<h2 class="title"><SPAN name="id2519057" name= "id2519057"></SPAN>Chapter IV. Demons, Fairies, and Ghosts</h2>
<p class="title"><b>Abstract</b></p>
<p>Spirits in Everything and Everywhere--The Bringers of Luck and
Misfortune--Germ Theory Anticipated--Early Gods indistinguishable
from Demons--Repulsive form of Ea--Spirit Groups as Attendants of
Deities--Egyptian, Indian, Greek, and Germanic parallels--Elder
Gods as Evil Gods--Animal Demons--The Babylonian
"Will-o'-the-Wisp"--"Foreign Devils"--Elves and Fairies--Demon
Lovers--"Adam's first wife, Lilith"--Children Charmed against
Evil Spirits--The Demon of Nightmare--Ghosts as Enemies of the
Living--The Vengeful Dead Mother in Babylonia, India, Europe, and
Mexico--Burial Contrast--Calling Back the Dead--Fate of Childless
Ghosts--Religious Need for Offspring--Hags and Giants and
Composite Monsters--Tempest Fiends--Legend of Adapa and the Storm
Demon--Wind Hags of Ancient Britain--Tyrolese Storm Maidens--Zu
Bird Legend and Indian Garuda Myth--Legend of the Eagle and the
Serpent--The Snake Mother Goddess--Demons and the Moon
God--Plague Deities--Classification of Spirits, and Egyptian,
Arabian, and Scottish parallels--Traces of Progress from Animism
to Monotheism.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page.anchor.59" name="page.anchor.59"></SPAN> The
memorable sermon preached by Paul to the Athenians when he stood
"in the midst of Mars' hill", could have been addressed with
equal appropriateness to the ancient Sumerians and Akkadians. "I
perceive", he declared, "that in all things ye are too
superstitious.... God that made the world and all things therein,
seeing that he is Lord of heaven and earth, dwelleth not in
temples made with hands; neither is worshipped with men's hands
as though he needed any thing, seeing he giveth to all life, and
breath, and all things ... for in him we live, and move, and have
our being; as certain also of your own poets have said, For we
are also his offspring. Forasmuch then as we are the offspring
of<SPAN name="page.anchor.60" name="page.anchor.60"></SPAN> God, we ought
not to think that the Godhead is like unto gold, or silver, or
stone, graven by art and man's device."<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex178" href="#ftn.fnrex178" id=
"fnrex178">78</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>Babylonian temples were houses of the gods in the literal
sense; the gods were supposed to dwell in them, their spirits
having entered into the graven images or blocks of stone. It is
probable that like the Ancient Egyptians they believed a god had
as many spirits as he had attributes. The gods, as we have said,
appear to have evolved from early spirit groups. All the world
swarmed with spirits, which inhabited stones and trees, mountains
and deserts, rivers and ocean, the air, the sky, the stars, and
the sun and moon. The spirits controlled Nature: they brought
light and darkness, sunshine and storm, summer and winter; they
were manifested in the thunderstorm, the sandstorm, the glare of
sunset, and the wraiths of mist rising from the steaming marshes.
They controlled also the lives of men and women. The good spirits
were the source of luck. The bad spirits caused misfortunes, and
were ever seeking to work evil against the Babylonian. Darkness
was peopled by demons and ghosts of the dead. The spirits of
disease were ever lying in wait to clutch him with cruel
invisible hands.</p>
<p>Some modern writers, who are too prone to regard ancient
peoples from a twentieth-century point of view, express grave
doubts as to whether "intelligent Babylonians" really believed
that spirits came down in the rain and entered the soil to rise
up before men's eyes as stalks of barley or wheat. There is no
reason for supposing that they thought otherwise. The early folks
based their theories on the accumulated knowledge of their age.
They knew nothing regarding the composition<SPAN name="page.anchor.61"
name="page.anchor.61"></SPAN> of water or the atmosphere, of the
cause of thunder and lightning, or of the chemical changes
effected in soils by the action of bacteria. They attributed all
natural phenomena to the operations of spirits or gods. In
believing that certain demons caused certain diseases, they may
be said to have achieved distinct progress, for they anticipated
the germ theory. They made discoveries, too, which have been
approved and elaborated in later times when they lit sacred
fires, bathed in sacred waters, and used oils and herbs to charm
away spirits of pestilence. Indeed, many folk cures, which were
originally associated with magical ceremonies, are still
practised in our own day. They were found to be effective by
early observers, although they were unable to explain why and how
cures were accomplished, like modern scientific
investigators.</p>
<p>In peopling the Universe with spirits, the Babylonians, like
other ancient folks, betrayed that tendency to symbolize
everything which has ever appealed to the human mind. Our
painters and poets and sculptors are greatest when they symbolize
their ideals and ideas and impressions, and by so doing make us
respond to their moods. Their "beauty and their terror are
sublime". But what may seem poetic to us, was invariably a grim
reality to the Babylonians. The statue or picture was not merely
a work of art but a manifestation of the god or demon. As has
been said, they believed that the spirit of the god inhabited the
idol; the frown of the brazen image was the frown of the wicked
demon. They entertained as much dread of the winged and
human-headed bulls guarding the entrance to the royal palace as
do some of the Arab workmen who, in our own day, assist
excavators to rescue them from sandy mounds in which they have
been hidden for long centuries.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page.anchor.62" name="page.anchor.62"></SPAN>When an idol
was carried away from a city by an invading army, it was believed
that the god himself had been taken prisoner, and was therefore
unable any longer to help his people.</p>
<p>In the early stages of Sumerian culture, the gods and
goddesses who formed groups were indistinguishable from demons.
They were vaguely defined, and had changing shapes. When attempts
were made to depict them they were represented in many varying
forms. Some were winged bulls or lions with human heads; others
had even more remarkable composite forms. The "dragon of
Babylon", for instance, which was portrayed on walls of temples,
had a serpent's head, a body covered with scales, the fore legs
of a lion, hind legs of an eagle, and a long wriggling serpentine
tail. Ea had several monster forms. The following description of
one of these is repulsive enough:--</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>The head is the head of a
serpent,</tt>
<tt>From his nostrils mucus
trickles,</tt>
<tt>His mouth is beslavered with
water;</tt>
<tt>The ears are like those of a
basilisk,</tt>
<tt>His horns are twisted into three
curls,</tt>
<tt>He wears a veil in his head
band,</tt>
<tt>The body is a suh-fish full of
stars,</tt>
<tt>The base of his feet are
claws,</tt>
<tt>The sole of his foot has no
heel,</tt>
<tt>His name is Sassu-wunnu,</tt>
<tt>A sea monster, a form of Ea.</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt> <span class="emphasis"><em>R.C.
Thompson's Translation.</em></span><span class="sub">[<SPAN name=
"fnrex179" href="#ftn.fnrex179" id=
"fnrex179">79</SPAN>]</span></tt></blockquote><p>Even after the gods were given beneficent attributes to
reflect the growth of culture, and were humanized, they still
retained many of their savage characteristics. Bel Enlil and his
fierce son, Nergal, were destroyers<SPAN name="page.anchor.63" name=
"page.anchor.63"></SPAN> of mankind; the storm god desolated the
land; the sky god deluged it with rain; the sea raged furiously,
ever hungering for human victims; the burning sun struck down its
victims; and the floods played havoc with the dykes and houses of
human beings. In Egypt the sun god Ra was similarly a "producer
of calamity", the composite monster god Sokar was "the lord of
fear".<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex180" href="#ftn.fnrex180" id="fnrex180">80</SPAN>]</span> Osiris in prehistoric times had been
"a dangerous god", and some of the Pharaohs sought protection
against him in the charms inscribed in their tombs.<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex181" href="#ftn.fnrex181" id=
"fnrex181">81</SPAN>]</span> The Indian Shiva, "the Destroyer", in
the old religious poems has also primitive attributes of like
character.</p>
<p>The Sumerian gods never lost their connection with the early
spirit groups. These continued to be represented by their
attendants, who executed a deity's stern and vengeful decrees. In
one of the Babylonian charms the demons are referred to as "the
spleen of the gods"--the symbols of their wrathful emotions and
vengeful desires. Bel Enlil, the air and earth god, was served by
the demons of disease, "the beloved sons of Bel", which issued
from the Underworld to attack mankind. Nergal, the sulky and
ill-tempered lord of death and destruction, who never lost his
demoniac character, swept over the land, followed by the spirits
of pestilence, sunstroke, weariness, and destruction. Anu, the
sky god, had "spawned" at creation the demons of cold and rain
and darkness. Even Ea and his consort, Damkina, were served by
groups of devils and giants, which preyed upon mankind in bleak
and desolate places when night fell. In the ocean home of Ea were
bred the "seven evil spirits" of tempest--the gaping dragon, the
leopard which preyed upon children, the great Beast, the terrible
serpent, &c.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page.anchor.64" name="page.anchor.64"></SPAN>In Indian
mythology Indra was similarly followed by the stormy Maruts, and
fierce Rudra by the tempestuous Rudras. In Teutonic mythology
Odin is the "Wild Huntsman in the Raging Host". In Greek
mythology the ocean furies attend upon fickle Poseidon. Other
examples of this kind could be multiplied.</p>
<p>As we have seen (Chapter II) the earliest group of Babylonian
deities consisted probably of four pairs of gods and goddesses as
in Egypt. The first pair was Apsu-Rishtu and Tiamat, who
personified the primordial deep. Now the elder deities in most
mythologies--the "grandsires" and "grandmothers" and "fathers"
and "mothers"--are ever the most powerful and most vengeful. They
appear to represent primitive "layers" of savage thought. The
Greek Cronos devours even his own children, and, as the late
Andrew Lang has shown, there are many parallels to this myth
among primitive peoples in various parts of the world.</p>
<p>Lang regarded the Greek survival as an example of "the
conservatism of the religious instinct".<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex182" href="#ftn.fnrex182" id=
"fnrex182">82</SPAN>]</span> The grandmother of the Teutonic deity
Tyr was a fierce giantess with nine hundred heads; his father was
an enemy of the gods. In Scotland the hag-mother of winter and
storm and darkness is the enemy of growth and all life, and she
raises storms to stop the grass growing, to slay young animals,
and prevent the union of her son with his fair bride. Similarly
the Babylonian chaos spirits, Apsu and Tiamat, the father and
mother of the gods, resolve to destroy their offspring, because
they begin to set the Universe in order. Tiamat, the female
dragon, is more powerful than her husband Apsu, who is slain by
his son Ea. She summons to her aid the gods of evil, and creates
also a brood of monsters--serpents,<SPAN name="page.anchor.65" name=
"page.anchor.65"></SPAN> dragons, vipers, fish men, raging hounds,
&c.--so as to bring about universal and enduring confusion
and evil. Not until she is destroyed can the beneficent gods
establish law and order and make the earth habitable and
beautiful.</p>
<p>But although Tiamat was slain, the everlasting battle between
the forces of good and evil was ever waged in the Babylonian
world. Certain evil spirits were let loose at certain periods,
and they strove to accomplish the destruction of mankind and his
works. These invisible enemies were either charmed away by
performing magical ceremonies, or by invoking the gods to thwart
them and bind them.</p>
<p>Other spirits inhabited the bodies of animals and were ever
hovering near. The ghosts of the dead and male and female demons
were birds, like the birds of Fate which sang to Siegfried. When
the owl raised its melancholy voice in the darkness the listener
heard the spirit of a departed mother crying for her child.
