was invited by the gods to a feast which they had prepared
in heaven. Owing to her hatred of the light, she
sent a refusal by her messenger Narntar, who acquitted
himself on this mission with such a bad grace, that
Ann and Ea were incensed against his mistress, and
commissioned Nergal to descend and chastise her; he
went, and finding the gates of hell open, dragged
the queen by her hair from the throne, and was about
to decapitate her, but she mollified him by her prayers,
and saved her life by becoming his wife. The nature
of Nergal fitted him well to play the part of a prince
of the departed: for he was the destroying sun
of summer, and the genius of pestilence and battle.
His functions, however, in heaven and earth took up
so much of his time that he had little leisure to
visit his nether kingdom, and he was consequently
obliged to content himself with the role of
providing subjects for it by despatching thither the
thousands of recruits which he gathered daily from
the abodes of men or from the field of battle.
Allat was the actual sovereign of the country.
She was represented with the body of a woman, ill-formed
and shaggy, the grinning muzzle of a lion, and the
claws of a bird of prey. She brandished in each
hand a large serpent—a real animated javelin,
whose poisonous bite inflicted a fatal wound upon
the enemy. Her children were two lions, which
she is represented as suckling, and she passed through
her empire, not seated in the saddle, but standing
upright or kneeling on the back of a horse, which
seems oppressed by her weight. Sometimes she set
out on an expedition upon the river which communicates
with the countries of light, in order to meet the
procession of newly arrived souls ceaselessly despatched
to her: she embarked in this case upon an enchanted
vessel, which made its way without sail or oars, its
prow projecting like the beak of a bird, and its stern
terminating in the head of an ox. She overcomes
all resistance, and nothing can escape from her:
the gods themselves can pass into her empire only on
the condition of submitting to death like mortals,
and of humbly avowing themselves her slaves.
[Illustration: 220.jpg THE GODDESS ALLAT PASSES THROUGH THE NETHER REGIONS IN HER BARK.]
Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bronze plaque of which an engraving was published by Clermont-Ganneau. The original, which belonged to M. Peretie, is now in the collection of M. de Clercq
[Illustration: 221.jpg NERGAL, THE GOD OF HADES; BACK VIEW.]
Drawn by Faucher-Gudin.
This is the back of the bronze plate
represented on the preceding
page; the animal-head of the
god appears in relief
at the top of the illustration.