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The
Orphic Pantheon
by
G. R. S.
Meade
UNAGING
TIME
Orpheus designated the Supreme Cause, although it is in reality ineffable,
Chronus (Time). This Time, and with it other ineffable Powers, was prior to
Heaven, Uranus (Procl. in Crat., p. 71, Boiss.). The name Chronus
closely resembles the name Cronus (Saturn), remarks Proclus (loc. sit.,
p. 64) suggestively; and in the same passage he says that ' "God-inspired"
words [Oracles] characterize this divinity [Cronus] as Once Beyond.' This may
mean that Chronus is ideal Unending Duration, and Cronus Time manifested;
though this leaves unexplained the strange term 'Once Beyond,' which is found
in the Chaldæan system. The same statements are found elsewhere in Proclus'
works (Tim., i.86; Theol., i.28, 68; Parm., vii.230).
And Philo (Quad Mand. Incorr., p. 952, b) says: 'There was
once a Time when Cosmos was not.' This is called 'Unborn Time, The Æon,' by
Timæus of Locris (p. 97). It is the 'First One, the Supersubstantial, the
Ineffable Principle.' It may be compared to the Zervan of the Avesta, the En
Suph and Hidden of the Hidden of the Kabalah, the Bythos of the Gnostics, the
Unknown Darkness of the Egyptians, and the Parabrahman of the Vedântins.
ÆTHER, CHAOS
AND NIGHT
Next come Æther and Chaos, Spirit-Matter, the Bound and Infinity of Plato
(Proc., Tim., ii. 117), the Purusha-Prakriti of the Sânkhya. Orpheus
calls this Æther the Mighty Whirlpool (Simplicius, Ausc., iv.123);
called Magna Vorago by Syrianus (Metaph., ii.33a). And Proclus
(Tim., ii.117), speaking of Chaos, says: 'The last Infinity, by which
also Matter is circumscribed--is the Container, the field and plane of ideas.
About her is "neither limit, nor foundation, nor seat, but excessive
darkness".' This is the Mûlaprakriti or Root-Matter of the Vedântins, and
Æther is the so-called first Logos, Æther-Chaos being the second. 'And dusky
Night comprehended and hid all below the Ether; [Orpheus thus] signifying that
Night came first.' (Malela, iv.31; Cedrenus, i.57, 84.)
Then comes the Dawn of the First Creation. In the Unaging Time, Chaos,
impregnated by the whirling of Æther, formed itself into
THE COSMIC
EGG
Proclus (Parm., vii.168) calls this Chaos the 'Mist of the
Darkness.' It is the first break of the Dawn of Creation, and may be compared
to the 'fire-mist' stage in the sensible universe. Thus the author of the
Recognitions (X.vii.316) tells us: 'They who had greater wisdom among
the nations proclaim that Chaos was first of all things; in course of the
eternity its outer parts became denser and so sides and ends were made, and it
assumed the fashion and form of a gigantic egg.' For before this stage, the
same writer tells us (c. xxx): 'Orpheus declares that Chaos first existed,
eternal, vast, uncreate--it was neither darkness, nor light, nor moist, nor
dry, nor hot, nor cold, but all things intermingled.'
Apion (Clement, Homil., VI.iv.671) writes that: 'Orpheus likened Chaos to
an egg, in which the primal "elements" were all mingled together. . . . This
egg was generated from the infinitude of primal matter as follows. [The first
two principles were] primal matter innate with life, and a certain vortex in
perpetual flux and unordered motion--from these there arose an orderly flux
and interblending of essences, and thus from each, that which was most
suitable to the production of life flowed to the centre of the universe, while
the surrounding spirit was drawn within, as a bubble in water. Thus a
spherical receptacle was formed. Then, impregnated in itself by the divine
spirit which seized upon it, it revolved itself into manifestation--with the
appearance of the periphery of an egg.'
Proclus (Crat., p. 79) mentions this circular motion as follows:
'Orpheus refers to the occult diacosm [primary or intellectual creation] in
the words, "the boundless unweariedly revolved in a circle".' He also refers
to it elsewhere (in Euclid, ii.42; Parm., vii.153), and in his
Commentary on the Timæus (iii. 160), he writes: 'The spherical is most closely
allied to the all.. . . This shape, therefore, is the paternal type of the
universe, and reveals itself in the occult diacosm itself.'
