FIRE-WORSHIP.
FROM the earliest time, the sun has been the object of human adoration.
But the common flame itself, being destructive, yet beneficial, while ever
mounting upward as if disdaining earth contact, became with most races of
mankind a religious emblem, if not a Deity.
Pyrolatreia, or fire-worship, was once nearly universal. The Moloch of
the Canaanites, Phœnicians, and Carthaginians, was the divinity of various
nations under different names Moloch was not the only deity tormenting
simple maids and tender babes with fire The blazing or fiery cross, in use
among Khonds of India, was well known in both Ireland and Scotland The
Egyptians, with more modern Africans, have reverenced flame.
The Irish assuredly were not behind the most cultured peoples in this
respect. The sanctity of their places for fire was notorious. The ancient
lighting of fires was attended with solemn ceremonies. Even now, the
trampling upon cinders in a household is regarded, in some way, as an
indignity to the head of the establishment.
According to the old records of the Four Masters of Ireland, a
curious spectacle was witnessed one St. George's day, having reference to
this curious superstition. At Ross Dela, now Ross-dalla, of Westmeath, a
tower of fire blazed up from a belfry for hours, while a great black bird,
accompanied by a flock of smaller birds, kept flying in and out of the
fire, the smaller taking shelter under the wings of the leader. When the
great bird had finished its fiery purifications, it took up an oak tree by
the roots, and flew off with it.
Persia was once the high seat of fire-worship. The Parsees of India
were refugees from Persia at the time of the Mahometan conquest of that
country, and these still retain the old fire religion. The natural flames
that issued from the earth, and were regarded as divine, have pointed out
to the practical moderns the mineral oil deposits of Baku. At the
Sheb-Seze, or Fire-feast of Persia, says Richardson, birds and beasts
were let loose with inflammable material about them.
American Indians, in some cases, retain this custom of their ancestors.
Squier notes the supreme, holy, Spirit of Fire, Loak Ishte-hoola-aba,
and the ignition of new fires at the solar festival. The priests got fire
by friction. The Pawnees had a sacrifice of human beings in the fire at
the vernal equinox. The Aztecs had a god of fire in Xiuhteuctli. The image
of Hercules, the sun-god, was solemnly burnt once a year at Tarsus.
The Scriptures have many references to this worship. A story is told in
Maccabees of a priest who took sacred fire from the altar, and hid it in a
cave. Upon Nehemiah sending for it, water only was found; yet, when the
liquid was poured over an altar of wood, the whole burst into flame. Phené
remarks--"The British spire now fills the place, in the plains, of the
once aspiring flame which ascended from the hill-altars."
The Perpetual Lamps of the ancients sanctioned the same idea. No
less than one hundred and seventy Roman, Arab, and Medieval writers record
the finding of such lamps. In 1540 a lamp was reported still burning in
the tomb of Cicero's daughter. Lights were buried in urns. Herodotus
speaks of lamps in the tombs of Egypt. Augustine wrote of lights
inextinguishable by either rain or wind. Asbestos wicks of lamps were
known in Greek temples. Madame Blavatski says that Buddhist priests made
use of asbestos wicks. Dr. Westcott, who records instances of Perpetual
Lamps, adds, "There formerly existed an art that has been lost."
Ireland was not without her perpetual fire. St. Bridget and her nuns,
in maintaining a constant flame in Kildare, were but continuing a very
ancient heathen custom. Tradition says that Druidesses did the same, also,
in sacred Kildare. As there was an Irish goddess Bridgit, Higgins remarked
that the deity had become a saint, when the disciple of St Patrick founded
her nunnery at Kildare. The Welsh ecclesiastic, who wrote of the Norman)
Conquest of Ireland, says of this fire, that though ever recruited with
fuel, "yet the ashes have never increased" It was fed with the wood of the
hawthorn. The place of the fire is described as being twenty feet square,
with a stone roof.
The virgin Daughters of the Fire were Inghean au dagha; but, as
fire-keepers, were Breochwidh. The Brudins, a place of magical
cauldron and perpetual fires, disappeared with Christianity. Those flames
were devoted by the Celts, &c. to Hestia, who stood in the place of Vesta.
Being in the Brudins now means in the fairies. The Greek
Pyrtaneium was, like the Brudins, a public feeding-house, where the
fire never went out. The baptism of fire was an Indian institution. The
Mexicans, Virginian Indians, and Peruvians, had their perpetual fire of a
religious character. A curious sect arose once in Spain, that burnt a
cross on the forehead of the child in baptism.
Lucius Florus said of Numa Pompilius, "He appointed a fire to be kept
up by the Vestal Virgins, that a flame in imitation of the stars might
perpetually watch as Guardian of the Empire."
The Archbishop of Dublin, in 1220, shocked at this revival of
fire-worship, under the mask of Christianity, ordered the Kildare fire to
be extinguished. It was, however, relighted, and duly maintained, until
the suppression of the nunnery in the reign of Henry VIII. As an old poet
sang:--
"The bright
lamp that shone in Kildare's holy fane,
And burned through long ages of darkness and stain."
The Parsees of India have such a fire that has burned for twelve
hundred years. This is at Oodwada, near Bulsar, which is much frequented
by Parsee pilgrims during certain periods of the year. The writer once
questioned a Parsee in Bombay on this matter. The gentleman repudiated the
idea of Fire or Sun-worship, declaring that he saw the Deity better by
that symbol than by any other.
As the Egyptian priests were said to acknowledge the same, it is
possible that the Irish priests recognized in sun and flame but symbols of
the invisible God.
Mrs. Bryant, however, asserts that "there is more trace of sun and
fire-worship in the peasantry lingering among us to-day, than in the
Bardic literature of the remote Iris past." Dr. Waddell, in Ossian and
the Clyde, has no doubt of fire-worship being extant in Ossian's days.
Dr. O'Brennan thinks that the Gadelians or Gaels everywhere they went
established fire-worship. The Gabha-Bheil was an ordeal by fire.
Two sects were said to be in the island--the Baalites, or fire adorers,
and the Lirites, or devotees of water. O'Kearny tells us--"It is probable
that very violent contentions we once carried on in Ireland by the
partizans of the rival religions, who were accustomed to meet and decide
the quarrels at the place set apart for battle." The Samhaisgs,
were devoted to fire-worship, and the Swans to Lir worship.
May-day in Ireland was very strictly observed, as it has been in
Babylon ages before. "Even now," says Mrs. Bryant, "in remote places, if
the fire goes out in a peasants house before the morning of the first of
May, a lighted sod from the priest's house to kindle it is highly
esteemed." On that day they once burnt hares, from a fancy that they stole
the butter.
The eve of May-day was a trying time, as fairies we then extra
frolicsome in stealing the milk. For preventative, the cows were driven
through fires, as in distant pagan days. According to Hone (1825), in
Dublin, folks would cast horses' heads into the bonfire; horses were sun
animals. May-eve rejoicings were known by the name Nech-na-Bealtaine.
According to the Book of Rights, Ultonian kings were not to bathe
on May-day. O'Conor remarks that the May fire ceremonies were transferred
by St. Patrick to the 24th of June. John Baptist's day. Leaping through
fire symbolized human sacrifice.
Beltaine, or Baaltinne, was the Roman Compitalia, or glad times,
for their beginning of the year. The Tailtean games of the Irish
were said to have originated from Tailte, wife of Mac Erc, the last
Firbolg king, killed in the Battle of Moy-tuir. May-eve was, with some,
Neen na Bealtina, Baal's fire eve.
Keating, writing on the Fair at Uisneach, of Meath, says, "This
fair, or assembly, was held on the first day of the month of May; and they
were wont to exchange or barter their cattle and other property there.
They were also accustomed to make offerings to the chief god which they
worshipped, named Bel; and it was a custom with them to make two fires in
honour of this Bel in every cantred of Ireland, and to drive a couple of
every kind of cattle in the cantred between the two fires as a
preservative."