Ghosts and evil spirits wandered through the streets in darkness;
they haunted empty houses; they fluttered through the evening air
as bats; they hastened, moaning dismally, across barren wastes
searching for food or lay in wait for travellers; they came as
roaring lions and howling jackals, hungering for human flesh. The
"shedu" was a destructive bull which might slay man wantonly or
as a protector of temples. Of like character was the "lamassu",
depicted as a winged bull with human head, the protector of
palaces; the "alu" was a bull-like demon of tempest, and there
were also many composite, distorted, or formless monsters which
were vaguely termed "seizers" or "overthrowers", the Semitic
"labashu" and "ach-chazu", the Sumerian "dimmea" and "dimme-kur".
A dialectic form of "gallu" or devil<SPAN name="page.anchor.66" name=
"page.anchor.66"></SPAN> was "mulla". Professor Pinches thinks it
not improbable that "mulla" may be connected with the word
"mula", meaning "star", and suggests that it referred to a
"will-o'-the-wisp".<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex183" href=
"#ftn.fnrex183" name="fnrex183">83</SPAN>]</span> In these islands,
according to an old rhyme,</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>Some call him Robin
Good-fellow,</tt>
<tt> Hob-goblin, or mad Crisp,</tt>
<tt>And some againe doe tearme him
oft</tt>
<tt> By name of Will the Wisp.</tt></blockquote><p>Other names are "Kitty", "Peg", and "Jack with a lantern".
"Poor Robin" sang:</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>I should indeed as soon
expect</tt>
<tt>That Peg-a-lantern would
direct</tt>
<tt>Me straightway home on misty
night</tt>
<tt>As wand'ring stars, quite out of
sight.</tt></blockquote><p>In Shakespeare's <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Tempest</em></span><span class="sub">[<SPAN name=
"fnrex184" href="#ftn.fnrex184" name="fnrex184">84</SPAN>]</span> a
sailor exclaims: "Your fairy, which, you say, is a harmless
fairy, has done little better than played the Jack with us". Dr.
Johnson commented that the reference was to "Jack with a
lantern". Milton wrote also of the "wandering fire",</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>Which oft, they say, some evil spirit
attends,</tt>
<tt>Hovering and blazing with delusive
light,</tt>
<tt>Misleads th' amaz'd night wand'rer from
his way</tt>
<tt>To bogs and mires, and oft through pond
or pool;</tt>
<tt>There swallowed up and lost from
succour far.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex185" href=
"#ftn.fnrex185" name="fnrex185">85</SPAN>]</span></tt></blockquote><p>"When we stick in the mire", sang Drayton, "he doth with
laughter leave us." These fires were also "fallen stars", "death
fires", and "fire drakes":</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>So have I seen a fire drake glide
along</tt>
<tt>Before a dying man, to point his
grave,</tt>
<tt>And in it stick and hide.<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex186" href="#ftn.fnrex186" id=
"fnrex186">86</SPAN>]</span></tt></blockquote><p><SPAN name="page.anchor.67" name="page.anchor.67"></SPAN>Pliny
referred to the wandering lights as stars.<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex187" href="#ftn.fnrex187" id=
"fnrex187">87</SPAN>]</span> The Sumerian "mulla" was undoubtedly an
evil spirit. In some countries the "fire drake" is a bird with
gleaming breast: in Babylonia it assumed the form of a bull, and
may have had some connection with the bull of lshtar. Like the
Indian "Dasyu" and "Dasa",<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex188"
href="#ftn.fnrex188" name="fnrex188">88</SPAN>]</span> Gallu was
applied in the sense of "foreign devil" to human and superhuman
adversaries of certain monarchs. Some of the supernatural beings
resemble our elves and fairies and the Indian Rakshasas.
