A History of Pantomime eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 186 pages of information about A History of Pantomime.

A History of Pantomime eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 186 pages of information about A History of Pantomime.

Another of the ancient deities worshipped by the Ammonians was Meed, or Meet, the Cybele of the Phrygians, the nurse of Dionysus, and the Soul of the World.

Nimrod, the “mighty hunter” (who possessed the regions of Babylonia and Chaldee), and one of the sons of Cush, was the builder of that seminary of idolatory the City and Tower of Bel, and erected in honour of the god Bel, and another name for the sun.  Upon the confusion of tongues when hitherto “The whole earth was of one language, and of one speech,” it came to be known as Babylon, “The City of Confusion.”  Homer introduces Orion (Nimrod) as a giant and a hunter in the shades below, and the author of the “Pascal Chronicles” mentions that Nimrod taught the Assyrians or Babylonians to worship fire.  The priests of Ammon, named Petor or Pator, used to dance round a large fire, which they affected in their dancing to describe.  Probably from this the Dervish dances all over the East may be traced to this source.

Kennedy observes, of the confusion of tongues at Babel, that it was only a labial failure, so that the people could not articulate.  It was not an aberration in words or language, but a failure and incapacity in labial utterance.  Epiphanius says that Babel, or Babylon, was the first city built after the flood.

The Cushites were a large and numerous body, and after their dispersion from Babylon they were scattered “Abroad upon the face of the earth.”  They were the same people who imparted their rites and religious services into Egypt, as far as the Indus and the Ganges, and still further into Japan and China.  From this event is to be discovered the fable of the flight of the Grecian god Bacchus, the fabulous wanderings of Osiris, and the same god under another name, of the Egyptians.  Wherever Dionysus, Osiris, or Bacchus went, the Ancients say that he taught the cultivation of the soil, and the planting of the vine.  Dionysus, Bacchus, or Osiris, as I have shown in a preceding page, were only other designations for Noah.

Of the Hindu heathen deity, Vishnu, Father Boushet mentions an Indian tradition, concerning a flood which covered the whole earth, when Vishnu made a raft, and, being turned into a fish, steered it with his tail.  Vishnu, like Dagon, was represented under the figure of a man and fish.

Strangely enough, the regions said to have been traversed by Dionysus, Osiris, or Bacchus were, at different times, passed through by the posterity of Ham, and in many of them they took up their residence.  In his journeyings the chief attendants of Osiris, or Bacchus, were Pan, Anabis, Macedo, the Muses, the Satyrs, and Bacchic women were all in his retinue.  The people of India claim him as their own, and maintain that he was born at Nusa in their country.  Arrian speaks of the Nuseans as being the attendants of Dionysus.  In all traditions Dionysus appears as the representative of some power of Nature.

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A History of Pantomime from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.