THE MYTHOLOGY OF THE GREEKS
This dark picture is worlds apart from the stories of
classical mythology. The study of the way early man looked at his surroundings
does not get much help from the Greeks. How briefly the anthropologists treat
the Greek myths is noteworthy.
Of course the Greeks too had their roots in the primeval
slime. Of course they too once lived a savage life, ugly and brutal. But what
the myths show is how high they had risen above the ancient filth and fierceness
by the time we have any knowledge of them. Only a few traces of that time are to
be found in the stories.
We do not know when these stories were first told in their
present shape; but whenever it was, primitive life had been left far behind. The
myths as we have them are the creation of great poets. The first written record
of Greece is the Iliad. Greek mythology begins with
Homer, generally believed to be not earlier than a thousand years before Christ.
The Iliad is, or contains, the oldest Greek
literature; and it is written in a rich and subtle and beautiful language which
must have had behind it centuries when men were striving to express themselves
with clarity and beauty, an indisputable proof of civilization. The tales of
Greek mythology do not throw any clear light upon what early mankind was like.
They do throw an abundance of light upon what early Greeks were like—a matter,
it would seem, of more importance to us, who are their descendants
intellectually, artistically, and politically, too. Nothing we learn about them
is alien to ourselves.
People often speak of “the Greek miracle.” What the phrase
tries to express is the new birth of the world with the awakening of Greece.
“Old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new.” Something like
that happened in Greece.
Why it happened, or when, we have no idea at all. We know only
that in the earliest Greek poets a new point of view dawned, never dreamed of in
the world before them, but never to leave the world after them. With the coming forward of Greece, mankind became the center
of the universe, the most important thing in it. This was a revolution in
thought. Human beings had counted for little heretofore. In Greece man first
realized what mankind was.
The Greeks made their gods in their own image. That had not
entered the mind of man before. Until then, gods had had no semblance of
reality. They were unlike all living things. In Egypt, a towering colossus,
immobile, beyond the power of the imagination to endow with movement, as fixed
in the stone as the tremendous temple columns, a representation of the human
shape deliberately made unhuman. Or a rigid figure, a woman with a cat’s head
suggesting inflexible, inhuman cruelty. Or a monstrous mysterious sphinx, aloof
from all that lives. In Mesopotamia, bas-reliefs of bestial shapes unlike any
beast ever known, men with birds’ heads and lions with bulls’ heads and both
with eagles’ wings, creations of artists who were intent upon producing
something never seen except in their own minds, the very consummation of
unreality.
These and their like were what the pre-Greek world worshiped.
One need only place beside them in imagination any Greek statue of a god, so
normal and natural with all its beauty, to perceive what a new idea had come
into the world. With its coming, the universe became rational.
Saint Paul said the invisible must be understood by the
visible. That was not a Hebrew idea, it was Greek. In Greece alone in the
ancient world people were preoccupied with the visible; they were finding the
satisfaction of their desires in what was actually in the world around them. The
sculptor watched the athletes contending in the games and
he felt that nothing he could imagine would be as beautiful as those strong
young bodies. So he made his statue of Apollo. The storyteller found Hermes
among the people he passed in the street. He saw the god “like a young man at
the age when youth is loveliest,” as Homer says. Greek artists and poets
realized how splendid a man could be, straight and swift and strong. He was the
fulfillment of their search for beauty. They had no wish to create some fantasy
shaped in their own minds. All the art and all the thought of Greece centered in
human beings.
Human gods naturally made heaven a pleasantly familiar place.
The Greeks felt at home in it. They knew just what the divine inhabitants did
there, what they ate and drank and where they banqueted and how they amused
themselves. Of course they were to be feared; they were very powerful and very
dangerous when angry. Still, with proper care a man could be quite fairly at
ease with them. He was even perfectly free to laugh at them. Zeus, trying to
hide his love affairs from his wife and invariably shown up, was a capital
figure of fun. The Greeks enjoyed him and liked him all the better for it. Hera
was that stock character of comedy, the typical jealous wife, and her ingenious
tricks to discomfit her husband and punish her rival, far from displeasing the
Greeks, entertained them as much as Hera’s modern counterpart does us today.
Such stories made for a friendly feeling. Laughter in the presence of an
Egyptian sphinx or an Assyrian bird-beast was inconceivable; but it was
perfectly natural in Olympus, and it made the gods companionable.
On earth, too, the deities were exceedingly and humanly
attractive. In the form of lovely youths and maidens they
peopled the woodland, the forest, the rivers, the sea, in harmony with the fair
earth and the bright waters.
That is the miracle of Greek mythology—a humanized world, men
freed from the paralyzing fear of an omnipotent Unknown. The terrifying
incomprehensibilities which were worshiped elsewhere, and the fearsome spirits
with which earth, air and sea swarmed, were banned from Greece. It may seem odd
to say that the men who made the myths disliked the irrational and had a love
for facts; but it is true, no matter how wildly fantastic some of the stories
are. Anyone who reads them with attention discovers that even the most
nonsensical take place in a world which is essentially rational and
matter-of-fact. Hercules, whose life was one long combat against preposterous
monsters, is always said to have had his home in the city of Thebes. The exact
spot where Aphrodite was born of the foam could be visited by any ancient
tourist; it was just offshore from the island of Cythera. The winged steed
Pegasus, after skimming the air all day, went every night to a comfortable
stable in Corinth. A familiar local habitation gave reality to all the mythical
beings. If the mixture seems childish, consider how reassuring and how sensible
the solid background is as compared with the Genie who comes from nowhere when
Aladdin rubs the lamp and, his task accomplished, returns to nowhere.
The terrifying irrational has no place in classical mythology.
Magic, so powerful in the world before and after Greece, is almost nonexistent.
There are no men and only two women with dreadful, supernatural powers. The
demoniac wizards and the hideous old witches who haunted Europe and America,
too, up to quite recent years, play no part at all in the
stories. Circe and Medea are the only witches and they are young and of
surpassing beauty—delightful, not horrible. Astrology, which has flourished from
the days of ancient Babylon down to today, is completely absent from classical
Greece. There are many stories about the stars, but not a trace of the idea that
they influence men’s lives. Astronomy is what the Greek mind finally made out of
the stars. Not a single story has a magical priest who is terribly to be feared
because he knows ways of winning over the gods or alienating them. The priest is
rarely seen and is never of importance. In the Odyssey
when a priest and a poet fall on their knees before Odysseus, praying him to
spare their lives, the hero kills the priest without a thought, but saves the
poet. Homer says that he felt awe to slay a man who had been taught his divine
art by the gods. Not the priest, but the poet, had influence with heaven—and no
one was ever afraid of a poet. Ghosts, too, which have played so large and so
fearsome a part in other lands, never appear on earth in any Greek story. The
Greeks were not afraid of the dead—“the piteous dead,” the Odyssey calls them.
The world of Greek mythology was not a place of terror for the
human spirit. It is true that the gods were disconcertingly incalculable. One
could never tell where Zeus’s thunderbolt would strike. Nevertheless, the whole
divine company, with a very few and for the most part not important exceptions,
were entrancingly beautiful with a human beauty, and nothing humanly beautiful
is really terrifying. The early Greek mythologists transformed a world full of
fear into a world full of beauty.
This bright picture has its dark spots. The change came about
slowly and was never quite completed. The gods-become-human were for a long time
a very slight improvement upon their worshipers. They were incomparably lovelier
and more powerful, and they were of course immortal; but they often acted in a
way no decent man or woman would. In the Iliad Hector
is nobler by far than any of the heavenly beings, and Andromache infinitely to
be preferred to Athena or Aphrodite. Hera from first to last is a goddess on a
very low level of humanity. Almost every one of the radiant divinities could act
cruelly or contemptibly. A very limited sense of right and wrong prevailed in
Homer’s heaven, and for a long time after.
Other dark spots too stand out. There are traces of a time
when there were beast-gods. The satyrs are goat-men and the centaurs are half
man, half horse. Hera is often called “cow-faced,” as if the adjective had
somehow stuck to her through all her changes from a divine cow to the very human
queen of heaven. There are also stories which point back clearly to a time when
there was human sacrifice. But what is astonishing is not that bits of savage
belief were left here and there. The strange thing is that they are so few.