Occasionally they appear in comely human guise; at other times
they are vaguely monstrous. The best known of this class is
Lilith, who, according to Hebrew tradition, preserved in the
Talmud, was the demon lover of Adam. She has been immortalized by
Dante Gabriel Rossetti:</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>Of Adam's first wife Lilith, it is
told</tt>
<tt>(The witch he loved before the gift of
Eve)</tt>
<tt>That, ere the snake's, her sweet tongue
could deceive,</tt>
<tt>And her enchanted hair was the first
gold.</tt>
<tt>And still she sits, young while the
earth is old,</tt>
<tt>And, subtly of herself
contemplative,</tt>
<tt>Draws men to watch the bright web she
can weave,</tt>
<tt>Till heart and body and life are in its
hold.</tt>
<tt>The rose and poppy are her flowers; for
where</tt>
<tt>Is he not found, O Lilith, whom shed
scent</tt>
<tt>And soft shed kisses and soft sleep
shall snare?</tt>
<tt>Lo! as that youth's eyes burned at
thine, so went</tt>
<tt>Thy spell through him, and left his
straight neck bent</tt>
<tt>And round his heart one strangling
golden hair.</tt></blockquote><p>Lilith is the Babylonian Lilithu, a feminine form of Lilu, the
Sumerian Lila. She resembles Surpanakha of the <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Ramayana</em></span>, who made love to Rama and
Lakshmana, and the sister of the demon Hidimva, who became<SPAN id=
"page.anchor.68" name="page.anchor.68"></SPAN> enamoured of Bhima,
one of the heroes of the <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Mahabharata</em></span>,<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex189" href="#ftn.fnrex189" id=
"fnrex189">89</SPAN>]</span> and the various fairy lovers of Europe
who lured men to eternal imprisonment inside mountains, or
vanished for ever when they were completely under their
influence, leaving them demented. The elfin Lilu similarly wooed
young women, like the Germanic Laurin of the "Wonderful Rose
Garden",<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex190" href=
"#ftn.fnrex190" name="fnrex190">90</SPAN>]</span> who carried away the
fair lady Kunhild to his underground dwelling amidst the Tyrolese
mountains, or left them haunting the place of their meetings,
searching for him in vain:</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>A savage place! as holy and
enchanted</tt>
<tt>As ere beneath the waning moon was
haunted</tt>
<tt>By woman wailing for her demon
lover...</tt>
<tt>His flashing eyes, his floating
hair!</tt>
<tt>Weave a circle round him
thrice,</tt>
<tt>And close your eyes with holy
dread,</tt>
<tt>For he on honey dew hath fed</tt>
<tt>And drunk the milk of
Paradise.</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Coleridge's Kubla Khan.</em></span></tt></blockquote><p>Another materializing spirit of this class was Ardat Lili, who
appears to have wedded human beings like the swan maidens, the
mermaids, and Nereids of the European folk tales, and the goddess
Ganga, who for a time was the wife of King Shantanu of the
<span class="emphasis"><em>Mahabharata</em></span>.<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex191" href="#ftn.fnrex191" id=
"fnrex191">91</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>The Labartu, to whom we have referred, was a female who
haunted mountains and marshes; like the fairies and hags of
Europe, she stole or afflicted children, who accordingly had to
wear charms round their necks for protection. Seven of these
supernatural beings were reputed to be daughters of Anu, the sky
god.</p>
<p>The Alu, a storm deity, was also a spirit which caused
nightmare. It endeavoured to smother sleepers like the<SPAN id=
"page.anchor.69" name="page.anchor.69"></SPAN> Scandinavian hag
Mara, and similarly deprived them of power to move. In Babylonia
this evil spirit might also cause sleeplessness or death by
hovering near a bed. In shape it might be as horrible and
repulsive as the Egyptian ghosts which caused children to die
from fright or by sucking out the breath of life.</p>
<p>As most representatives of the spirit world were enemies of
the living, so were the ghosts of dead men and women. Death
chilled all human affections; it turned love to hate; the deeper
the love had been, the deeper became the enmity fostered by the
ghost. Certain ghosts might also be regarded as particularly
virulent and hostile if they happened to have left the body of
one who was ceremonially impure. The most terrible ghost in
Babylonia was that of a woman who had died in childbed. She was
pitied and dreaded; her grief had demented her; she was doomed to
wail in the darkness; her impurity clung to her like poison. No
spirit was more prone to work evil against mankind, and her
hostility was accompanied by the most tragic sorrow. In Northern
India the Hindus, like the ancient Babylonians, regard as a
fearsome demon the ghost of a woman who died while pregnant, or
on the day of the child's birth.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name=
"fnrex192" href="#ftn.fnrex192" name="fnrex192">92</SPAN>]</span> A
similar belief prevailed in Mexico. In Europe there are many folk
tales of dead mothers who return to avenge themselves on the
cruel fathers of neglected children.</p>
<p>A sharp contrast is presented by the Mongolian Buriats, whose
outlook on the spirit world is less gloomy than was that of the
ancient Babylonians. According to Mr. Jeremiah Curtin, this
interesting people are wont to perform a ceremony with purpose to
entice the ghost to return to the dead body--a proceeding which
is<SPAN name="page.anchor.70" name="page.anchor.70"></SPAN> dreaded in
the Scottish Highlands.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex193"
href="#ftn.fnrex193" name="fnrex193">93</SPAN>]</span> The Buriats
address the ghost, saying: "You shall sleep well. Come back to
your natural ashes. Take pity on your friends. It is necessary to
live a real life. Do not wander along the mountains. Do not be
like bad spirits. Return to your peaceful home.... Come back and
work for your children. How can you leave the little ones?" If it
is a mother, these words have great effect; sometimes the spirit
moans and sobs, and the Buriats tell that there have been
instances of it returning to the body.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name=
"fnrex194" href="#ftn.fnrex194" name="fnrex194">94</SPAN>]</span> In
his <span class="emphasis"><em>Arabia
Deserta</em></span><span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex195" href=
"#ftn.fnrex195" name="fnrex195">95</SPAN>]</span> Doughty relates that
Arab women and children mock the cries of the owl. One explained
to him: "It is a wailful woman seeking her lost child; she has
become this forlorn bird". So do immemorial beliefs survive to
our own day.</p>
<p>The Babylonian ghosts of unmarried men and women and of those
without offspring were also disconsolate night wanderers. Others
who suffered similar fates were the ghosts of men who died in
battle far from home and were left unburied, the ghosts of
travellers who perished in the desert and were not covered over,
the ghosts of drowned men which rose from the water, the ghosts
of prisoners starved to death or executed, the ghosts of people
who died violent deaths before their appointed time. The dead
required to be cared for, to have libations poured out, to be
fed, so that they might not prowl<SPAN name="page.anchor.71" name=
"page.anchor.71"></SPAN> through the streets or enter houses
searching for scraps of food and pure water. The duty of giving
offerings to the dead was imposed apparently on near relatives.
