登陆注册
36114400000088

第88章 INDO-ARYAN MYTHS--SOURCES OF EVIDENCE(8)

To take another example; we open Mr. Max Muller's translation of the Rig-Veda at random, say at page 49. In the second verse of the hymn to the Maruts, Mr. Muller translates, "They who were born together, self-luminous, with the spotted deer (the clouds), the spears, the daggers, the glittering ornaments. I hear their whips almost close by, as they crack them in their hands; they gain splendour on their way." Now Wilson translates this passage, "Who, borne by spotted deer, were born self-luminous, with weapons, war-cries and decorations. I hear the cracking of their whips in their hands, wonderfully inspiring courage in the fight." Benfey has, "Who with stags and spears, and with thunder and lightning, self-luminous, were born. Hard by rings the crack of their whip as it sounds in their hands; bright fare they down in storm." Langlois translates, "Just born are they, self-luminous. Mark ye their arms, their decorations, their car drawn by deer? Hear ye their clamour? Listen! 'tis the noise of the whip they hold in their hands, the sound that stirs up courage in the battle." This is an ordinary example of the diversities of Vedic translation. It is sufficiently puzzling, nor is the matter made more transparent by the variety of opinion as to the meaning of the "deer" along with which the Maruts are said (by some of the translators) to have been born. This is just the sort of passage on which a controversy affecting the whole nature of Vedic mythological ideas might be raised. According to a text in the Yajur Veda, gods, and men, and beasts, and other matters were created from various portions of the frame of a divine being named Prajapati. The god Agni, Brahmans and the goat were born from the mouth of Prajapati. From his breast and arms came the god Indra (sometimes spoken of as a ram), the sheep, and of men the Rajanya. Cows and gods called Visvadevas were born together from his middle. Are we to understand the words "they who were born together with the spotted deer" to refer to a myth of this kind--a myth representing the Maruts and deer as having been born at the same birth, as Agni came with the goat, and Indra with the sheep? This is just the point on which the Indian commentators were divided. Sayana, the old commentator, says, "The legendary school takes them for deer with white spots; the etymological school, for the many-coloured lines of clouds". The modern legendary (or anthropological) and etymological (or philological) students of mythology are often as much at variance in their attempts to interpret the traditions of India.

Muir, Sanskrit Texts, 2nd edit., i. 16.

Max Muller, Rig-Veda Sanhita, trans., vol. i. p. 59.

Another famous, and almost comic, example of the difficulty of Vedic interpretation is well known. In Rig-Veda, x. 16, 4, there is a funeral hymn. Agni, the fire-god, is supplicated either to roast a goat or to warm the soul of the dead and convey it to paradise. Whether the soul is to be thus comforted or the goat is to be grilled, is a question that has mightily puzzled Vedic doctors. Professor Muller and M. Langlois are all for "the immortal soul", the goat has advocates, or had advocates, in Aufrecht, Ludwig and Roth. More important difficulties of interpretation are illustrated by the attitude of M. Bergaigne in La Religion Vedique, and his controversy with the great German lexicographers. The study of mythology at one time made the Vedas its starting-point. But perhaps it would be wise to begin from something more intelligible, something less perplexed by difficulties of language and diversities of interpretation.

Muir, v. 217.

In attempting to criticise the various Aryan myths, we shall be guided, on the whole, by the character of the myths themselves.

Pure and elevated conceptions we shall be inclined to assign to a pure and elevated condition of thought (though such conceptions do, recognisably, occur in the lowest known religious strata), and we shall make no difficulty about believing that Rishis and singers capable of noble conceptions existed in an age very remote in time, in a society which had many of the features of a lofty and ****** civilisation. But we shall not, therefore, assume that the hymns of these Rishis are in any sense "primitive," or throw much light on the infancy of the human mind, or on the "origin" of religious and heroic myths. Impure, childish and barbaric conceptions, on the other hand, we shall be inclined to attribute to an impure, childish, and barbaric condition of thought; and we shall again make no difficulty about believing that ideas originally conceived when that stage of thought was general have been retained and handed down to a far later period. This view of the possible, or rather probable, antiquity of many of the myths preserved in the Brahmanas is strengthened, if it needed strengthening, by the opinion of Dr. Weber. "We must indeed assume generally with regard to many of those legends (in the Brahmanas of the Rig-Veda)that they had already gained a rounded independent shape in tradition before they were incorporated into the Brahmanas; and of this we have frequent evidence in the DISTINCTLY ARCHAIC CHARACTEROF THEIR LANGUAGE, compared with that of the rest of the text." History of Indian Literature, English trans., p. 47.

We have now briefly stated the nature and probable relative antiquity of the evidence which is at the disposal of Vedic mythologists. The chief lesson we would enforce is the necessity of suspending the judgment when the Vedas are represented as examples of primitive and comparatively pure and ****** natural religion. They are not primitive; they are highly differentiated, highly complex, extremely enigmatic expressions of fairly advanced and very peculiar religious thought. They are not morally so very pure as has been maintained, and their purity, such as it is, seems the result of conscious reticence and wary selection rather than of primeval innocence. Yet the bards or editors have by no means wholly excluded very ancient myths of a thoroughly savage character. These will be chiefly exposed in the chapter on "Indo-Aryan Myths of the Beginnings of Things," which follows.

同类推荐
  • 订正太素脉秘诀

    订正太素脉秘诀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 忍古楼诗话

    忍古楼诗话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 唯识三十论

    唯识三十论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 南亭

    南亭

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 明伦汇编皇极典治道部

    明伦汇编皇极典治道部

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 逝去的从不流泪

    逝去的从不流泪

    爱情无非是你爱我我爱你,你不爱我我爱你,你爱我我不爱。而逝去的青春的爱情,是从不结束的。
  • 在超能世界的日常生活

    在超能世界的日常生活

    本书别名《如何在满是超能者的异世界伪装成一个正常人》自以为是穿越者的巅峰,结果周围每个人都是出名的超能力者,于是我决定去寻找自己丢失的系统和金手指。然后我就不得不怒摔键盘,在这个异世界当个正常人咋就这么难呢?
  • 中法战争

    中法战争

    中国文化知识读本丛书是由吉林文史出版社和吉林出版集团有限责任公司组织国内知名专家学者编写的一套旨在传播中华五千年优秀传统文化,提高全民文化修养的大型知识读本。
  • 时光仍旧

    时光仍旧

    听一首吴楚韩对光阴的遗憾,唱一曲朱蜜钱对时光的留恋。看一场李婳对爱恨的缅怀,演一场叶彦序对情仇的释然。
  • 神王祭

    神王祭

    公元3015年,天文学家发现仙女星系发生了大爆炸。随后无数的宇宙战舰从仙女星系进入银河系,人类第一次看到了外星人------统治了绝大部分宇宙的月族。然而他们带来的不是友好,而是战争。地球防卫队被打的溃不成军。就在地球即将失手之极,从银河系外围又来了一群人类,他们自称超越者,是仙女星系的遗民,他们带来了玄功。他们帮助人类抵御月族。在近一百年的战争之后,超越者和人类融合在了一起,人类的科技在这一百年里也是突飞猛进,逐渐可以对月族造成伤害。战争进入了胶着状态,人类从而进入了星河时代。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 初心如血

    初心如血

    人生苦短,有多少时间能够用来挥霍和蹉跎?遇见、错过、别离……一念动,缘生劫起,自此为你苦海轮回,至死不悔。
  • 男神请吃药!

    男神请吃药!

    我心心念念地追着我梦中的男神,就差一步修成正果,共度美好的人生。但这一步看起来很近,却相当之远。特别是,我身边有一个需要吃药的男!神!经!病!总而言之,这是一个追风女汉子被腹黑男神(经病)搓扁,捏圆,塞进口袋的故事。
  • 霸道总裁我惹不起,还躲不起?

    霸道总裁我惹不起,还躲不起?

    以前:她从他的眼皮下逃走。现在:“老公,今天累了,放了我吧“"不可能"以后:”爸爸,妈妈怎么又懒床啊?“”你妈妈昨天太晚睡了“
  • 娇妻甜又撩:霍少,超苏的!

    娇妻甜又撩:霍少,超苏的!

    前世,她惨遭亲人和未婚夫的双重背叛,临死前发誓,若有来生,必定血债血偿。于是,按照剧本,江乔真的重生了,可重生的第一天,她就和自己去世的丈夫的弟弟“不可描述”了一番。这是个什么鬼人设?江乔不愿意了,才想要逃走却被男人禁锢在了怀中:“碰了我的人,不负责任还想逃?”