Of course the mythical monster is present in any number of
shapes,
Gorgons and hydras and chimaeras dire,
but they are there only to give the hero his meed of glory.
What could a hero do in a world without them? They are always overcome by him.
The great hero of mythology, Hercules, might be an allegory of Greece herself. He fought the monsters and freed the earth from
them just as Greece freed the earth from the monstrous idea of the unhuman
supreme over the human.
Greek mythology is largely made up of stories about gods and
goddesses, but it must not be read as a kind of Greek Bible, an account of the
Greek religion. According to the most modern idea, a real myth has nothing to do
with religion. It is an explanation of something in nature; how, for instance,
any and everything in the universe came into existence: men, animals, this or
that tree or flower, the sun, the moon, the stars, storms, eruptions,
earthquakes, all that is and all that happens. Thunder and lightning are caused
when Zeus hurls his thunderbolt. A volcano erupts because a terrible creature is
imprisoned in the mountain and every now and then struggles to get free. The
Dipper, the constellation called also the Great Bear, does not set below the
horizon because a goddess once was angry at it and decreed that it should never
sink into the sea. Myths are early science, the result of men’s first trying to
explain what they saw around them. But there are many so-called myths which
explain nothing at all. These tales are pure entertainment, the sort of thing
people would tell each other on a long winter’s evening. The story of Pygmalion
and Galatea is an example; it has no conceivable connection with any event in
nature. Neither has the Quest of the Golden Fleece, nor Orpheus and Eurydice,
nor many another. This fact is now generally accepted; and we do not have to try
to find in every mythological heroine the moon or the dawn and in every hero’s
life a sun myth. The stories are early literature as well as early science.
But religion is there, too. In the background, to be sure, but
nevertheless plain to see. From Homer through the tragedians and even later,
there is a deepening realization of what human beings need and what they must
have in their gods.
Zeus the Thunderer was, it seems certain, once a rain-god. He
was supreme even over the sun, because rocky Greece needed rain more than
sunshine and the God of Gods would be the one who could give the precious water
of life to his worshipers. But Homer’s Zeus is not a fact of nature. He is a
person living in a world where civilization has made an entry, and of course he
has a standard of right and wrong. It is not very high, certainly, and seems
chiefly applicable to others, not to himself; but he does punish men who lie and
break their oaths; he is angered by any ill treatment of the dead; and he pities
and helps old Priam when he goes as a suppliant to Achilles. In the Odyssey, he has reached a higher level. The swineherd there
says that the needy and the stranger are from Zeus and he who fails to help them
sins against Zeus himself. Hesiod, not much later than the Odyssey if at all, says of a man who does evil to the
suppliant and the stranger, or who wrongs orphan children, “with that man Zeus
is angry.”
Then Justice became Zeus’s companion. That was a new idea. The
buccaneering chieftains in the Iliad did not want
justice. They wanted to be able to take whatever they chose because they were
strong and they wanted a god who was on the side of the strong. But Hesiod, who
was a peasant living in a poor man’s world, knew that the poor must have a just
god. He wrote, “Fishes and beasts and fowls of the air devour one another. But to man, Zeus has given justice. Beside Zeus on
his throne Justice has her seat.” These passages show that the great and bitter
needs of the helpless were reaching up to heaven and changing the god of the
strong into the protector of the weak.
So, back of the stories of an amorous Zeus and a cowardly Zeus
and a ridiculous Zeus, we can catch sight of another Zeus coming into being, as
men grow continually more conscious of what life demanded of them and what human
beings needed in the god they worshiped. Gradually this Zeus displaced the
others, until he occupied the whole scene. At last he became, in the words of
Dio Chrysostom, who wrote during the second century A.D.: “Our Zeus, the giver
of every good gift, the common father and saviour and guardian of mankind.”
The Odyssey speaks of “the divine
for which all men long,” and hundreds of years later Aristotle wrote,
“Excellence, much labored for by the race of mortals.” The Greeks from the
earliest mythologists on had a perception of the divine and the excellent. Their
longing for them was great enough to make them never give up laboring to see
them clearly, until at last the thunder and lightning were changed into the
Universal Father.
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