As in India, it would appear that the eldest son performed the
funeral ceremony: a dreadful fate therefore awaited the spirit of
the dead Babylonian man or woman without offspring. In Sanskrit
literature there is a reference to a priest who was not allowed
to enter Paradise, although he had performed rigid penances,
because he had no children.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex196"
href="#ftn.fnrex196" name="fnrex196">96</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>There were hags and giants of mountain and desert, of river
and ocean. Demons might possess the pig, the goat, the horse, the
lion, or the ibis, the raven, or the hawk. The seven spirits of
tempest, fire, and destruction rose from the depths of ocean, and
there were hosts of demons which could not be overcome or baffled
by man without the assistance of the gods to whom they were
hostile. Many were sexless; having no offspring, they were devoid
of mercy and compassion. They penetrated everywhere:</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>The high enclosures, the broad
enclosures, like a flood</tt>
<tt> they pass through,</tt>
<tt>From house to house they dash
along.</tt>
<tt>No door can shut them out;</tt>
<tt>No bolt can turn them back.</tt>
<tt>Through the door, like a snake, they
glide,</tt>
<tt>Through the hinge, like the wind, they
storm,</tt>
<tt>Tearing the wife from the embrace of
the man,</tt>
<tt>Driving the freedman from his family
home.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex197" href="#ftn.fnrex197" id="fnrex197">97</SPAN>]</span></tt></blockquote><p>These furies did not confine their unwelcomed attentions to
mankind alone:</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>They hunt the doves from their
cotes,</tt>
<tt>And drive the birds from their
nests,<SPAN name="page.anchor.72" name=
"page.anchor.72"></SPAN></tt>
<tt>And chase the marten from its
hole....</tt>
<tt>Through the gloomy street by night they
roam,</tt>
<tt>Smiting sheepfold and cattle
pen,</tt>
<tt>Shutting up the land as with door and
bolt.</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt> <span class="emphasis"><em>R.C.
Thompson's Translation.</em></span></tt></blockquote><p>The Babylonian poet, like Burns, was filled with pity for the
animals which suffered in the storm:</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>List'ning the doors an' winnocks
rattle,</tt>
<tt>I thought me o' the ourie
cattle,</tt>
<tt>Or silly sheep, wha bide this
brattle</tt>
<tt> O' winter war....</tt>
<tt>Ilk happing bird, wee, helpless
thing!</tt>
<tt>That in the merry months o'
spring</tt>
<tt>Delighted me to hear thee
sing,</tt>
<tt> What comes o' thee?</tt>
<tt>Whare wilt thou cow'r thy chittering
wing,</tt>
<tt> And close thy e'e?</tt></blockquote><p>According to Babylonian belief, "the great storms directed
from heaven" were caused by demons. Mankind heard them "loudly
roaring above, gibbering below".<span class="sub">[<SPAN name=
"fnrex198" href="#ftn.fnrex198" name="fnrex198">98</SPAN>]</span> The
south wind was raised by Shutu, a plumed storm demon resembling
Hraesvelgur of the Icelandic Eddas:</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>Corpse-swallower sits at the end of
heaven,</tt>
<tt> A Jötun in eagle
form;</tt>
<tt>From his wings, they say, comes the
wind which fares</tt>
<tt> Over all the dwellers of
earth.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex199" href="#ftn.fnrex199" id="fnrex199">99</SPAN>]</span></tt></blockquote><p>The northern story of Thor's fishing, when he hooked and
wounded the Midgard serpent, is recalled by the Babylonian legend
of Adapa, son of the god Ea. This hero was engaged catching fish,
when Shutu, the south wind, upset his boat. In his wrath Adapa
immediately attacked the storm demon and shattered her pinions.
Anu, the sky god, was moved to anger against Ea's son <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.73" name="page.anchor.73"></SPAN>and summoned him to
the Celestial Court. Adapa, however, appeared in garments of
mourning and was forgiven. Anu offered him the water of life and
the bread of life which would have made him immortal, but Ea's
son refused to eat or drink, believing, as his father had warned
him, that the sky god desired him to partake of the bread of
death and to drink of the water of death.</p>
<SPAN name="id2520294" name="id2520294"></SPAN>
<p class="title"><b>Figure IV.1. TWO FIGURES OF DEMONS</b></p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<p>The upper head is that of Shutu, the demon of the south-west
wind, whose wings were broken by Adapa, son of Ea (<span class=
"emphasis"><em>British Museum</em></span>)</p>
</blockquote>
<ANTIMG alt="" src="img/6.jpg" />
<SPAN name="id2520314" name="id2520314"></SPAN>
<p class="title"><b>Figure IV.2. WINGED HUMAN-HEADED COW
(?)</b></p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<p><span class="emphasis"><em>From Kouyunjik (Nineveh): now in
the British Museum</em></span></p>
</blockquote>
<ANTIMG alt="" src="img/7.jpg" />
<p>Another terrible atmospheric demon was the south-west wind,
which caused destructive storms and floods, and claimed many
human victims like the Icelandic "corpse swallower". She was
depicted with lidless staring eyes, broad flat nose, mouth gaping
horribly, and showing tusk-like teeth, and with high cheek bones,
heavy eyebrows, and low bulging forehead.</p>
<p>In Scotland the hag of the south-west wind is similarly a
bloodthirsty and fearsome demon. She is most virulent in the
springtime. At Cromarty she is quaintly called "Gentle Annie" by
the fisher folks, who repeat the saying: "When Gentle Annie is
skyawlan (yelling) roond the heel of Ness (a promontory) wi' a
white feather on her hat (the foam of big billows) they (the
spirits) will be harrying (robbing) the crook"--that is, the pot
which hangs from the crook is empty during the spring storms,
which prevent fishermen going to sea. In England the wind hag is
Black Annis, who dwells in a Leicestershire hill cave. She may be
identical with the Irish hag Anu, associated with the "Paps of
Anu". According to Gaelic lore, this wind demon of spring is the
"Cailleach" (old wife). She gives her name in the Highland
calendar to the stormy period of late spring; she raises gale
after gale to prevent the coming of summer. Angerboda, the
Icelandic hag, is also a storm demon, but represents the east
wind. A Tyrolese folk<SPAN name="page.anchor.74" name=
"page.anchor.74"></SPAN> tale tells of three magic maidens who dwelt
on Jochgrimm mountain, where they "brewed the winds". Their demon
lovers were Ecke, "he who causes fear"; Vasolt, "he who causes
dismay"; and the scornful Dietrich in his mythical character of
Donar or Thunor (Thor), the thunderer.</p>
<p>Another Sumerian storm demon was the Zu bird, which is
represented among the stars by Pegasus and Taurus. A legend
relates that this "worker of evil, who raised the head of evil",
once aspired to rule the gods, and stole from Bel, "the lord" of
deities, the Tablets of Destiny, which gave him his power over
the Universe as controller of the fates of all. The Zu bird
escaped with the Tablets and found shelter on its mountain top in
Arabia. Anu called on Ramman, the thunderer, to attack the Zu
bird, but he was afraid; other gods appear to have shrunk from
the conflict. How the rebel was overcome is not certain, because
the legend survives in fragmentary form. There is a reference,
however, to the moon god setting out towards the mountain in
Arabia with purpose to outwit the Zu bird and recover the lost
Tablets. How he fared it is impossible to ascertain. In another
legend--that of Etana--the mother serpent, addressing the sun
god, Shamash, says:</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>Thy net is like unto the broad
earth;</tt>
<tt>Thy snare is like unto the distant
heaven!</tt>
<tt>Who hath ever escaped from thy
net?</tt>
<tt>Even Zu, the worker of evil, who raised
the head</tt>
<tt> of evil [did not
escape]!</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt> <span class="emphasis"><em>L.W.
King's Translation.</em></span></tt></blockquote><p>In Indian mythology, Garuda, half giant, half eagle, robs the
Amrita (ambrosia) of the gods which gives them their power and
renders them immortal. It had assumed a golden body, bright as
the sun. Indra, the thunderer,<SPAN name="page.anchor.75" name=
"page.anchor.75"></SPAN> flung his bolt in vain; he could not wound
Garuda, and only displaced a single feather. Afterwards, however,
he stole the moon goblet containing the Amrita, which Garuda had
delivered to his enemies, the serpents, to free his mother from
bondage. This Indian eagle giant became the vehicle of the god
Vishnu, and, according to the <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Mahabharata</em></span>, "mocked the wind with his
fleetness".</p>
<p>It would appear that the Babylonian Zu bird symbolized the
summer sandstorms from the Arabian desert. Thunder is associated
with the rainy season, and it may have been assumed, therefore,
that the thunder god was powerless against the sandstorm demon,
who was chased, however, by the moon, and finally overcome by the
triumphant sun when it broke through the darkening sand drift and
brightened heaven and earth, "netting" the rebellious demon who
desired to establish the rule of evil over gods and mankind.</p>
<p>In the "Legend of Etana" the Eagle, another demon which links
with the Indian Garuda, slayer of serpents, devours the brood of
the Mother Serpent. For this offence against divine law, Shamash,
the sun god, pronounces the Eagle's doom. He instructs the Mother
Serpent to slay a wild ox and conceal herself in its entrails.
The Eagle comes to feed on the carcass, unheeding the warning of
one of his children, who says, "The serpent lies in this wild
ox":</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>He swooped down and stood upon the wild
ox,</tt>
<tt>The Eagle ... examined the
flesh;</tt>
<tt>He looked about carefully before and
behind him;</tt>
<tt>He again examined the flesh;</tt>
<tt>He looked about carefully before and
behind him,</tt>
<tt>Then, moving swiftly, he made for the
hidden parts.</tt>
<tt>When he entered into the
midst,</tt>
<tt>The serpent seized him by his
wing.</tt></blockquote><p><SPAN name="page.anchor.76" name="page.anchor.76"></SPAN>In vain the
Eagle appealed for mercy to the Mother Serpent, who was compelled
to execute the decree of Shamash; she tore off the Eagle's
pinions, wings, and claws, and threw him into a pit where he
perished from hunger and thirst.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name=
"fnrex1100" href="#ftn.fnrex1100" name="fnrex1100">100</SPAN>]</span>
This myth may refer to the ravages of a winged demon of disease
who was thwarted by the sacrifice of an ox. The Mother Serpent
appears to be identical with an ancient goddess of maternity
resembling the Egyptian Bast, the serpent mother of Bubastis.
According to Sumerian belief, Nintu, "a form of the goddess Ma",
was half a serpent. On her head there is a horn; she is "girt
about the loins"; her left arm holds "a babe suckling her
breast":</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>From her head to her loins</tt>
<tt>The body is that of a naked
woman;</tt>
<tt>From the loins to the sole of the
foot</tt>
<tt>Scales like those of a snake are
visible.</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt> <span class="emphasis"><em>R.C.
Thompson's Translation.</em></span></tt></blockquote><p>The close association of gods and demons is illustrated in an
obscure myth which may refer to an eclipse of the moon or a night
storm at the beginning of the rainy season. The demons go to war
against the high gods, and are assisted by Adad (Ramman) the
thunderer, Shamash the sun, and Ishtar. They desire to wreck the
heavens, the home of Anu:</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>They clustered angrily round the
crescent of the moon god,</tt>
<tt>And won over to their aid Shamash, the
mighty, and Adad, the warrior,</tt>
<tt>And Ishtar, who with Anu, the
King,</tt>
<tt>Hath founded a shining
dwelling.</tt></blockquote><p>The moon god Sin, "the seed of mankind", was darkened by the
demons who raged, "rushing loose over<SPAN name="page.anchor.77" name=
"page.anchor.77"></SPAN> the land" like to the wind. Bel called upon
his messenger, whom he sent to Ea in the ocean depths, saying:
"My son Sin ... hath been grievously bedimmed". Ea lamented, and
dispatched his son Merodach to net the demons by magic, using "a
two-coloured cord from the hair of a virgin kid and from the wool
of a virgin lamb".<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1101" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1101" name="fnrex1101">101</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>As in India, where Shitala, the Bengali goddess of smallpox,
for instance, is worshipped when the dreaded disease she controls
becomes epidemic, so in Babylonia the people sought to secure
immunity from attack by worshipping spirits of disease. A tablet
relates that Ura, a plague demon, once resolved to destroy all
life, but ultimately consented to spare those who praised his
name and exalted him in recognition of his bravery and power.
This could be accomplished by reciting a formula. Indian serpent
worshippers believe that their devotions "destroy all danger
proceeding from snakes".<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1102"
href="#ftn.fnrex1102" name="fnrex1102">102</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>Like the Ancient Egyptians, the Babylonians also had their
kindly spirits who brought luck and the various enjoyments of
life. A good "labartu" might attend on a human being like a
household fairy of India or Europe: a friendly "shedu" could
protect a household against the attacks of fierce demons and
human enemies. Even the spirits of Fate who served Anu, god of
the sky, and that "Norn" of the Underworld, Eresh-ki-gal, queen
of Hades, might sometimes be propitious: if the deities were
successfully invoked they could cause the Fates to smite spirits
of disease and bringers of ill luck. Damu, a friendly fairy
goddess, was well loved, because she inspired pleasant dreams,
relieved the sufferings of the<SPAN name="page.anchor.78" name=
"page.anchor.78"></SPAN> afflicted, and restored to good health
those patients whom she selected to favour.</p>
<p>In the Egyptian <span class="emphasis"><em>Book of the
Dead</em></span> the kindly spirits are overshadowed by the evil
ones, because the various magical spells which were put on record
were directed against those supernatural beings who were enemies
of mankind. Similarly in Babylonia the fragments of this class of
literature which survive deal mainly with wicked and vengeful
demons. It appears probable, however, that the highly emotional
Sumerians and Akkadians were on occasion quite as cheerful a
people as the inhabitants of ancient Egypt. Although they were
surrounded by bloodthirsty furies who desired to shorten their
days, and their nights were filled with vague lowering phantoms
which inspired fear, they no doubt shared, in their
charm-protected houses, a comfortable feeling of security after
performing magical ceremonies, and were happy enough when they
gathered round flickering lights to listen to ancient song and
story and gossip about crops and traders, the members of the
royal house, and the family affairs of their acquaintances.</p>
<p>The Babylonian spirit world, it will be seen, was of complex
character. Its inhabitants were numberless, but often vaguely
defined, and one class of demons linked with another. Like the
European fairies of folk belief, the Babylonian spirits were
extremely hostile and irresistible at certain seasonal periods;
and they were fickle and perverse and difficult to please even
when inclined to be friendly. They were also similarly manifested
from time to time in various forms. Sometimes they were comely
and beautiful; at other times they were apparitions of horror.
The Jinn of present-day Arabians are of like character; these may
be giants, cloudy shapes, comely women, serpents or cats, goats
or pigs.<SPAN name="page.anchor.79" name="page.anchor.79"></SPAN></p>
<p>Some of the composite monsters of Babylonia may suggest the
vague and exaggerated recollections of terror-stricken people who
have had glimpses of unfamiliar wild beasts in the dusk or amidst
reedy marshes. But they cannot be wholly accounted for in this
way. While animals were often identified with supernatural
beings, and foreigners were called "devils", it would be
misleading to assert that the spirit world reflects confused folk
memories of human and bestial enemies. Even when a demon was
given concrete human form it remained essentially non-human: no
ordinary weapon could inflict an injury, and it was never
controlled by natural laws. The spirits of disease and tempest
and darkness were creations of fancy: they symbolized moods; they
were the causes which explained effects. A sculptor or
storyteller who desired to convey an impression of a spirit of
storm or pestilence created monstrous forms to inspire terror.
Sudden and unexpected visits of fierce and devastating demons
were accounted for by asserting that they had wings like eagles,
were nimble-footed as gazelles, cunning and watchful as serpents;
that they had claws to clutch, horns to gore, and powerful fore
legs like a lion to smite down victims. Withal they drank blood
like ravens and devoured corpses like hyaenas. Monsters were all
the more repulsive when they were partly human. The human-headed
snake or the snake-headed man and the man with the horns of a
wild bull and the legs of a goat were horrible in the extreme.
Evil spirits might sometimes achieve success by practising
deception. They might appear as beautiful girls or handsome men
and seize unsuspecting victims in deathly embrace or leave them
demented and full of grief, or come as birds and suddenly assume
awesome shapes.</p>
<p>Fairies and elves, and other half-human demons, are<SPAN id=
"page.anchor.80" name="page.anchor.80"></SPAN> sometimes regarded as
degenerate gods. It will be seen, however, that while certain
spirits developed into deities, others remained something between
these two classes of supernatural beings: they might attend upon
gods and goddesses, or operate independently now against mankind
and now against deities even. The "namtaru", for instance, was a
spirit of fate, the son of Bel-Enlil and Eresh-ki-gal, queen of
Hades. "Apparently", writes Professor Pinches, "he executed the
instructions given him concerning the fate of men, and could also
have power over certain of the gods."<span class="sub">[<SPAN name=
"fnrex1103" href="#ftn.fnrex1103" name="fnrex1103">103</SPAN>]</span>
To this middle class belong the evil gods who rebelled against
the beneficent deities. According to Hebridean folk belief, the
fallen angels are divided into three classes--the fairies, the
"nimble men" (aurora borealis), and the "blue men of the Minch".
In <span class="emphasis"><em>Beowulf</em></span> the "brood of
Cain" includes "monsters and elves and sea-devils--giants also,
who long time fought with God, for which he gave them their
reward".<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1104" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1104" name="fnrex1104">104</SPAN>]</span> Similarly the
Babylonian spirit groups are liable to division and subdivision.
The various classes may be regarded as relics of the various
stages of development from crude animism to sublime monotheism:
in the fragmentary legends we trace the floating material from
which great mythologies have been framed.</p>
<br/>
<hr width="100" align="left" />
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex178" href="#fnrex178" name="ftn.fnrex178">78</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>The Acts</em></span>, xvii,
22-31.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex179" href="#fnrex179" name="ftn.fnrex179">79</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>Devils and Evil Spirits of
Babylonia</em></span>, vol. ii, p. 149 <span class=
"emphasis"><em>et seq</em></span>.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex180" href="#fnrex180" name="ftn.fnrex180">80</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>Egyptian Myth and Legend</em></span>,
xxxix, <span class="emphasis"><em>n.</em></span>
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex181" href="#fnrex181" name="ftn.fnrex181">81</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>Development of Religion and Thought in
Ancient Egypt</em></span>, J.H. Breasted, pp. 38, 74.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex182" href="#fnrex182" name="ftn.fnrex182">82</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>Custom and Myth</em></span>, p. 45
<span class="emphasis"><em>et seq</em></span>.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex183" href="#fnrex183" name="ftn.fnrex183">83</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>The Religion of Babylonia and
Assyria</em></span>, p. 108.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex184" href="#fnrex184" name="ftn.fnrex184">84</SPAN>]</span>
Act iv, scene 1.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex185" href="#fnrex185" name="ftn.fnrex185">85</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>Paradise Lost</em></span>, book
ix.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex186" href="#fnrex186" name="ftn.fnrex186">86</SPAN>]</span>
Chapman's <span class="emphasis"><em>Caesar and
Pompey</em></span>.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex187" href="#fnrex187" name="ftn.fnrex187">87</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>Natural History</em></span>, 2nd
book.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex188" href="#fnrex188" name="ftn.fnrex188">88</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>Indian Myth and Legend</em></span>,
70, n.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex189" href="#fnrex189" name="ftn.fnrex189">89</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>Indian Myth and Legend</em></span>,
pp. 202-5, 400, 401.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex190" href="#fnrex190" name="ftn.fnrex190">90</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>Teutonic Myth and Legend</em></span>,
p. 424 et seq.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex191" href="#fnrex191" name="ftn.fnrex191">91</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>Indian Myth and Legend</em></span>, p.
164 et seq.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex192" href="#fnrex192" name="ftn.fnrex192">92</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>Popular Religion and Folk Lore of
Northern India</em></span>, W. Crooke, vol. i, p. 254.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex193" href="#fnrex193" name="ftn.fnrex193">93</SPAN>]</span>
When a person, young or old, is dying, near relatives must not
call out their names in case the soul may come back from the
spirit world. A similar belief still lingers, especially among
women, in the Lowlands. The writer was once present in a room
when a child was supposed to be dying. Suddenly the mother called
out the child's name in agonized voice. It revived soon
afterwards. Two old women who had attempted to prevent "the
calling" shook their heads and remarked: "She has done it! The
child will never do any good in this world after being called
back." In England and Ireland, as well as in Scotland, the belief
also prevails in certain localities that if a dying person is
"called back" the soul will tarry for another twenty-four hours,
during which the individual will suffer great agony.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex194" href="#fnrex194" name="ftn.fnrex194">94</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>A Journey in Southern
Siberia</em></span>, Jeremiah Curtin, pp. 103, 104.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex195" href="#fnrex195" name="ftn.fnrex195">95</SPAN>]</span>
Vol. i, p. 305.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex196" href="#fnrex196" name="ftn.fnrex196">96</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>Adi Parva</em></span> section of
<span class="emphasis"><em>Mahàbhàrata</em></span>,
Roy's trans., p. 635.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex197" href="#fnrex197" name="ftn.fnrex197">97</SPAN>]</span>
Jastrow's <span class="emphasis"><em>Aspects of Religious Belief
in Babylonia</em></span>, &c., p. 312.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex198" href="#fnrex198" name="ftn.fnrex198">98</SPAN>]</span>
R.C. Thompson's trans.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex199" href="#fnrex199" name="ftn.fnrex199">99</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>The Elder or Poetic Edda</em></span>,
Olive Bray, part i, p. 53.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1100" href="#fnrex1100" id=
"ftn.fnrex1100">100</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Babylonian Religion</em></span>, L.W. King, pp.
186-8.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1101" href="#fnrex1101" id=
"ftn.fnrex1101">101</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>The
Devils and Evil Spirits of Babylonia</em></span>, R. Campbell
Thompson, vol. i, p. 53 et seq.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1102" href="#fnrex1102" id=
"ftn.fnrex1102">102</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>Omens
and Superstitions of Southern India</em></span>, E. Thurston, p.
124.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1103" href="#fnrex1103" id=
"ftn.fnrex1103">103</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>The
Religion of Babylonia and Assyria</em></span>, p. 110.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1104" href="#fnrex1104" id=
"ftn.fnrex1104">104</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Beowulf</em></span>, Clark Hall, p. 14.
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />