in all ages as well as today.
But when the flesh partaken of at the feast is that
of the Totem the guardian and presiding
genius of the tribe or perhaps of one of
its chief foodanimals then clearly the
feast takes on a holy and solemn character. It
becomes a sacrament of unity of the unity
of all with the tribe, and with each other. Selfinterests
and selfconsciousness are for the time submerged,
and the common life asserts itself; but here again
we see that a custom like this would not come into
being as a deliberate rite until selfconsciousness
and the divisions consequent thereon had grown to
be an obvious evil. The herdanimals (cows, sheep,
and so forth) do not have Eucharists, simply because
they are sensible enough to feed along the same pastures
without quarrelling over the richest tufts of grass.
When the flesh partaken of (either
actually or symbolically) is not that of a divinized
animal, but the flesh of a humanformed god as
in the mysteries of Dionysus or Osiris or Christ then
we are led to suspect (and of course this theory is
widely held and supported) that the rites date from
a very farback period when a human being, as representative
of the tribe, was actually slain, dismembered and partly
devoured; though as time went on, the rite gradually
became glossed over and mitigated into a lovecommunion
through the sharing of bread and wine.
It is curious anyhow that the dismemberment
or division into fragments of the body of a god (as
in the case of Dionysus, Osiris, Attis, Praj[a’]pâti
and others) should be so frequent a tenet of the old
religions, and so commonly associated with a lovefeast
of reconciliation and resurrection. It may be
fairly interpreted as a symbol of Naturedismemberment
in Winter and resurrection in Spring; but we must
also not forget that it may (and indeed must) have
stood as an allegory of tribal dismemberment
and reconciliation the tribe, conceived
of as a divinity, having thus suffered and died through
the inbreak of sin and the selfmotive, and risen
again into wholeness by the redemption of love and
sacrifice. Whatever view the rank and file of
the tribe may have taken of the matter, I think it
is incontestable that the more thoughtful regarded
these rites as full of mystic and spiritual meaning.
It is of the nature, as I have said before, of these
early symbols and ceremonies that they held so many
meanings in solution; and it is this fact which gave
them a poetic or creative quality, and their great
hold upon the public mind.
I use the word “tribe”
in many places here as a matter of convenience; not
forgetting however that in some cases “clan”
might be more appropriate, as referring to a section
of a tribe; or “people” or “folk”
as referring to unions of several tribes.
It is impossible of course to follow out all the gradations
of organization from tribal up to national life; but
it may be remembered that while animal totems
prevail as a rule in the earlier stages, humanformed
gods become more conspicuous in the later developments.
All through, the practice of the Eucharist goes on,
in varying forms adapting itself to the surrounding
conditions; and where in the later societies a religion
like Mithraism or Christianity includes people of
very various race, the Rite loses quite naturally
its tribal significance and becomes a celebration of
allegiance to a particular god of unity
within a special Church, in fact. Ultimately it
may become as for a brief moment in the
history of the early Christians it seemed likely to
do a celebration of allegiance to all Humanity,
irrespective of race or creed or color of skin or of
mind: though unfortunately that day seems still
far distant and remains yet unrealized. It must
not be overlooked, however, that the religion of the
Persian B[a^]b, first promulgated in 1845 to 1850 and
a subject I shall deal with presently had
as a matter of fact this all embracing and universal
scope.
To return to the Golden Age or Garden
of Eden. Our conclusion seems to be that there
really was such a period of comparative harmony in
human life to which later generations were
justified in looking back, and looking back with regret.
It corresponded in the psychology of human Evolution
to stage One. The second stage was that of the
Fall; and so one is inevitably led to the conjecture
and the hope that a third stage will redeem the earth
and its inhabitants to a condition of comparative
blessedness.