THE ORACLES.
B.C. 547
Plans of Croesus--The River
Halys--Nature of the oracles--Situation
of Delphi--The gaseous vapor--The
priestess--The sacred tripod--The
oracle of Dodona--The two black doves--The
priestesses of Dodona--Manner of obtaining
responses--The great brazen caldron--The
Oasis of Jupiter Ammon--Discovery of the
Oasis of Jupiter Ammon--Other oracles--Mode
of consulting the oracle--Mystic ceremonies--Croesus
puts the oracle to the test--Manner of doing
it--Return of the messengers--The
replies--Croesus decides in favor of Delphi--His
costly gifts--The silver tank--The
golden lion--The bread-maker--Her
history--The oracle questioned--The
response--Delight of Croesus--Supplementary
inquiry--Croesus’s feeling of security--Nature
of the oracles--Means by which the credit
of the oracles was sustained--Whether the
priests were impostors--Answers of the
oracles--Collusion between the priests and
those who consulted the oracle--Is there
any revelation truly divine?
As soon as Cyrus had become established
on his throne as King of the Mèdes and Persians,
his influence and power began to extend westward toward
the confines of the empire of Croesus, king of Lydia.
Croesus was aroused from the dejection and stupor into
which the death of his son had plunged him, as related
in a former chapter, by this threatening danger.
He began to consider very earnestly what he could
do to avert it.
The River Halys, a great river of
Asia Minor, which flows northward into the Black Sea,
was the eastern boundary of the Lydian empire.
Croesus began to entertain the design of raising an
army and crossing the Halys, to invade the empire
of Cyrus, thinking that that would perhaps be safer
policy than to wait for Cyrus to cross the Halys,
and bring the war upon him. Still, the enterprise
of invading Persia was a vast undertaking, and the
responsibility great of being the aggressor in the
contest. After carefully considering the subject
in all its aspects, Croesus found himself still perplexed
and undecided.
The Greeks had a method of looking
into futurity, and of ascertaining, as they imagined,
by supernatural means, the course of future events,
which was peculiar to that people; at least no other
nation seems ever to have practiced it in the precise
form which prevailed among them. It was by means
of the oracles. There were four or five localities
in the Grecian countries which possessed, as the people
thought, the property of inspiring persons who visited
them, or of giving to some natural object certain
supernatural powers by which future events could be
foretold. The three most important of these oracles
were situated respectively at Delphi, at Dodona, and
at the Oasis of Jupiter Ammon.
Delphi was a small town built in a
sort of valley, shaped like an amphitheater, on the
southern side of Mount Parnassus. Mount Parnassus
is north of the Peloponnesus, not very far from the
shores of the Gulf of Corinth. Delphi was in
a picturesque and romantic situation, with the mountain
behind it, and steep, precipitous rocks descending
to the level country before. These precipices
answered instead of walls to defend the temple and
the town. In very early times a cavern or fissure
in the rocks was discovered at Delphi, from which there
issued a stream of gaseous vapor, which produced strange
effects on those who inhaled it. It was supposed
to inspire them. People resorted to the place
to obtain the benefit of these inspirations, and of
the knowledge which they imagined they could obtain
by means of them. Finally, a temple was built,
and a priestess resided constantly in it, to inhale
the vapor and give the responses. When she gave
her answers to those who came to consult the oracle,
she sat upon a sort of three-legged stool, which was
called the sacred tripod. These stools were greatly
celebrated as a very important part of the sacred
apparatus of the place. This oracle became at
last so renowned, that the greatest potentates, and
even kings, came from great distances to consult it,
and they made very rich and costly presents at the
shrine when they came. These presents, it was
supposed, tended to induce the god who presided over
the oracle to give to those who made them favorable
and auspicious replies. The deity that dictated
the predictions of this oracle was Apollo.
There was another circumstance, besides
the existence of the cave, which signalized the locality
where this oracle was situated. The people believed
that this spot was the exact center of the earth,
which of course they considered as one vast plain.
