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The Eleusinian and Bacchic Mysteries, by Thomas Taylor, [1891], at sacred-texts.com


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Fortune and the Three Fates.
Fortune and the Three Fates.

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

DRAWN FROM THE ANTIQUE BY A. L. RAWSON.


A description of the illustrations to this volume properly includes the two or three theories of human life held by the ancient Greeks, and the beautiful myth of Demeter and Proserpina, the most charming of all mythological fancies, and the Orgies of Bacchus, which together supplied the motives to the artists of the originals from which these drawings were made.

From them we learn that it was believed that the soul is a part of, or a spark from, the Great Soul of the Kosmos, the Central Sun of the intellectual universe, and therefore immortal; has lived before, and will continue to live after this “body prison” is dissolved; that the river Styx is between us and the unseen world, and hence we have no recollection of any former state of existence; and that the body is Hades, in which the soul is made to suffer for past misdeeds done in the unseen world.

Poets and philosophers, tragedians and comedians, embellished the myth with a thousand fine fancies which were

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woven into the ritual of Eleusis, or were presented in the theaters during the Bacchic festivals.

The pictures include, beside the costumes of priests, priestesses, and their attendants, and of the fauns and satyrs, many of the sacred vessels and implements used in celebrating the Mysteries, in the orgies, and in the theaters, all of which were drawn by the ancient artists from the objects represented, and their work has been carefully followed here.

Page.

1.

Frontispiece. Sacrifice to Ceres.Denkmäler, sculptur.
The goddess stands near a serpent-guarded altar, on which a sheaf of grain is aflame. Worshipers attend, and Jupiter approves. (See page 17.)

2.

Decorating a Statue of Bacchus.Rom. Campana.
The priest wears a lamb-skin skirt, the thyrsus is a natural vine with grape clusters, and there are fruit and wine bearers.

4

3.

Bacchantes with Thyrsus and Flute.Rom. Camp.
Two fragments.

4

4.

Symbolical Ceremony.Rom. Camp.
Torch and thyrsus bearers and faun. See cut No. 40, and page 208 for reference to pine nut.

4

5.

Bacchus and Nymphs.

5

6.

Pluto, Proserpina, and Furies.Galerie des Peintres.
The Furies were said to be children of Pluto and Proserpina; other accounts say of Nox and Acheron, and Acheron was a son of Ceres without a father. (See page 65.)

5

7.

Priestess with Amphora and Sacred Cake.

6

8.

Priestess with Musical Instruments.

6

9.

Faun Kissing Bacchante.Bourbon Mus.

6

10.

Faun and Bacchus.Bourbon Mus.

6

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11.

Etruscan Vase.—Millingen.
See drawings on page 106.

7

12.

Mercury Presenting a Soul to Pluto.Pict. Ant. Sep. Nasonum, pl. I, 8.

8

13.

Mystic Rites.Admiranda, tau. 17.

8

14.

Eleusinian Ceremony.Oest. Denk. Alt. Kunst, II., 8.

8

15.

Bacchic Festival.Bartoli, Admiranda, 43.
Probably a stage scene. The characters are the king, who was an archon of Athens; a thyrsus bearer, musician, wine and fruit bearers, dancers, and Pluto and Proserpina. A boy removes the king’s sandal. (See page 35.)

9

16.

Apollo and the Muses.Florentine Museum.
The muses were the daughters of Jupiter and Mnemosyne; that is, of the god of the present instant, and of memory. Their office was, in part, to give information to any inquiring soul, and to preside over the various arts and sciences. They were called by various names derived from the places where they were worshiped: Aganippides, Aonides, Castalides, Heliconiades, Lebetheides, Pierides, and others. Apollo was called Musagetes, as their leader and conductor. The palm tree, laurel, fountains on Helicon, Parnassus, Pindus, and other sacred mountains, were sacred to the muses.

10

17.

Prometheus Forms a Woman.Visconti, Mus. Pio. Clem., IV., 34.
Mercury, the messenger of the gods, brings a soul from Jupiter for the body made by Prometheus, and the three Fates attend. The Athenians built an altar for the worship of Prometheus in the grove of the Academy.

11

18.

Procession of Iacchus and Phallus.Montfaucon.
From Athens to Eleusis, on the sixth day of the Eleusinia. The statue is made to play its part in a mystic ceremony, typifying the union of the sexes in generation. Attendant priestesses bear a basket of dried figs and a phallus, baskets of fruit, vases of wine, with clematis, and musical and sacrificial instruments. None but women and children were permitted to take part in this ceremony. The wooden emblem of fecundity was an object of supreme veneration, and the ceremony of placing and hooding it. was assigned to the most highly respected woman in Athens, as a mark of honor. Lucian and Plutarch

16

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say the phallus bearers at Rome carried images (phalloi) at the top of long poles, and their bodies were stained with wine lees, and partly covered with a lamb-skin, their heads crowned with a wreath of ivy. (See page 14.)

