He is, as a rule, wanting in that somewhat lithe grace
of form, and in that rather easy-going good-nature,
which were the primary characteristics of the Egyptian
gods: the Chaldaean divinity has the broad shoulders,
the thick-set figure and projecting muscles of the
people over whom he rules; he has their hasty and violent
temperament, their coarse sensuality, their cruel
and warlike propensities, their boldness in conceiving
undertakings, and their obstinate tenacity in carrying
them out. Their goddesses are modelled on the
tyra of the Chaldaen women, or, more properly speaking,
on that of their queens. The majority of them
do not quit the harem, and have no other ambition than
to become speedily the mother of a numerous offspring.
Those who openly reject the rigid constraints of such
a life, and who seek to share the rank of the gods,
seem to lose all self-restraint when they put off
the veil: like Ishtar, they exchange a life of
severe chastity for the lowest debauchery, and they
subject their followers to the same irregular life
which they themselves have led. “Every woman
born in the country must enter once during her lifetime
the enclosure of the temple of Aphrodite, must there
sit down and unite herself to a stranger. Many
who are wealthy are too proud to mix with the rest,
and repair thither in closed chariots, followed by
a considerable train of slaves. The greater number
seat themselves on the sacred pavement, with a cord
twisted about their heads,—and there is
always a great crowd there, coming and going; the
women being divided by ropes into long lanes, down
which strangers pass to make their choice. A woman
who has once taken her place here cannot return home
until a stranger has thrown into her lap a silver
coin, and has led her away with him beyond the limits
of the sacred enclosure. As he throws the money
he pronounces these words: ’May the goddess
Mylitta make thee happy! ’—Now, among
the Assyrians, Aphrodite is called Mylitta. The
silver coin may be of any value, but none may refuse
it, that is forbidden by the law, for, once thrown,
it is sacred. The woman follows the first man
who throws her the money, and repels no one.
When once she has accompanied him, and has thus satisfied
the goddess, she returns to her home, and from thenceforth,
however large the sum offered to her, she will yield
to no one. The women who are tall or beautiful
soon return to their homes, but those who are ugly
remain a long time before they are able to comply with
the law; some of them are obliged to wait three or
four years within the enclosure."* This custom still
existed in the Vth century before our era, and the
Greeks who visited Babylon about that time found it
still in full force.