There was an ancient story that Jupiter, in order
to determine the central point of creation, liberated
two eagles at the same time, in opposite quarters
of the heavens, that they might fly toward one another,
and so mark the middle point by the place of their
meeting. They met at Delphi.
Another of the most celebrated oracles
was at Dodona. Dodona was northwest of Delphi,
in the Epirus, which was a country in the western
part of what is now Turkey in Europe, and on the shores
of the Adriatic Sea. The origin of the oracle
at Dodona was, as the priestesses there told Herodotus,
as follows: In very ancient times, two black
doves were set at liberty in Thebes, which was a very
venerable and sacred city of Egypt. One flew toward
the north and the other toward the west. The
former crossed the Mediterranean, and then continued
its flight over the Peloponnesus, and over all the
southern provinces of Greece, until it reached Dodona.
There it alighted on a beech-tree, and said, in a
human voice, that that spot was divinely appointed
for the seat of a sacred oracle. The other dove
flew to the Oasis of Jupiter Ammon.
There were three priestesses at Dodona
in the days of Herodotus. Their names were Promenea,
Timarete, and Nicandre. The answers of the oracle
were, for a time, obtained by the priestesses from
some appearances which they observed in the sacred
beech on which the dove alighted, when the tree was
agitated by the wind. In later times, however,
the responses were obtained in a still more singular
manner. Then was a brazen statue of a man, holding
a whip in his hand. The whip had three lashes,
which were formed of brazen chains. At the end
of each chain was an astragalus, as it was
called, which was a row of little knots or knobs,
such as were commonly appended to the lashes of whips
used in those days for scourging criminals.
These heavy lashes hung suspended
in the hand of the statue over a great brazen caldron,
in such a manner that the wind would impel them, from
time to time, against its sides, causing the caldron
to ring and resound like a gong. There was, however,
something in this resonance supernatural and divine;
for, though it was not loud, it was very long continued,
when once the margin of the caldron was touched, however
gently, by the lashes. In fact, it was commonly
said that if touched in the morning, it would be night
before the reverberations would have died entirely
away. Such a belief could be very easily sustained
among the common people; for a large, open-mouthed
vessel like the Dodona caldron, with thin sides formed
of sonorous metal, might be kept in a state of continual
vibration by the wind alone.
They who wished to consult this oracle
came with rich presents both for the priestesses and
for the shrine, and when they had made the offerings,
and performed the preliminary ceremonies required,
they propounded their questions to the priestesses,
who obtained the replies by interpreting, according
to certain rules which they had formed, the sounds
emitted by the mysterious gong.
The second black dove which took its
flight from Thebes alighted, as we have already said,
in the Oasis of Jupiter Ammon. This oasis was
a small fertile spot in the midst of the deserts of
Africa, west of Egypt, about a hundred miles from
the Nile, and somewhat nearer than that to the Mediterranean
Sea. It was first discovered in the following
manner: A certain king was marching across the
deserts, and his army, having exhausted their supplies
of water, were on the point of perishing with thirst,
when a ram mysteriously appeared, and took a position
before them as their guide. They followed him,
and at length came suddenly upon a green and fertile
valley, many miles in length. The ram conducted
them into this valley, and then suddenly vanished,
and a copious fountain of water sprung up in the place
where he had stood. The king, in gratitude for
this divine interposition, consecrated the spot and
built a temple upon it, which was called the temple
of Jupiter Ammon. The dove alighted here, and
ever afterward the oracles delivered by the priests
of this temple were considered as divinely inspired.
These three were the most important
oracles. There were, however, many others of
subordinate consequence, each of which had its own
peculiar ceremonies, all senseless and absurd.
At one there was a sort of oven-shaped cave in the
rocks, the spot being inclosed by an artificial wall.
The cave was about six feet wide and eight feet deep.
The descent into it was by a ladder. Previously
to consulting this oracle certain ceremonies were
necessary, which it required several days to perform.
The applicant was to offer sacrifices to many different
deities, and to purify himself in various ways.
He was then conducted to a stream in the neighborhood
of the oracle, where he was to be anointed and washed.
Then he drank a certain magical water, called the
water of forgetfulness, which made him forget all previous
sorrows and cares. Afterward he drank of another
enchanted cup, which contained the water of remembrance;
this was to make him remember all that should be communicated
to him in the cave. He then descended the ladder,
and received within the cave the responses of the oracle.
At another of these oracles, which
was situated in Attica, the magic virtue was supposed
to reside in a certain marble statue, carved in honor
of an ancient and celebrated prophet, and placed in
a temple. Whoever wished to consult this oracle
must abstain from wine for three days, and from food
of every kind for twenty-four hours preceding the
application. He was then to offer a ram as a sacrifice;
and afterward, taking the skin of the ram from the
carcass, he was to spread it out before the statue
and lie down upon it to sleep. The answers of
the oracle came to him in his dreams.
But to return to Croesus. He
wished to ascertain, by consulting some of these oracles,
what the result of his proposed invasion of the dominions
of Cyrus would be, in case he should undertake it;
and in order to determine which of the various oracles
were most worthy of reliance, he conceived the plan
of putting them all to a preliminary test. He
effected this object in the following manner:
He dispatched a number of messengers
from Sardis, his capital, sending one to each of the
various oracles. He directed these messengers
to make their several journeys with all convenient
dispatch; but, in order to provide for any cases of
accidental detention or delay, he allowed them all
one hundred days to reach their several places of
destination. On the hundredth day from the time
of their leaving Sardis, they were all to make applications
to the oracles, and inquire what Croesus, king of
Lydia, was doing at that time. Of course he did
not tell them what he should be doing; and as the oracles
themselves could not possibly know how he was employed
by any human powers, their answers would seem to test
the validity of their claims to powers divine.
Croesus kept the reckoning of the
days himself with great care, and at the hour appointed
on the hundredth day, he employed himself in boiling
the flesh of a turtle and of a lamb together in a brazen
vessel. The vessel was covered with a lid, which
was also of brass. He then awaited the return
of the messengers. They came in due time, one
after another, bringing the replies which they had
severally obtained. The replies were all unsatisfactory,
except that of the oracle at Delphi. This answer
was in verse, as, in fact, the responses of that oracle
always were. The priestess who sat upon the tripod
was accustomed to give the replies in an incoherent
and half-intelligible manner, as impostors are very
apt to do in uttering prophecies, and then the attendant
priests and secretaries wrote them out in verse.
The verse which the messenger brought
back from the Delphic tripod was in Greek; but some
idea of its style, and the import of it, is conveyed
by the following imitation:
“I number the
sands, I measure the sea,
What’s hidden
to others is known to me.
The lamb and the turtle
are simmering slow
With brass above them
and brass below.”
Of course, Croesus decided that the
Delphic oracle was the one that he must rely upon
for guidance in respect to his projected campaign.
And he now began to prepare to consult it in a manner
corresponding with the vast importance of the subject,
and with his own boundless wealth. He provided
the most extraordinary and sumptuous presents.
Some of these treasures were to be deposited in the
temple, as sacred gifts, for permanent preservation
there. Others were to be offered as a burnt sacrifice
in honor of the god. Among the latter, besides
an incredible number of living victims, he caused
to be prepared a great number of couches, magnificently
decorated with silver and gold, and goblets and other
vessels of gold, and dresses of various kinds richly
embroidered, and numerous other articles, all intended
to be used in the ceremonies preliminary to his application
to the oracle. When the time arrived, a vast
concourse of people assembled to witness the spectacle.
The animals were sacrificed, and the people feasted
on the flesh; and when these ceremonies were concluded,
the couches, the goblets, the utensils of every kind,
the dresses every thing, in short, which
had been used on the occasion, were heaped up into
one great sacrificial pile, and set on fire.
Every thing that was combustible was consumed, while
the gold was melted, and ran into plates of great
size, which were afterward taken out from the ashes.
Thus it was the workmanship only of these articles
which was destroyed and lost by the fire. The
gold, in which the chief value consisted, was saved.
It was gold from the Pactolus.
Besides these articles, there were
others made, far more magnificent and costly, for
the temple itself. There was a silver cistern
or tank, large enough to hold three thousand gallons
of wine. This tank was to be used by the inhabitants
of Delphi in their great festivals. There was
also a smaller cistern, or immense goblet, as it might,
perhaps, more properly be called, which was made of
gold. There were also many other smaller presents,
such as basins, vases, and statues, all of silver
and gold, and of the most costly workmanship.
The gold, too, which had been taken from the fire,
was cast again, a part of it being formed into the
image of a lion, and the rest into large plates of
metal for the lion to stand upon. The image was
then set up upon the plates, within the precincts
of the temple.
There was one piece of statuary which
Croesus presented to the oracle at Delphi, which was,
in some respects, more extraordinary than any of the
rest. It was called the bread-maker. It was
an image representing a woman, a servant in the household
of Croesus, whose business it was to bake the bread.
The reason that induced Croesus to honor this bread-maker
with a statue of gold was, that on one occasion during
his childhood she had saved his life. The mother
of Croesus died when he was young, and his father
married a second time. The second wife wished
to have some one of her children, instead of Croesus,
succeed to her husband’s throne. In order,
therefore, to remove Croesus out of the way, she prepared
some poison and gave it to the bread-maker, instructing
her to put it into the bread which Croesus was to
eat. The bread-maker received the poison and promised
to obey. But, instead of doing so, she revealed
the intended murder to Croesus, and gave the poison
to the queen’s own children. In gratitude
for this fidelity to him, Croesus, when he came to
the throne, caused this statue to be made, and now
he placed it at Delphi, where he supposed it would
forever remain. The memory of his faithful servant
was indeed immortalized by the measure, though the
statue itself, as well as all these other treasures,
in process of time disappeared. In fact, statues
of brass or of marble generally make far more durable
monuments than statues of gold; and no structure or
object of art is likely to be very permanent among
mankind unless the workmanship is worth more than
the material.
Croesus did not proceed himself to
Delphi with these presents, but sent them by the hands
of trusty messengers, who were instructed to perform
the ceremonies required, to offer the gifts, and then
to make inquiries of the oracle in the following terms.
“Croesus the sovereign of Lydia
and of various other kingdoms, in return for the wisdom
which has marked your former declarations, has sent
you these gifts. He now furthermore desires to
know whether it is safe for him to proceed against
the Persians, and if so, whether it is best for him
to seek the assistance of any allies.”
The answer was as follows:
“If Croesus crosses the Halys,
and prosecutes a war with Persia, a mighty empire
will be overthrown. It will be best for him to
form an alliance with the most powerful states of
Greece.”
Croesus was extremely pleased with
this response. He immediately resolved on undertaking
the expedition against Cyrus; and to express his gratitude
for so favorable an answer to his questions, he sent
to Delphi to inquire what was the number of inhabitants
in the city, and, when the answer was reported to
him, he sent a present of a sum of money to every
one. The Delphians, in their turn, conferred
special privileges and honors upon the Lydians and
upon Croesus in respect to their oracle, giving them
the precedence in all future consultations, and conferring
upon them other marks of distinction and honor.
At the time when Croesus sent his
present to the inhabitants of Delphi, he took the
opportunity to address another inquiry to the oracle,
which was, whether his power would ever decline.
The oracle replied in a couplet of Greek verse, similar
in its style to the one recorded on the previous occasion.
It was as follows:
“Whene’er
a mule shall mount upon the Median throne,
Then, and not till then,
shall great Croesus fear to lose his own.”
This answer pleased the king quite
as much as the former one had done. The allusion
to the contingency of a mule’s reigning in Media
he very naturally regarded as only a rhetorical and
mystical mode of expressing an utter impossibility.
Croesus considered himself and the continuance of
his power as perfectly secure. He was fully confirmed
in his determination to organize his expedition without
any delay, and to proceed immediately to the proper
measures for obtaining the Grecian alliance and aid
which the oracle had recommended. The plans which
he formed, and the events which resulted, will be
described in subsequent chapters.