19, 20, 21.

From Etruscan VasesFlorentine Museum.
Human sacrifice may be indicated in the lower group.

22

22.

Venus and Proserpina in Hades.—Galerie des Peintres.
The myth relates that Venus gave Proserpina a pomegranate to eat in Hades, and so made her subject to the law which required her to remain four months of each year with Pluto in the Underworld, for Venus is the goddess who presides over birth and growth in all cases. Cerberus (see page 65) keeps guard, and one of the heads holds her garment, signifying that his master is entitled to one-third of her time.

28

23.

Rape of Proserpina. Carried Down to Hades (Invisibility)Flor. Mus.
See note, p. 152.

29

24.

Pallas, Venus, and Diana Consulting.—Gal. des Peint.
Jupiter ordered these divinities to excite desire in the heart of Proserpina as a means of leading her into the power of the richest of all monarchs, the one who most abounds in treasures. (See page 140.)

30

25.

Dionysus as God of the Sun.Pit. Ant. Ercolano.
Dionysus—Bacchus—symbolizes the sun as god of the seasons; rides on a panther, pours wine into a drinking-horn held by a satyr, who also carries a wine skin bottle. The winged genii of the seasons attend. Winter carries two geese and a cornucopia; Spring holds in one hand the mystical cist, and in the other the mystic zone; Summer bears a sickle and a sheaf of grain; and Autumn has a hare and a horn-of-plenty full of fruits. Fauns, satyrs, boy-fauns, the usual attendants of Bacchus, play with goats and panthers between the legs of the larger figures.

31

26.

Herse and Mercury.—Pit. Ant. Ercolano.
A fabled love match between the god and a daughter of Cecrops, the Egyptian who founded Athens, supplied the ritual for the festivals Hersephoria, in which young girls of seven to eleven years, from the most noted families, dressed in

42

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white, carried the sacred vessels and implements used in the Mysteries in procession. Cakes of a peculiar form were made for the occasion.

27.

Narcissus Sees His Image in Water.—P. Ovid. Naso.
The son of Cephissus and Liriope, an Oceanid, was said to be very beautiful. He sought to win the favor of the nymph of the fountain where he saw his face reflected, and failing, he drowned himself in chagrin. The gods, unwilling to lose so much beauty, changed him into the flower now known by his name. (See page 150.)

42

28.

Jupiter as Diana, and Calisto.P. Ovid. Naso.
The supreme deity of the ancients, beside numerous marriages, was credited with many amours with both divinities and mortals. In some of those adventures he succeeded by using a disguise, as here in the form of the Queen of the Starry Heavens, when he surprised Calisto (Helice), a daughter of Lycaon, king of Arcadia, an attendant on Diana. The companions of that goddess were pledged to celibacy. Jupiter, in the form of a swan, surprised Leda, who became mother of the Dioscuri (twins).

62

29.

Diana and Calisto.Ovid. Naso, Neder.
The fable says that when Diana and her nymphs were bathing the swelling form of Calisto attracted attention. It was reported to the goddess, when she punished the maid by changing her into the form of a bear. She would have been torn in pieces by the hunter’s dogs, but Jupiter interposed and translated her to the heavens, where she forms the constellation The Great Bear. Juno was jealous of Jupiter, and requested Thetis to refuse the Great Bear permission to descend at night beneath the waves of ocean, and she, being also jealous of Poseidon, complied, and therefore the dipper does not dip, but revolves close around the pole star.

62

30.

Bacchantes and Fauns Dancing.Rom. Campana, 37.
A stage ballet.

74

31.

Hercules, Bull, and Priestess.Rom. Camp.
Bacchic orgies.

74

32.

Fruit and Thyrsus Bearers.Bour. Mus.

84

33.

Torch-Bearer as Apollo.Bourbon Mus.

84

34.

Eleusinian Mysteries.Florence Mus.

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Page.

35.

Etruscan Mystic Ceremony.Rom. Camp.

94

36.

Etruscan Altar Group.Flor. Mus.
The mystic cist with serpent coiled around, the sacred oaks, baskets, drinking-horns, zones, festoon of branches and flowers, make very pretty and impressive accessories to two handsome priestesses.

106

37.

Etruscan Bacchantes.Millingen.
These two groups were drawn from a vase (page 7) which is a very fine work of art. The drapery, decoration, symbols, accessories, and all the details of implements used in the celebration of the Mysteries are very carefully drawn on the vase, which is well preserved. This vase is a strong proof of the antiquity of the orgies, for the Etruscans, Tyrrheni, and Tusci were ancient before the Romans began to build on the Tiber.

106

38.

Etruscan Ceremony.Millingen.

106

39.

Satyr, Cupid and Venus.Montfaucon; Sculpture.
Some Roman writers affirmed that the Satyr was a real animal, but science has dissipated that belief, and the monster has been classed among the artificial attractions of the theater where it belongs, and where it did a large share of duty in the Mysteries. They were invented by the poets as an impersonation of the life that animates the branches of trees when the wind sweeps through them, meaning, whistling, or shrieking in the gale. They were said to be the chief attendants on Bacchus, and to delight in revel and wine.

110

40.

Cupids, Satyr, and Statue of Priapus.—Montfaucon.
The many suggestive emblems in this picture form an instructive group, symbolic of Nature’s life-renewing power. The ancients adored this power under the emblems of the organs of generation. Many passages in the Bible denounce that worship, which is called “the grove,” and usually was an upright stone, or wooden pillar, plain or ornamented, as in Rome, where it became a statue to the waist, as seen in the engraving. The Palladium at Athens was a Greek form. The Druzes of Mount Lebanon in Syria now dispense with emblems of wood and stone, and use the natural objects in their mystic rites and ceremonies.

110

41.

Apollo and Daphne,—Galerie des Peint.
The rising sun shines on the dew-drops, and warming them as they hang on the leaves of the laurel tree, they disappear,

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leaving the tree; and it is said by the poet that Apollo loves and seeks Daphne, striving to embrace her, when she flies and is transformed into a laurel tree at the instant she is embraced by the sun-god.

42.

Diana and Endymion.—Bourbon Mus.
Diana as the queen of the night loves Endymion, the setting sun. The lovers ever strive to meet, but inexorable fate as ever prevents them from enjoying each other’s society. The fair huntress sometimes is permitted, as when she is the new moon, or in the first quarter, to approach near the place where her beloved one lingers near the Hesperian gardens, and to follow him even to the Pillars of Hercules, but never to embrace him. The new moon, as soon as visible, sets near but not with the sun. Endymion reluctantly sinks behind the western horizon, and would linger until the loved one can be folded in his arms, but his duty calls and he must turn his steps toward the Elysian Fields to cheer the noble and good souls who await his presence, ever cheerful and benign. Diana follows closely after and is welcomed by the brave and beautiful inhabitants of the Peaceful Islands, but while receiving their homage her lover hastens on toward the eastern gates, where the golden fleece makes the morning sky resplendent.

118

43.

Ceres and the Car of Triptolemus.P. Ovid. Naso, Neder.
Triptolemus (the word means three plowings) was the founder of the Eleusinian Mysteries, and was presented by Ceres with her car drawn by winged dragons, in which he distributed seed grain all over the world.

127

44.

Pluto Marries Proserpina.P. Ovid. Naso, Neder.
Jupiter is said to have consented to request of Pluto that Proserpina might revisit her mother’s dwelling, and the picture represents him as very earnest in his appeal to his brother. Since then the seed of grain has remained in the ground no longer than four months; the other eight it is above, in the regions of light. In the engraving a curtain is held up by bronze figures. This seems conclusive that it was a representation of a dramatic scene. (See pp. 159, 186.)

127

45.

Proserpina, according to the Greeks.Heck.

138

46.

Bacchus after the Visit to India.Heck.

138

47.

A Roman Figure of Ceres.Heck.

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48.

Demeter, from Etruscan Vase.Heck.

138

49.

Venus, Pallas, and Diana Inspecting the Needlework of Proserpina.Galerie des Peint.

142

50.

Proserpina Exposed to Pluto.Ovid. Naso, Neder.
There may have been a mild sarcasm in this artist’s mind when he drew the maid as dallying with Cupid, and the richest monarch in all the earth in the distance, hastening toward her. He succeeded, as is shown in the next engraving.

152

51.

Pluto Carrying Off Proserpina.—P. Ovid. Naso, Neder.
Eternal change is the universal law. Proserpina must go down into the Underworld that she may rise again into light and life. The seed must be planted under or into the soil that it may have a new birth and growth.

152

52.

Proserpina in Pluto’s Court.Montfaucon.
As a personation she was the “Apparent Brilliance” of all fruits and flowers.

156

53.

Ceres in Hades.Montfaucon.

162

54.

Bacchus, Fauns, and Wine Jars.Montfaucon.

168

55.

Tragic Actor.Bourbon Museum.

168

56.

A Group of Deities.Heck.
Pan and Dionysus, Hygeia, Hermes, Dionysus and Faunus, and Silenus.

168

57.

Night with Her Starry Canopy.Heck.

168

58.

The Three Graces.Heck.

168

59.