Easter-time was duly celebrated in pagan as it is now in Christian
times. The joyful season of awakening summer was being celebrated on Tara
hill, at the very moment when St. Patrick was lighting his Easter fire on
Slane hill, within sight of the King and his Court.
The Book of Rights informs us that "Patrick goes afterwards to
Fearta Fear Feic. A fire is kindled by him at that place on Easter Eve.
Laegaire is enraged as he sees the fire, for that was the geis of
Teamhair among the Gaedhil." The King had, according to custom, ordered
all fires out, as no fresh blaze could be kindled but directly or
indirectly from his own fire.
This incident in the life of the Saint is the most interesting of his
career, but can only be briefly referred to here. It was when standing on
the site of the royal palace at Tara hill, and looking across the
beautiful country to the distant hill of Slane, that we seemed to realize
the legend. Druids had forewarned the King of the coming of strangers, but
were as much astonished as he was at the sight of a blaze afar, when no
light could be raised but by the Sovereign's command.
Orders were issued for the arrest of the bold intruders. St. Patrick
and his shaven companions were brought into the presence of the Master of
Fire. Then he told his tale and lighted a flame in Erin never to be
quenched. The story, as given us there by a bent old woman of seventy
years, will not be soon forgotten. Leaning on her stick with one hand, and
pointing over the almost deserted region to the hill of the Saint's fire
with the other, heaving a sigh over the departed glories of Tara, she
might have been taken for a Druidess herself.
That Paschal fire was the victor over pagan fires, with their
abominable Moloch associations.
Midsummer fires served as sun charms to keep up the heat. Midsummer
Eve, however, afterwards nominated as John the Baptist's Eve, was a great
fire-day far and wide. Von Buch, the traveller, speaks of seeing custom
observed within the Arctic Circle.
An old writer about Ireland remarked--"A stranger would imagine the
whole country was on fire." Brand writes of the Vigil of St. John--"They
make bonfires, run along the streets and fields with wisps of straw
blazing on long poles, to purify the air which they think infectious by
believing all the devils, spirits, ghosts, and hobgoblins abroad this
night to hurt mankind." One, writing in 1867 said--"The old pagan
fire-worship still survives in Ireland though nominally in honour of St.
John. On Sunday night bonfires were observed throughout nearly every
county the province of Leinster."
As Easter Day was of old devoted to Astarte, the East goddess, so was
St. John's Day to Baal. But the eve of the first of November was the
Hallow Eve or Samhain, when the fires were a thanksgiving to the
sun at the end of harvest. Keating, who notes the sacred fire lighted by
the Archdruid on Usnagh Hill, Kildare, tells of the fires on the hill of
Ward, Meath County, on the last day of October. Some old writers identify
this period, rather than Easter, as that of the meeting of St. Patrick and
the King. The Samhain feast received a Christian baptism as the
feast of the Annunciation of the Virgin Mary.
The festival known as the Lucaid-lamh-fada, or festival of Love,
had no connection with the fires. It was held from the first to the
sixteenth of August, in honour of the sun and moon, when games, more or
less accompanied by greetings of the two sexes, were duly celebrated.
__________________
Baal or Bel is associated with the fires. Beltane was the Lucky
Fire through which cattle were passed for purification. Spenser declared
that in his day the Irish never put out a fire without a prayer. The
Gabha-Bheil, or trial by Beil, subjected the person with bare feet to
pass three times through a fire. A festival is mentioned, when birds and
other creatures, previously caught, were set free with lights attached to
them. There was an old Irish prayer, Bealaine, corrupted to
Bliadhain. Then we have Bealtinne, or Baal's fire; the
cromlech, near Cork, of Bealach magdadhair; aiche Beltinne,
the night of Baal's fire; Baaltinglas; Beilaine, circle of
Baal, &c.
Mrs. Anna Wilkes, in Ireland, the Ur of the Chaldees, sees in
the Irish and Hebrew word ur, the sacred fire. A fire-priest was
Ur-bad, or Hyr-bad. The perpetual fire in the monastery of
Seighir, says the Tripartite Life, was at the place where St. Patrick
first met St. Kieran. The Rinceadh-fada was a sacred dance of the
Irish at Beil-tinne, like dances recorded of Phœnicia and Assyria. At
Uisneach, the Navel of Ireland, where the Druids lighted the first
fire of the season, courts were regularly held till long after Christian
times.
The Venerable Bede records that even in his lifetime many of the Irish
were given to fire-worship. Fraser assures his readers that "in the south
of Ireland, the wayside beggar whose appeals for charity have met with a
liberal response, can think of no benediction so comprehensive as 'May the
blessing of Bel rest upon you! "'
Culdees, the recognized successors of the Druids in Ireland and
Scotland, are said to owe their name--cal, gal, or ceill--to the
word meaning preserver of fire "It is still lucky," writes one,
"for the young people to jump over the flames, or for cattle to pass
between two fires" Another says," Our forefathers sent their sons and
daughters through the fire to Moloch" In Toland's day firebrands were cast
about the fields of corn at Midsummer Eve, the survival prayers to the
fire-god to give heat for the harvest perfection he calls the November
fire, Tine-tlached-gha, or fire-ground. And yet, Arthur Clive
considered fire-worship oppose alike to Druidism and the faith preceding
it.
In the Book of Rights, so ably reproduced by J. O'Donovan, there
are four seasons described--Earrach, Samhradh, Foghmhar, and Geimeridh
which he finds to be "undoubtedly Irish words not derived from the Latin
through Christianity" Fires were lighted at Bealtaine the beginning of
Samhradh The summer end fires, Samhain, were known by the name of
Tlachtgha. The new fire was produced by the wheel and spindle, with
tow. The wheel, a solar symbol, must be turned by the spokes in direction
of the sun's daily course.
As Scotland, especially the western part, was largely peopled from
Ireland, it would not be surprising to recognise Baal or fire-worship
there.
All Hallow Eve ceremonies are well known, and especially the passing
through the fire, although the Council of Constantinople, 680, expressly
prohibited the heathen practice of leaping through the fire. The Rev. Alan
Stewart, referring to such fires in his parish of Kirkmichael, famous for
its Druidical circle, said, "The practice of lighting bonfires prevails in
this and the neighbouring Highland parishes." These were the Tinegin
or Needfires.
Regular Baal-fires continued in Ayrshire till 1780, and milkmaids still
like to drive their cows through the flames with a rowan stick. The proper
way to light the fire is by friction. S. Laing writes of "the Bel-fires
which, when I was young, were lighted on Midsummer night on the hills of
Orkney and Shetland. As a boy, I have rushed, with my playmates, through
the smoke of these bonfires, without a suspicion that we were repeating
the homage paid to Baal in the Valley of Hinnom."
One cannot help remembering the passage in Isa. l. 11--"All ye that
kindle a fire, that compass yourselves about with sparks, walk in the
light of your fire, and in the sparks that ye have kindled." Virgil
records a prayer to Apollo at Soracte:--
"Whom first
we serve, whole woods of unctuous pine
Burn on thy Heap, and to thy glory shine;
By thee protected, with our naked soles,
Thro' flame unsinged we pass, and tread the kindled coals."
The poet did not add that such devotees first applied a special
ointment to their feet.
The Scotch Beltane, till lately, was observed in the Hebrides with
something more heathen than the fire. The people lighted the fire by the
old fashion of friction with two pieces of wood, and then ate the
consecrated cake indulged in by pagan Syrians. The Scotch had the mixture
of eggs, milk, and oatcake. This was broken up, and distributed among the
assembly. Whoever got the black bit, hidden in the cake, was considered
worthy of sacrifice to Baal, as the cailteach bealtine. He was
pushed into the fire, though soon rescued, and afterwards had to leap
three times through the flames. The term Beltane carline was ever a
name of reproach.
In other places, at the Bealtine, a trench was cut round the fire, the
young men assembled in the circle, and cast lots who should be the
threefold leaper. Before eating the consecrated oatcake, a libation, in
heathen style, was poured upon the ground. The Scotch generally are not
now so given to sacramentarianism. Dr. Donald Clark conceives that the
Beltane is not derived from Baal.
The Isle of Man, coming more under the influence of Ireland than any
neighbouring land, has survivals of the old worship. Waldron asserts, "Not
a family in the old Island, of natives, but keeps a fire constantly
burning--or the most terrible devastations and mischief would immediately
ensue" Train, in his account of the people, writes--"Almost down to the
present time, no native of the Isle of Man will lend anything on either of
the great Druidical festivals."
The Deas-iul dance, anciently in honour of the sun, is, still
practised there, going, like the sun, from east to south, in its course,
not ear-tuia-iul, or going round by east to north. Fires were kept
up on the first of November, as at Hallowe'en.
Plowden, another historian of the place, remarks that--"The Scotch,
Irish, and Manx call the first day of May Beiltein, or the day of
Baal's fire." A newspaper of I837 has this paragraph--"On May-day the
people of the Isle of Man have, from time immemorial, burned all the whin
bushes in the Island, conceiving that they thereby burn all the witches
and fairies, which they believe take refuge there."
In like manner, in the Isle of Lewis, they had the custom of Dessil
(right hand), or Dess, from carrying fire in the right hand about
houses and the stock. When a murrain occurred among the cattle there, all
fires were formerly put out, and a fresh flame obtained by the rubbing of
two planks together.
The Gaelic Councils tried in vain to arrest this fire devotion. James
I. of Scotland has left a poem on the custom--
"At Beltane,
quhen ilk bodie bownis
To Peblis to the play--"
that is, at Beltane all went to the play or games at Peebles.
In Cornwall, another part under Irish influence, Midsummer Eve was kept
up with fire rejoicings. At Penzance, until a few years ago, on that eve
men carried two barrels on poles. Others had torches and rockets, and
girls held flowers. All at once all joined hands, and ran through the
streets, crying out, "An eye! an eye!"--when an eye was opened by a pair,
and all passed through. The old country dance was one in the same style.
No one needs reminding how far Wales, long under Irish rule, had
similar fire customs. At Newton Nottage, till very recently, people leaped
through the Midsummer fires. Of this custom, Theodoret, in condemnation of
it, admitted that it was held as an expiation of sin. Great fires were
kept up formerly on the noonside rock of Brimham, a Yorkshire Druidical
locality.
France, especially in Brittany, has survivals of fire-worship. Such
fires were useful to bless the apple-trees, and forward the harvest. A
Breton priest was once called Belec, which means a servant of Baal.
Outside Paris, Baal fires were lighted on St. John's Eve. Flammarion, in
1867, wrote--"In the evening the bonfires in honour of the feast of St.
John were lighted all around Angoulême, and men and women were dancing
before them, and jumping over them almost all night."
Russia and India have their leaping through the flames. In the first, a
straw figure of Kupalo, a sort of representative of vegetation, was thrown
in the fire. Germans had a straw image of the god Thor. In Mexico, babes
on their, fourth day were passed through fire.
Sonnerat had this account of the Darma, a Feast of Fire in
India--"It lasts eighteen days, during which time those who make a vow to
keep it must fast, abstain from women, lie on the bare ground, and walk on
a brisk fire. On the eighteenth day, they assemble on the sound of
instruments their heads covered with flowers, the body daubed with
saffron, and follow in cadence the figures of Darma Rajah and Dobrede his
wife, who are carried there in procession. When they come to the fire,
they stir it to animate its activity, and take a little of the ashes, with
which they their foreheads, and when the gods have been three times round
it, they walk, either fast or slow, according to their zeal, over a very
hot fire, extended to about forty feet length"
Fire-worship may be the purest form of idolatry; flame, so nearly
immaterial, ever moving, always aspiring is a type of the spiritual,--is
useful, although dangerous. But no form of idolatry could be more cruel
than fiery adoration of the grim Moloch Symbols are agreeable to fancy,
and often helpful; but they may, and repeat do, lead men to crass
idolatry. |