Shelley was ever calling attention to the fact that either from ignorance or the casuistical sophistries of mal-interested teachers who have distorted the divine pristine truths for their own base ends, emanated superstition, the taint of all it looked upon; and with no unsparing hand he flagellated the professors of the numerous false faiths, bastardized from their original purity, which have in their decay, darkened the earth, and with all the force of his powerful pen, mightier than any sword, he ridiculed these gross theologies existant among men, as in the following:
“Barbarous and uncivilized nations have uniformly adored, under various names, a God of which themselves were the model: revengeful, blood-thirsty, groveling and capricious. The idol of a savage is a demon that delights in carnage. The steam of slaughter, the dissonance of groans, the flames of a desolated land, are the offerings which he deems acceptable, and his innumerable votaries throughout the world have made it a point of duty to worship him to his taste. The Phoenicians, the Druids and the Mexicans have immolated hundreds at the shrines of their divinity, and the high and holy name of God has been in all ages the watchword of the most unsparing massacres, the sanction of the most atrocious perfidies.”
Of the treatment Judaism, the foster mother of Christianity, received at the poet’s hands, I will now recite two examples. To Moses, the Jehovah of the Hebrews is thus made to speak:
“From an eternity of idleness
I, God, awoke; in seven days’
toil made earth
From nothing; rested, and
created man;
I placed him in a paradise,
and there
Planted the tree of evil,
so that he
Might eat and perish, and
my soul procure
Wherewith to sate its malice,
and to turn
Even like a heartless conqueror
of the earth,
All misery to my fame.
The race of men
Chosen to my honor, with impunity
May sate the lusts I
planted in their hearts.
Here I command thee hence
to lead them on,
Until, with harden’d
feet, their conquering troops
Wade on the promised soil
through woman’s blood.
And make my name be dreaded
through the land,
Yet ever-burning flame and
ceaseless woe
Shall be the doom of their
eternal souls,
With every soul on this ungrateful
earth,
Virtuous or vicious, weak
or strong—even all
Shall perish to fulfill the
blind revenge
(Which you to men call justice)
of their God.”
In another place Shelley is equally descriptive of the early stages of Jewish history, and makes the following observations on the building of the Temple of Jerusalem, which rearing high its thousand golden domes to heaven, exposed its glory to the face of day: