the Tiber matters were carried much further.
The profound Etruscan read off to the believer his
future fortunes in detail from the lightning and from
the entrails of animals offered in sacrifice; and
the more singular the language of the gods, the more
startling the portent or prodigy, the more confidently
did he declare what they foretold and the means by
which it was possible to avert the mischief.
Thus arose the lore of lightning, the art of inspecting
entrails, the interpretation of prodigies—all
of them, and the science of lightning especially,
devised with the hair-splitting subtlety which characterizes
the mind in pursuit of absurdities. A dwarf
called Tages with the figure of a child but with gray
hairs, who had been ploughed up by a peasant in a
field near Tarquinii—we might almost fancy
that practices at once so childish and so drivelling
had sought to present in this figure a caricature
of themselves—betrayed the secret of this
lore to the Etruscans, and then straightway died.
His disciples and successors taught what gods were
in the habit of hurling the lightning; how the lightning
of each god might be recognized by its colour and
the quarter of the heavens whence it came; whether
the lightning boded a permanent state of things or
a single event; and in the latter case whether the
event was one unalterably fixed, or whether it could
be up to a certain limit artificially postponed:
how they might convey the lightning away when it struck,
or compel the threatening lightning to strike, and
various marvellous arts of the like kind, with which
there was incidentally conjoined no small desire of
pocketing fees. How deeply repugnant this jugglery
was to the Roman character is shown by the fact that,
even when people came at a later period to employ
the Etruscan lore in Rome, no attempt was made to
naturalize it; during our present period the Romans
were probably still content with their own, and with
the Greek oracles.
The Etruscan religion occupied a higher level than
the Roman, in so far as it developed at least the
rudiments of what was wholly wanting among the Romans—a
speculation veiled under religious forms. Over
the world and its gods there ruled the veiled gods
(-Dii involuti-), consulted by the Etruscan Jupiter
himself; that world moreover was finite, and, as it
had come into being, so was it again to pass away
after the expiry of a definite period of time, whose
sections were the -saecula-. Respecting the intellectual
value which may once have belonged to this Etruscan
cosmogony and philosophy, it is difficult to form
a judgment; they appear however to have been from
the very first characterized by a dull fatalism and
an insipid play upon number.
Notes for Book I Chapter XII
1. I. II. Religion
2. This was, to all appearance, the original
nature of the “morning-mother” or -Mater
matuta-; in connection with which we may recall the
circumstance that, as the names Lucius and especially
-Manius- show, the morning hour was reckoned as lucky
for birth. -Mater matuta-probably became a goddess
of sea and harbour only at a later epoch under the
influence of the myth of Leucothea; the fact that
the goddess was chiefly worshipped by women tells against
the view that she was originally a harbour-goddess.