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the golden bough-第146章

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tian worship of Osiris so closely that some people even identified the Adonis of Amathus with Osiris。

But the great seat of the worship of Aphrodite and Adonis in Cyprus was Paphos on the south…western side of the island。 Among the petty kingdoms into which Cyprus was divided from the earliest times until the end of the fourth century before our era Paphos must have ranked with the best。 It is a land of hills and billowy ridges; diversified by fields and vineyards and intersected by rivers; which in the course of ages have carved for themselves beds of such tremendous depth that travelling in the interior is difficult and tedious。 The lofty range of Mount Olympus (the modern Troodos); capped with snow the greater part of the year; screens Paphos from the northerly and easterly winds and cuts it off from the rest of the island。 On the slopes of the range the last pine…woods of Cyprus linger; sheltering here and there monasteries in scenery not unworthy of the Apennines。 The old city of Paphos occupied the summit of a hill about a mile from the sea; the newer city sprang up at the harbour some ten miles off。 The sanctuary of Aphrodite at Old Paphos (the modern Kuklia) was one of the most celebrated shrines in the ancient world。 According to Herodotus; it was founded by Phoenician colonists from Ascalon; but it is possible that a native goddess of fertility was worshipped on the spot before the arrival of the Phoenicians; and that the newcomers identified her with their own Baalath or Astarte; whom she may have closely resembled。 If two deities were thus fused in one; we may suppose that they were both varieties of that great goddess of motherhood and fertility whose worship appears to have been spread all over Western Asia from a very early time。 The supposition is confirmed as well by the archaic shape of her image as by the licentious character of her rites; for both that shape and those rites were shared by her with other Asiatic deities。 Her image was simply a white cone or pyramid。 In like manner; a cone was the emblem of Astarte at Byblus; of the native goddess whom the Greeks called Artemis at Perga in Pamphylia; and of the sun…god Heliogabalus at Emesa in Syria。 Conical stones; which apparently served as idols; have also been found at Golgi in Cyprus; and in the Phoenician temples of Malta; and cones of sandstone came to light at the shrine of the Mistress of Torquoise among the barren hills and frowning precipices of Sinai。

In Cyprus it appears that before marriage all women were formerly obliged by custom to prostitute themselves to strangers at the sanctuary of the goddess; whether she went by the name of Aphrodite; Astarte; or what not。 Similar customs prevailed in many parts of Western Asia。 Whatever its motive; the practice was clearly regarded; not as an orgy of lust; but as a solemn religious duty performed in the service of that great Mother Goddess of Western Asia whose name varied; while her type remained constant; from place to place。 Thus at Babylon every woman; whether rich or poor; had once in her life to submit to the embraces of a stranger at the temple of Mylitta; that is; of Ishtar or Astarte; and to dedicate to the goddess the wages earned by this sanctified harlotry。 The sacred precinct was crowded with women waiting to observe the custom。 Some of them had to wait there for years。 At Heliopolis or Baalbec in Syria; famous for the imposing grandeur of its ruined temples; the custom of the country required that every maiden should prostitute herself to a stranger at the temple of Astarte; and matrons as well as maids testified their devotion to the goddess in the same manner。 The emperor Constantine abolished the custom; destroyed the temple; and built a church in its stead。 In Phoenician temples women prostituted themselves for hire in the service of religion; believing that by this conduct they propitiated the goddess and won her favour。 It was a law of the Amorites; that she who was about to marry should sit in fornication seven days by the gate。 At Byblus the people shaved their heads in the annual mourning for Adonis。 Women who refused to sacrifice their hair had to give themselves up to strangers on a certain day of the festival; and the money which they thus earned was devoted to the goddess。 A Greek inscription found at Tralles in Lydia proves that the practice of religious prostitution survived in that country as late as the second century of our era。 It records of a certain woman; Aurelia Aemilia by name; not only that she herself served the god in the capacity of a harlot at his express command; but that her mother and other female ancestors had done the same before her; and the publicity of the record; engraved on a marble column which supported a votive offering; shows that no stain attached to such a life and such a parentage。 In Armenia the noblest families dedicated their daughters to the service of the goddess Anaitis in her temple of Acilisena; where the damsels acted as prostitutes for a long time before they were given in marriage。 Nobody scrupled to take one of these girls to wife when her period of service was over。 Again; the goddess Ma was served by a multitude of sacred harlots at Comana in Pontus; and crowds of men and women flocked to her sanctuary from the neighbouring cities and country to attend the biennial festivals or to pay their vows to the goddess。

If we survey the whole of the evidence on this subject; some of which has still to be laid before the reader; we may conclude that a great Mother Goddess; the personification of all the reproductive energies of nature; was worshipped under different names but with a substantial similarity of myth and ritual by many peoples of Western Asia; that associated with her was a lover; or rather series of lovers; divine yet mortal; with whom she mated year by year; their commerce being deemed essential to the propagation of animals and plants; each in their several kind; and further; that the fabulous union of the divine pair was simulated and; as it were; multiplied on earth by the real; though temporary; union of the human sexes at the sanctuary of the goddess for the sake of thereby ensuring the fruitfulness of the ground and the increase of man and beast。

At Paphos the custom of religious prostitution is said to have been instituted by King Cinyras; and to have been practised by his daughters; the sisters of Adonis; who; having incurred the wrath of Aphrodite; mated with strangers and ended their days in Egypt。 In this form of the tradition the wrath of Aphrodite is probably a feature added by a later authority; who could only regard conduct which shocked his own moral sense as a punishment inflicted by the goddess instead of as a sacrifice regularly enjoined by her on all her devotees。 At all events the story indicates that the princesses of Paphos had to conform to the custom as well as women of humble birth。

Among the stories which were told of Cinyras; the ancestor of the priestly kings of Paphos and the father of Adonis; there are some that deserve our attention。 In the first place; he is said to have begotten his son Adonis in incestuous intercourse with his daughter Myrrha at a festival of the corn…goddess; at
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