And Simplicius (Aus., i.31, b) writes: 'If he [Plato in
Parmenides,] says that Being closely resembles the circling mass of the
sphere, you should not be surprised, for there is a correspondence between it
and the formation of the first plasm of the mythologist [Orpheus]. For how
does this differ from speaking, as Orpheus does, of the "Silver-shining Egg"
?'
And so Proclus (Tim., i.138) sums up the question of the Egg by
reminding us that: 'The Egg was produced by Æther and Chaos, the former
establishing it according to limit, and the latter according to infinity. For
the former is the rootage of all, whereas the latter has no bounds.'
It would be too long to point to the same idea in other religions, whether
Phoenician, Babylonian, Syrian, Persian, or Egyptian (cf. Vishnu
Parâna, Wilson, i.39; and Gail's Recherches sur la Nature du Culte
de Bacchus en Grèce, pp. 117, 118); it is sufficient to refer readers to the
Hiranyagarbha of the Hindus, the Resplendent Egg or Germ, which is set
forth at length in the Upanishads and Purànas.
It is a most magnificent idea, this Germ of the Universe, and puts the
doctrine of the ancients as to cosmogony on a more rigidly scientific basis
than even the most advanced scientists of our day have arrived at. And if this
shape and this motion are the 'paternal types of the universe' and all
therein, how is it possible to imagine that the learned of the ancients were
not acquainted with the proper shape and motion of the earth?
But as the subject is of great interest not only from a cosmogonical
standpoint, but also from an anthropogonical point of view, some further
information may with advantage be added. This Egg of the Universe, besides
having its analogy in the germ-cell whence the human and every other kind of
embryo develops, has also its correspondence in the 'auric egg' of man, of
which much has been written and little revealed. The colour of this aura in
its purest form is opalescent. Therefore we find Damascius (Quæst.,
147) quoting a verse of Orpheus in which the Egg is called 'silver-white',
that is to say, silver-shining or mother o' pearl; he also calls it, again
quoting Orpheus (op. cit., p. 380), the 'Brilliant Vesture' or the
'Cloud'.
Leucippus and Democritus (Plutarch, Placitt., II.vi.396) also
'stretch a circular vesture and membrane round the cosmos'. It is interesting
to compare this idea of a membrane or chorion with a passage in the Vishnu
Purâna (I.ii; Wilson's trans., i.40). Parâshara is describing the Vast
Egg, 'which gradually expanded like a bubble of water' (the very simile used
by Apion), and referring to the contents of the Jagad-yoni or World-matrix, he
says 'Meru was its amnion, and the other mountains were its
chorion'--(Merurulbamabhûttasya jarâyushcha mahîdharâh--see
Fitzedward Hall's note loc. cit.). These two membranes, which play such
an important part in embryology, are easily explained in the world-process,
when we remember that Meru is the Olympus of the Greeks, the Celestial Arch,
whereas the 'other mountains' are the circular ranges, or spheres, which
separate the 'oceans' of space from each other.
In this connection also we should remember that the Egg contains the
'Triple God', the 'Dragon-formed'. Without the spermatozoon the ovum would
remain unfertilized. But the Dragon-formed will be referred to again later on.
In connection with this graphic symbol of an Egg, we must briefly mention the
Mixing-Bowl or
THE
CRATER
This is so called from the Goblet which the Deity orders to be given to
the souls to drink from, in order that they may imbibe the intelligence of all
things. Proclus (Tim., v.316) speaks of several of these Crateres:
'Plato in the Philebus hands on the tradition of the Vulcanic Crater
[the Cup of Fire] . . . and Orpheus is acquainted with the Cup of Dionysus,
and ranges many other such Cups round the Solar Table.' That is to say, that
the various spheres were each in their turn Cups containing the essence of the
Spheres or Eggs. We may compare this with the Cup of Anacreon and of the sûfi
mystics. For the same idea, and the same term, in the Chaldæan Oracles and the
Books of Hermes, see my Simon Magus (p. 56). Proclus (Tim.,
v.291) identifies this Crater with the Egg and Night, the mother and wife of
Phanes. And Plato, in his psychogony, speaks of two mixtures or Crateres; in
the one the Deity mixed the All-Soul of Universal Nature, and from the other
he ladled out the minds of men (Lobeck, op. cit., 786). And Macrobius
(Somn., XI.ii.66) says that: 'Plato speaks of this in the Phædo,
and says that the soul is dragged back into a body, hurried on by new
intoxication, desiring to taste a fresh draught of the overflow of matter,
whereby it is weighed down and brought back [to earth]. The sidereal Crater of
Father Liber [Dionysus, Bacchus] is a symbol of this mystery; and this is what
the ancients called the River of Lethe; the Orphics saying that Father Liber
was the Material Mind [Indra, Lord of the Senses].'
This shows us that we must continually bear in mind the aphorism 'as above
so below', if we would understand the intricacies of the system. There is the
Supernal Crater of the Super-sensible World, and the Material Crater of the
Sensible World--and others also. The following passages from Proclus'
Theology of Plato, however, will throw further light on this
interesting subject. Thus the Demiurgus is said to 'constitute the psychical
essences in conjunction with the Crater' (V.xxxi)--this in the Sensible World.
Again, 'the Crater is the peculiar cause of souls, and is co-arranged with the
Demiurgus and filled from him, but fills souls'. Thus the Crater is called the
'fountain of souls', the 'cause of souls'
(c. xxxi). But we must pass on to the God born from the Egg and his
associate deities.
PHANES,
ERICAPÆUS AND METIS
The Triple God born from the Egg was called Phanes, and also Metis and
Ericapaeus, the three being aspects of one Power.
As Clemens Alexandrinus (Lobeck, p. 478, gives his authority as 'Clemens,
p. 672'--an absolutely useless reference) writes: 'The Egg of Life, having
been brought forth from boundless Mother Substance, and kept in motion by this
subjective and ever-moving Mother Substance, manifests endless changes. For
from within its periphery a male-female living Power [the absolute "Animal"]
is ideated, by the foreknowledge of the divine [Father] Spirit [Æther], which
is in it [the Egg], which Power Orpheus calls Phanes, for on its shining forth
the whole universe shone forth by the light of Fire--the most glorious of the
elements--brought to perfection in the Moist [Principle--Chaos]. And so the
Egg, the first and last [of all things], heated by the living creature within
it, breaks; and the enformed [Power] comes forth, as Orpheus says, "when the
swollen wide-capacious Egg brake in twain"; and thus the outer membrane [skin,
shell, or chorion] contains the diacosmic evolution [that is to say, the two
diacosms, or in other words, the upper half of the membrane is the container
of the intellectual cosmos, and the lower of the sensible cosmos]; but he
[Phanes] presides over the Heaven [which lies between], as it were seated on
the heights of a mountain range, and in secret shines over the boundless Eon.'
In Hindu mythography this mountain range is figured as circular.
Malela and Cedrenus, in the passage referred to under 'Night', add that
Orpheus tells us that: 'Light [Phanes, "Bright Space Son of Dark Space"]
having burst through the Æther [the Âkâshic Eggl illuminated the Earth [the
First Earth--or Cosmos]; meaning that this Light was the Light which burst
through the highest Æther of all--[and not the sensible light that we see].
And the names of it Orpheus heard in prophetic vision, and declares them to be
Metis, Phanes and Ericapæus, which by interpretation are Will, Light and
Light-giver [or Consciousness, Light, and Life]; adding that these three
divine powers of names are the one power and one might of the One God, whom no
man sees--and from his power all things are created, both incorporeal
principles, and the sun and moon and all the stars.'
This deity is also called Protogonus, the First-born (Lactantius,
Inst., I.v.28), and Proclus (Tim., ii.132) quotes a verse of
Orpheus in which he is named Sweet Love, son of most beauteous Æther; and the
same mystic philosopher (Theol. Plat., III.xx.161) tells us that: 'He
is the most brilliant of the Noëtic Powers, the Noëtic Mind, and Radiant
Light, which amazes the Noëric Powers and causes even Father [Zeus, the
Demiurge] to wonder.' And Hermias (in Phædr., p. 141) quotes the lines of
Orpheus which describe the brilliancy of the First-born: 'And none could gaze
on Phanes with their eyes, save holy Night alone. The others, all, amazed
beheld the sudden Light in Space. Such was the light which streamed from
Phanes' deathless fame.'
As Metis (the Mahat of the Vedântins), Phanes is said to bear the
'far-famed seed of the Gods' (Proc. in Crat., pp. 36, 52; in
Tim., v.303, ii.137; Damascius, p. 346).
Of the three aspects, Phanes is said to be the 'father', Ericapæus the
'power', and Metis the 'intellect', in Platonic terms (see Damascius,
Quæst., p. 380). Damascius (p. 381) further describes this Power as being
symbolized by Orpheus as 'a God without a body, with golden wings on his
shoulder and having on his sides the heads of bulls, and on his head a
monstrous dragon with the likeness of every kind of wild beast.' This
symbolism is more simply given in the same passage as 'a dragon with the heads
of a bull and lion and in the midst the face of a God, with wings on the
shoulders.' This was the symbol of Pan, the All-Father, the Universal Creative
Power or absolute 'Animal'--the source of all living creatures. And Proclus
(in Tim., iii.130) writes of the same symbol: 'The first God, with
Orpheus, bears the heads of many animals, of the ram, the bull, the snake, and
bright-eyed lion; he came forth from the Primal Egg, in which the Animal is
contained in germ.' And later on (p. 131) he adds: 'And first of all he was
winged.'
I would venture to suggest that this graphic symbol, in one of its
meanings, traces evolution from reptile to bird, animal and man. But there are
other meanings. For Hermias (op. cit., p. 137) quotes a verse of
Orpheus which speaks of Phanes 'gazing in every direction with his four eyes,'
and 'being carried in every direction by his golden wings,' he also rides upon
various 'steeds'. This has most probably some connection with soul-powers.
Eliphas Levi, the French Kabalist, in his Dogme et Rituel de la Haute
Magie (p. 333) gives a most interesting drawing, which may with advantage
be compared with the symbol of Phanes. It is a pantacle made out of the two
interlaced triangles composed of wings; in the centre is the head of a man, on
the left the head of a bull, on the right that of a lion, and above the head
of an
eagle. Beneath are two other pantacles called respectively
the Wheel of Pythagoras and the Wheel of Ezekiel. The figure is also called
the 'fourheaded sphinx', and is symbolized in India by the Svastika
contained in a circle. These four 'beasts' are said to typify the four
elementary kingdoms--earth, air, fire, and water--and much else. They are
given by Christian mystics as the symbols of the four Gospels. In brief, they
signify the four great creative forces of the cosmos.
But with regard to Phanes, in the Orphic Theogony, these forces are
noëtic, and not sensible. For Phanes is the creator of the Gods, and the
great-grandfather of Zeus, the creator of the sensible universe. As Lactantius
(Inst., I.v.28) says:
'Orpheus tells us that Phanes is the father of all the Gods, for their
sake he created the heaven [the intellectual universe] with forethought for
his children, in order that they might have a habitation and a common
seat--"he founded for the immortals an imperishable mansion".'
Now Phanes, as we have already remarked, was also called Love (Erôs). This
is that Primal Love or Desire (Kâma-Deva) which arose in the All; in the words
of the Rig Veda, the 'primal germ of Mine--that which divides entity
from non-entity,' and which also unites entity with non-entity. This Love is
admirably explained by Proclus, in his Commentary on the First
Alsibiades of Plato (see Taylor, Myst. Hymns, pp. 117-120,
and also his notes on the speech of Diotima in the Banquet of Plato,
Works, vol. iv), where he writes as follows: 'The [Chaldæan] Oracles,
therefore, speak of Love as binding and residing in all things; and hence, if
it connects all things, it also couples us with the government of dæmons
[cosmic and nature powers]. But Diotima calls Love a "Great Dæmon", because it
everywhere fills up the medium between desiring and desirable natures. . . .
But among the intelligible and occult Gods [the Noëtic Order], it unites
intelligible intellect to the first and secret Beauty, by a certain life [the
"higher life"] better than Intelligence. Hence [Orpheus] the theologist of the
Greeks calls this Love "blind", for he says of intelligible intellect
[Phanes], "in his breast feeding eyeless, rapid Love." But in instances
posterior to intelligibles, it imparts by illumination an indissoluble
bond to all things perfected by itself; for a bond is a certain union, but
accompanied by much separation. On this account the Oracles are accustomed to
call the fire of love a "coupler"; for proceeding from intelligible intellect,
it binds all following natures with each other, and with itself [the "love for
all that lives and breathes"]. Hence it conjoins all the gods with
intelligible Beauty, and dæmons with gods; and conjoins us with both gods and
dæmons. In the gods indeed it has a primary subsistence; in dæmons a secondary
one; and in partial souls a subsistence through a certain third procession
from principles. Again, in the gods it subsists above essence for every genus
of gods is super-essential. But in dæmons it subsists according to essence;
and in souls according to illuminations.'
Phanes is also called the Limit or Boundary, since 'that God who closes
the paternal order is said by the wise to be the only deity among the
intelligible Gods that has a name; and theurgy ascends as far as this order'
(Procl., in Crat., Taylor, op. cit., p. 183). It is curious to
notice that the same term, Limit or Boundary, is used in the Gnostic
Valentinian System, and in precisely the same sense: 'It is called the
Boundary because it shuts off (bounds) the Hysterêma [Sensible World] without
from the Plerôma [Super-sensible World]' (Hippolytus, Philosophumena,
IV.xxx; see my translation of Pistis-Sophia, in Lucifer,
vi.233).
NIGHT
Closely associated with Phanes (intelligible 'Light'), as mother or wife,
or daughter, is Night (intelligible 'Darkness') which may be compared with the
Maya or Avidya (root-objectivity), of the Vedântins.
Just as there are three aspects of Phanes, so there are three Nights. Thus
Proclus (Tim., ii.137): 'Phanes comes forth alone, the same is sung of
as male and generator, and he leads with him the [three] Nights, and the
Father mingles [noëtically] with the middle one.' And so Patricius
(Discuss. Perip., III.i.293): 'For we know from Olympiodorus that
Orpheus evolved all the Gods from one Egg, from which [proceeded] first
Phanes, then Night, and then the rest.'
And again Proclus (op. cit., v.291) tells us that Phanes and Night
'preside over the Noëtic Orders, for they are eternally established in the
Adytum [the Vestibule of the Good in the Noëtic Order], as says Orpheus, for
he calls their occult Order the Adytum.'
Night, then, is the Mother of the Gods, or, as Orpheus says, 'the Nurse of
the Gods is immortal Night' (Proc., in Crat., p. 57). Just as Mâyâ is
the consort and power of Mâyi, or Ishvara (the Logos, or ideal Creative Cause)
of the Upanishads, and thus all Gods and all men are under her sway, so Phanes
hands over his sceptre to his consort Night. As Proclus tells us
(ibid.): 'Night receives the sceptre from the willing hands of
Phanes--"he placed his far-famed sceptre in the hands of Goddess Night, that
she might have queenly honour".'
To her was given the highest art of divination, for Mâyâ is the creative
power of the Deity, the means whereby he 'imagines' the universe, or thinks it
into being. Thus she, his spouse, is in the secret of his thoughts, and thus
presides over the highest divination. So Hermias (Phædr., p. 145):
'Orpheus, speaking of Night, tells us that "he [Phanes] gave her the mantic
[i.e., pertaining to divination] art that never fails, to have and hold
in every way".' And further back the same writer (p. 144), tells us that of
the three Nights, Orpheus 'ascribes to the first the gift of prophecy, but the
middle [Night] he calls humility, and the third, he says, gave birth to
righteousness'. These are said to be referred to by Plato when he discourses
of Prudence, Understanding (for true understanding is always humble or
modest), and Righteousness.
And so in prudence, and understanding, and righteousness, Night (the
occult power of Deity) gives birth to the noumenal and phenomenal universes;
in the words of Orpheus (Hermias, ibid.): 'And so she brought forth
Earth [the phenomenal universe] and wide Heaven [the noumenal], so as to
manifest visible from invisible.'
This is most graphically set forth by Proclus in his Commentary on the
Timæus (pp. 63, 96; as given by Taylor, Mst. Hymns, pp. 78, 79):
'The artificer of the universe [Zeus, the creative aspect of Phanes], prior to
his whole fabrication [says Orpheus], is said to have betaken himself to the
Oracle of Night, to have been there filled with divine conceptions, to have
received the principles of fabrication, and, if it is lawful so to speak, to
have solved all his doubts. Night, too, calls upon the father Zeus to
undertake the fabrication of the universe; and Zeus is said by the theologist
[Orpheus] to have thus addressed Night: