Page:Modern Greek folklore and ancient Greek religion - a study in survivals.djvu/55

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of the religion of his distant ancestors,—of those fundamental beliefs which guided their conduct towards gods and men in this life, and inspired their care for the dead?

On the conduct of man towards his fellow-men in this life the influence of Christianity appears to have been as great as that of paganism was small. Duty towards one's neighbour hardly came within the purview of Hellenic religion. If we look at the supreme acts of worship in ancient times, we cannot fail to be struck by the disunion of the religious and the ethical. A certain purity was no doubt required of those who attended the mysteries of Eleusis; but by that purity was meant physical cleanliness and, strangely enough, a pure use of the Greek language, just as much as any moral temperance or rectitude; and the required condition was largely attained by the use or avoidance of certain foods and by bathing in the sea. Their cleanliness in fact was of the same confused kind, half physical and half moral, as that which the inhabitants of Tenos were formerly wont, and perhaps still continue, to seek on S. John the Baptist's day (June 24) by leaping thrice through a bonfire and crying 'Here I leave my sins and my fleas[1]': and it was acquired by means equally material. There is nothing conspicuously ethical in such a purity as this.

If moreover, as has been well argued[2], a state of ecstasy was the highest manifestation of religious feeling, and this spiritual exaltation was the deliberate aim and end of Bacchic and other orgies, it must be frankly avowed that religion in its highest manifestations was not conducive to what we call morality. The means of inducing the ecstatic condition comprised drunkenness, inhalation of vapours, wild and licentious dancing. With physical surexcitation came, or was intended to come, a spiritual elevation such that the mind could visualise the object of its desire[3] and worship, and enjoy a sense of unity therewith. On the savagery and debauchery which accompanied these religious celebrations there is no need to enlarge. The Bacchae of Euripides, with all its passion for the beauty of holiness, is, [Greek: D. M. Mauromaras], [Greek: Historia tês Tênou], p. 87 (transl. of Dr M. Salonis, Voyage à Tine (Paris, 1809)).], Philo, de vita contempl. 2. p. 473 M., cited by Rohde l.c.]

  1. [Greek: edô aphinô ta hamartêmata mou kai tous psyllous mou
  2. Rohde, Psyche, vol. II. pp. 9 ff.
  3. [Greek: hoi bakcheuomenoi kai korybantiôntes enthousiazousi mechris an to pothoumenon idôsin