object after its kind. In occupations the very
steps of the process were spiritualized: thus,
for example, in the prayer for the husbandman there
was invoked the spirit of fallowing, of ploughing,
of furrowing, sowing, covering-in, harrowing, and so
forth down to that of the in-bringing, up-storing,
and opening of the granaries. In like manner
marriage, birth, and every other natural event were
endowed with a sacred life. The larger the sphere
embraced in the abstraction, the higher rose the god
and the reverence paid by man. Thus Jupiter
and Juno are the abstractions of manhood and womanhood;
Dea Dia or Ceres, the creative power; Minerva, the
power of memory; Dea Bona, or among the Samnites Dea
Cupra, the good deity. While to the Greek everything
assumed a concrete and corporeal shape, the Roman
could only make use of abstract, completely transparent
formulae; and while the Greek for the most part threw
aside the old legendary treasures of primitive times,
because they embodied the idea in too transparent a
form, the Roman could still less retain them, because
the sacred conceptions seemed to him dimmed even by
the lightest veil of allegory. Not a trace has
been preserved among the Romans even of the oldest
and most generally diffused myths, such as that current
among the Indians, the Greeks, and even the Semites,
regarding a great flood and its survivor, the common
ancestor of the present human race. Their gods
could not marry and beget children, like those of the
Hellenes; they did not walk about unseen among mortals;
and they needed no nectar. But that they, nevertheless,
in their spirituality—which only appears
tame to dull apprehension—gained a powerful
hold on men’s minds, a hold more powerful perhaps
than that of the gods of Hellas created after the
image of man, would be attested, even if history were
silent on the subject, by the Roman designation of
faith (the word and the idea alike foreign to the
Hellenes), -Religlo-, that is to say, “that
which binds.” As India and Iran developed
from one and the same inherited store, the former,
the richly varied forms of its sacred epics, the latter,
the abstractions of the Zend-Avesta; so in the Greek
mythology the person is predominant, in the Roman
the idea, in the former freedom, in the latter necessity.
Art
Lastly, what holds good of real life is true also of its counterfeit in jest and play, which everywhere, and especially in the earliest period of full and simple existence, do not exclude the serious, but veil it. The simplest elements of art are in Latium and Hellas quite the same; the decorous armed dance, the “leap” (-triumpus-, —thriambos—, —di-thyrambos—); the masquerade of the “full people” (—satyroi—, -satura-), who, wrapped in the skins of sheep and goats, wound up the festival with their jokes; lastly, the pipe, which with suitable strains accompanied and regulated the solemn as well as the merry dance.