by one who voluntarily gave himself up (-devovere
se-); noxious chasms in the ground were closed, and
battles half lost were converted into victories, when
a brave burgess threw himself as an expiatory offering
into the abyss or upon the foe. The “sacred
spring” was based on a similar view; all the
offspring whether of cattle or of men within a specified
period were presented to the gods. If acts of
this nature are to be called human sacrifices, then
such sacrifices belonged to the essence of the Latin
faith; but we are bound to add that, far back as our
view reaches into the past, this immolation, so far
as life was concerned, was limited to the guilty who
had been convicted before a civil tribunal, or to
the innocent who voluntarily chose to die. Human
sacrifices of a different description run counter
to the fundamental idea of a sacrificial act, and,
wherever they occur among the Indo-Germanic stocks
at least, are based on later degeneracy and barbarism.
They never gained admission among the Romans; hardly
in a single instance were superstition and despair
induced, even in times of extreme distress, to seek
an extraordinary deliverance through means so revolting.
Of belief in ghosts, fear of enchantments, or dealing
in mysteries, comparatively slight traces are to be
found among the Romans. Oracles and prophecy
never acquired the importance in Italy which they
obtained in Greece, and never were able to exercise
a serious control over private or public life.
But on the other hand the Latin religion sank into
an incredible insipidity and dulness, and early became
shrivelled into an anxious and dreary round of ceremonies.
The god of the Italian was, as we have already said,
above all things an instrument for helping him to
the attainment of very substantial earthly aims; this
turn was given to the religious views of the Italian
by his tendency towards the palpable and the real,
and is no less distinctly apparent in the saint-worship
of the modern inhabitants of Italy. The gods
confronted man just as a creditor confronted his debtor;
each of them had a duly acquired right to certain performances
and payments; and as the number of the gods was as
great as the number of the incidents in earthly life,
and the neglect or wrong performance of the worship
of each god revenged itself in the corresponding incident,
it was a laborious and difficult task even to gain
a knowledge of a man’s religious obligations,
and the priests who were skilled in the law of divine
things and pointed out its requirements—the
-Pontifices- —could not fail to attain an
extraordinary influence. The upright man fulfilled
the requirements of sacred ritual with the same mercantile
punctuality with which he met his earthly obligations,
and at times did more than was due, if the god had
done so on his part. Man even dealt in speculation
with his god; a vow was in reality as in name a formal
contract between the god and the man, by which the
latter promised to the former for a certain service