In respect to these Grecian oracles,
it is proper here to state, that there has been much
discussion among scholars on the question how they
were enabled to maintain, for so long a period, so
extended a credit among a people as intellectual and
well informed as the Greeks. It was doubtless
by means of a variety of contrivances and influences
that this end was attained. There is a natural
love of the marvelous among the humbler classes in
all countries, which leads them to be very ready to
believe in what is mystic and supernatural; and they
accordingly exaggerate and color such real incidents
as occur under any strange or remarkable circumstances,
and invest any unusual phenomena which they witness
with a miraculous or supernatural interest. The
cave at Delphi might really have emitted gases which
would produce quite striking effects upon those who
inhaled them; and how easy it would be for those who
witnessed these effects to imagine that some divine
and miraculous powers must exist in the aerial current
which produced them. The priests and priestesses,
who inhabited the temples in which these oracles were
contained, had, of course, a strong interest in keeping
up the belief of their reality in the minds of the
community; so were, in fact, all the inhabitants of
the cities which sprung up around them. They derived
their support from the visitors who frequented these
places, and they contrived various ways for drawing
contributions, both of money and gifts, from all who
came. In one case there was a sacred stream near
an oracle, where persons, on permission from the priests,
were allowed to bathe. After the bathing, they
were expected to throw pieces of money into the stream.
What afterward, in such cases, became of the money,
it is not difficult to imagine.
Nor is it necessary to suppose that
all these priests and priestesses were impostors.
Having been trained up from infancy to believe that
the inspirations were real, they would continue to
look upon them as such all their lives. Even
at the present day we shall all, if we closely scrutinize
our mental habits, find ourselves continuing to take
for granted, in our maturer years, what we inconsiderately
imbibed or were erroneously taught in infancy, and
that, often, in cases where the most obvious dictates
of reason, or even the plain testimony of our senses,
might show us that our notions are false. The
priests and priestesses, therefore, who imposed on
the rest of mankind, may have been as honestly and
as deep in the delusion themselves as any of their
dupes.
The answers of the oracles were generally
vague and indefinite, and susceptible of almost any
interpretation, according to the result. Whenever
the event corresponded with the prediction, or could
be made to correspond with it by the ingenuity of
the commentators, the story of the coincidence would,
of course, be every where spread abroad, becoming
more striking and more exact at each repetition.
Where there was a failure, it would not be direct
and absolute, on account of the vagueness and indefiniteness
of the response, and there would therefore be no interest
felt in hearing or in circulating the story.
The cases, thus, which would tend to establish the
truth of the oracle, would be universally known and
remembered, while those of a contrary bearing would
be speedily forgotten.
There is no doubt, however, that in
many cases the responses were given in collusion with
the one who consulted the oracle, for the purpose
of deceiving others. For example, let us suppose
that Croesus wished to establish strongly the credibility
of the Delphic oracle in the minds of his countrymen,
in order to encourage them to enlist in his armies,
and to engage in the enterprise which he was contemplating
against Cyrus with resolution and confidence; it would
have been easy for him to have let the priestess at
Delphi know what he was doing on the day when he sent
to inquire, and thus himself to have directed her
answer. Then, when his messengers returned, he
would appeal to the answer as proof of the reality
of the inspiration which seemed to furnish it.
Alexander the Great certainly did, in this way, act
in collusion with the priests at the temple of Jupiter
Ammon.
The fact that there have been so many
and such successful cases of falsehood and imposture
among mankind in respect to revelations from Heaven,
is no indication, as some superficially suppose, that
no revelation is true, but is, on the other hand,
strong evidence to the contrary. The Author of
human existence has given no instincts in vain; and
the universal tendency of mankind to believe in the
supernatural, to look into an unseen world, to seek,
and to imagine that they find, revelations from Heaven,
and to expect a continuance of existence after this
earthly life is over, is the strongest possible natural
evidence that there is an unseen world; that man may
have true communications with it; that a personal deity
reigns, who approves and disapproves of human conduct,
and that there is a future state of being. In
this point of view, the absurd oracles of Greece,
and the universal credence which they obtained, constitute
strong evidence that there is somewhere to be found
inspiration and prophecy really divine.