Cupid Asleep in the Arms of Venus.Galerie des Peint.

174

60.

Prize Dance between a Satyr and a Goat.Antichi.

174

61.

Baubo and Ceres at Eleusis.Galerie des Peint.
See page 232.

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Page.

62.

Psyche Asleep in Hades.—From the ruins of the Bath of Titus, Rome.
See page 45.

186

63.

Nymphs of the Four Rivers in Hades.—Tomb of the Nasons.
“It was easy for poets and mythographers, when they had once started the idea of a gloomy land watered with the rivers of woe, to place Styx, the stream which makes men shudder, as the boundary which separates it from the world of living men, and to lead through it the channels of Lêthê, in which all things are forgotten, of Kokytos, which echoes only with shrieks of pain, and of Pyryphlegethon, with its waves of fire.” Acheron, in the early myths, was the only river of Hades.

187

64.

Etruscan Vase Group.Millingen.

198

65.

Dancers, Etruscans.Millin, 1 pl. 27.

198

66.

Greek Convivial Scene.Millin, 1 pl. 38.

198

67.

Faun and Bacchante.Bour. Mus.

206

68.

Thyrsus-Bearer.Bourbon Museum.

206

69.

Bacchante and Faun.Bour. Mus.
These three very graceful pictures were drawn from paintings on walls in Herculaneum.

206

70.

King, Torch, Fruit, and Thyrsus Bearer.

212

71.

Hercules Reclining.—Zoëga, Bassirilievi, 70.
Here is an actual ceremony in which many actors took parts; with an altar, flames, a torch, tripod, the kerux (crier), bacchantes, fauns, and other attendants on the celebration of the Mysteries, including the role of an angel with wings.

212

72.

Marriage (or Adultery) of Mars and Venus.Montfaucon.
See pages 231-237. If this is from a scene as played at the Bacchic theaters, those dramas must have been very popular, and justly so. To those theaters, which were supported by the government in Athens and in many other cities throughout Greece, we owe the immortal works of Æschylus and Sophocles.

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73.

Musical Conference (Epithalamium).S. Bartoli, Admiranda, pl. 62.
Written music was evidently used, for one of the company is writing as if correcting the score, and writing with the left hand.

228

74.

Venus Rising from the Sea.Ovid. Naso, Verburg.
This goddess was called Venus Anadyomene, for the poets said she rose from the sea—the morning sunlight on the foam of the sea on the shore of the island Cythera, or Cyprus, or wherever the poet may choose as the favored place for the manifestation of the generative power of nature, and wherever flowers show her footprints. The loves bear aloft her magic girdle, which Juno borrowed as a means of winning back Jupiter’s affection. The rose and the myrtle were sacred to her. Her worship was the motive for building temples in Cythera and in Cyprus at Amathus, Idalium. Golgoi, and in many other places. (See engravings 22, 39, and 49, and page 230.)

229

75.

Jupiter Disguised as Diana, and Calisto.—Ovid. Naso, Neder.
The gods were said to have the power, and to practice assuming the form of any other of their train, or of any animal. In these disguises they are supposed to play tricks on each other as here. Diana is the queen of the night sky, Calisto is one of her attendants, and many white clouds float over the blue ether (Jupiter), and are chased by the winds (as dogs).

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76.

Hercules, Deianeira, and Nessus.—Ovid. Naso, Neder.
The sun nears the end of the day’s journey; he is aged and weary; dark clouds obscure his face and obstruct his way, but still Hercules loves beautiful things, and Deianeira, the fair daughter of the king of Ætolia, retires with him into exile. At a ford the hero entrusts his bride to Nessus the Centaur, to carry across the river. The ferryman made love to the lady, and Hercules resented the indiscretion, and wounded him by an arrow. Dying Nessus tells Deianeira to keep his blood as a love charm in case her husband should love another woman. Hercules did love another, named Iole, and Deianeira dipped his shirt in the blood of Nessus—the crimson and scarlet clouds of a splendid sunset are made glorious by the blood of Nessus, and Hercules is burnt on the funeral pyre of scarlet and crimson sunset clouds.

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Page.

77.

The Sacrifice.Herculaneum, IV., 13.

237

78.

Hercules Drunk.Zoëga, Bassirilievi, tav. 67.

238

79.

Proserpina Enthroned in Hades.Archäol. Zeit.
The principle of growth rules the Underworld.

240

80.

Bacchante and Centaur.Bourbon Mus.

241

81.

Bacchante and Centauress.Bourbon Mus.

241

82.

Eleusinian Priest and Assistants.

247

83.

The Fates.Zoëga, Bassirilievi, tav. 46.

248

84.

Supper Scene.

258

85.

Bacchic Bull.Antichi.

On cover.

Supper-Scene.
Supper-Scene.