Sex and Sex Worship
(Phallic Worship)
O. A. WALL, M.D., Ph.G., Ph.M.
— i~*\-<jjb.
176
W187
1919
of tije
33604
Estate of Lr, J. A. i:h/-ans
Sex and Sex Worship
(Phallic Worship)
Sex and Sex Worship
(Phallic Worship)
A Scientific Treatise on Sex, its Nature and Function, and its
Influence on Art, Science, Architecture, and Religion— with Special
Reference to Sex Worship and Symbolism
BY
O. A. WALL, M.D., Ph.G., Ph.M.
Author of "Handbook of Pharmacognosy," "The Prescription," "Elementary Lessons
in Latin." etc., etc.
J.**
THREE HUNDRED SEVENTY-TWO ILLUSTRATIONS
ST. LOUIS
C. V. MOSBY COMPANY
1919
Copyright, 1919, By C. V. Mosby Co.
Press of
C. V. Mosby Company
St. Louis
PREFACE
Years ago, it was my good fortune to lunc tlie opportunity to
examine and read a collection of curious books on sex matters.
As I read, I made notations of many facts that I wished to remem-
ber, and I also annexed references to the sources from which I
had acquired the knowledge. Many of these memoranda, if they
were short, were literal copies ; longer ones were abridged, others
were merely paraphrased; all of them were written partly ^v-ith
word and phrase signs, such as stenographers used, to make the
work as little as possible.
Then, at my leisure I made clean copy of this material, ar-
ranging it according to subject matter, with numbered references
to the book in which I had the original material. This latter book
was destroyed during the cyclone of 1896, together with many
other of my books, by becoming watersoaked and illegible by
Avater coming into a bookcase from damage to the roof im-
mediately over it. I could not now say which of the facts stated
were literal quotations, or from what authors, and wliich were
passages original with me, or freely paraphrased by me. I have
attempted to place quotation marks wherever I could remember
that the matter was a quotation, but I may have failed to properly
mark other passages as quotations ; I speak of this to disclaim any
conscious or intentional plagiarism, if such plagiarism should have
occurred, for I have freelv used matter written bv others if thev
said anything in an exceptionally good manner.
The material, prior to 1896, was mainly from the private
lil)rary referred to above, which' was sold, I was told, to an eastern
collector of erotica, after the owmer's death. But any reference to
the subject found elsewhere*,, in current literatuj'e, in encyelo-
pedias, histories, magazines, .novels, newspapers^ etc., was also
used and much of the matter w^-s contributed. by friends who were
aware that I was gathering this material: 'For example, the picture
of the burning of a negro at Texarkana in 1892 (see page 340) Avas
sent me by a member of the State Board of Pharmacy of Texas
at that time.
I am sorry that the accident of the cyclone i3revents me from
vii
VI 11 PllEFACE
.^iviiii;' due ci-edit to everyone and every source of information I
consulted, l)ut it docs not affect the information itself,
AVlieii " Psychopathia Sexualis" by Krafft-P]bing, and similar
works by j\loll, Lombroso, etc., appeared in print, I, at the request
of some of my professional friends prepared a series of lecture's
for them, showing tliat sexual ''perversions," described in these
works as insanities, were in reality deliberate vices, the results of
vicious teachings which had come to us by transmission and teach-
ings from the Greek and Eoman schools in which slaves were
trained in libidinous arts, to make them more valuable to luxury-
loving purchasers, their masters and mistresses. But of this mat-
ter little or none is used in this book, which does not pretend to
treat of that phase of sexual life and sexual practices.
Recently I was asked to write my studies oil sex for publica-
tion, in order that the work might not be lost. As the views on
these subjects have materially changed among; the learned among
the public since the time when the collection of this information
was first begun, I consented, and this book is the result.
The facts gathered about phallic religion led me to doubt
whether this was ever a religion from all other religions apart ;
it appeared to me to be merely a phase in the evolution of all re-
ligions. Nor was it a real worship of the generative organs, l)ut
rather a use of representations of the phallus and yoni as symbols
I'oT- certain religious ideas which Avere embodied in nature-worship.
Mankind, when it gave expression to its tirst dawnings of re-
ligions thonghts, wove a fabric of myths and theories about re-
ligion, the warp of which ran through from earliest historical
times to our own days as threads of the Avarp of philosophies and
theories about sex, male, female, love, passion, lust, desire, pro-
creation, offspring, etc. ; while the succeeding ages and civilizations
wove into tliis warp the woof of the individual religions, the myths
and fables of gods and goddesses, so that the Avliole fabric of be-
liefs, thongli at first coarse and poor, became more refined as
mankind itself advanced, l)y a process of revelation which con-
sisted in a gradual unfolding of truths in the consciousness and
consciences of iiinumeral)l(^ thinkers, until our present religions
were produced, and which process of revelation is still going on
and will continue unfil all that is fantastic, irrational, imbeliev-
able, is ei'adicated from our faiths.
PREFACE IX
AVe read in the Bible (:\Ii('a]i, vi, 8) : ''AMiat doth the Lord re-
(|uire ot* thee, but to do justly, and to love iiicrey, and to \\alk
humbly before thy God?" In other words, to aet fairly towards
onr fellow-men is all tliei'e is of reli.^'ion that is worth while.
The theories that are taught and the myths we are asked to
believe, are non-essential. AVe can not comprehend how the world
could exist, without having been created, bnt neither can we com-
prehend liOA\' it could have been created ; we can not compi-ehend
how or where there can be a Power to create a nniverse, or under-
stand the nature of such a Power. But the theorizing on snch sub-
jects has formed our religions. MattheAV Arnold wrote:
"Children of ^len! The unseen Power whose eye
Forever doth accompany mankind
Hath looked on no religion scornfully
That mankind did ever find."
Possibly as good a definition of religion as we can find is
Carlyle's saying: "His religion at best is an anxious wish, — like
that of Rabelais, a great Perhaps."
In the course of years I have accumnlated many illustrations
on art, religion, etc., some of which are used in this book. But
many that would most drastically (but possibly also offensively)
have shown the crude phallism of the earlier stages of i-eligious
thought, such as many sculptures from the temple ruins of Egypt,
or the collection of paintings, or utensils from the Roman homes
in Pompeii or Herculaneum, had to be omitted out of deference to
modern ideas of propriety, although they would have cast an in-
teresting and illuminating, ali)eit lurid light on the history of the
phallic phase in religions.
In recording here what I have found in my reading and the
conclusions at which I have arrived, I do not attempt to even ap-
proximately exhaust the vast field of details. But I attempt to
present the truths as recorded in history, as I see them, even
though, as George Eliot said:
"Truth has rough flavor if we bite it through."
0. A. Wall.
St. Louis, U. S. A.
CONTENTS
SEX
Primitive ideas about sex, 2; Heaveu and earth, 3; Creator lierniaplirodite, 5;
Plato 's idea, 5 ; Hindu stoiy of creation of animals, 5.
MODERN RELIGIONS
Definition, 6 ; Father, 7 ; Bildes, 8 ; Brahmanism, 8 ; Hindu Trinity, 9 ; Jewish
and Christian Bible, 9; Bibliolatry, 10; Oral transmission, 11; Koran, 13; Statistics
of religion, 14.
OTHER BELIEFS
Shintoisni, 14; Taoism, 14; Confucianism, 14; Buddhism, 14; Gautama, 16;
Lamaism, 18; Statistics, 19; Shamanism, 20.
HOW OLD IS MANKIND
Geological ages, 20; Darwinism, 22; Earliest writing, 23; Earth's age/ 24;
Age of man, 24; Pithecanthropus, 26; Alalus, 28; Inhabitants of Pacific Islands, 29;
Similarity of Aztec and Asiatic civilizations, 31 ; Aztec crucifix, 33 ; How many races
of man, 34 ; Biblical account, 34 ; Other accounts, 34 ; Preglacial art, 35 ; Early records,
36; Evolution, 37.
NATURE OF SEX
Mystery, 39 ; Death and reproduction, 40 ; Death angel, 41 ; Styx and Charon,
43 ; Disease demons, 45 ; Witchcraft, 46.
NATURE OF REPRODUCTION
Fission, 49; Asexual, 49; Budding, 50; Conjugation, 52; Anabolism, 52; Katabo-
lism, 53 ; Evolution of sex, 53 ; Impregnation, 55 ; Parthenogenesis, 57 ; Hermaphro-
ditism, 58 ; Atavism, 59 ; Determination of sex, 61 ; Nourishment, 61 ; Parthenogenesis
in insects, 64.
STATUS OF WOMAN
In Dahome}-, 68; Jus inimae noetic, 60; Biblical, 69; Has woman a soul? 70;
Infanticide, 72 ; Socialistic communities, 73 ; Mosaic law, 74 ; in England, 76 ; Woman 's
dress, 78; Koran on woman, 78; Slavery of woman, 79; Whipping women, 82; Chastity
belts, 83 ; Census on woman, 89.
COSMOGONIES
Genesis, 91 ; Books of Moses, 95 ; Legend of Sargon, 96 ; Days of Genesis, 97 ;
Koran, creation, 97 ; Persian version, 97 ; Years, 98 ; Months, 98 ; Weeks, 98 ; Zodiac,
99; Days of the week, 79; Sabbath, 101.
xi
XU CONTENTS
GEMETRIA
Antichrist, 102; Liic-ky and nnlucky days, and nuniljcrs, 10l^>; Creation of the
world, l^liilo, 1(14; Six, 10 1; Xunil)t'rs have sex, 104.
BIBLE OF THE GREEKS
Writinos of Hosiod and Homer, 106; Birth of Venus, lOS ; Eros, 109; Baby-
lonian account of creation, 110; Brahmanie aecount,lll ; Buddhism, 112; Origin of
religious sentiment, gratitude, 114; fear, 116; Ancestor -worship, 115; Manes, 115;
Phallus as a symbol, 116; People without religion, 118; Persian views, 119; Hindus,
120; Arc mythologies religions? 121; Caves, Cybele, 121; Demiurge, 122; Mandaeans,
123; Assurbanipal's library, 124; Avesta, 124; Story of flood, 125; Cosmic egg, 126.
SEX IN PLANTS AND TOTEMISM
Iggdrasil, 128; Ash tree, 129; Alder tree, 129; Birch, 129; Lupercalia, 130; Fir
tree, 130 ; Marriage to trees, 130 ; Birth trees, 131 ; Gender of plant names, 131 ; Sex
in plants, 134; Fertilization in plants, 136.
SEX IN ANIMALS AND MANKIND
Lilith, 139; Prakriti, 139; Adam a hermaphrodite, 139; Purusha, 140; Baeath
the fertilizing agent, 140; Seed from male alone, 140; Right side of body male, left
female, 143; Ancient views of sex, 145; Medieval views, 147; Modern views, 149.
LIGHT ON A DARK SUBJECT
Female, 150; Vulva, 151; Pelvic organs, 151; Menses, 152; Human ovum, 153;
Pregnancy, 154; Mammary gland, 156; Male, 157; Spermatozoon, 158; Male genitals,
159; Coition, 160; Masturbation, 162; Onanism, 163; Sexual instinct, 166; Coition,
how often, 174; seasons for, 175; Sexual passion, .175 ; Rutting odor, 177.
SOCIAL RELATIONS 01' MEN AND WOMEN
Promiscuity, 180; Monogamy, 181; Family, 183; Marriage by capture, 185;
Polygamy or Polygyny, 187; Marriage by purchase of Avives, 190; Marriage to sisters,
192; Kabbalah, 193; Free love, 199'; Double standard of morality, 200; Polyandry, 200;
Concubinage, 202; Prostitution, 204; Celibacy, 205; Asceticism, 207; Skopsi, 211;
Eunuchs or Castrati, 212.
GRATIFICATION OF THE SENSES
Perfumery, 213; Perfume for the gods, 218; Sacrifices, 219; Human sacrifices,
222; Diuidic sacrifices, 226; Aztec sacrifices, 227; Incense, 228; Perfume for humans,
230 ; Odophone, Dr. Piesse, 230 ; Antiquity of cabarets, 232 ; Perfumes, forms of, 233 ;
Perfume of the human body, 236 ; Perfuming the bride, 239 ; Perfume among the
ancients, 239 ; Natural odors of the human body, 242 ; Sense of hearing, 248 ; Sense
of taste, 249; Kiss, 250; Love cake, 250; Cannibalism, 251; Sense of touch, 253;
Sense of sight, 253; Beauty, 255; Long hair, 256; Elliptic shape of women, 257;
Bosom of woman, 259; waist, 261; Legs and feet, 262; Dance, 263; Religious dances,
266 ; Social dances, 267.
CONTENTS XIU
ART AND ETHICS
Influence of Worhl's Fairs, 2(i9 ; Egyptian ait, 271; Greek art, 271; Nude in
art, 273; In churches, 277; Nudity for baptism, 277; Adam and Eve, 279; Chiton, 281;
Arena, 283; Prostitute, 285; Una, 286; Idealization in art, 287; Modern decadence of
art, 288; Indecency in art, 289; Realism, 289; Vulgarity in art, 290.
SCULPTURE
Sculpture, 292 ; Decency, 29-i ; Indecency, 294 ; Innocence of naked childhood,
297; Modern photography of the nude, 298; Pompeiian batli-room paintings, 302.
ART ANATOMY
Rules of proportion of bodies, 303 ; Heredity, 305 ; Children, 308 ; Women, 308 ;
Men, 308; Youths and Maidens, 309; Plan of body structure, 310; Wedge shape of
men, 312; Elliptic form of -women, 313; Eeminine beauty, 313.
CREDULITY
Magic, 315; An old deer, 316; Educated mermaid, 316; Patron saint of Poland,
316; Multiple births, 317; Three hundred and sixty-five children at one birth, 318;
Agnosticism, 319; Atheism, 320.
LYCANTHROPY
Lycanthropy, 321; Witches, 322; Diana and Actaeon, 323; Daphne and Apollo,
324.
ORIGIN OF RELIGIOUS IDEAS
How m^-ths travel, 327: Unitarianism, 330; Trinitarianism, 330; What are the
Gods? 331; Ancient ideas, .331; Neo-Platonists, 333; Pantheism, 333; Pithagorians,
333; Hesiod's fable of hawk and nightingale, 335; Homo est crcaior del, 337; Religious
intolerance and persecution, 337; Burning at the stake, 339.
PRIMITIVE BELIEFS
Fear of Ghosts, 343 ; Fetiches, 343 ; African fetich place, 344 ; Suttee in India,
345; Dragons, 346; Asshur, 347; Idols, 348; Images, 348; Aztec idols, 350; Teraphim,
351 ; Pan, 354 ; Stones, pillars, steeples, etc., 355 ; Dolmens, Cromlechs, etc., 356 ;
Animals as symbols of deities, 356; Sivayites or Lingayats, 357; Greek statues of
deities, 357; Ikons, 358; Crucifix or cross, 358.
SEXUAL RELATIONSHIPS OF THE GODS
Daemones, Greek, 360 ; Demons, modern, 360 ; Exorcism, 361 ; Philacteries or
charms, 361 ; Pentagram, 361 ; Were-wolves, 362 ; Vampires, 362 ; Ineubi and Succubi,
364 ; Manichaeism, 364 ; Simon Magus, 365 ; Witches ' Sabbath, 366 ; Trial of Witches,
366; Fauns, 367; Satyrs, 368; Sileni, 368; Nymphs, 368; Naiads, 369; Angels, 370;
(jenii, 370; Valkyrs, 372; Sirens, 373; Sons of God, 373; Incest and Ro,pe, 374.
THE GODS LIVED I>IKE MEN
Ammon, 375; Wodan, 375; Demeter, 375'; Proserpina,. 376 ; Lara, 376.
XIV CONTENTS
MONOGAMY, POLYGAMY
Osiris and Isis, 37G; Juno, 377; Zeus or Jupiter, 377.
PHALLIC WOESHIP
Unity of religions, 378; Phallism, 379; Creator, the father, 380; Lingam, 382;
Ancestor Avorship, 382; Phallus, 382; Male sexual organs, 383; Baal, 384; Phallic
pillars, dolmens, etc., 385; Asher, Anu and Hoa, 386; Male symbols, 387; male triangle,
387; Lotus, 387; Pleur-de-lis, 388; Shamrock, 388; Phallic jewelry and medals, 389;
Abraxas medals, 390; Salerno trinity, 390; Uas sceptre, 393; Pyramid, 393; Triangle
symbol for biblical God, 395; Medieval trinity, 398; Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A.
triangles, 398; Arrow, 399; Thyrsus, 399; Temptation of St. Anthony, 401; Sign of
the Cross, 403 ; Trinity, 404 ; Phallic signs on horses, 405 ; Holy families, 406 ; Norns,
406.
PLANT WORSHIP
Christmas tree, 408; Maypole, 408; Yule log, 409; Groves (in the Bible), 411;
Assyrian tree of life, 413; Alchemistic tree of life, 415; Witchhazel, 415; Mistletoe,
416; Mandrake roots, 417; Love charms, 417; Plant names, 422; Romance of plant
names, 422.
ANIMAL WORSHIP
Turtle, 430; Bull, 431; Goats, 435; Eagle, 436; Owl, 436; Vulture, 436; Pea-
cock, 437; Doves, 437; Cock, 437; Lamb (Agnus Dei), 437; Scarabaeus insect, 582.
SOME OF THE GODS
Age of recorded history, 439 ; Ishtar 's trip to Hades, 440 ; Phoenicia, 441 ; Sun
and moon worship, 442; Persia, 443; Ormuzd and Ahriman, 444; Egypt, 445; Osiris,
Isis and Horus or Harpokrat, 446; Osiris mysteries, 448; Greece, 449; Old Father
Time, 450 ; Zeus, 450 ; Mars, 452 ; Cupid or Amor, 453 ; Dionysus, 454 ; India, 456 ;
Four Great Gods, 457; Siva, 458; Vishnu, 459; China, 460; Japan, 461; Mexico, 461.
THE ETERNAL FEMININE
Mother worship, 462 ; Symbols of the feminine, 463 ; Vulva, 464 ; Feminine
triangle, 465; Abracadabra, 466; Sign of fertility, 467; Ishtar, 468; Cruelty to
women, 469; Sistrum, 469; Stonehenge, 471; Arches, 471; Shells, 472; Adoration, 474;
Vesica piscis, 475; Door of life, 476; Medals, seals, etc., 476; Symbol of vulva on
slate roofs, 479 ; Labial caressing of woman, 479 ; Festival of the womb, 482 ; Worship
of breast, 488; Madonna worship, 489; Egg, 491; Goddesses of maternity, 492; Aztec
Madonna, 493.
VIRGIN WORSHIP
Parthenogenesis, 494; Jupiter and Leda, 495; Fornication, 496; Gods born of
women, 496; Diana of Epliesus, 497; Devaki and Krishna, 498; Isis as a virgin, 498;
Earth as a Madonna, 499; Juno as Madonna, 501; Queen of Heaven, 502; Madonna
and St. Bernhard of Clairvaux, 502; Mound builders' Madonna, 503; Religion of Hu-
manity, 504; Goddess of Reason, 505; Worship of woman, 506.
CONTENTS XV
ABOUT GODDESSES
Assyrian and Babylonian, 508; Egypt, 509; Greece, 510; Venus or Aphrodite,
510; Tliree Graces, 512; Juno, 512; Hebe, 513; Diana or Artemis, 514; Latoua, 515;
Flora, 51(3; The Fates, 517; Immaculate Conception, 518.
MEEE MORTAL WOMEN
Story of Esther, 519; King Candaules, 519; Conon and his daughter, 520; Cas-
sandra, 520; Leaena, 521; Tamerlane and Bajazeth, 521; Model mother of Cliina, 521.
SEXUAL UNION AMONG DEITIES
David's shield, 522; Sign of the Gnostics, 522; Swastika, 523; Irish crosses,
524; Hands in blessing, 524; Adam and Eve, in church decoration, 525; Ikons, 526;
Iconoclasts, 526; Crux ansata, 527; Hindu holy places, 528; Wedding ring, symbol
of yoni, 530; Finger symbol of lingam, 530; Suben, goddess of maternity, 532; Posey
rings, 533.
SERPENT WORSHIP
Peleus and Thetis, 534; Apple of Discord, 535; Aesculapius' staff, 535; Hygeia,
535; Serpent mound, 537; Zuni snake worship, 538; Adam, Eve and serpent, 539; St.
Patrick, 540; Creation of Eve, 542; Worship of satan, 543.
WORSHIP OF HEAVENLY BODIES
Sun and moon, 545 ; Stars and planets, 545 ; Sun myths, 549 ; Golden fleece, 549 ;
Mohammedan crescent, 551 ; Marriage of sun and moon, 552 ; Hekate, 553 ; Lunatic
554; Planets, 555; Zodiacal signs, 556.
PHALLIC FESTIVALS
Sexual life, ancient and modern, 557; Prostitution in Rome, 560; Roman festi-
vals, 564 ; Liberalia, 565 ; Dionysia, 566 ; Floralia, 568 ; Lupercalia, 569 ; Agrionia,
570 ; Bacchanalia, 570 ; Phallic festivals in India, 574.
WATER
Worship of rivers and river gods, 575; Styx, 576; Nile, 576; Ganges, 577; Jordan.
577 ; Holy water, 578 ; Urine as holy water, Persia, 579 ; Urine as a remedy, 579.
IS THERE AN IMMORTAL SOUL?
Cicero 's ideas, 580 ; Kant on immortality, 581 ; Plato 's ideas, 581 ; Materialistic
view, 581; Stoics, 584; Zoroastriau beliefs, 584; Buddha's teachings, 584; Nirvana, 584;
Pre-existence of souls, 586; Seat of the soul, 588; Hades, or hell, 589; Heaven or
paradise, 590; Have women souls? 591; Devil, 592; Valhalla, 592; Hindu immortality,
593; Myth of Ahasuerus, 594; Conclusion, 595.
SEX ANT) SEX WORSHIP
(PHALLIC WORSHIP)
SEX
AVlien j)rimitive man had advanced sufficiently to have ac-
quired the rudiments of language and the ability to think logi-
cally, he 2irol)a])ly conunenced to speculate on the origin or source
of life or existence. It is not inconceivable that the trogiodites,
living in their caves, depending for food on the hunt and the chase,
slaying wild animals in self-defence, others for game, robbing-
birds' nests for food, and using all animal substances, even in-
cluding the dead of their own kind, as provender, came across
some eggs just as they were being hatched, or upon some wild
animal just as it was giving birth to 3^oung; and generalizing
from such observations, which corresponded so closely with what
the}' knew to be the facts about their domestic animals and about
their o^Yn women and children, they came to the conclusion that
all things were produced in the same manner as was the case
among men and women of their own kind.
To civilized man only man seems personal — a real conscious
Ego — ''Cogito, ergo sum!" I tliink, therefore, I am.
But savages, primitive men, conceive every object as living,
as being personal, endowed wdth passions and attributes like them-
selves ; even the most abstract phenomena of nature are regarded
as persons — sky, earth, A\^nd, fire, etc.
In the dim ages of long ago, Avhen the da\\m of the human
reasoning power occurred, the distinctions between animal, veg-
etable and inorganic objects were unknoMm. There w^ere many
transitional forms between animals and plants on the one hand,
while the fossils and petrifactions furnished equally transitional
forms betw^een animals, vegetables and minerals, or stones, on
the other hand.
2 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Mankind in its cliildhood imagined all things to be alive and
to have sex like mankind itself. The facts of sex became known
from experience ; sex Avas the great mystery* of the ancients, and
also the readiest explanation of reproduction and of life, or even
of existence of any kind, and so all things, animate and inanimate,
were supposed to be sexual and to produce either their owni kind
or any other kind of being by processes analogous to those by
which human offspring was produced.
Even the soil and stones were supposed to produce human
beings, and the ancient Greeks called men who sprang from their
soil '" autochtJiones."
Our negroes, who still cultivate many features of voodoo
worship, consider lodestones to be powerful love-charms or fe-
tishes, and know how to distinguish between "male" and "fe-
male" lodestones.
And primitive men extended such ideas to the supernatural
beings with whom their imagination peopled the heavens above
them, and the world around them and under them, and to many
phenomena of nature, as sun, moon and planets, as well as to the
gods and goddesses, the demons, and the powers of the infernal
regions, all of Avhich were supposed to be sexual.
All religions are based on sex; some, like the ancient Egyp-
tian, Greek and Roman, or the modern Brahmanic worship of
Siva, very coarsely so, according to modern civilized thought;
others, like the Christian religion, more obscurely so.
Hence it will prove interesting to ascertain, if possible, what
sex is or is supposed to be, and what it was supposed to be.
We Avill first give a Dictionary definition, as a sample of
what such definitions usually are :
"Sex (from Latin secus, indecl. ; from seco, cui, ctimi, care, 1,
v.a., to cut; to cut surgically, to cut off or out, to amputate; to di-
vide, cleave, separate).
Secus, indecl. ) ^ ^ ^
„ ^ I a sex, male or female.
Sexus, us, m., 4 )
i i
Sex : 1. The distinction between male and female ; the phys-
ical difference between male and female ; that i^roperty or charac-
ter by which an animal is male or female.
*For this cause shall a man leave his father and mother and shall be joined unto his wife,
ind they two shall be one flesh. This is a great mystery. — Eph. S, 31, 32.
SEX AND SEX WOPiSniP 6
"Sexual distinctions are derived from tlie presence and de-
velopment of the characteristic generative organs of the male and
female respectively.
'■'2, Womankind, by way of empliasis (generally preceded l)y
the definite article the),
"A tact which surpassed the tact of hov sex, as
much as the tact of her sex surpasses the tact of
ours." — ]\iacaulay, TTist. of Engl., Ch. xi.
"3. One of the two divisions of animals founded on the dis-
tinction between male and female. ' '
Originall}^, in Latin, either the word secus or sexiis was used ;
while seciis was more common in the w'orks of the earlier Avriters,
the w^ord sexus became more and more common in later times,
after the beginning of our era, until it finally replaced the word
secus altogether.
An explanation of the derivation of the w^ord secus {sexus)
from the verb seco must probably be sought in the older religions
with W'hicli the Romans were acquainted.
Heaven and Earth (the deities Uranus and Gea) Avere sup-
posed to have been at first permanently united, either in an un-
ending sexual embrace or as an hermaiDhrodite deity. The same
idea w^as found in many mythologies, in most of wdiich the tw^o
principles (Uranus, male, and Gea, female) were supposed to
have been separated later on by cutting apart (hence seco, to am-
putate, to separate).
The heaven here mentioned must not be confounded AAT.th
the heaven of the Christian religion wdiich is an idea that the
ancients did not knoAv; the heaven of the ancients was simply the
upper atmosphere, the region of the clouds, or above the clouds,
which seemed to them to encompass the earth on all sides, the
earth being beneath.
" Lucretius said: "Lastly, you may say, perhaps, the show^ers
of raiii perish, wdien Father Aether has poured them down into
the lap of Mother Earth. But it is not so ; for hence the smiling
fruits arise, and the branches become verdant on the trees."
This posture of the male above and the female below^, is usual
during sexual congress among animals, and in the Brahmanic
waitings it is taught that men and women should cohabit in the
4 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
same posture, as to do so in any other posture, or at any time
except at night, is sin.
Heaven and Earth, then, were endowed with human parts
and human passions ; they begat the gods in Greek, Vedic, Hindu,
Chinese, Polynesian and New Zealand mythologies (although des-
ignated, of course, by different names in the different languages).
In these religions they were at first united, but later on sepa-
rated. The sky was also a god, personal and sexual, among the
Samoyeds, the North American Indians (Amerinds) and the Zu-
lus, though not hermaphrodite by union with Earth.
Uranus (Coelum, Sky) was supposed to be male and to be
covering Gea (Earth, Terra) in one unending sexual embrace;
Gea was female.
In Polynesian, New Zealand, Chinese, Vedic and Greek myths,
Heaven (Sky) and Gea (Earth, Nature) constituted a hermaphro-
dite being; their union was perpetual. Only later on were they
considered as a pair, separated from each other, and each one
uni-sexual.
The Maories, natives of New Zealand, told the story as fol-
lows: The god Rangi (Sky) was a male person Avho Avas insep-
arably united in a continuous union with his wife Papa, and thus
they begat the gods and all other things ; the couple were after-
wards torn apart or separated by their children (the other gods).
It does not appear distinctly that there was any idea of anal-
ogy to vaginismus in any of these mythologies to explain the
perpetual or prolonged union; the condition of vaginismus, as
frequently seen in the copulation of dogs, for instance, and as oc-
casionally, although rarely, occurring during coition of humans,
may have been known, and may perhaps be implied in the above
story of Rangi and Papa, Avho were "torn apart;" but in most
of the stories of this kind the separation of a hermaphrodite be-
ing into its two separate natures is distinctly stated.
Of course, sex was distinctly apparent in the higher animals
and mankind, but the ideas as to the sexual process were vague
and Avholly unscientific. In fact, the earliest references in the
oldest mythologies did not always assume two complementary
principles or agencies (sometimes spoken of as "antagonistic
principles"), but seem to have taught that the Creator was of
hermaphrodite nature.
In imitation of these ancient theories that the Creator was
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP O
androo:>nioiis or hermaphrodite, and no doubt derived from the
same folk-lore, some philosophers held the same view in regard
to YaliAve (Jehovah or Eloliim), the god or the Deminrge of the
Old Testament. We read in the twenty-seventli verse of the first
chapter of Genesis: ''So God created man in his owti image; male
and female created He them" {in liis own image; male and fe-
male created He them). And this is emphasized by repetition
in the more explicit statement in verses 1 and 2, chap, v, of Gen-
esis: ''In the day that God created man, in the likeness of God
made he them; and God blessed them, and called their name
Adam.''
The Talmud (Hebrew Traditions) says that Adam was cre-
ated androgynous. His head reached the clouds. God caused
a sleep to fall on him, and God took something away from all
his members {seco, to cut off — the same idea) and these parts
he fashioned into ordinary men and women and scattered them
throughout the Avorld. After Lilith (Adam's first wife, a mother
of demons and giants) deserted Adam, God separated Adam into
his two sexual parts; he took one of Adam's ribs and made Eve
from it. Philo, a Jewish philosopher contemporaneous with
Jesus, said that Adam was a double, androgynous or hermaphro-
dite being "in the likeness of God."
Philo said that "God separated Adam into his two sexual
component parts, one male, the other female — Eve — taken from
his side. The longing for reunion which love inspired in the
divided halves of the originally dual being, is the source of the
sexual pleasure, which is the beginning of all transgressions."
The Targum of Jonathan relates that Eve was made from the
thirteenth rib of Adam's right side; even modern theologists
have held that Adam had one more rib than his descendants.
Plato, a Greek philosopher, explained the amatory instincts
and inclinations of men and Avomen by the assertion that human
beings were at first androgynous; Zeus separated them into uni-
sexual halves, and they seek to become reunited.
The Hindus explain the creation of the different animals in
this way: Purusha Avas alone in the Avorld, and A^ery lonesome.
He therefore diAHided himself into tAvo beings, man and Avife; the
A\4fe regarded union A^ith him to be incestuous, on account of
their former close relationship, and fled from his amorous ad-
A^ances and embraces, and to elude him changed herself to A^ari-
6 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
oiis forms; but Puriisha assumed the same shapes as his wife
and in these forms succeeded in Ids pursuit, and begat Avith her
the various animals, of the shapes that his wife had assumed.
In the writing's of Ilesiod (the old Greek Bil)le) occurs the
story of how Cronus (the Latin god Saturn) separated Heaven
and Earth with a sickle, by cutting off the sexual organs of his
father Uranus.
In one of the compartments of the hewn cave temples of
Elephanta, near Bombay, there are a great many figures of an-
cient workmanship, representing Siva with his Sakti or Avife,
Parvati, as one being of an hermaphrodite nature. One of these
figures is about 16 feet high, having both male and female parts,
or being half male, half female. The androgynous form of Siva
and Parvati, before separation, Avas called Viraj.
The idea that originally gods and men Avere hermaphrodite,
and had to be separated into uni-sexual beings, accounts for the
Avord "sex," cleriA^ed from secus, and this in turn from the word
seco, to amputate, to cut apart.
MODERN RELIGIONS
Most people ha\^e dcA'^eloped, either through the imagina-
tion of one or a feAv dreamers and poets, or through the cumula-
tiA'C efforts of many, some theory of the formation of the Avorld,
and of the gods that govern this Avorld. The explanations in
regard to the formation of the Avorld are spoken of as "cosmog-
onies," Avhile the beliefs in regard to supernatural or non-human
beings (gods, goddesses, demons, devils, etc.) are called "myth-
ologies;" or, if a religious Avorship of any kind is inculcated in
connection thereA^dth, they are called "religions." There is a
difference, hoAvever, between mythology and religion; only those
gods or goddesses, or other supernatural beings Avho are actu-
ally Avorshipped, have a religious significance. All those about
whom the fables are told, but avIio are not Avorshipped or pro-
pitiated Avith sacrifices, belong merely to mythology.
A religion is the form or embodiment Avliich the dcA^otion of
a religious mind assiunes towards God; it consists of certain
rites or ceremonials practiced in the Avorship of God. Cicero de-
fined religion to be reverence for the gods, the fear of God con-
nected with a careful pondering of divine things, piety, religion.
PEX AND SEX WORSHIP t
A "true religion" is the religion adhered to hy the individ-
ual believer, while all other religions are usually regarded and
referred to as "false religions;" or to use a familiar saying —
"orthodoxy is my doxy, heterodoxy or unorthodoxy is the other
fellow's doxy." Tliis, at least, has always Ix'cn the mental atti-
tude of religious persons.
The source or origin of religions must be sought in the rec-
ords of earlier times when they were tirst proclaimed. What
primitive men believed from tlie time of the appearance of the
Alalus (speechless ancestor) to the time w^hen the dawn of au-
thentic histor}^ occurred, we do not know; there is an impenetra-
l)le curtain drawn over the untold ages, variously estimated by
scientists from a few tens of thousands of years, to a million
years or more, during which time man existed but was unable to
leave us any records of his existence except such as we may trace
in the stone implements, kitchen middens, dolmens, or fossils,
etc., that Ave may tind.
We have no reason to assume that primitive man had any
religion, or that he bothered his mind with speculations about
abstruse mental problems. It seems more reasonable to believe
that the sentiment of religion is a comparatively late acquire-
ment on the part of mankind, possibly not older than 10,000 or
25,000 years, a mere trifle in comparison with the ages during
which he probably existed. It is not our object here to attempt
the description of the evolution of religions. Did they develop
one from another? It seems to a certain extent this was the
case, but we want only to study the religions with regard to
sex, — to tind the bearing religion has to sex, or vice versa, that
sex has to religion. A part of our inquiry is to see what is
meant by " Sex- Worship. "
We are struck by one peculiarity at a very early stage of
our research. Most Aryan nations speak of their supreme God
as "Father;" thus at once proclaiming sex as an important fea-
ture of religion.
The leading religions of the world are based in great part at
least on ancient "sacred writings," the authors of which were
supposed to have been the gods of the respective religions them-
selves ; or the gods are supposed to have inspired certain writers,
or to have dictated to them the contents of their writings. These
8 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
writings are called "The Word of God" by the adherents of the
several religions.
The Books, or collections of hooks, are also called "Bibles"
(from the Greek word hyhlon or its plural hyhlia, meaning
"books") ; thus, the writings of Hesiod and Homer constitute the
Bible of the ancient Greeks; the Rig-Vedas are the Bible of the
Hindus; the writings of Moses and the prophets are the Bible
of the Jews, and the latter, together with the modern writings of
some Greeks and Jews, called the New Testament, form the Bible
of the Christians.
It is probable that the evolution of the luiman race from its
pre-human ancestors took place somewhere in Asia. But it is
not necessary here to make any dogmatic assertions of any kind
regarding this subject, because there are scientists who believe
that the human race may have originated in America, and others
who believe that it originated, when the time was ripe for this
evolution, in several centers at once, from where they overspread
the earth.
Whatever we may individually believe regarding this, sci-
entists probably all agree that the first traces of inscriptions or
written records, occurred in the region about the Eastern end of
the Mediterranean Sea, in Asia Minor, in Assyria, Babylon or
Egypt, or even in India. The majority of writers, I think, agree
that this was the region of the first home of early mankind.
The Rig-Vedas are the Hindu sacred Avritings which are prob-
ably the oldest literary compositions in the world. They are
supposed to have been composed between 5000 and 2000 b.c. ;
they were transmitted orally imtil they were reduced to writing
about 600 B.C., although some authorities say they were not
written earlier than about 1000 a.d. Tlie Vedas teach a belief
in one Supreme God, under the name of Brahma. His attributes
are represented by the three personified powers of Creation,
Preservation and Destruction, which under the respective names
of Brahma, Vishnu and Siva, form the Trinnirti, or Hindu Trin-
ity, represented as one human body with three heads, or with
one head but with three faces. (Fig. 1.)
At Elephanta, an island near Bombay, is a temple grotto
carved into a solid cliff. It contains many figures of Hindu dei-
ties, but many of these, especially those Avith phallic or yonic
attributes, were defaced or nuitilated by the fanatical zeal of
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
9
early Portuguese missionaries, or tlie even more fanatical Mo-
hammedans. In the center of this temple is a hnst of the Hindu
Trinmrti, six feet hig-h.
In more recent times Indra, the God of tlie Sky (Fig. 2), is
also much worshipped in India, as well as Agni, tlie God of Fire.
Modern Brahmanism is nature Avorship, and the Rig-Vedas con-
tain directions for sacrificial ceremonies and hymns of praise.
When they were reduced to writing, several variant versions
which had arisen through unavoidable inaccuracies in oral trans-
missions were united into one collection, without critical editing,
and some writings, evidently not part of the original collection.
Fig. 1.— Tlie Tiimurti. The Hindu Fig. 2.— India, the God of the Sky; a
Trinity — Brahma, creator; Vishnu, preser- Hindu god corresponding to tlie Greek
ver; and Siva, destroyer. god Zeus.
were included. In Hindu mythology the gods are represented
with four, six or more arms, which is simply a conventional sjan-
bolical mode of indicating their superior power, similar to the
'^himdred-handers" of the early Greeks.
The evolution of the (Jewish and) Christian Bible was sim-
ilar to that of the Rig-Vedas. It is a collection of sixty-six pam-
phlets, written in several different languages, by about forty
different authors. Its composition took about sixteen hundred
years, from the first to the last book.
Instead of being a book written by God in Heaven, it is a
10 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
literary collection containing history, law, biography, hymns,
oratory, proverbs, visions, dreams, epigrams, and even erotic
love stories ; and one of these, Esther, seems to be a Persian pro-
duction. The authors of some of the books are unknoA\m, but
some of the books bear unmistakable internal evidence of having
been compiled from still older sources, noAv lost.
Some of the stories in the Bible, such as that of the flood, of
the sun standing still to accommodate a human hero, of changing
humans to pillars of (stone or) salt for their curiosity, have been
found in Assyrian and Babjdonian inscriptions and Brahmanic
writings in practically the same form as they are in the Bible,
while the Assja-ian inscriptions are probably a full thousand years
older than the books of the Bible containing these same stories.
The older parts of the Bible were transmitted orally for many
centuries, before they were reduced to writing; and when the
earliest writing occurred, it was imperfect and primitive. Only
consonants were in use ; the words Avere not separated by spaces,
nor was there a division into sentences or verses. For instance,
if we were to write the twenty-seventh verse of the first chapter
of Genesis in the manner in which the ancient Bible was written,
it would look something like this :
SGDCRTDMNNHSNMGNTHMGFGD
CRTDHHMMLNDFMLCRTDHTHM.
(So God created man in his OAvn image; in his o^vn im-
age created he him; male and female created he them.)
>5
The cantors or recitors in the Je\\dsh synagogues, to facili
tate reading of the scriptures, invented signs for "breathing,
now called vowel points but these were not part of the text in the
ancient scrolls, in fact, they were not introduced until 600 a.d.,
and in this form the writings were transmitted for further cen-
turies.
Bibliolatry is a superstitious worship of the Bible, based on
a claim that every word in the book is a direct revelation from
God; yet the Bible contains three different accounts of the crea-
tion of the world; it contains theology or speculations on the na-
ture of God; escliatology, or speculations on a future life; reli-
gion, or rules and rites for the proper worship of God, et cetera.
Many of these subjects were also discussed by the philosophers
SEX AND SEX WOKSHIP 11
among the Greeks, Chaldeans, Hindus and other nations of those
early days, and some of these so-called Pagan views resembled
very closely the Biblical views.
The Bible consists of two parts; the Old Testament or the
Bible of the ancient Jews, and the New Testament, the sacred
writings of the Christians. The Bible of the Christians contains
both Testaments. The first part teaches that there is one God —
Jehovah ; the second part teaches \deAvs Avhich led to a belief in a
Trinity,
The Old Testament does not teach that Jehovah was a god of
the universe, bnt that he was a tribal god, the God of Israel, or
the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. The other tribes had their
own gods. Rnth said to Naomi: ''Whither thou goest, I will go;
and where thou lodgest, I will lodge ; thy iDeople shall be my peo-
ple, and thy God my God." (Ruth i, 16.)
The Jews, when they went out of Egypt, were a crude and
uncivilized nation of ex-slaves, and during their sojourn in Egypt
they naturally adopted some of the ideas of their masters. During
their travels in the wilderness they reverted to these beliefs, and
erected an Apis bull — a golden calf. The Hebrew^s were probably
too ignorant to have understood abstruse speculations on mono-
theism, so Moses simpl}^ established a theocracy, or an absolute
monarchy ^\ith a god as the ruler, for Avhich god he himself was
the mouthpiece; he pretended to be on intimate speaking terms
with this god, and he transmitted the commands of this god to
the people. He made the people believe that they were the "cho-
sen people of God, ' ' and this belief still prevails.
There are certain passages in the Bible which -seem to imply
that there may have been other gods besides Yahwe, the "God
of Israel;" as for instance Avhen this Jewish God Avished to create
man, he is represented as talking to some other supernatural be-
ings, possibly other gods, as in Gen. i, 26: "And God said. Let us
make man in our image, after our likeness;" Gen. iii, 22: "And
the Lord God said. Behold, the man is become as one of us;" or
Gen. iii, 5: "And God doth know, that in the day ye eat thereof,
then your eyes shall be opened; and ye shall be as gods."
The books of the Old Testament were transmitted orally, as
just explained, for about a thousand years or more ; then they were
reduced to writings, but the letters simply served as mnemonic
signs for the recitation in the synagogues, which was practically
12 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
from memory. The books of the New Testament Avere Avritten
when writing was a quite conmion accomplishment, and they are
therefore in a more perfect state of preservation.
Christianity is based on the Jewish Bible, of which it claims
to be the fulfilment and tlie object of its prophecies. Christianity
asserts that the New Testament contains the fulfilment of the Old
Testament and that the tAvo Bibles therefore really constitute one
completed work.
As recent researches have slioAvn that the Old Testament is
largely derived from the same sources as the Assyrian, Babylo-
nian, Chaldean and Kgyptian religions, it should not surprise us
to find traces of these religions and of their sjanbolism in Chris-
tianity, as Avill appear farther on in this book.
The ancients themselves seem to have been Avell aware of
the similarity of their myths or theories to those of other neigh-
boring people; and this led to accusations of plagiarism or copy-
ing one from another.
Lucian, a Greek writer, quoted the story of the flood in the
Avritings of Moses, in support of a charge of plagiarism against
the JeAvish Avriters; and likeAvise Celsus says that the authors of
the "Books of Moses" had simply paraphrased the Greek story
of Deucalion and Pyrrlia. And we noAv, after the lapse of so many
centuries, are in a position to judge fairly in regard to these crim-
inations and recriminations of plagiarism, because Ave noAv have
the proof that both Jewish and Greek Avriters got their material
from the folklore common to all Asia Minor, and especially to
Assyrian, Babylonian and Chaldean writings.
Much of Avhat is noAV currently belicA^ed by Christians, the
churches as well as the masses, consists of elements derived from
folklore, the speculative or dogmatic Avritings of the church-
fathers, and from poetical Avorks, such as Virgil, Milton's Para-
dise Lost, Dante's Divine Comedy, etc.; or of beliefs and practices
derived from other, so-called Pagan, religions, especially from
the teachings of Zoroaster, from Manichaeism and Gnosticism,
and from Buddhism.
The A^arious councils of the church haA^e modified and ampli-
fied the earlier teachings ; thus, the Council of Nice, in the year
325 A.D., affirmed the DiAdnity of Jesus, and the Council of Con-
stantinople in 381 A.D., declared the Divinity of the Holy Ghost,
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 13
thus completing the Trinity which is believed in by most sects of
the Christian faith ; practically by all but the Unitarians.
Protestants who believe in the theory of the Trinity seem to
forget that this doctrine rests on the same kind of human authority
as that which more recently declared the Immaculate Conception
of Mary and the Infallibility of the Pope to be articles of faith.
The Koran (Qu'ran) contains the teachings of Mohammed,
who commenced his career as prophet about the year 610 after
Christ. His teachings show the influence of the Jewdsh and early
Christian views with which he had come into contact ; but Moham-
med claimed that Allah (God) had sent his angel Gabriel to dic-
tate to him the contents of the Koran. Mohammedan believers
call the Koran the "Word of God."
Mohanuned could not read or write, but some of his followers
wrote down his sayings on any available material at hand at the
time — leather, palm-leaves, stones, and even on the shoulder-
blades of the bleached skeletons of sheep; these sajangs were
afterwards gathered, mthout any great effort at editing or ar-
ranging, either chronologically or according to sense ; like the Old
Testament, the Koran was originally written in consonants only.
The Koran contains a peculiar mixture of more or less unre-
lated materials, such as moral, religious, civil and political teach-
ings, magical formulas, promises of future rewards for true be-
lievers and threats of future punislunents for unbelievers.
The Mohanunedan Paradise is peopled ^\ith "houries" or
celestial nymphs, sexual pleasure with whom will form the chief
happiness of pious believers hereafter.
The three books, the Rig-Vedas, the Bible and the Koran, are
the bases of the Brahmanic, Jemsh, Christian and Mohammedan
religions respectively; these are the main religions of the world.
They are really religions, that is, they teach rites and ceremonials
to be practiced in the worship of God ; they are systems of doc-
trine and Avorship imagined by their adherents to be of Divine
origin. They promise a life of happiness hereafter to the faith-
ful believers and a life of eternal punishment to the unbelievers.
They have many features in coimnon which they appear to
have borrowed from each other, or probably, drew from a com-
mon source, a sort of folklore which had been built up by oral
transmission in Southern and Southwestern Asia and Northeast-
ern Africa, during the untold ages which had passed from the
14 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
time of the dawn of thinking among primitive men to the first
traces of authentic or recorded histor}^
These religions are the leading faiths of the ^vorld, and their
adherents are numbered as follows:
Christians, 564,510,000
Hindus, 210,540,000
Mohanunedans, 221,825,000
Jews, 13,052,846
The Christians are divided in turn into
Roman Catholics, 272,860,000
Greek Catholics, 120,000,000
Protestants, 171,650,000
But it does not follow tliat all Avho are included in such a
classification are "true believers."
OTHER BELIEFS
Not all beliefs in regard to Supernatural Beings, nor all
mythological accounts of the creation of the world, or the creation
of man, can properly be called "religions." A religion inculcates
a worship of a god or gods, and without such worship, whether by
ceremonials, prayers, hymns of x)raise, sacrifices, or in any other
manner, a belief is not a religion.
There are in Asia a number of important beliefs which are
usually considered to be religions, although they are not really
such. We will consider a few of these, under the names of Con-
fucianism, Taoism, Shintoism, and Buddhism.
The illustration (Fig. 3) represents the Japanese "Mode of
Life;" it is represented in very many variants, usually in the
forms of small sculptures, more rarely as paintings or as papier
mache figures. The group signifies: "Hear no evil! Speak no
evil ! See no evil ! ' '
In Japan the prevailing beliefs are Shintoism and Buddhism,
or perhaps more frequently a mixture of the two; Shintoism,
called "The Path of the Gods," is so nearly like Taoism that it
seems probable that it was derived from the latter. Before the
introduction of Buddhism into Japan, Shintoism was the only
Taitli. Sliiiitoisin iiiculcatos no worsliip of God and has no moi-al
SEX A^n'D sex worship
15
code of behavior, because, as one of the writers of Japan observed,
"every Japanese knows how to properly conduct himself, by sim-
ply obeying the behests of the Mikado."
Matoori, who lived from 1730 to 1801, said that the will of
Fig. 3.— The Japanese ''Mode of Life."
Fig. 4. — "Budtlha Preaching," discovered at Sarnath, India, in 1904.
the Mikado is the certain guide to a knowledge of good and evil.
Shintoism teaches that the Mikado is the direct descendant of the
sungoddess, therefore a representative of this deity. Shintoism
also includes elements of hero-worship, especially of the ances-
tors of the Mikado; in addition, the Japanese believe that the
16 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
powers of nature are spiritual agencies, constituting, as it were,
a group of inferior deities.
Taoism is founded on the teachings of Lao-Tze, who lived
about 500 B.C. ; he was begotten in a supernatural manner, and his
mother carried him in her womb for eighty-two years, which time
_ he devoted to introspective meditations, and to the elaboration of
his theory of life. Some Chinese historians vary the story by
ascribing different lengths of time to this miraculous pregnancy,
so that an uncertainty prevails regarding this matter, varying
from 61 to 82 years. To us, for the purpose of our study, it makes
little difference which period is assumed as the correct one.
Taoism, or the teachings of Lao-Tze, also called the Chinese
''Way of Life," is not really a religion, for it teaches no ritual for
the worship of a god, nor even, that there is any god; the word
"tao" means "a way," and Taoism teaches the way to live —
essentially, to practice virtue and to follow the teachings of the
Golden Rule.
In addition, the Chinese, as Avell as the Japanese, worship
the manes or shades (ghosts) of their ancestors.
Chung-Fu-Tze, called Confucius in western countries, lived
about the same time as Lao-Tze, the two having been personally
acquainted with each other, according to some historians. Both
taught practically the same tenets. Neither taught anj^thing about
a god, or a future life, but Confucius formulated a version of the
Golden Rule or "Rule of Life" which varies from the version
formulated by Jesus, in being in a rather negative form: "What
you would not have others do to you, do you not unto them!"
He does not inculcate any active efforts at doing good to
others, as is taught, for instance, in the Golden Rule as formulated
by Jesus: "Do unto others as ye would that they should do unto
you ! ' '
Confucianism can not properly be called a religion, because
it does not teach a belief in God, or demand any worship of God.
Taoism, Shintoism and Confucianism teach a way to live
Avhich conduces to happiness; l)ut none of these similar beliefs
teach a worship of God, or hold out hopes of future rewards or
fear of future punishments.
Gautama, a Hindu prince, lived about 450 b.c. He renounced
wife and wealth, became an ascetic, devoted himself to religious
meditations and became a great teacher or Buddha. The word
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 17
Buddlia is not the name of the founder of Buddliism but is' a
title — Teacher. In this we see a parallel to the story of Jesus,
called Jesus Christ ; the word Christ is not a name but a title ; it
means "Messiah" or "Anointed." Buddha was the greatest ag-
nostic in the world's history, but after liis death his teachings
were ignored, and he himself became an object of worsliip to his
followers, in this regard being paralleled by the history of Jesus,
who was also deified after his death and is now worshipped as a
god by the Christians.
After the death of Gautama, many myths were told of him;
among the Hindus he is considered as an incarnation or an "ata-
var" of Vishnu.
Buddhism teaches that misery is inseparable from existence,
and that final bliss consists in Nirvana, a ceasing to exist, or the
final extinction of the soul. To reach this bliss there are four
"paths:" 1. An awakening of the heart; i.e., a realization that
misery and existence always go together ; that unhappiness neces-
sarily is a prominent part of man's life. 2. Getting rid of impure
desires and revengeful feelings.
Foremost among "impure desires" is the love of man for
woman, the promptings of sex; it is curious that from a very
early age those who were the religious teachers of the people, and
who professed to have inside information on the subject, have
contended that celibacy is the better, nobler and higher condition
in this life; there were even some among the early Christians
who claimed that those who became married forfeited the chance
of going to heaven. So also, the ascetics among the Hindus and
Buddhists had this same idea; in fact, it is a characteristic of
fanatical minds in all religions. Gautama abandoned his young
\vife; and Jesus said: "Verily I say unto you. There is no man
that hath left house, or brethren, or sisters, or father, or mother,
or wife, or children, or lands, for my sake, and the gospel's, but
he shall receive a hundred-fold now in this time, houses, and
brethren, and sisters, and mothers, and children, and lands, mth
persecutions; and in the world to come, eternal life." 3. Getting
rid of ignorance, doubt, heresy, unkindliness and vexation, and
4. Universal charity.
In a surprisingly short period, by the end of the Fifth Century
B.C., Buddhism had overspread the major part of Asia, and soon
even spread to Europe, where it manifested itself as Gnosticism,
18
SEX AXD SEX WORSHIP
which prevailed widely in the first four centuries of the Christian
era, and was in fact a powerful rival of the early Christian reli-
gion. Gnosticism caused the decay and destruction of the beau-
tiful and cheerful religions of the Greeks and Romans.
There are many different sects of Buddhism, just as there
are among the Christians, and the rivalry and even hatred
among these sects for each other, is often in inverse ratio to the
actual differences of faith.
The Chinese and Japanese Buddhists retained the worship
of their ancestors and heroes, which was probably their original
faith, adding thereto the teachings of Gautama. A view in the
temple of the 500 gods in Canton, China, is shown (Fig. 5) ; the
Fig. 0. — Temple of the Five-luuidred Golden Gods, at Cauton, China.
images are portraits^ or supjDosed portraits, of a long line of illus-
trious dead, the departed heroes, teachers and ancestors who are
worshipped by the Buddhists of China. The figures are carved
in wood and heavily gilded, wherefore they are sometimes called
the "500 Golden Gods;" this aggregation of gods is presided over
by Buddha, who is seen seated at the end of the hall.
Lamaism, or Thibetan Buddhism, shows a remarkable simi-
larity to the ritual and ceremonial of the Catholic church, although
not to its religious teachings. Buddhism originated a celibate
priesthood, the tonsure or shaven crown of the heads of the priests
(the priesthood comprises popes, bishops, abbots, celibate orders
of monks and nuns), cloisters, the mass with its gorgeous vest-
SEX AND SEX WOKSTIir 19
monts and its impressive ceremonial; tlio Buddhists liavo and nse
bells, rosaries, images, incense, holy water, religions lorocessions,
feast and fast days, the confessional, and they believe in pnrga-
tory and the worship of the Virgin. They practice endless repe-
titions of prayers which are counted on strings of beads like the
rosaries of the Catholics; as the Buddhists were by many centu-
ries the earlier practicers of these ceremonials, rites and beliefs,
it looks reasonable to believe that the Christians obtained these
things from the Buddhists, although perhaps partly at least by
the survival of ceremonials of the priests in the temples of Ju-
piter and the gods of the Roman people.
The repetition of the name of a deity or saint, or of a prayer,
a certain number of times, is a very meritorious action ; the Bud-
dhists have cylinders with prayers inscribed on them (so-called
"prayer-wheels") which a devotee turns and gets the credit for
all the prayers thereon, while saving him the trouble of actually
saying them. Or the cylinders are turned by water power and
the devotee pays the priests connected Avith the temple a certain
fee for a specified time, and gets credit for all the prayers told
off in this manner, while he himself may go about other business.
Buddhism is no longer popular in India where it originated,
although there are still many Buddhists in that country. It is a
custom among the Hindu Buddhists to train parrots to repeat the
name of the deity Krishna-Radha, for which the owner of the par-
rot gets the credit.
The story of Buddha is almost literally reproduced in the
Catholic stories of Saints Barlaam and Josaphat, Avliich are
merely Christianized versions of the story of Buddha, Lakya and
Muni.
Taoism, Shintoism, Confucianism and Buddhism agree in
ignoring the question of the existence of a deity and they also
agree in teaching to lead a life of purity; also in offering no re-
ward and threatening no punishment in a life hereafter. Bud-
dhism teaches that virtue accelerates and vice retards Nirvana, or
Final Extinction.
The adlierents of these faiths are as follows :
Buddhism, 138,031,000
Confucianism, 300,830,000
Shintoism (Taoism), 25,000,000
20 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Probably none of these tliree religions and three "ways of
life" are followed in their original forms by their nominal ad-
herents. The two leading religions were handed down by oral
transmission simultaneously for a thousand years or more in
Southern and Southwestern Asia, thus forming a folklore com-
mon to a certain extent to the whole territory, from which folk-
lore the writers of the Rig-Vedas and the Bible drew the materials
\vlien these "books" were finally reduced to writing. They were
no doubt altered by contact with each other, and moreover the
religions became incrusted with various and similar superstitions
of common origin, until they acquired many features, beliefs, rit-
uals and symbolisms in conunon, some of which we will consider.
In addition to these faiths there are others of less importance ;
for instance. Animism, which is a belief in a sort of world-soul
which inhabits all things ; it is a sort of f etichism common in parts
of Asia and most of Africa, and is estimated to have 158,270,000
believers.
Then there is Shamanism, a belief in magic of which the
priests are sorcerers, as among the Northern Asiatic people as
well as among the North American Indians; this, and some scat-
tered unclassified faiths, have about 15,280,000 followers.
HOW OLD IS MANKIND?
This subject is not very eas}^ to answer, nor can the num-
bers of years be fixed with, any degree of accuracy; we must be
content mth the roughest kind of estimates merely.
To explain the subject thoroughly would really require an
explanation of the mode of world-formation, as taught in geol-
ogy, but we cannot burden this book with details.
Suffice it to say that the geological ages succeeded one another
in this order. First and lowest, the primitive rocks, in which
there are no traces of fossils ; the age when they were formed is
called the Azoic Age or age without life. These rocks were the
scorise or slag, or scum which floated on the surfaces of the
molten materials after the earth had cooled sufficiently to com-
mence to form a solid crust. Until this surface was cool enough
to allow the condensed .steam from the atmosphere or nebula to
remain, and to allow life to occur, many hundreds of millions of
years may have passed.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 21
These azoic rocks are found extensively on this continent
in Canada ; also, an island of them existed in Missouri, near Pilot
Knob (Graniteville),
Most of the succeeding layers of rock were caused by sedi-
mentation, although some of them were of volcanic origin; and
some were sedimentary rocks melted and changed, with all traces
of fossils destroyed loj volcanic heat.
The loAvest sedimentary rocks are called "Huronian" (they
occur in the neighborhood of Lake Huron) and they contain the
earliest traces of fossils, or of life, such as the Eozoon Canaclense,
etc. The next layer is the ''Cambrian" which contains early
forms of fossils, of mollusks, such as oysters and clams ; also, fos-
sils of lobster-like animals and of seaweeds. Above this and there-
fore next succeeding it, comes the ''Silurian" rock, containing re-
mains of starfish, crinoids, trilobites, early forms of fishes and
seaweeds. These together are usually called the ''Age of Mol-
lusks.''
Next came an age of fishes, most of Avhich are now extinct,
although some forms, like the gar, still survive; there are also
fossils of corals, marsh-plants and gymnosperms. This is the
Devonian Period, or the "Age of Fishes."
During the next period there was a great development of
plant life ; the excess of carbon dioxide A\diich still existed in the
air, and which prevented the existence of life in the air or on the
land, was absorbed and the carbon thereof fixed and deposited
in our coal-beds. This period is therefore called the "Carhon-
iferous Age." Corals and fishes were plentiful and towards the
end of this period the fishes began to develop into reptile forms.
Also some amphibians (frogs) occurred. These could venture out
of the Avater and live alternately on dry land, as Avell as in the
Avater. Taken together, from the Huronian and including the
last, or Carboniferous, these ages formed the Primary Period.
FolloAving this came the Secondary Period. The loAvest forma-
tion of this is the Triassic, Avith many fossils of reptile forms.
Then the Jurassic, Avith fish-like, reptile-like and bird-like fossils,
and later forms of A^egetation. Then the Cretaceous period, so-
called because chalk formations Avere common; also later kinds
of trees, exogenous, "trees, in the AA^hich is the fruit of a tree
yielding seed" (Gen. i, 29). Together, the Secondary Period of
22 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
life formation, marked hy animals able to live on land, is called
the ''Age of Reptiles/'
The Tertiary Period followed; it is also called the ''Age of
Mammals" or the "Mammalian Age." The reptilian forms of
animals developed into mammals, thron^'h the marsupials. Mam-
mals, including- man, appeared in this period, as did also the
birds. Lastly came the Recent Period, also called "The Age of
Man" This last period is characterized by the fossil records of
man and his handiwork, such as stone implements, kitchen mid-
dens, caves in which are found the evidences of occupancy by
primitive man, the homes of the troglodites, dolmens and other
burial places, menhirs, etc. Only one-half of one per cent of the
sedimentary rock formations which contain the records of the
life history of the world were formed during this recent period,
the age of man. As to amount, the age of man is therefore an
almost negligible part of the earth's record of evolution, yet it
is the most important.
We will not argue the question, whether the theory of evolu-
tion is true or not. It admits of no such discussion for all sci-
entists agree that it is true in its main features. There may be dif-
ferences of opinion as to the importance of details. More impor-
tance is now given to the influence of environment and less to
the influence of sexual selection ("Darwinism"), but no scien-
tific writer anywhere now contends that evolution is not true.
Darwinism, the theory of the influence of sexual selection, is
now considered only as one factor, possibly not even the most
important factor, in the unfolding of the life history of our globe.
Nevertheless, the differentiation of organic beings into male
and female or the Evolution of Sex, Avas a wonderful advance
over previous asexual or hermaphrodite forms because it intro-
duced an element which contributed greatly to variation in forms
of living beings.
Sex antedates the appearance of man by untold a^ons of time.
The esthnates of the age of the earth are based on many con-
siderations; one of these is a calculation how long it must have
taken for a molten mass of the size and constitution of our earth
to have cooled down by radiation of heat into space, to its present
temperature. Large portions of its interior are still incandescent,
as is shown by the activity of volcanoes and the floAvs of lava.
Sir William Thomjoson estimated that the earth's crust can
SEX AND SEX WORSTTIP 23
not liavo lioeii solidified for more than 400 millions of ycai's and
]n''ohal)ly not for more tlian 1^00 nn"llions of years.
The rate of erosion by rain and Avater, and frost, in reducing
mountain ranges or excavating river beds, the rapidity (or rather
the slowness) of formation of stalactites or stalagmites in caves,
etc., have all been considered.
The age of the earth has been estimated by some geologists
at about 72,000,000 of years, yet it may be much older or much
younger; it is only an approximate guess, but based on the best
grounds that scientists could find, and the first appearance of
sex dates back to the first appearance of life on our earth, for
the first living organisms, the algae, have sex!
Fi{j. G. — The oldest wiitinji known — the Ploffman tablet in the General Tlieoloiiica]
^t)
Seminary, New York City; 5,000 B.C.
The time when the evolution of primitive man from previous
lower forms took place, is variously estimated, from about 20,000
years by some scientists to a quarter of a million or to two or three
millions of years by others.
The lower estimate must be rejected, because man was too
far advanced in the earliest days of authentic history, for the re-
mainder of the 20,000 years to have sufficed for his physical evo-
lution. Written history, or rather, sculptured history, goes back
perhaps to four or five thousand years before Christ, or in the
aggregate, to about 7,000 years ago.
And since then no material change has occurred in the form
of man as proved by the sculptures of different races in the tem-
24 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
pie inscriptions of Egypt. At the recorded rate of evolution, the
13,000 years would not suffice to explain the previous evolution
from mammalian forms to primitive man.
When mammals began to change to more or less anthropoid
forms, man was one of the final outcomes of this evolution. But
man did not descend from any of the present anthropoid apes,
although he must have gone through similar forms that are now
extinct. Man is not a twig from the branch from the mammals
that produced the apes, but a collateral branch from the manmials
direct, developing at the same time that the ape-line was develop-
ing, in a similar direction, but with a higher outcome.
It is a popular misapprehension of the theory of evolution
to think that mankind descended from monkeys, as was expressed
by the little girl in a school essay: "Men are what women marry;
they smoke and chew and don't go to church. Men and women
sprang from monkej^s, but women sprang the farther. ' '
Another estimate of the earth's age is based on a calculation
from astronomical considerations, or calculations, as to when the
glacial epoch occurred. This estimate makes the time since the
end of the glacial epoch until now about 250,000 years.
Evidence has been found to prove that man existed before
the glacial epoch. Suppose we assume the evolution of man to
have taken place about 250,000 years ago, then man dates back
only about l/288th part of the world's existence; or rather, of
the time which is assumed to have elapsed since the earth had
sufficiently cooled off to become a solid globe, formed out of the
primordial nebular chaos, and far enough advanced to permit life
to originate on its surface.
About the end of the nineteenth century a portion of the
skull of a prehistoric man was found in the ancient bed of the
Thames Eiver. From various geological indications it was reck-
oned that this man was drowned and lost in the mud at the bot-
tom of the river not less than 170,000 years ago, and the struc-
ture of the skull showed that he by no means belonged to the type
of the Neanderthal man or the man of Aix Les Chapelles, or of
the usual primitive ancestral {" Alalus") t^^ie (Fig. 7-A) but that
he was already far in advance of these types.
The Age of Mammals is divided into several periods, as in-
dicated in this diagram :
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
25
YEAUS
FOSSILS. ETC.
n:i;i()i)S
].')(),( II in
Of Man
Kcrcnt, (I)' IIllliKill
^B Fossils of Man and. specimciib
1,500,000 H of Ms handiwork, iniple-
^M ments, etc.
Pleistocene, or
Glacial
^M I'itliccanlhropus
6,000,000 ™ (Fossil Man of Java) and
: : Stone Implements
Pliocene
: : Primates, Apes, Anthropoids,
8,000,000 : : \^l
Miocene
VH
O
<D
be
<
^1 Modern Mammals
10,000,000 ■ -r. • •..• TV/r 1
' ' WM Primitive Mammals
Eocene
In this diagram the estimated length of the periods is stated
in years. It is claimed that stone implements have been fonnd in
miocene formations; but let us assume only the much stronger
claim that they occurred in the early or loAver Pliocene times, and
it will put the earliest traces of man's handiwork back to between
six and eight million years ago ; or suppose we go back to the ear-
liest period in which fossils of man himself occurred, to the Pithe-
canthropus (Fig. 7-B) or Fossil Man of Java, in the later or upper
Pliocene times, and it puts the date of man's first appearance on
earth back to about two million years ago. This latter time is in-
dicated by the upper part of the heavy line on the left, which
marks the period in which positive proof of man's existence was
found by the discovery of his fossil remains.
In Miocene deposits in France have been found remains of
a variety of ape as large as man, together with chipped flints, ar-
tificially cut bones, etc. ; these apes seem to have been higher than
any anthropoid apes now living, yet their fossils are not human,
in the generally accepted sense, unless we accept the definition
"human" to include any being who could make chipped flint im-
plements. This ape, the Dryopitliecus, partook sufficiently of hu-
man traits, to be considered as a "missing link," if we do not
^nsh to consider him archaic human. At about this same time un-
doubtedly human beings existed in Portugal and California, be-
fore the end of the Miocene or about the beginning of the Pliocene
period.
26
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Below, in tlie Eocene period, is another black line, which
shoAvs the time ol' wliicli we are positive that man did not exist.
Between these two l)lack portions of this line, is a dotted XDortion,
Avhich marks the geological time during which the evolution of
man prol)al)ly took place.
In Miocene times the evolution of the apes, anthropoids, pri-
mates, and man probably took place simultaneously. As already
stated, man did not descend (or ascend) from any now existing
types of apes, but from a collateral primitive branch; he may
therefore have been in process of evolution at the same time as
Fig. 7-A. — ' ' Aialus l^ui opaeus, ' '
painted by Gabriel Max, according
to suggestions by Karl Vogt.
Fig. 7-B. — Pithecanthropus, or the Man
of Java. After Osborn 's Men of the Old
Stone Age.
tlio other Primates, sometime between the end of the Eocene and
the end of the Pliocene periods.
At all events, Avhatever the period at which he was produced,
and however many or few years we ascribe to these periods, man-
kind has attained a great age and dates back to very hoary
antiquity.
There is no reason to believe that the jDrocess of evolution
of man took place in any great number of individuals at the same
time, nor in any uninterrupted or unbroken series of generations.
All progress in advancement must have been more or less spo-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 27
radical, accompanied by reversions of type or degenerations, be-
cause the process was not a conscious one on the part of primitive
man.
When our breeders of stock of any kind determine to perpet-
uate some certain feature, or on eliminating- some other feature,
they are able to get results in a comparatively short time, first,
because there are so many generations of any kind of stock in
so short a time; then the breeder absolutely controls conditions
of mating and breeding; he selects both males and females and
permits only those of the offspring to live and breed again, which
have advanced along tlie lines he was aiming at, and he kills and
sends to market those individuals which failed to satisfy his
expectations. Or, in certain cases, he castrates or spays the in-
dividuals that he does not Avant to breed again. Thus, in even
the lifetime of one man, the result aimed at may be achieved,
and it may be maintained for an indefinite length of time by a
little care in culling out any specimens that show a reversion in
type.
But even great and permanent good results may be had by
a community of farmers, for instance, buying a high-breed boar
or bull, and then breeding from him with their ordinary female
stock, without any further effort at improvement. While in this
way the offspring will not be pure-bred or high-l)red, there will
be an impress on all tlie hogs or all the cattle of the neighbor-
hood, due to the hereditary impulses imparted by the one sire.
In primitive man, on the other hand, no intelligent control
was exerted and the changes in the lifetime of one individual or
generation were possibly hardly appreciated. When one individ-
ual showed peculiarities that tended in the direction of what we
now call "higher" development, or more human-like traits, such
traits may not even have appealed to the other individuals as
being advantageous; in fact, from the standpoint of a savage
anthropoid animal, // lie reasoned at all, some of these features
may have seemed a physical drawljack rather than an advantage.
Then interl)reeding with the more backward individuals con-
tinued, tending in the offspring towards reversion to a more or
less uniform type, although, as in the case of the boar or bull
mentioned above, advantageous traits, physical or intellectual,
must have been impressed more or less distinctly on all succeed-
ing offspring, so that distinct, even if slight advancement re-
28 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
suited. This impress of superior individuals would leave its per-
manent results, notwithstanding the general mediocrity or uni-
formity of the mass of the race.
Promiscuous and uncontrolled interbreeding in animals or
man necessarily retards progress, and tends to make the type
uniform, but it can not altogether undo the influence of now and
then an exceptionally highly bred male or female. A sire im-
presses more the generation immediately following, and is usu-
ally more noticeable than the influence of a female; the latter
imj)resses her influence, however, just as surely, but more slowly,
in the succeeding generations.
The advance in humankind must have been infinitely slow,
and often sadly interrupted by inferior strains in the. breeding
ancestors. Nor is there any ground for the theory that early or
primitive man formulated any abstract ideas, about religion, for
example ; and thousands of generations may have passed, making
slow progress in ]3lwsical regards, before the " Alalus" (Fig. 7-A)
had a da^^Tiing in his mind, of speech, thoughts, or awe of super-
natural beings. The Alain s was so named by Vogt, from a Greek
word meaning '' speech-less;" fossil skulls of man have been
found with chins so shaped that it seems probable that the indi-
vidual whose skull it was could not have uttered articulate speech.
Time enough elapsed in this wa}^ to account for the scatter-
ing of man to every part of the inhabitable world, and not once
only, but rejDeatedly, and to carry to all parts of the world any
ideas accepted b}^ man in the early stages of evolution. A^Hien
history began, the world was populated, even many of the isolated
islands of the Pacific Ocean being the homes of primitive types
of men.
The inhabitants of New Zealand, for instance, have a tradi-
tion that their ancestors were cast on their shores after having
been lost at sea. When they Avere discovered by white naviga-
tors their similarity to the Hawaiians Avas noticed, and the Mao-
ries are probably HaAvaiian stock. A HaAvaiian brought to NeAv
Zealand can understand the language, or A^ice A^ersa; and to a
great extent this is true of other Polynesian islands.
As an example of hoAv the Pacific islands became populated,
Ave may consider the history of Pitcairn Island, in the East Pa-
cific. This is a volcanic island about three miles long by tAvo
miles wide, rising abruptly from the deep ocean, and therefore
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 29
without coral atolls. It lias some fertile soil, but no springs or
streams, but there is usually plenty of water from rainfall, or
occasional snowfall in winter. Kequiring cistern supply or stor-
age for occasional drought periods would probably have pre-
vented this island from becoming the home of a Polynesian
savage tribe. Yams and some other agricultural products grow
a))undantly.
In the year 1789 the crew of the English ship ''Bounty"
mutinied and set their officers adrift in a small boat ; and the crew
put back to Tahiti. Here some of the crew left, but nine English-
men either persuaded or compelled six Tahitians and twelve
Tahitian women to go with them, and they sailed until they came
to an uninhabited island. Here they landed and settled down,
glad to be beyond the reach of the law that condenmed mutineers
to death. To make sure that they would not l)e found, they de-
stroved the evidence bv burning the "Boimtv."
Of those who remained in Tahiti, some were found and exe-
cuted as mutineers, the officers ha\dng been rescued and having
told the story.
Now the mistake that was made by the settlers on Pitcairn
Island was, that they did not take enough women with them for
all the men, for jealousies and hatreds were engendered which
resulted in so many murders that by the year 1793 only four
Englishmen and ten Tahitian women survived; these four Eng-
lishmen came to an agreement as to the possession of the ten
women, and cpiit killing one another ; by the year 1800 all the men
were dead except one, John Adams, who lived in Patriarchal style,
taught the children reading and writing, and the Christian
religion.
The island was visited by a passing ship in 1808, and by an-
other ship in 1817. By this time there was quite a colony of sober,
industrious, virtuous inhabitants. In 1856, sixty married men "\\n.th
their wives and children (134 in all) abandoned the island and lo-
cated elsewhere, but in 1858 two men and their families returned,
and were soon followed by others. The island is now a prosperous
settlement, proud of their English ancestors and living happily,
governed by Scotch-English thrift and virtues.
We can not believe that the evolution of man took place on each
separate island; in fact, ive know that this was not the case, be-
cause in most of the islands (Australia, for example, and certainly
30 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
in all smaller islands) there were no materials from wliich men
conld have been evolved. The conditions in Australia were those
of the earliest marsupial periods of the Age of Mammals, when
Australia first became kno^^m to modern Europeans; therefore
man must have come to Australia and other islands from elsewhere,
and as such an evolution could not have taken place in the limited
space of a small island, we must assume the islands to have been
populated by the advent of man from the continents, or adjacent
islands.
War parties starting out from the continent or from other
islands may have lost their way; storms may have driven them
elsewhere ; they may have perished by shipwreck or starvation, or
have been driven to the shores of other islands, beyond any hope
or possibility of finding their way home again.
In these new islands they may have existed until the last of
them died ; possibly fighting otf starvation as best they could, hav-
ing recourse even to cannibalism or anthropophagy. Nearly all
Pacific islanders were addicted to cannibalism when first discov-
ered, due possibly to the difficulty of securing enough food other-
wise.
Or these expeditions of warriors may have been from exoga-
mous tribes who started out to capture women for wives, and the
storm that beat them out of their course may have occurred after
they had secured the female captives they went for. In such a
case, if the island on which they landed was large enough, they
founded another isolated tribe or horde which became modified by
environment and the influence of the traits possessed by the fe-
males whom they made their wives. And they carried the tra-
ditions of any primitive folklore with them, so that we find similar
ideas about heaven and earth and the creation of all things, prac-
tically of the same type or nature, from the regions of the Medi-
terranean Sea to the remotest islands of Polynesia, New Zealand,
etc., as already referred to in the beginning of this book.
We find characteristics of bodily structure and of religious
belief conunon to the ancient Egyptians and to the Aztecs of
Mexico and Central America. How could this have happened?
It is not necessary to ])elieve that in very early days there Avas
overland communication from Asia to Alaska, from one continent
to another. The Aleutian islands would have sufficed for such
communication; but it is doubtful whether people would or could
SEX AND SEX WORSIlll' 31
have traveled overland so far, or whether they could have car-
ried with them religious ideas from the west of Asia to Central
America, without leaving more traces of their presence or of
their faiths to the tribes on the way. Moreover, as the glacial
period occurred to interfere with travel hy an overland route, it
is almost certain that no conununication between Asia and Amer-
ica occurred in this way.
Nor is it probable that there was a large continent or island
in the Atlantic Ocean, w^hicli in prehistoric times facilitated com-
munication between Africa and America, the subsidence of which
continent is held by some authors to account for the general
prevalence of the story of the flood in so many religions, both in
the Eastern and Western continents. Of course, this all might
have been true, Init the probability is that it is not true, but
simply a myth.
It was stated in a history of the United States published in
1891, that ''within the last 100 years no less than 40 Japanese
vessels have been blo\\m ashore on the Pacific coast of North
America." On some of these ships some of the men were still
alive; such may have occurred more or less regularly even thou-
sands of years ago, and there may have been women among the
survivors of some of these boats so that mankind may have been
brought here from the place in Asia where many suppose his
original home was. Or, if Ave prefer to assume that the evolution
of man took place on this continent also, the men from Asia may
have intermarried with women of America, thus modifying the
regular Amerindian type by the admixture of Asiatic strain, and
these men may have perpetuated some of their Asiatic religious
beliefs by ingrafting them on native American religions.
The British Encyclopedia says that it is most probable that
the civilization of pre-historic Peru originated in China, and gives
many reasons for such a statement.
In Central America tradition said that a white man came
from overseas (many centuries b.c). He announced to the peo-
ple, who were savages at that time, a knoAvledge of the ''god of
all truth" and l)uilt a temple to him. When the Europeans first
discovered Central America, they found there traces of some of
the Egyptian and Greek mysteries. It is possible that some an-
cient Phoenician sailors, Avho are knoA\ni to have navigated the
ocean as far as Great Britain and even Scandinavia, may have
32 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
reached Iceland, and from there America, carrying with them
knowledge of the nwsteries of Western Asiatic and Egyptian
religions.
Another Central American tradition said that at a time which
corresponded Avith that immediately before our own era, a party
filling seven ships nnder the leadership of Quetzalcohuatl, wearing
long floA\dng robes and long beards, came from the east. Another
tradition related that people came from a region of the frozen
parts of the earth (about 635 a.d.) Avho reached Mexico after
wandering for forty years, and that these latter established the
Toltec empire. The Toltecs were a tall white people!
We know that Norwegians discovered Ehode Island as early
as 1000 A.D., and it is- not unlikely that some of them by sailing
along the coast finally came to Central America. At all events,
it is very curious that the Central Americans knew about an arc-
tic or frozen part of the earth.
Aristotle, Plato and Seneca made references in their works
to a land hidden far to the west in the western ocean. The Brit-
ish Encyclopedia says "America had of course been known to the
barbarian nations of Asia for thousands of years."
The Toltecs had a tradition, and showed the ruins of a tower
in proof, of a tower which w^as built for the purpose of reaching
heaven ; and that when this was being built God gave to each fam-
ily its own particular speech. To fmd here a tradition of the
story of the tower of Babel, is certainly odd. Combine with this
the general belief in some circles that the North American Indi-
ans are the descendants of the lost tribes of Israel, and the sup-
position that there had been conununication between East Asiatic
as well as West Asiatic people and Mexican and Central Amer-
ican people becomes more than merely possible ; it becomes prob-
able, and the occurrence of similar religious ideas and symbols
is accounted for.
No people were ever more addicted to making limnan sacri-
fices than the Aztecs. At the chief annual festival, at the Avinter
solstice, of their god of Avar Hnitzilopochtli, a sort of communion
was celebrated, at Avhich a large cake, Avith Avliich the blood of a
sacrificed child Avas mixed, Avas divided among the people. This
child represented the divinity.
The Mayas, a people also living in Mexico, had a tradition
of a white man, or god, Avho visited them and taught them to ab-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 33
stain from bloody sacrifices, and to offer bread, flowers and per-
fumes. This may have been a white man, possibly a white mis-
sionary, whom fate had carried to America with one of the pre-
historic arrivals of Japanese junks. The reference to perfume
seems to point to the introduction of incense, so that this "white
god" was possibly a Catholic or Buddhist missionary, long be-
fore Columbus discovered America.
When the Spaniards first came to Mexico, the missionaries
were astonished to find that figures of a crucifix were used in the
religious ceremonies of these people; the figures were made in
the plastic material which is even now used in that country, sun-
Fig. 8. — A mould to 'make adobe figures of the cruciibcion ; prehistoric Mexican ; intaglio.
baked clay, or adobe. No specimens of these figures have been
found so far, but in one of the temple ruins was fomid a stone
mould, in which a figure of a crucified person was cut intaglio,
so that the modeled figure would be cameo style (Fig. 8). Here
is a copy of this mould, after a woodcut in a "History of the
Cross;" is this a Christian crucifix? Or Avas it, as the Spanish
missionaries thought, an invention of the devil to mock the Chris-
tian faith? Or perhaps, was it introduced by the "white God"
of the Mayas, and was the latter a Catholic missionary, cast away
to these distant shores? We can only guess; it is possible, prob-
able even, provided only that we assume time enough to have
34 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
elapsed. And time was abundant ; the calculation of the age of
mankind shows that even if we reduce it to one-tenth the time,
it would still suffice for the scattering of primitive man and prim-
itive folklore all over the world.
HOW MANY RACES OF MEN?
It does not interest us much, for the purpose of studying
sex, to inquire whether man is of one species only, or more.
During slavery times it was customary to assert that the negro
race was an inferior species, and the argument used was that
whites and negroes could not perfectly interbreed; that the mu-
lattoes became infertile and could not reproduce their kind be-
tween themselves, although interbreeding between mulatto and
either white or black took place readily. Thus, Avhite men could
procreate with mulatto women, to produce quadroons and again,
octoroons, etc., while mulatto women with mulatto mates remained
sterile. This was probably merely claimed to justify the theory
that the negro race was of a different species, and thus to justify
slavery, and the statements were not based on correct premises or
on facts.
Man has been studied very thoroughly, but opinions have
varied very materially in regard to this question. While it is of
course preposterous to believe that mankind originated from a
single pair, or that evolution was. confined to one restricted dis-
trict, yet it is possible that this evolution took place in one quar-
ter of the world only and resulted in one species only, as is be-
lieved by the majority of writers on this subject; Virej assumed
two distinct species, and in general, writers often mention "su-
perior" and ''inferior" races of mankind without, however, dis-
tinctly claiming two or more species in the proper biological sense.
Jacquinot assumed three species; Kant, four; Blumenbach,
five; Buff on, six; Hunter, seven; Agassiz,. eight; Pickering,
eleven; Bory St. Vincent, fifteen; Desmoulins, sixteen; Morton,
twenty-two; Crawford, sixty, and Burke sixty-three.
The Biblical claim, of course, is one species only ; God created
man in his o^vn image (Gen. i, 27), only a little lower than the
angels (Ps. viii, 5), and the variation of races occurred by dif-
ferentiation among the descendants of the sons of Noah (chapters
ix and x of Genesis).
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
35
PRIMITIVE MAN
Primitive man was ossentially an iinreasonin.s; brute, intel-
lectually hut little above other beasts; self-conscionsness of race
probably does not date back nuich more than 100 or 200 thousand
years. Some archaeologists maintain that tlie earliest traces of
the handiwork of man, arrow-heads and otlier stone implements,
were not produced more than about ten thousand years ago, but
other writers ascribe a vastly greater age; many such tinds have
been assigned to pre-glacial times, or perhaps 250 thousand j^ears
ago. For instance, this little figure (Fig. 9), of wliich three dif-
ferent views are shown, was found in the borings brought up from
the bottom of an artesian well near Nampa, in Idaho. The ar-
rangement of such a well permits only the entrance of the detritus
Fig. 9. — Three views of the same burnt clay figure, found at Nampa, Idalio ; pre-glacial.
of boring at the bottom; when this well had reached the depth of
320 feet, this little figure of burnt clay, shown here in al)out actual
size, came up with the expelled mud and water.
The valley, or the place where the well was dug, had been
filled up by the detritus from the erosion of the mountains to a
depth of 320 feet below the present surface, when the primitive
man lived, who fashioned this little figure and threw it into the
fire Avhere it was burnt to brick. After he had done this, more
detritus came down into the valley and covered this specimen of
early American art ; volcanic eruptions took place, and a layer or
stratum of lava was among the superincuml)ent layers ; then more
detritus, etc., was added and the surface rocks, 320 feet above the
place where this little statuette had rested for so many ages,
sJiotv glacial markings on their surface! They were there when
36 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
the glacial epoch occurred, be this 30 thousand or 250 thousand
years or a million years ago.
The recording of thoughts, whether by sculptures, pictures
or picture writing, ideographs, primitive symbols, or carved or
written language of any kind, is of comparatively recent date;
it is generalh^ estimated to have been invented not more than
about 10,000 years ago.
Few Avriters ascribe any greater age to actual records, though
to works of art involving no language much greater ages have
been assigned by some authors; it is doubtful, however, how
much credence can be given to dates exceeding 12000 to 16000
years.
Pliny, the Elder (I Cent, a.d.), it is true, wrote: ''Epigenes,
a writer of very great authority, informs us that the Babylonians
have a series of observations on the stars, for a period of seven
hundred and twenty thousand years, inscribed on baked bricks.
Berosus and Critodemus, who make the period the shortest, give
it as four hundred and ninety thousand years. From this state-
ment, it would appear that letters have been in use from all eter-
nity." But this statement is probably due to the early habit which
exaggerated age, as for instance in stating the ages of the patri-
archs, in the Bible.
Yet mankind made more progress intellectually in the last
two or three Centuries, than in all the previous ages. Even 100
years ago but few of the modern inventions Avere known. The
utilization of natural forces, steam, electricity, etc., for the pro-
duction of power dates back but little over one hundred years.
Steam engines, telegraphs, electric lights, telephones, etc., are but
of yesterday.
With the exception of a few processes accidentally or empir-
ically discovered but not intelligently understood, the utilization
of chemical force was practically unknown 100 3^ears ago. The
wonderful industrial utilization of chemistry is very modern.
Photography, the x-ray, the telephone, the phonograph, etc., are
so recent that some of the readers of these pages remember when
they were not.
In physiology the function of the sex-cells, the mystery of the
sex-elements in the processes of begetting and conceiving, was
not fully understood forty years ago; probably, is not yet cor-
rectly understood. I graduated as a physician from Bellevue
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 37
Medical Collei^'e in the same year that Darwin pnhlished his work
on the Descent of Man; the '^Conflict hetiveen Science and Reli-
gion" which ensued, Avas fonght out and the truth of the theory
of evokition was established Avithin the period of my professional
career. And mth this victory of human thought many supersti-
tions faded away.
Eeligious tolerance is a thing of so modern introduction that
it has not yet been established fully everywhere.
But little more than 100 years ago the Inquisition in Spain*
and its colonies still imprisoned and tortured and burnt at the
stake people who differed in their religious convictions from the
established church; and persecutions and killings for religion's
sake are still of daily occurrence in Eussian and Turkish Europe
and in Asia.
The doctrine of the equality before the law of all citizens
got its first impetus in the War of the Eevolution of the Amer-
ican Colonies against England, and the French Eevolution, to-
wards the end of the eighteenth century.
But the recognition of the equality of woman with man has
not yet been accomplished, except in some states of our union,
although gratifying progress has been made. The Biblical handi-
caps, of Asiatic origin, still rest as a curse on the female sex, and
only A\T.thin the last few years have some of the Protestant
churches commenced to give woman some recognition in the man-
agement of church affairs.
The admission of women to the higher educational institu-
tions of learning — co-education — is of quite recent date.
When I went to the public schools, in my younger days, puri-
tanical notions still prevailed to the extent that co-education in
the schools, except in the jDrimary classes, was not tolerated ; girls
did not go to school with boys, nor women to colleges or universi-
ties with men.
Xow, more girls graduate from high school than boj^s, and
women are freely admitted to our colleges and universities. Prac-
tically all the professions are open to Avomen, and the philanthro-
pies and charities are largeh" under their control. Nine-tenths of
the teachers in our schools are Avomen, and less than one-tenth of
our criminals are Avomen.
*The Inquisition was not finally abolished in Spain until the year 1814.
38 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Mankind is but just on the threshold of its intellectual accom-
plishments. Geologists say that present conditions in sustaining
hmnan life will probably be maintained for at least three millions
of years more. We are but infants in the evolution of thought;
a great awakening of human conscience is taking place, and super-
stitions and prejudices are rapidly disappearing.
The woi'ld has just been engaged in the most gigantic conflict
of all time, fighting to save the liberties of all the people, from the
autocratic power of an ambitious ruler. Democracy has been vicy
torious; and the world will be a better place to live in when
peace has been fully restored.
What will the future bring! No one can tell all the bene-
fits that will accrue to mankind; but two conditions are clearly
foreshadowed — the Equality of Man and Woman, and Freedom
of Thought and Conscience. To take our parts intelligently in
the further development of mankind, men and women must
Dare to Knoiv!
''Sapere Aude!"
(Horace.)
NATURE OF SEX
Until comparatively recently it was thought improper to de-
vote any study to the sexual characteristics of hmuan beings;
pruriency went so far as to set the phenomena of sex outside the
scope of legitimate investigation, and men who gave thought and
study to this subject were looked on askance and with suspicion,
and their work was often submitted to ignorant and prejudiced
moral censors, who, by their unfair actions, added to the obloquy
under wliich this subject rested.
"The problem of the origin of sex has been so much shirked
and naturalists have beaten so much about the bush in seeking
to solve it, because, in ordinary life for various reasons, mainly
false, it is customary to mark off the reproductive and sexual
functions as facts per se. Modesty defeats itself in pruriency
and good taste runs to the exti'omo of putting a premium on
ignorance. ' '
What is sex? There are still many mysteries to be solved
before this question can be fully answered; even now, mtli the
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 39
riddles of sex and lieredity tlie subject of study of hundreds of
learned men and investigators, the inmost secrets of life, sex and
heredity are but imperfectly understood. Yet it mil prove in-
teresting to trace the history of sex, both in the geological rec-
ords and in the written records of mankind.
The Bible implies that sex is the most God-like attribute of
humanity. A class in catechism, in a Sunday school, had been
drilled for a public examination ; unfortunately, the absence of
one boy interfered with the regular sequence of the answers as
pre-arranged. Said the teacher to the first boy — "Who made
vou?" and the bov answered "Mv daddv!" The horrified teacher
corrected: "No, no, God made you." "Please, teacher," said
the pupil, ' ' the boy Avliom God made, is absent ; he 's sick. ' ' Now
this boy gave the answer that has l:)een given by mankind for
thousands of years, so much so, that ancestor-worship, or parent-
worship, is the basis of many, if not most, religions. Mankind
has always attributed creation, genesis, to its parents, and in
early times the father Avas given full credit for this act. Hence
all sacred writings or bibles, devoted much attention to the sex-
ual relationships of humankind.
We read in Genesis (ch. i, v. 27) "So God created man in his
own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female
created he them." The most God-like attribute of man appeared
to the writer of Genesis (generally supposed to have been Moses)
to have been the x)ower of creation, or pro-creation. Man is like
God in this, that lie lias the power of creating human heings.
The Lord is represented as having taken extra precautions
that man should not become immortal; there Avere in the Garden
of Eden two trees, the "tree of knoAvledge of good and evil," and
the ' ' tree of life ; ' ' and man was forbidden to eat of the fruits of
either (Gen. ii, 9). If we may believe Adam (Gen. iii, 12), he
Avas solicited by his Avif e to eat of the fruit of the ' ' tree of knoAAd-
edge of good and ca^I;" Adam did, Avhat in our days Ave AA^ould
call, "hiding behind his Avife's skirts," only, in his case, ^ve can
not sa}^ so, because Eve Avore no petticoats. But the eating of this
fruit had the curious effect (Gen. iii, 7) that "the eyes of both
Avere opened and they kncAv that they Avere naked ; and they scAved
fig-leaA^es together and made themseh^es aprons." In an early
edition of the English Bible the Avord "aprons" Avas translated
"breeches;" this edition of the Bible is knoAvn among bibliophiles
40 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
as the ''Breeches Bible." "And the Lord said (apparently to
his companions, the other godsf), Behold, the man is become as
one of us, to know good and evil. And now, lest he put forth his
hand and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live forever" —
(Gen, iii, 22) "he drove him out of the garden, and he placed
cherubims and a flaming sword Avhich turned every Avay, to keep
the way of the tree of life" (Gen. iii, 24).
The result was, that as Adam and Eve were prevented from
eating of the fruit of the tree of life, eventually they had to die.
We read in the fifth chapter of Genesis, 1-5 verses: "This is the
book of generations of Adam: In the day that God created
man, in the likeness of God made he him. Male and female cre-
ated he them, and he called their name Adam. * * * and Adam
begat a son in Ms own likeness, after his image; and called his
name Seth * * * and he begat sons and daughters * * *
and he died."
Note the similarity of the expression "in his oivn likeness"
as referring to creation by God as well as by Adam. Note also
the sequence of all nature^ — '"he begat * * * and he died."
That is the everlasting monotonous round of life.
"The world will turn when we are earth,
As though we had not come nor gone ;
There was no lack before our birth,
AVhen we are gone there mil be none."
(Omar Khayyam.)
We have already learned that the Hindu Trimurti consists of
Brahma, the Creator, Vishnu the Preserver, and Siva the De-
stroyer. Siva is now the main deity in India, and his function of
destroying is supposed to include or necessitate the function of
creating ; he is therefore worshipped in the form of a phallus, the
image of the male sexual organs, or the male trinity of penis and
two testicles. But creation implies death, and death implies re-
placement, or re-creation, procreation, reproduction.
Death has been the goal as Avell as the dread of man since
death existed — which was alivays since life began. There is no
life without death and no death without life.
"Death, so-called, is a thing which makes men weep,
And yet a third of life is passed in sleep."
(Byron, in Don Juan.)
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 41
* * * ^'All that tread
The glol)e are but a handful to the tribes
That shuuber in its bosom."
(Bryant, Thanatopsis.)
<< •
Some men make womanish complaint that it is a great mis-
fortune to die before our time. I would ask, what time? Is it
that of Nature ? But she, indeed, has lent us life as we do a sum
of money, only, no certain day is fixed for pa^mient. Wliat reason
then to complain if she demands it at pleasure, since it was on
this condition that 3^011 received it," (Cicero.)
Death is the inevitable fate of all — we die; but others take
our places ; life ceases not on earth, for to obey the first command
in the Bible — "Be fruitful and multiply and replenish the earth"
is the most imperative instinct and impulse in every living being ;
reproduction is as imperative an obligation on the race, as death
is an imperative destiny for the individual, and so the race con-
tinues while the individuals come and go.
The Psalmist truly says: "AA^iat man is he that liveth, and
shall not see death? Shall he deliver his soul from the hand of
the grave ? Selah. ' ' — ( Ps. Ixxxix, 48. )
Death among primitive men has probably always been con-
sidered as the result of violence, either at the hands of human or
animal enemies, or as the action of hurtful demons or death-
angels.
As the poet Longfellow wrote :
"There is a Keaper whose name is Death
And Avith his sickle keen
He reaps the bearded grain at a breath
And the flowers that grow between.
J J
The Bible ascribes death to a death-angel; (Rev. vi, 8) "And
I looked, and behold, a pale horse; and his name that sat on him
was Death * * * and power was given to kill mth sword, and
with hunger, and with death * * * (Fig. 10).
Again: (II Samuel, ch. xxiv, 15-16) "So the Lord sent a pes-
tilence upon Israel * * * and when the angel stretched out
his hand upon Jerusalem to destroy it, the Lord repented him
of the evil, and said to the angel that destroyed the people, It
is enough ; stay now thy hand. ' '
42
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Fig. 10. — "Death," from Dore's Bible illustrations. According to the Apocalypse.
Fig. 11.— "Death-Angel," f r o ni
Dore's Bible illustrations.
Fig. 12. — ' ' Charon Rowing Souls
Over the St.\-x, " from Temple of the
Muses, XVIII Century.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
43
In tlie year 790 b.c. Sennacherib besieged Jerusalem. In an-
swer to the prayers of the Jews, the Lord's "angel" (a pesti-
lence) visited the enemy's camp and slew 185,000 Assyrians (Fig.
11), as related in the Second Book of Kings: "And it came to
pass that night, that the angel of the Lord went out and smote in
the camp of the Assyrians a hundred fourscore and five thousand ;
and when they arose in the morning, behold, they were all dead
corjDses." (II Kings, xix, 35.)
In some countries or religions death Avas looked upon as a
journey to another world; thus, in Egypt, in the "Book of the
Dead," a ship is figured, carrying the souls to the other world.
Fig. 13. — "Charon's Ferry;" illustration to Dante's Inferno, by Dore,
The Greeks thought that the souls of the dead were ferried
by Charon over the river Styx, which Avas made up of all the tears
that had been shed in the world ; the same origin is also ascribed
to the river Acheron. Tlie Styx Avas a sacred river among the
Greeks, as the Ganges is among the Hindus or the Nile, in ancient
times, to the Egyptians, and they SAvore "by Styx."
Charon charged a fee for his services as ferryman, so that,
Avhen the Greeks buried anyone they proA^ided him with a small
coin Avhich Avas placed in his hand, or under his tongue, so that
he might not be detained at the bank of that dreaded riA^er
(Fig. 12).
If a soul had no coin to pay his fare, it Avas detained for one-
44 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
hundred years, as shoA^^l in the illustration from the "Temple
of the Muses" published in the XVIII Century. From this idea,
or simultaneously with it, was probably evolved the theory of
purgatory, believed in by many people. The belief in purgatory,
adapted from the Greeks, was made an article of faith for Catho-
lics by Pope Gregory the Great, about 500 a.d.
Dante adopted this Pagan idea about Charon and featured
it in his Divine Comedy; in Dore's illustrations to this work, this
ferrying of the souls over the river was figured as here shown
(Fig. 13).
Together with many other features of Paganism, Christianity
also appropriated this idea, and so-called '^ gospel hymns" or
''revival hymns" utilize it in various versions.
When the poet Lamb wrote, in his poem ^'Hester:"
****** ''Gone before
To that unknown and silent shore,"
he was justified in doing so, because poets always did utilize
Pagan ideas when they were beautiful.
But when, in modern hymnology, we find this idea adopted,
as in the gospel hymn :
"We are waiting by the river
We are watching l)y the shore.
Only waiting for the boatman
Soon He'll come and row us o'er.
"Though the mist hang o'er the river
And its billows loudly roar
Yet we hear the song of angels
Wafted from the other shore.
J ?
we recognize it as a purely Greek Pagan metaphor, which can
not be excused or justified by any passage from the Bible. But
modern revivalists have seized on the idea as a telling one, and
in their songs as well as in their talks they work on these lines
in endless modifications.
' ' Shall we meet beyond the river
Where the surges cease to roll.
Where in all the bright forever
Sorrow ne'er shall press the soul?
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 45
'* Shall we meet in tliat blest harbor
When our stormy voyage is o'er,
Shall we meet and cast the anchor
By the fair celestial shore?
"Shall we meet, shall we meet,
Shall we meet beyond the river
Shall we meet beyond the river
Where the surges cease to roll!"
The same motif is found in such songs as :
) J
"Safe in the Arms of Jesus;"
"We Shall Meet Beyond the Kiver, Bye and Bye;
"The Home Over There;"
"The Beautiful River;" or
' ' That Shining Shore ' ' — with its chorus :
"For we stand on Jordan's strand,
Our friends are passing over," etc.
It is Greek Paganism, slightly modified of course, to suit the
requirements, but essentially the myth of Charon, the son of Ere-
bus and Night (Nox) roAving the Manes or ghosts of the departed
over the Styx, to the judgment seat of Aeacus, Rhadamanthus and
Minos, the Judges of the Infernal Regions.
Among savage and barbarous nations diseases and death are
often attributed to the malevolent influence of evil spirits. In
some cases these evil poAvers are supposed to be the ghosts of the
dead, sometimes, to be imps or devils under the conmiand of
Satan or the Devil, who is a reality to even many of our civilized
Christians. But in many cases these disease-demons are fantas-
tic and grotesque creations of the imagination as, for instance,
disease-demons of the Bohemian gypsies. Among some people,
these demons are imagined as supernatural beings, endowed with
special functions; for instance, among some Malay tribes there
are demons that produce smallpox, others that produce glandu-
lar swellings, abscesses, bubonic plague, etc.
We will return to this subject later on, simply stating now
that the belief in evil spirits and in their power of producing sick-
ness and death is very widely held, even among Christians.
Closely connected Avith the belief in evil demons is the belief
46 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
in witchcraft, a belief which is based on the Bible and mnst there-
fore, in the opinion of millions of people, be true.
In the Second Book of Chronicles, ch. xxxiii, sixth verse, we
are told of Manasseh that "he caused his children to pass through
the fire in the valley of the son of Hinnoni: also he observed times
and used enchantments and used witchcraft and dealt with a fa-
miliar spirit and ■\^^tll wizards." And in Exodus (xxii, 18) we
read: ''Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live." Or in Deuter-
onomy: (xviii, 10) "There shall not be found among you any one
that maketh his son or his daughter to pass through the fire, or
that usetli divination, or an observer of times, or an enchanter,
or a witch. ' '
In Exodus Ave are told that God had a talk with Moses in
which he taught him to do several miracles or tricks by witch-
craft. (Ex. vii, 1 to 12) "And the Lord said unto Moses, See, I
have made thee a god to Pharaoh; and Aaron, thy brother shall
be thy prophet * * * j\^nd the Lord spake unto ,Moses, and
unto Aaron, saying, AVhen Pharaoh shall speak unto you, say-
ing, Show a miracle for you, then thou shalt say unto Aaron, Take
thy rod and cast it before Pharaoh, and it shall become a serpent.
And Moses and Aaron went in unto Pharaoh * * * and Aaron
cast down his rod before Pharaoh and before his servants, and
it became a serpent. Then Pharaoh also called the wise men and
the sorcerers: now the magicians of Egypt they also did in like
manner wdth their enchantments. For they cast down every man
his rod, and they became serpents: but Aaron's rod swallowed up
their rods."
To base this belief in Avitchcraft on the Bible, as has been
done and is being done, may be like the argument of the little boy,
who made some assertion and was asked to mention his authority
for the statement; he clinched all argument in this manner: "My
mother said so, and when she says anything is so, it is so, even
if it isn't so."
There is an almost universal belief among the uneducated,
that persons can "sell their souls" to a devil or demon and get
in return the power of doing supernatural or magical things, es-
pecially the power to produce sickness or death, or of "bewitch-
ing" any one. A prominent feature of such a compact generally
is the signature of the human "party of the first part" in his
o\\ni blood.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 47
A typical caso of such l)eliof in the Christian chnrch is the
following, found in a secular encyclopedic history of the world, of
the 18th century. It is the case of a nun, Mary Renata Sengerin,
who was born at Massan, near Munich, Bavaria; she became a
nun Avhen she was 19 years of age and at the time of the occur-
rence of the tragedy I am about to relate (in 1751) she had been
a mm for 50 years. She had lived a life of great piety and vir-
tue during these 50 years and was held in great good repute.
But * ' iuAvardly, " as it appeared from the records of her trial as
a witch, "she Avas the slave of a hellish spirit" and had for ten
years afflicted the other nuns Anth much bodily ailment and suf-
fering, by breathing on them.
One of the other nuns complained to the authorities of the
establishment or nunnery and accused Sister Mary of being a
Avitch ; she AA^as arrested and in her room Avere f oiuid some oint-
ment, some Avitch-herbs, a yelloAv skirt, and also some cats. She
was "compelled to undergo an interrogation," Avhich probably
means that she Avas tortured, and AAdien the evil spirits Avere dri\^en
from her by the exorcisms of the priests, these demons confessed
that they had serA^ed the accused nun, Avho Avas a Avitch. She also
admitted that the cats in her room Avere hellish spirits.
Her trial took place at Wuerzburg, in 1751 ; she was duly con-
victed of being a Avitch, and Avas publicly beheaded and her body
Avas burned to ashes.
Such Avas but one of many, many thousands of cases of sim-
ilar kind, Avhich took place Avhile the delusion of belief in A\itch-
craft lasted in the minds of the people.
If among our forefathers, but little OA^er a century and a half
ago, such foolish notions existed, can Ave be surprised that they
Avere and are still common among less civilized peoples'?
Even among physicians disease and deatli Avas not ahvays
recognized as the result of perfectly natural processes, as Ave
learn from the History of Medicine; CA^en here, demons and life
principles, etc., Avere iuA^oked to explain both life and death.
But death, as the ineA^table fate of most humankind Avas rec-
ognized as sure — "Sure as Fate."
It is true there are a feAv cases mentioned in the Bible, of
people ivlio did not die; "Enoch Avas translated, that he should
not see death" (HebreAvs, xi, 5); or in II Kings, ii, 11, "Elijah
AA^ent up by a AAhirhvind into lieaA^en."
48 SEX AND SEX WOESHIP
To some, these cases appear well authenticated; to others,
they are not quite so convincing.
But most individuals must die; to count on being "trans-
lated" is too uncertain, and if all must die, the world would be-
come depopulated if Siva, or powers like him, did not attend to
reproduction.
What Is Reproduction?
We may cut sponges or sea anemones into fragments and put
them back into their native waters, and each piece will develop
^~^^• .X ■:•;■':■
^ f
ft I , ''■ ^'1 >-*-^ tS
.id:- ■
'"■ '-''^I'j'-y!.
"^'(r- fif'i" ':-Rf
rig. 14. — Upper row, plasmodia of amoeba; lower row, plasmodium dividing into two
amoeba.
into a perfect specimen of its kind; or in spading our garden Ave
may accidentally cut a worm in two — the tail end will produce a
new head and the head end mil produce a new tail, and we have
two individuals. Possibly we should not call them new individ-
uals, but they are as good as new — for there are now two individ-
uals where there was only one before ; what we have accomplished
by accident or design is the usual method of reproduction in many
animals and plants in which division takes place spontaneously.
We do not know just what "life" is; but we know its mani-
festations : Motion, groivth, sensation and self-preservation. Hun-
ger is one form of the impulse of self-preservation and is insep-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
49
aral)le from life; from the one-celled animal or plant to the most
complex organism, all eat or assimilate food, digest, grow and
mnltiply; bnt growth is limited between certain comparatively
narrow bounds ; the simplest particle of protoplasm, the simplest
cell, when it has reached its normal limit of growth, divides into
two or more.
In Fig. 14 we see an amoeba cell (upper left) ; in the next
figure we see commencing division of the nucleus; in the third,
division commences by constricting; then this process is carried
further imtil finally the two halves have separated and there are
two amoeba.
Fig. 15. — Division of desmids, above; of cells, below.
Cell-division is here shoA\m (Fig. 15) in simple cells (lower)
as well as in desmids (upper). Unicellular organisms of all kinds,
as well as many large and comparatively complex organisms,
when they become too large for one individual, divide into two.
But the resulting forms resemble each other ; they can not be dis-
tinguished as male and female. This mode of reproduction is
called asexual, or ivitliout sex. A similar process, but not as
complete, is that by which some of the lower forms of life can
reproduce lost or accidentally destroyed parts; thus, a snail hav-
ing one of its eyes cut off, will have a new eye grow out ; or a lob-
ster, losing a claw, mil have another claw grow.
In the middle ages, when human credulity gave credence to
50
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
many preposterous tales, the following story found its way into
a secular work on history. In the VIII Century Johannis Damas-
ceni, a soldier in one of the crusades, was captured by the Sara-
cens, and his right hand was heAvn off by order of one of the Sara-
cen kings. He prayed to Mary, mother of God, and a new hand
grew, leaving only a small red scar around the arm at the point
where it grew. He was canonized for his faith, as evidenced by
his prayer and its fulfilment, and is now numbered among the
saints.
In cases of the restoration of lost parts it is not complete
reproduction, but only partial, for while the injured individual
grows out a new part, the severed part does not reproduce a new
individual. But, of course, in higher organisms, the severed part
Fig. 16. — Miraculous reproduction of a hand; from a secular history of 1740. Madonna
in a hairy door of life.
is not reproduced. Certain organs are called "vital" if injury
to tliem, or severance, produce death, Avhile others are "non-
vital" because removal of them does not affect life, or general
health, but merely entails discomfort or disability.
If we place a leaf of Bryophyllum* on moist sand, little buds
form on its margin (Fig. 17) ; as the leaf decays these buds be-
come separated into individual plants; this is reproduction "by
budding." Buds may break off from the parent animal or plant
and become independent individuals, and this method of repro-
duction is common in many animals, as zoophytes, corals, etc.,
as well as in many plants.
*A plant of the family of house-leeks; has no common ICnglish name, except that in Bermuda
it is known as "Life-plant."
SEX AND SEX WOESHIP
51
The "layering" of grapevines or raspberry plants, the plant-
ing of slips of fuchsia or geranium, the placing of a twig of ole-
ander in a bottle of Avatcr, and producing a new plant thereby,
is practically a form of reproduction l)y budding and we might
even go furtlier and include liere the grafting of a scion on an-
other plant as a modification of this method of reproduction. The
bud or slip or scion l)eing a part of the parent plant, there will be
a growth exactly resembling tlie parent stock; the resulting new
individual Avill show only such variations as may be produced by
Fig. 17. — Leaf of Bryopliylluni forming buds on its margin wliicli become independent
plants on decay of the leaf.
more or less favorable environment, l)ut no essential or hered-
itary variation can take place. This reproduction is also asexual
or without sex.
In the protozoa we find that Avhile for many generations the
organisms may divide and subdivide to form new individuals, a
time comes when this power becomes less and finally ceases alto-
gether, and this line of the species threatens to die out. Then two
or more protozoa api^roach one another in obedience to an im-
perative impulse, apparentl}^ eat each other — " proto^Dlasmic can-
52
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
nibalism" — and coalesce into one large individual from whicli the
species takes a new start — by again dividing. This process is
called ''conjugation;" but we see no difference between the sev-
eral individuals taking part in the process, and there is no sex
in the proper sense of the word, yet we must recognize this as an
early step in the evolution of that wonderful and complex proc-
ess called "sexual reproduction" in the higher orders of beings.
In our illustration (Fig. 18) we see three amoeba unite
(above) to form a Plasmodium, and to the right, a completed
large plasmodium with two new nuclei, each of which, with its
half of the plasmodium, will form a new amoeba. In the lower
part of the illustration are shown several individuals of Pan-
Fig. 18. — Upper row, three amoebae uniting to form a j)lasmodium ; lower row, con-
jugation of two pandorinae.
dorina, the conjugation and coalescence of two individuals into a
new individual, from which the usual form of reproduction by
fission or division starts again.
Every organism is hungry, but some possess the power of
assimilating food and of elaborating it into complex organic com-
pounds in a more marked degree than others; a cell of this kind
is constructive; assimilation exceeds waste; income is larger than
expense and a surplus accumulates, the cell grows large and round,
and not needing to exert itself to live, it becomes sluggish and
quiescent. In the gradual differentiation between the cells taking
part in the process of conjugation (Fig, 19), cells ha\ing these
characteristics are said to be ''anabolic;" this process of cell-
SEX AND SEX WOESHIP 53
growth is called ' * anaholism ; " tlie cell when completely differen-
tiated, is an ovnm — the female rudimentary unit. The cell is
feminine.
In other cells growth is retarded, the power of assimilating
food and elaborating it into more complex organic compounds is
weakened; waste outruns assimilation; the cell lives beyond its
means, for it uses up more than it gathers; its organic constitu-
ents tend to disorganization and death, to a reduction of its con-
stituents to their elementary condition. The cell is partially
starved and it must exert itself to maintain life; it therefore as-
sumes a shape which enables it to hustle for a living, or at least,
to hurry to accomplish its life mission before it loses its power to
Hi^hesi forms of life.
SeKUcd .
IV^'
m Iff
^•1>>
^ Amoeboid.
Courest forms of-Life.
CLSexzcaL
Fig. 19. — The evolution of sex from asexiial reproduction.
do this ; it assumes a shape that admits of active locomotion. We
call such a condition "katabolism;" such a cell, Avhen fully dif-
ferentiated, constitutes the male rudimentary unit — the sperma-
tozoon; the cell is masculine.
In the diagram, starting with the conjugation of two equal
cells, as in the amoeba, constituting "asexual" reproduction, we
see a gradual divergence in the cells taking part in conjugation
until the cells are completely differentiated into the large femi-
nine ovnm and the small male spermatozoon.
While the ovmn may, and in many species and under certain
conditions does, develop into a new being without the cooperation
of a male cell, the latter is by itself utterly imable to produce any-
54 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
thing; the male spermatozoon is of value only when required by
the female cell or ovum; otherwise its katabolic tendency asserts
itself and the cell perishes; death results — never reproduction.
When the small and active spermatozoon comes into contact
with an ovum of the same species, it is absorbed by the latter and
the coalescence of the two nuclei of these two cells starts a devel-
opment in the o^nim which results in the formation of a new indi-
vidual which partakes of the natures of the two parent cells. We
must construe literally what Jesus said of this matter: "Have
ye not read, that he Avhich made them at the beginning, made them
male and female; for this cause shall a man leave father and
mother, and shall cleave to his wife: and they twain shall be one
flesh. Wherefore they are no more twain, but one flesh." (Matt.
xix, 4-6.)
He (the spermatozoon) and she (the ovum) coalesce and ac-
tually become ''one flesh," partaking of the natures of both the
father and the mother. This coming together of the spermato-
zoon and ovum is called fertilization, impregnation, or sexual
reproduction.
We understand now the essential or fundamental nature of
sex; the details are being studied by thousands of able investi-
gators, and mam^ of the secrets of nature, let us hope, will be
made clear within a few years. Meanwhile the essence of the na-
ture of sex may be apprehended from the facts just stated.
In the lowest forms of life there is no sex, but conjugation of
several equal cells, as in the amoeba, where two or several cells
form a Plasmodium; then conjugation, limited to two cells, but
yet without appreciable difference between them; next, conjuga-
tion between two somewhat dissimilar cells or individuals, and
lastly, a union, by "fertilization" of two completely differenti-
ated male and female cells or individuals.
All excellence of character and all loveliness and seductiveness
of body serve but to attract two individuals through love, in order
that a spermatozoon may come into contact with an ovum, to pro-
duce a new being.
"For Beauty is the bait which with delight
Doth man allure, for to enlarge his kind ; ' '
said the poet Spenser, fully 300 years ago.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
55
Impregnation
To make clear the nature of fertilization I show here the
mode of reproduction of Peronospora, a mould that grows on the
potato and causes potato rot (Fig. 20). In fungi the merely veg-
etative portion consists of more or less loosely or more or less
compactly matted threads, called the mycelium. In Peronospora
the mycelium consists of threadlike fibers. The fructification con-
sists of two kinds of outgrowths from these fibers, one a larger
round body, or female organ, in which there are one or several
smaller round bodies — the oospheres or ova (eggs) ; then there
is also a slim male outgro^vth Avhich produces immense numbers
Fig. 20. — Sexual reproduction in Pero-
nospora, a mould, above ; o\'um and an-
therozoids of Fucus, below.
Fig. 21. — Cochineal insects on
cactus leaf; male insect ^\dth ^dngs.
of slender active cells called antherozoids, Avhich correspond to
the spermatozoa of animals.
The male outgrowth applies itself to the side of the female
organ, perforates the walls of the latter, enters it by a tubular
prolongation, and discharges the antherozoids into it, bringing
them into contact with the female cells or ova, the oospheres, each
of which becomes fertilized by absorbing an antherozoid by Avhicli
they become changed into fertile spores that are able to develop
into new plants.
We have here, in one of the lowest classes of plants, and one
56 SEX AISTD SEX WORSHIP
of the earliest forms of plants, a forecast of that more complex
process which Ave know as coition.
It will be noticed that in even these very lowly organisms the
female cells are passive and that the activity necessary to bring
the male cells into contact with the female cells is exerted by the
male, or the male organ; even in these fungoid threads ''the
bride does not seek the bridegroom, but awaits his coming and
his wooing."
In the lower part of the drawing are seen the shapes of the
oosphere or female cell or ovum and the antherozoids or male
cells of bladder-wrack {Fucus vesiculosus), one of the algae.
In the cochineal insects (Fig. 21) we see this difference of
sex-disposition jolainly exemplified. When the eggs of these in-
sects are hatched, about 200 females are produced for every one
male insect. The Avingless females move about sluggishly on the
surface of the leaf of the cactus, while the winged males fly about
actively from one female to another to impregnate them, which
having been accomplished their function in life is completed and
they die.
The females now attach themselves firmly to the leaf, appear-
ing like so many warts, storing aAvay the anabolic surplus of food
in their bodies as carmine, to serve as food for the developing
young, Avho feed upon the bodies of their mothers when the eggs
are hatched.
"We see here again "a vivid emblem of what is an average
truth throughout the world of animals — the preponderating pas-
sivity of the females and the predominant activity of the males."
"Even in the human species this contrast is recognized. Ev-
ery one will admit that strenuous bursts of activity characterize
men, especially in youth and among the less civilized races ; while
patient continuance with less violent expenditure of energy is as
generally associated with the work of women."
To see this difference in regard to sexual activity we need
but glance at the behavior of the rooster among a number of hens,
or of the male pigeon with his mate, or of the cock sparrow. The
ancient Romans had a proverb: ''Et musca Jiahet penem," "Even
the fly has a penis," which corresponds to our modern saying:
"They all do it!" and which shows this active desire of the males
very plainly.
The difference in this regard between males and females of
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 57
the human species is seen in the enthnsiasm with which men be-
come soldiers, for which service women are nnfit; and on the
otlier hand the exhanstless patience with Avhich women act as
nnrses in the Eed Cross hospitals. There can be no question as
to the patriotism of either; both, in their spheres, are equally
loyal, and equally active, but their spheres of activity are dif-
ferent. Women can not do all the tasks of men, nor can men do
the tasks of women ; nor did nature intend them to do tasks con-
trary to their natures.
Many of the lower organisms, especially j)lants, are capable
of producing both elements^ — ova and spermatozoa, or ova and
antherozoids, or pollen — such individuals are called hermaphro-
dites. In higher animal forms it is more conmion that one indi-
vidual produces only ova. — it is a female; others produce only
spermatozoa — they are males.
In some species, of insects especially, the female has the
power to produce eggs that can be developed without being fer-
tilized by a spermatozoon. The males in such species seem to be
superfluous; or they are rudimentary; or there are no males at
all. This latter, however, may be due to the fact that the forms
of males and females of certain species are so dissimilar in size
and shape, that the two forms have as yet not been recognized as
belonging together.
When a female produces eggs that hatch without being fer-
tilized by a male, the process of procreation is called ^'partheno-
genesis," which is a compound Greek word signifying "birth from
a virgin." This may take place in insects, but it is sometimes
said to have taken place in much higher forms, as will be men-
tioned later on^ — suffice it to saj here, that neither true liermaph-
roditism or parthenogenesis can occur in mammals or in mankind.
By referring back to page 5, the ancient views of Philo and
Plato in regard to a supposed condition of hermaphroditism in
man will be found.
Another view, however, Avas advanced later on, for Scotus
(or Erigena, IX Cent.) taught that man was originally sinless
and without sex. Only after the introduction of sin did man
lose his spiritual body and acquire his animal nature with the
differentiation of sex ; according to Scotus woman is the imperson-
ation and embodiment of man's sensuous and fallen nature, but
on the final return of divine unity (in heaven) all distinction of
58 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
sex mil disappear and the original spiritual body will be re-
gained; this is probably premised on Mark xii, 25: "For when
they shall rise from the dead, they neither marry, nor are given
in marriage * * * , " and Lnke xx, 35 : " But they which shall
be accounted worthy to obtain that world, and the resurrection
from the dead, neither marry nor are given in marriage."
Eecently some Avriters seriously proposed the theory that the
males and females of today are but the deteriorated representa-
tives of original bi-sexual human beings, and that hermaphro-
ditism is really only a reversion in type to that of the "original
perfect bisexual man." The authors of this work say that her-
maphrodites which are now always sterile, were not always so
but that there are "scientific records" that such persons have
assumed the relations of both sexes, sometimes acting as fathers
and then again as mothers.
Needless to say, the writer has never met with any "scientific
record" of this kind; a case from an old history is quoted on
p. 316 to show the credulity of the human mind. The record of
science is that hermaphrodites are never bisexually potent in the
human race.
Wliat is generally called "hermaphroditism" in humans con-
sists most commonly in an abnormally developed clitoris which
may resemble a penis in size, and may be mistaken for one, but
it never is capable of impregnating a Avoman. In ancient times
castrates were called hermaphrodites because Avhile they had the
general features of men they were used like women, for coitus
in ano, which was once an exceedingly popular form of sexual
indulgence, known as "Greek love," and Avhich is referred to in
Kom. i, 27 : " And likewise also the men, leaving the natural use
of the woman, burned in their lust one toward another ; men with
men Avorking that which is unseemly * * * . "
This is as near to a scientific record that men have acted
both as males and as females as there exists; Nero was fond of
such relationships, but it does not prove real hermaphroditism.
Julius Caesar also Avas addicted to "Greek love."
When a cluster of cells in an embryo which may develop
either into a clitoris or into a jDenis during uterine development
begins to differentiate, it either becomes a perfect clitoris, with
all the other parts also feminine, or it becomes a perfect penis,
with all the other parts also male, or it may become malformed.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 59
producmg what is miscalled hermapliroditism; but it can not
develop into two distinct forms, clitoris and penis both; only one
or the other, or imperfect. So with other parts; when they com-
mence to differentiate their destiny becomes fixed, as for instance,
they may become ovaries or testicles, but not both.
Atavism means reversal to ancestral forms; the possibilities
for atavisms were laid in very early evolutionary processes; for
instance, the possibility of having five or six fingers on a hand
dates back to the Silurian age, the age of fishes, when the fin of
a fish developed into the five-fingered arm or limb of a reptile ; or
perhaps even earlier, when the trilobite evolved a limb, as in the
pteriehthys. But the development of most joarts in man origi-
nated later. Yet his conformation was determined in evolution
in much earlier times than even the mammalian age ; but even in
those early days of fishes, reptiles, marsupials, early mammals,
etc., the differentiation of sex — either male or female hut not
both — had been fully established, and Avhen man appeared there
was no more possibility of his having been sexless or bi-sexual, than
there would be of a perfect man developing the form of a Hindu
god, with four or six perfect arms, or of a perfect woman devel-
oping into an angel with four upper extremities, two arms, and
two feathered mngs. Neither was it possible for a sexless race
to be produced from mammals in whom sex differentiation was
complete.
Only those who believe in special acts of creation can imagine
a possibility of sexless or bi-sexual human ancestors ; no scientist
can give credence to such an absurd proposition.
"WTien two-headed monstrosities, and similar foetal products
appear, they are derived from two ova Avhich become united in
utero; and moreover, monstrosities with multiple parts are usu-
ally born dead or die soon after birth. At one time such mon-
strosities were considered to be portents of evil; even Martin
Luther said of such a monstrosity occurring near where he lived,
that it ''presaged great misfortunes and trials, and might pos-
sibly mean even the approach of the Day of Judgment."
But the human mind is so constituted that many persons can
believe almost anything. Among the signs and joortents which
preceded the destruction of Jerusalem under Titus, Avere the fol-
lowing: A comet appeared nightly for a whole year (a comet is
even now regarded as a premonition of war, for a large comet
60 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
appeared just l)efore our civil war, and one also appeared abont
1910 prior to the present war; to the superstitious this is proof
enough) ; a cow was brought into the temple for sacrifice, but
gave birth to a sheep right before the altar. The clouds appeared
to resemble warring armies of soldiery. These portents were
warnings to the Jews that God was about to punish them for hav-
ing demanded the crucifixion of Jesus.
The belief that mankind was originally either sexless, or en-
dowed Avith both sexes in the same person calls for very super-
stitious and uneducated people.
In this connection it may be of interest to state that at Spy,
Belgium, two nearly perfect skeletons were found, one, of a male,
the other of a female, as well differentiated as the two sexes are
today; they belonged to the Neanderthal type of mankind (see
p. 325) and this type existed in Europe from 50,000 to 200,000
years ago. The differentiation of sex took place, in fact, in the
algae, the lowest type of plants, probably before any kind of
animal life existed.
What Determines Sex?
Many theories have been proposed to explain the determina-
tion of sex. I will refer only to the most plausible theory, and the
one now most commonly accepted by scientists.
The human body requires a greater time to reach maturity
than any other organism. During the growth of the body the
bones and their epiphyses are separate, and they do not become
solidly united until about the age of 22 or 23 years.
Here are two x-ray pictures, one of the hand of a young girl
in which the bones in the fingers are not yet united (Fig. 22) but
the epiphyses are still separate.
In Fig. 23 is shown the sciagraph, or x-ray photograph, of
a woman's hand, showing the location of the point of a needle
broken off in her thumb, but introduced here to show that the
bones of the hand and their epiphyses are united, or form one
bone; the growth of the individual is therefore completed.
One theory is that a woman Avho is married before she is
fully perfected, needs nourishing material for herself and has not
so much to spare for a child she may carry in her womb, and that
this lack of sufficient nourishment for tlie child will prevent the
fullest development of the latter and it will be born a boy; while
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
61
a woman fully formed or matured will have more surplus food
and lier child is apt to be a girl.
This accounts for the fact that the first child of a young
Y/oman is quite commonly a bo}^, while later children, when the
mother is more mature, are girls.
Incidentally, the too early consolidation of the bones of the
skull in the negroes is supposed to be the cause of the retardation
of the brains in this race, and the cause of the inferiority which
has made this race the servants and slaves of all other races, as
sho^\ai by the history of mankind from the earliest times to now.
Fig. 22. — X-ray photograph of the hand Fig. 23. — X-ray photogravph of the hand
of a girl; not yet fully matured.
of a matured woman; see broken end of
needle in thumb.
The Determination of Sex Depends on Nourishment
Up to a certain and often quite advanced period of devel-
opment of the embryo, sex is undetermined, and the individual
may become either a male or a female. In toads, for example,
sex is for a long time undetermined, the development of the sex-
ual organs being retarded until a quite late period ; circumstances
may occur, therefore, quite late, to determine whether the young
toad mil become a male or female, each one having traces of
both sex-organs in early youth. When tadpoles are left to them-
selves, females preponderate in the proportion of about 57 in 100.
I quote only one experiment, made by Yung:* Yung took a
•Sometimes this name is spelled Young, and sometimes Yung; the latter is probably correct.
62 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
brood of tadpoles and divided it into two equal parts; the first
set, left to itself, produced 56% females, while by feeding the
other set on the especially nourishing flesh of frogs the propor-
tion of females rose to 92%. The high feeding increased the an-
abolic tendency sufficiently to produce 92 females to only 8 males.
''A robust woman under favorable conditions is apt to give
birth to a girl, Avliile under unfavorable conditions a boy will
probably be born. The general conclusion, more or less clearly
grasped by numerous investigators, is, that favorable nutritive
conditions tend to produce females, and unfavorable conditions
males."
Probably the majority of parents are proud when the mid-
wife or doctor announces "it's a boy!" And the hope that it
will be a boy is ever present in the heart of the prospective mother.
If it Avere possible to control the sex of the child in the womb,
possibly Avomen would be far scarcer than they are now; but,
fortunately, so far, efforts to control the determination of sex
have proved futile.
As long ago as 1672 a French physician collected 262 theories
bearing on the determination of sex,* all of which he considered
useless ; and he added another theory, Avhich time and experience
demonstrated to be equally wrong.
Cudworth, an English writer, considers the fact that males
and females are produced in about equal ratio, as a powerful ar-
gmnent in favor of a teleological plan in the universe. He con-
tends that no accidental combination of elements could be suffi-
cient cause to produce that balance of male and female individuals
on which the preservation of the species depends.
It is a curious fact that among organisms of the most widely
different kinds, the males and females are produced in nearly
equal numbers, with a slight preponderance of males. Among
humans there are born about 1050 males to 1000 females ; but boys
are slightly larger, therefore sul)ject to more chances of injury
during childbirth; they are biologically a little less fitted to live,
therefore the mortality in the first year or two after birth is
greater among boys than among girls; and in a few years the
equality in numbers is practically restored. The less vitality of
boys is also shown by a large preponderance of still births among
boys over those among girls.
*According to Dr. E. Apert.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 63
And what is still more ciirioiis, Ave find the same ratio of the
sexes among our domestic animals : Cattle, males 1046 to 1000
females; horses, 1010 males to 1000 females; ducks, 1050 males
to 1000 females; etc.
The latest theory to account for this, is that in the final di-
\Tsion of the nuclei in forming two spermatozoa, one half of each
cell becomes a male-i)roducing spermatozoon, the other half a
female-producing spermatozoon; that is, these Iavo spermatozoa
differ in their nuclear and chromosome constituents, so that one
in union Avith an ovum Avill produce a male embryo, while the other
would produce a female embryo.
These two kinds of spermatozoa necessarily are produced in
absolutely equal numbers ; the chances therefore are even as far
as the spermatozoa for an impregnation are concerned, as to the
number of the resultant sexes.
"In the production of male sexual elements the nucleus of
the spermatocyte divides \\]) asA^mnetrically. Half the sperma-
tozoa have a nucleus identical in structure with that of the o\Tile
in respect to the number of chromosomes. The ovules fertilized
by these spermatozoa Avill consequently have a symmetrical nu-
cleus since it is built uj) of two equivalent parts and these develop
a female embryo. The remaining spermatozoa have a nucleus dif-
fering in structure from that of the ovnle and the o\Tiles fertilized
by these spermatozoa are asAaiunetrical and develop male em-
bryos." (E. Apert, M.D.)
The chances for any conception to produce a boy or a girl
are equal as far as the mnnbers of male-producing and female-
producing spermatozoa are concerned; but there is an excess of
boys. This may possibly be accounted for by a greater activity
of the male-2Droducing spermatozoa ; it is possible that they share
the general sex-bias of activity and ascend quicker and in greater
numbers, so as to make the chances incline slightly in favor of
male births.
But if this theory is true, all attempts to control the pre-
determination of sex must fail, because we can not control Avhether
a male-producing or a female-producing spermatozoon will Avin
the race to the OA^nn in the Fallopian tubes.
In Korea there are sacred edifices Avhere a large stone is
mounted on a piA^ot so that it can be turned like a turnstile; if a
pregnant Avoman desires the child to be a boy, she turns this
64 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
stone around once; more frequent turning invokes blessing on
children she already has. This method of predetermining the sex
of the offspring is probalily just as effective as any of the 262
methods referred to above.
The inferiority of the male is strikingly shoAvn in the bees ; a
queen bee is fertilized by a male during the nuptial flight known
as "swarming," A^^ien she returns to the hive, the balance of
her life is practically devoted to laying eggs Avliich are cared for
by the workers. The queen controls the fertilization of her eggs ;
she can lay either unfertilized or fertilized eggs. The unferti-
lized eggs develop into males or drones ; the fertilized eggs develop
into imperfect females or workers ; by special attention and food,
a worker larva can be developed into a perfect female, or queen,
in case the queen dies, or a new swarm is to be provided for. In
other words, a drone, or male, can be produced by the imperfect
method of reproduction, called parthenogenesis, while the produc-
tion of females requires the more perfect method of the coopera-
tion of both sex elements. The Philloxera, a grapevine pest, lays
small eggs parthenogenetically, which yield males and wingless fe-
males; also, large eggs, which are fertilized and yield winged or
perfect females.
The excess of assimilation over waste in the female sex which
shows itself in some of the lower animals by the greater size and
vitality of the females and by their greater development, mani-
fests itself in the human female, Avhen she is not pregnant, by the
peculiar periodical flow of the menstrual discharge, which accom-
panies the monthly production of an ovum ; and still more mark-
edly by the supply of nourishment to the embryo during gestation,
and to the child after birth by lactation.
Popular opinion, from primitive times to our o-v\ti times, con-
sidered the male to be the superior animal, because he has the
stronger bones and muscles, and because a nation is stronger in
proportion to the number of its warriors and workers, yet Science
has demonstrated that biologically the woman is the higher man-
ifestation of life.
A man has more powerful and intense sexual appetite than
a woman. His love is sensual, ph^^sical, lustful and desirous and
is aroused by the physical attractiveness, or beauty, of the woman ;
he therefore is attracted by every pretty woman, and his love is
inconstant. He loves variety; he has no periodical states of sex-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
65
ual activity Avitli intoi'venin^ periods of inactivity or apatliy, and
lie is always ready, and generally also always willing to indulge
in sexual union if he can do so without social risks. Historv, reli-
gion, and the nature of the man show that he was made for polyg-
amous sexual relationships; monogamy is an artificial and more
or less unnatural condition and a really monogamous man is the
exception and not the rule. The man is sexually aggressive and
his intense sexual desires perpetuate the vices.
On the other hand, a well-bred woman does not seek carnal
gratification and she is usually apathetic to sexual pleasures. Her
Fig. 24 — "Faun and Nymph," from Fig. 25. — "Joseph and Potiphar's Wife,"
a painting by Cabanel. from an engraving.
love is psychical or spiritual, rather than carnal, and her passive-
ness in regard to coition often amounts to disgust for it; lust is
seldom an element in a woman's character, and she is the pre-
server of chastity and morality. So rare is it that this sex-bias is
reversed and that a Avoman solicits and a man refuses (except, of
course, among women Avho ply sexual indulgence as a trade or
vocation) that one example of it Avas deemed worthy of record,
and the story of Joseph and Potiphar's wife is preserved in holy
writ for all time in memory of such a curious reversal of the usual
GO SEX AND SEX WOPvSHIP
conditions prevailing in regard to the relationsliip of the sexes to
each other.
But the Bible version of Joseph and Potiphar's wife is not
the only one, and perhaps it is not a 'true and correct one. In the
Koran is another version, which is different, judging from this,
that Firclonsi, a Persian poet, Avrote a poem of 9000 couplets,
about the loves of Joseph and Potiphar's wife, on a theme taken
from the Koran; 9000 couplets seem to imply some love-making.
If Avomen were as salacious as men, morality, chastity and
virtue Avould not exist and the world would be but one vast brothel.
''There is nothing in the human economy of which men and
women should know more and of which they know less than of
the sexual relationship. Ignorance is not bliss ; it is the source of
unhappiness, suffering, crime, vice and sorrow without end."
The light of knowledge illuminating this subject would ele-
vate the present sensual and impure conceptions of the relation-
ship of the sexes into an appreciation of the real godlike holiness
and purity of married companionship, and it would go far toward
checking immorality and prostitution.
Add to the natural inclination of the man the teachings of re-
ligion that the Avoman is the inferior being, that she was made for
the benefit or enjoyment of the man, and that, as St. Paul says,
the '' natural use" of the woman is coition (Rom. i, 27), and we
can readily account for the ages-old injustice that has been done
to woman by man-made laws.
The Status of Woman
Nearly all religions and almost all people, ancient and mod-
ern, have considered woman to be inferior to man ; few authorities
have maintained any equality of the sexes, and still fewer have
claimed any superiority for the female sex. This latter was re-
served for modern biologists. The weight of authority has always
been in favor of a doctrine of the superiority of the male; and
in regard to the human female some religions, like some sects of
Mohammedans, even maintain that women have no souls ; the
Mohammedans say of women that they ai"e "long-haired and
short-brained."
Philosophers have contended that woman is but an undevel-
oped man; hence it was but natural that she was early reduced to
SEX AXI) SKX W'OltSlllI" G7
the position of a dopoiideiit — a slave. Plato, for iiistance, con-
sidered the wife io Ix' iiictcly a yinrt and pared of tlie hnshand's
estate; to he, in the snmc sense as was his horse oi- doa,' or slave,
his property.
As Shakespeare said in ''Taniinu' of the Shrew:"
"I will he master of what is mine own;
She is my goods, my chattels; she is my house,
My honsehold stuff, my field, my harn,
My horse, my ox, my ass, my anything;
And here she stands, touch her whoever dare."
Darwin's theory of evolution hy sexual seh^ction pi'esupposes
a superiority of the male line, inherent in that sex; Spencei-
thought that in woman further development is early arrested hy
her procreating functions, hy menstruation, or in a more marked
manner, hy pregnancy. Darwin's man is, as it were, an evolved,
or developed woman, while Spencer's woman is an undeveloped
man, arrested in her development before she had arrived at full
evolution.
Tiedman regarded every embryo as naturally male, but fre-
quently some of them failed of full development and became fe-
males; or as he expressed it, "degenerating to the female state."
Starkweather Avas one of the first to recognize the atrocious
unfairness of such views, and he declared that "neither sex is
physically the superior, but both are essentially equal in a physio-
logical sense."
Up to the middle of the nineteenth century women were prac-
tically held in a sort of subjection or slavery to the men. They
were not permitted to engage in the ordinary avocations, or wage-
earning professions; the refined and educated women might per-
haps become teachers and the uneducated could be household
drudges or servants ("slaveys," as they are still called in Eng-
land) ; but beyond this few Avomen ventured, for women writers
of fiction or poetry were comparatively rare. And with rare
exceptions, women were not paid the same wages as men, even
when they did the same work. In Babylon of old, as the recent
discover}^ of tablets of cuneiform inscriptions from Ashurban-
ipal's library proves, women Avere regarded higlier than CA^en
amongst us, and Avere paid the same price Avhen they took a man's
place and did a man's Avork.
68 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
The married Avomen had no civil rights except through their
husbands; they coukl not hold property in their own names and
both they and their children belonged to their husbands.
Even our Dictionary definitions imply this inferiority of
women: ''Unmanly, = effeminate or childish," certainly implies
such a comparison.
We are not surprised at such conditions among savages; for
instance, in Dahomey about one-fourth of the women are said to
be married to the fetish, that is, they are slaves of the state and
serve in the army which j)artly consists of amazons. All the
other women are property of the King, who disposes of them as
he wishes. He keeps for himself whatever women please him.
He can put in the army whomever he wishes, and he supplies his
chief men liberally with wives. Of female captives in war the
physically fittest are drafted into the army, and the remainder
become camp followers, for the use of the men warriors, or they
become slaves.
In Ashantee the king is said to have 3333 wives; this means
that he has an unlimited number of Avomen to please his desires.
Such a savage conception of woman's status persisted even
in highly civilized lands. Thus, in France, up to only about 130
years ago, every woman belonged legally to the King; the profli-
gate King Louis XV did not hesitate to commandeer any lady of
his court for whom he felt a desire. History tells us that he had
good preceptors, but that by temperament he was altogether bad ;
his religion was merely superstition and fear, not real religious
feeling; he was cynical and coldly selfish, allowing nothing to
interfere with his desires for any pleasure, and he mixed piety
and debauchery in a gross and abominable manner. He was de-
vout in confession, and took the absolution by his sycophant con-
fessors to absolve him from sin and to permit him to continue
his immoralities.
It is related that once he conmiandeered a noble lady of his
court as a companion for his desires. She apprised her husband
of the command Avhich they dared not ignore; so the husband set
about deliberately to contract syphilis, which he imparted to his
Avife, and she to the king, who died miserably from the malady.
According to the law up to the time of the French Revolution
tlic king of France had the right to sleep with any maiden on the
first night after her marriage; this was the notorius ''jus primae
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 69
noctis" whieli was one of the important causes of tlie French
Revolution. Of course, the king could not possihly exert this
right with every maiden, so he sublet for a consideration this
right to some one for a province; this one sublet the right again,
and so on, until the last purchaser, the seigneur of a castle per-
haps, possessed this right over all the girls in his district. "When
a man wanted to marry, he could purchase this right to the par-
ticular girl Avhom he intended to marry, foi- a sum of money from
the seigneur, who charged ''all the traffic would bear," unless he
knew the lass and coveted the privilege himself, in which case
there was no method of eluding his claims.
The theory that everything belonged to the king was general
in feudal times in Europe; the English expressions of the "king's
army" or the "king's navy" is a survival of those days.
The Old Testament shows this inferiority of women in many
passages, but here we will only insert one instance : Lev. xii, 2-5 :
' ' Speak unto the children of Israel; saying. If a woman have con-
ceived seed and borne a man-child : then she shall be unclean seven
days; * * * ^j^^j {^i the eighth day the flesh of his foreskin
shall be circumcised. And she shall then continue in the blood
of her purifying three and thirty days : she shall touch no hallowed
thing * * * But if she bear a maid-child, then she shall be
unclean two weeks * * * aiid she shall continue in the blood
of her jDurifj^ing three-score and six days."
In other words, the Biblical theory was that giving birth to
a girl makes the mother twice as unclean as giving birth to a boy,
and her penance is twice as great.
It is asserted by the natives of Africa that instances have
been known that a gorilla has carried off a human female and
kept her as a mate.
The low estimation in which woman is held by many men,
even at the present time and in civilized lands, is a survival from
the times when women were slaves.
This statue of the "Gorilla" by Fremiet (Fig. 26) allego-
rizes the degraded status of women under such systems and ideas
of marriage and motherhood.
This group of the "Captive Mother," by Sinding (Fig. 27), is
a symbolization of woman — "the nourisher of the race, bound
and hampered in her noblest work by many limitations. She is
the victim of oppression; she is denied the freedom of develop-
70
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
ment by ties which bind her to false ideas of sex ethics, which
deny her the social and political equality with her brother to which
she is entitled. She is held responsible for the education of her
children, which the laws of many states and countries declare be-
long to the husband and not to her.
"A fi-anker recognition of the essential purity of sex will en-
noble motherhood and free womanhood from the tragedy which
now surrounds her. ' '
St. Augustine raised the question whether Eve derived her
Fig. 26— ."The Gorilla," Lv Fieiiiiet.
soul from Adam or whether God imparted to her a soul of her
own by blowing his breath in lier nostrils. Arguments were ad-
vanced in fa vol- of both views. In some of the nations of Asia
Minor, where these arguments were known, some sects adopted
the view that Eve was made from the flesh of Adam l)ut was left
without a soul. This belief, that a woman has no soul, was even
held by some teachers in the early Christian Church, for we find
that the Provincial Council ol' Macon, as late as the sixth century,
seriouslv del)ated "Avhether woman lias a soul or not; and as re-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
1
cently as 1895 a minister in an Eastern city preached that the
Bible teaclies that woman lias no sonl !
The early church-fathers taught that woman was a tempta-
tion and a snare; that her mind was evil and her body unholy and
impure, and that desire for her Avas a sin. St. Paul said: "It is
good for a man not to touch a woman;" "the head of the woman
is the man" * * * "for the man is not of the woman but
the Avoman of the man * * * neither was the man created for
the woman but the woman for the man. Wives, submit yourselves
unto your own husbands as unto the Lord * * * for the hus-
band is the head of the wife * * * therefore as the church is
subject unto Christ, so let the Avives be to their husbands in every-
thing, * * * let the wife see that she reverence her husband."
Fig. 27. — "The Captive Mother," by Sinding. A repliea of this is in the St. Louis Art
Museum.
Girls and women have ahvays been considered subject to the
desires of men, and even St. Paul speaks of the "natural use"
of Avoman as being coition. Canonical laAv says: "Only man Avas
created in the image of God, not Avoman ! therefore Avoman should
serve him and be his maid." The inferior position into Avliich
laAA^, custom and religion thus placed Avoman is allegorically rep-
resented in the statue of the "Gorilla" (Fig. 26).
The same belief, that Avoman has no soul, is held hy some of
the Mohammedan sects ; this led to a belief that no particular sin
Avas committed by killing a Avoman, and led to the practice that
if a Avife, concubine or slaAc displeased her master, there Avas no
72 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
stronger consideration tlian lier money value to deter liim from
disposing of her, which was usnally done by tying her up in a
sack with some rocks or otlier weiglit, and dropping her into the
Bosphorus. This couki be done without incurring any charge of
murder as the master held the "power" of life and death and
events that happened in the harem did not reach the public.
Among the Chinese, also, such a belief prevails, and therefore
the Chinese have no more hesitation about killing an unwelcome
female infant than we would have about destro^^ng superfluous
kittens or puppies. The destruction of girl babies is rather an
abandonment by leaving the newly-born infants on lots, similar
to the ''dying fields,"* where anyone who wants a girl baby is
welcome to take what he wants; those that are not rescued in this
manner soon die, except in the cities Avhere foreign missionaries
gather them up and rear them in orphan asylums. About a quar-
ter of a century ago there appeared in a missionary report the
statement that during a great famine, gro-v^ai girls were sold to
the butchers for about $3 each, to be slaughtered and cut up for
food; to sell girls to become slaves is probably an everyda}^ hap-
pening in China.
Infanticide is common among the Asiatics. In ancient times,
even in Europe, a newborn babe was shown to the father, who
decided whether it was to be raised or killed. Especially were
girls thus killed, because they were as expensive and troublesome
to raise as boys, and when they were old enough to repay for this
trouble by labor, this labor went to a stranger, the husband.
Hence arose a custom of demanding a remuneration from the hus-
band as is still done in many African and Asiatic tribes ; but such
a gift to the father made the freeborn girl a slave of the hus-
band, to do with as he pleased.
In exogamic tribes (tribes that are not permitted to marry
within their o^\m tribe, but must get wives elsewhere) infanticide
of girls is due to another cause, the fear of attack by neighboring
tribes who want to steal their daughters for wives; they kill the
daughters in infancy, to have no marriageable young women to
tempt the cupidity of their neighbors.
Still another reason produced the general practice of infanti-
cide in nearly all Polynesian (Pacific) islands; the danger of
*In China fields are set aside to which people may resort, to die without being interfered
with. Most of those who go there to die, take a large dose of opium.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 73
famines occurring from overpopnlation. The surest way to keep
down tlie population was to kill the girl babies, and in many of
the islands the proportion of girls which might be raised was
strictly controlled by tribal laws. Of course, in the Christianized
islands infanticide is no longer practiced, nor are famines apt to
occur on account of better methods of sending food in case of
need.
The Bashgalis (a tribe in Afghanistan) freely sell their fe-
male children to the Mohanunedans ; and they pay to the King of
Chitral an annual tribute in children (of both sexes) wdiom he
disposes of as slaves, as a method of raising a revenue for himself.
In all times there have been efforts to establish socialistic
communities. We have already mentioned that Plato considered
the wife to be merely a part of the property or estate of the hus-
band ; he was an advocate of conununity of property, and this led
him also to advocate conununity of mves. In his works he speaks
of the '^possession and use of women and children," and he con-
sidered monogamy to be a reprehensible claim to the exclusive
possession on the part of one man to a piece of property (a
woman) which ought to be for the benefit and enjoyment of the
community.
Kepeatedly communistic societies have been wrecked by at-
tacking marriage and advocating promiscuous intercourse be-
tween the sexes ; the underlying principle being that the Avomen
were property which belonged to the Avliole community and Avhich
it Avas Avrong to appropriate for the exclusiA^e use of one member
of the community.
The claim of Petruchio : ' ' She is my goods, my chattels ' ' —
would not be alloAved in a socialistic community. As an example,
let us take the "Perfectionists," a communistic sect of Oneida,
N. Y. ; they have put in practice a community of Avives, claiming
that there is no intrinsic difference betAveen property in persons
and property in things, and that the same principles or ideas that
abolish exclusiveness in regard to money, necessarily also abol-
ish exclusiA-eness in regard to Avomen and children.
On the other hand, "the Economists" and the "Shakers" are
celibate societies, getting ncAV members from outsiders or con-
verts. The "Separatists" faA^or celibacy, although they do not
enforce it, but in their religious declarations they express the be-
74 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
lief that celil^acy is more in accord Avitli the Divine will than mar-
riage.
This inferiority of women still continnes in most countries,
and in most states of our own country. Modern laws are based
largely on the Koman laws, and in ancient Rome the father (the
male) held the power of life and death of his slaves, his wife, his
concubines, and his children ; the. wife was the property of the
husband, and the law held that she was acquired solely and exclu-
sively for the benefit and pleasure of the husband, just as were
his slaves.
Even when the civil Roman laws were supplanted by the
ecclesiastical laws, the woman's status was not much bettered.
The Canon law was averse to the independence of the woman, and
held her in the same subjection as before ; it especially taught that
the wife was to l)e in subjection to the husband, and that she
was to be obedient to him in all things.
The Napoleonic Code declared that the woman was the prop-
erty of the husband. Women, collectively, were the property of
the state.
Such laws in their origin were leased on the Asiatic idea that
all women were the property of the head of the household; they
could be disposed of, sold, transferred or conveyed to others as
wives or slaves at the will of the men; it possibly dated back to
the troglodite age, when marriage by capture prevailed, and all
women were slaves.
In India the sul)ordination of the wife is al)jeet. The Hindu
religion prescribes the humble subjection of the wife to the hus-
band; it commands her to honor and obey him, even when he is
old or ugly, crippled or diseased, irascible or brutal, cruel and
fiendish, a drunkard or a criminal, and to worship him as if he
were a god.
In the Mosaic law tlie woman's status was not much im-
proved ; a husband could divorce a wife at will, but the wife could
not divorce a husband. Let us consider a fcAv laws of Moses re-
garding woman. Deut. xx, 13, 14: — "And when the Lord thy God
hath delivered it (the city) into thy hands thou shall smite every
male thereof witli the edge of the sword : but the women and the
little ones, and the cattle, and all that is in the city, even all tlie
spoil thereof shall thou take unto thyself * * * "
Deut. xxi, 10: "When thou goest forth to war against thine
SEX AND SEX WOllSlili' 75
enemies and thou liast taken them captive, and seest among the
captives a beautiful woman and hast a desire unto her, tliat tliou
wouldst have her to wife * * * thou shalt go in unto her and
be lier Imsband, and slie shall be thy wife. And it shall be if
thou have no delight in her, then thou shalt let her go whither she
will : but thou shalt not sell her at all for money ; thou shalt not
make merchandise of her, because thou hast humbled her."
Deut. xxii, 22, et seq.: "If a man be found lying with a
woman married to a husband, then they shall both of them die
* * * " (Here the otfence was to the liusl)and, the owner of
the woman.) "If a damsel that is a virgin be betrothed unto a
husband, and a man find her in the city and lie with her ; then ye
shall bring them both out unto the gate of the city and ye shall
stone them with stones that they die ; the damsel, because she cried
not, being in the city. * * * But if a man find a betrothed dam-
sel in the field, and the man force her, and lie with her, then the
man only that lay with her shall die. But unto the damsel thou
shalt do nothing; there is in the damsel no sin worthy of death;
for as when a man riseth against his neighbor and slayeth him
even so is this matter. For he found her in the field, and tlie be-
trothed damsel cried, and there was none to save her. (Here the
offence is not against the maiden, but against the man to Avhom
she is betrothed.) If a man find a damsel that is a virgin which
is not betrothed, and lay hold on her and lie with her, and they
be found ; then the man that lay with her shall give unto the dam-
sel 's father fifty shekels of silver, and she shall be his wife. ' '
In early England the wife often was the purchased slave of
the man. The laws of Athelbert directed that if any man ab-
ducted the wife of an English freeman, he must at his own expense
buy another wife for the husband.
The laws Avere nnich stricter for women than men. For in-
stance, if a female slave was convicted of theft she was burnt
alive, under the laws of Ethelstan.
By the laws of Canute, adultery on the part of a wife Avas
punishable by cutting off her ears and nose, l)ut adultery on the
part of the husband was an offence so trivial, that the civil laws
took no notice of it. As late as the latter half of last century
(that is, only about 50 or 60 years or less ago) the man in Eng-
land could o])tain a divoi-ce on account of adultery on the part of
the wife, but the wife could not sue foi* divorce on this ground,
76 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
but had to add other grounds — cruelty, indignities, habitual
drunkenness, abandonment, failure to provide for her and her
children, etc.
Even as late as 1885, as we are told in the British Encyclope-
dia, adultery by the husband was no crime and was ignored by the
civil law; the ecclesiastical courts made it a source of income, by
imposing a fine on the offender, up to the XVII Century, but even
this was not done later on.
Up to and in the XVII Century a married woman had no
rights in England except such as the husband voluntarily granted ;
her property and her person Avere entirely subject to his pleasure,
during his lifetime; and in some countries, at his death, the wom-
an's property, in the absence of a will, went to his relatives, and
not to her or her children.
Even until quite recent times in our OAvn country, and even
now, when an American girl marries a foreigner, if she wants to
retain her property for herself and children, she has to have it
transferred before marriage to trustees to hold for her. She her-
self, however, has the income only at the pleasure of the trustees,
but this was considered better than to give the capital outright
to a foreign titled prince who could spend it as he wished, on
other women, even refusing his wife the necessary amounts to
keep her in the style to which she was accustomed.
After the Reformation, the law in England became changed
somewhat; all marriages were solemnized by a priest, but the
woman had to be covered with a veil {"femme convert e") ; an en-
gagement to marry was almost of the binding force of a marriage,
for if the girl changed her mind and married some one else, this
subsequent marriage was legally null and void. According to
canon law (church law), the seduction of a woman by her be-
trotlied was not punishable "on account of tlie l)ctrotlial beginning
to entitle him to the control of her body."
In some states seduction of an unmarried woman under prom-
ise to marry her is a crime, but marriage subsequently is a bar
to criminal proceedings.
According to old English (King Aethelbright) laws, it was
decreed: "If a man carry off a maiden by force, let him pay 50
shillings to the owner, and afterwards buy the maiden from her
owner." If she was betrothed, lie was to pay 20 shillings to the
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 77
one to wliom she was l)otrotlio(l, and if she became pregnant, 35
sliillings, and 15 shillings to the king.
In snch laws no offence is committed against the maiden, bnt
only against her mascnline ''owner."
In Massachusetts, quite recently, if a man commits fornica-
tion with a single woman, each is to be imprisoned for three
months or to be tined $30 each. Even quite recently the theory
of the English law in cases of seduction is that the woman herself
has suffered no wrong ; the wrong has been suffered by the parent
(or the person who is legally in the place of the o^\aier or parent)
who must sue for loss of service!
As to the seduction of a married woman a claim for damages
against the co-respondent can be made.
But it is a felony to seduce a girl under 13 years old; after
that she is assumed to have given assent, and the seduction is
not a felony. We in this country have framed our laws in con-
sonance with English laws, and legal retribution for crimes
against our women have often either failed entirely or were very
inadequate. Hence we have tacitly adopted an "unwritten law,"
according to which the injured father, brother, or husband takes
the law in his oavu hands and kills the offender.
The Synod of Elvira established many regulations concern-
ing the relations of men toward w^omen.
Article LXI. ''If any one after the death of his w^ife marries
her sister, she being herself a believer, it is decreed that he should
be kept from conununion for five years, unless perchance the ex-
tremity of sickness recpiires that peace be given him sooner."
Art. LXVII. "It is forbidden that any woman of the faith
or a catechumen (one under instruction or probation) should
have hair-dressers or hair-curlers; whosoever do so, let them be
driven from the communion."
Art. LXXXI. "Concerning the letters of women. — Women
should not presume to Avrite letters to laymen in their own names
and not in the names of their husbands; nor should they receive
friendly letters from anyone addressed to their names alone."
Many efforts have been made at various times and by vari-
ous law-makers, to dictate the styles of clothing, etc., that may
or may not be used by women; usually such legislation is soon
ignored.
In Rome, for instance, a law was passed, "on woman's
78 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
dress," during tlic Pmiie war, that "no woman should possess
more than half an ounce of gold or wear a garment of various col-
ors, or ride in a carriage drawn by horses, in a city, or any town,
or any place nearer thereto than one mile; except on occasion of
some public religious solemnity."
Livy tells us that the women soon atteniptcnl to have this law
repealed; "the capitol was filled with crowds who favored or op-
posed the law; nor could the matrons be kept at home, either by
advice or shame, nor even by commands of their husbands; but
beset every street and pass in the city, beseeching the men as they
Avent doAAii to the forum, that * * * they would suffer the
women to have their former ornaments of dress restored. * * *
The women next day poured out into public in nuicli greater
numbers * * * there was then no further doubt l)ut that every
one of the tribes would vote for the repeal of the law."
This has always been the result of similar laws to control
what Avomen shall or shall not wear.
A feAv paragraphs from the Salic Law (Teutons, Anglo-
Saxons) Avill be of interest:
Title XIII. "Concerning rape committed by Freemen. 1. If
three men carry oif a freeborn girl, they shall be compelled to
pay 30 shillings. 2. If there are more than three, each one shall
pay 5 shillings. 4. But those Avho commit rape shall pay 63 shil-
lings."
Title XLIY. "Concerning marrying a AvidoAv. — If a man
Avishes to marry a Avidow he must pay 3 shillings and 1 denar
to her former husband's estate (of Avhich she is apparently part
of the property). If he marries her Avithout approA^al of the
authorities he must pay 63 shillings to the one to Avliom belongs
the reipiis (the payment of the 3 shillings and 1 denar).
The Koran contains a ' ' Chapter of "Women ; ' ' here are a f eAV
extracts :
"In the name of the merciful and comx)assionate God! 0, ye
folk! fear your Lord, Avho created you from one soul, and created
therefrom its mate, and diffused from them tAvain many men and
Avomen. And fear God, in Avhose name ye beg of one another, and
the Avombs; A^erily, God over you doth Avatcli. * * * Marr}^
Avhat seems good to you of Avomen, by twos, or threes, or fours;
and if ye fear that ye can not be ecpiitable, then only one. * * *
"Against those of your women Avho coiniiiit adultery, call
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 79
witnesses, four in iinmher from amono^ yourselves; and if these
bear witness, then keep the women in houses until death release
them * * * (Imprisonment for life). Ihit if ye wish to ex-
chan^'e one Avife for another, and linvc <>iven one of tliem a talent,
then take not from it anything"."
After enumerating- tlie forbidden degrees — "])nt lawful for
you is all besides this, for you to seek them A\ith your wealth,
marrying them and not fornieating ; Imt such of them as you have
enjoyed, give them their hire as a lawful due; for there is no
crime in you about what ye agree between you after such lawful
due, verily, God is knowing and wise. * ^ * ]\Xon stand supe-
rior to women in that God hath "preferred some of them over
others, and in that they expend of their wealth : and the virtuous
woman, devoted, careful (in their husband's) absence, as God has
cared for them. But those whose perverseness ye fear, admonish
them and remove them into bedchambers and beat them; but if
they sul)mit to you, then do not seek a way against them; verily,
God is high and great. ' '
The Koran also says that all male and female slaves taken as
plunder in war are the lawful property of their master ; that the
master hath power to take to himself any female slave either
married or single; tliat tlie position of a slave is as helpless as
that of the stone idols of Arabia ; but that tliey should be treated
witli kindness and granted their freedom when they are able to
ask for and ipay for it.
Among the lowest nations the woman is the prey of the strong-
est ; the spoil of war or ambush ; the slave of the victor or thief ;
she has no recognized riglits and is practically one of the domes-
tic animals and like tliem may be sold or killed according to the
will of the man. Under such conditions woman is a ware, an ob-
ject of barter or sale, a thing to satisfy men's lusts, and to Avork.
To what extent this inferiority of the woman exists may be seen
in the cruel l)arbarity with which she is treated as a beast of bur-
den in some parts of Africa (Fig. 28).
Slavery, and worse, has been the fate of women in later times
as well. In medieval wars girls and women Avere as much part of
the legitimate booty of Avar as A^aluables of any other kind, and
this illustrates a scene Avhere tAvo girls are part of the plunder
acquii-cd in this Avay (Fig. 29). CiA^ilized mankind flattered itself
that such things had ceased to be possible amongst themselves
80
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
until the niispeakalile Hun under the leadership of a madman,
reintroduced this medieval conception and enforced the slavery
of Belgian girls and women as the legitimate prey of the bar-
barian Huns of modern days.
In the records of Babylon, recently uncovered, was found a
l)oast by Ashur-natsir-pal, IIT, an Assyrian king :
"With battle and slaughter I attacked the city and captured
it. Three thousand of their fighting men I slew with the sword;
their spoil, their goods, their oxen and their sheep I carried away ;
many captives I burned A^4th fire.
Fig. 28. — A chain-gang of women slaves as burden canieis, a conunon scene in Portu-
guese Africa.
( i-
•1 captured many of their soldiers alive; I cut off the hands
and feet of some ; of others I cut off the noses, the ears, and. the
fingers ; I put out the eyes of many soldiers. I built up a pyramid
of the living and a pyramid of heads. On high I hung up their
heads on trees. * * * Their young men and their maidens I
burned with fire. ' '
Cruelties of this kind characterized mankind for ages. Im-
paling on pointed stakes, cutting out tongues, cutting off noses,
SEX AND SEX WORSniP
81
ears, lips, hands and foet, gonging out eyes, tearing off breasts
with pincers, hanging u]) naked bodies by the feet and tearing off
the flesh with sharp liooks, breaking on the wheel, etc., were com-
mon punishments. In 11)14 a.d. the French King Philii) ordered
some offenders to be executed by flaying alive, dragging over a
new-mown Avheat field, next, cutting off the privates and then
quartering them.
We read in II Kings, viii, 12: ''And Hazael said, AVhy weep-
eth my lord? And he (Elislia) answered. Because I know the
evil that thou wilt do unto the children of Israel; their strong
holds wilt thou set on fire, and their young men wilt thou slay
Fig-. 29. — "The Captain's Share," from painting by E. de Beaumont.
with the sword, and wilt dash their children, and rip up their
women with child."
II Kings, XV, 16: "Then Menahem smote Tiphsah * * *
and all the women therein that were W'ith child he ripped up."
Hosea, xiii, 16: ''Samaria shall become desolate; * * *
their infants shall be dashed to pieces, and their women with child
shall be ripped up."
Amos i, 13: "Thus saith the Lord; for three transgressions
of the children of Ammon, and for four, I w^ill not turn away the
punishment thereof : because they have ripped up the women wdth
child * * * ."
Modern Turks or Kurds have done the same to Armenian
82 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Avomen, adding- tliereto the preliminary outrage of laying bets on
the sex of the embryo while the woman had to stand by, and then
cutting the woman open and taking out the embryo to decide the
bets.
But this subjection of the woman to tlie lust and cruelty of
man was, in the plan of evolution (if there was a teleological
plan?), a mighty factor in raising humankind from savagery to
civilization, for it produced in womankind all those gentler traits,
which, cumulatively transmitted by heredity from generation to
generation, have made civilization possible. Sexual dependence
on the pleasures of the man sul)dued the animal passions in the
female and brought about that sensual apathy in woman which
is the main preserver of virtue and morality; and the fear felt by
woman for man eventually developed a dread of violence, a gen-
tleness and sympathy for the oppressed and suffering, and that
submissiveness to authority which allowed the gentler arts and
religions of civilization to develop ; it made possible the great
achievements in charity and helpfulness which finds its noblest
expression just now in the activities of the Red Cross organiza-
tion.
In some lands the husband had, and still has, the right to
Avhip his wife and children if they needed chastisement in his
judgment, and this whipping was often given for disobedience,
or because she displeased him in any way ; and quite recently de-
cisions were given in some of our own courts that this right still
existed in some parts of the United States!
In England this right was formerly restricted by certain reg-
ulations, such as that the husband must not use a stick thicker
than his thumb. But in Russia there was not, and is not now,
any such limitation, although the birch rods which are a part of
the bride's trousseau and which she dutifully presents to her hus-
band as soon as they are alone after the wedding festivities, are
the implements most commonly used.
The Lupercalia were Roman festivals which will be described
later. One feature of these festivals was, that matrons and girls
ran about naked so that they could be whipped on the bare poste-
riors with thongs of dog-skin. This was supposed to insure good
health, fecundity, and easy childbirth.
This idea is kept alive among the women of many parts of
Europe, and is pi'ol)al)ly the reason why tliey submit to whippings.
SEX AXI> SKX AVOKSIIII' 83
111 Russia, and adjacent lands, especially, the superstition has
been impressed on the minds of the girls that these whippings are
essential to theii- l)ecoming wives and ha])py, healthy mothers;
a woman wh()S(^ hus1)and does not whip lici- thinks he does not
love her.
In Poland, for the same reason, the bride is driven to the
nuptial bed with a rod of fii" l)y her matron friends.
In a work on this subject published in 1898 in Dresden, it is
stated that "domestic discipline" is considered very leniently by
the courts in all parts of Europe (in fact, "everywhere except in
America"). Formerly the right of the husband to whip his wife
was formally in the written laws, but nowadays it is only tacitly
recognized. In Germany, as late as 1898, a husband might Avhip
his wife on the bare posterior in the presence of the servants, if
the master (or husband) thought fit to chastise her. Can we
wonder much at the brutality of the German soldiery in Belgium,
France and Armenia in the present war !
In some parts of Europe both the female animals and the
women and maids of the household are whipped on their bared
genitals by the men of the household on Halloween eve; this is
supposed to insure fertility, easy delivery and healthy offspring.
While such practices are not definitely stated as permissible,
they are not recognized as legal causes of complaint against the
husband, or as causes for divorce ; they are therefore accepted by
the women as natural and matter-of-fact consecpiences of being
women and wives, and no complaints are made. By the men these
whippings are inflicted as a matter of right appertaining to their
status as men and as husbands.
But the most degrading example of this subjection of the wife
was to be seen in the use of the so-called "chastity belts" of the
middle ages — metal frames which were fastened with padlock
and key about the waist and pelvis of the wife by the husband, to
prevent her from any chance of having illicit intercourse with
some other man (Fig. 30). These belts or harnesses were in use
as late as a century or two ago, and many of them are still shown
in European museums.
It is related that during the crusades, a German emperor had
a blacksmith rivet an iron frame on his wife, the queen, to insure
her chastity until he would return from the campaign against the
Saracens.
84
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Some authors state that mothers in primitive communities
in Europe still safeguard their daughters in a similar manner.
It has also been stated that in Oriental harems when hus-
bands permit a wife or odalisque to visit a friend and they have
no eunuch slave to send with them as a guard, they fasten an
arrangement on them which consists of a belt that goes about the
waist ; to the back of this is attached an iron or leather band that
passes through a hole in a round wooden stick about four or five
inches from one end ; this end of the stick is pushed in the vagina
Fi"-. 30. — Medieval chastity Itelts.
Many of these belts can be seen in European
museums.
and the band is brought up in front, tightly drawn up and locked
to the belt so that the wood can not be removed from the vagina.
The lower end of the wood extends to the knees, so that the woman
is necessarily and uncomfortably reminded that she belongs to
her husband or master.
A similar idea, but not so brutally expressed, was the custom
of Roman unmarried women of wearing the zona or zona virg'i-
nalis, or belt or girdle worn about the loins or abdomen to indi-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 85
cate the limit to wliicli tlie alxlomen miglit expand in a vir.^in; on
the marriage day this girdle was loosened or removed by the hus-
band to indicate a permission that the abdoiiicu could now enlarge
in pregnancy. At Troezen (now the village of Damala) there was
in ancient times a temple to Venus Apaturia, at which Troezenian
maidens dedicated their girdles before their marriage-day.
Everywhere, to tliis day, orthodox marriage rituals demand
of the bride that she shall promise "to obey;" also, she is re-
minded that formerly she was a slave and to a certain extent, still
is so, by the custom of a male relative '^ giving the bride away."
The Bible abounds in declarations as to the attitude of the
man towards the woman and of the woman's duty to man, and the
place she shall hold in the family and the community. It teaches
that the woman was made for the pleasure and convenience of the
man; it broadly asserts as a fundamental principle the subjection
and inferiority of woman. It teaches that "the man is the head
of the woman," that she must learn in silence and in all subjec-
tion, and that the woman, the Avife, must submit herself to man,
the husband, "m all things/' which of course includes submission
to his sexual appetites and demands.
Let me quote a few passages from the Bible : I Cor. xi, 3 —
' ' But I would have you know that the head of every man is Christ ;
and the head of the woman is man, and the head of Christ is
God."
xi. 7, 9: "The man is the image and glory of God, but the
woman is the glor^' of man. Neither was the man created for the
woman; but the woman for the man."
I Tim. xi, 11-13: "Let the Avoman learn in silence, with all
subjection. For I suffer not a woman to teach or usurp authority
over the man, but to be in silence. For Adam was first formed,
then Eve."
Ephes. V, 22 and 24: "Wives, submit yourselves unto your
hushands as unto the Lord. Therefore, as the church is subject
unto Christ, so let the tvives be to their husbands in everything."
(Also; Col. iii, 18.)
I Peter iii, 1: "Likewise, ye wives, be in subjection to your
own husbands."
I Cor. xvi, 35: "And, if ivomen will learn anything, let them
ask their husbands at home."
86 SEX AND SEX WOESHIP
The teaching-s above quoted are the platforms of the churches
today!* They have never been recalled, and according to the teach-
ings of the churches there is no power to recall them or to abro-
gate or modify them in any way, because they are "the word of
God." They are a well-considered and logical system, taught by
the Asiatics nineteen hundred years ago, to keep their women
contented to be slaves in the harem; and tliey have been kept up
by the selfish interests of men to apply to the educated women of
today. These teachings rest directly on the Old Testament, on
the curse pronounced on woman in the writings of Moses, an Ori-
ental, about 3400 years ago: Gen. iii, 10. — "He (thy husband)
shall rule over thee."
And 3"et women are the main supporters and believers in a
system of teachings, that would keep modern civilized woman in
the same pitiful subjection that was the lot and still is the lot of
Oriental women or harem slaves today; just as it was when the
Bible was written by Asiatics several thousand years ago.
Sapere Aude! Dare to knoiv! Dare to he wise!
I believe that women have the same right to know that men
have; I have always believed so. It is largely due to the debased
position assigned to women that I have lost faith in any "in-
spired" nature of man-made Bibles, whether they l)e the sacred
writings of the Greeks or Brahmans, of Jews or Christians.
As was formerly the case with slaves — so with women ! Ig-
norance is the basis on which depends their willing acquiescence
in their subjection.
The last half century has been remarkable, not only for all
the inventions and material advancements which we enjoy, but
even more, for the Emancipation of Woman from the limitations
that have bound her during all previous ages, and the progress
that women have made in extricating themselves from the intel-
lectual slavery which had oppressed them so long.
*Vet there are signs lliat these teachings may ch;.nge. 'J'he following is from the daily
press of November 24, 1918:
"The Right Rev. Frederick W. Keating, liishop of Northhampton, luigland, and represent-
ative of English Catholics to the golden jubilee of Cardinal ("jibbons at lialtimore, arrived in St.
Louis yesterday afternoon and addressed the Catholic Women's League at the Cathedral auditorium.
"The subject of the Bishop's address was 'Reconstruction.' He said: 'The war has caused
the discovery of woman, and the discovery has given imnicn!:e joy to England, for women went
hand in hand with the soldiers in winning the war. War work has inspired English women not
to be idlers and ornaments, and English women will be intrusted with a great part of the work to
follow peace. Already the English women have a program, and it would be advisable for the
women of this league to take an interest in it. They will study social diseases, lind out the causes,
discover remedies and tactfully administer them.' "
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
87
THE TWENTIETH CENTURY PROMISES TO BE THE DAWN
OF THE AGE OF WOMAN
It is related of Pope Gregory the Great (540-604 a.d.) tliat
wlien lie was still a Benedictine monk lie saw some English slaves
of marvelons beauty exposed For sale in the Roman market. The
Roman usage was, as it is now in Oriental slave markets, to ex-
pose slaves for sale naked (Fig. 31). Gregory was so impressed
with the beauty and intelligence of these slaves that he said:
"'Non Augli, sed Angeli sunt!"
[They are not Angiians (English) but angels!] and he determin(Ml
to go to England to convert that country to Christianity. Circum-
stances prevented this, however.
Fig-. 31. — Ancient Roman slave market, from painting by Boulanger.
So, when we contemplate modern Avonien, we feel tempted to
saj^ ''Angelae* sunt!" (They are angels.)
"\A^ien St. Paul wrote that the woman should be subordinated
to the man — ''for Adam was first formed, then Eve" — he knew
nothing of the modern science of biology. The ovum was pro-
duced in early forms of life even before the sexes were differen-
tiated, and in many lower forms it can be developed into a new
being without impregnation by a male. If the production of an
o\nim constitutes the essential of femininity, as it undoiihtefJJjj
*As to the sex of angels, we will find ex[)lanation elsewhere.
88 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
does, then the female ("Eve") was formed ages before the male
C'Adam").
The male (''Adam," to use the Biblical term) was therefore
not first formed, nor was the male as important as the female.
In the process of reproduction the male's share is so fleeting and
subordinate, that if his function was strictly limited to that of
impregnating the female, one man might readily suffice for sev-
eral hundred women, even as one cochineal male insect suffices for
several hundred female insects.
From the standpoint of modern science the words of St. Paul
might well be reversed:
"For the Female (Eve, woman) is not of the Male (Adam,
man) but the male of the female. Neither was the female created
for the male, but the male for the female."
Many men dread the influence women will exert when they
have equal political rights with men. But where they have the
right to vote, no startling revolutions have occurred, but only
orderly and Avell-matured im]3rovements, so far mainly in the in-
terest of women and children, though through them in tlie inter-
est of all humanity.
And why should we fear their influence? "Women are an-
gels!" They are biologically, morally, ethically, physiologically
and probably intellectually (at all events, intuitively) higher man-
ifestations of animal life than men; and now, that woman is per-
mitted to share the same educational privileges as man, she is
rapidly furnishing proof for the claim that she is mentally
superior.
There is no gainsaying the truth of the last line in the follow-
ing quotation from Thomas Peacock's poem — The Visions of
Love:
"To chase the clouds of life's tempestuous hours,
To strew its short but wearv wav with floAv'rs,
New hopes to raise, new feelings to impart.
And pour celestial balsam on the heart;
For this to man was lovely woman giv'n
The last, best w^ork, the noblest gift of Heav'n."
The following comparisons, taken from the U. S. census of
1890, are of interest:
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 89
U. S. POPULATION, JUNE 1, 1890
Males ?.2,067,880
Females 30,554,370
INMATES OF REFORMATORIES
Males 11,535
Females 3,311
PRISONERS
Males 75,924
Females 6,405
CRIMINALS AGAINST PROPERTY
Males 36,382
Females 1,325
CRIMINALS AGAINST PERSONS
Males 16,511
Females 770
CRIMINALS AGAINST MORALS
Males 8,001
Females 2,099
FEEBLE-MINDED
Males 52,940
Females 42,631
DEAF AND DUMB
Males 22,783
Females 18,500
BLIND'
Males 27,983
Females 22,428
INSANE--^
Males 53,264
Females 52,990
SUICIDES^*
Males 70 to 85% ,
Females 15 to 30%
COLOR-BLIND t
Males i% of total
Females i/^% of total
*Most blindness is caused by neglect of cleanliness during childbirth and is not a result of
katabolic tendencies. These conditions of neglect will not depend en the sex of the expected
child, therefore blindness ought to affect the sexes about equally. Yet the katabolic tendency of
the male makes them weaker in resisting unfavorable conditions, so that blindness is more fre-
quent in males than in females.
The strictly defective conditions, feeble-minded, deaf or dumb, stutterers, etc., are dependent
on katabolic sex-tendencies, therefore the katabolic tendency in the male causes a larger number
of these defectives in that sex.
**These conditions are largely produced by economic conditions which have always affected
females vastly more unfavorably than the males. We should expect a far larger number of insane
or suicides among women and it is therefore a surprise to find that women far exceed men in keep-
ing a well-balanced mind in adversity, so that they are far less affected than men by unfavorable
conditions.
tNot from the Census, but from a special work on Color Blindness.
90 SEX AND SEX WOESHIP
Thus the l)iological superiority of the Feminine shows itself
in every comparison, and the Katabolic male tendency shows itself,
especially in regard to insanity, suicide, and crime.
"0 Woman! Fairest of Creation! Last and best
Of all God's works! Creature in whom excelled
Whatever can to sight or thought be formed
Holy, Divine, Good, Amiable and Sweet!"
(Milton.)
COSMOGONIES
The myths told al)out creation by various people sliouid not
be mistaken for religions; neither the stories fabled about their
gods. Only those gods that are worshipped are to be considered
as appertaining to religion ; not those gods about whom stories are
told, but to whom no worship is given.
Cosmogonies are accounts of the origin or creation of the
world and of the living creatures thereon, as found in the differ-
ent Bibles of mankind, or told by different people. We will first
consider the cosmogony in the first chapter of Genesis, Avhich is
generally ascribed to Moses.
We can not expect these cosmogonies to be scientifically cor-
rect, unless we assume that God himself narrated how he made
the world. Enough has been said to indicate that scientists reject
this claim, and believe tliat such accounts are subject to criticism,
like all other works that assume to present scientific facts.
Another reason why we can not positively condemn any ex-
planation of creation is, that our own views are mainly "the-
ories," or ideas in regard to certain subjects that may or may
not be true.
Some of these theories, from their very natures, are not sub-
ject to proof; the most Ave can claim for them is that they are the
most plausible theories tliat liave been proposed.
Our experience with tlie evolution of science should make us
quite modest as to any chiinis of absolute truth for any theories
we now hold; for no theory seems to be so firmly estal)lished that
there have not been, or are not now, writers who raise objections
to it.
Tlie author of Genesis is generally said to liave been Moses,
SEX AND SEX WOKSl||l> 91
who lived about 1500 n.c. Tii eoinpai'isoii with tho ag-e of mankind,
he lived in quite recent times, and the ^jliilosophei's or scientists
of his days had made g-reat headway in learning, as we know from
the history of contemporaneous philosophies of tiie Greeks, etc.
AYe are told that Moses, although a Jew, Avas hrought up by a
daughter of Pharaoh (Exodus ii, 10); he was no d(nibt educated
in all the wisdom of the ancient Egyptians, so that his account of
the creation of the world represents, to a great extent at least,
the Egyptian views on this subject in his time. The account in
Genesis has usually Ix'cn rejected totally l)y scientists; a close
examination, especially if we do not insist on a literal interpreta-
tion, or on the literalness of the ''seven days" gives us a much
higher idea of its merits.
I will quote some statements from Genesis and follow them
with some explanatory remarks.
Gen. i, 1: ''In the heginuing God created the heaven and the
earth." ^Xe may accept this as correct, if we make the meaning
of the word "God" wide enough to embrace ang agencg that
caused the production or creation of the earth. Herbert Spencer
says of this Power that it is Unknowable; if Herbert Spencer
failed to comprehend the "Great First Cause," others will be
excusable if they fail to explain it.
The name which is most frequently used for the God of the
Bible is Jehovah. Among the ancient Jews it was more nearly
Jahir or Jahue (Yahwe) or Jholi. The ancient Jews considered
the name so sacred that it was sacrilegious to pronounce it; the
injunction (Dent, xx, 7) "Thou shalt not take the name of the
Lord thy God in vain," was construed to mean, not to pronounce
the name at all, so that the readers (cantors) in the Jewish syn-
agogues always said "Adonai" when the written text was Yahwe.
The name means "he who causes to be" or "the Creator."
Latelv, Elect ricitv has lieen claimed to be the cause of Grav-
itation, of the union of "ions" and "atoms" in chemical union,
of the undulations causing the phenomena of light and heat, etc.;
some Avould explain creation as the result of electricity ; this would
make the terms "electricity" and "God" synonymous. The vast
majority of people Avill agree that "God" (whoever or whatever
he may be) created the heaven and the earth.
92 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
''There is no God, Init God, the living,
the self-sustaining."
(Koran.)
"Father of All! in ev'ry age
In ev'ry clime ador'd
By Saint, by Savage, and by Sage,
Jehovah, Jove* or Lord."
(Pope.)
Gen. i, 2: '^Aiid the earth ivas ivithout form and void." Mod-
ern scientists say that this was the condition of the earth when
it was in its nebular state — "in the heginning."
Gen. i, 2: ''''And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of
the ivaters." "Waters" possibly means "fluids," as this is
claimed by some authorities to be a more correct translation; if
so, this might be construed to refer to the earth when it had con-
densed from a nebular consistence to a liquid or molten condition,
or when it was no longer gaseous. Whatever we may understand
by the "spirit of God," when matter had been assembled, force
acted upon it, motion resulted and the earth commenced to ro-
tate. The obloid shape of our globe proves that it rotated be-
fore it became rigidly solid.
Gen. i, 3: "And God said, Let there he light, and there ivas
light." The nebular mass in which sun, earth, and all planets were
still undifferentiated glowed with a light consisting of only a few
vibrations in the blue and green parts of the spectrum, but it was
not the light of the sun. Later, when the earth had cooled so that
the gaseous form had changed to liquid, this melted material
glowed with light which had a perfect spectrum.
Gen. i, 4: "And God saw the light, that it was good." Gen.
i, 9, 10: '"''And God said, Let the waters under the heavens he
garth ered together unto one place and let the dry land appear; and
it was so." It may be, that when the melted mass which became
our globe began to cool, the scoriae or dross gathered in a single
sheet on the outside, just as the formation of crystals is apt to
proceed from the first solid particle that occurs in a solution.
The material of which these scoriae consisted ^\■('^e nnich lighter
than the metals which constitute the interior of our globe; the
*The similarity between the Jewish name for God — Jhov or Yalnvc and the word stem of the
Latin name for Jupiter — Jov — is striking, and may signify the same name.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 93
specific gravity of oiii- oartli is far greater than the specific grav-
ity of any of our surface rocks.
This sheet of floating scoriae afterwards broke apart wliere
the Atlantic Ocean now is, and the momentum from tlie revolu-
tion of the earth caused the heavier mass to gradually drift east-
ward. When the melted matters underneath cooled off sufficiently
for the glolie to become rigid, this left the continents composed
of the scoriae, elevated above the surface of the metal mass, be-
cause they were lighter. That tliey were originally one sheet of
crust or scoriae appears from the fact that the eastern edge of
the western continent fits into the western edge of the eastern
continent. Betw^een these elevated masses of scoriae were the de-
pressions in which the waters gathered when the earth had become
sufficiently cool to allow the Avaters to remain.
The earth had cooled sufficiently for the first solid land to
appear — the azoic rocks ; and the vast amount of Avater Avhich had
been in tlie atmosphere in the form of clouds was precipitated in
torrents, and gathered together in the depressions to form the
oceans.
Gen. i, 9, 10: ''And God said, Let the earth bring forth grass,
and herb yielding seed after his kind, and the tree yielding fruit
after his kind, ivhose seed is in itself, upon the earth; and it ivas
so." The main difference between plants and animals is that
plants can assimilate inorganic food, animals can not. Plants
therefore had to appear before animals could live. Moreover, the
atmosphere must at first ha\^e contained too much carbon dioxide
to alloAv respiration by animals, and carbon dioxide Avas food for
plants.
But this verse is of great importance otherwise; it does not
say that God created plants, Imt it says ''Let the earth bring
forth." This justifies the theory of eA^olution Avhich is merely an
effort to explain "hoAV the earth produced." The Avord "earth"
does not here mean soil, but the terrestrial globe; plants in the
Avater, algae, etc., grew, as well as plants on the dry land.
Gen. i, 12: ''And the earth brought forth grass, and herbs;"
and ''God sair that it ivas good.'' The growing plants absorbed
carbon dioxide and liberated the oxygen, fixing the carbon in
the tissues of the plants, Avliich became modified to coal later on.
This rendered the air fit for animal respiration. The atmosphere
must at first have been densely filled Avith Avatery vapors or clouds,
94 SEX ATiJ^D SEX WOPuSFTTP
extending himdreds or thousands of miles farther into space than
onr atmosphere extends now; the snn's rays eonld not penetrate
this atmosphere, except just enough to canse a perpetual twilight
to prevail; but it was enough light for the growth of the plants.
Gen. i, 14, 15: ''And God said, Let there he lif/hts in the firma-
ment of the heaven, to divide the day from the night; and let
them he for signs and for seasons, and for dags and gears. And
let them he for lights in the firmament of the heaven to give light
upon the earth; and it ivas so." Note that ''heaven" is used here
in the old Greek sense — not in the Cliristian theological sense.
The vapor had hy this time condensed sufficiently to allow the sun
and moon to be seen on the surface of the earth, if there had heen
eyes to see them. Therefore the ''days" mentioned in the cos-
mogony were not our ordinary solar days, Init periods of time.
The ordinary days and years and seasons, etc., were not "cre-
ated" till on the "fourth day," or fourth period, of the Genesis
account.
Gen. i, 20-22: ''And God said, Let the waters hring forth
abundantly the moving creature that hath life, and fond that may
fly ahove the earth in the open firmament of heaven. And God
created great ivhales and every living creature that moveth, luhich
the ivaters brought forth abundantly after their kind, and every
iviuged fowl after his kind; and God saiv that it ivas good. And
God blessed them, saying. Be fruitful and multiply and fill the
ivaters in the seas, and -let fowl midtiply in the earth." This
again says that the "waters brought forth," disclaiming any spe-
cial creative acts of God, and justifying the theory of evolution.
It does not conflict with the statements of the scientists that the
first animal life occurred in the waters, and it endorses the rota-
tion in which the animal organisms followed each otlier — niollusks
in the Age of Mollusks, fishes in the Devonian Age, plants in the
Carboniferous Age, and the reptiles of the Reptilian Age, includ-
ing the flying saurians, and finally the birds.
The carboniferous age had completed the purification of the
atmosphere, so that the earth was fit for the respiration of ter-
restrial life.
Gen. i, 24: "And God said, Let the earth bring forth the
living creature after his kind, cattle and creeping thing and beast
of the earth after his kind; and if icas so.'' This ushers in the
SEX AXl) SHX WOKSIIIP 95
Age of Mammals; also l)y ilio process of cvolntion, l)y moans of
''the earth brhi^-iiio- foi'tli."
Gen. i, 26-28: ''And God said. Lei us make man in our own
inHif/c, after our oii'u Hh<')i(\ss; * * * So God crcalcd uiau in
his oirn image, in fJie image of God created lie liim; male and fe-
nxdc created he tliem. And God Ijicsscd Ihcni, and God said iinto
them, Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenisJi the earth." To
whom did God speak when he said: "Let ns malve!" The Bible
does not definitely say that there is only one g'od ; Jehovah was a
tribal god, "the God of Israel," and he may have been represented
as talking to the other gods — the gods of the neighboring tribes
in the time of Moses; or he may have used the "editorial we."
Both views have been held by different commentators.
Valentinus (an Egyptian Christian, about 140 a.d.) believed
that God did not make the woi'ld himself, but merely eonnnanded
a demiurge to do this for him; this would imply that God spoke
to his demiurge, when he said "we."
Gen. i, 31: ''And God saw everything that he had made and
behold it urns very good." Omitting all references to supernat-
ural agencies and to the mystical number 6 Mdiich is so prominent
a part of this ancient account of the genesis of our earth and of
the life upon it, we see that it is a fairly correct account of what
we moderns consider the process to have been, and it impresses us
with the superiority of Moses' account of the Creation of the
World over all other accounts, some of which are more or less
silly and even grotesque accounts given by the Avriters of other
nations, a few of Avhich accounts we will consider further on.
But it is not certain that Moses composed any of the books
generally knoA\ni as the "Five Books of Moses" or the "Penta-
teuch;" in fact, it is conceded by nearly all critical commentators
that he did not ivrite any of the liooks, or even compose them in
their present shape, to be handed down orally as the law. AVhile
it is a Jemsh tradition that he was the author of these books,
there is no proof for such a statement.
Suppose then that we accept the dictum of qualified judges,
that Ezra, the Prophet, first gathered the oral or legendary his-
tory' of the Jews, sometime after the Babylonian captivity, and
reduced the traditions or folklore to written "books" Avhich were
*The Babylonian captivity occurred from 597 to 538 B.C. Kzra wrote about -i45 B.C., or about
1050 years after the time of Moses.
96 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
ascribed to Moses ; it is highly probable that Ezra not only gath-
ered them, hut hr ought them up to date, in which latter case he
may have modified the record to include the advancements in
learning that had been made by Chaldean, Assyrian and Babylo-
nian scholars.
At all events, if we omit the references to the supernatural,
and to the "days," the account is not a poor or irrational state-
ment of the genesis of the earth as it is conceived by modern sci-
ence. We must bear in mind that our o^x\\ "scientific" accounts
of these occurrences are merely plausible theories, for we have
no definite or absolute knowledge of how the earth was created.
Even if Moses is the author of Genesis, he Avas not present at the
creation, and therefore had no better personal knowledge than
we have of "the beginning," and scientific men reject the idea of
any supernatural "inspiration."
Moses lived about 1500 b.c. ; the account in Genesis which is
generally ascribed to him was orally transmitted for more than
a thousand years, to about 450 b.c, when it was reduced to Avrit-
ing by Ezra, a Babylonian prophet, who was no doubt well versed
in the learning of the Assyrians and Babylonians some of whose
writings have been recently found to contain the story of the flood,
the legend of Sargon, which was a story similar to that of Moses,
etc., which stories were ages older than the stories told by the
Jews, and which antedated Moses by more than two thousand
years.
From The Legend of Sargon
(Babylonian, 3800 b.c.)
"Sargon, the mighty king, the king of Agade, am I.
My mother was a princess, my father I know not.
My mother, the princess, conceived me ; in a secret place she
gave me birth.
She placed me in a basket of reeds, and closed the lid with pitch,
She cast me in the river which overw^ielmed me not.
The river bore me along. To Akki, the irrigator, it ])rought me.
Akki, the irrigator, reared me to boyhood as his own son.
Akki, the irrigator, made me his gardener.
And in my gardenership the Goddess Islitar loved me,
( ) four years I ruled the kingdom."
SEX AND SEX WOESTIIP 97
THE "DAYS" OF GENESIS
Orthodox believers claim that the week is founded on the
story that God created heaven and eai'th in six days and rested
on tlie seventh day. Such is not "c^ facf" liowevcr, Ix'cause the
week, as Ave have it now, is ag'es older than the account of Crea-
tion in Genesis.
Several nations not directh' related to the ancient Israelites
had similar views in regard to Creation.
The Koran says in Chapter L : "AYe did create the heaven and
the earth and what is between the two in six* days, and no weari-
ness touched us."
This almost sounds as if Mohammed either wrote this to
show that Allah is greater than Jehovah and did not need a ''day
of rest, ' ' or that he wrote it simply in accord with the idea of the
''perfection" of the number six in his mind. It is generally con-
ceded that Mohammed based much of the Koran on Jewish, Chris-
tian, Gnostic, Manichaean and other religions of neighboring
people.
In Etruria (Greece), it was believed that God created the
universe in six periods of time of one thousand years each. Man
w^as created after sun, moon and the planets and plants and ani-
mals had been created.
The ancient Persians thought that Ormuzd, the God of Light,
created the world by his word or command, in six* periods of
1000 years each.
Compare with this the fourth verse of the 90th psalm: "For
a thousand years in thy sight are but as yesterday when it is past,
and as a Avatch in the night." It is but a figurative way of saying
"a very long time."
Sun-worship in some form or other was practiced by nearly
all primitive or ancient peoples, and the course of the sun in
the heavens and the succession of the seasons, were the origin of
the "year;" as the Bible expresses it (Gen. i, 14) : "Let there be
lights in the heaven, to divide the day from the night; and let
them be for signs, and for seasons, and for days and years."
There may have been other modes of counting years ; an
*For the significance of "six" see page 104.
98 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
ancient Greek writer tells us that in earlier times the years were
eight times as long as they were in his (and our) day.
There were also some authors who have claimed that a "lu-
nar year," from full moon to full moon, was at one time in use.
We learn ( Gen. v, 27 ) that ' ' all the days of Methuselah were nine
hundred and sixty-nine, raid he died." If '* lunar years" w^ere
meant, this would make about 74 solar years, which would not be
unbelievable. Possibly the suggestion of ''lunar years" was an
effort to make the genealogy of the patriarchs of old more plausi-
ble; but this theory of the years creates other difficulties, for
''Enoch lived sixty and five years, and begat Methuselah;" this,
if we figure lunar months, would make Enoch about five (solar)
years old when he begat Methuselah. On the other hand, if solar
years were meant, the patriarchs were quite old men before they
commenced to "beget," which is exceedingly unlikely to have been
the case. Probably the best solution is to consider the genealogy
as altogether imaginary and give it no further consideration.
The most noticeable division of time was the day ; among the
ancient Jew^s this was from sunset to sunset; our astronomers
figure it from noon to noon, and in ordinary life we count from
midnight to midnight.
The next most apparent division of time is based on the
phases of the moon; from new moon to new moon was a month.
These months are now called "lunar months;" they do not cor-
respond to our ordinary months, which were subdivisions of the
3^ear based on the worship of the "Twelve Great Gods," the zo-
diacal signs (Figs. 32 and 33).
In ancient India the new and full moon were religious fes-
tivals; they were approximately fourteen days apart; dividing
each period into tM^o, corresponding to the four quarters of the
moon, gave four divisions, or "weeks."
Among the ancient Semitic races, also, the new and full moons
were festivals, and even to this day, the Jews and Christians base
their Easter festival on the phases of the moon.
This week of seven days was common to practically all the
Eastern or Asiatic nations, long before there was a Jewish na-
tion, probably ages before Moses lived, and therefore a long, long
time before the Genesis account of Creation was formulated.
The old Egyptians had a week of ten days ; and it is interest-
ing to know that during the French revolution, when the Decimal
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
99
System of Weights and Measures was introduced, an effort w^as
made to introduce a decimal week.
Among many nations, especially those of nomadic habits in
which the shepherds guarded the flocks at night, the heavenly
bodies wore contemplated and studied, and astrology had its or-
igin. The "Seven Great Gods" Avere the planets, as then known,
Saturn, Jupiter, Mars, Sun, Venus, Mercury and Moon. Each
one of these deities ruled over one day of the week, and the rota-
tion in which they ruled fixed the names of the days of the week.
This made a week of seven davs which was not based on
'■'^'■'!ri-iffi, i ilirr^-—^
Fig. 32. — Zodiacal signs in bas-relief;
original in the Louvre, Paris.
Fig. 33. — ' ' Chaos. ' ' Eepresentecl as
the wrecking of the Zocliacnl constella-
tions, XVIII Century.
any motions of the heavenly bodies and this week was common to
nearly all ancient Asiatic countries, and it is the week we still
have; but the number of days for the creation has nothing to do
with this week.
The English names of the days of our present week are
from the Old Saxon names, which were as follows:
Sun's Day, or Sunday, in honor of the sun; Moon's Day, or
Monday, in honor of the moon; Tiw's Day, or Tuesday, in honor
of Tiw or Tives, an old Teutonic deity; Wodan's Day, or Wednes-
]00 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
day, in honor of the old Teuton and Norse god AVodan ; some say
this is derived from Venus' Day, but this explanation is not gen-
erally accepted; Tlior's Uaj^, or Thursday, in honor of the Norse
god Thor, the god of thunder (wherefore this day is called Don-
nerstag, or Thunder's Day, in German) ; Freya's Day (or Friga's
Day), or Friday, in honor of Freya or Friga, the Germanic vir-
gin goddess; and lastly, Saturn's Day, or Saturday, in honor of
the god Saturn.
In former days, Thursday Avas also known as Jove's Day;
Wednesday as Mercury's Day; Tuesday as Mars' Day, because
Tiw or Tives was the Teuton god of war and was considered iden-
tical with the Roman god of war, Mars.
Because the ''Seven Great Gods" were worshipped, the num-
l)er seven became a sacred number to which a great many super-
stitions became attached. Saturn (Greek, Cronus), the first of
the "Seven Great Gods," exerted many occult and sinister influ-
ences, among others, on sooth-saying or fortune-telling and witch-
craft. His bad repute was probably due to his having cut off the
sexual organs of his father Sky or Uranus. His magical influ-
ence or power as the god of the seventh day is still believed in by
many among us, as for instance in the belief in the occult poAvers
of the seventh son of a seventh son, in tlie superstitious veneration
of the seventh day, in "come seven, come eleven," etc.
Among some nations in Asia the first day of the week was
named in honor of the god Saturn, which would make the last day
of the week Friday; at that time, however, this day was sacred to
the goddess Mylitta, the Assyrian form of the goddess Venus;
this day Avas consecrated to marriages, and to festivals during
which practices were indulged in that are now considered indecent
when done in pul)lic, l)ut which at that time were done publicly in
honor of Venus (Mylitta) in lier temples.
This day therefore became accursed to the early Christians,
because the church considered the sexual rites in honor of the
goddess Venus as a gross affront to their own Virgin.
As we shall see later on, the fish has a shape wliich reminds
of the vulva or yoni, and as this Avas a symbol for A^arious god-
desses (Ashtoreth, Venus, Tsis, etc.) and prominently so for the
Assyrian goddess Mylitta, the fish l)ocanie consecrated to this
goddess and was eaten as a feast on the day of the A^irgin, call
it Mylitta Day, or Freya-Day, or Friday, as you please.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 101
The fish is still eaten, hut as a fast, on the Virgin's Day
(Freya Day or Friday) hy an overwhelming majority of Chris-
tians.
However, an entirely different explanation is also given for
the sacredness of the fish as a Christian symhol; the Greek
word Ix^v^ {Iclithijs, Fish) is found on many articles, rings, seals,
amulets, tombstones, etc., of the early Christian period, because
the letters of the word are the initials of the Greek words Jesus
Christ, Son of God, Savior.
The point of importance here, is, that the week of seven days
was used ages before Moses lived, and therefore could not have
been derived from the story in Genesis.
Nor was the seventh day a sacred or holy day because God
rested on the seventh day ; all the affairs of the people were regu-
lated by the priests, according to the days of the Aveek, among the
ancients who worshipped the deities who presided over the sev-
eral days.
In ancient Assyria and Babylonia the first day of the week
was consecrated to Saturn (the Assyrian god Baal or Bel) and
the last day of the Aveek to Mylitta, the Assyrian goddess of love,
wherefore marriages took place on this day; and as weddings
were always and everywhere accompanied by feasting and rejoic-
ing, it became the festival day, a day of rest from the ordinary
avocations or labors; it was the "seventh day." It is still the
sabbath among the Mohannnedans.
But in quite early times the numbers of the days of the week
became shifted; the Sun's day was placed first and Saturn's day
was the last, or "seventh" day, the holy day.
. From the Assyrians the Semitic people (Jews) adopted this
as their "seventh" day, or day of feasting and rest from Avork;
and the myth of its origin Avas invented by them (or Moses) to in-
crease its sacredness.
We read (Lev. xxiii, 2 and 3) * * * <^even these are my
feasts. Six days shall Avork be done ; l)ut the se\'entli day is the
sabbath of rest, a holy convocation; ye shall do no AVork therein;
it is the sabbath of the Lord in all your dwellings."
Among the ancient Jcavs it Avas obserA^ed in the sense in Avliich
it AA^as instituted, as a religious festival, a day of enjoyment, of
feasting; but Nehemiah (about 450 b.c.) made it a legal day of
rest, as may be fully appreciated by reading the thirteenth chapter
102 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
of the book of Neliemiali. He forbade the sale of wine, of grapes
and of figs, and of fish (Nehemiah, xiii, 15, 16), and other materi-
als for the festival; and he insisted on attendance in the syna-
gogues, etc. ; in other words, he was the originator of the puritan-
ical ideas that have marked all later Christian legislation on the
sabbath, for previous to Nehemiah 's time the civil authorities did
not attempt to exert their fanatical zeal to make all others comply
with their narroAv views of what the sabbath signified, or how it
should be observed. Jesus said "The sabbath was made for man,
and not man for the sabbath (Mark ii, 27)."
Arabic numeration as we have it now, Avas introduced about
715 A.D. ; it was therefore unknown to the ancients.
In early Greek times the letters of the Ionic alphabet were
used for numeration; the letters were consecutively, 1, 2, 3, etc.,
to 24, for the 24 letters of their alphabet.
Another mode was in use among the Greeks, Hebrews and
Assyrians (Sja'ians) ; they used the first nine letters for the
numbers 1 to 9 inclusive ; the rest of the letters for the tens, hun-
dreds, etc. In addition to their o^YYi letters the Greeks used three
Phoenician letters for numbering, Avhich they did not use for
writing.
In the old Semitic alphabet of 22 letters, the higher numbers
were expressed by juxtapositions; in the Roman numeration,
which we still use for certain purposes, only a few letters are used
as numbers — I, V, X, L, C, D, M, — 'the numbers being expressed
by juxtapositions.
Gemetria
Gemetria was a science of numbers that involved many mys-
tical attributes of numbers which appear ver^^ queer to us now.
The Gnostics, for instance, believed that from God emanated 365
angels, one as a guardian for each day of the year; these were
called "Abraxas" because tlie Greek letters of this word sig-
nified 365.
In the Hel)reAv Mishnali and Kabbalah and in the Christian
Apocalypse (or Revelation) we find many examples of this use
of numbers; I will quote one which refers to Antichrist: Rev.
xiii, 18: "Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding
count the number of the beast; for it is the number of a man;
and his immber is six hundred threescore and six {Q)(dQ).''^
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 103
The words Kaesar Neron (in Jewish lettei-s) figure up 666.
Therefore many authorities believed the Emperor Nero to be
Antichrist.
Some said that the word "lateinos," whose Greek letters
added up to the figures 666, was to be construed as meaning the
Pagan Roman Empire to be Antichrist. Pope Innocent III (in
1215) declared the Saracens to be Antichrist, and Pope Greg-
ory IX (in 1234) called the emperor Frederick II, Antichrist.
The churcli called all heretics Antichrist; Avhile the Waldenses,
Wicliffe, Huss, Luther and others retaliated by calling the Pope
Antichrist.
Mohammed also had an Antichrist in the Koran ; he said the
Antichrist was to l)e branded on the forehead with the letters
''C. F. Pi." At that time no vowels Avere in use in Arabia, as
already explained, therefore C. F. R. spelled ''Cafir" and was so
pronounced; this word meant ''infidel."
Gradually the meaning of gemetria was lost; Irenaeus, for
instance, one of the church-fathers (130-202 a.d.), did not under-
stand it and made several conjectures as to what it meant, in the
vision of Daniel, and in the Apocalypse, but none of his conjec-
tures were correct.
There were lucky and unlucky days and numbers; the 7th,
14th, 19th, 21st, and 28th days of the month were unlucky in an-
cient Babvlon and Assvria. The natives of Madagascar believe
in lucky and unlucky days of birth. If a child is born on an un-
lucky day, it is killed at once, rather than have it live under the
dread inspired by its unlucky birthday.
Thirteen is an unlucky number with us, because the 13 (Jesus
and his twelve disciples) sat at table together just before Jesus
was arrested, tried and crucified. Many hotels have no rooms la-
beled 13; there was no ''station 13" on the railroad in the World's
Fair Grounds in St. Louis in 1904, and an accidental company of
thirteen at a bancpiet or at table will cause consternation and un-
easiness for not a few, and that even among people whom Ave do
not ordinarily consider superstitious.
The crises in diseases were based on gemetria: "The fourth
day is the index of the seventh, the eighth of the Aveek folloAving.
But the elcA^enth day is to be considered, for it is the fourth of
another seA^'enth. And again the seA^enteenth day is to be consid-
104 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
ered, l^eiiig the fourtli from the fourteenth and the seventh from
the eleventh" (ancient medical idea).
Friday, as already explained, Avas deemed accursed by the
early Christians on account of its association with Mylitta or Ve-
nus; it was considered particularly unlucky; it was (and is) made
"hangman's day;" it is considered to be unlucky to start on a
journey or begin any undertaking on this day, and when the thir-
teenth and Friday happen to fall on the same day it is supposed
to portend particularly bad luck.
Philo Juclaeus was a Jewish philosopher who lived in Alex-
andria, Egypt, from 20 b.c. to 40 a.d. Let us consider a few para-
graphs from his writings :
''The Creatiok" of the AVoeld"
''I. Of other lawgivers, some have set forth what they con-
sider to be just and reasonable, in a naked and unadorned manner,
while others, investing their ideas Avith an al)undance of ampli-
fication, have sought to bewilder the people by burying the truth
under a heap of fabulous inventions. But Moses * * * made
the beginnings of the laws entirely beautiful * * * neither in-
venting fables himself nor adopting those which had been invented
by others * * * ^
"II. For some men, admiring the Avorld itself rather than
the Creator of the world, have represented it as existing without
any maker * * * ,
"III. And he (Moses) says that the world was made in six
days, not because the Creator stood in need of a length of time
* * * but because the things created required arrangement;
and number is akin to arrangement ; and,- of all numbers, six is
by the laws of nature, the most productive ; for of all the numbers,
from the unit upwards, it is the first perfect one, being made equal
to its parts, and being made complete by them; the number three
being half of it, and the number two a third of it, and, so to say,
it is formed so as to be both male and female, and is made up of
the power of both natures ; for in existing things the odd number
is the male, and the even number is the female; accordingly, of
odd numbers the first is the number three and of even numbers
the first is the number two, and the two numbers multiplied make
six. It was fitting, therefore, that the worl^l, being the most per-
fect of created things, should l)o made according to the perfect
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 105
iimiiboi-, namely, six : and as it was to have in it the causes of both,
which arise from combination, that it shoukl be formed according
to a mixed number, the first combination of odd and even num-
bers, since it was to eml)raco the character botli of the male who
sows the seed, and of the female who receives it. And he allotted
each of the six days to one of the portions of the whole, taking
out the first day, which he does not even call the first day, that it
may not be numbered with the others, but entitling it one, he
names it rightly, perceiving in it, and ascribing to it the nature
and appellation of the unit.
"VII. Moses says also: 'In the beginning God created the
heaven and the earth,' taking the beginning to be, not as some
men think, that which is according to time; for before the Avorld
time had no existence, but was created either simultaneously with
it, or after it * * * ; to venture to assert that time is older
than the world is absolutely inconsistent with philosophy. * * *
"XI. And after this, as the whole body of water in existence
was spread over all the earth, and had penetrated through all its
parts as if it Avere a sponge Avhich had imbibed moisture, so that
the earth Avas only SAvampy land and deep mud, both the elements
of earth and Avater being mixed up and combined together, like
one confused mass into one undistinguishable and shapeless na-
ture, God ordained that all the Avater Avhich Avas salt, and destined
to be a cause of barrenness to seeds and trees should be gathered
together, floAving forth out of all the holes of the entire earth ; and
he commanded dr}' land to appear, that liquid Avhicli had any
SAveetness in it being left in it to secure its durability. For this
SAveet liquid, in due proportions, is as a sort of glue for the dif-
ferent substances, preventing the earth from being utterly dried
up, and so becoming unproductive and barren, and causing it,
like a mother, to furnish not only one kind of nourishment, namely
meat, but both sorts at once, so as to supply its offspring Avith
liotli meat and driiik ; Avherefore he filled it Avith A^eins, resembling
breasts, Avhich being pro\dded Avitli openings, Avere destined to
pour forth springs and rivers. And in the same Avay he extended
the iuA'isible irrigations of dew pervading e\"ery portion of arable
and deep-soiled land, to contribute to the most liberal and plente-
ous supply of fruits. Having arranged these things, he gaA^e them
names, calling the dry 'land' and the Avater Avhich Avas separated
from it 'sea.' "
106 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Ezra, Avho reduced the traditions of the Mosaic account to
writing, and who lived in the lands in which the pseudo-science of
gemetria was cultivated, no doubt introduced these mystical spec-
ulations to ''improve" or "perfect" the traditions dating from
Moses, who probably did not know anything about gemetria.
That the mystic science of gemetria Avas known to the Chal-
deans, Assyrians and Babylonians in the days of Ezra, is certain,
for in the book of Daniel occur plentiful references to mystic num-
bers. Daniel was learned in all the wisdom of the Chaldeans
(Dan. i, 4) and in his interpretations of the visions of others, and
in his own visions occur such phrases as "seven times" — -"four
beasts" — "four wings" — "ancient of days" — "time, times and
a half," etc. The references to animals, etc., are very similar to
the "eagle," "the swan," "the raven," etc., of the Rosecrucians
and the alchemists of later days, who still cultivated the science
of gemetria.
Daniel wrote about 600 b.c. ; Ezra wrote about 450 b.c. ; Philo
wrote about the beginning of our era; and St. John wrote the
Apocalypse about 96 a.d., and all of these Avritings make use of
the mystic meanings of numbers according to gemetria, which was
part of the learning of the initiated.
Anyhow, Ave see that the story of Genesis has nothing to do
with our Aveek, nor the Aveek Avith Genesis, but that the story of
Genesis is based on the supposed "perfection" of the number six.
It is therefore Avasted time to bestoAV much study or attach any
importance to the "days" of Creation as related in Genesis.
And it shoAvs us hoAV deeply sex, or ideas about sex, per-
meated the thoughts of the ancients, for even the numbers Avere
male and female. And Philo 's description of the earth corre-
sponds Avith the general views held in regard to "Mother Earth."
These considerations explain many things that Ave might not
so readily appreciate if Ave did not know to Avhat extent sex Avas
the underlying principle in all ancient philosophies.
THE BIBLE OF THE GREEKS
The Avord Biblia (or Bible) means "The Books." It is there-
fore proper to speak of all sacred "books" as the Bihlia (bibles)
of the respective people among Avhom they Avere held sacred.
The sacred books of the Greeks Avere the poems of Homer
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 107
(about 1000 B.C.) and Hesiod (about 800 b.c). Like the books of
tlie JeAvish bil)le, these works were lianded down tliroiigh centu-
ries by oral transmission from generation to generation, until li-
nally tlie art of writing was acquired by tlie Greeks, Avhen these-
poems were reduced to writing.
How anthropomorphic the Greek deities Avere supposed to be
can perhaps best be shoAAai by quoting a few passages from Hesiod.
In enumerating the gods, Hesiod begins by describing the genera-
tion of gods to Avhich Zeus belonged- — only referring briefly to
Cronos as the father of Zeus.
Cronos, the oldest god, is sometimes supposed to be the same
as Chronos (Time) ; they are not the same, only the sounds being
similar Avhile the spelling is different.
Thus writes Hesiod: "Begin Ave to sing Avith the Heliconian
Muses, who * * * Avith delicate feet dance about the Adolet-
hued fount and altars of the mighty Son of Cronos (Zeus) ; and
likeAvise having bathed their soft skins * * * are Avont to in-
stitute on the top of Helicon choral dances, beautiful and lo\^ely,
and moA^e nimbly A\ith their feet * * * ^ gy jxigi^t they Avere
Avont to Avend their Avay, uttering sounds exceeding sAveet, AA^hile
they celebrate aegis-bearing Jove and majestic Juno * * *
and gleaming-eyed Athene * * * • Phoebus Apollo; Artemis,
arroAv queen; and earth-compassing, earth-shaking Poseidon;
august Themis; Aphrodite, shooting lovely glances;* and
Hebe * * * and fair Dione; Aurora and the great Sun, and
the resplendent Moon; Latona, and lapetus and Avily Cronos.
Earth, mighty Ocean, and dark Night, and the holy race of other
ever-living immortals * * * ."
''The Muses * * * whom Mnemosyne bare, after union
A\'ith their sire, the son of Cronos * * * ; for during nine nights
did the Counsellor JoA^e associate Avith her, apart from the other
immortals, ascending her holy bed * * * and many days had
been completed, then she bare nine accordant daughters Avhose
care is song * * * ."
"In truth then foremost sprang Chaos, and next broad-
bosomed Earth * * * bnt from Chaos Avere born Erebus and
l)lack Night; and from Night again sprang forth Aether and Day,
AAdiom Earth bare after haAdng conceived by union Avith Erebus
in loA^e."
*AIaking goo-goo eyes."
108
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
''And Earth bare first indeed like to herself (in size) starry
Heaven that he might shelter her around on all sides, so that she
might ever be a secaire seat for the blessed gods; * * * ij^it
afterwards, having bedded with Heaven, she (Earth) bare deep-
eddying Ocean, Caens and Crius, Hyperion and lapetus, Thea and
Rhea, Themis, Mnemosyne, and Phoebe with golden coronet, and
lovely Thetis. And after these was born, youngest, wily Cronos,
most savage of their children; and he hated his \agor-giving
sire * * * . For of as many sons as were born of Earth and
Heaven they * * * were hated by their sire from the very first ;
as soon as any of these were born, he would hide them all, and
not send them up to the light, in a cave of the earth, and Heaven
exulted over the work of mischief, while huge Earth inly groaned. ' '
Fig. 34. — "Birth of Venus," from painting by Botticelli.
So Earth conspired with her son Cronos (Saturn) to avenge
her, and furnished him with a sickle with which to castrate Heaven,
"Then came vast Heaven, bringing Night with him, and,
eager for love, brooded around Earth and lay stretched, I wot,
on all sides ; but his son from out his ambush grasped at him with
his left hand, whilst in liis right he took the huge sickle, long and
jagged-toothed and hastily mowed off the genitals of his sire, and
threw them back to be carried away beliind him. In nowise vainly
slipped they from his hand ; for as many gory drops as ran thence,
Earth received them all; and when the years rolled round she
gave birth to stern Furies and mighty Giants * * * ."
"But the genitals, as after first severing them with the steel
he had cast them into ilie heaving sea from the continent, so kept
SEX AXD SEX WORSHIP
109
drifting- a long time up and down the deep, and all round kept ris-
ing a wliite foam from tlio inmiortal flesh; and in it a maiden was
nourished; first she drew nigh divine Cythera, and thence came
next to wave-washed Cyprus. Then forth stepped an awful, beau-
teous goddess (Fig. 34) ; and bciioatli her delicate feet the verdure
throve around; her, gods and men name Aphrodite, the foam-
sprung goddess, and fair-wreathed Cytherea — the first because
she was nursed in foam, but Cytherea, because she touched at
Cythera ; and Cyprus-born because she was born in wave-dashed
Cyprus. ' '
mM
Fig. 3.3.— "Eros," by Thorwaldsen.
i i
'And her Eros (Love) accompanied (Fig. 35) and fair Desire
followed, when first she was born and came into the host of the
gods. ' '
*'Mght bare also hateful Destiny, and black Fate, and Death.
She bare Sleep, likemse, she bare the tribe of Dreams ; these did
the goddess gloomy Night bare after union Avith none."
The poems of Homer were more human and humane; they
treated the story of the gods more reverently; there were less
stories of rape, incest, murder, and of unnatural occurrences, such
as changing themselves into animals, etc.; in other words, the
110 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
gods and goddesses of Homer compared with the same deities of
Hesiod, like civilized beings compared with savages — yet the two
versions became mixed so that the public believed both kinds of
tiction side by side.
It will be noticed that Hesiod was later than Homer, and al-
though but about 200 years difference, the thoughts and ideas had
undergone marked degeneration or decadence even in that short
time.
BABYLONIAN ACCOUNT OF CREATION
(About 3800 B.C.)
''Long ago when the heaven above had not been named and
the earth beneath had no name, and only Apsu (the Ocean), the
primeval who begat them, and Tiamat, Confusion, who bore them
both, existed — their waters mingled — and when no fields were
formed, and no reeds to be seen, when not one of the gods had
been called into being and named, and no fates had been decreed,
then were created all the gods. Luchmu and Lachamu were the
first to be called into being. Ages passed, then Anshar and Kishar
were created, and long days before Anu, Bel, and Ea were
created." * * *
The God Marduk fought against Tiamat (Confusion) and de-
stroyed Tiamat.
"Then the lord quieted dowm, seeing her (Tiamat 's) corpse. * *
He tore from her like of a fish her skin in two halves.
Half of her he stood up, and made it the heavenly dome. * *
Anu, Bel (and) Ea he caused to inhabit it as their habitation.
He (Marduk) established the mansions of the great gods.
The stars, corresponding to them, he fixed, and the annual con-
stellations.*
He determined the jesiY, (its) limits he fixed, * * *
That none (of the days) might deviate nor be found lacking. *
* * *
He made the moon-god (Nannaru) brilliant, intrusted the night
to him.
He defined him as a night-body, to mark off the days (saying),
'Monthly without ceasing define (the time) witli the disc;
*This refers to the "Seven Great Gods" the planets, aiij the "Twelve Great Gods" the
zodiacal signs.
SEX AND SEX WOllSllll' Ml
In the beginning- of the niontli light np in tlie evening,
That tlie horns shine to mark the heavens.
On the seventh day make half the royal cap (i.e., show one-
half of the disc).*
On the fourteenth maj^est thon mark the half of the month.' "
BRAHMANIC IDEAS
Some of the earliest records of religion are contained in the
Vedas of the Brahman s of India. The Vedas are hymns addressed
to the personified powers of nature — the Dawn, the Sky, the
Storm-god, etc.
1. "In the Beginning there arose the Golden child; as soon as
born, he alone Avas the lord of all that is. He established
the earth and the heavens: — AVho is the God to whom we
shall offer sacrifice?
2. ''He who gives breath, he who gives strength, whose command
all the bright gods revere, whose shadow is inunortality,
whose shadow is death : — ^AVho is the God to whom we shall
offer sacrifice?
5. "He through whom the awful heaven and the earth Avere made
fast, he through whom the ether Avas established, and the
firmament; he Avho measured the air in the sky: — AVho is
the God to Avhom w^e shall offer sacrifice f * * *
7. ''When the great Avaters Avent everyAvhere, holding the germ,
and generating light, then there arose from them the breath
of the gods : — Who is the God to Avhom we shall offer sac-
rifice?
8. "He who by his might looked even over the waters which held
poAA^er (the germ) and generated the sacrifice (light), he
who alone is God above all gods : — Who is the God to Avhom
Ave shall offer sacrifice?
9. "May he not hurt us, he Avho is the begetter of the earth, or he,
the righteous, Avho begat the heaA^en ; he Avho also begat the
bright and mighty Avaters: — Who is the God to Avhom Ave
shall offer sacrifice?"
*This was the creation of the week.
112 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
To the God Rudra
{Storm-God, Lightning -God)
1. "Offer ye these songs to Rudra whose bow is strong, whose ar-
rows are swift, the self-dependent god, the unconquered
conqueror, the intelligent, whose weapons are sharp — may
he hear us !
2. ''For being the lord, he looks after what is born on earth; be-
ing the universal ruler, he looks after what is born in
heaven. Protecting us, come to our protecting doors, be
without illness among our people, 0, Eudra!" * * * *
From the "First Prapathaka"
1. "The altar is man, 0 Gautama; its fuel speech itself, the smoke
its breath, the light the tongue, the coals the eye, the sparks,
the ear.
2. "On that altar the Devas offer food. From that oblation seed
arises."
1. "The altar is woman, 0 Gautama.
2. "On that altar the Devas offer seed. From that oblation rises
the germ."
1. "For this reason is water in the fifth oblation called man.
This germ, covered in the womb, having dwelt there ten
months,* or more or less, is born.
2. "When born, he lives whatever the length of his life may be.
AVhen he has departed, his friends carry him, as appointed,
to the fire** from whence he came, from whence he sprang.
) J
i i -
BUDDHISM
Foundation of the Kingdom of Righteousness
5. "* * * Now this, 0 Bikkhus, is the noble truth concerning
suffering.
Birth is attended with pain, decay is painful, disease is pain-
ful, death is painful. Union with the unpleasant is painful,
painful is separation from the pleasant; and any craving
that is unsatisfied, that too is painful. * * *"
*Ten lunar months.
**0f the funeral pile.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 113
6. ''Now this, 0 Bikklins, is the nohle truth concerning tlie origin
of suffering.
"Verily, it is that craving, causing the renewal of existence,
accompanied l)y sensual delight, seeking satisfaction now
here, now there — that is to say, the craving for the grat-
ification of the passions. * * *
''This then, 0 Bikkhus, is the noble truth concerning the origin
of suffering.
7. "NoAv this, 0 Bikkhus, is the noble truth concerning the de-
struction of suffering.
"Verily, it is the destruction, in which no passion remains, of
this very craving; the laying aside of, the getting rid of,
the being free from, the harboring no longer of tliis crav-
-I y-» ™ * * ^ / /
illg.
These extracts from some of the various bibles or sacred
l)ooks show the importance attached to sex, to begetting, to seed
and to germ, to being born, etc., by the ancient writers. It is
not necessary to enter more fully on this subject at this time. The
underlying idea of nearly all religions is a gladness that we ex-
ist, "we're glad we're here," a thankfulness to the Creator, and
a desire to show our gratitude by worship and sacrifices.
SOME OTHER COSMOGONIES
The bibles to which reference has just been made, are those
of the Aryan people, the stock from which came modern civiliza-
tion, the Caucasian stock.
To define the term "Caucasian" so as to sharply separate
this race from all other races is impossible ; intermixture with
other races in various degrees, has left an impress on the mixed
offspring Avhich obliterated sharp distinctions ; residence for un-
told ages in tropical climates has had its influence in modifying
the complexions ; so there is no possibility to define accurately a
race that has mixed itself for ages Avith all the other races on
earth, until we realize that it is subject to great variations due to
these conditions. But he is of the Indo-European family of the
human race.
A Caucasian is not necessarily a white man ; he may be very
dark, as some of the Hindus, from exposure for many generations
to the tropical sun and climate. He is "Caucasian" from consid-
114 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
erations of l)ody and sknll formation, large facial angle, orthog-
nathous jaw, large cranial capacity and l)rain capability, etc., and
not merely on account of his color. This Aryan stock had the
largest brain, and when the Aryans left their original habitat in
Asia and scattered to all parts of the world, from Ireland and
Scandinavia to India and Japan (in which latter country we find
the white hairy Ainus), they carried with them the traditions of a
"creator" or "father," and of a religion which led to the highest
ethical development so far achieved by mankind.
But other varieties or races (called species by some) of the
^' genus liomo" whom we noAv consider to be barbarians or sav-
ages, constructed other myths in regard to the creation of the
world and of man, many of which seem grotesc^uely absurd to us.
Religion may be considered to be an effort of the human mind
to explain the relations of mankind to God — to that power which
is conceived to exist by the majority of mankind. To arrive at
truth in religion is the highest aim of man's thought, but some re-
ligions had only a vague dawning of truth while others are eth-
ically much higher. The underlying truth of religion is the intent
to formulate the noblest aspirations and conceptions that are pos-
sible to the finite mind of man. The origin of the ideas about a
supernatural power, or powers, may be ascribed to various causes.
One is gratitude; thankfulness for life, for existence. This
led to the Aryan concepts in regard to a creator. The burden of
our religions is thankfulness to the Creator — "Worship thy Cre-
ator"— and in probably all Aryan nations this creator was known
as the "father."
In many nations, if not in most nations of antiquity, this cre-
ator was supposed to be the earthly or human father, the paternal
cause of our being, the paternal parent; and such a view of the
creator gave rise to ancestor-worship, which was probalily the
oldest and most universal form of religion, and which to this day
prevails in many lands.
In more cultivated or advanced races and nations this idea
was transferred to an imaginary "heavenly father."
Jupiter was the same deity as the Vedic or Indian god Dgaiis
pitar; he was the Zeus of the Greeks, and the P^truscan god Tina;
in all these religions he retained his original significance ; he was
the Graeco-Latinic god who ruled over the cyclic changes of the
heaven, over seasons, and years. As Jupiter, he was Jupiter
SEX AND SEX WOItSIIlP 115
Lucretius the god of the bright sky, and Jupiter Pluvius the god
of tlie rainy sky; lie was the god of light and darkness, of thun-
der and rain. To him evci-y place that was struck by lightning
became sacred, and it was enclosed by a fence to })revent its dese-
cration by profane feet.
In Rome, at an early date, a moral side of his character de-
veloped, and Jupiter was looked upon as the fatherly ruler of
mankind, who protected the higher elements of human society and
guarded the sanctity of oaths; this latter function of Jupiter is
still recognized by us, for it is no uncommon occurrence for us to
exclaim ''by Jove," as did the ancient Romans Avhen taking an
oath.
It is surprising to lind similar views held ])y savages in a
strange and far distant continent. The Pawnees and Blackfeet
Indians Avorshipped a deity, Atius Tiraiva (Father Spirit), an
innnaterial spirit who was beneficent, benevolent, and all-power-
ful. Next came Earth, who had produced them, and to whom
they returned at death. They worshipped "Mother Corn" who
nourished and sustained them. The sun, moon and stars were per-
sons, to whom they prayed. These ideas appear to have l)een
taken from the same general fund of folklore, that seems to have
encompassed the Avhole world.
Ancestor Avorship is a widely disseminated form of religion;
in some nations, as among the Chinese, it is a literal worship of
the dead parents, grandparents, etc. ; but this worship is often
limited to the worship of the father, the mother being ignored as
a factor in creation. Among the Buddhists the ancient teachers
and heroes and the ancestors of their rulers are venerated; but
among some sects of Buddhists, some living persons are consid-
ered as divine, as the Lamas in Thibet and the Mikado in Japan.
The Mikados are considered to be direct descendants of the sun-
goddess, AAdiom they represent on earth, and hence they are divine.
In other nations, as in ancient Rome, this worship was at first
a Avorship of the father, Avho had the poAver of life and death OA^er
his Avives, children and slaves. Later on it assumed a less literal
form, as in the worship of the Manes or Shades or Ghosts of the
dead.
Among the Romans, the gliosts or the spirits of the departed
ancestors became the object of a sort of household cult ; they Avere
116 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
called the Manes, and daily offerings or libations Avere made to
them.
On tombstones there were frequent recognitions of them, and
''Dis Manihus" ("to the ancestral gods") was a freqnent inscrip-
tion.
In some nations these ideas led to a symbolic worship of the
generative organs of the parents, the penis and testicles, called
the ''phallns" in Greek and Latin, and the ^oilva, called ''yoni"
in Hindustani. These two words, "phallus" and "yoni" are gen-
erally used now in referring to the worship of the masculine and
feminine powers respectively; these forms of worship are re-
ferred to as the "phallic worship" — not perhaps the best term
that might have been chosen, because, strictly speaking, it does
not include the worship of the feminine, and also because among
the thinking pagans these organs were not actually worshipped as
such, but were adored or reverenced only as symbols for the pow-
ers in nature which they represented. By the word symbol we un-
derstand any object which is intended to call to mind, or to stand
for some moral or intellectual idea; it is also called emblem, a
type or representation which figuratively stands for some abstract
ideal. "Phallic worship" is therefore also knoA\m as "nature-
worship" but this term implies more than the former term.
Sex is the greatest fact in hmnan experience, the source of
life and of nearly all its deepest emotions ; the well-spring of our
intensest pleasures as well as of our deepest griefs (Fig. 36).
Solomon said in Proverbs (v, 18) : "Rejoice with the wife of thy
youth * * * be thou ravished always with her love." In the
Bible the first command given by God to man was: "Be fruitful
and multiply" (Gen. i, 28).
All beauties of body and all graces of mind serve but to
attract two individuals of different sexes, so tliat a new being-
may be created.
Another powerful factor in producing a religious feeling was
fear. When the worship of ancestors Avas transferred from the
living parents to the ancestral dead, gratitude for existence be-
came less prominent and there entered into religion a fearsome
element, the universal and superstitious fear of ghosts; this may
have led to the expression, "the fear of God," or "the fear of
the Lord." Whatever phenomena of nature primitive man did
not understand were assigned to some supernatural power.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 117
In all religions there is a worship of a power greater than
man and ontsicle of himself; in whatever form this power was
imagined it almost always took the anthrojiomorphic form of a
sexual power that created nature — The Demiurge — The Creator.
There is no valid reason why we should assign the first dawn-
ings of the idea of a deity or supernatural power to any very early
stage of the existence of mankind. No doubt fear of the unknoAni
was an early accompaniment of the fear of the known. The early
troglodites, in constant dread of becoming the prey of the saber-
toothed tiger or the cave-bear were in equal dread of the unseen
Fig. 36.— "Eternal Spring," by Rodin.
force that sent the storm rushing through the forest or that hurled
the lightning that sliattered the trees ; but this may have been an
indefinite — an indefinable — dread, for which primitive man, per-
haps not yet even endowed with the gift of speech or language,
could form no conscious explanation or conception.
AVhat is called "history" is an infinitely small span of time
when compared with the hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions
of years, that elapsed between the first appearance of man with
the primitive body and the primitive mind and speech and reli-
gion of the Pithecanthropus or Neanderthal man, and the liistor-
ical period; between these two periods stretches an inconceivably
118 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
long period of time,' reg-arding which all is darkness and mystery.
From the first utterances of human articulate sounds until
man was able to formulate thought into speech of words and sen-
tences, was perhaps a longer time than from this stage of his exist-
ence to the time when he was al)le to record his thoughts in sculp-
ture, and thus begin the historical period.
But tlie first thoughts of man's theories of creation took place
sometime during this unknown and unrecorded period of his
existence.
Of the period between the time when the first primitive human
courtship occurred, when the male, seeing a mossy spot under the
trees that would have tempted the fauns and n^miphs of ancient
Greece, nudged his female companion with a primitive "hml"
and she responded with an acquiescing *'uh-huh!" until the time
when man stopped to contemi)late the heavens and to speculate on
cosmogonies, we know nothing. But we know of later people, in
historical times, even in our own times, who have not yet turned
their thoughts to any religious speculations.
Even among ourselves, in civilized nations, the masses are not
interested in thoughts about cosmogony. It is probable that there
are few who have not heard about God and who would not be able
to say when asked who made the world that God made it; but
it conveys no real thought to their minds.
A Salvation Arnw lass once told the writer that one of their
number had asked a man whether he knew that Jesus had died
for him, and he answered: "No, I did not even know that he was
sick!" Millions of human beings in our most civilized communi-
ties are equally ignorant and indifferent, and from their own inner
consciousness are never tempted to think about such matters at all.
The Esquimaux have no native theory of God or creation;
except now, such as has been taught them by missionaries.
The Abipones never bothered themselves as to the nature or
origin of the heavenly bodies; the}^ simply accepted them as mat-
ters of fact, but these natural phenomena inspired no curiosity.
There are a number of so-called cosmogonies that appear to
us to lie a])sur(l. For instance: The Seandinavians worshipped
a god wliom they called Yniir; tlie iirst man and woman sprang
from his armpit. In simiUir manner, ^linerva sprang from the
head of Zeus, and Pan from his thigh.
According to the Bi])le (Gen. ii, 7) and the belief of the na-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 119
tives of Australia, New Zealand, Melanesia, Greece, India and
some other lands, man was fashioned out of clay or the dust of
the earth ; as the funeral ritual of many of our churches expresses
it: "Dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return;" or in the
words of the Bible (Gen. iii, 19) : "In the sweat of thy face shalt
thou eat bread, till thou return unto the ground; for out of it
wast thou taken; for dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou
return. "
A colored teacher in a Sunday school told his class how God
had taken a moist lump of clay and had made Adam from it;
"and God set him alongside of a fence and Avhen he was dry
enough he blew his breath into his nostrils, and Adam became a
living soul" (see Gen. ii, 7). "You say God set Adam long-side
of a fence to dry," said an inquisitive pupil. "Dass what I said,"
answered the teacher. "AVell, whar did that fence come from?"
"Ah, go way, nigger; such questions as dat'll upset any system
of theology!"
In Thibet the chief god was Kun-tu-Czang-po and his wife,
Yom-ki-long-mo, was the eternal female principle ; from these two
came all the other gods, all liumankind, and the whole world.
Some North American tribes of Indians sa};- that the muskrat
created the earth by fishing it up from the depths of the ocean.
The Quiches, of ancient Mexico and Central America, be-
lieved that Hiiral'mi ("hurricane") the thunder-god, the "heart
of heaven," created humankind.
The ancient Persians said that the tirst tree and the first bull
were the ancestors of the human race; they believed that there
were two "antagonistic" principles, one male and one female,
primordial tire or heat (the passionate nature of the male) and
primordial water, or cold (the apathetic nature of the female).
According to Persian traditions, Meschia and Meschiane, pro-
genitors of mankind, were created for happiness in this world
and the next, provided they were good and did not worship Dews,
the Spirit of Evil. But they were seduced by an evil spirit and
dressed themselves in black for thirty days, in worship of the
Spirit of Darkness. Dews then gave them various fruits to eat
and they forfeited many pleasures ; they covered themselves Avith
the skins of dogs and ate dogs.
Ahriman is represented as a poisonous serpent and Dews
120 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
often assumes the same shape (the same story that we find in
Genesis).
The Cahnncks say that men in the first age of the world lived
80,000 years; they were holy and happy. But a plant sw^eet as
honey sprang ont of the earth, of Avhich a greedy man tasted and
made others acquainted with it, A sense of shame was awakened
and they began to make themselves coverings and clothes from
leaves. Virtue fled and vice, murder and adultery spread in the
land. Thibetan mythology tells a similar story.
We meet here the same elements of ancient folklore that are
found in the Bible ; the great age of the first of mankind, the same
eating of some fruit or vegetable product which caused them to
become ashamed, the same making themselves clothes from leaves,
the same fall from the state of innocence.
Ovid (B.C. 43-A.D. 17) said that man was made in the image of
the Gods and that he was intended to rule over earth and all the
creatures of earth. (See charge of plagiarism, p. 12.) The
same folklore material that appears in the Bible is found in Ovid.
The Hindus taught that Prajapati ("the universe which was
soul and only one") made animals from his breath and men from
his soul ; the same element of folklore that was also utilized in the
Bible.
The Brahmans taught that Brahma created man who issued
from the ground at the divine word (Gen. i, 11: "let the earth
bring forth") his head appearing first, then his shoulders, body
and legs. Life was then infused into him, and God made for. him
a companion, a woman, and the tAvo lived together as man and
wife, tilling the ground (like Adam and Eve), and they had four
sons. Brahma made wives for them also, and they and their prog-
eny scattered to the four quarters of the earth.
In one regard this account is more considerate than the ac-
count in Genesis ; a good many people are sensitive about the lat-
ter story, as they can not understand where Cain, Abel and Seth
got wives without committing incestuous union with their own
sisters. The Bible says that Adam and Eve had sons and daugh-
ters ; one of the apocryphal books, the Book of Jubilees, mentions
two of the latter, Avan and Azura. The Brahmans tell the story
so as not to worry these hypersensitive ones, who take these myths
for actual facts.
Among the Bushmen of Africa the mantis {Mantis religiosa,
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 121
the insect commonly known to us as "devil's horse") is supposed
to have been the creator of tlie world and its inhabitants; some
tribes of Bushmen say the creator was a grasshopper; l)ut tlicy
also say that Cagn (the Mantis) "gave orders and caused all
things to appear."
The ancient Greeks also ascribed supernatural powers to this
insect; the Turks and Arabs believe that it prays with its head
towards Mecca; in Nubia it is viewed with much veneration, while
the Hottentots are said to worship it, and when one alights on
them, they consider it a peculiarly good omen.
Even among more civilized people it is considered with awe;
it is related that once one of these insects alighted on the hand
of Saint Francis Xavier (1506-1552 a.d,), who, impressed by its
pious attitude of prayer, commanded it to sing the praise of God,
which it instantly did by composing and intoning loudly a hymn
of praise.
But are such myths bona fide attempts at forming a theory
of cosmogony? Are we justified in including them in the list of
mythologies or religions'?
When a mother amongst us is bothered by the older children
to tell them where the new little brother or sister came from, does
she tell them what she really knows! Or does she tell them that
the doctor brought it; or that a stork brought it; or (in some parts
of Europe) that it Avas found in a hollow tree, or that it grew on
a tree?
There were many primitive people who said that men and
women came out of caves ; and caves were sacred and symbolical
of Cybele, a Phrygian goddess, at one time worshipped through-
out Asia Minor. She was considered as identical with the Gre-
cian goddess Rhea.
Did these people believe as a religion that men and women
came out of caves? Probably not; at least not the more intel-
ligent ones, who saw in such a story a euphemistic way of saying
that children come out of the vulva and womb, for which "cave"
is a symbol in some religions ; the cave is ' ' the womb of nature. ' '
"Would a "man from Mars" writing about his visit to our
earth tell his readers that the American Christians are a sect who
believe that storks create babies, because he had heard a mother
explain to her inquisitive children that storks brought the babies'?
Why should we consider such stories of mythology or cosmogony
122 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
to be serious religion for grown-ups on the part of some other
people?
We know that savages at a certain age initiate their boys and
girls into societies or lodges where they are taught certain truths
that are religiously kept from the uninitiated or children. When
strangers interrogate them, they are apt to give them "fairy
tales" instead of the truth, and these fairy tales seem to be ac-
cepted by some travelers as the real beliefs of the people whom
they interrogated. May not this be the case with some of these
tales of cosmogony?
In nearly all primitive cosmogonies, "a vast abyss of water"
is assumed to be feminine, and to be "made pregnant" by a male
god or creator or demiurge.
The word "demiurgus" (Latin) means a workman, an artif-
icer, a maker ; one who makes or models anything. Tertullianus,
a Christian writer of about 125 a.d., wrote: "Figulat liominem
demiurgus et de afflatu suo auimat;" (the demiurge models man
and animates him with some of his breath). The word figulat is
from the same root as the word fig id us, a moulder, a potter, a
brickmaker.
This "demiurge," as he was called by the Platonic philos-
ophers, was supposed to be a mysterious power through whom
God created, an artificer who obeyed the commands of God, as
for instance, when God said "let there be light," the demiurge
made or turned on the light.
In some of the earlier cosmogonies the first thing created is
light; possibly from an early realization that life depends on
light and that creation Avas impossible without light. The Egyp-
tians said tliat their god Thoth was the demiurge, the Creator,
who Avas said "to have given the world light when all was dark-
ness and there was no sun." Moses also had God create light first
and the sun afterwards.
Now human beings formed by a demiurge of course were not
born in the ordinary human way ; they were fashioned in a super-
natural way; they were therefore called "protoplasts" by the
ancients.
Also, some writers, like Swedenborg, taught that in heaven
all will be naked as clothing was introduced through sin; based
on this idea, writers have said that when we go to heaven we can
readily recognize Adam and Eve because they have no navels.
SEX AND SEX WOliSlilP 123
never having been attached througli a navel cord and placenta to
a mother.
In most religions hnt little stress is placed on the navel. In
India Vishmrs Jiavcl, symbolized thus: C^^~^^^ ^ i*^ adored. From
his navel a lotus l)ud grew, which, when it developed, produced the
world.
The Mandaeans were an ancient Oriental sect whose religion
was made up of a mixture of elements borrowed or appropriated
from Jewish, Christian and Heathen sources. They said that the
origin of all things was Pira, "the great abyss," associated with
whom and forming a trinity are Avar ziva raljba (the "great
shining ether") and Mana rabba (the "great spirit of glory").
Along Avith Mana rabba is D'mutha, his wife or image, a fe-
male power. The demiurge of the Mandaeans made Adam and
Eve, but was unable to make them stand upright ; so Hibil, Shithil
and Amush were sent by the ' ^ first life ' ' to infuse into the forms
of Adam and Eve a portion of the essence of Mana rabba him-
self. Hibil then taught the protoplasts to marry and how to
people the earth.
The Mandaeans said that Estera (Istar or Venus) is the Holy
Ghost; the devil of the Mandaeans was Rulia, who was female;
she gave birth to three sets of children, who w^ere translated to
heaven and became the constellations ; the first set consisted of
seven, and they became the seven planets (the "seven great
gods") ; another set consisted of twelve, who became the twelve
zodiacal constellations or signs (the "twelve great gods") ; but
the record of what became of her third set of five children has
not come down to us.
The Mandaeans were similar to the Gnostics ; they performed
baptism by total immersion in running w^ater, but their baptism
does not seem to have been as effective as amongst us, as it had
to be frequently repeated; their name for holy water was
' ' Jordan. ' '
Their sacred books laid nmch stress on procreation, and like
the patriarchs of old they tried to do their duty in this regard by
practicing polygamy; but history records that few of them w^ere
rich enough to acquire and maintain more than two wives.
The "great abyss" of the Mandaeans occurs also in various
forms in other mythologies. Many primitive cosmogonies con-
124 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
sidered water as a pre-existent material wliicli held in solution,
or out of wliicli were formed, all other things. Some savage peo-
ple supposed that the earth grew out of the water, which, inci-
dently, is how geology tells us that the continents grew.
The Babylonian mythology, for instance, thought that water
was the vehicle of life, as in a certain sense it is, for where there
was no water there was no life — it was a desert. The Babylo-
nians imagined an abyss of water to have been made pregnant
by a male creator, who arose from the abyss itself.
King Assurbanipal's library (about VII Century b.c.) speaks
of a female primeval flood or abyss called Tiamat and a mascu-
line power. Another idea, prevalent especially in the Pacific Is-
lands, is that the earth was raised or fished up from the primeval
water ; living, as they did, on a comparatively small firm land sur-
surrounded on all sides by deep water, this was perhaps a quite
rational conclusion of .the islanders. They may have even had
traditional knowledge of such creation of land, for some of the
islands were formed by volcanic eruption or elevation.
The Japanese, also an island-inhabiting people, had a myth
that a rush grew out of the earth while it was still soft mud (com-
pare Philo's description of the earth, p. 105) or "like oil floating
on the surface of water;" this rush produced (as a fruit?) a
"land-forming god. ' '
Philo, of Byblus, tells about several Phoenician cosmogonies.
One mentions Baal and Tanith as the male and female principles,
the conjugal union of whom produced creation. In another of
these cosmogonies is mentioned a woman, Baau, which name is
interpreted as night; probalily she was identical with Bohu, the
Hebrew name in the Mosaic account (Gen. i, 2) which is translated
chaos, or with the Babylonian Tiamat, confusion.
The Polynesians speak of the "heaven-god Tangaloa" as a
great bird hovering over the waters ; an idea probably derived
from the same folklore from which Moses adopted the expression,
"the spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters" (Gen. i, 2).
In the Avesta, the Persian sacred books, wliicli were reduced
to writing probably a little earlier than were the books of Moses,
the God Ahura-Mazda is represented as creating the world out
of nothing by the exercise of his Avill.
In the cuneiform inscriptions of about the time of Darius and
SEX AXD SEX WORSHIP 125
Xerxes, Ahnra-Mazda is called the ''great god of gods, who made
heaven and earth and men."
This abj^ss of waters, liowever, was not merely the creative
flux out of which came creation, but in many cosmogonies it also
became a destructive agent. Many mythologies believe in suc-
cessive destructions and re-creations of the w^orld, as for instance,
the story in the Bible (Gen. vi, vii, and viii) ; this idea ascribes
to the flood of waters the same function that the Hindus ascribe
to Siva — Destruction and Reproduction. This same, or a very
similar story is known in almost all the mythologies of the world,
in the old as well as in the new continent. The Assyrian account
which is about a thousand years older than the Mosaic account, is
very similar to the latter.
The idea that the flood was sent as a punishment for the
sins of the people was also very widespread. That is the reason
given for the flood in the Bible. It was also the cause of the flood
in the Hindu sacred writings, which relates that Vishnu became
incarnated as a flsh who held up the earth and thus became its
savior.
Ovid (a Greek poet, b.c. 43 to 17 a.d.) said that the Golden
Age, or the earliest age of man, was one of simplicity and inno-
cence, but it gradually degenerated until corruption was so great
that Zeus sent a flood to destroy mankind.
Catlin tells us that among the North American Indians there
is not a tribe that has not a tradition of a great flood ; it is possi-
ble that such myths as that of the destruction of Atlantis, etc.,
and all the other flood stories are based on the experiences of
Pacific Islanders, whose '^Avorlds" are subject to occasional par-
tial or even nearly complete destruction by the tidal waves or
floods which are caused by the volcanic disturbances in that part
of the world ; but it is of course also possible that the story of the
flood was brought to the Indians by early missionaries.
In India, in 1876, a tidal wave rushed in upon the land, and
as it retreated to the sea, it carried with it 150,000 of the inhab-
itants, together with all their belongings. In days before the
telegraph or mail service, such a disaster would be more or less
local, but it would live in the memories of the survivors, or of
the neighboring people, for many generations, and give rise to a
tradition of a flood, and as such floods may have occurred in va-
rious places and many times, this would be ample to account for
126 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
a universal tradition of a flood, that need not have been the same
flood.
Like in the story of the Bible, another pair of "first par-
ents" must be provided, to continue the race of mankind. These
are either supplied l)y new creations, or l)y the survival of a few
individuals as in the Bil)le myth which makes Noah and his wife
"the second Adam and Eve," as they are called by the Arabians.
Of course the general theories of creation, as due to sex, make
such- a feature of a deluge myth a necessit}^
Primitive man, at some time or other, must have commenced
to speculate on the origin or source of life. It is not inconceiv-
able that the troglodites, living in their caves, depending for food
on the hunt, and chase, came across some eggs just as they were
hatching, and generalizing from such observations the egg be-
came to them an earh^ and primitive conception of the source
of life and creation; and the "cosmic egg^^ became a feature of
many mythologies and cosmogonies. From this egg originated
our universe and all that it contains, including our earth, our
gods and men. The myth of a cosmic egg occurs in Phoenician,
Egyptian, Indian, Chinese, Polynesian and Finland mythologies,
associated with one or another, or several, of the ideas concerning
the abyss, a male god who fertilized it, mixture, generation, fra-
gility, the domelike appearance of the sky, and the form of the
sun, moon and planets.
No ideas of sex seem to have lieen connected with the cosmic
egg in the earlier cosmogonies. The egg was not yet associated
with, or recognized as a manifestation or characteristic of the
feminine, as it was later on.
The Hindu god Brahma who produced it was male. So was
the Egyptian god Seb, who produced it; the Egyptians figured
many of their deities in the form of animals and Seb, the producer
of the cosmic egg, was represented in the image of the goose.
In the S'atapaiha Bralunana is an account of the "primeval
waters" and a cosmic or world-egg; according to one account this
egg i^roduced Prajapati, according to another account Prajapati
produced the cosmic egg. A little later, in India, we find the myth
of a "self-existent Lord" who created "by a thought." He cre-
ated the waters and deposited in them a seed which grew into a
golden egg, from which egg he himself was born as Brahma, the
"progenitor of all the worlds."
SEX AXI) SEX WORSHIP 127
Apuleiiis, an ancient Latin ^vl•it('l•, "saw in the egg the sym-
bol of all that was, that is, and that is possible to be," and modern
l)iolo.c,y teaches that the ovnm, or egg, is the highest manifestation
of life, to which all other phenomena of life are subservient and
contributory.
In the cuneiform inscriptions of about the time of Darius and
Xerxes, Ahura-Mazda is called the "great god of gods, who made
heaven and earth and men."
SEX IN PLANTS, AND TOTEMISM
The germs of liotanical science are found in a rudimentary
form in very remote anticiuity. The lieginning of a science may
be considered to be that time when the subject to which it relates
first engaged the thought and incited the investigations in regard
to the particular natural phenomena by early mankind.
The actual achievements are not of material consideration in
this connection; the fact that a subject became an object of study
and speculation at a certain period constitutes the "germ" or
"beginning" of the science, regardless of the question whether
these early theories stood the test of time and were found cor-
rect, or whether thev were afterwards abandoned because thev
were proved to be incorrect.
It can only be in this sense that it can be said truthfully that
the germs of botanical science are traceable in remote antiquity.
Figuier, in Vegetable World, says that the ancients already
held the view that plants were sexual, and says this as if such an-
cient assumption was based on more or less scientific foundation.
It is therefore of interest to examine the ancient views on sex, and
this will show that Figuier 's assertion is erroneous and that the
idea that the ancients hneiv plants to be sexual rests on very slim
premises.
Primitive men conceived every object as being personal and
to be endowed with passions and attributes like themselves ; even
the most abstract phenomena, like sky, earth, wind, fire, etc., even
the stones and plants were regarded as persons. All things, ani-
mate and inanimate, were supposed to be sexual and to produce
either their own kind, or any other kind of being, by processes
analogous to those by which human offspring was produced.
Even the soil and stones were supposed to be able to produce
128 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
human beings, and the ancient Greeks called men who sprang
from their soil ^'autochthones." Even our negroes, who still cul-
tivate many features of voodoo worship, consider lodestones to
be powerful fetishes or love-charms, and know how to distinguish
between the "male" and "female" lodestones.
With such ideas prevailing, it was but natural that all living
things, animal or vegetable, were considered to be related to each
other, and that they all, like humankind, were male and female.
And animals and plants came to l)e regarded as the ancestors of
the human race, or at least of certain tribes or people. This is
totemism.
While totemism generally considers man as descended from
and therefore related to certain animals (totems), there are tribes
who claim to be descended from and related to certain plants.
Such tribes could not kill any animal for food or use any plant
that was "totem" to them; such animal or plant was tapu (taboo)
to them.
Among the Red Maize Clan of Omahas (North American In-
dians) the red maize was considered to be their totem or ancestor,
and members of this tribe may not eat red maize.
Among the ancient Norsemen, Yggdrasil was the tree of life
from which all living beings sprang. It reached with its roots to
all parts of the earth, and produced all the inhabitants of the
earth; its roots reached to the lowest depths of the under- world
and produced the demons and evil spirits; and its branches
reached up into the air, and produced all the creatures that live in
the air, and its uppermost branches reached into heaven and pro-
duced the gods, thus binding all life into one relationship.
Yggdrasil was an ash-tree (Fraxinus) and was the ancestor
(or the male ancestor) of mankind. "Fru Eller" {Alder, Alnus),
according to Norse mythology, was the female progenitress, or
ancestress, of mankind. Such and similar was the origin of the
ancient belief that plants had sexual attributes. We will consider
a few more of these ancient (and modern uncivilized) notions in
regard to sex.
The Persians imagined the first tree and the first bull to have
been the first ancestors of the human race; as the bull was their
symbol of their male creator, tlie tree must have been their first
female ancestress. They discovered, in physics generally, two
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 129
antagonistic, or rather complementary, principles, one male, the
other female.
In Maori mythology some of the gods were vegetable, some
animal in nature. So also in Hindu mythology.
Those of the people of Amhon who are descendants from
trees may not use their totem trees for firewood. An Ormon clan
whose totem is the Kuj-rar tree will not eat of the oil obtained
from that tree, nor even sit in its shade.
The Eddas say that the first man came from an ash-tree; the
first woman from an alder-tree (the ash-tree a variety of Frax-
inus; the alder-tree, Ahius incana, ''Erie").
In making fire by friction a hole was made in a block of alder
(yonic) and the stick which was twirled in this hole was of ash
(phallic), the two by friction producing fire (heat and life). The
ancient Greeks explained that Prometheus brought fire to man-
kind, hidden in a staff; this explained why, by rubbing staffs to-
gether, the fire could be set free again.
The ancient Teutons considered the oak-tree male, because
the acorn looks like a glans penis with its prepuce (acorn in its
cupule).
A modern example of this method of grouping plants into
male and female prevails in some rural districts of England, with
regard to the holly {Ilex aquifolium). This plant is dioecious and
the British Encyclopaedia says that it changes sex from male to
female Avith age. The common people, however, distinguish two
varieties of the plant ; one variety which is prickly and rough and
is called "he holly," the other variety, Avhich is smooth or non-
prickly, is "she holly," in analogy to the human body, which in
the male is bearded and hairy on the body, while the female body
is smooth and devoid of hair.
In some parts of Europe children are said to be found in
lakes, from which they are brought by storks. In other parts they
are said to grow on trees, or to be found in hollow trees.
The birch-tree {Betida alba) is considered to be feminine in
Bavaria, and children are said to come from birch-trees, or to be
found in hollow birch-trees. A newly-born girl baby is bathed in
a tub made of birch-wood so that when she grows up she will be
attractive to the men.
The beech (Fagus) is considered also to be female, and in
some provinces it is regarded in the same manner as the birch.
130 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
The Lupercalia were old Roman festivals on which occasions
women ran about naked so that they conld l)e whipped on their
bare posteriors, to make them fertile. This festival survives in
some primitive communities of continental Europe. Children are
whipped with birch-switches ("Lebens-ruthen," life-switches),
otherwise they will not thrive or grow, but remain stunted. In
many parts of Europe female domestic animals as well as the
women of the household are whipped on the bare genitals with
birch-switches on Halloween eve by the men of the household ; this
is supposed to insure fertility and healthy offspring.
In parts of Russia the husbands whip their wives on the bare
posteriors with birch twigs to make them fertile and to insure easy
and safe child-birth. A woman whose husband does not whip her
thinks he does not love her. The trousseau of the bride contains
the necessary bundle of birch rods or switches ("Ruhte;" also
in German the name of the male virile organ).
In Poland, for the same reason, the bride is driven to the
nuptial bed by the matrons with a rod of fir, which is there con-
sidered in the same way as the birch is elsewhere. The "up-
standing" growth of the fir is very suggestive of a prominent
characteristic of the male member.
In Japan the fir is a symbol of the masculine ; the plum-tree,
of the feminine. At weddings dwarf trees of these two kinds are
used as table decorations.'
In India, when a Hindu plants a grove of mango trees, he
will not take the fruit of the grove before the trees have been mar-
ried (with full Brahmanic rites and ritual) to some other kind of
tree, usually a tamarind, sometimes an acacia. It is considered a
disgrace if the mango trees conunence to bear fruit before this
marriage has been celebrated.
In the Punjab a Hindu can not legally be married to a
"third" woman; he gets around the difficulty by marrying a
"babul" tree, so that the wife he subsequently marries is counted
as his fourth.
In Bengal both bride and bridegroom are married to trees be-
fore they are married to each other.
Kipling wrote: "Lalun is a member of the most ancient pro-
fession in the world. In the West people say rude things about
Lalun's profession and distribute lectures to young people in or-
der that morality may be preserved. * * * Lalun's real hus-
SEX AND SEX WOIISHIP 131
band, for even ladies of Lalun's profession in the East must have
husbands, was a great big ,]ujube-tree * * * for tliat is the
custom of the kind. The advantages of having a jujube-tree for
a husl)and are obvious: you can not hurt his feelings, he looks
imposing, and he does not become jealous."
In Germany formerly, when a child was baptized, a "birth-
tree" was planted; a male tree for a boy and a female tree for a
girl; this was also done for one of President Wilson's grand-
children. According to Albert Magnus (about 1250 a.d.), the
trees used for this ceremonial were the pear-tree, which was mas-
culine, and the apple-tree, which was feminine. The health and
growth of the children were supposed to depend on the manner
in which the trees thrived.
Among the ancient Greeks and Romans all trees that bore
fruit were considered female ; grammatically they were considered
feminine, even if the names had masculine endings; the adjectives
were feminine. In our scientific nomenclature we have retained
this grammatical gender (or sex). Pruniis, i. f., II Deck, plum-
tree; as Primus domestica, adj. fern. Amygdalus, i. f., II Deck,
almond-tree; as Amygdcdns communis, var. amara, adj. fem.
Quercus, us, fem. IV Deck, oak-tree; as Quercus infectoria, adj.
fem.
This applies also to many smaller plants, although not as
regularly so : Avena sativa, fem., oats ; Oryza sativa, fem., rice.
But enough for the present of plant folklore; it shows that
no element of a scientific nature entered into the widespread an-
cient belief that plants were sexual in their natures.
In Gen. i, 11, we read: "And God said. Let the earth bring
forth grass, the herb yielding seed, and the fruit-tree yielding-
fruit after his kind, whose seed is in itself; and it was so." Sci-
ence teaches us that the first life on earth was vegetable life. And
very low in the scale of life among the algae we find sex ; conse-
quently sex existed probably before there were any animals.
In Cruden's Concordance of the Bible, the first edition of
which was published in 1737, but the edition which I have, and
from which I quote, printed in 1829, we tind the following defini-
tion of seed: "Seed — that thin, hot and spirituous humour in
man's body which is fitted by nature for the generation of man-
kind (Gen. xxxviii, 9). Likewise for that matter which in all
plants and fruits is disposed for the propagation of the kind."
132
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
The oldest mention of botanical lore was found in Assyrian
and Egyptian inscriptions. In a tomb at Thebes a wall-painting
was found which represents a botanical garden, and this is the
earliest mention of the cultivation of exotic plants (Fig. 37). A
contemporary record on a temple wall at Thebes states that an
expedition was sent by Queen Hasop (about 1600 b.c.) to bring
incense trees from Punt (modern Somaliland) to be planted in the
gardens connected A\dth the temple for the purpose of cultivating
incense for the temple ceremonials.
An early attempt at botanical illustration is a Babylonian
sculpture (about 680 b.c.) showing Assurbanipal's queen at a meal
Fig. 37. — A botanical garden, from a tomb at Thebes, Egj'pt, 1900 B.C.
(Fig. 38); among the plants in the background are a date palm
and a grapevine, both of which are quite characteristically de-
picted.
In Sardanapal.'s library (650 b.c.) were figured plants and
plant parts used in medicine, which were stated to be copied from
inscriptions going back to between 4000 and 5000 b.c.
The promoters of botany among the ancient Greeks and Ro-
mans Avere not, properly speaking, botanists, but rlikotomw or
'pliarmacopolcE, gatherers of and dealers in medicinal roots and
herbs. Aristotle, Mithridates, Cato, Virgil, Dioscorides and the
elder Pliny, however, all wrote on botany or the Avonders of A^ege-
tation. The most learned and important Avorks on this subject
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
133
wore the works of Theoplirastiis (IV Century b.c). He men-
tions sexnality of plants, hut did not determine any special sexual
organs.
Of course it may have been empirically noted at a quite early
time that some plants never bore fruit, while others of the same
kind did produce fruit. The ancients considered fruit-bearing
plants as female by analogy Avith mankind or themselves; the
plants that did not produce fruit were therefore male. Some
dioecious iDlants, like hemp, were of this kind ; so w^ere date palms ;
and this empirical observation led the ancients to speak of male
and female plants without their having any real scientific under-
standing of the facts.
The works of Theophrastus remained the most important
-<;^^
I
^ -, --J^^
/Ui- -■
\tk\if^im\\yKlikm^tm^ditt£tiSk
Fig. 38. — An Assyrian sculpture showing date-palm and grape-vine, about 680 B.C.
works on botany until comparatively recent times, in fact, until
the times of Linnaeus and his contemporaries.
Herodotus, who Avrote about 450 years b.c, recorded that the
female date-trees had to be fertilized by shaking among their
flower-clusters the flower-clusters from the male trees. This pro-
cedure, as just explained, must have been due to empirical expe-
rience and not to scientific understanding, and the fertilizing
power was even ascribed to the multitude of small gnats that were
shaken out of the male clusters of flowers.
Thomas de Garbo, in 629 a.d., taught that plants were not nec-
essarily produced by seeds, but could be produced through fer-
mentation.
134 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Alpini, a physician and botanist who lived 1553-1617 a.d.,
wrote: ''The female date-palms do not bear fruits unless the
branches of the male and female plants are mixed together; or,
as is more generally done, unless the dust found in the male sheath
or male flower is sprinkled over the female flowers. ' ' There does
not appear any reason to place Alpini 's opinion on other than
purely empiric experience.
When alchemists realized the futility or absurdity of their
search for the "philosopher's stone" which Avas to transmute
baser metals to gold, or for the "elixir of life" which would cure
all diseases and prolong life indefinitely, they turned their atten-
tion to the solving of the mystery of generation; the mystery of
Adam and Eve, the "red man" and the "white woman" of Glen-
esis in the Bible ; the mystery of sex.
Caesalpinus (1519-1603 a.d.), a learned Italian scientist, pub-
lished a work entitled De Plantis Libri xvi, in 1583 a.d. In this
work the author suggested a classification of plants which more
or less distinctly foreshadowed both the Linnsean system and the
Natural system of Jussieu and which he based on characteristics
of flowers, stamens, pistils and fruits. In this work he recognized
that plants were sexual, but he speaks of the "halitus" (breath,
exhalation, perfume?) as the fertilizing agent. Caesalpinus, as
late as 1600 a.d., referred to a ^'halitus or breath, an immaterial
emanation, exhalation or vapor," practically the perfume from
the male plants as causing fertility in the female plant. His views
on the anthers and pistils, however, do not seem to have become
generally knoA\Ti nor generally accepted.
In the year 1682 a.d. Nehemiah Grew, secretary of the Soci-
ety of London, published his Anatomy of Plants, in which the na-
ture of the stamens and pistils as the male and female organs of
plants was distinctly asserted.
In 1694 A.D. Camerarius, a German botanist, also described the
stamens as male organs and the pistils as female organs, in a book
entitled De Sexu Plantarum.
In 1684 A.D. the French botanist Tournefort published his
Elements of Botany, being the first attempt to define the exact
limits of genera in vegetables. Most of his genera are still recog-
nized in modern classifications. The great mistake of his classi-
fication, however, was his division of all iilants into two classes.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 135
"Trees and Herbs;" the great merit, on the other liand, was the
importance given to the stndy of the flower.
His scheme in outline is as follows :
Floiver-hearing trees:
\ J 1 I Apetalous, properly so called
Apeiaious^ . , , . ., .
[Amentaceae, having catkms
Monopetalous
Petalous
Regular, Rosacese
Polypetalous i In-egular, Papilionacese
HerhaceoKS plants ivlthout corolla:
1. Plants provided with stamens (wheat, barley, rice, etc.).
2. Flowerless plants with seeds (ferns, lichens, etc.).
3. Plants in Avhich flowers and fruits are not apparent.
Simple-floivering Jierhaceous plants:
Corolla monopetalous]
Regular
'&
[Irregular
Corolla polvpetalous I ^ ,
[Irregular
Compound -flowering Jierhaceous plants:
Compositse.
While Caesalpinus, Grew and Camerarius had promulgated
the idea that plants possessed sexual parts, Tournefort remained
sceptical and did not accept such views. However, his system of
classification was so superior to previous systems that it brought
order where confusion had previously existed, and modern scien-
tific botany practically originated with Tournefort.
John Ray, an English botanist, published his Historia Plan-
tarum in 1686 a.d. ; in this work he laid the foundations for modern
natural systems of classification.
The main plan of Ray's system is as follows:
Flowerless plants
Plants J-r^T • 1 , f Monocotyledonous
I Flowermg plants -p.- ^- ^ i
^ ^ [Dicotyledonous
Divided into woody trees and herbaceous plants.
Further subdivisions based on the fruits.
136
SEX AND SEX WOESHIP
In 1735 A.D. Linnseus presented the theory that stamens were
male organs and pistils female organs of plants with such con-
vincing emphasis tliat he compelled universal acceptance of this
view. So little knoA\m, apparently, were the previously published
views of Caosalpinus, Grew and Camerarius, that Linnaeus is gen-
erally considered to have been the first one to explain the nature of
stamens and pistils and to firmly establish the fact that plants
have sex. He rendered the theory popular by basing on it his
system of classification, which is even to this day used in the
schools in some European lands.
The structure of a flower, and the nature of fertilization, are
shown in Fig. 39. Tlie anther cells produce the pollen grains,
^rT?%
Fig. 39. — Section of flower, and section of ovn'm, above; shows fertilization. Various
pollen grains below.
which fall on the stigma of the ovary (female part), and are pro-
longed into a tube which carries the protoplasm of the male cell
down into the interior of the ovary where it comes in contact with
the protoplasmic matter of the ovum or female cell. The result
is fertilization and the growth of the embryo.
"While modifications of Eay's system constitute the Natural
systems of modern times, the Linnsean system still forms an arti-
ficial key to the Natural systems, and the terms of this system are
generally used in the description of plants and flowers.
That this demonstration of the sexual nature of plants Avas
novel is seen from the interest, even entliusiasm, Avith which it
was receiA^ed. Erasmus DarAvin, the grandfather of Charles Dar-
SEX AND SEX WOKSHIP
137
win, published a poem, "The Loves of the Flowers," which was
illiisti-ated with a series of fine steel engravings (Fig. 40) ; and
the rapid acceptance of the Linnrean system everywhere is gen-
erally kno"\\Ti.
In 1789 A.D. Laurent de Jussieu published his Genera Plan-
tarimi, Avhich is the basis of all modern natural systems of classi-
fication; we thus bring do\m the history of taxonomy to our o^vn
times.
During the last 75 or 100 years many botanists have attempted
various svstems of classification based on the consideration of
Fig. 40. — "Cupid Among the Flowers, " from the "Loves of the Flowers, " by Erasmus
Dar\\'iii.
the cotyledons ; of polypetalous, monopetalous and apetalous flow-
ers; upon the mode of insertion of the stamens; names have
changed, things remain the same ; and if in their details the series
of families or orders present certain differences it onl}^ arises
from the fact that a linear series is incompatible Avith the natural
system, and that the connection of the intermediate groups may be
expressed in various ways without affecting the general princi-
ples of the system.
While Linnaeus established the main facts of the nature of
the sexual organs in j)lants, the exact method of fertilization re-
mained as obscure as that in the case of animals. The pollen was
138 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
recognized as the matter which fecundated the ovary, but it re-
mained a question as to the manner in which it did so.
It was at first thought that the grains of pollen broke on the
stigmas and that the granules were absorbed by the stigma and
went to form the embryo. In 1823 a.d. Amici, an Italian botanist,
discovered the pollen-tubes. About 1837 a.d. Schleiden and
Hoeckel announced that the vegetable embryo preexisted as a germ
within the pollen grains; it is carried at the end of the pollen-
tube to the embryonic sac, where it develops into the seed or
embryo.
Whether this was a conscious effort to harmonize the fertil-
ization of plants with the views held so long in regard to animals
and man (see p. 140), views that were apparently in harmony with
the teachings of the Bible, that the seed or embryo issued from
the sexual parts of the male, or father, I can not say ; that it was
such there can be no doubt.
Schleiden 's theory of the preexistence of the embryo in the
pollen grains was shown to be wrong by the observations of
Brongniart, Amici, Mohl, linger, Hoffmeister, and others.
In 1849 A.D. Tulasne published his studies on vegetable em-
bryogeny and finally established the theory of fertilization as
taught today, namely, that the male and female elements unite to
form the embryo.
About 1876 A.D. the nuclear theory of fertilization was demon-
strated. The successive steps in karyokinesis and the importance
of chromosomes were demonstrated.
This does not mean that all the secrets of the process are
clear ; hundreds of men of science are still trying to solve further
mysteries of heredity, etc., but these mysteries, while constituting
the most fertile field for research and investigation, do not par-
ticularly interest us now in connection with this attempt to fix the
niche which is filled by Linnaeus in connection with the develop-
ment of Vegetable Taxonomy.
SEX IN ANIMALS
Ancient Ideas
Of course, sex was more distinctly apparent in animals and
mankind than in plants, but even here, the ideas as to the sexual
process were vague and wholly unscientific. In fact, the earliest
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 139
references, in the oldest mythologies, did not always assume two
complementary principles or agencies (sometimes spoken of as
"antagonistic principles"), but seem to have taught that the Cre-
ator was of hermaphrodite nature. I have already stated that in
early cosmogonies the cosmic ep;p; was not associated with a fem-
inine or not even Avith any sexual agency.
In New Zealand, Chinese, Vedic, Indian and Greek myths
Heaven (sky) and Earth constituted a hermaphrodite l)eing; their
anion was perpetual. Only later on were they considered as a
pair, or as unisexual and dual.
The Piirana, a sacred Brahminic book, says: ''The Supreme
Spirit, in the act of creation, became twofold; the right side Avas
male, the left was Prakriti. She is Maia, eternal and imperish-
able." Again: "The Divine Cause of Creation experienced no
bliss, being isolated — alone. He ardently desired a companion;
and inunediately the desire was gratified. He caused his body to
divide and become male and female. They united and human be-
ings were thus made."
In imitation of this ancient theory that the Creator was an-
drogynous or hermaphrodite some philosophers held the same
view with regard to Jehovah (or Elohim), the god of the Bible.
We read in the twenty-seventh verse of the first chapter of Gen-
esis: "So God created man in his oivn image; male and female
created he them." And this is emphasized by repetition in the
more explicit statement in verses 1 and 2, Gen. v: "In the day
that God created man, in the likeness of God made he them; and
God blessed them, and called their name Adam."
The Talmud (Hebrew Traditions) says that Adam was cre-
ated androgynous. His head reached the clouds. God caused a
sleep to fall on him, and took something away from all his mem-
bers, and these parts he fashioned into ordinary men and Avomen,
and scattered them through the Avorld.
After Lilith, Adam's first Avife, mother of demons and giants,
deserted him, God separated Adam into his two sexual parts; he
took one of Adam's ribs and made Eve from it.
Philo, a JeA\4sli philosopher contemporaneous Avith Jesus,
said that Adam was a double, androgynous or hermaphrodite be-
ing "in the likeness of God." Philo said that "God separated
Adam into his tAvo sexual component parts, one male, the other
female — Eve — taken from his side. The longing for reunion,
140 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
which love inspired in the divided halves of the originally bi-
sexual being, is the source of the sexual pleasure, which is the
beginning of all transgressions."
Plato, a Greek philosopher, explained the amatory instincts
and inclinations of men and women by the assertion that human
beings were at first androgynous; Zeus separated them into uni-
sexual halves, and they seek to become reunited.
The Aryans of India account for the appearance of the ditf er-
ent animals in this way: "Purusha was alone in the world. He
ditfei'entiated himself into two beings, man and wife. The wife
regarded union with him as incest and fled, assuming the shapes
of various animals. The husband pursued, taking the same
shapes, and thus produced the various species of animals."
A similar story was told in Greece of Demeter changing her-
self into a mare to escape the pursuit of Poseidon (see page 451).
We read in Genesis (ii, 7), "And the Lord formed man of the
dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life ;
and man became a living soul." And Job said (xxxiii, 4), ''The
spirit of God hath made me and the breath of the Almighty hath
given me life."
The "breath of God" was recognized as the vivifying, life-
giving, fertilizing essence of the Creator, not only by the early
Jewish religion, but also by other religions of antiquity.
Many ancient authors believed, in the "out-breathing" (hali-
tus) of the male being the fecundating agent that produced life.
In medieval times it was held that Mary was made pregnant by
the "word of God" (a very slight modification of. the "breath of
God") because the Bible tells us that "the word became flesh."
Pythagoras (500 b.c.) taught that "seed is an immaterial
ether or vapor, similar to thought, produced by the male." And
even as late as a.d. 1600, Caesalpinus, an Italian scientist, referred
to a "halitus" or breath (an immaterial emanation, exhalation or
vapor — practically the perfume) from the male plants as causing
fertility in the female plants. Put a material substance, or
"seed," was substituted for tlie "l)reath" at a very early age.
Anaxagoras (a Greek philosopher, about 475 b.c.) taught that
the embryo was formed entirely from the "seed" of tlie father
and that the mother merely furnished the soil in which it grew
and developed. But this theory was not new. Anaxagoras merely
gave it more definite expression, and made it generally known and
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 141
popular among the Greeks and the successors to Greek science.
The earliest traces of this tlieory are found in the religious writ-
ings of archaic times. For more than a thousand years the sacred
compositions of the Hebrews and the Hindus (the Old Testament
and the Rig-Vedas) were transmitted orally in Southwestern Asia,
and from the resulting folklore were obtained the contents of the
Bible and the Rig-Vedas when these ''books" were reduced to
writings, and in both of these sacred books we find this theory,
which was taught by Aristotle and Diogenes of Apollonia, but
which is most generally ascribed to Anaxagoras, plainly stated.
In the ancient marriage ceremony of the Hindus, when the
bride enters her husband's home, those present say: "As a fallow
field thy mfe enters; sow in her, 0 man, thy seed!"
And in the Bible we read (Gen. xxx, 11, about 1732 b.c),
"God said unto Jacob, Israel shall be thy name. * * * Kings
shall come out of thy loins" ("loins" in this connection being a
euphemistic translation of the Hebrew word meaning phallus or
genitals). And again (Gen. xlvi, 26, about 1706 b.c.) : "All the
souls that came with Jacob into Egypt, ivhich came out of his
loins * * * ^vere three score and ten."
It is a peculiar feature of modern translations of the Bible,
that the translators were ashamed of the plain language used by
God, and they translated such words as penis, etc., by less objec-
tionable words. If the Bible is really the "word of God" it should
be translated correctly, for it is annoying, to say the least, to be
interrupted in an argument based on the English version of the
Bible, to be met with the statement, that so and so is not a correct
translation, but is something different in the original Hebrew text.
This passage from the Bible is of considerable interest in con-
nection A^dth the theory of the "preformationists," who held not
only that the fully formed although microscopically minute or-
ganism existed preformed in the seed of the father, but that it
contained or included in itself (like a nest of pill-boxes one within
the other) all sujjsequent generations of germs as well.
This view seems to be implied in the statement just quoted
from Genesis, that the children and the children's children "came
out of the loins" of Jacob. Again (about 1004 b.c), the Lord
said unto David: "Nevertheless thou shalt not build the house
(the temple) but thy son that shall come forth out of thy loins, he
shall build the house unto my name" (I Kings ix, 19). The Bible
142 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
therefore teaches this theor}'. As late as a.d. 64, this theory had
Bil)lical sanction, for St. Panl referred to a time before Levi was
born in this wise: "For lie ivas yet in the loins of his father "
Jacob (Hebr. vii, 10).
It is of great interest to trace the gradual development of a
knowledge of sex; we will give some older views, but necessarily
in very concise form only.
Herakleitos (550 b.c.) said: "Man is kindled and put ont like
a light in the night-time." "The wisest man is an ape compared
to God, jnst as the most beautiful ape is ugly compared to man."
Anaximander (about 600 b.c.) said: "Living creatures arose
from the moist element as it was evaporated by the sun. Man
was like another animal, the fish, in the beginning." Further, he
says that in the beginning man was born from animals of a dif-
ferent species. His reason is that, "while other animals quickly
find food for themselves, man alone requires a prolonged period
of suckling. Hence, had he been originally such as he is now, he
could never have survived. * * * The first living creatures
were produced in the moist element * * * as time went on they
came out upon the drier part * * * and changed their mode
of life."
Parmenides (about 500 b.c): " * * * ^he narrower
circles are filled Avith unmixed fire, and those surrounding them
with night, and in the midst of these rushes their portion of fire.
In the midst of these circles is the diAdnity (Necessitj^) that di-
rects the course of all things ; for she rules over all painful births
and all begetting, driving the female to the embrace of the male,
and the male to that of the female.
"First of all the Gods she contrived Eros.
"On the right, boys; on the left girls. * * *"
Empedokles (about 475 b.c): "There is no coming into be-
ing of aught that perishes, nor any end for it in baneful death;
but only mingling and separation of what has been mingled. * * *
But when the elements have been mingled in the fashion of a man,
and come to the light of day, or in the fashion of the race of
wild beasts or plants or l)irds, then men say that these come into
being ; and when they are separated, they call that, as is the cus-
tom, Avoeful death. I too follow the custom, and call it so my-
self. * * * Fools ! — for they have no far-reaching thoughts —
who deem that what before was not comes into being, or that
SEX AND SEX WOUSIIIP 143
ang-ht can perish and be utterly destroyed. * * * The coming
togetlier of all things brings one generation into being and de-
stroys it; the other grows up and is scattered as things become
divided. * * * At one time things grew together to be one only
out of many, at another time they parted asunder so as to be many
instead of one. Fire and water and earth and the mighty height
of air, dead strife, too, apart from these and balancing every one
of them * * * it is she that is deemed to be implanted in tlie
frame of mortals. * * * They call her by the name of Joy and
Aphrodite. * * * Behold the sun, everywhere bright and warm,
and all the immortal things that are bathed in its heat and bright
radiance. Behold the rain, everywhere dark and cold; and from
the earth issue forth things close-pressed and solid. When they
are in strife all these are different in form and separated; but
they come together in love and are desired by one another.
"For out of these have sprung all things that were and are
and shall be — trees and men and women, beasts and birds and
the fishes that dwell in the waters * * * for these things are
what they are ; but running through one another they take differ-
ent shapes — so much does mixture change them. * * *"
"It (Love) made many heads spring up Avithout necks, and
arms wandered bare and bereft of shoulders. Eyes strayed up
and doA\Ti in want of foreheads * * * this marvelous mass of
mortal limbs. At one time all the limbs that are the body's are
brought together into one by Love * * * ^nd again they are
severed by cruel strife.
"But as divinity was mingled still further with divinity, these
things joined together as each might chance, * * * some off-
spring of oxen with faces of men, while others, again, arose as
offspring of men with the heads of oxen, and creatures in whom
the nature of women and men was mingled, furnished with sterile
parts.
^'Come now, hear how the Fire as it was separated caused the
night-born ghosts of men and tearful Avomen to arise * * *
whole-natured forms first arose from the earth, having a portion
both of water and fire. These did the fire * * * cause to
grow, showing as yet neither the charming form of women's
limbs, nor yet the voice and parts that are proper to man. * * *
"But the substance of the child's limbs is divided between
them, part of it in men's and part in women's (body).
144 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
''And upon him came desire as he iningled with her through
sight.
"And it was poured out in the pure parts; and when it met
with cold, women arose from it.
" * * * the two diverging harbors of Aphrodite.
"For in its warmer parts the womb brings forth males, and
that is why m'en are darker, more sinewy and more hairy. * * *"
This gives some idea of the theories about male and female
in early days.
Pythagoras, 500 b.c. — "Semen is an immaterial substance,
like thought, produced hy the male."
Anaxagoras, 500-426 b.c. — "The embryo is from the male
only; a drop from the brain."
Democritus, 470-369 b.c. (?) — "Seed is produced from all
parts of the man's bodj^"
Aristotle, 384-322 b.c. — "Seed is produced only by the male;
it causes coagulation of the menstrual blood and this coagulum
forms the embryo;" but he added that the seed of the male de-
termined the form of the embr^^o; women give no seed and their
testicles (ovaries) are superfluous and as useless as the breasts
of the male.
Diogenes of Appollonia (about 350 b.c.) — "The embryo is
formed from the seed of the male."
Then there was a long list of authors, generally referred to as
"post-Pythagorean" philosophers, Thessalus, Drakon, Polybius,
Dioxippus, Diokles, and others, who believed in accord with many
ancient phallic religions that the male "seeds" were formed in
the right testicle (On) and the female "seeds" were formed in
the left testicle (Hoa) ; they believed the sex of the offspring
could be controlled by tying a string around one of the testicles
during coition. A string tied around the right testicle prevented
the male seeds from escaping, so that a seed from the left tes-
ticle Avoulcl produce a girl child ; and vice versa, by tying a string
around the left testicle and allowing only seed from the right tes-
ticle to be emitted, a boy must necessarily be the result. Galen
(130-200 A.D.) also taught this theory.
Mohammed considered the seed to be merely fluid ; in the
Koran, Sura xcvi, he said: "Read, in the name of the Lord who
created man from a drop ! ' '
But even in these early days there were some who credited
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 145
woman vrith an imjiortant share in the function of creating off-
sjDring; thns Alkmaeon (502 n.c.) said: ^'Both sexes give seed;
the one who gives most determines the sex of the child."
About the beginning of our era the Essenes were a secret
Jewish society Avho devoted their lives to speculations on reli-
gious subjects; they lived clean lives and were much respected.
Among their number were such men as Philo, John the Apostle,
St. Paul, etc.; it was in these times that the Jews (Essenes) orig-
inated (or at least formulated) the Kabbalah of which mention
will be made later on. The Kabbalah contains a mixture of Zo-
roastrian, Pythagorean, Chaldean, Persian and Jewish vagaries,
and they invented the speculations about "Logos," the "Son of
God," the "Mediator," etc.; they placed much stress on the sig-
nificance of words and letters in scripture, according to the the-
ories of those initiated in gemetria. By the end of the I Century
after Christ the Kabbalah speculations about "Logos" had been
firmly established and accepted by the early Christian writers.
The Kabbalah considered the right side of the body to be male
and the left side to be female,
Athenaeus (68 a.d.) believed that the embryo was formed
from the menstrual blood, to Avhich the male seed gave definite
shape and form. The female testicles (as ovaries were then
called) were useless; they were mainly intended for the sake of
synunetry. (See Galen, a little farther on.)
Soranus, as early as 97 a.d., had correctly described the sex-
ual parts of Avoman, showing that he had dissected them. He
denied that the uterus or Avomb contained "cotyledons" or sep-
arate compartments. This referred to a theory previously held
that the womb was made of two lobes, called by some ancient
writers, "the two harbors of Venus," the one on the right side
being warm, so that seed which lodged there became developed
into male children, Avhile the one on the left side was cold and
wet, so that seed finding its way to this harbor developed female
children. Soranus calls the ovaries "female testicles," but he
correctly defined their relation to the pelvic bones; he correctly
described both h^niien and clitoris, and spoke of the sympathy be-
tween the uterus and the mammary glands.
Moschion (117 a.d.) also denied the theory that children at-
tached to a placenta on the right side became males, while those
attached on the left side l^ecame females. He taught, however,
146 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
that women who were trained as professional singers did not
menstruate.
We will have to refer to the sexuality of the two sides of
the body again, later on.
Apollonius, an Alexandrian sophist, ahout 96 a.d., was much
addicted to speculations ahout gemetria, etc.; he taught that all
who want to become godlike in knowledge, and in the healing art,
must abstain from the eating of meat and from congress Avith
women.
Galen (131-203 a.d.) believed that the right testicle produces
male children and the left testicle produces female children, but
he believed also that both sexes contributed seed toAvards the for-
mation of the child; he objected to the theory of Athenaeus (see
above) that form was not always due to the father but that some
children resembled their mothers in form and features which
proves that women's semen or seed also had an influence on the
form of the embryo ; the embryo, he said, sucks blood and spirit
from the placenta; from the blood the flesh and the intestines
were formed, and from blood mixed with spirit the vessels were
produced. The l)rain was formed from a portion of pure seed.
Galen said that women had the same sexual parts as men,
only, on account of their colder (more apathetic) nature they are
placed within her body; the ovaries are testicles and furnish
female seed ; he said that there are as many cavities in the uterus
as there are breasts. (This is the theory of uterine cotyledons.)
Averrhoes (1120-1198 a.d.) believed the female testicles to
be useless; they merely secreted moisture (for lubricating the
vagina during coition; now referred to by some as "sympathy
fluid"); the embryo is formed from the coagulated menstrual
blood; the form is due to the masculine seed; the seed itself is not
impotent but it contains a spiritual or volatile constituent which
causes impregnation, and he quotes a case in which this volatile
substance was absorbed by a woman who bathed in a pool in which
a man had previously bathed and had had an emission of semen.
Jacob von Forli, professor in Padua, about 1450 a.d., said
that the embryo in the first month of pregnancy was under the
influence of Jupiter (''pater," the giver of life); in the seventh
month under the influence of Luna, Avho is favorable because she
is moist and reflects the light of the sun; in the eighth month it
is under the influence of Saturn, Avho kills and eats children; he
SEX AND SEX WOIISIflP 147
is tlie enemy of life and kills every cliild ^vho is born in the
eig-lith month. In the ninth month, again, the child comes mider
the influence of Jnpiter avIio i2,i'ants life to the child.
Ag-rippa (1486 a.d.) said that animals could he reproduced
without seed from various heterogeneous materials. He was a
believer in the mystical and supernatural attri])utes of numbers
(gemetria) and he deduced from these attributes, for instance,
that a prayer to Mary, ''mother of God," on a first of April,
at 8 o'clock in the morning, Avas more certain to be heard and
granted than at any other time.
Cardanus (1501-1576 a.d.) said beavers, rabbits and gazelles
were produced by the impurities in stagnant water. He also
thought that a virgin's breasts would give milk if they were
whipped with nettles. He also taught of the relation of the parts
of the hand (chiromancy) to the character; the thumb indicates
strength, bravery and voluptuousness, and is under the influ-
ence of the planet Mars; the index finger indicates honors, posi-
tion and rank in state and church and is under the influence of
Jnpiter; the middle finger is under the influence of Saturn and
indicates aptitude for magic, for work, and ability to bear pov-
erty and sorroAv ; the ring finger is sacred to the sun, and friend-
ship, honor, might, etc., can be judged from the same; the little
finger is mider the dominion of Venus, and it indicates children,
beautiful women and voluptuousness ; the triangle in the palm of
the hand is under the influence of Mercury, and indicates wis-
dom, smartness, acquisitiveness, etc.
Levinus Lemnius (1505 a.d.) said that crows conceive through
their eyes, that sharks give birth to young through their mouths,
and vermin, such as roaches, mice, etc., originate from dirt and
rubbish.
Ambrose Pare (1510 a.d.) opposed the idea that Avitches could
have connection with demons or devils, as the latter were im-
mortal and immaterial and could not furnish seed.
Fallopius (about 1523 a.d.) first recognized the similarity
in structure and in formation, as erogenous zone, between clitoris
and penis.
Vesalius about the same time taught that the sexual organs
of males and females were alike ; only, those of women were within
the bodv.
148 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
John Ferneliiis (about 1558 a.d.) called the ovaries female
testicles and believed that they produced seed.
Eustachus (about 1562 a.d.) gave the first correct description
of the uterus; he also described the anatomy of the manunary
gland (of a mare).
Wyerus (1515-1588 a.d.) wrote a book concerning the devil
in which he combated the theories of the church and inquisition;
he asserted that the tricks of the magicians were due to sleight-of-
hand and not to an assistance of devils; he denied the existence
of were-wolves and the possibility of sexual union of devils and
women witches, etc.
Ludwig Settala (about 1633 a.d.) wrote a curious work on
moles, birthmarks, etc. ; he said that a mole or mark on the
nose was accompanied by a similar one on the penis; one in the
face was accompanied by a similar one near the genitals, etc.;
the nearer it is to the nose, the nearer it is to the penis or
vulva, etc.
Paracelsus (1492-1541 a.d.) taught that if menstruating or
pregnant women breathed on a mirror it would injure the health
of children who looked in the mirror afterwards ; he said that
from the seed of a man, a man could be generated by placing
the semen in fermenting horse-dung, like chicken eggs could be
hatched; this was to prove that the woman's part in generation
was merely to furnish the aiopropriate soil for the development
of the male seed into an embryo.
He explained that the seed is produced by all parts of the
body and reproduces its kind; the seed from the nose repro-
duced the nose, from the eye, the eye, etc.
The elements, air, earth, fire and water each had the prop-
erties of being hot, dry, cold and wet; therefore there could be
dry water, cold fire, etc. ; which was proved by ice, by luminous
or phosphorescent decaying wood, etc.
He believed that the menstrual blood removed poisonous ma-
terials from the system ; therefore it could not be the cause of the
embryo; the embryo in the Avomb got its nourishment from the
milk of the breasts, which flowed down to the womb.
Gold was male ; silver, female ; but this was simply in accord
with general alchemistic ideas.
Harvey (1578-1658 a.d.) taught that the ovum was the impor-
tant germ-cell and that it contained in itself the preformed ova
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 149
for the next generation, whicli in turn held the ovum for an-
otlier; this again held one for the next generation, and so ad
infinitum (like nested pill-boxes) ; it was calculated that Eve at
her creation held 200,000 millions of hmnan germs within her!
The advocates of this theory were called ''praeformationists."
It is curious to note that Harvey arrived at this conclnsion
by pure reasoning, as he had no microscope and could not posi-
tively know that the woman produced eggs or ova.
In Crudon's Concordance of the Bible (1737), we find the fol-
lowing definition of seed: ''Seed — that thin, hot and spirituous
humour in man's body which is fitted by nature for the genera-
tion of mankind."
This ma}^ refer to "man" as the male, or it may refer to
"man" as the species, as mankind; it does not therefore specif-
ically attribute the "seed" to the male sex alone.
The "animalculists" on the other hand asserted that the
spermatozoon is the essential germ, which contained the human
being complete in all its parts, only exceedingly minute, and which
only needed to be deposited in a woman's body, like a seed in soil,
to groAV into a child. Von Haller taught this theory- as late as
1677 A.D.
Such was the authority of the Bible that this view persisted
until quite modern times. Charles Bonnet taught that before fe-
cundation the germ is preexistent, and that it contains in minia-
ture all the organs of the adult. His book. Contemplation de
la Nature/' containing these teachings was published in 1764-
1765 A.D. Bonnet died in 1793 a.d.
Leeuwenhoek, in 1677 a.d., made known his discovery of the
spermatozoa. Dr. Dalen Patius soon afterwards claimed to have
seen the human form in the spermatozoon, "the two naked thighs,
the legs, the breast, both arms, etc."
In France, in 1694 a.d., Hartsoecker published that "each
spermatozoon conceals beneath its tender and delicate skin a com-
plete male or female animal. The egg (of the w^oman) is merely
the source of nourishment for the real germ contained in the sper-
matozoon. Each one of the male animals (spermatozoa) encloses
an infinity of other animals, both male and female, which are cor-
respondingly small, and those male animals enclose yet other
males and females of the same species, and so forth in a series
which are to be produced up to the end of time." And the sci-
150 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
entists of those days seriously calculated when the supply of germs
which Adam had deposited in Eve, and through her in mankind,
would become exhausted, and how many human heings were pre-
formed in the beginning and came "from the loins" of Adam.
Buffon, the celebrated scientist, and the friend of Bonnet, held
similar views.
So it appears that this view of the male furnishing the "seed"
was predominant from about 1732 b.c. to the beginning of the
nineteenth century, or, if we include the centuries of the oral trans-
mission of the Bible, for about 4000 years.
What modern science says about this subject will be con-
sidered presently.
LIGHT ON A DARK SUBJECT
"There is nothing in the human economy of which men and
women should know more and of which they know less than of
the sexual relationship. Ignorance is not bliss; it is the source
of unhappiness, suffering, crime, vice and sorrow without end."
The light of knowledge illmninating this subject would ele-
vate the prevalent sensual conceptions of the relationship of the
sexes to an appreciation of the real holiness and purity of married
companionship and would check immorality and prostitution.
The universal song of love is a harmonious blending of friend-
ship, esteem, and companionship with the baser animal desires,
sanctifying the latter through the holiness of the former. This
perfect love was symbolized by the Greeks in the myth of Cupid
and Psyche; Cupid, the god of Physical Love, and Psyche, the
Soul, tlie Spiritual Element in Love (Fig. 41).
Let us first consider the physical or carnal side of love.
The Female
Between the thighs of the woman, chastely hidden by the
hair of the nions veneris, miobtrusive and retiring as the nature
of the woman herself, lies the vulva — the external sexual organ
of the woman. AVhen we spread the lips or labia apart we see
in the upper part the clitoris, consisting of erectile tissue and
constituting a so-called "erogenous zone;" when this organ is
excited by friction, or by playful handling, it becomes erect and
gives rise to voluptuous sensations. Below the clitoris is the open-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
151
ing to the vagina, into wliicli tlie man introduces liis erect penis
during coition, thus bringing his puhic hair against the clitoris,
to increase the titillation wliich gives the pleasure to the woman.
These parts are sho\Mi in the drawing (Fig. 42).
Fig. 41.— "Cupid and Psyche," from an antique statue.
Fig". 42.- — Drawing of a vulva, and its
symbol, the doubly-pointed ellipse.
Fig. 43. — Section of female pelvis, sliowing
sexual organ (utenis) of woman.
152
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Tliis diagranunatic drawing of a section of tlie woman's body
shows us the sexual structures of the human female (Fig. 43).
Her sexual organs lie in the cavity of the pelvis, which has been
called the ' ' cradle of the human race ; ' ' and the vulva is the ' ' door
of life," or the ''door to the womb;" it is the door to the vagina,
the "vestibule" or "ante-chamber of life" leading to the womb.
Here (Fig. 44) we see the vagina laid open and the uterus
in section ; attached to the Avomb we see the Fallopian tubes and
the ovaries. In the latter an ovum is elaborated or perfected or
matured once in every four weeks, or in a lunar month, and when
Fig. 44. — Diagram showing vagina laid open, uterus and fallopian tubes in section, and
ovaries, from an old work on ' ' Artificial Impregnation. ' '
it is freed from the ovary, the ovum is caught up by the funnel-
shaped ends of a Fallopian tube and passed down to the interior
of the uterus or womb.
This disengagement of an ovum is accompanied by a dis-
charge of blood which we call "menstruation" or "monthlies,"
or in Latin — "menses," and the physical discomfort due to the
congestion of the ovaries, with the accompanying disturbance of
the nervous system, forms the physical basis of "sexual instinct"
in the female. During this process the female is said to be "in
heat," and connection with the male about this time is particu-
larly liable to be followed by impregnation; in fact, among many
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
153
of the lower animals the male refuses to serve the female at all,
if she is not in heat (Fig-. 45),
According to one theory of the predetermination of sex, the
fresher the ovum is at the time of impregnation, the more likely
is it to lead to the formation of a girl embryo; and as it gets
older, during the passage through the Falloj)ian tube, the more
likely is it to produce a boy baby. Therefore some say that coi-
tion just before the monthlies are expected, is the best time for
coition if a girl baby is desired, and coition a day or two after
menstruation is preferable, if a boy baby is desired. The theory
is not accepted as infallible, hoAvever, and for reasons already
explained, no theory on this subject is absolutely reliable.
Fig. 45. — The female in heat, f roin an old
work on ' ' Artificial Impregnation. ' '
Fig. 46. — Explaining the conse-
quences, from an old work on "Arti-
ficial Impregnation."
The speculations on sex determination assumed an undue im-
portance in recent times, because the Czar and other rulers were
anxious to secure male heirs for their d^masties.
The human oat^iui or egg, of which I show an enlarged draw-
ing in Fig, 47, is a small round cell about Vi2r, inch in diameter,
or far less than the smallest pin head in size. If it does not meet
with a spermatozoon in the ducts or in the uterus, it perishes and
is discharged from the womb. But if it meets Avith a spermatozoon
and combines Avith it — and this can be but A\dtli one spermatozoon
of all the many millions injected by a Adgorous male into the va-
gina during each coition — the ovum absorbs the head or nucleus
of the spermatozoon or male cell and thereby becomes fertilized
154
SEX AND SEX WOKSHIP
or impregnated. The illustration also shows the relative size of
the OAH^im and the spermatozoon.
The process of ovulation begins about the age of twelve
or fourteen years in our climate ; this is called the age of puberty
and about this time the sexual organs mature, the hips broaden
and the pubic hair appears; also, the breasts become enlarged
and assume the beautiful shape that is presented in a beautiful
woman.
Ovulation continues for about thirty years, or with us to
about the age of forty-five ^-ears, after which the woman becomes
I'ig. 47. — Human ovum and
spermatozoa. Reproduced from an
old work.
Fig. 48. — Section of pregnant woman ; the
ancient Peruvians placed their dead in the po-
sition of a foetus, for burial.
a neuter, or practically sexless, although not incapable of sexual
intercourse and sensual pleasure, for which, in fact, a liking is
sometimes developed after the cessation of menstruation. This
period of the cessation of menstruation is called the ''change of
life" or the "menopause."
If impregnation occurs, the ovum becomes attached to the
interior Avails of the uterus and develops into an embryo or child.
As this embryo grows, the abdomen of the woman correspond-
ingly enlarges and becomes round and full (Figs. 46 and 48) ; the
woman is ''pregnant" or "with child" or "enciente." Pregnancy
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
155
lasts al)()ut nine niontlis (or as the ancients stated it, ten [lunar]
months) durin,<>- which time tlie ana])olic sex-bias of the woman
enables her to elal)orate nourishment enough for both herself and
the growing- cliild Avitliin her, nntil "at term," or at the end of
the nine months of gestation, the child is expelled by the contrac-
tion of the womb into independent existence.
The anabolic surplus of the female mammal is now directed
to her breasts and milk is produced (Fig. 51). The fulness of
the mammary glands gives rise to discomfort which is relieved
bv the infant sucking the milk from the breasts. The nipple is
-^^i9\
^^^'^^
^p^'
f'-:, ..> -v* 1
«m6^^^^
pf^-
Fig. 49. — An ape niotlier and her young.
Fig. 50.— "Love's Secret." Statue of
mother and child.
an erogenous zone having a structure similar to the cavernous
portion of the penis, capable of giving a pleasure similar al-
though weaker than that experienced by the clitoris during coi-
tion; and the desire to obtain relief from the engorgement of
the breasts and to feel the pleasure caused by the erection of the
nipple by tlie sucking of the infant, is the physical l)asis of "nia-
tci-nal instinct."
The illustration shows the structure of a human breast-gland;
the lobules of cells secrete the milk Avhich is collected by the
156 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
lactiferous ducts wliich anastomose into larger and more dilat-
able ducts, which converge to the mamilla or nipple where the
mouths of these ducts are situated and from which the child can
obtain the milk by sucking. The nipple is a mildly erogenous zone,
and sucking it gives a pleasurable sensation, which is the phys-
ical basis of mother-love (Fig. 51).
There is a general belief that a woman Avill not conceive while
she is nursing a child ; therefore this process is continued as long
as possible by many mothers.
Probably the Papuan women have a' similar idea; they keep
little pigs as pets which the women suckle at their breasts.
The first articulate sound uttered by the infant of any na-
Fig; 51. — Section of a luimau mammary gland, shomng the lactiferous ducts.
tion, by the child of any human mother, is the syllable ''ma;" it
may be repeated, thus "ma, ma;" and the mother, fondly holding
the child to her breasts, fancies that the child is trying to call her
name. Hence, in nearly all languages of earth, "ma" or "mama"
means "mother." Perhaps the next articulate sound will be "ba,
ba," or "pa, pa," and this is supposed to be the name of the fa-
ther; except that in some nations the word "mama" means the
father and the word "papa" the mother, as among the Maori (see
the story of the god Rangi and his wife Papa, on page 4).
The most important part of the mother to the child is the
source of its nourishment — the breasts. These are called, from
the word "mama," the mammary glands, and animals who have
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 157
sucli milk-prodnciii<^- glands ai'o called ''maininaliaiis" or ''mam-
mals."
But the evolution of the female breast or of the mammary
glniid, as a feature of the female annual, dates back probably not
more than about 25,000,000 of years, though some scientists claim
it to be not much over 3,000,000 of years old. That is, the age
of mammals is variously estimated to have begun from 3,000,000
to 25,000,000 years ago.
The evolution of the breast was a momentous event ; it marked
a new epoch, for it ushered in a period when "mother love," the
care and education of the offspring by the mother, became a
prominent feature of life, and a factor in the development of in-
tellectual traits.
The evolution of the mammary gland was a great aid in the
mental evolution of the animal and hmnankiiid. When the off-
spring is able to shift for itself, either at birth or very soon there-
after, its instincts will be sufficient for its recpiirements, and ad-
vancement is slow and uncertain.
But when offspring is dependent for nourishment and care
on its parents for a long time, it is taught many things that are
not instinctive. When a cat plays with a captured mouse, it is
not necessarily due to a cruel disposition; if the cat has kittens
she does this to teach them how to catch their own prey, mice,
birds, etc.
The human infant is dependent on its parents longer than
any young of any species, first, by nursing at its mother's breast
for a year or more, and then for years, until at least the age of
twelve to twenty years, for clothing, food and education; the
result is that the human offspring advances much farther in
things that are learned by exercising the brain, by thinking, and
less by instinct, than any other organism, with the result that
there is mental and intellectual advancement from generation to
generation.
The Male
Prominent on the front of the pubic parts of the man are his
sexual organs — bold, self-assertive, and aggressive as is the man
himself. These organs are the penis, also called "virile organ"
(from the Latin words vir, a man, and virilis, e, virile, manly),
and the two testicles, the latter contained in a pendulous sac called
158 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
the scrotum. In tliese testicles are produced the male cells or
the spermatozoa. Owing to their prominence and sensitiveness
these organs are snliject to injury; in fights, they offer a hold to
an opponent which is dangerous to the one whose testicles or
scrotum are thus seized; from this comes the expression, ^' to have
a man hy the nuts," which means, to have a man at a great dis-
advantage. These organs are often referred to as "the privates"
or "private parts" or as in the Bible, the "secrets;" Deut. xxv,
11, 12. "When men strive together one with another, and the
wife of the one draweth near for to deliver her husband out of
the hand of liim tliat smiteth liim, and putteth forth her hand, and
Fig. 52. — A speniiatoziKin, enlarged. Eeprofluetion from an old print.
taketh him by the secrets : then thou shalt cut off her hand, thine
eye shall not pity her."
In ancient Egypt men of the poorer classes wore a kilt and
girdle only, or went naked when at manual lal)or ; the Jews were
slaves in Egypt, and therefore poor, and they probably followed
the example of the Egyptians as to dress. This made it easy,
and almost natural, for a woman coming to the rescue of her hus-
band in a brawl, to put her husband's enemy to the greatest dis-
advantage she could, which was to seize him by his most sensitive
and \a^ilnerable parts; but we see from the above quotation that
she was apt to suffer much for such loyalty to her husband.
We more commonly call the testicles "imts" or "stones;"
Moses already gave them the latter name nearly 3500 years ago ;
SEX AND SEX WOItSIIlP
L')!)
Deut. xxiii, 1: "He tliat is wounded in the stones, or liath liis
privy member cut off, shall not enter into the congregation of
the Lord."
The spermatozoon is an extremely small and very active cell
having a "head" and a "tail," which latter moves with an un-
dulating motion similar to that of a tadpole, propelling the sper-
matozoon abont in a lively manner; many thousands, if not mil-
lions, of spermatozoa wriggle about in the semen introduced at
each coition into the vagina. Here, if both loarties to the sexual
union are healthy, they meet with congenial surroundings, able
to maintain life and good health for several days, and perhaps
Fig. 53. — Stmcture of male sexual
organs ; penis relaxed.
Fig. 54 — Male organ, showing erection.
(Diagrammatic. )
for weeks, so that it is doubtful whether in a young married
woman, before the novelty of the new relationship has palled, the
vagina, uterus and Fallopian tubes are ever entirely free from
spermatozoa capable of performing their function.
In Fig. 52 the illustration shows the shape of a spermatozoon,
of course much enlarged; the corresponding male cells in plants
are the antherozoids of cryptogams and the pollen cells of the
higher or flowering plants.
After the spermatozoa are produced in the testicles they pass
to the seminal vesicles (small reservoirs behind the bladder)
where they are stored up for future use (Fig. 53). The bladder
160 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
is emptied through a tube called the urethra ; the ejaculatory ducts
are passages from the seminal vesicles to the membranous portion
of the urethra; when the vesicles become filled Avith spermatozoa
and seminal fluid, this fulness causes a sense of discomfort which
prompts to the taking of measures for evacuation, and this sense
of discomfort is the physical basis of "sexual instinct" in the
male.
The head and skin of the penis are the erogenous zone in
man ; friction, handling or irritation of any kind, may produce an
erection and emission which is accompanied by pleasant sensa-
tions, but the pleasantest sensation is that caused by the slight
friction of the back and forward movement of the erect penis in
the vagina during coition.
Erection is essential to coition; it is due to the filling of the
interstices in the cavernous or spongy portion of the penis with
blood, under the influence of the erectile nerves which cause the
contraction of a muscle near the base of the penis, which holds the
blood in the penis, causing ver}^ rigid erection.
You probably have heard the medical students' story of the
young woman student in the class (in these days of co-education)
who, when she was asked by the professor of surgery how she
would amputate the penis, replied: ''I'd make a circular inci-
sion tlirough the soft parts, then retract the soft parts and saw
through the bone." "But," said the professor, "there is no
bone in the penis. " " Oh, yes, there is ! Every one I ever felt
had a bone in it," replied the co-ed.
If the exciting cause is long enough continued, as in coition,
the semen j)asses from the seminal vesicles through the ejacula-
tory ducts to the urethra where it becomes mixed with fluid from
the prostatic and some other glands ; when this accumulation of
fluid is sufficiently great a convulsive excitation expels it from
the urethra; this excitation is called "orgasm." The pleasurable
feeling is caused by the passage of the semen through the ejacu-
latory ducts and its accumulation in the posterior part of the
urethra; it increases in intensity and reaches its acme at emis-
sion, after which it quickly subsides, leaving a sense of comfort-
able lassitude.
If this emission takes place during union in the usual posi-
tion of coition, the woman on her back and the man on top, the
position of the feminine pelvis is somewhat as in the diagram
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
IGl
(Fig. 55) ; just in front of the inoiitli of tlie woiiil) is a small cul-
de-sac of the vagina and the penis reaches to this point so that
the semen is ejected into almost immediate contact with the mouth
of the womb; the pleasurable excitement of the clitoris extends
to the entire nervous complex of the uterine organs, and eventu-
ates in a sort of spasmodic insufflation by the uterus, by which
means the semen, which when quite fresh is more or less viscid,
somewhat more so than white of egg, or even like the chalaziform
appendage to the yolk of the egg, is sucked up into the uterus
with some force and is splashed all over the inner surface of the
womb where it soon liquefies, after which the spermatozoa com-
mence their excursion up the Fallopian tubes, by wiggling their
vibratile tails.
-Position of pelvic organs, woman lying down ; shows pockot in front of month
of uterus for semen in coition.
This insufflation by the uterus is the ''orgasm" in woman,
and constitutes the moment of intensest gratification to her in the
sexual congress with her mate.
Perfect love between man and woman depends on a compati-
bility of bodily pleasures as well as on spiritual love. Both must
become excited in coition at the same time; ''if either^ is passive,
with the genital muscles relaxed and the spirit cold, he or she
can take no part in the duet of love;" the duet remains a solo,
and if either is ha])itually cold and unresponsive the symphony
of love will be marred by the jangling and jarring sounds and
discords of "sweet bells out of tune."
162 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Whether coition will be a mutual pleasure or a one-sided en-
joyment only, depends on the man, for he can control, to a cer-
tain extent at least, the emission of the semen ; if he simply thinks
of his own pleasure and lets the semen go before he feels that his
mate is sufficiently excited for an orgasm, the woman will be dis-
appointed and more or less disgusted ; but if he rightly times the
emission the woman and the man will both experience the pleas-
ure which is referred to in Prov. v, 18, 19: "Rejoice with the wife
of thy youth * * * be thou ravished always with her love."
Virility, or the power to impregnate a woman, continues in
man from puberty to about the age of 60 or 70 years, but in most
men probably longer, as far as spermatozoa are concerned, pro-
vided he retains the vigor to have an erection which is necessary
to bring the semen to the mouth of the uterus ; if a man loses the
ability of begetting a child, it is more frequently from inability
to have erections than from absence of spermatozoa, although the
latter condition sometimes occurs. Such a condition is called
"impotence" or "loss of virile power;" this, however, is often
more imaginary than real, as a result of being frightened by the
lying advertisements of quacks, who live on the credulity of the
ignorant.
One of the most common symptoms of "loss of sexual power"
is, according to these advertisements, that one testicle (usually
the left) hangs lower than the other. The frightened reader ex-
amines himself and finds that this dreadful symptom is present
with him, and he goes to the quack for treatment, which usually
"comes high."
In realit^^, it is a wise provision of nature that one testicle
should hang a little lower than the other, so that they may glide
out of each other's way when otherwise they might be bruised
during jumping, wrestling or physical exertions of any kind. The
important bearing which this relative position of the testicles had
on religion and religious symbolism will appear later.
Masturbation
That portion of the nervous system which presides over and
controls the process of erection is called the "erection center,"
probably situated in the sacral plexus of nerves, but according to
some authors, in the brain, or in the pituitary gland; it is not
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 163
directly under the influence of the will. The only strictly "in-
stinctive" excitation of this center is caused by a fulness of the
seminal vesicles and auxiliary <i,lan(ls, which, by reflex action,
causes erotic ideas and desires in the waking condition, (n- '^in-
voluntary emissions" during sleep.
If awake, this fulness suggests to the male to seek a female
companion or to masturbate; the resulting emission relieves the
discomfort caused by the engorgement of the seminal vesicles.
Probably the least harmful and most natural way to get re-
lief is bv masturbation.
Fanatics on sex relations have agitated against tlie practice
of masturbation, until probably every youth thinks this is a most
heinous sin. I have seen it defined in some tracts as the "sin
against the Holy Ghost" which is supposed to be unforgival)le.
These fanatical wi'itings have sent many people to insane asy-
lums ; I kncAv of one young man, who believed that masturbation
was a wicked sin, and I have seen him seize a knife A\4th intent to
kill himself because he could not In-eak himself of the habit; he
had been taught that to find relief with a woman, if he was not
married to her, would damn him forever. He finally went to an
insane asylum, where he was when I last heard of him, a hopeless
lunatic.
Now, as a matter of fact, there is notliing said in the Bible
about masturbation; from a religious standpoint, therefore, it is
no sin.
But masturbation is called l)y misrepresenting fanatics —
"the sin of Onan;" hence masturbation is also called "onanism."
We read in the Bible, Dent, xxv, 5 to 9: "If brethren dwell
together, and one of them die and have no cliild, the wife of the
dead shall not marry without unto a stranger: her husband's
brother shall go in unto her, and take her to him to wife, and per-
form the duty of a husband's brother unto her.
"And it shall be, that the first-born which she beareth, shall
succeed in the name of his brother which is dead, that liis name
be not put out of Israel.
"And if the man like not to take his brother's wife, then let
his ])rother's wife go up to the gate unto the elders, and say. My
husband's brother refuseth to raise up unto his brother a name
in Israel, he will not perform the duty of my husband's brother.
164 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
"Then the elders of his city shall call him, and speak unto
him : and if he stand to it, and say, I like not to take her,
''Then shall his brother's wife come unto him in the pres-
ence of the elders, and loose his shoe from off his foot, and spit
in his face, and shall answer and say. So shall it be done nnto that
man that will not bnild np his brother's house.
"And his name shall be called in Israel, The house of him
that hath his shoe loosed."
The Semitic people, to which the Jews belonged, had some
peculiar customs in ancient times in regard to women or wives.
A wife who had been procured b}' purchase by her husband, or
secured from her father by a contract and a payment of any kind,
became the slave of her husband and at his death she could not
marry again at her own will, as she was part of her husband's
estate or property; she therefore became the property of her de-
ceased husband's next of kin, who inherited the estate. While
this remained the custom among other Semitic tribes, especially
the Arabians until the time of Mohanuned, the Jews changed
this; but they retained one feature of this custom, namely, that
a widow left childless at her husband's death, was entitled to
have a child to inherit her husband's name and property; she had
the right to demand from her husband's brother that he let her
have enough of the family seed to raise offspring to her hus-
band's memory, as just related in the passage from Deuteronomy.*
In some Polynesian islands a similar custom prevailed; a
widow was taken by the brother of her deceased husband, or if
there was no brother, some other relative took her, but not to se-
cure an heir for his brother, but as a Avife for himself.
This custom was also prevalent in ancient Sparta and Athens ;
possibly in all such cases there was an underlying memory or per-
sistence of polyandric practices in primitive ancestry.
Now we also read in the Bible, Gen. xxxviii, 4 et seq: "And
she (Shuali, the wife of Judah) conceived again and bare a son;
and called his name Onan."
* * * "And Judah took a wife for Er, his first-born, whose
name was Tamar.
"And Er, Judah 's firstborn, was wicked in the sight of the
Lord; and the Lord slew him.
*An interesting story in this connection is told in tlic l!i()lc about Ruth and IJoaz.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 165
"And Judah said unto Onan, Go in unto thy brother's wife,
and marry her, and raise up seed to thy brother.
"And Onan knew that tlie seed shoukl not be his; and it came
to pass, when he went in unto his ])rother's wife, that he spilk'd
it (tlie seed) on tlie g'round, lest he shouM give seed to his brother,
"And the tiling which he did displeased the Lord, and he
slew him also."
We see from this that the sin of Onan was not what we now
call "onanism," hut it urns a refusal to beget a child ivith Ms
sister -in-lmu in memory of his brother. Onan was willing to enjoy
tlie beauty of Taniar, l^ut when he felt the sensual gratification, he
withdrew his penis and allow^ed the semen to fall on the ground,
thus refusing her her share of the pleasure and the chance to con-
ceive. The story of Onan has no reference to masturbation, and
I know of no passage in the Bible that even hints that this prac-
tice is a sin.
It is a bad habit and a man would do well to avoid it ; but it
is not to be worried over if he can not refrain from it.
To apply the story of Onan to the practice of masturbation is
about as appropriate as the reproof of the minister who overheard
a rather profane boy telling another boy to "go to the devil!"
Taking the boy by the shoulder and looking him sternly in the
eyes, he said in his most sanctimonious and impressive manner:
"My boy, do you not remember the commandment, 'thou shalt
not take the name of the Lord, thy God, in vain.' "
AVlien we consider with what detail the Bible regulates such
matters as menstruation, or with what women a man may indulge
in coition, and what Avomen are forbidden to him, and even re-
garding defecation (see Deut. xxiii, 10-14), it seems significant
that nothing is said about masturbation, if this had been consid-
ered a reprehensible practice by Moses; perhaps, as the Jews
practiced polygamy and could have concubines besides, mastur-
bation was not as common a practice as it is in monogamous com-
munities; it was unnecessary because there was practically no
limit to feminine conveniences to satisfy the sexual desires.
St. Augustine defined a sin to be "any thought, word or deed
against the law of God," so that in the absence of such a law,
masturbation can not be a sin. If we eliminate the superstitious
dread of sin, then masturbation is the most rational, the most ef-
fective and the least harmful mode of gratifying sexual instinct,
1()() SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
except coition with a wife. Misrepresenting masturbation to be
a lieinons sin, and as very destructive to the nervous organiza-
tion leads multitudes of young men to go to houses of prostitution,
because coition is commonly regarded as less objectionable than
masturbation.
But coition with a prostitute involves risks to reputation, to
social standing and to health, that makes this indulgence much
more dangerous than masturbation, so that many young men are
afraid to go to a whore, and so they seduce innocent girls, to
avoid any risks to themselves ; or some young men go insane over
their inability to abstain from masturbation. Warnings against
masturbating may be well meant, but the pictured evils are vastly
exaggerated, and the consequent harm done to young men and
to girls is infmitely greater than any possible harm from indul-
gence in the habit.
Masturbation may occasionally do harm to a weak-minded
subject, but the idiocy or nervous affections, ''loss of manhood,"
etc., are less frequently the result of excessive masturbation than
excessive masturbation is the result of idiocy; idiocy is not the
result but the cause of masturbation.
Sexual Instinct
It is of the utmost importance for an understanding of sexual
practices and sexual vices and perversions, that we should have
a full understanding of "sexual instinct," and "sexual passion."
Science, in the number for November, 1892, said: "All the
voluntary activities of men and animals are reflex or intelligent,
the one set originating in sensation, the other in perception.
"Instincts are not activities, but impulses to activity. They
are due to the sensation being transmitted from their several lo-
cal seats to the brain, where they present themselves as cravings,
desires, appetites, imperatively calling for relief. They prompt
to both kinds of activities, those which can be performed by reflex
action, and those which require the adoption of intelligent means.
Voiding of the feces and urine is a type of the former, the pro-
viding of food of the latter. The more important instincts are
the craving for food, the sexual instinct and the maternal instinct.
"Instinct impels to action but does not guide to its perform-
ance."
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
167
Let me repeat and emphasize this last sentence, as it states
the nature of sexual instinct in unmistakable terms:
"Instinct impels to action but does not guide to its perform-
ance."
"If reflex action Avill appease it the animal has but to will:
if intelligent measures are required it is the function of the intel-
lect to adopt them.
''The most important instincts originate in the local action of
proper secretions, as the contents of the stomach, or bladder, the
gastric juice, the spermatorrhoeal or lacteal secretions, etc, In-
Fig. 56 — "Daphnis and Chloe, " from Fig. 57. — Papuan women in their best at-
a painting of an ancient Persian love tire — just a string about the neck,
storv.
stinct is not a lower order of intelligence, nor a substitute for it.
It is an impulse or spur, and may be called the school-master or
wet-nurse of the intellect."
One of the oldest and sweetest of love-stories is the old Per-
sian tale of Daphnis and Chloe, now better known as "Paul and
Virginia" (Fig. 56). This storv^ tells of a youth and a maiden
who grew up in idyllic simplicity and with no thought of carnal
desire. In the most ancient times, as evidenced by this story, it
168 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
was already recognized that the sexual impulse or instinct did not
teach the method of gratification knoAMi as coition, and that this
had to be learnt from teaching by others.
Instinct is not as powerful in man as in other animals be-
cause there is not the same necessity for it, and in the clothed
nations there is but little suggestion on Avhich instinct could act,
so that, even if at one time coition was suggested by instinct, the
disuse of such a faculty for untold generations must have made
it inoperative among clothed nations.*
In the unclothed savage nations the conditions are different,
but even there, as we are told in the descriptions of these peoples,
coition and the knowledge of sexual relationship are the result of
teaching by others. In many savage nations, at the age of pu-
berty, the boys are sent apart from the tribe for a time, during
which they are instructed by priests or elder men. When they
return to the tribe they are "men" or "warriors ;" in other words,
they know "the ways of men with a maiden." In some of the
Polynesian tribes the boys are tattooed during this time ; they are
considered to be minor children until after they have been tattooed.
In some tribes, as for instance in Arabia, boys go naked until
they are near the age of puberty, while the girls are put into their
first clothing when they are about six or seven years of age.
When the first menstrual flow is noticed in a girl, some tribes,
as for instance, the Sawaioris (Polynesian), make this the occa-
sion of a sort of family festival for the women, and the nature of
this flow is explained to the girl ; in ancient Greece and Rome a
girl at this period of her life was taken by the priestesses to the
temples of Priapus, whose images were represented mth rigid,
erect penises (whence the term "priapism), and the girl was
instructed in the uses of the organ of Priapus, or even allowed or
compelled to have connection with the god, after which she was no
longer a girl but a woman.
With us, as a general rule, no information on this subject is
given to young people ; they are left to gather what they may from
evil companions, or from obscene pictures or erotic literature, of
which there is no lack among the boj^s. Sexual instinct exerts but
a small influence on our lives, and many persons, especially among
the more guardedly reared girls, grow to maturity Avithout any
*A quaint story based on this idea, is "The Harvester," by Gene Stratton-Porter.
SEX AND SEX WOllSHIP 1 G9
knowledge of the sexual relationsliip, and are even married with-
out any anticipation of what the experiences of the bridal night
will reveal to them.
Hence there is often great curiosity engendered, which is not
always contributive to best morality. Some young ladies were
talking about marriage, and Avondering A\'hy their married friends
affected siicli an air of superior knowledge and experience; and
they agreed that the first of them to be married should tell her
experience to the others.
Soon afterwards one of them became engaged, and in due time
married; and she kept her promise by writing to her friends:
^'Read Job xli, 16-17 and Job xl, 16-17."*
If instinct Avas sufficient to suggest coition everyone should
know about this. To Avhat extent habits ordinarily supposed to
be strictly ''instinctive" are reallj^ due to teaching is illustrated
by the advice of Mr. J. F. Ferris, in his work on artificial hatch-
ing of poultry, that ' ' if the chicks do not readily eat Avhen twenty-
four hours old, one or two chickens someAvhat older should be
placed Avith them to teach them to eat." Of course, when hatched
by a hen, the hen teaches them this.
Ignorance of coition in groAvn men must necessarily be rare;
yet I had experience in a case Avhere a man had been married for
OA^er five years, and although he prayed eA^ery night that God
might bless their home AA^th a child, no baby arrived; finally his
Avife prevailed on him to consult a physician, haAdng first given
me an insight into the true condition of affairs. When he came, a
little questioning proved that his Avife Avas still a virgin; he had
never seen a Avoman naked and did not knoAv the significance of
the anatomical difference betAveen himself and his Avife and did
not dream of any other way of getting babies than that God would
send them, possibly by storks or angels! (Fig. 58). I took him
with me to the dissecting room and explained to him the anatomy
and physiology of the parts, and the modus operandi, and im-
pressed on him that, in this matter at least, God helps those Avho
help themselves.
After several Aveeks he came back and said that he had not
succeeded in coition, as every time when he had an erection, by
*Job xH, 16-17: "One is so near to another that no air can come between them. They are
joined one to another, they stick together, they can not be sundered."
Job xl, 16-17: "'Lo now, his strength is in his loins, and his force is in the navel of his belly.
He moveth his tail like a cedar; the sinews of his stones are wrapped together."
170
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
the time he and his wife had removed their clothing to a sufficient
extent, his erection was gone. I advised him to take all the clothes
off his wife and himself when they went to bed, let the light burn
dinilv, and to kiss his wife from head to foot; to do this everv eve-
ning for a month, but not to attempt coition until after a month,
so as not to risk humiliating his Avife by a possible failure; and
I ad\dsed him to read the fourth chapter of the Song of Solomon,
or better, to memorize it and repeat it inwardly as he kissed his
wife. Whether he did as I advised, I do not know, but there were-
several children.
The point I wish to make is this : That if a knowledge of sex-
Fig-. 58. — "To Its Earthly Home," from Fig. 59. — A childbii-tli, allegorically rep-
a painting by Kaulbach. resented in the Kurfuersten Bible, 1768*
aal union is not a matter of instinct, then unnatural and unusual
practices are still less likely to originate spontaneously in this
way, and especially not in the minds of the comparatively passive
girls, and perverted practices (such as the Bible refers to in Rom.
i, 26, 27 : ' ' For even their women did change the natural use into
that which is against nature. And likewise also the men, leaving
the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust one toward
*"And there appeared a great wonder in heaven : a woman clothed with the sun, and the
moon under her feet, and upon her head a crown of twelve stars; and she, being with child, cried,
travailing in birth and pained to be delivered." Rev. xii, 1 and 2.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 171
another; men with men working that wliich is unseemly)" are
not to be explained or palliated by references to "perverted in-
stincts." The "instincts" are not perverted, even Avhen the prac-
tices are so. All sexual perversions are the results of perverted
teachings; they are not the results of instinctive suggestions and
can not be excused as insanities. Some that are insane may be
addicted to sexual perversions, but the practices are not proof of
insanity, for they are indulged in all over the world as the re-
sults of suggestions and teachings. But Ave can not enter into
further details, as it is not the plan of this book to treat of sexual
perversions.
Sexual instinct is essentially of the same nature as the desire
to urinate or defecate, being a sense of discomfort from distended
seminal vesicles in the male or of congested or engorged ovaries
in the female, just as the other impulses are caused by a full rec-
tum or bladder.
In men this discomfort is relieved spontaneously by involun-
tary emissions, and in women by the menstrual flow, these being
the primary, normal, natural, and instinctive methods of appeas-
ing the sexual instinct.
All methods of relieving the distention of the seminal vesicles
except involuntary emissions are unnatural in the sense that they
are not instinctive, but the results of volition. Strictly speaking,
a method like masturbation Avhich can be practiced by one indi-
vidual alone, is more natural than a method like coition that de-
mands the co-operation of another individual who may perhaps
at the time be indifferent or even averse to the copulation.
Every voluntary act to satisfy the sexual instinct or passion
is an intellectual act, and it is sane if it accomplishes the result
suggested by the sexual instinct — an emission of the semen; all
the arts of the debauche that achieve this result are rational and
sane. The man Avho uses a Avoman, the masturbator Avho uses his
hand, the Turk Avho uses his eunuch, the pederast Avho uses a boy
or man, the Arab Avho uses his mare, the coAA^boy Avho uses a
heifer, and the libertine Avho pays a girl to suck his penis, all are
equally sane, because the method in each case adopted depends
upon the customs of the country, the opportunities presented, and
the moral and ethical character of the man.
The accumulation of semen in the seminal A^esicles, Avith its
attendant discomfort, is the physical basis of sexual instinct; but
172 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
any irritation in the pelvic region may be mistaken for fulness of
the vesicles and may be considered to be sexual instinct, so that
in many cases when a man congratulates himself on his powerful
virility he may be merely constipated, or he wants to urinate, or
has prostatic trouble.
The early church fathers considered coition to be a sin and
a fall from grace, and they taught that the unmarried would at-
tain to greater glories in heaven, some of them saying that those
of either sex who had indulged in coition, even though in wedlock,
could not enter into heaven at all. This led to the establishment
of religious celibate orders; to triumph over one's sexual desires
was the greatest merit to be achieved, and some church fathers
nnd female saints went so far, to gain complete triumph, that they
had beautiful companions of the opposite sex live with them and
oven sleep with them because continence under such circumstances
was supposed to deserve greater reward hereafter than if it had
been maintained under less tempting conditions.
The argument that coition was necessary to perpetuate the
race was met with the theory that if Adam had not yielded to his
passion for Eve, he would have effectually rebuked God and com-
pelled him to invent some harmless mode of reproduction that
would have dispensed with the co-operation of the sexes, and thus
the world would have l)een peopled by innocent and passionless
beings ; such was the doctrine taught liy Justin, Gregory of Nyssa,
Augustine, and other church-fathers.
Such views are not extinct! I remember reading in the ex-
planations of a catechism that it is a sin to bathe all over, because
the sight of one's naked body gives rise to lascivious thouglits !
There are some persons who are very easily affected to erotic
thoughts !
I passed one day in front of a theater when the audience Avas
just being dismissed; when the doors were thrown open pass-
ersby could get a glimpse of the stage. With me was a very exem-
plary gentleman — a minister. When he saw this last scene of a
Christmas pantomime fairy transformation scene (how we would
enjoy seeing one again!), he said to me, "Isn't that awful!"
"Wliat is awful?" said I. "Why, the way those girls show their
legs!" I told him tliat I had taken my A\ife and children to that
performance the previous evening and we had found it very beau-
tiful, and that I had promised the children to take them again.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 173
"How can yon do siicli a tliini;! AVliy, I had an involuntary omis-
sion from the sight! It's scandalous!" and ho advised me to
pray to God to let me have concupiscent thoughts so that I too
miglit appreciate the immorality of such shoAvs. I advised him
to pray to God to clean his mind of such ideas, so that he couhl
appreciate the beauty, purity, and wholesomeness of the human
body. No clean-minded man, woman or child should have lascivi-
ous thoughts on account of a fairy scene like that!
But is it likely that women avIio have been brought up under
SLicli influence and under such religious teachings will make their
husbands happy ?
Let me quote a few sentences from an essay on Social Purity
by Lucinda B. Chandler, a would-be social "reformer;" here is
what she thought of marriage :
"When a woman has made this agreement * * * gj^e has
made herself permanently * * * a legal prostitute till death
or divorce dissolves the contract. — I demand the immediate and
unconditional ABOLITION of this vilest system that ever cursed
the earth. Marriage is legalized prostitution. * * * The term
marriage is more offensive than the terms rape, murder, or pros-
titution, because it involves all of them, and all combined are
worse than either alone. * * * The wife is the most degraded
of all prostitutes * * * a forced prostitute. * * * Popular
prostitution, bad as it is, is not as bad as the forced prostitution
of marriage."
Excessive coition, in marriage or out of marriage, may of
course be injurious, especiall}^ to the delicate nervous system of
a woman, but it is not likely to be exacted from a wife who allows
her husband a rational enjoyment of her charms in other ways.
There can be no suggestion of prostitution in wedlock when sexual
pleasure is mutual, and it is onl}' the most extreme and rabid
W-C-T-U-ism that can speak of the wifely relationship as a con-
dition of legalized prostitution. Marriage, as an institution, is
one of the most sacred and chastest relationships on earth.
The old feudal method of valuing a wife as one might a brood-
mare, according to the number of her offspring, is still upheld by
orthodox ecclesiasticism, as shown in the opposition to "birth
control ; " it is cruelly exhaustive to the wife and equally injurious
to the quality of the offspring, for large families, especially among
the poor, are the source of pauperism, ignorance, vice, crime and
174 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
disease. It must come to be understood that large families are
as much an evidence of intemperance and even more reprehen-
sible than drunkenness and other excesses, but it does not follow
that there may be no sensual pleasures in wedlock, but rather,
that if caution is not sufficient to prevent impregnation, that some
of the Malthusian restraints on conception should be practiced,
as being both more moral and more humane to the. wife than too
frequent and exhausting pregnancies.
To have recourse to abortion is to commit murder — it should
not be thought of !
Temperance in coition is desirable for many reasons, but it
is attainable only when the esthetical enjoyment of a wife's beauty
is such a matter-of-course affair, that it ceases to have an eroti-
cally inflaming effect ; for when a wife entertains the too prevalent
notions in regard to nudity, such temperance is difficult to at-
tain, for the less frequently the beauty of the wife's body is seen
the more erotically excitable and desirous is the nature of the man.
It may be asked, how often may conjugal coition be practiced !
This will depend on the mutual desires and consent of husband
and wife, and with us is a private concern, but it has been the sub-
ject of legislation. In Athens Solon decreed that a man must
render this conjugal duty to the wife tliree times a month ; and in
Mohammedan lands the Koran directs the husband to gratify his
wife at least once a week on pain of her having the right to de-
mand divorce if he fails in this duty.
The Bible does not state how often coition is to be exercised,
Imt implies that it should not be long l)etween-times ; ''Let tlie
husband render unto the wife due benevolence: and likewise also
the wife unto the husband. The wife hath not power of her own
body, but the husband: and likewise also the husband hath not
power of his oavii body but the wife. Defraud ye not one another,
except it be with consent for a time, that ye may give yourselves
to fasting and prayer ; and come together again, that Satan tempt
ye not for your incontinency " (I Cor. vii, 3).
This puts it plainly on the basis of each mate trying to sat-
isfy the desire of the other, and it is "benevolence" to grant the
pleasure.
In Arragonia, a part of what is now Spain, at one time and
at the instance of the queen a law was passed that no husband
SEX AXD SEX WORSHIP 175
should have the right to demand coition from his wife oftener
than six times in any one day !
Leaving out of consideration the extreme views of six times
a day, and the other extreme view of Zenobia, Queen of Palmyra
(about 275 a.d.), that once in two or three years for the sake of
begetting offspring was enough, the best rule is probably some-
where between Martin Luther's view — twice in one week — and
that of some modern writers — once in two weeks; the best inter-
val depends on the vigor and health of the man and Avoman con-
cerned, and — apart from that — on the pleasure and desire of the
wife !
In summer, no doubt, coition is more enervating than in win-
ter, which was already recognized by the ancients who believed
that coition was injurious in all months whose names contain no
''R," so that their coition season corresponded with our oyster
season.
Sexual Passion
As erotic ideas are instinctively caused by a stimulus coming
from the erection center, so, obversely, this center may be irritated
by erotic ideas produced in the brain; what we see or hear may
cause us to have erotic desires, and this, reacting on the erection
center may cause erections; lascivious thoughts, dreams, stories,
pictures, etc., may have this effect.
The disposition to become thus excited by mental impressions
is under the control of the will to a great extent ; we may encourage
it and become libertines, or we may discourage it and remain
continent men. This disiDosition is therefore not instinctive, but
is a cultivated habit which constitutes ''sexual passion."
I show here a diagram (Fig. 60) to make clear the difference
between sexual instinct and sexual passion. Listinct originates
in the seminal vesicles ; the impulse is transmitted to the erection
centers in the sacral plexus of nerves and the similar center in
the brain, and then by reflex action to the penis, causing sexual
desire and erection. Passion originates in the brain; the impulse
is transmitted to the penis and the erection center in the sa-
cral plexus, causing erection. How sexual passion operates is
shown in the Bible (II Sam. xi, 2 et seq.) : "And it came to pass
in an evening tide, that David arose from off his bed, and walked
upon the roof of the king's house: and from the roof he saw a
176
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
woman washing herself; and the Avoman was very beautiful to
look upon, * * * ^nd David sent messengers and took her;
and she came in unto him and he lay with her."
Sexual passion is therefore a result of intellectual disposi-
tion, or a cultivated hahit, which in some is allowed to grow, so
that it pi'actically controls the disi^osition of the man until he
lets his mind dwell on erotic desires all the time. Even uninten-
tional suggestions of nudity of a woman often have erotic effects
on some minds, as when a society reporter said of a lady at a ball,
that "she was magnificently attired in a diamond necklace;" or,
as occurred quite recently in a theatrical announcement, which
5 va.cn.
Ortai/n oj" y^
<fl7ipuisfc.
INSTINCT.
^y-o-uvo-.
>.\
PASSION.
Fig. GO. — The oiigiu of sexual instinct is in the seminal vesicles; of lust or passion in
the brain.
stated that a well-known actress would appear at a certain theater
in ''A Pair of Silk Stockings."
Ninety-nine times out of a hundred, our acts to secure sexual
pleasure are not in obedience to sexual instincts, but to secure
the sensual pleasure that experience has taught us may be ob-
tained thereby ; in other words, instinct is replaced by a cultivated
hal)it or passion, and the methods chosen are equally deliberately
acquired and practiced. Passion is most frequently stimulated by
"memory pictures," that is, by creations of an erotic fancy run-
ning riot in lustful reveries or dreams.
In many animals the liberation of sex-elements is passive and
SEX AND SEX WOllSlllP 177
not accompanied by pleasure; it is strictly of the same nature as
defecation or urinating, and it concerns the individual alone. Fer-
tilization is a random matter and although sex exists, sex attrac-
tion and sexual passion do not. A female fish, for example, lays
her eggs in the shallow waters near the shore and a male deposits
his semen in the same waters, and the accidents of wind and wave
determine whether an egg is fertilized or not.
A grade higher, true sexual union appears, but between any
male and any available female ; there may be pleasure in the act,
but not enough to favor the establishment of passion ; there is no
pairing, no love in the higher sense; union is promiscuous, as
among cattle, horses, dogs, poultry, etc.
As we ascend in the scale of intelligence we find that the psy-
chic elements in love gain in importance. AVhile the appreciation
of beauty may be an element in the pairing of even lower animals,
such beauty alone does not seem to excite erotic desires in an-
imals ; it may decide the mating, but coition is still only in obedi-
ence to some other stimulus, especially the rutting odor. Passion
due to centric memory pictures is essentially a hmnan trait, al-
though animals trained for stud purposes sometimes acquire an
unnatural concupiscence.
Rutting Odor
In animals the female exhales a peculiar odor when she is
physiologically ready for copulation with the male. This odor is
called the "rutting odor," and in most animals the male does not
become sexually excited unless this odor is present.
No doubt everyone is familiar with the behavior of dogs when
there is a bitch in heat about ; or they have seen the facial contor-
tions of a bull when he smells the sexual organs of a cow to as-
certain whether she is in heat.
But even in quite low" animals, as in butterflies and moths, the
female has this kind of attractive odor and entomologists some-
times place female moths in small cages, so as to attract the male
moths so they can catch them with their nets.
There is a similar odor in the human female about the time
of menstruation, but in mankind, at least in civilized communities,
this odor has lost its importance because man has to a great ex-
tent lost his sense of smell.
178 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
The influence of the rutting odor in a mare had a great in-
fluence on the history of the world. When Cyrus died he left no
son to inherit his kingdom, and the chiefs agreed among them-
selves that they would ride out to a certain hill to greet the rising
sun (recognized as a deity among the Persians), and the one
whose horse would neigh first in greeting to the sun should become
king. The stable master of Darius heard of this agreement, and
the evening before the chiefs were to ride out to the appointed
place he took his master 's stallion, which Darius always rode, and
led him to a mare in heat which he had previously taken to the
place; there the stallion was allowed to serve the mare at his
pleasure (Fig. 61).
Next morning, when the chiefs rode out to the hill, the stal-
Fig. 61. — ' ' Cyrus Becomes King, ' ' from Welt-GremaeJde Gallerie, XVIII Century.
lion recognized the place and remembered the delights of the pre-
vious evening and neighed loudly as a call to the mare, which,
however, was no longer there. But the other chiefs, as soon as
Darius' horse greeted the rising sun by neighing, dismounted
from their own horses, and made their obeisances to him and ac-
claimed him their king. The story adds that soon thereafter a
thunder storm arose, and this was considered as an omen that God
approved their choice ; and perhaps it was a fair choice as Darius
was the husband of a daughter of Cyrus.
While the rutting odor is no longer of sexually excitant value
to the clothed nations, it is possible that it retains some amount
of attractiveness in unclothed nations, but as coition, even among
the lowest people, is now a matter of cultivated habit and not of
instinct, the odor of the female body is not of great importance
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 179
as the excitant feature. Nevertheless, tlie odors of liuman be-
ings are also of importance, foi" although men may not always be
consciously awai e of such an infhience, yet the perfume of the
woman is one of the many subtle influences which attract the at-
tention and perhaps arouse the affections of the man for a par-
ticular Avoman.
There is a theory that each human being is surrounded by
an aura or thin cloud of personal emanations, which either at-
tracts or repels, and there is no doubt that animals perceive this
even more quickly and certainly than do men and women, who are
not so dependent now upon the sense of smell as are primitive
peoptle.
Humboldt in his Kosmos tells of a tribe of South American
Indians, Avho could track their game by the sense of smell, as our
hunting dogs do.
In the middle ages, and even in some cases to this day, phy-
sicians diagnosed the sickness of their patients by the sick-bed
odors; even now, I believe, anyone who ever treated a case of
smallpox or meningitis would be able to diagnose another case by
its odor.
The former importance of the sense of smell in mankind is
shown by the fact that about one-half of humankind still greet
each other by rubbing noses together, which caress is kno\\Ti as
the ''salute by smelling," It is also indicated by the frequent
references to the body odors which occur in the writings of the
ancients, as for instance, in the Bible, It is therefore no more
than natural that we should consider this sense in connection
with sex.
SOCIAL RELATIONS OF MEN AND WOMEN
It is sometimes stated that the institution of marriage, the
relationship) of husband and wife, is the original form of sexual
relationship, introduced by God when he created Adam, and then
cre'ated a helpmate for him.
But in reality married relationship is a rather late institu-
tion, introduced when man had advanced far enough to appreciate
the crudeness and coarseness of his evolutionary inheritance in
this regard.
We have already learned that mankind was the product of
180 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
evolution from mammals, and not from the higher apes, but as
a collateral branch to these. Like our domestic animals, cattle,
horses, goats, sheep, dogs, etc., who resulted by evolution from
the same sources from Avliich man sprang, when this evolution
was taking place in regard to man's body, he inherited with his
physical characteristics also many of the mental traits of his pre-
human ancestors. It is a characteristic of most herbivorous mam-
mals that they do not pair, as many birds and many carnivorous
animals do, but that they live in a promiscuous relationship of the
sexes, or that they go in droves or flocks of many females attached
to one male. These two methods of sexual relationships were
probably the primitive methods of men and women living together.
Whenever civilized travelers have visited savage nations for
the first time, they found in most cases the tribal organization not
based on marriage, but that the men and women of the tribe lived
together in promiscuous relationship which seemed to be subject
to no regulation, but only to the immediate and temporary inclina-
tion of the individual man and woman. In other words, the family
as it exists in civilized communities, was unknown in most of the
lower nations ; and presumal)ly also in primitive conditions of the
higher nations.
In such imregulated relationship it is of course impossible to
determine the paternal ancestry, and onh^ the relation of the
mother to the child is known. Under such conditions, it was im-
possible even for a woman to know with any degree of certainty
who was the father.
This led to tribal or horde organization, in which relationship
and inheritance was traced through the mother only, and some
authors think that, by analogy, the earliest deities were supposed
to be living together in similar manner and that this led to an
exaltation of the mother over the unknown father, and that the
first ideas of deities were of feminine deities; that motherhood
was deified.
This is probably true, and family-relationship of gods and
goddesses, and of men and women, was not known to primitive
tribes who lived by hunting and fishing, and wlio had no permanent
homes. In such people women and children belonged to the tribe ;
they were community property.
Herodotus tells us of a Scythian people who held their women
as common property, "that they might all be brothers."
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 181
Siiidas relates that the women in Attica abandoned them-
selves to nnc'heeked vice, and no man knew his father.
An ancient Hindu work says, that Svetaketn instituted mar-
riage, and that "before his time women were unconfined and
roamed at their pleasure."
The Chinese also believe that marriage was introduced by
teaching. Fo-hi, a semi-mythical king of China, supposed to have
been born of a virgin, put an end to promiscuous relations by
introducing social order, marriage, writing and music. Other na-
tions had similar traditions about the introduction of married
relationship.
Aristotle and other ancient writers reported similar condi-
tions elsewhere ; and such customs exist in many places to this day.
In many Polynesian islands promiscuous intercourse between
the sexes prevailed until the natives Avere converted by the mis-
sionaries; or they prevail to this day where they have not been
converted. In fact, the effort to limit a man to one woman has
been one of the greatest obstacles to the influence of the mission-
aries in some of these islands.
In some of the islands female virtue was highly prized and
Samoa was pre-eminent in this respect. A woman when about to
be married had to undergo a special ordeal to prove her virginity,
and a proof of her immorality disgraced all her relatives.
In other islands great laxity of morals was the rule. In Ha-
waii brothers with their wives, and sisters with their husbands,
possessed each other in common; and in some of the islands, es-
pecially among the chiefs, brothers and sisters intermarried.
On the other hand, in some quite low tribes, morality was
high. In the Andaman Islands the people go absolutely naked,
except that women in quite recent times have commenced to wear
aprons of grass behind ; yet a fairly strict monogamy is the rule,
and transgressions are the exception. They name their children
before birth ; all names are therefore of conmion gender, and there
are only about 20 names, but the different names are usually
qualified ])y adjectives.
In Burmah monogamy is the rule, but husbands can rent or
lease their wives to strangers for a stated period ; this is not con-
sidered degrading to the woman, Avho is generally true to her tem-
porary Imsband or master.
In East India, in early times, the Aryan housewdfe shared
182 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
with the husband the joys and the trials, as well as the privileges
of worshipping the gods ; she even took part in composing the
hymns to the gods, and some of the finest of these were composed
by prophetesses.
The Niam-Mam tribe in Africa, who are cannibals, have a
genuine affection for their wives, such as does not exist in any
other African tribe; if a man's wife is captured or stolen, those
who hold her can get almost anything from the husband, such as
ivory, etc., in exchange for her liberty.
In ancient Germany a youth married the girl of his choice.
The husband presented the wife with arms which she could use in
emergencies. They were monogamous, except that the princes or
chiefs sometimes married the daughters of several chiefs for po-
litical reasons. This continued far into civilized times, in fact, to
the days of Luther. About 750 a.d. the Germans were very cor-
rupt, and the sanctity of marriage Avas almost disregarded. About
this time the Saxons were still Pagans and offered human sac-
rifices to their gods. They also married their sisters.
Among the Sawaioris women occupied a high position and
could even hold hereditary offices or positions in the tribe.
The Eskimos are very filthy; owing to the intense cold in
winter, washing is out of the question. Mothers sometimes wash
their children by licking them off with their tongues, like cows do
their calves; they are monogamous, a man having but one wife;
but the women especially are very low in their estimate of chastity,
and their husbands and relatives practically ignore any moral
lapses on the part of the wives.
In parts of Alaska, among the Aleuts, the Avomen go to meet
incoming ships, and earn money by associating with the sailors ;
this is considered by the husbands to be a perfectly proper and
commendable way to contribute to the household maintenance.
A curious story is told of the Lacedemonians Avho in a war
(3209 B.C.) had sworn not to return to their native land until they
had taken Messina ; this took longer than they had anticipated,
and at the end of ten years they w^ere still at war. Their wives
then sent them word to return home and beget children with their
wives and the daughters who had meanwhile groAvn up. So the
Lacedemonians sent a picked number of robust warriors to im-
pregnate all the women at home; as many of these were young
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 183
women, or virgins, all the children born of this visit of the dele-
gation were called partlienios, or virgin-children.
In later days the Greeks frequently invited especially beau-
tiful 3^oung men to cohabit with their Avives and daughters so as
to have the latter bear beautiful children; this was considered
eminently proper and did not injure the reputations of the women
to any degree whatever.
When Cook and his crew \dsited the Hawaiian islands
for the first time, they found promiscuous intercourse the rule;
they joined in, but as some of the sailors had syphilis this disease
Fig. 62. — "The Family," the unit and foimclation of civilized society.
soon became general, and this was the cause of a great deteriora-
tion in the native stock.
Efforts have been frequently made, even in highly civilized
lands, to reintroduce this promiscuous relationshix), but Avhile it
exists sub rosa in all lands, it has not met with official recognition.
During the French Revolution. efforts Avere made to take the
o\^^lership of all women and girls from the king and from those to
whom he had leased his rights in them, and to vest it in the state.
The state was to lease the women to the men, for breeding pur-
poses, and to be their maids (the ideas of canonical law being
accepted).
184 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Fournier, a French socialist, proposed to reorganize society;
lie believed that the institution of marriage imposes unnatural
restraints on human nature, which results in vice and misery, and
tliat the full and free development of human nature, and the only
way to happiness and virtue, depends on the unrestrained indul-
gence of human passion. He proposed that those who desired to
cohabit should take out licenses, good for a certain limited time,
which would permit them to do so.
Such a system, under religious sanction, actually exists in
modern Persia, where temporary marriages for a few hours or
for a few days only, can be arranged for by the mollah (Moham-
medan priest) Avho receives a part of the money paid by the man
to his temporary wife. This is, of course, merely prostitution,
but it is camouflaged by a religious setting, and thereby saved
from being a moral lapse.
About 1830 Enfantin proposed that the "tyranny of mar-
riage" should be abolished in France, and that a system of "free
love" take its place.
In 1848 the idea was again brought forward in the legisla-
tive body in France, when it was demanded that a law should be
passed declaring all women and children to be the property of the
state, and providing regulations for leasing the women to the men
for certain periods of time as household maids or housekeepers
and for breeding purposes.
To a certain extent this effort to reintroduce promiscuous or
primitive tribe and horde relationship was actually carried out in
France during the Revolution. A premium was paid to the moth-
ers of illegitimate children, who were called "les enfants de la
patrie;" it was forbidden to make any inquiries in regard to the
paternity of such children, but the seeking out the mothers of
abandoned children was permitted.
The tendency of men of the lower classes, when a revolution
gives them temporary power, to revert to similar ideas, is shown
by the following report :
LONDON, Oct. 26, 1918. — Russian maidens under the jurisdiction of certain
provincial Bolshevik Soviets become the "property of the state" when they reach
the age of 18 and arc compelled to register at a goveninient "bureau of free love,"
according to the official gazette of the Vladimir Soviet of Workers and Soldiers'
Deputies, which recently published the Soviet's decree on the subject.
Under the decree a woman having registered "has the right to choose from
among men between 19 and 50 "a cohabitant husband." The consent of the man
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 185
chosen is niecessary, the decree adds, tlie man chosen haviiij,^ the right to make
any protest.
A similar privilege of choosing from among the registered women is given
every man between 19 and 50 "without the consent of the women." This provision
is described as "in the interest of the state."
Children born of such marriages are to become the "property of the state."
Stringent rules and penalties are laid down for the protection of girls under 18.
Ill primitive tril3es the women were mainly slaves who were
captured in predatory raids; they were considered the legitimate
spoil of war belonging to the victors, they could be passed along
from man to man or even from horde to horde ; even the Bible ap-
proved of this method of getting wives, as we saw in the rules
about taking captured women as mves (see p. 75), and the Koran
permitted the same disposal of captives in Avar (see p. 79).
The Bible says. Gen. vi, 1, 2: "And it came to pass, Avhen men
began to multiply on the face of the earth, and daughters were
born unto them, that the sons of God saw the daughters of men
that they were fair; and they took them wives of all which they
chose."
Judg. xxi, 10 et seq.: "And the congregation sent thither
twelve thousand men * * * and commanded them, saying. Go
and smite the inhabitants of Jabesh-gilead w^ith the edge of the
SAvoi'd, with the Avoiiien and children. And this is the thing that
ye shall do. Ye shall utterly destroy every male, and every woman
that hath lain by man. And they found among the inhabitants of
Jabesh-gilead four hundred young virgins that had known no
man by lying with any male; and they brought them unto the
camp to Shiloh * * * and they gave (the children of Benjamin)
wives which they had saved alive of the women of Jabesh-gilead."
In many primitive people it was considered wrong to marry
a relative, and as promiscuous intercourse prevented a man from
knowing who of the women were his "cousins or his sisters or his
aunts," he could not marry within the tribe at all; he had to buy
or steal mves from other tribes. Such tribes were called exo-
gamic, or marrying outside of their own tribes. But this led to
a form of marriage which is spoken of as "marriage by theft" or
capture ; and this in early days was probably the most usual way
of obtaining wives.
Exogamic tribes were very numerous. In Australia no man
may marry a woman of his mother's clan, no matter how unre-
lated such a woman may otherwise be to him. Among North
186 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
American Indians they may not marry Avithin the same totem;
marriages are forbidden between persons of the same name or
totem.
The Eomans kidnapped the Sabine women (Fig. 63) ; and
the Bible and Koran both allowed this custom. When large raids
were made by whole tribes, all the captured women became slaves
belonging to the tribe and could be used for general or promiscu-
ous intercourse ; but when women were obtained by personal raids
of one man, then he claimed the Avoman as his owm slave and kept
Fig. 63. — ' ' Rape of the Sabines, ' ' reproduction of statue.
her for his own use ; and Avhere this Avas the usual method of ob-
taining AA^ves, it did aAvay Avith a promiscuous relationship of the
sexes. Men became jealous and guarded their OAvn; attempted in-
fringement on their rights to their oAvn Avomen leading to a polyg-
amous family life and a defending of their rights eA^en to the ex-
treme of murder of the infringer. The horde plan of commingling
of the sexes Avas replaced by the herd system as found among deer,
Avild cattle, Avild horses, seals, Avalruses, etc. ; one male Avith a num-
ber of females.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 187
As this was apt to occur more frequently among people who
had settled hal)itations, as among agricultural or pastoral peo-
ple, we find this type of *' patriarchal family" among them. One
man, the oldest, was the patriarch of the family; he had several
wives, but besides this he could take to himself his slaves, or
concubines.
Polygamy was the rule in patriarchal families, as among the
ancient Jews ; it was not forbidden by the Old Testament ; it Avas
common among the Greeks, but less common among the Romans ;
in nearly all Mohammedan lands it is the customary practice, and
prevails generally in Asia, Africa, Polynesia, and among the
American Indians.
AVhile Ave generally understand polygamy to imply a plural-
ity of Avives, it strictly means a plurality of husbands as Avell. The
term polygAaiy means the marriage of one man to several Avomen
at the same time; it Avould be the better term to use; but polyg-
amy is so generally understood to mean this that it is hardly
Avorth Avhile to change to the use of the term polygyny, especially
as polyandry is in common use to express the marriage of one
Avoman to several men at the same time.
The Mohammedans are permitted by the Koran to haA^e four
Avives (the Sultan seA^en) but there is no limitation to the number
of concubines that a man may have ; also, among the Mohammed-
ans there are not so many forbidden degrees as among the Chris-
tians, Avhich accounts largely for the rapid spread of IMoham-
medanism.
Polygamy Avas only recently abolished among the Mormons
of our oAATi land (by act of Congress ; possibly still practiced to a
certain extent, but not publicly paraded, as formerly).
Among these patriarchal families the fate of the AVomen Avas
of course much better than in tribal or horde relationship; and
the idea of ''family" became a fixed institution.
Among the Mohammedans the AviA^es and concubines are gen-
erally kept in seclusion (in harems) and are guarded by castrated
slaA^es or eunuchs, the chief of Avhich is the Kizlaer aghassi, or
the "master of the maidens." Harem means something that is
forbidden; but is generally supposed to mean the female con-
tingent of a polygamist's household; it really has a meaning
something like in our public buildings — "for women only" — or
' ' for men only. " It is like the gynaeceuni of the ancient Greeks, —
188
SEX a:e^d sex worship
the apartments of the women — strictly forbidden to strangers —
*' strictly private." Any child born in the harem is supposed to
be the child of the master, because no other opportunity for im-
pregnation is supposed to be possible; if a concubine or slave be-
comes a mother, the child is free and the mother can not there-
after be sold; she in effect becomes a wife, although if the man
has four wives already, the concubine can not be called a wife ; but
she has the rights of a w^ife.
The "harem" (Fig, 64) is an Asiatic institution, but pre-
vails throughout all Mohammedan lands. The wife is subordinate
to the husband, practically his slave no matter how he obtained
her ; Asiatics wrote the Bible, hence these Asiatic ideas regarding
women and wives were transferred to Christianity, but they were
Fig.
64. — ' ' In a Harem, ' ' from painting by Cecconi,
ascribed to the fall, and to a curse which was supposed to have
been pronounced on Eve by God.
The wives of Mohammedans are often obtained as with us, by
betrothal, although all details are arranged by female relatives
so that the man can not meet or see his bride until after the mar-
riage ; his mother or sisters become acquainted with the women
of their class in the public baths, where they see them naked (Fig.
65), and can report al)out them and their physical attractions.
But they can buy concubines in the markets (Fig. 66) which, al-
though now forbidden by law, are still in existence, and those who
want to buy a slave have no difficulty in doing so. Mohammedans
are forbidden to liave "images" of any living object, just as
SEX AND 8EX WORSHIP
189
among the ancient Jcavs; they can not have statues or paintings
of beautiful nymphs or goddesses, so they buy beautiful slave-
girls whom they keep as we keep statuary, etc., as something good
to look at (Fig. 67). Of course, the owner can take any such slave,
or odalisque, as sexual mate, but most of them are kept, usually
naked or nearly so, to beautify the homo. They are much subject
to tuberculosis, through insufficient clothing and confinement
indoors.
Georgia and Circassia furnished most of the female slaves for
the Turkish harems ; but in recent times thousands upon thousands
of Armenian girls were sold to the same fate; houseliold servants
are mostly l)lacks, clandestinely imported from Africa.
Fig. C)~). — "Oriental Bath," from a i^aiuting by Gerome.
The Parsees treat their women much better than do other
Asiatic people; women appear freely in public, and they have
entire management of the household.
Among the Persians generally the father is reverenced in an
extravagant manner, but the highest respect is paid to the mother
whose Avord is law in the household; the grandmother also is al-
most worshipj)ed.
A Persian is very glad to have his wife 's mother live with her,
as a mother-in-law is considered to be the best guardian of a
wife 's virtue. Persians are poh^gamous ; in the house the women
190
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
wear a short chemise, which among the rich is of very thin gos-
samer fabric; a jacket open in front, a skirt reaching only to the
middle of the thighs, and an abundance of armlets, bracelets and
anklets, to which many talismans are attached, in which Persians
have much faith; they go barefoot; the costume therefore prac-
tically displays all the beauties of the body in the privacy of the
home ; but when they go out to visit friends, etc., they are so bun-
dled up in shapeless garments that not even their husbands could
recognize them.
In the homes the little girls are dressed like boys (male
Fig. GG. — "Slave Sale," from painting Fig. G7. — " An Odalisque, " from painting
hy Gerome.
by Szyndler.
clothes) and the little boys like girls (female clothes) until they
are about ten years old, when they assume the costumes appropri-
ate to their sex; this is done to avoid the "evil eye," a sinister
influence which is much dreaded. Among Persians the logical
wives are considered to be the cousins on the father's side.
Among the early Hebrews monogamy was the general rule,
although it was not very strict; later on polygamy and concubi-
nage became prevalent, to the extent that Solomon had ' ' seven hun-
dred wives, princesses, and three hundred concubines" (I Kings
xi, 3). When the father of the household died, his wives and con-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 191
cubines became the ijroperty of his heir; they went with the in-
heritance. Nor Avere unions between near relatives forbidden;
Abraham had his half-sister (from same father but a different
mother) for wife, and in many lands full sisters could be taken
for wives.
Caligula, the tyrant of Rome, had sexual congress with all
his sisters, one of whom, Drusilla, he made his official wife; the
other two he drove aAvay into misery. He also took any Roman
matron or woman he desired, and sometimes invited other men
to share them with him. At the amphitheatre shows, if he did
not have enough victims to throw before the wild animals, he had
some of the spectators seized, their tongues cut out so they could
not denounce him, and then they were thrown into the arena. He
was finally killed by his own guards.
Caracalla's mother (some say step-mother) fell in love with
him and contrived, as if by accident, to be seen naked by him ;
when he saw her he took her as his wife and her name appears as
his queen on numerous documents.
Yet this was probably an extreme case ; as a rule it was con-
sidered improper for a man to cohabit with his mother, or even
with any other of his father's wives. A sort of Solomonic judg-
ment is related of Claudius. He was judge in a case in which a
woman refused to acknowledge that a certain man was her son.
Claudius ruled that she should marry him, Avhich she refused to
do, and finally admitted that she could not marry him as he was
her son.
In Greece a man could marry his father's daughter by some
other wife than his own mother but not a ''uterine sister;" but
among the ancient Egyptians a pharaoh usually, or at least often,
married his full sister; Cleopatra, for instance, was married to
her brother Ptolemy.
In many lands in Africa a man may have as many wives as
he can afford to buy. But then there is no particular trouble
about keeping them, for they need little or no clothing and they
do the work in the fields and in guarding the herds. Such is the
custom in the Congo district; among the Hottentots there is no
purchasing of wives, but the consent of the parents is obtained by
presents, etc., and the mfe is not considered a slave.
The most primitive relation of the sexes to each other is one
of promiscuous intercourse. The loAvest form of marriage is
192 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
where the men simply steal or purchase as many women as they
want and make them their wives, bnt even this is already the be-
ginning of family ties, and therefore the beginning of social
advancement.
I have already stated that man is polygamous by nature, and
polygamy is therefore the prevailing type of sexual relationship
throughout the world. It is the legalh^ recognized relationship of
the sexes among more than two-thirds of the inhal)itants of the
earth, and is practiced in some form or other by all nations on
the globe. A strictly" monogamic people does not exist, and strict
monogamy in the individual man is as uncommon as strict celi-
bacy, even among us.
Polygamy was first for])idden by law in the early days of
Eome, when women were so scarce that men had to steal them from
tlieir neighbors and it was considered to be unfair for one man
to appropriate several w^omen for himself Avhile others might not
be able to obtain any. Forgetting the origin of the laws establish-
ing monogamy, such laws were kept in force by states which for
just as cogent reasons should allow polygamy in the interest of
the excess of women over men who can not otherwise find hus-
bands. This is not a question of religion, for from both a reli-
gious and from a moral standpoint as nmch, or more, can be said
in favor of polygamy as in favor of monogamy; it is really only
a question of expedienc}^ in a politico-economic sense, whether
monogamy or polygamy shall be the legally recognized form of
marriage. I have no doubt that if it were not for the complica-
tions of property interests, and if men dared to publicly avow
their convictions, a very large number of men and ivomen would
admit that legally recognized polygamy Avould be preferable to
our present system of monogamy with prostitution or "affin-
ities."
On the other hand there are no doubt many advocates of mo-
nogamy who favor the present conditions largely from interested
motives, because it affords them oppoi'tunities of enjoyment with
young and pretty women without the satiety that would come even
in legally recognized polygamy, when of course the possibilities
for variety now existing would be exchanged to companionships
for life.
Monogamy is not a distinctly Christian practice, for it pre-
vailed in many pre-Christian nations, and is today practiced by
SEX AND kSEX worship 193
some savage tribes; while on the other hand, polygamy was per-
mitted by the Christian church until about the time of Luther,
and is not forbidden in the Bible.
Monogamy means a marriage of one man to one woman ; this
is the connnon or legal form of marriage in civilized Christian
lands. But it is also found in some very primitive kinds of peo-
ple as well.
The close relationship of a husband to a wife in such a mar-
riage is a stronger tie than that of any blood-relationship.
Gen. ii, 24: "Therefore shall a man leave his father and his
mother and shall cleave unto his wife ; and they shall be one
flesh."
Matt, xix, 4-6 : ' ' Have ye not read that he which made them
at the beginning made them male and female, and said, For this
cause shall a man leave father and mother, and shall cleave to
his wife; and they twain shall be one flesh? Wherefore they
are no more twain, but one flesh. What therefore God hath joined
together, let no man put asunder." (Also Mark x, 6-9.)
Ephes. V, 31 : "For this cause shall a man leave his father and
mother, and shall be joined unto his wife, and they two shall be
one flesh. This is a great mystery * * *_ Nevertheless, let
every one of you in particular so love his wife even as himself:
and the wife see that she reverence her husband."
The Kahhalali, a Jewish system of theosophy which claimed
to have been written in the first century of our era, but which was
said by some to have been w^ritten about the thirteenth or four-
teenth century, claimed to contain certain mysteries which God
had taught to Adam in paradise, and which had been transmitted
by oral tradition until they were reduced to writing.
It is of course quite possible that the theories contained in
the Kahhalali were ancient Jewish traditions, which may possibly
have come do\^^l to the time Avhen they were reduced to writing,
by oral transmission; if so, they were of equal antiquity and of
equal importance as those which were written dowTi by Ezra, and
which are now known as the Books of Moses.
In the Kahhalali it is taught that the highest and most mys-
terious "God" or "Power" or whatever else we may choose to
call it, was "En Soph," Pure Thought, Supreme Will; this was
not composed of matter ; it was purely spiritual.
From En Soph there were ten emanations of spiritual beings.
194
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
The KahhalaJi stated that the ''Holy Ghost made all things male
or female, because otherwise nothing could endure. ' ' It described
the archetypal man (Fig. 68), using many m5^stic references to
gemetria, to the peculiar numerical values of words, and to the
sex of the left and tlie right side, etc. ; for instance, wisdoni Avas
located in the forehead and was male while intelligence was lo-
cated in the left side of the chest and was female ; wisdom, the fa-
ther, and intelligence, the mother, produced a crown. Love was
male and was in the right arm, justice was female and resided in
the left arm, together they produced beauty, residing in the bosom
Fig. 68. — Archetypal inaii, from the Kabbalali.
or breasts. Firmness was male and resided in the right thigh
and splendor was female and resided in the left thigh, and to-
gether they produced "foundation" or sex, or sexual organs.
"All the souls of the whole human race pre-existed in the
world of emanations (from God) and are all destined to inhabit
human bodies. Each soul, prior to its entering this world, con-
sists of a male and a female potency, united into one spiritual
being. When a soul descends on this earth the two parts are sepa-
rated and animate two different bodies. At the time of marriage,
the "Holy One (God), blessed be he who knows all souls and
spirits," unites them again as they were before; and they again
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 195
constitute one body and one sonl, forming, as it were the right
and left of the individual. ' '
Tlie KahhalnU claimed that it explains all the hidden mean-
ings of the Jewish scriptures; the passage just quoted explained
the quotations from both the old and the new testaments, stated
above, and explains also our saying that marriages are made or
ordained in heaven; and it imparts a greater sanctity to the mo-
nogamous marriage by teaching that the souls of husband and wife
were originally before the birth of either, a hermaphrodite spirit,
both halves of which, after existing without bodies for some time,
finally are guided together again by the ''Holy One Avho knows
all souls."
In connection Avitli this theory of the KahhalaJi may be men-
tioned the doctrine of the Mormons on polygamy. The Mormons
are not a Christian sect, as some suppose. The chief god of the
Mormons is Adam (of Genesis fame), while Christ, Mohammed,
Joseph Smith and Brigham Young are also at least partially di-
vine. These divinities propagate souls who are destined to in-
habit the bodies of human beings born in this world. They believe
it to be the duty of every woman to give birth to as many children
as possible, because all the souls who do not enter into children
at birth will have no chance to go to heaven. But as there were
many more women converted to Mormonism than men, and as it
was practically a sin for a woman to neglect to become a mother,
and as her reward in heaven Avas proportionate to her doing her
duty in regard to having children, polygamy was introduced as a
religious duty of this sect.
Among Oriental slave-holding nations there is little true
love — no mating in a noble sense; the woman is not courted nor
asked for consent; she is a slave, and if her appearance and her
price are satisfactory the man buys her and after that it is to her
interest to study obedience to her master's desires and pleasures.
In the human being true mating based on mutual friendship
is possible only when the woman is not a slave. When the wom-
an's right to bestow her favors where she pleases is generally ad-
mitted, wooing or courtship, the psychic or ethical element in
love, is enhanced and the carnal features of love are purified by
the emotional sympathies as well as by the intellectual bonds of
affection.
196 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Love in the highest and purest sense, and marriage based on
mutual love and consent, is possible only when the full equality
of the woman with the man is recognized; and then even only
when questions of pecuniary considerations like the prospective
inheritance from the father of the bride or of receiving support
and a home from the husband are l3ut subordinate or secondary
considerations. The highest form of love is founded on a mutual
recognition of mental, moral and social worth, as well as on a
desire for the person or body, and is possible only when the whole
personality is loved ; not when merely the body is loved, which is
carnal love or lust, nor Avhen only the soul is loved, which is
Platonic love.
"When Max Nordau says that ''love in marriage is degraded
into a mere sensuality without the slightest value for the com-
munity," he refers to marriage as it is ordained now by church
and state ; not to an ideal monogamic marriage ; he fails to realize
the purity of bodily pleasures and caresses between man and
wife when sanctified by the mental and ethical elements of love.
The carnal side of love is not mere sensuality; it is necessary to
the perpetuation of the ethical and mental side of love, of which
coition is merely the physical basis. Men and women should
marry one another to live together in the joys of the body as Avell
as in the communion of souls ; but the spiritual element in the rela-
tion of the sexes should l)e paramount for it implies companion-
ship and elevation of the woman while the predominance of the
sensual element in love involves the subjection, degradation and
prostitution of the woman, even in wedlock. This is even more
appreciated among some of the so-called savage nations than
among ourselves, for among the Iroquois and Hurons young cou-
ples were obliged to live together without sexual intercourse for
one year after marriage, to prove that higher motives than the
gratification of sensual pleasure had brought them together.
Coition which is not practiced from motives of love for the
individual woman is not love but lust ; it is essentially of the na-
ture of masturbation, and although often spoken of as "love" is
qualified as "carnal love." Except in the mechanism of its grati-
fication lustful love has little in common with true love, such as
should actuate husband and wife, and in which ethical elements
predominate that are entirely wanting in mere lustful love.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 197
''"WHiat is Love? 'Tis not the kiss
Of a harlot lip' — the bliss
That doth perish
Even while we cherish
The fleeting charm: and what so fleet as this?
He is blessed in love alone
Who loves for years, and loves but one!"
AYe read in the 18th and 19th verses of the 5th chapter of
Proverbs, as follows: ''Rejoice with the wife of thy youth. * * *
let her breasts satisfy thee at all times and be thou ravished al-
ways with her love. ' '
Following the methods of our theological friends, this text
suggests the following thoughts :
First. — "Rejoice wdth thy wife — ." In this sense it is a re-
proof to those ascetics Avho teach that sexual enjoyments are
always evil and to be shunned; the text says: "Rejoice."
Second. — "Rejoice ivitli thy ivife — ." Let sexual pleasures
be enjoyed in wedlock; not with strange women. "The lips of a
strange woman drop as a honeycomb, and her mouth is smoother
than oil: but her end is bitter as worm-wood, sharp as a two-
edged sword. Her feet go down to death ; her steps take hold on
hell" (Prov. V, 3-5).
Third.- — "Rejoice with the ivife of thy youth — ." This ad-
vice urges early marriages, to avoid the "sowing of wild oats"
during the best years of our lives and then bringing an impaired
or exliausted vitality as our contribution towards the formation
of our children.
Fourth. — "Let her breasts satisfy thee — ." The text opposes
here the breasts as the emblems of the ethical purity of a woman's
beauty of body to the \Tilva as the symliol of carnal or animal
gratification.* It means that we should find pleasure in the con-
templation of a wife's beauty, rather than in the coarser and
grosser sensual caress of coition.
Fifth. — "Be thou ravished — ." Let all your senses be in-
toxicated with the bodily and mental pleasures that a wife can
give.
Sixth. — "Be thou ravished alicays — ." Let the ethical or
*See explanation of beauty in the Kabbalah (page 193) which accounts for the "breasts'" being
the symbol of beauty in the biblical text under consideration.
198 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
mental element in yonr love for your wife so fill the mind vnth
pleasant tliongiits as to exclude carnal desires for all other women.
Seventh. — ''Be thou ravished always ivith her love." — This
makes it the duty of the mfe so to use the beauty of her body as
well as her mental charms that her husband may be satisfied with
the love she gives him, so that he may never be tempted to seek
elsewhere a love that she denies him. The wife's love, in its
blending of sensual and ps3^chic attractions, is the anchor that
holds the husband to morality and continence.
"Love, thou hast every bliss in store;
'Tis friendship, and 'tis something more.
Each other every wish they give :
Not to know love is not to live."
(Gray.)
Monogamy, based on the equality of the woman ivith the man,
is the highest type of sexual relationship, but it is not possible
under present church and state laws, because neither the state
nor any Christian church recognizes the equality of the woman
mth the man.
The ritual of the Church of England says: ''The iv Oman's
ivill, SO God says, shall he subject to the man, and he shall be her
master; that is, the woman shall not live a life according to her
otvn will * * * and must neither begin nor complete anything
tvithout the man. Where he is she must be, and bend before him
as her master, ivhom she shall fear and to whom she shall be sub-
ject and obedient."
In Germany the Kaiser said : "Woman is for the church, the
kitchen and for children." ("Die Frau ist fuer Kirclie, Kueche
und Kinder.")
A Law Digest defines legal disability as "the status of being
an infant, a lunatic or a married woman. ' '
In Scandinavia, for the last few years, a commission is at
work to formulate better conditions for monogamic marriage;
divorce is to be by common consent, with a reversal of the indi-
vidual property of man and wife to each, and an equitable divi-
sion of property accumulated while the marriage lasted. I do
not know what disposition is to be made of the children, but it
is reasonable to presume that the present theory that they belong
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 199
to the husband will be modified, and the woman's right in them
will be recognized.
When the churches are ready to abandon the Asiatico-Biblical
doctrine of the inferiority and servitude of the wife, or woman,
and when the laws (of all countries) are ready to recognize the
equality of the w^oman as a human being, entitled to her own chil-
dren and to her own earnings, then monogamic marriage, and
sexual pleasures based on mutual enjoyment and mutual desires,
will make marriage the ideal relationship poets have always rep-
resented it to be.
*'A11 thoughts, all passions, all delights,
Whatever stirs this mortal frame.
All are but ministers of Love
And feel his sacred flame."
( Coleridge — Love. )
Max Nordau said that ''not one man out of a thousand can
truthfully say on his death-bed that he never in his life had con-
nection mth a woman not his wife."
Society does not expect continence in a man; it is only ex-
pected that he keep his sexual digressions from notoriety. "Sow-
ing wild oats" is tacitly tolerated, if it does not actually make the
man more desirable or more interesting in society circles and
among society women.
The poet BroA\ming wrote:
Men ' ' love so many women in their youth
And even in age they all love whom they please ;
And yet the best of men confide to friends
That 'tis not beauty makes the lasting love —
They spend a day with such, and tire the next ;
They like soul — well, then, they like fantasy.
Novelty even. Let us confess the truth.
Horrible though it be — . ' '
"The world loves a spice of wickedness," saj's Longfellow;
natural instincts, cultivated passions, and social customs favor
unfaithfulness on the part of the man, and a wise wife is conven-
iently blind and deaf to such a condition.
Originally in Greece and Rome it was held that a man could
200 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
not commit adultery ; this could be done only by the woman. The
reason why the adultery of the husband is of less serious char-
acter than the adultery of the wife is of course obvious to every-
one ; it does not interfere with his ability to give full satisfaction
to all desires of his wife; it brings no disturbing element into
the family in the way of otf spring; it is unlikely to incapacitate
him from doing his work or to do his connubial duties; it casts
no doubt on the parentage of the children; and it does not give
much rise to scandal if the husband is discreet, for it is generally
ignored in polite circles; and last, not least, to many wives it is
a welcome relief from the amorous demonstrations of their hus-
bands. Many women object to coition as a part of their duty to
their husbands ; of course, husbands often resent such an attitude
and either force their attentions on their wives or leave the wife
and sue for divorce. But if there are children, then for the chil-
dren's sake divorce should be avoided. Under such circumstances
a man is a more loving husband if he respects his wife 's antipathy
to sexual caresses, but goes quietly elsewhere to gratify himself,
than is the man who enforces his legal rights in the courts.
On the other hand, the unfaithfulness of the wife in compar-
ison with that of the husband is morally a much more weighty of-
fence; public sentiment is such that when it becomes known it
dishonors the woman and excludes her from all respectable soci-
ety; it dishonors her family, alienates her friends, throws doubt
over the parentage of her children and blights their lives with the
memory of her infidelity.
I am not discussing here Avhether this is just, or as it should
be; I am simply stating what are the conditions in modern soci-
ety. Of one thing, however, there can be no doubt — the story of
Jesus and the woman taken in adultery (John viii, 3-11) teaches
us that we should be more merciful in judging the woman who
transgresses, and who is generally more sinned against than
sinning (Fig. 372).
A curious form of marriage found in Thibet and some other
Asiatic countries is polyandry, — one woman having several hus-
bands. It is a question whether we should consider this a distinct
type of mar]-iage, or simply a relationship depending upon neces-
sity ; in Thibet women are sold to be wives, and a rich man usually
buys several women and practices polygamy; a man who is able to
buy a woman for himself alone considers himself lucky in practicing
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 201
nionogamy ; but when men are too poor to be able to buy a woman
for individual possession, several cluli tog-ether and buy a wife
in common, on tlie principle tliat lialf-a-loaf is better than no
bread, and they practice polyandry. If women in Thibet were
free to dispose of themselves, many would do as women do amongst
us, not tie themselves to a few men but accommodate many ; they
would practice prostitution in place of polyandry.
Still, polyandry is peculiar in this that the woman is usu-
ally the Avife of several brothers ; this form of marriage, however,
has brought about a recognized superiority of the women, which
in many cases amounts to almost a position of being a princess;
she governs and rules the household. It has another great advan-
tage; a number of men have their sexual appetites satisfied in a
proper and legal manner, and yet the number of children in a
household is not greater than in a monogamic household, because
this is limited by the bearing capacity of the one w^oman; the
household has a number of jDroviders, and not an unreasonable
number to be provided for, and therefore there is a condition of
comfort or even of wealth which would not be possible if each
man had a wife and a group of children to maintain. The children
know the oldest of the brothers as "father" and all the others
are "uncles." And of course, inheritance goes by the mother.
The practice is not confined to Thibet; the Todas, of India,
are a tribe in which a woman marries all the brothers of a family.
Their religion is a sort of Hinduism; they worship their dairy
cattle. As to their cosmogony, they consider themselves autoch-
thones— i. e., they believe that they originally grew out of the soil,
like plants.
Among the Navis of Malabar, also, a woman has several hus-
bands, but these are seldom brothers. The woman lives with her
mother, or brother, or in some cases she has a house where she
receives her husbands. This of course does not differ very much
from prostitution among ourselves, except that the arrangement
is lasting, all the husbands are attached to her and provide for
her for life.
A passage in the Maluibharata, a Hindu worK, tells how the
five brothers Pandava "married the fair Draaupadi with eyes of
lotus blue;" this seems to indicate that romance is not entirely
done away \v\{\\ in such unions.
Caesar spoke of a similar condition existing in Britain, and
202
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Polybius says it prevailed in Sparta. It is practiced now by about
30,000,000 of Asiatic people.
We have already referred to a similar relationship in Hawaii,
where brothers had all their wives in common and sisters had all
their hnsbands in conunon. This seems to be like polyandry in
some regards, but more on the principle of "what is sauce for
the goose is also sauce for the gander."
A peculiar relationship of the sexes is concubinage. The
origin of this arrangement Avas probably the sterility of the law-
ful wife. We read in the Bible, Gen. xvi, 1 : ''Now Sarai, Abram's
Fig.
69. — "Presentation of Hagar, " from painting by Steuben.
wife, bare him no children ; and she had an handmaid, an Egyptian,
whose name was Hagar. And Sarai said unto Abram, Behold
now, the Lord hath restrained me from bearing; I pray thee, go
in to my maid ; it may be that I may obtain children by her. And
Abram hearkened to the voice of Sarai" (Fig. 69); or again:
"And when Rachel saw that she bare Jacob no children
* * * she said (to Jacob), Behold my maid Bilbah, go in unto
her ; and she shall bear upon my knees, that I may also have chil-
dren by her. And she gave him Bilbah her handmaid to wife ; and
Jacob went in unto her."
There are many references to concubines in the Old Testa-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 203
mont; David had seven wives and ten concubines; Solomon had
seven hundred wives and three hundred concubines; Rehoboam
had eighteen wives and sixty concubines ; etc.
In Mohammedan lands there is no limit to the nmnber of
concubines a man may possess.
In European lands concubinage was general until quite re-
cent times, and the position of the concubine was an honorable one.
It also persists among the European nobility in the form of
morganatic marriages which are entered upon from love, and
when later official marriages must be contracted for state reasons,
these ^'left-handed marriages" are either discontinued, or are
maintained on the quiet, along with the official family, thus con-
stituting polygamy. In such morganatic marriages the title or
rank is not inherited by the children, but no disgrace attaches to
them, or to the woman.
The official marriages, for state reasons, of course furnish
the heir apparent, the croA\Ti prince, or the children who can in-
herit the title. To make sure that there was no doubt about the
heirs of a royal house, it was a requirement in medieval times
that the ministers of state were called in to actually witness the
birth of the children of a queen or empress, so that they could
officially certify that they were possible "heirs apparent." To
be a queen or empress had its advantages, but in those days it
also had its humiliations.
A similar system is not uncommon among us, but the concu-
bine is called the mistress, and her position is not considered an
honorable one, although it is infinitely better than that of a
prostitute. The practice is tacitly tolerated, but must not be pub-
licly paraded.
According to our laws sterility or barrenness of the wife is
a cause for divorce, but is it not cruel to a woman who, in every-
thing but this her misfortune, may be a devoted Avife, to break
up a relationship which may be ideally happy in all the ethical
and sensual relations of marriage? Does not the mental anguish
of a Josephine, for instance, whom Napoleon so ardently loved,
but whom he divorced that he might secure an heir, appeal to us
to permit a less cruel solution of such an unfortunate condition?
There have been frequent suggestions that this present world-
war may make it necessary for some countries to permit either
some legal form of concubinage, or polygamy, to recoup itself in
204 SEX AXD SEX WORSHIP
population. There is nothing of a religious character to prevent
the passing of laws to this effect, as there is nothing in the Bible
to forhid it; it would he against our prejudices, hut state policy
may demand some action of this kind and it is a matter for human
legislators to determine.
A sin is a transgression against the laws of God ; the laws of
God do not forhid; therefore concubinage or polygamy would not
be sin. Besides, "laws of God" are not recognized by everybody.
A vice is a transgression against the laws of nature or against
oneself; these practices are not against any laws of nature, there-
fore there could be no objection on this account.
A crime is a transgression against the laws of the land. Both
concubinage and polygamy are crimes when they are forbidden
by the laws, but they are legitimate practices in those lands whoso
laws approve of them. At present they are crimes Avith us, but
thej^ would not be if our laws Avere changed.
We are apt to feel that our prejudices could decide such mat-
ters, but there has been so much agitation against an open and
impartial discussion of these questions, that it is doubtful whether
legislators would have the courage to discuss such questions at all.
Prostitution, as universally existing, is but a survival of pro-
miscuous cohabitation similar to that which existed in the earliest
types of human tribe organization. History shows that it has al-
ways existed, and it is probable that it Avill alw^ays continue to
exist; there will always be men who can not marry, for economic
reasons, but who have passions like other men; there will always
be women who, rather than become the legal slave of one man,
will prefer to be the mistress of many men.
Suppression of prostitution will never be possible ; regulation
is possible.
In recent years many educated people, college and university
bred men and women, rebelling against the unjust degradation
imposed on the woman by entering legal wedded relations, have
preferred to ignore the laws and to enter into "free love" unions,
to be based on mutual consent only, sometimes called "common-
law" marriages. Educated women often prefer such a union, be-
cause they do not Ibecome the slaves of the men, but remain mis-
tresses of their own destinies ; any resulting children are their
own ; their earnings are their OA\m and they may choose what pro-
fession or calling they like. Lastly, such unions are based on
SEX AXI) SFA- WORSHIP 205
rational modes of living-, and control of reproduction is usually
favored, so that an overproduction of children is avoided; "birth-
control" is practiced.
As long as the laws and the rules of the church or of religion
are as they are, many people will prefer to live together in bonds
that can be broken when love is gone. As long as love lasts (and
it is more apt to last in such a union than in any other) free love
is ideally happy.
In our own land this is not a burning question, because our
men tacitly ignore the laws and the church, and do not attempt
to coerce or control their Avives, but let them do as they please;
but in lands where the full legal rights of the husband are insisted
on, there have been serious threats on the part of the w^omen, to
stril^e against the institution of marriage, and to agree to live in
"free love" only. "We have fought a world's war for democracy,
for human rights ; it will have been fought in vain if it does not
bring about the freedom of woman from the disabilities now le-
gally forced on her. She is a human being also!
Celibacy
Originally, in Latin, the word virfiis meant the attributes of
a man, something like our word virility ; it meant bravery or cour-
age, which was esteemed as the highest type of virtue in a man
among people of the warlike type of the ancient Romans. Grad-
ually, however, this meaning of the word became less important
and another significance, expressing the purity or chastity of
women, was substituted, so that now it is generally used as equiv-
alent to castitas or chastity; a virtue which, curiously enough, is
not a characteristic which is generally ascribed to men.
Uprightness of living, high ideals of purpose, abstaining from
vicious desires, especially in regard to sexual indulgences, a high
and chivalrous regard for the purity of Avomanhoocl, a preference
for virtue for virtue's sake, abstaining from selfish gratification
at the expense of innocent w^emen, was inculcated as an essential
characteristic of masculine nobility of thought and action, even
by pre-Christian ancients.
The teachings of some of the old Greek and Roman philos-
ophers, such as Aristotle, Plato and others, were as noble as those
of any modern Avriters, even though they were what we now call
"heathens."
206 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
The North American tribe of Chippewa Indians have a secret
society called Mide ; the moral instructions in this lodge are given
in songs. Their ancient religion is still taught, and here is one of
tlieir characteristic songs :
"Do not speak ill of the Mide
My Mide brethren
Wherever you may be
Do not speak ill of a woman
My Mide brethren."
This seems high principled for savages, for though many of
these Indians are now civilized, their lodge, its teachings and its
songs, are very ancient. Compare the teachings with the Japanese
''mode of life" (p. 14).
In the ages previous to Christianity there were many who
realized that the best interests of the state required orderly mar-
riage relationship as contributing best towards happiness and
the morality of the citizens ; Sparta and other states imposed pen-
alties on bachelors, and even in modern times it has frequently
been proposed to impose taxes on bachelors ; some states even sug-
gesting such a measure to raise funds for assisting unmarried la-
dies who were in want. Among the Spartans one disability imposed
on bachelors was that they could not be admitted to the public
athletic games, at which both young men and young women com-
peted in athletic games in a state of entire nudity. On the other
hand, there have been advantages proposed to the married, with
a view to induce as great a desire to enter the married relation-
ship as possible; and now, a goodly number of marriages, and a
goodly number of births are construed to mean a healthy con-
dition of the affair^ of state, so that from both civic and religious
considerations marriages are encouraged as highly desirable.
There have, however, at all times been people who have held
different views. The ascetics taught that man has a spirit which
is an emanation from God himself — "the breath of God" — and a
body which was made of matter, which was therefore looked down
upon and despised and condemned as evil. Such fanatics believed
that anything that tended to produce a state of happiness must
be evil, and they therefore tried to deprive people of everything
that was pleasant, in order, as they thought, to make them mor-
ally better. This ascetic tendency was to be found in all ages, and
SEX AlsTD SEX WORSHIP 207
among all people of all the religions of earth. It reached its liigh-
est development in some Oriental nations, as among the fakirs of
the Hindus, who inflict curious and painful injuries on themselves,
such as closing a hand until the nails grow through the palm to
the back, sitting or reclining on boards studded with pointed nails,
sitting before hot fires, looking at the sun until they become blind,
standing on one leg day and night or standing on a pillar for
years, or indulging in other senseless and cruel penances which
are supposed to make their souls more godlike. As Prescott ex-
pressed it, "making earth a hell in order to gain heaven."
The ascetics of all ages and countries thought that to refuse
to enjoy the ordinary pleasures of life was a very meritorious act ;
and the credit given in heaven for such self-abnegation was sup-
posed to be in direct proportion to the pleasure which was thus
declined. AVe would perhaps not be far wrong if we considered
such mental attitudes to be forms of insanity.
To live on the coarsest and simplest of foods, to drink only
water, to sleep on a litter of straw, to go without washing or
combing or cutting of liair, to let the finger nails grow, to Avear
the coarsest clothing, or to whip themselves with nettles, or with
thongs into which small pointed wires had been interwoven, were
all considered to be very meritorious acts in the eyes of God ; and
as sexual indulgence was one of the greatest of pleasures, absten-
tion from it was necessarily one of the greatest virtues.
Only a few years ago, in Denver, if I remember aright, a
priest fainted while saying mass, who was found to be wearing a
coarse undershirt to the inside of which dozens of very small fish-
hooks had been sewed, which caught in his fle?;h and caused tor-
ture enough to make him faint; and this self-torture and mortifi-
cation of the flesh is usually undertaken in the hope that it will
subdue carnal desire or the natural passion for intercourse with
women.
For instance, Origen, one of the early Christian church-
fathers, mutilated himself by emasculating himself, so that he
might escape temptation while teaching mixed classes of men and
women the Christian religion.
St. Anthony is said never to have bathed himself, holding that
bathing and the care for the body relaxed the liody and made it
more likely to succumb to carnal temptations; it is claimed for
him that he never saw himself naked.
208 . SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Men of this type condemned the most ordinary refinements
of life as unholy and Avicked. St. Bonaventure narrates that at
the end of the X Centnr}^ the sister of Romanns Argulns ''scan-
dalized all Venice hy an odd and unusual form of luxury," which
consisted in using a foi-k instead of her fingers when eating; and
the chronicler Dandolo, full of horror at such depravity, adds that
the unhappy woman was "by a chastisement sent from heaven,
attacked b}' a disease that caused her body to exhale, even before
death the odor of corruption. ' '
The Essenes were a Jewish sect which practiced very severe
asceticism ; they did not allow marriage or intercourse with women,
but not because they thought this particularly wrong but because
they considered all women to be fickle and unreliable. One sec-
tion of the Essenes permitted marriage, but strictly prohibited
sexual intercourse except for the express purpose of the begetting
of children. The necessity of the sexual act was recognized, but
the pleasurable feature of it was to be avoided as much as possible.
The early Christians were mostly poor and ignorant people;
the faith made most converts among slaves. The disciples of the
new faith were told to sell all they had and to give to the com-
munity; "Jesus said unto him. If thou wilt be perfect, go and sell
that thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure
in heaven, and come and follow me. But when the young man
heard that saying he went away sorrowful ; for he had great pos-
sessions. Then said Jesus imto his disciples, Verily, I say unto
you, that a rich man shall hardly enter the kingdom of heaven.
* * * it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle,
than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God" (Matt, xix,
21-24). These early Christians believed that riches and the ties
of family were hindrances to leading a good Christian life, and
they were advised to forsake all such ties and follow Jesus. "If
any man come to me and hate not his father and mother, and
wife and children, and brethren and sisters, yea, and his own life
also, he can not be my disciple. * * * So likewise, whosoever
he be of you that f orsaketh not all that he hath, he can not be my
disciple" (Luke xiv, 26 and 33).
In other words, the early Christians had to forswear every-
thing that their human nature held dear, and to subdue all human
desires for family and friends and riches in order to be good
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 209
Christians; and tlio moans by Avliieli tliis was to he accomplished
was solitude, povert}^ celibacy, penances and fasting.
Jesus went even further; he said: ''there be eunuchs Avhich
have made themselves eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven's sake.
He that is able to receive it, let him receive it" (Matt, xix, 12).
In other words, ''let those who can take a hint, do so."
St. Jerome (Hieronymus) lived in the latter half of the IV
Centur}^ and acting on such advice by Jesus himself, he became
one of the main promoters of celibate orders, both monasteries
and nunneries. He organized associations of this kind, and found
many enthusiastic disciples, and the church has maintained them
ever since. St. Jerome himself founded such an order of disciples
composed of Roman ladies and maidens who met together in the
house of Marcella to study the Scriptures under his instruction.
This movement, once introduced, spread widely; those who
entered the orders took vows of chastity, poverty and obedience;
but "chastity" was construed to mean celibacy, which was not
alwaj'S conducive to true chastity or virtue, but often led to ex-
cesses of various kinds.
For instance, Jeanne Marie Guyon was born in 1648 of
wealthy parents ; she came into contact with fanatics of the kind
just described, and soon became addicted to mystical thoughts,
the results of brooding over certain passages in the Bible. In her
12th year she wore the name of Jesus inscribed (or tattooed) on
her body, and commenced to practice many austerities. She
made a vow that she would always subordinate her will to the will
of God. When she was not quite 16 years old her parents married
her to M. Guyon, who probably did not find much happiness in
this union, for she prayed almost uninterruptedly until in 1672
when she was 24 years old, she drew up a formal solemn mar-
riage contract or act of consecration by which she became con-
tracted to Jesus as liis spouse, and she sealed this with her ring
and signed it ivith her oivn hlood. Such cases of fanaticism were
not unconunon.
One of the most common results of such organizations was to
make the members very narrow and bigoted.
Fanatics become intolerant of any other beliefs than their
o^^ll, and they also think those who believe otherwise are wilfully
impious and they seek to impose their views on them, by force if
necessary. For instance, Hypatia was a celebrated matliematician
210 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
and philosopher at Alexandria, born about 370 a.d. In the con-
flicts between the various factions of Christians, when Cyril be-
came patriarch in 412, she became an object of fear to the monks
belonging to the church, on account of her caustic agitation against
the doctrines of the church; the monks together with a mob of
fanatical followers, and possibly at the instigation of Cyril him-
self, seized her, tore the clothing from her, and hacked her naked
body to pieces.
Others became insane, or intolerantly fanatic, and in later
times some of these orders became the bigoted promoters of the
inquisition and of its autos-da-fe, its tortures and its cruelties of
many kinds. There were even in comparatively early times some
who tried to stem this perverse tendency in the Christian church ;
Saints Augustine and Chrysostom taught the sanctity of the Chris-
tian family life, but multitudes preferred to follow the advice of
St. Paul: ''It is good for a man not to touch a woman" (I Cor.
vii, 1). * * * "for I would that all men were even as I myself"
(St. Paul was a bachelor). "I say therefore to the unmarried and
widows, it is good for them if they abide even as I" (I Cor. vii,
7,8).
Through such teachings of the early church, celibacy (mis-
called "chastity") was exalted almost to a (or the) cardinal vir-
tue and it was even held that those who married could not enter
into the kingdom of heaven.
The Council of Gangra, in 363 a.d., anathematized those who
asserted that marriage was a sin; trying to stem this unnatural
asceticism of the early church.
Some of the monastic orders were great missionary bodies
and did incalculable good in converting many heathen peoples,
and popes and other ecclesiastical authorities exerted all their
influence to correct any abuses that occasionally crept in.
Even in heathen (pre-Christian) times there were priests
who held such ascetic views; in some temples, even, it was the
rule that the priests should be emasculated. Celibacy of the
priesthood was common in Buddhist lands, and was early adopted
by the Catholic church; in the primitive Christian church the
bishops had to be married men: "A bishop then must be blame-
less, the husband of one wife, vigilant, sober, of good behavior,
given to hospitality," etc. (I Tim. iii, 2). These laws of tlie
church were afterwards changed, not by any additional revelation.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 211
but by the decrees of synod meetings, nntil now the celibacy of
the priesthood is a firmly established policy of the Catholic
Church, in both the Greek and the Roman branches.
The agitation of the question of celibacy versus married life
gave rise to many aberrations of thought and action; thus, the
Adamites were a sect which existed about the II Century; they
claimed to have regained the condition of Adam's innocence be-
fore the fall and they lived in absolute sexual lawlessness. The
sect died out soon, but it was resuscitated under the name of
''Picards" in Bohemia, about 1300 a.d., at which time they lived
in a state of nudity and held all their wives in common. Such ex-
cesses led to the opposite extremes, of course, and there were
many who swore off all sexual enjoyments, even going so far as
to follow the advice of Jesus: "If thy right eye offend thee, pluck
it out * * * and if thy right hand offend thee, cut it off * * *
for it is profitable for thee that one of thy members should per-
ish, and not that thy whole body should be cast into hell."
The Skopsi of Russia began about 1757 a.d.; they emascu-
lated themselves and practiced flagellation. The order thrived
in spite of much persecution from the authorities. In 1815 the
prioress of a flagellant society introduced the practice among
women, and girls and young women allowed themselves to be
spayed (ovaries cut out) and to have their breasts cut off, so as to
be less able to excite sexual desire in the men. The sect thrived,
and while it is not accurately known how many have been muti-
lated, it has been stated that the sect numbers about 150,000
members.
In males there are two methods, cutting out the testicles, or
total extirpation of penis and scrotum; these are removed with
cutting implements and the bleeding is checked with a redhot
iron. This is called the "baptism by fire." Occasionally the
parts are removed by burning them off with a redhot iron loop.
In women the operations are varied: cutting off or burning
off one or both nipples ; amputating one or both breasts ; cutting
out the labia minora with the clitoris or the clitoris alone ; or the
extirpation as far as possible of the entire external genitals, labia
majora, labia minora and clitoris; also, the extirpation of the
ovaries (spaying). In addition, various marks are branded on
the body with hot irons, mainly crosses.
Their "Lord's Supper" consists in cutting off the breast of
212 SEX AN"D SEX WORSHIP
a young woman initiate, and cutting the gland into small bits
which are distributed among those present, and eaten by them.
They then place the newly initiated member on a throne and
dance around her until they fall senseless in convulsions;
Jesus said to his disciples: "There are some eunuchs which
were so born from their mother's womb; and there are some
eunuchs which were made eunuchs of men ; and there be eunuchs,
which have made themselves eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven's
sake" (Matt, xix, 12). We have just learned something about a
sect who have ''made themselves eunuchs for the kingdom of
heaven's sake," as they imagine. The "eunuchs which were
made of men ' ' are mainly castrated slaves, in Oriental lands, who
are much used as attendants and guardians of the women in the
harems. The word is from the Greek eiinoucJios, meaning one who
guards the bed. God forbade the Jews to make eunuchs, but
nearly all other nations have made them.
The slave raiders in Africa make some, although the industry
is said to be mostly practiced in Coptic monasteries; boy slaves
of about six to ten years old are bought by the monks and the
operation is done by firmly grasping the penis and scrotum, and
pulling them away from the body ; then the whole appendages are
cut off with a long sharp knife; the hemorrhage is stopped with
a sponge at the end of a stick, the sponge having been dipped into
boiling oil. A cloth with some soothing ointment or oil is placed
over the parts, and the boy is kept immobile for a few days by
standing him in a pit, with his hands tied behind him, and the
pit filled in with sand to the boy's shoulders. About one out of
four operated on survives; therefore the fourth one must make
up in price for the loss of the others besides paying a profit on
the business. These slaves are highly prized in the Orient.
Among the ancients, in Greece and Rome for instance, these
slaves were called "hermaphrodites;" they were especially val-
ued as men-whores and were used for pederastic coition {coitus
in ano). It is said that Philip of Macedonia carried with him on
his war expeditions eight hundred eunuchs for the use of himself
and his friends.
In Europe the castrating of boy slaves has been considered a
crime for many centuries; except that in Rome castrates were
used for the choirs in the Sistine Chapel. The making castrates
to be "soxDrani" or "castrati" in this choir was regularly prac-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 213
ticed, of course with all possible safeguards as to the life of the
victim, until it was forbidden by Pope Leo XIII in the year 1880.
It is also said that some of these castrati later on became
some of the celebrated tenors of the operatic stage.
Gratification of the Senses
''Live joyfully with the wife whom thou lovest — for that is
thy portion in this life — " (Eccl. ix, 9), said Solomon, and he
gave us a glowing direction in his Song of Songs how to rejoice
with a wife.*
Vulgar people think that sexual gratification consists merely
or even mainly in coition ; but this is placing a very low estimate
on the tenderest and sweetest relationship in. life ; this is but the
lowest element in the psychology of love, and while necessary to
a complete union of the sexes, and necessary for the God-ordained
purpose of love — procreation, the enjoyment produced by the
gratification of other senses forms a nobler and more spiritual
sexual companionship. Sexual pleasure, to be complete, demands
that all the senses be gratified; each sense is to contribute its
share to the total pleasure; "Be thou ravished"— says the Bible.
Perfumery
Perfumery is the art of manipulating and coml)ining odorifer-
ous substances for the gratification of the sense of smell.
When Solomon (Prov. v, 18-19) said: "Rejoice with the mfe
of thy youth. * * * Let her breasts satisfy thee at all times ;
and be thou ravished always with her love," he implied that she
should please all his senses, and that he should be pleased with
the odors of her body, as well as with all the other features that
make a wife, or woman, attractive (Fig, 70).
A woman's toilet is devoted to making herself attractive to
men; both consciously and instinctively this is aimed at by a
refined woman.
The Book of Judith, in the Apocrypha (x, 3 et seq.) tells us
that Judith, when she determined to meet Holof ernes, ' ' pulled off
the sack-cloth which she had on, and put off the garments of her
widowhood, and washed her body all over with water, and anointed
*We will not discuss here whether this song is merely erotic poetry or whether it was written
by Solomon; even if it is only a pastoral song of youthful and conjugal love, it is beautiful, no
matter who wrote it.
214 SEX AND SEX WOKSHIP
herself with precious ointment, and braided the hair of her head
and put a tiara upon it, and put on her garments of gladness
wherewith she was clad during the life of Manasses, her husband.
''And she put sandals on her feet, and put about her her
bracelets and her chains and her rings, her ear rings and all her
ornaments, and decked herself bravely to allure the eyes of all
men that should see her."
The "Eternal Feminine" is still the same, wherever there is
a woman; and in every nation and clime she still seeks to be
pleasing to men (Fig 71).
The desire of a man for a woman may become excited by
many charms of her body or her manner. No doubt the most im-
portant of these is her beauty.
Fig. 70. — ' ' Among Roses, ' ' f ro'm painting by Duran.
i i '
Beauty is but the bait, Avhich, with delight,
Doth man ensnare for to enlarge his kind."
said the poet Spenser, three hundred years ago. In these modern
times we must judge the beauty of a woman largely by her face,
neck, shoulders, back and arms, which society permits to be shown
quite freely, and by the gracefulness of her carriage.
Quite recently a self-constituted body of censors deplored the
relapse of our civilization to Paganism, and they quoted the dress
of our women as an example of such a relapse. There was not,
within the last few hundred years, a time when the dress of women
was so charming as it is at the present time, because it not only
properly covers the body, but also discreetly displays the perfec-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
215
tion of its proportions. The female body was made for the ad-
miration and adoration of men, and its display, in the ball-room
or at the bathing beach, or in the art photos so much in vogue
at present, is not only proper but is conducive to a better morality
than when it was hidden under clothing that did not allow anyone
to judge of the perfection of the woman 's form.
The claim that civilization tends towards degeneracy is not
true, for while some weak-minded men can not stand the strain,
and become degenerate, yet the great mass of humankind has been
uplifted and made better.
It is with civilization as with our modes of lighting our cities ;
Fig. 71.— "The Kiss," by Rodin.
the more brilliant the illumination the more dense the shadows
by contrast; yet only apparently so, for they look darker than
they really are because we just looked at the intenser light. In
reality the shadows are far more light than when we used dimmer
illumination, or no lights at all. So the dark spots on our civiliza-
tion appear gloomier, because in the main civilization has made
life in general brighter and better.
Modern customs and costumes are fairly liberal in allowing
men to judge of the attractiveness of women; the thin sleeves
216
SEX AND SEX WOESHIP
which shoAv the arms, the lowcut dresses which display the
bosoms, the short skirts which allow the feet and the legs to be
seen, even np to the bend of the knees when women enter the
street-cars, are so frequently to be seen that they hardly attract
attention. The thin and almost diaphanous skirts are not quite
so common, yet fairly often to be seen wlien women walk between
us and the bright sun.
But the swimming races in the rivers, the public bathing
places, the pageants in the parks (Fig. 72), the ilhistrations in
the supplements of our Sunday papers, bathing scenes in the
''movies," etc., the fasliion plates in the magazines, the models in
Fig. 72. — Dancing at a pageant in Forest Fig. 73. — Distribution of nerves in the
Park, St. Louis, 1918.
nose.
the show-Avindows of the stores, the advertisements of underwear,
corsets, hosiery, etc., and the pictures of actresses, all contribute
to the fact that man no longer looks at a woman as ''fearfully
and wonderfully made," for he has become almost as familiar with
the construction of her wardrobe as if he had seen her put it on,
piece after piece, beginning with nothing.
While we are privileged to see the beauty of woman by her
present modes of dressing, we are also influenced greatly by her
efforts to make herself attractive in other ways, as for instance,
by the perfume she uses.
Oliver Wendell Holmes was not alone in expressing the
SEX a^:d sex wor^sTTir 217
opinion that physical and intellectual qualities do not exert greater
influence on sex-afifinity than that exerted through the olfactory
organs.
Cadet-Devaux, in Revue Encyclopediqiie, considers the exhala-
tions of the female the most important sexual attraction. And
Shakspeare placed the attraction of odor on a level with that of
sight.
An artist can represent most of the attractive features of the
woman, such as the glory of her hair, her wonderful complexion
and texture of skin, the soulful eyes, the luscious lips, her volup-
tuous beauty of bosom and body, and the comely roundness and
plumpness of her limbs, but one of the most delightful features,
the odor of her bod}^, can not be represented in statuary, painting
or photography.
The artist is therefore compelled to content himself with
merely suggesting it in some w^ay, as by accompanying the por-
trayal of woman with flowers; or by scenes of a woman's toilet
or bath, suggesting both exquisite cleanliness and therefore also
delicate body odors.
All statuary or paintings of women bathing may be consid-
ered as attempts to suggest, if not to represent, the natural per-
fume of a woman's body.
There is much that is mysterious about perfumes or odors,
but it is certain that our sense of smell takes cognizance of invis-
ible, impalpable and imponderable particles of matter that cause
the odors. The illustration (Fig. 73) shows the distribution of
the nerves of smell in the lining membranes of the nose.
The olfactory nerve is so intimately connected with the brain,
that Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, the celebrated physiologist, stated
that it is not a nerve at all, but a part of the lorain in intimate con-
nection with the anterior lobes.
The particles which act on these nerves are so small that sci-
ence has not enabled us to see, measure or weigh them, or even
to estimate their size; they reach the sensitive nerves in the nose
and induce in them a kind of vibration which is called a perfume
or aroma when it is pleasant, a scent when it is indifferent, or a
stench when it is unpleasant; with, of course, a great many in-
different odors that are neither pleasant nor unpleasant.
The sensitiveness of the nerves of smell may be realized from
218 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
the fact that one part of sulphuretted hydrogen gas in one million
parts of air can be readily recognized by smell.
The word ''perfume" is derived from the Latin words "per
fumiim," meaning "by smoke," or "by fumes." The very word
perfumery is an evidence that our modern use of perfumery is
but an evolution from the original use of incense and burnt
offerings.
The use of incense consists in the slow combustion of odor-
iferous substances by fire, so that the aromatic particles are
driven off by a sort of distillation similar to sublimation; a
Fig. 74. — "An Offering to Minerva," from a painting.
process that most people probably have seen in a church at some
time or other.
The use of incense dates back for thousands of years, to the
most remote antiquity.
Perfume for the Gods
In ancient Rome it was customary to make an offering of
incense to the Lares, the spirits of the ancestors, daily; also, to
make an offering to the Penates, always two divinities who pre-
sided over the kitchen and the store-rooms of food; this latter
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 219
offering was a burnt offering of a small portion of the food pre-
pared for the day, the offering being somewhat in the nature of
our saying grace before eating.
Burnt offerings were offered to the deities in very early
times; it was supposed that the gods were delighted mth certain
odors, and these were produced by burning certain spices and
resins on an altar, so that the smoke rising heavenward might
carry with it the odor for the gods (Fig, 74). Or they were placed
in thuribles, censers or vessels in Avhich glowing charcoal is placed
and then swung by the priest, so as to keep up enough draft to
keep the charcoal gloA^^ng; the incense is then sprinkled on this
coal. This is the method of using incense in our churches, just
as it was used in ancient times in heathen temples.
Homer taught that gods and kings are best disposed favorably
through offerings or gifts. A prayer or request to a god was
usually accompanied by some offering that savored a little of
bribery; or when the request was made, a vow was also made to
do certain things in case the prayer was granted.
It was thought that gods experienced a physical pleasure
from the offered sacrifice, whatever it was. Nearly all ancient
people imagined their gods to reside in certain places that were
holy to them. In Greece, for instance, Jupiter designated these
places by throwing his bolts at them (striking them with light-
ning) and such places were fenced in and considered sacred to
Jove. Or the gods were supposed to reside in certain stones
(called Beth-el, or "house of God" in the Bible) or in a sacred tree
or pole (called asliera, or in the Bible — "grove").
The offering of a sacrifice consisted in pouring libations of
wine, or milk, or oil, or the blood of sacrificial animals over the
holy places, the sacred stone, or on the ground about the sacred
tree ; and the carcass of the victim was either left on the ground,
where it usually was consumed by wild animals, and the disap-
pearance was ascribed to the gods ; or the victim was buried near
or under the sacred place.
In ancient times such altars were made of unhewn stones,
preferably a meteoric stone if it could be found. In the 20th chap-
ter of Exodus, V. 25, God is represented as saying to Israel, "if
thou wilt make me an altar of stone, thou shalt not build it of
he\\Ti stone, for if thou lift up thy tool upon it, thou hast pol-
luted it."
220 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Later on, it was believed that the gods were not able to nse
anything that was not purified and etherialized by burning it in
fire Cby smoke" or "per fmmim") and that the gods could ap-
preciate an offering only by the sense of smell, of odors that
ascended to them in heaven.
The original idea was to offer food to the gods, and either the
whole of the animal or only certain parts were burned on the
altars. Thus, it is believed that in many sacrifices only the pel-
vis with the sexual parts, or perhaps only the one bone of the
pelvis, the sacrum, with the attached sexual parts Avas an offering
to the gods, and that the name of the bone, the ''sacred bone,"
Avas derived from its use in Inirnt offerings.
The parts of the sacrificial animal not offered as a burnt of-
ering to the gods was eaten by the priests or the worshippers.
Among some people only the blood was offered as a sacrifice
(as among the Aztecs) or the fat and the thighs {os sacrum?) or
the blood, fat and kidne3'S.
God commanded the Jews (Levit. ii, 13), ''and every obla-
tion of thy meat-offering shaft thou season with salt; neither
shalt thou suffer the salt of the covenant of thy God to be lack-
ing from thy meat-offerings; with all thine offerings thou shalt
offer salt."
Salt is also an ingredient of holy water in the church.
The parts ordered to be offered to God were forbidden to the
Jews to eat (Lev. vii, 26, Lev. iii, 17).
In India the sacrifice was accompanied by libations of wine,
or soma.
Certain animals could not be offered because they were "un-
clean;" others not, because they were sacred, as the cow to Isis,
in Egypt, or the goat to Athena, in Greece.
Among the Greeks the worship of Athena (Fig. 75) was in-
troduced by the Aegidae, or "goat-clan," and Athena was repre-
sented as dressed in an aegis or goat skin, like Zeus. Athena
therefore Avas of the goat-clan (see Totemism, p. 127), and as in
all totem tribes who can not eat their totem (be it animal or veg-
etable), so Athena could not eat her totem or a member of her
own clan, that of the goat; to have offered goat sacrifices to her
would have been equivalent to cannibalism.
The book of Leviticus is full of directions of what animals to
offer as sacrifices; as burnt offerings, cattle (a male without a
SEX AXD SEX WORSHIP
221
blemish), slieep or goats (a male Avithout a l)leinisli)j fowls (turtle-
doves or young pigeons) ; or fine flour, oil, frankincense, unleav-
ened cakes, fruits; but leaven (yeast) or honey were forbidden to
be used as offerings.
But for peace-offerings animals of the herds or flocks, either
male or female (without blemish) Avere permitted.
Human sacrifices were common among Semitic nations, in-
cluding the Jews ; thus, Abraham was commanded to offer his son
Isaac, but when he was about to do so, an angel interfered and
ordered him. to substitute a ram (Gen. eh. xxii, 1-13).
A peculiar form of sacrifice consisted in cutting off the pre-
Fig. 75. — Burning incense before Athena. Interior of the Parthenon, restored.
puce, or foreskin of the penis ; this was done by different nations,
but it was especially enjoined on the Jew^s as a religious covenant
with God. It was a sacrifice of a small part of the body that the
balance might be saved, for dire punishment was threatened
against those who were not circumcised (Gen. xvii, 14).
It is interesting to note that what are now considered purely
Adces, are survivals of religious ceremonies of former days. In
olden times, for instance, the priest had to take the penis he cir-
cumcised in his mouth and suck it, as a part of the ritual. This
was forbidden in the days of Napoleon, because syphilis was con-
veyed by the mucous patches on the lips of some of the operators.
222 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Originally circumcision was probably a sacrifice to the Power
of Procreation, which was supposed to reside in the penis, or to
be symbolized by the penis.
Orthodox Jews still practice circumcision as a religious rite,
it having the place that baptism of the Christians holds.
Also, the Bible tells us that Jephthah made a vow to the Lord :
"if thou shalt mthout fail deliver the children of Ammon into my
hands, then it shall be, that whatsoever cometh forth of the doors
of my house to meet me, * * * shall surely be the Lord's and
I will offer it up for a burnt-offering."
And when he came back, his daughter met him, and * * *
' ' Jephthah did with her according to his vow which he had vowed. ' '
Writers have tried to explain away the hideousness of this
story by saying that Jephthah dedicated her to the service of God ;
but there is no use to apologize for the statements in the Bible ; —
"I will offer it up for a burnt-offering" — and — "Jephthah did
with her according to his vow" are statements too unequivocal
to admit a doubt of his having slaughtered her and burnt her body
as an offering to God Jehovah (provided we accept all that is in
the Bible as truth).
And stress is laid on the fact that she was a virgin, therefore
an exceptionally acceptable sacrifice.
During the idolatry of the Jews, they offered their children
as burnt offerings to Molech, the deity of the Philistines. These
children were offered like any other offerings, slaughtered, cut
up and burnt; they were not burned alive. The latter practice,
however, was prevalent at one time in Carthage; and every now
and then in our own communities some religious fanatic imagines
he has been commanded by the Lord to sacrifice one of his chil-
dren, and either attempts to do so, or succeeds in doing so; only,
instead of it being regarded as an act approved by God, as in
Abraham's case, we now call such a person insane and lock
him up.
Among the Phoenicians human sacrifices were offered on
great occasions, and usually a first-born and only son was chosen
for the purpose. This was because an offering was supposed to
be acceptable to a god in proportion as it was valued by the wor-
shippers. It was thought that deities delighted in and demanded
the costliest and holiest gifts, and this led to the dedication of
virgins as gifts to temples of Astarte to become temple attendants
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
223
(or temple prostitutes) in the groves of this goddess, and some-
times virgins or matrons (wives) were given, to be sacrificial
offerings.
In later times these human sacrifices were only figuratively
carried out; for instance, women cut off and burnt their hair as
an offering, instead of being themselves the sacrificial victuns.
In a similar manner in ancient Egypt, when the inundation
of the Nile occurred (the Nile was a divinity) a maiden was
throwTi into the Nile as a sacrificial offering; later on, when
human sacrifices were no longer required, a waxen image of a
Fig. 76.— ''Cain Kills Abel," from Core's Bible illustrations.
maiden was thrown into the flood; at present, the Avater is con-
trolled by dams and locks. When it is to be allowed to flow out
over the land, a pillar of mud is erected in front of the floodgate,
which is called "the bride of the Nile" and serves in place of
the living human victim offered by the ancients.
Cain killed Abel because the smoke of the latter 's offering
ascended straighter to heaven than that of his o\\ai, or what was
the same thing to Cain, because Abel's sacrifice was more ac-
ceptable to God than his own (Fig. 76).
"Cain brought of the fruit of the ground an offering unto
the Lord (Gen. iv, 3),
224
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
''And Abel, he also brought of the firstlings of his flock, and
of the fat thereof. And the Lord had respect unto Abel, and to
his offering,
"But unto Cain and to his offering he had not respect"
(Gen. iv, 4, 5).
That God might not respect their offerings seems to have
been much dreaded by the ancient Jews, for God threatens (Lev.
xxvi, 31) : "And I Avill make your cities waste and bring your
sanctuaries into desolation, and I will not smell the savour of your
sweet odors."
Among ancient people the idea here stated seemed to be gen-
erally accepted that the gods preferred bloody sacrifices, because
they delighted in the smell of blood ; and since such offerings were
acceptable in proportion as they were valuable to the worship-
Fig. 77. — Achilles sacrificing to the manes of Patrocles; from the Fancois tomb, near
Vulci.
pers, human offerings, the offerings of firstborn sons or of virgin
daughters were the holiest.
After all, the idea that the gods preferred virgins was per-
fectly natural ; all mankind has a special regard for virgins. And
if any of us were invited to a feast, such as a sacrifice was sup-
posed to be for the gods, we would be like the gods in appre-
ciating tender "chickens." Among the cannibals of Central
Africa, tender young women, properly fricasseed, are still con-
sidered a special treat and delicacy.
Among the ancient Greeks at one time human offerings were
not unusual. Tliis (Fig. 77) represents Achilles sacrificing to
the shade of his ancestor Patrocles at the siege of Troy (after
sculptures in an old Grecian tomb).
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
225
Agamemnon liad in some way offended tlie goddess Artemis,
who demanded that he offer his daughter Iphigeneia in expiation.
AVhen he was about to sacrifice Iphigeneia, the goddess relented
and ordered a hind to be substituted for Iphigeneia (the sam(^
story as that of Abraham offering Isaac), but she took Iphigeneia
and made her a priestess in a temple of Artemis. According to
some versions of this story, Iphigeneia was actually sacrificed.
Polyxena was a daughter of Priam, old Greek legends say.
Priam was the last king of Troy and Hecuba was the mother of
Polyxena. She had been betrothed to Achilles, and after the
Fig. 78. — ''The Rape of Polyxena," by Fecli; now in Florence, Italy.
destruction of Troy and the death of Achilles, the ghost of the lat-
ter appeared to the Greeks and demanded of them the sacrifice of
Polyxena. The Greeks consented and Neoptolemus, the son of
Achilles, seized and sacrificed Polvxena on his father's grave
(Fig. 78).
Similar was the story of the maidens offered to the Minotaur.
In early times the Greeks also made human sacrifices to
Artemis (the moon).
In Rome sacrifices were offered to various deities; male an-
imals to gods and female animals to goddesses. The Penates
226
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
were the Roman gods of the storehouse of food, the larder or
cupboard. The family hearth was their altar, on which as al-
ready stated, a portion of the daily food was offered to them.
They were always accompanied by the Lares or ancestral gods,
who remained as household deities; to them also offerings of
food were made.
The serving of food and drink to household spirits prevailed
in Russia, Germany, Lapland, Servia, etc. In Russia, or rather
in Siberia, this took a peculiar form. The Russians who had been
banished to Siberia believed (or at least pretended to believe)
that ancestral spirits visited them in their exile, and they set
food outside of their windows every evening for them. In reality,
Fig-. 79.
-A Druidic human sacrifice.
this food was intended for prisoners who had escaped from the
mines, and who dared not come in daytime to beg food, and to
whom the people would not have dared to give food. The offer-
ings for their "ancestral visitors" outside of their windows were
occasionally accompanied by little gifts of money and were in-
tended to help the unfortunates on their way to freedom.
Young maidens, or virgins, were especially acceptable sac-
rifices to the gods, and were offered by the ancient Druids (Fig.
79) as well as by the Greeks; and the custom extended to nearly
all parts of the world.
Until quite recently (last century) a virgin was sacrificed
annuallv to Pelee, the female demon deitv of the volcano Kilauea,
SEX AND SEX WOFvSTTTP
227
by being tlirowji i'roiii tlie edge of tlie crater into the seething lake
of lava below. A hair-like substance is often found in Hawaii
which is called "Pelee's hair;" it is a sort of mineral or slag
wool, made by lava being ejected from the volcano, and blo^Am
by the wind into threads.
Prescott tells us that the Aztecs, in the times of the Con-
quest of Mexico, sacriticed annually many thousands of human
victims to their blood-thirsty God of War, who delighted in the
odor of fresh blood.
This illustration (Fig. 80) is copied from an old painting in
a temple of Mexico, showing the method of making these human
sacrifices. Several temple attendants, who were made more hide-
ous by painting their bodies black, seized the victim and stretched
him on his back over a convex altar stone, whereupon the priesl
Fig. SO. — Aztec sacrifice, from Kingsborougli's Mexican Antiquities.
made an incision and quickly tore the heart from the body and
held it up to the idol, so that Huitzilopochtli might smell the
fragrance of the Avarm and palpitating heart and of the blood.
The bodies were then thro\^^l doA^^l among the worshippers,
and afterwards were roasted and eaten.
We learn from the Bible that, of the Jewish offerings, some
were completely burned, of others only a few parts were burned
and the remainder served as food for the temple attendants or
could be carried back and eaten by the ones who had made the
offerings; the blood in every case, however, was sprinkled over
the altar as a grateful offering to the nostrils of Jehovah, and the
228 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Jews were forbidden to eat blood. Aromatic resins, or incense,
and salt was added to the parts that were burned on the altars.
The ancient Egyptians filled the carcasses of their burnt of-
ferings with spices, raisins, etc., to render the odor, the only
part that ascended to heaven, more acceptable to the gods. It
also rendered the sacrificial animals, which were roasted, not
burned, more acceptable to the priests and temple attendants
whose perquisites they were, and who feasted on them. The Egyp-
tians also burned only a small part for the gods, probably the
sacrum with the sexual parts.
The word hethoreth, used by the ancient Jews for incense,
meant ' ' savor of satisfaction. ' ' It was used as among the ancient
Egyptians, from whom the Jews obtained many of their ideas
during their captivity in Egypt.
The modern use of consecrated candles, or of incense, in our
churches, is but an innocent survival of former more bloody and
cruel sacrifices.
In the 35th verse of the thirtieth chapter of Exodus, in the
Bible, incense is also called a "confection made after the art of
the apothecary," which modern scholars say should rather have
been translated: "a perfume (or incense) made after the art of
the perfumer."
This verse refers to the burnt offering incense of the ancient
Jews, which seems to have had a twofold purpose: First, to ren-
der the actual burnt offering, that part of the sacrificial animal
which was consumed by fire on the altar, more acceptable to
the nostrils of God ; second, to render it less offensive to the wor-
shippers in the temple.
Incense was, and is, used among the Hindus in the same way
and for the same purposes as among the ancient Jews. The
Hindus formerly used frankincense, but now they generally use
benzoin.
In ancient Roman temples the use of religious fumigations
was common. It was probably continued from these Pagan prac-
tices by the primitive Christians, although direct testimony to
this effect is wanting, for we find no mention of its use among
the Christians until about the fifth century of our era.
At present there is no fixed rule for the making of incense for
church purposes; it is, however, recommended that, whenever
possible, frankincense (olibanum) shall constitute more than one-
SEX AND SEX WOKSHIP 229
I'.alf of tlio mixture. It is especially reeomDieiided that no in-
ferior substance, if used at all, shall preponderate.
In Rome, olibanum is used alone; in other places benzoin,
storax, aloes, cascarilla, cinnamon, cloves or musk, or a combina-
tion of several of these are added to the olibanum.
In the Russian branch of the Greek Catholic church the in-
cense consists mainly of benzoin, as among the Hindus ; and in
the Armenian branch of the Greek Catholic church incense is
usually a mixture of myrrh and cinnamon.
An inscription in the Valley of Hammamat records that
Hannu was sent by the Pharaoh Sankharra, about 2500 B.C., or
1000 years before Moses, by the route of the Red Sea southward
to Punt (modern Somaliland) on the eastern coast of Africa, to
bring back odoriferous gums to be used in the temples for incense,
and for embalming the dead. An inscription in the temple at
Der-el-Bahri shows the bringing of goods for Queen Hatshep-
sowet, Avho had determined to import incense trees into Egypt, to
attempt to raise their oAvn incense for use in the temples.
The native products obtained from the Prince of Punt in-
cluded aromatic woods, spices, incense, incense trees, other rare
plants, gold, etc., for the temple of Thebes. The record states that
an expedition was sent by Queen Hasop (about 1600 b.c.) to bring
incense trees from Punt, to be planted in the gardens connected
with this temple, with the intention of producing incense.
In Stones of Venice Ruskin speaks of the ''close air loaded
with a sweet and peculiar odor associated only with religious
services," as pervading the interior of the churches. The in-
fluence of incense in producing a devotional frame of mind has
perhaps been experienced by most of us.
This mental disposition is to a great extent due to the in-
halation of the volatilized terebinthinate constituents of the in-
cense which produces an obscure yet perceptibly stimulant ef-
fect on the erection center; were the effect stronger it would
excite distinct erotic emotions with erection, but as it is, it only
produces religiously devotional emotions, arguing however the
close relationship of our sexual and our religious passions.
Under the Emperor Constantine the burning of incense as a
sacrifice was considered to be proof of Paganism, and was made
a crime punishable with death.
230
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
PERFUME FOR HUMANS
So far we have spoken of incense or perfume for religious
uses; but from very early times it was also used in Egypt and
India for secular purposes, to perfume the home, the clothing and
the bodies of persons.
In other words, it was used for the same purposes as our
modern perfumes.
The Hottentot women rub their bodies with butter, soot and
bucliu leaves; the Hawaiian women decorate themselves with
Fig. 81. — "A Message to Cleopatra," from a painting by Miss Coomans.
wreaths and garlands of odorous flowers; Cleopatra (Fig. 81) is
identified b}^ both ancient and modern writers with the utmost
luxury in the use of perfumery and flowers, and our modern
women delight in receiving gifts of flowers and rare perfumes.
Dr. Septinms Piesse, one of the most famous, if not the most
famous of French perfumers, arranged the chief odors used in
perfumery in analogy to the musical scale, both bass and treble,
thus assigning its real place to each simple odor and laying down
rules for the proper combination of odors to form "harmonies"
or blends, for some odors conflict with others, producing discords.
According to the theories of Piesse, when a combination of
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
231
odors is desired, they must be such as to form a true harmony.
This system was called by Piesse the OdopJione, or the Science of
Perfume Harmony. As an example, Fig. 82 shows a proper com-
l)ination: A Bouquet in the Sub-Dominant of C. Musk (or sim-
ilar substances, as ambergris, castor or civet) are in perfume what
Tor? /(a Bean
t
~g~T(05e
Tube- Camphor
^ose Joncjud
MusK
Fig. 82. — Subdominant chord of C, after Piesse 's Odoplioiie.
Orange Blossom .
AcacLa -m- ~^ Pose.
Geranium
Sandal.
Fig. 83. — Co'nimon eliord of C, after Piesse 's Odoplioiie.
Qy^tvnffe
Blossom.
Soutkeryv
Wood
Tuberose.
Violet
Sv\reet Tea
Fig. 84. — Dominant 7th chord of C, after Piesse 's Odophone.
the pedal notes are in organ-playing, adding to the volume and
sonorousness of the chord although themselves used only in sub-
dued quantities. They impart persistence to more delicate odors,
even when used so sparingly as to l)e themselves almost imper-
ceptible to the average nose.
232 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Another pleasing combination is a bouquet in the Common
Chord of C (Fig. 83). A bouquet in the Dominant Seventh Chord
of C is shown in Fig. 84. This musical scale of the odors may
be more or less subject to correction or to differences of opinion
between experts, but it serves as an illustration of the variety of
odors, and it suggests that a skilled perfmner may be as much
an artist mth scents as the musician is an artist with sounds or
the painter with colors, and that it is only the master-mind that
produces the finest of odorous harmonies.
When I was a boy I bought a novel entitled Kaloolali; the
scene was laid in Africa, most of which at that time was unex-
plored and unkno"v\Ti territory and for that reason a welcome re-
gion for the romancer. In this book is described a concert which
-■Twafc.-
% ■ A \ ^
"til
Fig. 85. — An Egyptian at his meal, from plastic models shown at Louisiana Purchase
Exposition, St. Louis, 1904.
issued harmonies and chords of odors, blown out upon the audi-
ence as the valves of the organ were opened and closed by play-
ing on a keyboard much as sounds issue from the pipes of an or-
dinary organ when air is blo^vn through the sounding tubes.
Taste is closely related to smell; in food we have "flavor,"
a compound sensation of both smell and taste. AVe refer to the
flavor of wine as the "bouquet" of the wine.
A group from the anthropological exhibit of Egypt (Fig. 85)
at the International Exhibition, at St. Louis, 1904, represented a
rich Egyptian being entertained with music and dancing by girls
trained in these arts, while he is at dinner. The group was mod-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
233
eled after furniture, masks, and drawings found in Egyptian
tombs of 2500 b.c.
Lucullus, 75 B.C., was renowned for the luxury of his entertain-
ments ; the most expensive viands, the rarest and costliest wines,
fountains of perfumed water, incense, beautiful slave dancing
girls and musicians, all contributed to the splendor of his feasts.
Our modern cabaret entertainments are but weak imitations of
these Roman prototypes (Fig. 86).
The feminine, as a feature of feasts, sometimes took on pe-
culiar forms ; thus, formerly, and sometimes now, at Russian wed-
ding feasts the slippers of the bride are used as loving cups ; they
Fig. 86. — ' ' Feast of Lucullus, ' ' at Tusculum, from a painting by Boulanger.
are filled with wine and the guests pass them around and drink
from them, until they become so soggy that they will no longer
hold wdne.
Perfumes are made in various forms :
Per f limes proper: — The fluid preparations intended for the
handkerchief or for sprajdng on the clothing.
Scented Soaps: — For the bath; and so-called ^'waters" (as
Cologne water, Florida water, etc.), intended mainly to perfume
the water used for Avashing or for the bath. Occasionally fas-
tidious and wealthy women perfume their baths with the petals
of roses or violets.
Skin and Hair Preparations: — Cold creams for facial mas-
234 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
sage; "skin foods;" hair oils, pomades, invigorators, tonics, and
shampoos for the hair.
Perfumed Toilet Poivders: — Starch, orris root, talcum, chalk,
etc.
Tooth Poivders and Tooth Pastes: — Usually also medicated,
to cleanse, disinf eci^^_and:>preserve the teeth ; sometimes medicated
soaps are used.
Cachoux: — To perfume the breath; usually small pellets made
of cardamom, cinnamon, benzoin, and other aromatics; often
silver-coated.
Perfume Sachets: — Mixtures of powdered vetivert, lavender
flowers, sawdust of sandal wood, etc., to which vanilla, musk,
tonka bean or coumarin, or sometimes more delicately odorous
substances, as violets, are added.
Perfume Jars: — Small jars filled with the petals of odorous
flowers, packed with salt to prevent decay.
Smelling Salts: — Pungent substances, as carbonate of ammo-
nium or glacial acetic acid, are sometimes rendered more pleas-
ant by the addition of perfumes.
Pastilles or Fumigating Pastilles: — Cones made of odorous
substances or incense, with a small percentage of nitrate of potas-
sium or sodium to cause them to smoulder and burn slowly when
ignited. The Chinese "joss sticks" are frequently used in our
houses. These are used by the Chinese like incense in their
temples.
All of these substances are used to render the odors of our
homes, more particularly the persons and the rooms of our women,
agreeable to us.
Unlike animals, mankind has cultivated sexual pleasures as
luxuries rather than for reproduction. Sexual passion in the
man is now a habit, artificially fostered, until man is practically
always ready for the sexual act, without any of the stimuli that
are necessary for animals. The human male is always ready —
^^ semper paratus" — ; he is stimulated by sight rather than by
odor. Yet it is related of a recent Sultan of Turkey that he was
fond of going in the bathing pool with his odalisques, and after
the bath he ordered them to dance until they were in perspiration ;
he then ordered the one whose perspiration odor appealed most
strongly to him to go to bed with him for the night.
It is unnecessary here to consider either the methods of pre-
SEX AND S?:X AVORPTTTP 235
paring perfumery, or the materials that are used, except to say
that some of the most important ingredients, such as musk, castor,
civet, etc., are obtained from glands connected with the sexual
organs of animals, while even many of the attars or volatile oils
from flowers have important hearing on the sexual functions of
plants.
It is not likely to have been mere accidental coincidence that
nearly all our most lasting perfumes contain either musk, civet
or castor, all of which are substances obtained from glands con-
nected with the sexual organs of animals.
As already explained in the remarks on Dr. Piesse's Odo-
plione, these substances render delicate and evanescent odors more
lasting or permanent, and one or the other of these substances is
therefore apt to be in every perfume.
However, amljergris, from the intestines of whales, benzoin,
and "violet-root," the root of Florentine orris, also have similar
properties, so that one of these may be substituted for the sub-
stances from the genitals of animals, or they may be added.
Nor should it be overlooked that there may be personal
idiosyncrasies respecting perfumes, just as there are in other mat-
ters of taste, as in music, for example; but it is held by expert
perfumers that personal preference is not the only guide, nor
indeed always a safe guide, in the choice of one's perfumes. A
brunette, for instance, may be very fond of violet, and therefore
may desire to use violet perfmne ; but the fact is, that our bodies
exhale or emit certain acids, and the acid given off by a brunette
is in direct conflict Avith the violet odor, so that in a short time she
will counteract, or "kill" the violet extract on her clothing or
person. A perfume in which rose predominates is more fitted
for the brunette.
Nor may we neglect the effects of the various odors on the
emotions of mankind. It is said that the odor of magnolia pro-
duces a combative disposition, while a spirit of placid and saintly
devotion will mark the person who habitually uses violet; the
odor of cloves is credited with inciting to suspicion and slander,
probably on account of its general use as an inter-act condiment ;
it is claimed that a frivolous and irreverent spirit can be changed
to that of a meditative thinker by the habitual use of bergamot.
"\Ve have learned from biographies of Schiller that he could
not write unless he had apples on his Avriting desk; vervain de-
236 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
velops the artistic temperament; ambergris is recommended as
a divine essence upon which poetic genius thrives; white rose be-
gets a love of languorous indolence, and the famous jDatchouly will,
sooner or later, cause the moral downfall of its devotees. The es-
sence of verbena is blamed for exciting to the use of strong drink,
while the odor of the common or garden pink develops a meek
and pious spirit. The red rose, like spring, will cause the fancy
to turn, not lightly but rapturously, to thoughts of love.
The majority of our artists and poets praise the beauty of the
light-haired, blue-eyed, fair-skinned and violet-scented woman as
their highest ideal of feminine loveliness.
The blonde who uses rose or Oriental odors transgresses
against her own best interests, and sins against nature ; she should
use violet, or some of the odors akin to violet, such as lilac, acacia,
apple blossom, etc., so that she and the perfumes she uses may be
in full accord, each enhancing the sweetness of the other. There
must be personal harmony between the perfume and the user, or
the odor of the perfume is destroyed or rendered disagreeable by
being contaminated by discordant body odors; and there results
a discord which is generally recognizable though but few may
understand its nature.
The clean and healthy human body, fresh from the bath
(Fig. 87) emits an agreeable odor, which, in the woman because
she uses no liquors, tobacco or strongly-spiced foods, resembles
the delicate fragrance of perfumery. These body odors are most
characteristic about the bosom and the axillas, and in the darker-
colored races of men, and especially among negroes, are often so
strong as to be disagreeable to Avhite people.
Prof. Jaeger, a German scientist, ascribed the characteristic
odors of the head, axillas and pubes to the hair, but it is probable
that the hair odors are not as delicate nor as delightful as those
of the skin itself, especially the skin of the breasts and bosom.
But it is very possible that the odor of the hair, especially that
about the pubes, may be more aphrodisiacally exciting (Prof.
Jaeger 's Haar-D uft-Theo rie ) .
The value of the perfume of shoulders, arms, bosom and axil-
las is so much appreciated in recent years that these parts of a
woman's body are practically left bare in ball-costumes; and as
the axilla itself is frequently shown in modern dance postures,
safety razors are publicly advertised for ladies' use, to keep the
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 237
axillas smooth-shaved, white and attractive, to intoxicate their
partners.
Novelists are well aware of this, and passages like the fol-
lowing, from The Prisoner, by Alice Brown, are common: "Once
within, beside her perfumed presence — yet Esther used no vulgar
helps to provoke the senses, — he forgot that he must be safe and
took her in his arms. He had been so certain of his stability, that
he forgot to resist himself and Esther did not help him. She
clung to him, and the perfume mounted to his brain. What was
Fig. 87. — An artist's model.
it? Not, even he knew, a cunning of the toilet; only the whole
warm breath of her."
Every reader of the Bible is no doubt aware of the prom-
inence given to the odors of the various parts of the bride's body,
in the Song of Songs, where they are compared to the fragrance
of grapes, wine, apples, pomegranates, myrrh, frankincense, and
sweet spices; the Bible contains many references to perfume as
of sexual importance, as when Ruth anointed herself to be attrac-
tive to Boaz; or when the bride in Solomon's Song says of her
lover: "Wlio is it that cometh, perfumed with myrrh, frankin-
238
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
cense and all the powders of the merchants !" And especially does
the Bible emphasize the importance of the perfume of a bride.
(See Song of Songs.)
We have already learned how Judith prepared herself to
captivate Holof ernes: "She washed herself all over with water,
and anointed herself with precious ointment." In Biblical times
perfumed oils and "precious" or perfumed ointments appear to
have been the main forms for using perfumery for the enhance-
ment of bodily attractiveness (Fig. 88).
rig. 88.—"
Oriental Bath, ' ' from a painting by Bedt.
We read in the Booh of Esther, in the Bible, that King
Ahasuerus, being displeased with his queen Vashti, sent her away
and sought a new queen; Esther ii, 2-17: "Let there be fair young
virgins sought for the king, and let the maiden that pleaseth the
king be queen instead of Vashti. * * * So it came to pass that
many maidens were gathered together * * *. Noav, when every
maiden's turn was come to go in unto King Ahasuerus, after she
had been twelve months according to the manner of the women
(for so were the da^-s of their purification accomplished, towit,
six months with oil of myrrh and six months with sweet odors and
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 239
witli other things for the purifying of the women) ; then thus came
every maiden unto the king * * * i^ tlie evening she went and
on tlie morrow she returned to the custody of Shaashgaz, the
king's chamherlain who kept the concubines. * * * So Esther
was taken unto King Ahasuerus * * * ^^^^ ^]^q king loved
Esther above all the other women * * * so that he made her
queen instead of Vashti. "
The preparation of a bride for the nuptials by bathing and
perfuming is probably universal, but amongst ourselves it is not
a public function, but a private matter, except that intimate girl
friends are allowed to see the garments of the trousseau.
Among Hottentots and some African tribes where the unmar-
ried women go naked, the bride is perfumed by rubbing the entire
body with the bruised leaves of buchu or other odorous plants.
In some tribes on Islands of the Pacific the process of per-
fuming the bride is a public festival. Patchouly and other fra-
grant leaves and flowers are boiled during a whole night while
bonfires burn and general festivities take place. In the morning
a large tub or trough is taken to the public square of the village
and is filled with the odorous decoction; the bride, naked, is then
brought by her women friends aiid placed in this bath to soak
during the whole day, while general feasting is indulged in until
in the evening when she is conducted to the home of her future
husband.
In India the bride is prepared for marriage by being fed for
some days on cakes made by rolling a piece of benzoin in lumps
of dough and frying in melted butter, similar to our doughnuts.
As the Hindu religion is a form of sex-worship and they use ben-
zoin as incense in their temples, this feeding the bride on these
perfumed cakes may have a religious significance.
Among the ancient Egyptians wealthy women went naked, or
nearly so, for their costly veil-like draperies were a protection
against gnats and flies, rather than protective clothing; poor
women, and slave women, wore coarse and opaque cotton gar-
ments, and slave girls trained as dancers and musicians wore noth-
ing at all. Tliis (Fig. 89) is from an ancient Egyptian painting
and shows Nefert-Ari-Ahmes ("the beautiful consort of Ahmes"),
whose garments could not have obscured her physical charms,
including her bodily odors; but inscriptions of her time, about
240 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
1500 B.C., inform us that women of that period perfumed their
sexual parts to add to their attractiveness.
A similar custom still prevails in some of the tribes of Oce-
anica; and it is proliahly practiced by a certain class of women
everywhere, even amongst us.
Many of the ancients were fond of strong-smelling ointments or
perfumes, just as are their descendants, the modern Oriental peo-
ple. The aim of the ancients was to find some perfume so fully
in accord with their bodies that the odor might seem as a real
emanation from their own bodies. But unlike moderns they did
Fig. 89. — Nef ert-Aii-Abmes ; fro'm L'Egypte, published by order of Nai^oleon.
not seek to accomplish this by mixing different simples to make
a "blend," as we do today, but by applying different, but har-
monious scents to different parts of their bodies.
Lucian, an ancient writer, tells us that the Athenians used
different perfumes for different parts of their bodies: "Egyptian
essences for the hands and feet, Phoenician perfumes for the
cheeks and bosom, marjoram for the hair, and the spirit of wild
thyme for the thighs."
And who does not recall in this connection the story of Mary
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 241
anointing the feet of Jesus Avith very costly ointment of spikenard
and wiping his feet with her hair (John xii, 3).
That I speak mainly of women in connection with perfumery
is due
First: To the fact that women use most of it;
Second: Because men have studied the subject more closely
in its relation to women; and
Lastly: Also perhaps on the principle of the old nursery
rhyme —
''Snips and snails, and puppy dogs' tails
Are the things the boys are made of;
Sugar and spice, and all that is nice
Are the things the girls are made of.
J?
"The most beautiful object in the world, it will be allowed, is
a beautiful woman, ' ' said Macauley, and it is but natural that we
should mentally associate her with everything that is pleasing to
our senses, sweet perfumes, fragrant flowers, poetry and music,
and everything else that we delight in.
Women fascinate men with many charms, and the use of per-
fumery is not the least potent of these. Large volumes have been
written on this subject, but we can only stop to consider a few
of the most elementary facts. We love to associate women with
the fragrance of flowers ; we like to see them wear flowers. Most
women use perfumes in the art of loving. Shakspeare referred to
this when he said of Cleopatra: "She was so perfumed that the
wdnds were love-sick. ' '
We read in the Song of Songs: "How fair art thou, my sis-
ter, my spouse! How much better is thy love than wine! And
the smell of thy ointments than all spices ! Thy lips, 0, my spouse,
drop as the honeycomb, and milk and honey are under thy tongue ;
and the smell of thy garments is like the smell of Lebanon ! ' '
We may divide women into two classes — those who use per-
fumeries, and those who do not (Fig. 90) ; the latter are apt to be
of a prosaic turn of mind and with but little sympathy for all the
higher aspirations of the refined and educated women of today;
some women abstain from the use of perfiunery from a religious
ol)jection to all dainty enhancements of bodily attractiveness, be-
cause they believe that such things lead to sensuality and are
therefore vanity and sin; others are content with any coarse
242 SEX xVND SEX WORSHIP
scents, as citronella or bergamot for tlie hair, cinnamon for the
handkerchief, wintergreen and sassafras for flavors, garlic or sage
(ugh!) for cooking, and perhaps a sprig of peppermint or rose-
mary on Sundays to carry to church.
Such women exert no powerful or lasting fascination for men,
and if they are married their husbands may be tempted to go
outside of their own homes, to find gratification elsewhere, with
daintier women.
Odor may be considered as a secondary sexual characteristic,
in general harmony with pigmentation and hair-coloring ; the wise
Fig. 90. — She docs not use perfumery.
woman will not underestimate its importance, but Avill make it
subservient to her worldly interests.
Huysmans says: ''The hair has a whole gamut of odors; au-
dacious and fatiguing in the brunette and black woman ; sharp and
fierce in the red ; and like sugared wine in blondes. ' '
Prof. A. Galapin writes of the "sweet, health-giving charac-
ter of the odors of the beloved woman."
La Gousse says that the odors of the arm-pits, "whether in
a country lass or a society belle, are all the more seductive as they
filter through the garments."
Casanova remarks that he always found the odor of the
woman he loved, "sweet as an intimate balsamic and voluptuous
SEX AND SEX AVORSTIIP 243
emanation;" and Casanova had exceptional experience and knew
what he spoke about.
Herrick, one of the older English poets, displayed a special
interest in the sexual attractiveness of odors, and wrote lyrics to
'^ Julia's Breath," "Julia's Sweat," and "Jidia unlacing her-
self." He declared that hands and bosom and thighs and legs are
all richly perfumed and most kissable.
In the Hebrew Song of Songs there are twenty-four refer-
ences to the odors of the woman as being sexually attractive.
In the Kajna-Sutra of Vatryayana, the Hindu writer speaks
of the perspiration of the perfect woman as smelling of musk,
while that of the vulgar woman smells of fish.
Kipling says of Lalun: "She is a member of the most ancient
profession in the world. In the AYest, people say rude things
about Lalun 's profession and write lectures about it and distrib-
ute the lectures to young people in order that morality may be
preserved. She has been variously compared to the moon, the
Dil-Sagar Lake, a spotted quail, a gazelle, the sun on the desert
of Kutch, the dawn, the stars, and the young bamboo. These com-
parisons imply that she is beautiful, exceedingly. To describe
Lalun w^ould need, as the poet Wali-Dad said: 'A thousand pens
of gold, and ink scented with musk.' "
Hindu writers refer to the sexual odor of the perfect woman
(during coition) as "not unlike that of a newly burst bud of
henna flowers," or like an opening bud of the moon-flower, or as
patch only leaves, which have spermatic odors; and the aphrodisiac
odor of many plants is attributed to capric and caprylic acids, to
which vaginal and seminal odors owe their peculiar characteristics.
Persian literature refers to woman's hair as a crown of
musk ; and the ancient Irish Sagas spoke of the pleasure of Avomen
in the presence of their lovers' odors.
On the other hand, men who use perfumery have always been
considered effeminate; Zeno, a Greek, who lived about 350 b.c,
meeting a man who was all over ointments and perfumery, said:
"Who is this, who smells like a woman!"
The basis of all modern perfumes is largely derived from
glands connected with the sexual parts of animals; even the oil
glands in flowers furnish their attars because they are necessarj^
to the fertilization of tlie ovum.
The natural odors of the human body vary from strong musk-
244 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
like exhalations in some Avomen, to fainter \dolet-like odors in
other women. It is claimed by many writers that strong musk-
like perspiration is associated with strong emotions and passions,
and that women who exhale it are apt to love ardently and to
become jealous easily; they cause similar emotions in men and
rouse in the latter such violent passions that they often lead to
vice and crime.
This type of women is most frequently found in Southern
climes, where the flowers are more odorous, colors more intense,
fruits more highly flavored, spices hotter,, bodily exhalations more
pronounced and passions fiercer. That these odors are really
aphrodisiac or sexually exciting, is proved by the behavior of
cats, who are excited by the intimate wearing apparel, such as
chemises, of women of this type as they would be by valerian;
even to men the odors of such women are oppressive and sexually
excitant, having the same effect as that of the close and hot air of
a ball-room, where bare bosoms, shoulders, arms and axillas, stim-
ulated by the exercise of dancing, saturate the air with the exha-
lations of women in their most seductive moods.
Women of this type furnish many of that class of whom King
Solomon wrote : ' ' There met him a woman with the attire of an har-
lot, and she caught him and kissed him and said unto him, Be-
hold, I have perfumed my bed with myrrh, aloes and cinnamon —
Come, let us take our fill of love until morning!" (Prov. vii, 10).
Such was Lalun, of whom Kipling wrote : ' ' Her eyes are black,
and her hair is black, and her eye-brows are black as leeches ; her
mouth is tiny and says witty things ; her hands are tiny ; her feet
are tiny and have trodden on the naked hearts of many men.
But as Wali-Dad sings: 'Lalun is Lalun, and when you have said
that, you have only come to the beginning of knowledge.' "
Women of this type, probably impelled by a consciousness of
the penetrating character of their o^vn bodily odors, use strong
perfumes, and when they belong to that most ancient of guilds
which enables women to turn caresses into riches, they drench
their clothing and their bodies with patchouly. Jockey Club, or
even with pure essence of musk.
I have seen a member of Lalun 's calling come into a drug-
store and buy half-an-ounce of perfume which she poured dovm
into her bosom to saturate her body and her underwear with its
fragrance; and there are such women who inject perfumery sub-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 245
ciitaiieously that their skins may exhale fragrant odors for many
days afterwards.
Poisonous weeds often have heavy narcotic odors; and it is
said that the cobra, the deadliest of all venomous serpents, betrays
its presence by a sickening odor wliicli warns man and beast of
danger. So these women warn men by the oppressiveness of
the perfumes they use ; and it is Avell to heed the warning, for men
who allow themselves to become infatuated with such w^omen are
often brought to disgrace and ruin, even to murder and suicide.
Of course, not all girls or women who use strong perfumes
are wicked or inclined to be so. Many of them use strong per-
fumes from no personal necessity, for either their own bodily
odors are not penetrating, or they can keep them in moderation
Avith baths ; some few use them because they suffer from diseases
accompanied by disagreeable odors, as in cancer; some others,
because they have a defective sense of smell and are really not
aAvare that they use more than ordinarily strong scents; but a
large number use "loud" perfumes from the same thoughtlessness
that leads them to wear "loud" dress or to indulge in "loud"
behavior — to attract attention.
The latter may not be w^ickedly inclined, but they play a dan-
gerous game, for "loudness" of any kind tempts some men to
take liberties in word or deed, that, even if resented, mortify and
humiliate, and if not resented, may lead to shame and ruin
(Fig. 91).
Then there is the violet-scented girl! more frequently found
among the daughters of the North, where flowers are less odorous
but more sweet, colors less intense, fruits and spices milder-
flavored, bodily exhalations less strong, and passions more easily
controlled ; it is of such a girl that Longfellow wrote :
' ' Blue were her eyes as the fairy flax.
Her cheeks like the da^vn of day.
And her bosom white like the hawthorn bud
That opes in the month of May."
Conscious of the purity and sw^eetness of her own body
(Fig. 92) the violet-scented girl neither needs nor uses strong per-
fumes ; she pours a little lavender in her bath, or places a sachet
of violet or vetivert among the lingerie in her chiffonier, or per-
246
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
haps she sprays a drop of heliotrope or lihic over her dress and
handkerchief.
AVhen you call on her, as she enters the room, the perfnme of
her presence reminds yon of tlie air. coming over fields of new-
mown hay, or of breezes laden with the fragrance of the eglantine,
of mignonette, or sweet violets; and she looks so sweet that yon
can almost imagine the frou-frou of her gowns to be the humming
of bees gathering honey. She arouses no passions that lead to
ruin, but the mind is calmed with a feeling akin to that which we
experience when we enter a church, for we feel instinctively that
Fig. 91. — "Innocence in Danger."
Playing with an arrow, or, figuratively, a
lingam, from a painting by Voillemont.
Fig. 92. — ' ' The Bather, ' ' reproduction
made from a painting.
we are in the presence of something better and purer than we our-
selves are. Her presence and her fragrance rouse in our hearts
all the emotions that tend to make us better men, and we feel, as
we perhaps never felt before, the truth of the words of the poet:
"Blessed through Love are the (jods — through Love
Their bliss to ourselves is given;
Heavenlier througli Love is tlie heaven above.
And Love makes the earth a heaven!"
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
247
You may fall in love with such a woman — it would perhaps
bo a wonder if you did not — and you may ask her to become your
Avife; and if she marries you she will prove an inspiration that
will spur you on to live a useful and honored life (Fi^. 93).
But if she remains only a friend, or promises to be a sister
to you, or even if she passes out of your life altogether, you will
be a better and purer man for having known her, and having in-
haled the fragrance of her presence.
And if you never marry, but pass your life solitary and alone,
without a wife to double your joys and divide your sorrows, per-
.*<^E--.-
Fig-. 'i)'.i. — "At Last Alone," from a Fig. 94. — "Siiring, " from painting by
painting by Tofano. P. A. Cot.
haps in some moments of revery your memory will turn back to
some such girl, and as you think of the might-have-been, you will
perhaps feel with the poet Tennyson :
' ' The smell of violets in the green
Pour'd back into my empty soul and frame.
The times when I remembered to have been
Joyful, and free from blame."
The ancients believed that when the}' inhaled any odor, a por-
tion of the object from which that odor emanated became a part
248
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
of themselves; odors are exhalations of real particles of matter,
and who knows but what the ancients were right, and that when
we inhale the fragrance of the violet-scented girl, a part of her
innocence and purity may enter into our souls and become a part
of our own being, to inspire in us a desire to lead a life as clean
and as pure as her OA\m!
Sense of Hearing
The sense of hearing is subordinate in importance, yet a
sweet voice is a pleasant thing; to most men the gushing and
Fig. 95. — ' ' Eve, ' ' from painting by Grandchamp.
gurgling laugh of a pretty woman is the most entrancing music
in nature; and possibly all men agree with Shakspeare when he
says:
"Her voice was ever soft.
Gentle, and low; an excellent thing in woman."
The man's voice changes from a boyish treble to a masculine
bass about the age of puberty and it is not as dulcet as the voice
of the woman; but the influence of the man's voice over woman is
not so much in the sound of the voice as in the words spoken;
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 249
women are susceptible to flattery and fall victims to the seducer
usually in response to liis wooing words, but mainly to the mod-
ern ideas which deny her a knowledge of sexual facts, so that she
is too innocent and inexperienced to be on her guard. When a
girl is seduced it is generally the fault of the mother in not in-
forming her daughter properly so she would be worldly-Avise
enough to avoid harm.
It was Eve, not Adam, who listened to the beguiling words of
the serpent. It was for this reason that, as Ruskin tells us, the
serpent in paradise Avas for many centuries represented with the
head of a man, as in this illustration Eve, by Grandchamp (Fig.
95).
i^St-H^yMC?'!*!' \»W'»."'»''i, '"'.'»* #,>i'«ji .»«
I.
Fig. 96. — ' ' Love 's Dream, ' ' from a painting by Mertens.
Sense of Taste
The sense of taste runs in a minor key through the universal
song of love ; yet it gives it some of its most tender chords. The
kiss is called the "salute by tasting," and it is knoAvn to about
one-half of mankind (Fig. 96). The kiss has been likened to
Creation — ''made out of nothing, but very good!"
Originally the kiss pointed to an idea of commingling of
souls, the breath being considered the life of the person, as ex-
pressed in the Bible, where God blows his breath into Adam to
give him life.
The Japanese do not permit kissing except as a caress be-
tween husband and wife, it being considered so distinctly sexual
that even parents do not kiss their children, nor are brothers and
250 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
sisters permitted to kiss each other. It is slanderous, however,
when it is claimed that women have an instinctive feeling that a
kiss is a sexuaV caress, and that they kiss one another in obedi-
ence to the Golden Rule — ''Doing unto each other as they would
that men should do unto them."
The lover or hushand does not restrict his kisses to the lips
or cheeks of his beloved one, but finds even greater pleasure in
kissing other parts of her body, as the bosom, etc.
''I rest content; I kiss your eyes,
I kiss your liair in my delight,
I kiss your hand and say 'Good Night!' "
(Joaquin Miller.)
"And his kiss! What ecstatic feeling!
Like two flames that lovingly entwine ;
Like the harp's soft tones together stealing
Into one sweet harmony divine, —
Soul and soul embraced, connningled, blended,
Lips and cheeks with trembling passion burn'd
Heaven and Earth, in pristine chaos ended
Round the blissful lovers madly twined."
(Schiller.)
It is a curious fact that there are traces of the importance
of the flavor of the Avoman still persisting. This is not the place
to consider love-charms ; it will suffice to mention only three Avhich
are still in vogue in primitive communities of Europe. In some
parts of France mothers carefully preserve the afterbirth (pla-
centa and membranes) of their daughters; Avhen the latter are
grown to marriageable age this afterbirth is powdered and a small
pinch of it is secretly placed in the food or drink offered to de-
sirable young men, in the belief that this will stinmlate their de-
sire and j)assion for the girl.
In the middle ages, and probalily occasionally at the present
time, a girl would bake a "love-cake" to be given to the lover
whom she desired to secure as a husband. To l)ake this cake the
girl had to be naked ; she touched the dough to lier breasts, axillas,
genitals, etc., so that it might absorb some of her sweat, which
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 251
was supposed to convert the cake into a most powerful love-charm.
Or slie took the bloody napkins which she wore while men-
struating and burnt them to ashes, of which she mixed some with
the dough for the cake.
Some authors connect the pleasure by taste, as symbolized by
the kiss, or as actually carried out in sucking- or biting the woman
during sexual frenzy, with the protoplasmic hunger of lower or-
ganisms ; it is curious that we should have such endearing expres-
sions as "sweet enough to eat" or "so pretty, I'd like to eat you,"
and that in tlie caresses of babies l)y their mothers playful pre-
tences of biting or eating should be so universal.
The eating (or tasting) of human liodies is still a habit in
certain parts of the world; it is called anthropophagy. In the
caves of the troglodites human bones were found which had been
roasted and cracked for their marrow; but so rarely, that we are
not justified in considering this to have been a habit among prim-
itive men. In the main, mankind lias felt a horror at eating its
own kind, going even so far tliat savages could not eat their oAvn
totems (animals or plants from whom they iinagined themselves
descended and to Avhicli they were therefore related).
Cannibalism was a I'eligious rite in some nations, as among
the Aztecs who ate the human sacrificial victims, whose hearts
had been offered to Huitzilopochtli.
In the Islands of the Pacific canni1)alism was proba])ly due
to necessity or famine ; in years of bad crops starvation threat-
ened all, and therefore the older and weaker were killed and eaten
to save the rest.
Cannibalism x)robably occurred everywhere when famines
prevailed. In Leviticus (ch. xxvi, 29) we read of God's threat
against Israel, of dire punishments, including want and famine ;
"And ye shall eat the flesh of your sons, and the flesh of your
daughters shall ye eat."
This is said to be still done among the Fuegians, although not
always from necessity.
In Hawaii it was formerly practiced as a religious rite, for
when a great chief or Avarrior died, the other chiefs ate his heart
and liver so that his valor would pass into them and thus be pre-
served to the people.
In the Fiji Islands cannibalism was x^art of their religion; it
252 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
was believed that the souls of the dead were eaten by the gods,
and the bodies were eaten by the worshippers.
In Australia it is practiced in exultation over slain enemies,
because it is believed the valor of the slain in battle will enter the
eaters; but sometimes it is a solemn funeral rite and they intend
to show great respect for their loved dead, by eating them.
In all times the adherents of persecuted religions have been
accused of all kinds of evil deeds ; so in the time of the persecu-
tions of the Christians in Rome, under Nero, Tiberius, Caligula,
etc., the Christians were accused of being atheists, that they were
licentious, ate human flesh, etc.; Athenagoras was a Christian
apologist (TI Century a.d.) and wrote a defence in which he refutes
these accusations and he in turn bitterly attacked the wickedness
of the Romans.
But human flesh is considered proper and good food by mil-
lions upon millions of the inhabitants of our earth to this day.
In all parts of Africa negro slavery continues and slave raids oc-
cur at all times; formerly these slaves Avere exported to Amer-
ica, but since dealing in slaves has been declared piracy, and those
who are captured with slaves on their ships are hanged, the ex-
port to America ceased, even before slavery itself was abolished
in America. Some are still exported across the Red Sea to Asia ;
but the trade has now been deflected to Central Africa; the sur-
plus of slaves who are not needed anywhere as servants, are now
taken to inner Africa, where they are butchered as cattle are with
us and their flesh is used as food. The live slaves are exchanged
for ivory, gold, rubber, etc., and a profitable trade is carried on
in this way by some Arabian dealers and raiders.
Formerly human flesh was considered a delicacy in Fiji, in
Sumatra among the Battas, in inner Papua, among the Monbuttu
of Africa, etc. The Monbuttu in Africa dry the bodies of those
slain in their raids for future use, and they drive the captives like
a herd of sheep, to be slaughtered later as they need them for food.
It is more than probable that human sacrifices would not have
been in vogue if human flesh had not been appreciated as good
food; it is unlikely that a feast of human flesh should have been
offered to the gods, if the offerers had not esteemed it a delicacy.
Stories of cannibalism on shipwrecked vessels, etc., are not
uncommon.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
253
Sense of Touch
Closely allied to the kiss is the pleasure felt in caressing the
body of a beloved one with the hands. The embrace is essen-
tially an effort to touch as nuich as possible of another (Fig. 97)
at one time, and it finds its intensest gratification in the sexual
embrace of man and woman.
The skin of a woman is softer to the touch than silk or velvet ;
more exquisitely beautiful to the eye, and capable of conveying
more delicious sensations to the hand of a man, than any other
substance in the world. The Shulamite bride, in Solomon's Song,
Fig. 97. — "A Man and a Woman," by Sinding.
said of her lover: "His left hand is under my head and his right
hand doth embrace me."
Sense of Sight
The sense by which we chiefly discover beaut}^ in material
objects and through which we experience the highest form of en-
jo;}Tiient, is the sense of sight. The characteristics taken cogni-
zance of by this sense are — Color, Form and Motion. There can
of course be no abstract standard of beauty as regards color, since
preference in this regard depends on individual or race tastes. The
white skins of our women, which we consider so beautiful, are not
so much admired by the men of other races who generally prefer
254
SEX A]S^D SEX WORSHIP
the beauty of tlieir own women, even when, to our tastes, they are
positively ugly.
Thus among the women of Borneo but few are fairly well
formed; the majority are ugly. In addition to this handicap of
nature they think they beautif}^ themselves, and perhaps they do
in the eyes of their men, 1)y staining their faces blue with indigo,
their front teeth black and the canine teeth red ; we are told that
a man of Borneo may take as many Avives as he wants but that
they rarely take more than three ; after reading about them many
Fiy'. 98. — A beautiful blonde airl.
of US will wonder wdiy they should want any, or why there are
not more ''wild men of Borneo."
White men, being better educated and more cosmopolitan in
their tastes, can appreciate the beauty of color as well as of form
of women of other races ; for instance, it is well knoAAni that many
superbly proportioned women are to be found among Ethiopian
and Abyssinian tribes, whose beauty is enhanced rather than
diminished by their glossy bro^Aai-black skins which make them
look like magnificent bronze figures of goddesses.
We can appreciate the beauty of these dusky Venuses, we
may admire the warm sensuous tints of the quadroon or octoroon,
SEX AXD SEX WOr.STTTP 255
some of us may prefer the liealthy glow of the brunette daughters
of the South, but there is no doubt that the majority of our writ-
ers and artists laud the blond beauty of the light-haired, blue-
eyed and white-skinned Northern women as their highest ideal of
female loveliness (Fig. 98).
Of all material qualities that which is most generally and most
naturally productive of the emotions of beauty is Form. "The
most beautiful object in the world, it will be allowed, is a beau-
tiful woman," said Macaulay, and the purest delight Ave can ex-
perience is that of seeing beautiful women.
And this delight in seeing God's most beautiful creation is
natural and chaste.
"Beauty was lent to nature as the type
Of heaven's unspeakal)le and holy joy.
Where all perfection makes the sum of bliss."
(Hale.)
The Bible itself teaches us how to enjoy such beauty: "Be-
hold, tliou art fair, my beloved, yea pleasant ; thy teeth are like a
flock of sheep that are even shorn which come up from the washing ;
thy two breasts are like two young roes that are twins which feed
among the lilies. How fair and how pleasant art thou, 0, Love,
for delights" {Song of Songs).
Space will not permit us to dwell long on the beauties of the
himian face. If we draw a horizontal line to divide the face into
two equal halves, we notice that the loAver and more animal the
type, the lower will such a line drop towards the chin, and the
higher the type, the nearer will such a line approach toward the
eyes or forehead.
We see a typical illustration of the animal type of face in
man, coarse, angular, large-jawed, large-mouthed and brutal, and
with this line passing through or just above the bulb of the nose
in the head of the Pithecanthropus, p. 26; Avhile in the intellectual
type we see an oval, small-mouthed, round-chinned face, A^^th this
line passing through or near the ej^es.
The highest type of feminine face is a perfect OA^al, the mouth
delicately small, and this line passing through the eyes (Fig. 99).
Even in the highest type of male face some of the animal features
are retained, for the face is not as perfect an o\^al, a suggestion
256
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
of angularity about the jaws giving an appearance of greater
strength and more expression, while the mouth is larger and
somewhat coarser; and the horizontal line passes just below the
eyes.
The highest type of head and face is that of woman, who, in
her most perfect form, represents the highest achievements of
creative evolution.
' ' What is female beauty, but an air divine
Through which the mind's all-gentle graces shine."
(Young.)
The hair has always been held to be one of the loveliest
charms of woman. The Bible says : "If a woman have long hair,
it is a glory to her" (I Cor. xi, 15).
Fig. 99. — Types of faces of highly civilized individuals.
The most sense-beguiling witchery of woman is when she
lets her long hair hang loose-flowing over her naked body;
''Fair tresses man's imperial race ensnare
And Beauty draws us with a single hair."
(Pope.)
Long hair. seems to be a feminine feature, not merely because
fashion requires it, but because nature so ordains. And in pro-
portion as the hair of the head is plentiful, tlie small hair kno^^^l
as lanugo ("down") is scant on the body. In the man this down
frequently is developed into large coarse hair, but then usually
the hair of the head is scant and the man becomes bald early. And
when a man retains a full head of hair to past middle age, his
body is usually hairless like a woman's body. The body of the
woman is usually soft, smooth and hairless except in the axillas
and about the pubes.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
257
If we draw a line to touch the outer points on a woman's
shoulder, hip and ankle, such a line will be a curve (Fig. 100).
Nature al)liors angulai-ity in a Avonian and her l)ody presents the
most enchanting combinations of curves and lines of beauty. Ev-
ery part is rounded and dimpled, and the entire surface, both in
its lines and in its texture, seems to have been made to give pleas-
ure to the esthetical eve and hand of man.
If we draw two such lines, one on each side of the woman's
body, they will form an ellipse (Fig. 101), the whole form of the
f\
jr-sv- r-.r2!«sfi , ... ■
Fig. 100. — Curves iu a woman 's body.
Fig". 101. — Elliptic form of woman.
woman thus suggesting a figure, which, as we shall learn a little
farther on, is symbolical of woman in a most sacred sense.
This width and fulness of the female hips is considered a
peculiarly attractive charm and the constriction of the waist in
tight lacing is a feminine trick to emphasize the beauty of this
feature. The body of a well-formed w^oman from the w^aist to the
knees is almost a perfect oval, and it is surprising hoAV small the
upper part of the body appears in comparison.
Women consciously or unconsciously assume attitudes which
display this fulness of the hips, and such postures have been im-
258
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
mortalized by artists ever since the ancient Greeks first sculptured
naked female loveliness in bronze or marble (Fig. 102).
For the same reason that men admire full hips they also ad-
mire large nates, and whether this is instinctive or the result of
ages of inheritance of such admiration or not, it is yet of posi-
tive benefit to the race (Fig. 103). Who would not prefer the
girl on the left to the one on the right, and other things being
equal, prefer to marry such a one, even without consciously re-
alizing that the ample pelvis, indicated by the generous propor-
tions of her hips and buttocks, mean sensual gratification, easy
Fig. 102. — ''Amor aiid Hebe
Feeding Doves of Venus, ' ' from a
painting by Serres.
Fig. 103. — Comparison of hips of women. The
gill on the right lias contracted pelvis.
childbirth, and a long and healthy life, while the narrow-hipped
girl has a contracted pelvis, indicating difficult labors with pos-
sible death in child-bed or an invalid existence ever after the first
confinement. The full development of the hips and buttocks af-
fords a better protection against changes in temperature in win-
ter to a womb in which a child is developing; therefore it means
a better developed and healthier child as well.
Some men become sexually excited, and have erotic desires,
and often involuntary erections and emissions, when they see a
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 259
large-hipped woman walking with that peculiar gait known as
' ^ wobbling. ' '
Sneli men Avould be in continual misery if they were sent
among the Hottentots as missionaries, because Hottentot women
have buttocks developed to a monstrous size as compared with
their Caucasian sisters.
Dimples, which are such charming features of the female face
and body, are said to be imprints of angels' kisses, and they re-
main invitations for men to kiss. The woman who has a pretty
dimple is usually well aware of its value, and
"You'll seldom iind a maiden whom
The angels kissed at birth,
But that the dimples in her cheek
She makes to play at hide and seek
For every cent they're worth."
Probably the prettiest dimples are the two in a woman's back,
immortalized in many a statue of naked goddess and naked nymph.
The loveliest object in the world is the bosom of a beautiful
woman. It is to be noted that, for aesthetic reasons, to make a
young woman attractive in the eyes of the man and attract a mate
for her, the breasts of the human female are the only breasts that
are developed before they are intended for use ; but then, the hu-
man male is also the only male to whom the female breast can con-
vey aesthetic pleasure, either by sight or touch. This is, no doubt,
in consequence of the selective preference of men for plump-bos-
omed women for wives.
The ^mlgar and uneducated often consider an enormous ac-
cumulation of fat about the breast-glands to make a beautiful
breast, but the lovers of the truly beautiful know that plump,
firm, even if small breasts, low dow^n on the bosom, without a
fold underneath, and with their delicate pink nipples pointing
straight forward, are the classically beautiful breasts of the an-
tique Greek statues.
The bosom of woman — "that ivory throne of love" — exhausts
the possibilities of form-beauty in material objects.
In the Arabian Nights Tales it is said of Elsett-Budur : "But
her bosom, blessed be the Gods, is a living seduction. It bears
twin breasts of the purity of ivory, rounded, and that may be
held within the five fingers of the hand."
260 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
The bride in Solomon's Song exclaimed: "My breasts are like
towers; then was I in his sight as one that found favor; a bundle
of myrrh is my well-beloved one nnto me ; he shall lie all night
betwixt my breasts."
Swedenborg says that in the inmost heaven all go naked, and
that if a man is good on this earth the breasts of his wife will be
restored to their virgin beauty, and will then remain things of
beauty and of joy forever ; truly a much more alluring description
of heavenly bliss than the usual one, of playing on harps for-
ever, especially to one who is not fond of music.
Unfortunately the beauty of the female breast is an ephem-
eral charm. As the flower expands its petals to attract the pollen-
laden bee, that it may fertilize its ova, Avhicli done, the petals
wither and die, so the breast, having served its aesthetic mission of
attracting the male, offers its virgin beauty as a sacrifice to util-
ity; for after it has once served to nurse a child, it usually be-
comes more or less pendulous, nodulated or flabby, and the delicate
pink areola of virginity is replaced by a darker-colored and often
quite large and ugly zone.
Such hanging breasts are particularly ugly in the inferior
races of mankind, as is often seen in North American Indian
squaws.
Among some people in Africa the breasts are manipulated
or pulled down until they hang very low, the gland being con-
tained in a pendulous sac. The women carry their children slung
on their backs, and when a child is restless the mother simply
hands it one of her breasts over her shoulder to nurse it, Avith-
out interfering with her work.
Even among the ancient Egyptians such flabby breasts were
used to represent hideousness (Fig. 104). Taourt, the feminine
counterpart of Set, the Egyptian spirit of evil, was figured mth
ugly breasts, as is shown in the illustration.
One of the most hideous figures I remember to have come
across in art, is this figure of Death sununoning a queen, from
the Death-Dance of Basle (Fig. 105). The hanging breasts, the
ugly pendulous folds of the belly, and the emaciated frame, pre-
sent a veritable "old hag," as such ugly specimens of womankind
are often called.
Mankind always abhorred old and ugly women, and to this
day they are called hags and witches. The Patagonians kill
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
261
their womon with a chih, when they grow old, but Christian
people, less merciful, burned no loss than four millions of
witches at the stake in obedience to a superstition that had its
origin in the dislike for ugliness in women.
The last witch hanged in America was Bridget Bishop, at Sa-
lem, Mass., in June, 1692, but little more than 225 years ago.
A woman's abdomen! how beautiful its charming roundness
and softness, and its ivory whiteness!
"Thy navel is like a round goblet, which wanteth not liquor;
thy belly is like a heap of wheat set about with lilies," said the
lover in Solomon's Song to his bride.
And is there anything that appeals to a husband for more
Fig. 104. — Taouit ; from temple at Kar-
nak. Au evil demon.
Fig. 105.— "Death to the Queen," from
the Death-Dance of Basle.
tender and solicitous regard than a wife's abdomen full of the
promise of future childish laughter and frolic in the home!
The circumference of a woman's waist should be a little more
than two-thirds of her height ; so that a woman 5 feet high should
have a waist a trifle more than 24 inches around, Avhile a woman
of the average height of 5 feet, 4 inches should have a waist at
least 26 inches in circumference. By a curious adaptation of
nature, the average length of a man's arm is equal to the aver-
age circumference of a woman's waist — or also about 26 inches.
The difference between an idealist and a naturalist has been
thus defined: The idealist looks into the eves of a woman to
262 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
measure their depth ; a naturalist looks at the hips of a woman to
measure their breadth.
When choosing a wife it behooves a man to be first a natural-
ist and only^ afterwards an idealist. An ample waist and pelvis
means easy childbirth, good health and probably long and happy
life, while a narrow or contracted pelvis indicates difficult labors
with possible death during her first confinement or an invalid
existence ever afterwards.
The well-formed woman is endowed, as Chaucer expressed
it in the quaint English of 500 years ago — "with buttockes brode
and brestes round and hye ; ' ' that is, she is the woman obviously
best built to bear children and to suckle them.
"How beautiful are thy feet, 0, Prince's daughter; the
joints of thy thighs are like jewels!" wrote Solomon.
Hesiod, one of the writers of the Greek sacred books, was
fond of referring to the trim ankles of the goddesses; he tells of
3000 daughters of Oceanus and Thetis — " tapering-ankled ocean
nymphs;" another favorite adjective for goddesses was "fair-
ankled. ' '
The legs and feet of women are particularly attractive to men.
When Dolly Dymple asked Charley, as she tied her shoestrings:
"Why is a woman's leg like bad weather I" and then added, when
Charley "gave up:" "Because men would like to see it clear up,"
she described a mental trait that has characterized men since
women first began to hide the beauty of their legs in petticoats.
There is a sympathy betAveen extremes, opposites attract, and
many a man's head has been turned by a woman's pretty foot!
A windy day is thus regarded by the women:
"The devil sends the wicked wind
That swirls our skirts knee-high;
But God is just, and he sends the dust
That blows in the bad man's eye."
And a rainy day is judged from the men's standpoint:
"There's magic in a pretty foot
And well the ladies know it ;
And she who has a pretty one
Is pretty sure to show it. "
Artists rave over pretty feet, sculptors delight to model them
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 263
and poets have sung their praises; even Tennyson speaks of
ladies' feet as "sunny gems on the Enghsh green."
''Her feet beneath her petticoat
Like little mice stole in and out
As if they feared the light ;
But, oh, she dances such a way !
No sun upon an Easter-day
Is half so fine a sight ! ' '
(Sir John Suckling.)
Wliether Ave individually prefer the tall girl or the small
girl, the fair or the brunette, the delicate or the robust, the spare
or corpulent, the pensive or the frivolous, the demure or the
saucy, the reserved or the gushing Avoman, there is one thing on
Avhich all virile, manly men agree, — that the naked woman is the
croAvning jeAvel of Creation! And the artists and poets of all
times, and the men of all nations and of all climes pay homage
at her shrine, and agree that to portray her in her various moods
and attitudes is the highest form of art.
The third characteristic of Beauty is Motion.
In all times the best display of the charms of A\'Omen Avas
considered to be Avhen they accompanied the display of form Avith
the motions of the dance.
Motion, as an element of Avorks of art, is best seen in the
dance, especially on the modern stage as danced by Isadora Dun-
can, Gertrude Hotfman, Maude Allen, and many others.
Terpsichore, one of the nine Greek muses, the Muse of the
Dance, is generally represented nude, because artists and the lov-
ers of the beautiful knoAv that the highest perfection of the dance
requires nude or nearly nude Avomen,
Originally dances Avere ceremonials of a religious signifi-
cance, and most heathen temples eA^en noAV have slave girls or
attendants Avho perform the sacred dances.
When Hesiod Avrote the Greek Bible, he told of his inspira-
tion: "Begin Ave to sing Avitli the Heliconian Muses, Avho * * *
Avith delicate feet dance about the A^olet-hued fount and altars
of the mighty Son of Cronos (Zeus) ; and likeAvise liaAdng bathed
their soft skins * * * are Avont to institute on the top of Helicon
choral dances * * *."
The religious dances of nearly all ancient and of many mod-
264
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
ern people were originally attempts to imitate and exalt sexual
delights, because all primitive religions were forms of the wor-
ship of sex. Such are, for instance, the Almeh dances, the Nantch
dances, and similar Oriental dances, which were introduced to
the notice of American audiences through the various "World's
Fairs" held in this country in recent years, and which are popu-
larly known as Couchee-Couchee dances.
In ancient Egypt, and in fact in all the adjacent lands, the
musicians were women trained in the art; they went naked from
childhood on, so that nakedness in public did not embarrass
them; many of the psalms of David are inscribed or dedicated
Fig. 106. — " Daiisc du Vontre, " from a painting hy Bedt.
"to the chief musician," who, in all probability, was the leader
of the chorus of musicians and singers and like them — a naked
woman or girl. Dances, also, were executed mainW by naked
girls; the dances were similar to those performed by Ferida, an
Egyptian dancer at the Egyptian theatre, Chicago World's Fair,
which was a marvelously beautiful presentation of sexual or-
gasm, not at all even hinted at by the many vulgar imitators who
now perform such dances at "stag parties" in many clubs.
The Almeh (plural Awalim) dancers are generally also ac-
complished singers ; in fact, from ancient times until now, Egyp-
tian musicians usually danced while they played or sang. In
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
265
modern times the Almees (or Awalim) perform witliout being
naked, and they should not be mistaken for the lower grade
ghawazees (singular Ghazeeyeh) who are strolling bands of danc-
ing girls, who dance erotic dances, and practice, as a side line,
prostitution, when they are desired by a man. The better class
Egyptian people consider their dances improper (Fig. 107).
Most people have national dances, often having a religious
symbolic meaning. Probably no people ever had cleaner and
more beautiful dances than the ancient Greeks, and moderns have
Fig. 107. — Egyptian Almeli dance, from a
painting.
Fig. 108. — An Almeh (lancer, from a
painting by Gerome.
imitated and reintroduced the ancient Greek dances to the de-
light of millions of spectators.
Isadora Duncan was one of the first, and most successful of
modern ^' Greek" Dancers. She adopted a number of children
whom she brought up, like the ancient dancers, in a condition of
nature. Her idea was that they should act naturally in the nearly
naked dances she taught them.
Orgies were certain rites in the worship of Dionysus in an-
cient Greece. These rites were participated in only by women
who met in certain holy places in the woods, nearly naked or
266 - SEX AXD SEX WORSHIP
dressed only in isivm skins, their hair hanging loose over their
shoulders; they brandished the thyrsus or sceptre sacred to Di-
onysus, a staff with a figure of a bunch of grapes or a pine-cone
at the end, beat cymbals and danced. They danced until they
worked themselves into a state of frenzj', even to mad excite-
ment and convulsions. Then at night they killed a sacrificial bull
by tearing him to pieces with their teeth, after which they de-
voured the raw flesh. In early Greek times the sacrificial vic-
tim was a man, not a bull ; in either case, an important feature of
these orgies was the adoration of the phallus, or penis, of the
victim ; or of the image of this organ which was used as an altar
figure representing the procreative god; the celebrants of these
orgies were called maenads or bacchantes.
The Corybantes were dancers who officiated at the temples
of the goddess Rhea Cybele in Phrygia; her priests castrated
themselves, and some of the younger ones joined in the orgiastic
dances, with the lilood still dripping from their mutilated
phalluses.
All Greek dances probably to a certain extent had a phallic
■or sexual significance ; they pictured the relationship of the sexes.
When danced as by the maenads it produced excitement approach-
ing convulsions; in camp meetings, especially among negroes,
the walking around, the clapping of hands, the jumping and shout-
ing, results in similar ecstasies as in the religious dances in honor
of Bacchus or Cybele; it may approach to madness.
The ancient Jews danced religious dances. Ps, cxlix, 2, 3:
''Let Israel rejoice in him that made him; let the children of
Zion be joyful to their king. Let them praise his name in the
dance; let them sing praises unto him with the timbrel and harp."
This exhortation to praise the Creator with dance, means to
dance the erotic or sexual dances common to all Oriental people.
Even David danced, II Sam. vi, 14: "And David danced before
the Lord with all his might ; * * * and Michal, Saul's daugh-
ter, looked through a windoAv, and saw King Da\dd leaping and
dancing before the Lord; and she despised him."
Salome, the daughter of Herodias, danced a dance similar to
the couchee-couchee, the ages-old dance of the Orient: "But when
Herod's birthday was kept, the daughter of Herodias danced be-
fore them, and pleased Herod" (Matt, xiv, 6). At the present
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 267
time such dances are common in various parts of the world (Fig.
109).
In Madagascar, for instance, when the men are away on a war
expedition, the women spend much of their time in dancing, for
they believe that their dancing will inspire their men with courage.
North American Indians have their war and other ceremonial
dances. The Zunis have their snake-dance. The national dance
of the Kamchadales is one of the wildest dances knowm; it is
danced by men and women and they dance until every muscle
quivers. Here also, the dance is phallic; and there is a deliberate
effort to show its sexual significance, by making the dance a rude
representation of sexual passion, which is called obscene by Euro-
pean observers. And, of course, all who have seen the cancan
danced, can form some idea of the wild phallic dances of other
people.
The "whirling dervishes" of the Turks perform a similar
Avild dance, which often eventuates in convulsions, or in madness
during which they stab themselves until the loss of blood makes
them fall in a faint.
Even in the early Christian churches the members of the choir
danced religious dances while they sang. Some of the early
church-fathers said that the angels always dance. St. Augustine
discouraged this, and said: ^^ Melius est fodere qiiam saltare" — •
"It is better to dig (cultivate the soil) than to dance."
Not knowing the reason for the condemnation of these reli-
gious dances of the early church, later preachers and churches
applied this to all dances, also to those of a purely social, innocent
and harmless kind, and condemn dancing as a social pastime as a
sin!
Our social dances are of an entirely different character, and
there is little or no harm in them. They are a pleasant method
for young people to become acquainted and to enjoy themselves,
and the ecclesiastical thunderbolts hurled at them by some fanat-
ical preachers are much of the nature of Don Quixote's charge
against the vanes of the Avindmill; they are the sour attempts of
bigoted kill-joys to reform the world to their way of thinking. It
reminds of a clever saying by a recent author: "Curious thing
about reformers. They don't seem to get such a lot of pleasure
out of their labors unless the ones they reform resist and suf-
fer, and show a proper sense of their degradation. I bet, a lot
268
SEX Als^D SEX WORSHIP
of reformers would quit tomorrow if they knew their Avork wasn't
going to bother people any."
In the painting by Garnier, entitled "Borgia S 'Amuse," (Bor-
gia amusing himself) is sho^m a form of entertainment once al-
most universal — dancing by naked girls. Browning, the pojDular
poet, appreciated the luxury of having naked girls about, as is
apparent from this quotation from one of his poems :
"You found he ate his supper in a room
Blazing with lights ; four Titians on the wall,
And twenty naked girls to change his plate."
Fig. 109. — The customary attire of a Salome or Couchee-Couclico dancer on the
modern stage.
In most countries, before Christianity had introduced its ig-
noble conceptions in regard to nudity of body, the dance w^as exe-
cuted by naked girls. This was the case in Greece and Rome.
Caracalla was fond of giving lavish entertainments on the
Island of Capri, at which the dancers were beautiful Spanish danc-
ing girls ; to show his utter disregard for expense, he had these
slaves thrown over the cliffs into the sea after the applause that
greeted their dance ceased. More economical-minded entertain-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 269
ers put their slaves up at auction, and realized handsome profits
from the excitement produced by their dancing.
In Persia, Turkey, Egypt, India, Burmah, and other Oriental
countries dancing girls are eitlier naked or only very lightly clad.
The -vvarm-blooded inhabitants of Southern Europe are fond
of dancing, and the Spanish dances are recognized as most beau-
tiful to this day. In rural Spain there is a popular dance, during
which the performers throw off one garment after another until
they dance in a state of nudity; both sexes indulge in this dance,
but as far as I could learn it is not accompanied by erotic demon-
strations among the spectators, only the beauty of the dancers and
the gracefulness of the motions being taken cognizance of.
Professional dancers of our own times are as nearly naked
as conventional rules will allow (Fig. 109) ; and our ballets, and
Amazonian marches, our dances at the public pageants in our
parks, display the female form as much as possible without any
part actually being naked, because they are still covered with flesh-
colored tights. No one can have anj^ true conception of the sup-
pleness and beauty of the human body who has not seen naked
girls swaying and undulating in the rhythmic movements of the
dance; but the dances should l)e clean like the Sailor's Hornpipe
or the Highland Fling, and not of the vulgar Couchee-couchee
type.
ART AND ETHICS
The degree of culture of an individual or a community can
fairly be judged by their views in regard to the Nude in Art.
Up to about forty years ago St. Louis was but an overgrown vil-
lage, with all the narrow prejudices of a rural community. To
the St. Louisans of those days the gods and goddesses of ancient
Greece and Rome were shamelessly naked; and when works of
the Nude in Art Avere brought to St. Louis fairs or exhibitions
they were either excluded from the art galleries, or they caused a
storm of indignant protest iii the daily papers from a shocked
and puritanical public.
Then came a series of AYorld Fairs — Philadelphia, New Or-
leans, Chicago, Buffalo, Omaha, St. Louis, etc., which were vis-
ited by millions of Americans whose views in regard to art were
broadened and chastened thereby (Fig. 110).
American cities ceased to be provincial and became cosmo-
270
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
politan. The pretty naked nymph on Union Avenne, in St. Louis,
familiarly known as "Carrie Kingsbury," ceased to arouse ad-
Fig. 110. — "Triumph of Apollo," at Festival Hall, Louisiana Purchase Expositioin,
St. Louis, 1904.
Fig. 111.— "The Kaked Truth," by
Wandschneider. Located in Reservoir
Park, St. Louis.
Fig. 112. — Conventional Egyptian art,
from temple at Karnak, Egypt.
verse comment, and she was less and less frequently garbed over-
night in a flannel costume; and then came ''The Naked Truth"
in Reservoir Park (Fig. 111). AVhile the "Naked Truth" is not
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 271
beautiful, slic has the supreme merit that she is candidly naked,
and she has made St, Louisans familiar with, and tolerant of
representations of the Nude in Art as an element of urban dec-
oration.
Among the ancient Egyptians the mode of representing the
human liody was prescribed by theii' religion, and wliile rich
Avomen went about naked or clad only in a veil-like garment, the
figures of the gods and goddesses were rendered in a conven-
tional stiff position, also clothed in a clinging garment that fully
displayed the figure as in this sculpture from the temple of Kar-
nak, Egypt (Fig. 112).
But art became art in the fullest sense only when the human
body was represented for the sake of giving pleasure, and this
mode of representing the human body began in Greece.
Greek art took an upward tendency in development when
Bupalus and Athenis lived (about 540 b.c.) in the Island of Chios.
They were Greek sculptors, but they produced only draped fig-
ures, because art had not advanced to the delineation of nude
figures. Even the ''Three Graces," now always nude, were at
that time draped.
Here is shoAvn one of the early, or archaic, Greek works of
art— "The Haircutter of Tanagra" (Fig. 113). At Tanagra a
lot of terra cotta figurines were found which represented various
subjects not connected with temple or tomb art, i. e., art which
represented homely episodes for amusement and pleasure merely ;
when this development in art had been reached, art began to be
art in the modern sense of the word.
It was a long and tedious way from the crude art of primi-
tive men, as found in the earliest art of the cave-dwellers, or even
from the figurines of Tanagra or Nanipa, to the statues of Greece
in the height of its culture and art.
Ruskin said: "Not a single anticpie statue excels the Venus
of Melos (Fig. 114) and she has nothing notable except dignity
and simplicity." This is generally conceded to be the best exam-
ple of "high art," the most majestic representation of Avoman's
form. "High art consists neither in altering nor in improving
nature ; but in seeking throughout nature for whatever things are
pure; in displaying to the utmost of the artist's powers such love-
liness as. is in them, and in directing the thoughts of others to
272
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
them by winning art and gentle emphasis." This statue belongs
to the Louvre, in Paris.
"To an artist's true and highly trained instinct the human body
is the loveliest of all objects; * * * the ancient Greeks drew
the body from pure delight in it, and with a knowledge of it living.
The Venus of Milo and the Laocoon (Fig. 115) have the forms
their designers truly liked to see in men and women. * * * The
Greeks learned to know the body from the living body; their
treatment of the body is faithful, modest and natural." The
Fig. 118.— ''Tlie Hair-Cutter of Taua-
gra ; ' ' Archaic Greek art.
Fig. 114. — "Venus of Milo." Antique;
at the Louvre, Paris.
Laocoon group belongs to the Museum of the Vatican, Rome.
"Michelangelo and Raphael learned to know the human body
essentially from the corpse, and had no delight in it, l)ut great
pride in showing that they knew all its mechanism; they drew
the body from knowledge of it dead."
In the Sistine Chapel of the Vatican, the jiope's private
chapel, where popes are elected and the ceremony of installation
into their exalted office takes place, there is the most celebrated
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
273
work representing' tlie Nude in Art in the whole world. It is the
Last Judgment by Michelangelo (Fig. 116). This work was
ordered by Pope Julius I, and continued under Popes Leo X,
Fig. 115. — "Laoeoon Group." Antique; at the Vatican, Rome.
Fig. 116.
Last Judgnneut, " by Michelangelo; at the Sistine Chapel, Vatican, Rome.
Adrian V, Clement VII, and finished under Pope Paul III.
Michelangelo worked at it for 15 years.
The accentuation by Michelangelo of anatomical details that
can not be seen in the living subject covered with integument,
has be(m the basis of reproach to the art of this great artist ; but
274
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
there seems to be a reasonable excuse for this style of drawing.
Michelangelo was accustomed to draw figures of gigantic size, to
be viewed from great distances, as, for instance, the figures
against the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel; if drawn natural, the
details would have been practically lost at that distance, and the
figures would have appeared flat and lifeless. The artist there-
fore exaggerated the details, just as the ancient artist did who
modeled the Farnese Hercules. But working in this manner for
15 years, it was difficult to avoid the style, even when the work
of art was destined for a nearer view and hence Ave see it also in
•m'M
Fig. 117.— ''Moses," by Michelangelo. Tomb of Pope Julius II, Rome.
Moses which is a prominent feature of the tomb of Julius II, in
Rome, standing on a level with the beholder (Fig. 117).
''Not all modern artists, however, indulged in a vain display
of anatomical knowledge. Correggio and Tintoretto, and others,
represented the human form with all the grace and purity of the
ancient Greeks.
"Female Beauty can be found more perfect than that of the
male, and artists paint and carve it fearlessly, with all right and
natural qualities. A beautiful woman is the simplest of lovely
veracities and the representation of this highest type of beauty
is also the most complex of human arts."
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
275
In a book entitled "Tracts for Young People" by the Rev.
Furniss, of Cork, Ireland, tliere was a story told of a female
saint who imagined that she had been permitted by God to make
a personal inspection of hell, and she told of seeing a young
girl encased in a close-fitting suit of boiler iron and lying in a
fire which made her suit red-hot, so that her blood boiled and
sizzled and hissed as the steam from it escaped from her ears
and nostrils; and she was condemned to lie there forever and
ever (by a ''God of infinite Love and Compassion!") because she
had seen herself naked in the hath! What a difference between
the ravings of such ignorant and insane fanatics who believe such
Fig. 118.— ''Love," by Evelyn B.
Longman.
Fig. 119. — "Springtime of Love," by
Kiemsch.
vagaries, and the educated popes who employed Michelangelo to
paint the frescoes of the Sistine Chapel ; or the Bible, which tells
us that Adam and Eve were both naked and "were not ashamed!"
Opponents of the Nude in Art claim that the pleasure we ex-
perience in seeing such works of art is due to our sexual natures,
and say this as if it proved beyond doubt that such works of art
must be evil (Fig. 118). Suppose we admit that our delight in
seeing the Nude in Art is due to sex and our sexual natures, yet
we are taught that nearly all progress, physical, intellectual and
276 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
ethical, during evolution, was largely due, directly or indirectly,
to sex and sex emotions.
Sexual emotions and desires are neither base nor wrong!
We read in the Bible: "So God created man in his 0A\ai image,
in the image of God created he them. And God saw everything
that he had made, and liehold it was very good! And they were
both naked, the man and his wife, and were not ashamed." And
why should we be ashamed of our sex — the one great thing that
makes us God-like! That enables us also to become — creators!
Milton, in Paradise Lost, calls this nakedness of our first
parents — ''that first naked glory."
In saying that nudity is always and necessarily evil, and
that reference to sex is base, the views of some of the early church-
fathers are perpetuated, for they claimed that God made a great
mistake when he created mankind male and female. Justin, Greg-
ory of Nj'ssa, Augustine and other church-fathers regretted that
Adam yielded to his passionate desire for Eve, and held that if
Adam had abstained from sexual pleasure with Eve, he would
have effectualh^ rebuked God and would have compelled him to
invent some harmless mode of reproduction that would not have
required the co-operation of the sexes and thus the world would
have been peopled with passionless and innocent beings.
Most of us will agree with God, when he declared that what
he had made was "very good," and we will therefore admit that
the sexual emotions are due to an impulse implanted in human
hearts by the Creator for the benefit and pleasure of mankind
(Fig. 119).
Addison wrote:
"When love's well-timed, 'tis not a fault to love;
The strong, the brave, the virtuous and the wise
Sink in the soft captivity together."
And Solomon wrote: "Live joyfully with the wife whom thou
lovest, for that is thy share in this life and in the labor that thou
takest under the sun."
If nudity were more frequently seen in our daily lives it
would lose whatever it may now have of suggestiveness ; nudity
to the extent that it suggests erotic thoughts, does so in conse-
quence of perverted teachings that have been transmitted through
many generations.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
277
''The shame of human loveliness which sees evil in its por-
trayal, is older than Comstockism and W-C-T-U-ism. Paul IV
(Paul the Prude) saw shame and indecenc}^ in Michelangelo's great
fresco of the Last Judgment where others saw only reverence
for Beauty." The naked body is in itself no more impure in
nature, or in a work of art, than it is on tlu^ walls of the pope's
private chapel, the Sistine Chapel, — "to the soul that rightly
thinks."
"We should inculcate in our youths a profound reverence for
the human form divine; so long as art endures — so long as there
are souls to rebel against the ugly and impure, to welcome what
Fig-. 120. — "Adam and Eve." Ceiling in tlnirch at Hildeslicim, Germany.
is lovely and pure with eager hearts, earth will not lack sons and
daughters who will refuse to cover beauty with rags of shame — to
whom a beautiful body will ])e sacred as a temple of God."
The Edict of Jerusalem in the IV Century decreed that all
persons must be naked wlien they are being baptized — a rule
which still prevails in the Russian branch of the Greek church
(Fig. 121).
This (Fig. 122) is a painting of the Baptism of Christ by
Verrocchio. If nearly one hundred millions of Christians find
nudity an essential condition for one of their holiest sacraments,
then, surely, nudity can not be as bad as many other Christians
pretend it to be.
278
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Jesus is also represented naked on the cross, in paintings of
the Resurrection, etc., and millions of crucifixes with the naked
Jesus are venerated throughout the world. And in the Pope's
Fig. 121. — "Ei^isode in Life of St. Firmin, " by Garnier.
Fig. 122.— "Baptism of Christ," by Fig. 123.— " Christ, " from the Last
Verrocchio, in Academy, Florence, Italy. Judgment; Michelangelo, Vatican, Rome.
owii chapel, Jesus is sho"\\ni naked, when he comes to judge the
dead and the living, on the Last Judgment Day (Fig. 123).
If people can look upon the naked form of a Jesus, or even of
a Magdalen, without feeling lasci\dous emotions, they could do
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
279
the same with any other naked figure, decently presented, if tJiey
had been properly taught to consider it pure.
During the middle ages nearly every church had a statue or
a painting of a naked Adam and Eve, probably to inculcate the
essential purity and holiness of the human body. The celebrated
altar-piece by the Van Eycks, — ''The Adoration of the Lamb" —
had an Adam and an Eve, both naked, one on the right panel and
the other on the left. The "Eve" here shown (Fig. 124) still
exists in the Cathedral at Schleswig, Germany; and on the ceil-
(gCAt f)if bcrerii-gcl ain 35ktt /
^ KfrvnSfPiiimMrlrtffiriicfKltt/
Fig. 124.— ''Eve," from High Altar Fig. 125.— "Adam and Eve," from
of Cathedral in Schleswig, Gennany, the "Death-Dance of Basle." The text
made in a.d. 1520 explains why pictures of this kind were so
common in medieval days.
ing of tlie church at Hildesheim, Germany (Fig. 120), may be
seen an Adam and Eve, in a fresco painting, both naked.
A celebrated edition of the Bible, the Kurfuersten-Bihel, con-
tains an engraving of Adam and Eve.
Those who have studied the subject, "know that the Nude,
presented purely for the sake of Beauty, as most of it is rep-
resented, demoralizes nobody's mind. It is the straining to con-
ceal the beautiful Nude, and to suppress it, which injures."
It is the evil imagination which suggests the thought of im-
propriety. Unfortunately Macaulay's saying that a "nice man is
one who has nasty thoughts" is only too true, and some of these
280 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
''nice men" are the chief causes of the harm done by some kinds
of the Nude in Art.
The propriety of the Nude in Art depends largely on the men-
tal attitude and the degree of education of the observer, rather
than upon the representations of the imde themselves; the pro-
priety or impropriety of such art is mainly subjective — not ob-
jective.
''A beautiful statue or painting carries no bad suggestion,
except as the evil thought is always present in some minds. Per-
fect familiarity Avith nudes destroys that imagination, Avhich does
so much harm."
The disastrous effects of wrong education about the Nude
in Art and the Nude in Nature is seen in women who have been
brought up with too puritanical views. Many a marriage is
wrecked because the wives do not realize the full difference be-
tween the lovers who courted them and the husbands who married
them and who are entitled to see them naked. To too many women
the husband remains merely a "man" in this regard, 1 recall a
number of such tragedies ; for instance, one of a sober industrious
man, who, after marriage, began to drink heavily and staid out
late at night. He excused himself by the fact that his wife ex-
cluded him from her bedroom. The final outcome was a divorce
and the death of the husband from dissipation and tuberculosis.
This represents the chiton (Fig. 126), the house dress of
women in classic Greece; occasionally this dress was even simpler,
as in Athens, where the women were called "phaenomerides"
or the "bare-thighed" because this garment, open on one side,
reached only to the upper part of the thighs; and Aelian said of
Melita, the wife of Phocion, that "she showed herself clothed in
her chastity, that was all her ornament;" and we agree after a
lapse of twenty centuries, that
"Loveliness needs not the aid of ornament
But is, when unadorn'd, adorn 'd the most."
Exposure of the body to sight was not considered to be im-
proper in Greece or Rome, until after the beginning of the Chris-
tian era (Fig. 127). St. Chrysostom said of the Roman ladies —
"they did not hesitate or blush to appear perfectly naked in the
presence of the public at the theatres;" and as decency is merely
conforming to custom or fashion, Ave can not say that Greek or
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
281
Roman ladies were indecent in following the general custom of
their times.
It is related of ancient Greek women that ''if they had any
particularly beautiful features of the body, they left them naked
that they might be admired."
The celebrated Venus Callipygis is said l)y ancient writers
to have been modeled after two sisters 'Svho were celebrated
throughout all Greece for the beauty of their buttocks." This
figure is often referred to as the "Venus with the untranslatable
name;" callipygis means "with beautiful buttocks." The female
buttocks were an object of admiration and even of adoration
among the ancient Romans; Petronius (I Century a.d.) referred to
this secret buttock-worship : puellain invitare ad pygisiaca sacra
Fig. 126. — The Chiton. Home dress
of Greek women in classic times.
Fig. 127. — "Summer Bath at Pompeii,"
from painting by Bouguereau.
(to invite a girl to the sacred rites appertaining to the buttocks)
Avliich consisted probably, like all adoration, in kissing them.
A revolt against all Pagan customs was a characteristic of
early Christianity; I have already stated that most of the early
Christians were slaves, or poor; they were naturally incensed
against the rich, the fashionable, the educated and the refined
upper classes. As it was a feature of Greek and Roman life to
282
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
rejoice in tlie beauty of the Iranian body, the ascetic Christians
went to the other extreme, of hiding this beanty and being ashamed
of it ; and by a monstrous perversion of religion and morality it
came to be believed that a reluctance to show the beauty of the
body was a particularly virtuous and modest act. This fanatical
pruriency became so marked a feature of early Christianity, that
to mortify them, the Christian maidens and women were often
condemned to become slaves in the public houses of prostitution
(which were o'\^^led and operated by the state) where all the
women were kept naked for the inspection of tlie male visitors
who could choose any of the inmates that appealed to their taste.
The martyrs were usually stripped naked before being driven
into the arenas to be crucified, or to be torn to pieces by the wild
Fig. 128. — " Three Graces,"
bv Rerniault.
a paiutiiig Fig. 129. — "Education,'" by Isidor
Kimtz.
animals, that the exposure of their bodies to the gaze of the as-
sembled multitude might add keener suffering to their physical
tortures (Fig. 130).
Education (Fig. 129) is doing away with the prudery of ages,
and we are commencing to appreciate the words of the poet :
''Oh, what a pure and sacred thing
Is Beauty, curtain 'd from the sight
Of the gross world, illumining
One onlv mansion with her light."
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 283
if
'Why is it," asked a lad}^, "that so many men are anxious to
get rid of their wives?" and Wells, in his work on "Wedlock" an-
swers: "Because so few women exert themselves after marriage
to make their presence indispensable to their husbands — this is
the true reason. The woman who charmed before marriage can
charm afterwards, if she will, though not of course in the same
way. There are a thousand ways in which she can make herself
the particular deity of the domestic paradise." AAHien a man mar-
ries a woman, he looks forward to a companionship of bodies, as
well as to an affinity of souls. I have already referred to the nar-
row prejudices of the early church-fathers who taught that sexual
passion is an inspiration from the devil. Celibacy and continence
?* -P^
^■y^
Fig. 130. — ' ' The Arena, ' ' from painting by Labaudere.
were exaggerated into cardinal virtues, and the most unhappy
misuse was made of this idea. So pronounced was this unhappy
tendency in the early Christian church that St. Paul was led to
protest in very plain words in his First Letter to the Corinthians,
vii, 4, 5: ''The tvife hath not poiver of her own hody, hut the hus-
band; and likewise also, the hushand hath not power of his own
hody, but the tvife. Defraud ye not one another * * *.'"
Leckey, in his History of European Morals says that "when-
ever any strong religious fervor fell upon a husband or \\\ie, its
first eifect was to make a happy union impossible; the more re-
ligious partner desired to live an unnatural separation in mar-
riage." There is many a man who is daily oppressed by the su-
284
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
perior and intimidating goodness of his wife. He realizes that
his household is presided over by a priestess of moral propriety,
but she does not gladden his heart. She keeps all the command-
ments with austere fidelity but he vainly strives to make a com-
panion of her in the practical and delightful sense of the word.
AVhen the wife does not gratify her husband's reasonable
craving to see and enjoy feminine beauty, which is inborn in the
breast of every manly man, she ought not to feel surprised when
she discovers some day that he seeks consolation, — not by visiting
H
-Jtm T^bBI
r (
[j
j> * ^H^B^^H
^jyS^p^
i^
1 iwwr^'^
r
^1^
bBb^^^b
fm
^
Fig. 131.—' ' Will-o '-the-Wisp,
painting by Lersch.
fium Fig. 132.— "The Devil," from painting
by Koppay.
an ideal bronze or marble Diana in an art gallery, but by \dsiting
a living, breathing, palpitating, passionate Lais or Aspasia.
The vrife who knows how to combine the chastity of a Juno
with the loving yielding of a Venus, need not fear that her hus-
band Avill tire of her, or seek pleasure elsewhere.
Austerely chaste wives usually have profligate husbands.
Men are actively sexual, and the wife should not repel her hus-
liand through false modesty; she should be glad that her beauty
can attract him and hold him to home, family, and morality. '' Af-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
285
finities" are the products of wifely frigidity, and may become the
will-o'-the--\\dsps that lure to ruin (Fig. 131).
Dean Swift said quaintly: "The reason why so few marriages
are happy is because young women spend their time in making
nets — not in making cages." All writers on the subject agree
that frigidly chaste wives are the main cause of the prostitution
that is inseparable from a monogamic life and civilization, and
civilized clothing.
"The prostitute (Fig. 132) is to be pitied, not to be blamed;
she is the necessary product and victim of civilization. Herself
the supreme type of vice, she is ultimately the most efficient
guardian of virtue. On that one degraded head are concentrated
Fig. 133. — "Innocence," from painting by Benner.
the passions and desires that might have filled the Avorld with
shame. She remains, Avhile civilizations and creeds rise and fall,
the Eternal Priestess of Humanity, blasted for the sins of the
people."
"The most beautiful object in the world, it will be allowed, is
a beautiful woman, ' ' said Macaulay, and the Bible teaches us how
to appreciate this Beauty (Fig. 133). Solomon was a wise man,
and a man of much experience, for he had 700 wives and 300 con-
cubines ; and he wrote :
"Behold, thou art fair, my beloved, yea, pleasant. Thy hair
is as a flock of goats that appear from Mount Gilead. Thou hast
dove's eyes; thine eyes are like the fish-pools of Heshbon; thy
286 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
lips are like threads of scarlet ; thy teeth are like a flock of sheep
that are even shorn ! Thy neck is as a tower of ivory ! Thy navel
is like a round goblet that wanteth not liquor! Thy belly is like
a heap of wheat set about with lilies ! The joints of thy thighs are
like jewels! How fair and how beautiful are thy feet, 0, Prince's
daughter! How fair and how pleasant art thou, 0, Love, for
delights ! ' '
To nearly every man comes a time when he falls under the
influence of some woman who dominates his mind and his whole
life; they two may become married and then, if she is a good
Fig. 134. — Una and the Lion.
woman, she will be the inspiration of his whole being. She is
Una, the One (from the Latin adjective unus, a, um, one).
One day a powerful man, a giant almost, weighing perhaps
250 to 300 pounds, who worked in an iron works in St. Louis, was
overcome by the heat of a summer's day, the heat of a puddling
furnace and overindulgence in liquor, and he ran amuck. He took
his revolver, and went out in the street, naked to his waist as
were the others about the furnaces, and he threatened to kill any-
one he might see. The police stopped the cars from rmming and
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 287
warned people off the street, and they themselves staid around
the corners. Meanwhile someone had gone to his house and told
his wife; she came, a slight woman of perhaps 125 pounds. She
went out in the street and called to him, "Here, John, give me
that gun!" He did so and she took him by the arm and led him
home and the danger was over. She was "Una," the only One
that dared to go to him and disarm him. This is allegorically
represented in Figure 134.
"To make the cunning artless, tame the rude.
Subdue the haughty, shake the undaunted soul
Yea, put a bridle in the lion's mouth
And lead him forth as a domestic cur.
These are the triumphs of all-powerful Beauty."
Idealization and Vulgarity in Art
Ruskin said that "there are three classes of artists. The first
class take the good and leave the evil. Out of Avhatever is pre-
sented to them they gather what it has of grace, and life, and
light and loveliness, and leave as much of the rest unknowm and
undrawn (see Fig. 330).
"The second, or greater class, render all that they see in na-
ture unhesitatingly, sympathizing with all the good, and bringing
good out of evil also. These may be termed naturalists. They
realize that sensual pleasure in humankind is not only a fact, but
a Divine fact; the human creature, though the highest of animals,
is nevertheless a perfect animal, and human happiness, healtli and
nobleness depend on the cultivation of every animal passion as
well as on the cultivation of every spiritual tendency.
" The illustration (Fig. 135) shows three Bacchantes, slightly
intoxicated as becomes the priestesses of Bacchus, the god of wine ;
the two outer ones are trying to throw the one in the center into
the ^vater; the group was designed for an ornamental fountain.
As a representation of the exuberant joy of physical life, it would
be difficult to find a better example,
"The third class perceive and imitate evil only. Their art is
in nowise a Divine institution. It is entirely human, and these
artists are either useless or harmful men. These men are sensual-
ists, understand, not men who delight in evil; but men who fail
to see or represent the best and purest there is in nature."
288
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
The tendency to pander to sensuality is the "modern deca-
dence of art." "While the greatest artists of all times have been
naturalists, the world is full of vulgar naturalists, sensualists,
who bring discredit on all painting of nature." Notice, for in-
Fig. 135. — "Wrestling Bacchantes," by Petrilli. Ijouisiana Purchase Exposition, 1904.
Fig. 136. — "The Women are Dear," from painting by E. de Beaumont.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
289
stance, in De Beanmont's picture: Les Femmes Sont CJieres (Fig.
136), wliicli was exhibited in the Frencli Salon of 1870, a negro
ravishing one of the girl slaves in the standing position.
''Such paintings violate every instinct of decency and law
of virtue or life written on the human soul."
The depths to which artists of this class have descended, I
can not show, but the most outrageous examples are such paint-
ings as Belsliazzar's Feast, or the illustrations of the de luxe edi-
tions of Balzac's Contes Droliques, or the Life of Casanova.
Fig. 137.— "Leda and the Swan,"
from painting by Saintm.
Fig. 138.— "Lcda and the Swan,"
from painting by Lejeune.
Idealization and Realism
"When an artist uses a model he may paint her just as she is,
as did the medieval Dutch painters, when it is called "realism."
Occasionally, of course, a model may be so beautiful or jDerfect,
that there is nothing to suggest coarse fleshiness merely.
This difference may be appreciated by comparing the Leda
by Saintin (Fig. 137) with the Leda b^^ Lejeune (Fig. 138) ; the
latter seems improper because she either should be altogether
clothed or altogether naked, for being partially clothed in modern
clothing is too anachronistic for the subject of the painting.
290
SEX AND SEX WOESHIP
Compare with the two ilhistrations of Leda and the Sivan also
this statue by Michelangelo, the Swan (Jupiter) having sexual
connection with Leda (Fig. 139) ; this is '' realism."
Compare with these pictures the one of a girl bathing in a
hidden nook, but frightened by the rustle of a flying bird (page
Fig. 13U. — "Leda and the Swan," by Michelangelo.
W' f.
Fig. 140. — "Leda and the Swan," from i^ainting by Corregio.
24G). She is all alone and as innocent and pure as an artist can
paint a naked girl.
This leads to the consideration of another feature of works
of art — vulgarity.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
291
The word is from the Latin adjective vulgaris, e, and means
common, not refined, in bad taste. Many people think that vulgar
and obscene mean the same thing. Even a representation of coi-
tion is not obscene, in a proper sense, because it is a perfectly
proper and moral act, bnt it is generally agreed that it is in bad
taste to represent it in art; a picture representing it would be
vulgar, but not obscene.
Vulgar pictures are not necessarily evil, but they are more
or less aj)t to be so, and are frequently described as "suggestive;"
i. e., they are often erotically excitant.
Fiff. 141. — " Paul and Virginia. "
Fig. 142.— " Daphnis and Cliloe," V)y
Courtot.
Obscenity, on the other hand, represents the vices ; it suggests
and teaches practices that are not normal or proper and that have
been decreed by the consensus of opinion of decent people to be
vicious and iimnoral, and obscenity is therefore harmful.
Idealization is somewhat difficult when man and woman are
represented together and both are naked, but it is often done, mod-
estly and properly, as in Cupid and Psyche (Page 151), antique,
and Love (page 275), by Evehm B. Longman, modern.
More frequently, however, one or both figures are partially
draped, as in this lovely statue of Daplinis and Cliloe (Fig. 142),
by Courtot.
292
SEX AND SEX WOKSHIP
Or the passionate nature of the man, the animal instincts of
sex in man, are allegorized as a wild animal, as in Diana and the
Lio^byElwell (Fig. 143).
Sculpture
Scnlptnre is the highest, the supreme form of art; the best
achievement of human skill. For while in a painting we see an
object from one viewpoint only, in statuary we may have as many
different representations as there are different angles, and as the
Fig. 143. — "Diana and the Lion," by
Elwell. Chicago World's Fair, 1893.
Fig. 144. — ''Venus de Medici." An-
tique statue, no\Y in Eome.
statue must look perfect from every angle, it demands the highest
skill to make a statue.
And as the beauty of the naked woman is the highest type of
beauty, the representation of this beauty in sculpture is neces-
sai-ily tlie highest and purest of all the arts.
Figure 144 is a picture of the most celebrated work of art in
the Avorld, ancient or modern. Aphrodite, or Venus, being the God-
dess of Universal Love, is naked; and her posture shows her as
glorying in the eternally and universally entrancing features of
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 293
the breasts and pul)es as the syml)ols of woiiiaiiliood. Someone
said of this statue:
a rp
There was a scnlptor named Pliidias
Whose statnes Avere pei-fectly hideons;
He made Aphrodite
Without any nightie
And so shocked the nltra-fastidions."
Fanatics teach that all the God-given beauty of the Imman
body is corrupt ; that the naked human body is always evil.
Some people can not see the purest and holiest things with-
out interpreting them into vice, and the naked glory of a statue
of a goddess or painting of a naked madonna or a saint, that in
the pure-minded evokes nothing but emotions of thankfulness to
the Creator for the blessings of loveliness and goodness with
which He has enriched our lives, calls forth in their minds las-
civious thoughts and erotic feelings and desires,
''Their minds refuse to enter the ideal world to which these
works of art point, but stop with the symbols and inflame them-
selves with the emotions which the model's anachronistic freedom,
coupled with its pulsating vitality, arouses in them."
"Just in proportion as these likenesses are pleasing with
ruddy warmth in themselves, they remain flesh and blood to such
men as these" — and judging others by their o\m concupiscent
natures, they imagine all others to be tainted with the same moral
perversity, and in their "immodest modesty" they would annihi-
late Avhatever makes life beautiful and good and pure, and would
shroud all nature in sack-cloth and ashes; they Avould blot out
sunshine and beauty and substitute gloom and ugliness ; they
would close our art galleries and would deprive mankind of the
pure pleasures of the highest forms of art.
Such men are of that type of ascetics so well described by
Prescott: "The Aztec priests were frequent in their ablutions and
vigils, and mortified the flesh in fasting and by cruel penances —
drawing blood from their bodies l)y all those austerities to which
fanaticism has resorted in every age of the world, in hopes to
merit heaven by making earth a hell. ' '
They are survivals of that perverted type of virtue which
finds its extreme illustration in tliose fanatics who believed with
St. Hieronymus that "AVoman is the door foi- the devil, a way to
294 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
e\dl, the sting of the scorpion," and who crossed themselves and
repeated the litany for exorcising the devil when they saw a
woman; or who castrated themselves and lived as hermits like
Origen, to escape from their supersensitive concupiscence.
The fanatical pilgrims who drink from the sacred, but pol-
luted, wells of Mecca and then start the scourge of cholera around
the world, think they serve God, and are as well-meaning as men
and women of this kind whose teachings i)repare the mental soil
for the develojoment of that epidemic of vice, the contagion of
which is poured out over the intellectual Avorld by such men as
Casanova, Zola, and the many apostles of filth who wallow in
moral mire like swine in a morass.
The vast deluge of indecent, oliscene and erotic literature and
art which floods the civilized world is but the harvest of weeds
that sprout and thrive on the soil so well prepared for their
reception.
The two tendencies of thought, the puritanical which de-
nounces all nude in art, and the erotic which prefers impure art,
are responsible for most of the vices in civilization ; ethically these
trends of thought are as far as heaven and hell apart, but prac-
tically they are co-workers and boon-companions, cause and effect,
in the work of breeding moral pestilence. The puritanical views
teach the mind to see evil in tilings that are in themselves inno-
cent and harmless, and the other view furnishes the evil in art
which those who have been educated to look for evil, can find when
they look for it.
Unfortunately Max Nordau was right when he said: "We
cling like cowards to certain conventionalities whose utter incon-
gruity we feel with every fibre of our being," else we would not
allow the opinions of millions of pure-minded and educated people
to be misrepresented by a few fanatics to whose perverted vision
purity is distorted into impurity and who consider beauty of body
the greatest crime, and the admiration of that beauty the greatest
vice.
The Nude is inherently neither decent nor indecent. Decency
is a conforming to usage, and what is decent at one time and place
is indecent at another time and place. Thus, when Rawlinson
said of Nefert-Ari-Ahmes ("the beautiful consort of Ahmes")
that "she went in an indecently transparent garment," he uses
an inappropriate expression, as he judges her by the standards
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 295
of decency in liis time, instead of by those of lier own time by
which alone she should be judged and according to wliich she was
attired perfectly decently (see page 240).
Nudity Avas considered to be perfectly proper, and evidently
the thin fabrics with which rich Egyptian ladies enveloped them-
selves were not worn from a desire to hide their bodies from sight
but rather as veils to protect them from annoyance by gnats and
flies. Juvenal speaks of women of his day, who were so delicate
that they became overheated by wearing a silken veil, and who
therefore had to go about naked.
In an abstract sense the naked body is more chaste than the
clothed. AVe read in the Bible : ' ' So God created man in his own
image — and God saw^ everything he had made and behold it was
very good ; — and they were both naked, the man and his wife, and
were not ashamed."
That nudity is not incompatible with modesty is seen in many
of the lower nations ; the Botocudos, for instance, live in absolute
nudity yet their language has a word for "blushing." It is be-
cause of its suggestion of an ideal, unearthly world that the em-
ployment of the Nude in Art has its justification and its necessity.
The Nude, when elevated by idealization, presents pure being or
action without the hindering accidents of earthly reality ; it trans-
ports the mind of the observer back to some golden age, or for-
ivard to some heavenly world where personality is unembar-
rassed by convention, where character and intention stand out
clear and undisguised.
"In an age of coimnonplace realism like the present, it is
well for the public mind that it should Ije occasionally invited to
enter an ideal world where human life and human labor are pre-
sented in abstract form."
It is sometimes said that it is "instinctive modesty" which
causes a girl to shrink from being seen naked, but this is not really
so. Children are not ashamed of being seen naked, and it is only
by the most persistent admonition from their mothers that they
can be finally made to understand that they should be ashamed
of their own bodies ; incidently this proves that acquired ideas or
mental traits are not transmissible by inheritance, even after
many centuries of persistence.
The story is told of a little girl who came running out of her
room dressed only in her niglitie, to greet a little boy visitor whose
296 SEX AISTD SEX WORSHIP
voice she liearcl. Her mother was shocked and sent her back to
her room saying, '' little girls must not allow themselves to be
seen in their nighties." In a few moments the little girl came
out again, sajdng, "I'm all right noAv; I took off my nightie!"
The story sounds true. Even if it is not true, it illustrates so well
a child's attitude toward nudity.
Nor is it instinctive that girls become more sensitive in this
regard than boys ; there are nations in which the women go naked
while the men are clothed, Avliich, after all, is but rational since
in a naked man the genital organs can be seen while they can not
be seen in a naked woman. Nor is it instinctive modesty which
determines which part of the body must be kept hidden, for dif-
ferent parts must be covered in different nations. Among our-
selves, perhaps the first effort of a girl surprised naked would be
to hide the sexual parts, but among the Malays a girl or woman
would under similar circumstances cover her navel with her
hands; and the women of some African tribes wear an apron be-
hind, and if the}' lose this apron they sit down until another is
handed to them because it would be very indecent to expose their
posteriors to sight, Avhile a bare front is perfectly chaste and
proper.
Among Turks, Eg3q3tians and Mohammedans generally the
faces of the women must be kept hidden, and a Turkish woman
surprised by a man Avith her face uncovered will, if no other cov-
ering is at hand, raise her garments and throw them over her
head even if by so doing she exposes her naked body from the
bosom down, rather than that her naked face should be seen. The
gesture of covering the face when surprised partly or wholly un-
dressed is not uncommon among our own women, and it really
implies greater embarrassment and agitation than the hiding of
the genitals, because it is intended to hide the blushes and per-
haps tears which are the result of intense self-consciousness of
shame and mortification.
In some Arabian tribes modesty requires that the back of the
head and hair be kept covered, while in China the foot and leg of
a woman must not be exposed to view, and may not even be men-
tioned in polite society. Habit and custom, therefore, alone de-
cide what is proper or improper in these regards, and education
and not instinct makes us ashamed of nakedness. Nor is the
wearing of clothes a result of being ashamed of our nakedness,
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
297
but the wearino- of clothing has produced this sense of shame.
Fair-skinned nations feel the need of a covering for their
bodies more than dark-skinned nations, but it does not always
lead to the wearing of clothes, for painting the body, or tattooing
it, often are used instead. In Japan clothing is not worn from
am^ sense of shame, for in the rural districts the inhabitants go
clothed in mnter and naked in summer, the clothing being simply
a protection against the weather.
Our grown folks find nothing objectionable in seeing a baby
naked and our little ones are often photographed thus. It would
Fig. 145. — "The Sistiue Madonna," in Fig. 146.— Portrait statue of Marie An-
the Sistine Chapel, Vatican, Rome.
toinette and Dauphin Prince.
be a very nice distinction to say just when this nakedness becomes
improper ; the suggestion that it becomes immodest as soon as the
child becomes self-conscious of the impropriety Avill not answer,
for it does not become thus conscious except from the teaching of
others.
The innocence of naked childhood is also attested in this, that
Madonnas are often figured mth the Christ-Child naked, or sur-
rounded by naked cherubs (Fig. 145).
Swedenborg, the celebrated theologian, says, in commenting
298 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
on this subject: "The angels in tlie inmost heaven are naked be-
cause they are innocent and innocence corresponds to nakedness.
To the innocent and the chaste nakedness is no shame because
without offence." This is of course a logical conclusion forced
on us by the Bible, for since clothing was the result of our first
parents' fall, or sin, it can have no j)lace in heaven where there
is no sin.
The noble ladies in the times of Titian, Canova, and even
later, of Makart, considered it an honor to be permitted to pose
naked for these great masters. Princess Pauline Bonaparte, sis-
ter of the great Napoleon, was one of the most beautiful women
of modern times and she had a portrait-statue of herself made
by Canova, which is now knoA\Ti as the "Borghese Venus." When
the work was first exhibited and one of her friends exclaimed:
"How could you pose like that for Canova?" she showed a much
more chaste conception than her friend, when she naively replied :
"The studio was kept very comfortably warm."
Figure 146 shows a statue of Marie Antoinette and her son,
the Dauphin Prince, made for her husband, Louis XVI, of France.
A St. Louis photographer told me that he had frequent re-
quests from married women to be photographed naked, to please
their husbands ; this same photographer told me that he had made
over 2000 pliotographs of naked women, arrangements for hav-
ing them made having been attended to by the husbands, who
in many cases accompanied their wives to his studio; and in an
interview a New York photographer was quoted as saying that
he had made about 3000 photographs of naked women in one and
a half years, and very few of these were immoral women.
AYe were told on the authority of a leading photographic
journal that it is the custom in England (this was before the war)
among young ladies among the best families to have themselves
photographed undraped, in "classic poses" (Fig. 147); and that
every young lady in society i3ossesses an album filled with such
portraits of her girl friends. The practice deserves encourage-
ment, rather than censure, for it cultivates a healthier and more
moral appreciation of the beauty and essential purity of the hu-
man body than has heretofore prevailed, and must lead to happier
marriages and purer lives.
Sarony gave much attention to photographing from the nude,
and many of his published pictures are very beautiful. In recent
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
299
times various photographic journals contained articles asking pho-
tograpliers to pay more attention to this branch of their art; urg-
ing competitive exhibition of such work at the photographers'
conventions, and claiming that such portrayal of nude figures is
the highest form of photographic art, as it is the highest art to
represent the nude body in paintings and statuary.
''Purity does not consist in seeing nastiness in everything,"
and when a beautiful bride, a society belle in a Missouri town,
startled her friends some years ago by having herself photo-
graphed naked to please her husband, she did a jDerfectly chaste
and proper thing by perpetuating the enjoyment of her youthful
beauty to be a delight to her husband when the inexorable ravages
Fig. 147. — Modern
classic pose, popular pres-
ent-day photography.
Fio-. 148.-
-"Bath of Court Ladies; XVIII Century."
From a painting.
of time and maternity would otherwise have made it but a sweet
sad memory. When a husljand Avishes to have such a picture and
the wife is willing to please him, there can be no legitimate reason
for objecting, any more than there is to photographing our chil-
dren naked ; such pictures are perfectly chaste and not to be men-
tioned in the same breath with vulgar or obscene pictures.
It is generally stated that the Japanese are sexually an ex-
ceptionally pure people, yet in Yeddo there is a large public bath-
house where men and women swim and bathe in the same pool
300 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
perfectly naked, the two sexes being kept apart by a bamboo pole
laid across to divide the pool into tAvo compartments; yet there
is no immorality in consequence. A well-known lady lecturer on
Japan told me that on one occasion she was invited for a week-
end party in the country by a prominent Japanese official in
Tokyo. When she got to the country-home she was introduced to
the whole family, one member, a grown son, being in a state of
perfect nudity. Also, in her city home, she could see her neighbor
sitting in his garden naked, every warm evening.
Turkish ladies make up parties to take their baths together
where they lounge and gossip, drink coffee or sherbet, eat confec-
tions and smoke narghiles, and mothers have opportunities to
see the physical charms of the eligible girls in their acquaintance-
ship and report to their sons, to guide the latter in choosing wives.
There is no reason other than absurd prudery Avhy our ladies
should not take their liaths together as was the custom among the
court-ladies in the eighteenth century (Fig. 148). The parties of
ladies in our natatoriums or in our public bathing pools are a
movement in the direction of rational and healthful enjoyment;
still more so, the bathing beaches in various parts of the world.
Every human being should expose the entire surface of the
body to the air and sunshine for an hour or two a day, if possible,
and it would do away with a vast amount of sickness and depres-
sion of spirits.
The bacilli of disease thrive in darkness, and more light means
more health, better morals, and longer and happier lives. Now
only our faces and hands receive the benefit of sunlight, for the
rest of our bodies is in continual darkness under our opaque
clothing, or at best, in perpetual twilight in tlie lighter wearing
apparel of our women. If to a sunbath were added the cheering
influence of good company, the human body and mind would both
be invigorated and cleansed, and it would harm none and be pro-
motive of better morals and more joyous home-life if the men of
the family Avere permitted to look in on such family recreations,
as they could do in ancient Greece and Rome, for they would not
then be tempted to go to houses of prostitution, or to keep mis-
tresses to see what should be a daily delight in their own homes.
Our clothing is to a great extent the cause of our immoralities,
and it is the testimony of disinterested observers, that, when civ-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 301
ilized clothing is introdiieod into previously innocent heathen
commnnities, onr vices and licentiousness go with it.
Because we see the nude so seldom an unexpected sight or
suggestion of it gives pleasurable feelings, or even in some who
have been improperly educated in regard to it, excites erotically.
Men are fond of sexual things; this explains their fondness for
pictures or statues of the nude, for erotic stories, for "stag par-
ties," and for the innumerable suggestive pictures that are extant.
Men are fond of seeing representations of the sexual act. Fig.
149 is a photograph of a pipe, found in a mound in Indiana.
It shoAvs that the earliest inhabitants of America had some of the
Fig. 149. — A pipe found iu a mound in the United States, in the State of Indiana.
below; a modern Meerschaum pipe, above.
mental traits of the present inhabitants. In Mexico statuettes of
couples engaged in coition are openly sold, as part of the instruc-
tion to the young folks and as a pleasant excitement for the older
folks. Even these figures are not in themselves indecent; there
are Polynesian tribes in which the newly married couple per-
form this consummation of the marriage before the assembled
guests. Speaking of such representations, Ruskin, than whom a
purer-minded man never wrote on art, said: "In this breadth and
realism the painter saw that sexual passion is not only a fact but
a divine fact ; the human creature, though the highest of animals,
was nevertheless a perfect animal and his happiness, health and
302 SEX AND SEX WOKSHIP
nobleness depended npon the due power of every animal passion
as well as on the cultivation of every spiritual tendency. ' '
The nude is not always or necessarily chaste ; it may be sug-
gestive of evil, of course. Nor is it necessary that the figure
should be naked to express an evil tendency; viciousness may be
shown in entirely covered figures. The propriety or impropriety
of the nude is therefore not conditioned upon the mere presence
or absence of clothing, but upon the motive of the representation.
Madonnas have been painted naked and chaste, and clothed and
anchaste.
There are, or rather were before the war, establishments in
Europe where photographs were made from natural poses, to
illustrate every possible or conceivable posture in which natural
or unnatural sexual gratification may be obtained.
The collection of mural paintings from the bath rooms of
Pompeii and lierculaneum, now in the Muse Secret, of the latter
city, are a collection of this kind. This kind of art possibly came
to Rome from India and Egypt. Collections of such drawings
were known as the Pictures of ElephanUs in ancient Greece and
Rome, and it is recorded that a rich Roman matron, Lalage, pre-
sented a copy of this work to the temple of Priapus with the prayer
that she might be permitted to enjoy the passionate pleasures over
which this god presided in all the postures depicted in that cele-
brated treatise.
In civilized communities the man who marries burdens him-
self with obligations towards wife, children and society that de-
prive him of many personal comforts that he might have enjoyed
if he had remained single, for he can gratify his passions much
more economically by occasional visits to a prostitute than by
establishing a wife in a household of his own. This extra burden,
therefore, is assumed for the sake of the psychical element of the
love he feels for the woman he makes his wife, but there is no
doul)t that sensual passion for the loved one is an important or
even the primary incentive that impels him to marriage.
La Roche-Faucauld wrote: "It is difficult to define love; in
the mind it is nothing Init a latent and delicate desire to possess
the loved object." If it were not for this passion men would ar-
gue, as I once heard it expressed: "Wliat is the use of keeping a
cow, when milk can be bought for ten cents a quart!" and prosti-
tutes would soon outnumber wives. It is therefore necessary in
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 303
tlio intorosts of our race, of society and of o;ood morals, that the
passions of men slionhl over-ride eokl calculating reason, for if
the sexnal passion hecame less strong, or Avas outweighed by mo-
tives of selfishness, the majority of marriages wonld not occur.
Passion in man must therefore be kept alive and as the nat-
ural stimulus of nudity at home and among our friends is want-
ing, smutty stories, obscene pictures, erotic literature and las-
civious exhibitions have lieen substituted. The Erotica have a
legitimate function to perform and can not be suppressed unless
we return to archaic simplicity of costumes and methods of living.
On this subject Thomas Case, Professor of Moral Philosophy
at Oxford, said: "Many books are proper for men which are im-
proper for women; a man may hear and read things which a
woman should not. As God has not found some other way to gen-
erate mankind, it is vital that a woman should be a pure vessel.
On this point it would be immoral to mince matters. A wife is
much more the mother of a child, both before and after its birth,
than the husband is the father. The law of divorce, in condemning
her more easily, is only following the inexorable law of nature,
which absolutely demands her purity."
ART ANATOMY
A thorough knowledge of anatomy is not necessary, or even
desirable, to judge or to execute works of art; a trained accuracy
of observation is sufficient. In fact, a thorough knowledge of
anatomy is incompatilile with the representation and apprecia-
tion of beauty, in the highest sense, because it tempts the artist
to Avork out details that he knows exist, but that he can not see
in the skin-covered body.
The simplest rule of proportions is the modern one, of eight
head-lengths, as shown in Fig. 150. Also, the body is just as
long as is the distance from tip to tip of the fingers when the arms
are outstretched.
The old Greek rule is illustrated in Fig. 151; a line is first
drawn across from one shoulder (acromion process) to the other;
the part below that line is divided into three equal parts ; the
part above is % as long as one of these parts, of which the head
is in turn %; the head is therefore % of 7I1 of the total length
304
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
from the top of the head to the sole of the foot ; this is Yss or very
near Vs or %2.
Our bodily conformation and mental disposition resulted from
ages of inheritance and not merely from the two individuals
whom we call parents ; each of us represents the average features
of innumerable ancestors (Fig. 152). Each of us had two parents,
four grandparents, eight great-grandparents, etc., doubling for
each generation; counting at the rate of three generations to the
century there Avould have been over four thousand ancestors in
Fig. 150. — Proportions of human body. Modern rule, eight head-lengths.
the year 1500, about the time of the discovery of America ; and in
the fifty-seventh generation remote, contemporaneous with the
beginning of our era, about one hundred forty-four quadrillions.
But all these ancestors added together would give each one of us
the grand total of over two hundred eighty-eight quadrillions of
ancestors since the beginning of our era; and man probably ex-
isted more than a quarter of a million years previously, not coimt-
ing the myriads of generations of animal ancestry before our
first primitive human forefathers were formed.
These numbers are of course vastly in excess of the actual
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
305
nuiu])ers, sineo they do not take into account intonnarriagcs of
relatives. T^et ns suppose tliat tlie parents were cousins ; that the
grandparents were also cousins, and that two of the great-grand-
parents were children of the same parents although they married
into unrelated families, and four generations ago, instead of six-
5* VL£a//i t/r?7,
Fio-. 151. — Represents ilie proportions as ascertained from an analysis of hun-
dreds of antique statues.
'^^a-'iM ll V W 8rSP Be ^S
Ai.aes.c/G.sii.iof. ad. s-oo.
<yV,»l5;»«8.075",8S5,87a.-TIME OF CHRIST.
268,230,376,751, 7;;.r^2. - Total since Cfirist
Fig. 152.^Tlus diagram sliows the complexity of heredity.
teen ancestors Ave find but eight. The possibilities of inter-
national intermingling are suggested by the names of countries,
but possibilities of race intermingling are intentionally omitted.
If no other intermarriages tlian those just mentioned had occurred
30G
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
previously since the Cliristian era began, 3^et the 288 quadrillions
of ancestors would be reduced to 144 quadrillions. If we make a
wildly extravagant allowance and say that our figures are one-
Imndrecl-thousand-niillions times too large, our ancestry would
still be nearly three millions of different individuals since the
Christian era began ; however meaningless such figures may there-
AUJVRIA.
^. _/^SPAIN.
RUSSIA
PRUSSIA
9
SWCDEN
P^P^^f'^-'^^^^
I \l N
AMERICA.
Fig. 153. — Heredity; effect of iiiteimaniage between cousins, and between jiersons of
different nations indicated.
^^■i^f'TT "^s.
BOAZ w,iKRufh.
OBED.
JESSE.
DAVID.wifh Bath-Sheba.
SOLOMON.
ROBOAM.
AB/A.
''''^ITABIZ ^^^^
Fig. 1;j4. — The nncestry as well as the posterity of one man.
fore be as facts, they still help us to realize the complexity of the
heredity that made us what we are, bodily and mentally, and the
infinitely small influence any one of these ancestors of the "long
ago" can have had on oin- nature.
We read in the first chapter of St. Matthew: "Boaz begat
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 307
Obed, of Kntli; Obed begat Jesse; and Jesse begat David, the
king; and David the king begat Solomon of her that had been the
wife of Urias; and Solomon begat Koboam; and Roboam begat
Abia ; ' ' etc. Let ns assnme that each in turn begat two sons, and
we have the lower pyramid. David's blood comes to each one in
Abia's generation in as direct a line as to himself. It has been
calculated that there is not a Caucasian today who has not in him
traces of King David's blood, and this calculation does not even
depend upon Solomon's efforts in diffusing the strain by having
700 wives and 400 concubines; nor upon the further statement
that "Solomon loved many strange women!"
But David was not an original source of hereditary influence;
each individual is but like the focus of the rays of light coming
through a condensing lens. In David innumerable lines of con-
verging hereditary influence from all the past ages became vis-
ible for a brief lifetime, and then radiated again in innumerable
lines of divergence to the end of time; King David's blood is but
the blood of Boaz and Ruth, and of all their ancestors ; it blended
with the blood of all the ancestors of Bath-Sheba, the wife of
Urias, and Avith the blood of all his other wives, and through all
their offspring it was transmitted to every Caucasian now living.
And just as David's blood courses in all our veins, so does the
blood of Phoenician and Persian kings, of Greek heroes and of
Roman emperors, of Gallic, Teutonic, Norse and Scandinavian
chiefs, Avho transmitted their blood in greater currents than other
men, for many women captured in war became mothers through
them; thus, the Roman Emperor Proknlus said in a letter to his
friend Metianus, that in less than fourteen days he had impreg-
nated one hundred virgins captured in war.
And not only the blood of kings and nobles, but the blood of
slaves as well courses in each one's veins, for the "wives" were
often the pretty daughters of the slaves ! And through the vicis-
situdes of war and rapine and plunder, princesses became slaves
and the mothers of slaves, and slaves who found favor in the
eyes of royal masters became the mothers of princes.
Add to this the right of the feudal lords to use their female
serfs; "the law of the first night" which gave the king the right
of first cohabitation with a bride, and the right to delegate the
privilege to someone else; and the prevalence of clandestine inter-
course at all times, and among all classes, and we have influ-
308
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
ences which produced such a blending of hereditary strains as to
insure the average similarity of physical proportions and mental
characteristics for the entire Caucasian race.
In the man the bones are larger, the muscles more prominent,
Fig. 155. — Muscular back of a man.
Fig. 156. — Smooth back of a woman. Fig. 157. — Two small children, compared.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
309
and all anatomical detail is more distinctly shown (Fi^'. 155) ; this
shows the muscular Lack of a man, while the smoothness of a
woman's body is well shown in Figure 156.
Of course, this refers to men and Avomen in civilized connnu-
nities; savage women, and hard-lahoring civilized women fre-
quently have well-dev^eloped muscles and approach the male type
ill appearance.
In childhood there is no difference of build ])etween the sexes;
in the new horn child, the whole body is four and one-half head-
lengths in size, Init the body grows more rapidly than the head so
Fig. 158.— Young g-irl about ten or twelve
years old.
Fig. 159. — "The Young Prisoner/'
by Michelangelo.
that this proportion changes until the body has attained its full
growth. This indicates the essential uniformity of build in
infancy (Fig. 157).
At the approach of maturity both sexes assume the normal
sex-characteristics, but up to the age of about ten or twelve
there is not yet nmch difference; this shoAVS a young girl (Fig.
158) compared witli the figure of a 3^oung boy, the latter shown
from a statue l)y Michelangelo, The Young Prisoner (Fig. 159).
At the age of puberty (Fig. 160) a girl's bosom enlarges and
310
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
the pul)ic hair appears — two features of beauty to which the
prophet Ezekiel referred when he compared Jerusalem to a young
bride (Ezek. xvi, 7) : "Thou art come to excellent ornaments; thy
breasts are fashioned and thine hair is grown whereas thou wast
Fig. 160.— "Sweet Sixteen." A model
from nature.
Fig. 161.— "A Nymph," by Toberenz.
Female.
mdle.
yianof
'/^trui'tare.
Fig. 162. — Sex difference in form, diagrainmatic.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 311
naked and bave." While a lieavy growth oi' hair on the piibes
was highly esteemed by the ancient Egyptians and Jews, as it
is also by ourselves, this hair was removed by the women of many
ancient as well as modern Asiatic people. Curiously enough, this
Asiatic bare mons Veneris has become the accepted form in which
artists now represent this part of the female body (Fig. 161).
The typical structural sex differences between man and
woman are illustrated in Fig. 162. Man is the toiler, the bread-
winner, and the mechanical part of the body preponderates.
Woman's highest sphere is home and family and her whole body
is moulded with reference to her chief aim in life — Motherhood —
Eeproduction.
Representing the mechanical part of the body by the bones
and muscles of the arms and shoulders, and the sexual functions
by the pelvis, the relative importance of these two characteris-
tics in the two sexes is here diagrammatically shoAvn, and inci-
dentally the essential diiference in shape is also indicated.
The man's body as a rule is large and strong, with bony
joints and with well-marked muscles capable of great physical
exertion, with shoulders broad and the body tapering wedge-
shaped to the feet; the man is aggressive, intellectual, but not
'^ beautiful" in the ordinary sense;
*'for contemplation he and valor formed."
(Milton.)
Man chooses his mate mainly for her physical beauty, and the
woman, through this sexual selection by the man, which has gone
on for untold ages, has become the most beautiful object in crea-
tion ; small, smooth-skinned, fair, plump, round and dimpled.
Fortunately we do not go much amiss in choosing a wife for
her beauty of body; "a fine form, a good figure, beautiful bust,
round arms and neck, fresh complexion and lovely face, are all
outward and visible signs of the physical qualities that make up
a healthy and vigorous wife and mother; they imply soundness,
fertility, good circulation and good digestion."
Figure 163 shows the statue of Hercules, now generally called
the Farnese Hercules because it is in the Farnese gallery in Rome ;
it shows the cuneate or wedge shape of the male body, by some-
what exaggerating the development of the shoulders and arms.
In Fig. 164 is shown a representation of a statue of Anti-
312
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
nous, the favorite of the Emperor Hadrian, of Rome ; in the days
of Hadrian he was considered the most beautiful man that ever
lived and Hadrian had many statues erected to perpetuate his
beauty. After the death of Antinous, these statues were placed in
the temples and divine honors were paid to them. Modern writers
often say that the statue of Apollo Belvidere is the most perfect
type of male form; others object that all Apollos are too effem-
inate in form.
But it is only when we see the naked woman that we can ap-
preciate the full beauty of the human body (Fig. 165) ; slie is the
Fig. 163. — "Farnese Hercules;
statue in Eome.
antique Fig. 164. — Antinous, favorite of Emperor
Hadrian, Rome.
crowning jewel of Creation! Of her Milton said "for softness
she, and sweet attractive grace was formed." We have cause to
be thankful for and to rejoice in the esthetic emotions which en-
able us to appreciate her loveliness, even though we admit the
truth of what Spenser Avrote 300 years ago :
''Beauty is the bait which Avith delight,
Doth man ensnare for to enlarge Ids kind."
Tlie word "Beauty" as applied to the liuiiian l)()dy (Fig. 166)
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
313
is always applied to feminine loveliness — to woman's shapely
form and features. Rochester said of Beauty:
"Oh, she is the Pride and Glory of the World;
Without her, all the rest is worthless dross ;
Life a base slavery ; Empire but a mock ;
And Love — the Soul of All — a bitter curse."
And Dryden said of Beauty:
Marck her majestick fabriek; she's a temple
Sacred by birth and built by hands divine.
5 J
Fig. 165. — ^A beautiful woman.
Fiff. 160. — A beautiful woman.
''Socrates called Beauty a short-lived tyranny; Plato, a priv-
ilege of nature; Theophrastus, a silent cheat; Theocritus, a de-
lightful prejudice; Carneades, a solitary kingdom; Aristotle af-
firmed that Beauty was better than all the letters of recommenda-
tion in the world; Homer, that it was a glorious gift of nature;
and Ovid called it a favor bestowed by the Gods. ' '
Artists see in the representations of the naked woman the
end and fulness of art. The highest type of beauty is that of
naked woman. At the shrine of naked woman the artists of all
times and the men of all nations and all climes pay homage and
recognize in her ''The Source," the "Spring," the "Fountain,"
and the "Inspiration" for the best work in all the arts (Fig. 167).
314 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
"Who dotli not feel, until his failing sight
Faints into dimness with its own delight
Has changing cheek, his sinking heart confess.
The Might, the Majesty, of Loveliness."
(Byron.)
A beantifnl woman has been described as an edition cle luxe
of the most charming Avork by the greatest of all Authors; the
edition is large, and every man should secure a copy for himself.
"0 Woman! Whose form and whose soul
Are the spell and the light of each path we pursue.
Whether sunn 'd at the tropics, or chill 'd at the pole,
If woman is there, there is happiness, too !"
Fig. 167. — "The Soiuce, " from paiuting by Thiiion.
CREDULITY
It is hard to imagine anything that the credulity of the human
mind can not accept as believable. This does not mean only among
the ignorant, but among the educated as well. On the other hand,
scepticism may become as great an evil as credulity. When the
discoveries of the x-ray and the phonograph were first announced,
some scientists regarded the report as a hoax.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 315
But really scientific men neither accept nor reject sucli an-
nouncements offhand, but carefully investigate, before expressing
an opinion; and even then, they may come to wrong conclusions
as was the case in the following story, related in an encyclopedic
history of the world, entitled Welt-Gemaelde Gallerie, published
in 1740 in 17 volumes, occupying about 5 feet of shelf-room:
''A poor boy in Saxony (1593) lost a molar tooth in the sev-
enth year of his age ; but another tooth grew in its place which con-
sisted of solid gold. Whereupon the celebrated physician. Jacobus
Horsting, Professor at liolmstadt, examined the case and reported
that there Avas no fraud but that the tooth really was good ducat
gold." This case is generally mentioned in works on Medical
History.
I have frequently seen l)ooks, the authors of which said of
certain things — "it is not known" — or "it can not be explained."
In sucli cases a more correct mode of expression would be "I
do not know" or "I can not exiilain," — because in some such
cases others could have explained to the authors what they said
could not be explained. Yet there are some statements that are
so preposterous, so contrary to our experience, that we are justi-
fied in proclaiming them to be impossible; yet such statements
may be made and believed in good faith by some Avho are more
credulous. This disposition to believe readily, is the basis on
which rests much of the superstructure of the various religions
and mythologies of the world.
I will relate here some circumstances reported as facts in
the History mentioned above, which I think will not be believed
by any of my readers.
Veronace, or Veronica, is the name assigned by tradition to
the woman cured of an issue of blood by touching the robe of Je-
sus (Mark v, 25-34) ; she is said to have wiped the perspiration
from the brow of Jesus on his way to the crucifixion with a napkin
or handkerchief, and the features of Jesus were thereby im-
pressed on the fabric. It is said that this napkin is still kept in
St. Peter's Church at Rome.
"At the Court of Emperor Wenceslaus of Bohemia, toward
the end of the XIV Century, there was a magician who was skilled
in the black and damnable art of sorcery beyond all others. He
swallowed a competing sorcerer alive and afterwards passed him
from his bowels into a tub, to the great amusement of the emperor
316 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
and his court. But at last his master whom he served — the devil —
caught him up and carried him into the air and tore him to pieces."
This same history tells us that Weneeslaus showed in infancy
that he would grow up to be a had man. It was a requirement
in those days that those to be baptized had to be naked ; when the
baby AVenceslaus (1368) was immersed in the baptismal font, he
urinated and defecated into it which was taken as an omen that
he would grow up an impious and Avicked man.
"In 1380 a very large stag was captured on whose neck was
a heavily gilded copper collar on which was engraved: 'Hoc me
Caesar donavit' (Caesar gave me this), from Avliich it followed
that the stag was about 1400 years old."
In 1386, according to this same truthful work, we are told
that "in Flanders a peculiar sea-monster was caught, namel}^ a
mermaid resembling a woman, which was kept in captivity in
Harlem and educated so that it could do all sorts of feminine
work and could hardly l)e distinguished from a human being, ex-
cept that it could not talk" (of course this proved that it was
not a real woman ! ) .
"About the beginning of the XIV Century the house in which
the annunciation to Mary was made, Avas transported by angels
from Nazareth to Loreto, where it still stands as a shrine for
pilgrimage" (Fig. 168).
"In 1284 a delegation from Poland came to Rome to ask the
pope to give them the body of a saint to become the patron saint
of their country. The pope went with them to a crypt where lay
the bodies of several saints, and in a joking manner asked these
bodies — "Who wants to become patron saint of Poland?" The
body of the Holy Martyr Florian thereupon raised his hand and
was taken home to Poland by the delegation" (Fig. 169).
"In 1628, in Jetzehohe in Holstein, occurred a terrible affair;
a spook or ghost one night twisted off the heads of twenty oxen.
In the following year ghosts twisted off the heads of 12 persons
at Frankfort."
"In 1694, in Wiirttemberg near Hohen-Asberg, several oak-
trees produced from their own branches a crop of genuine and
well-tasting grapes. ' '
"In 1697 a report came from Rome that a Avoman Avho had
been married for 19 years, suddenly changed sex to that of a male,
so that the marriage had to be dissolved."
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
317
"Near Rostock, in Mecklenburg, a Avoman gave birth to fifteen
living cliildren at one time, all of whom remained alive."
''In Rome a woman gave birth to tliree sons and two daugh-
ters all of whom remained alive; the pope granted her an annuity
to help raise them."
"In 1605, in the city of Spej^er, a girl 12 years old w^as found
Fig. 168. — Angels transferring the liouse in which the annunciation took place, from
Nazareth to Loreto.
Fig. 169. — The corpse of St. Florian signifying liis willingness to become the patron
saint of Poland.
who had not taken food for two years ; and a young woman who
had abstained from all food for seven years."
"In 1709, at Chareaudun, France, the governor's wife, 50
years old, gave birth at the same time to four boys and three
girls. ' '
Near Venlo, France, a 50 year old spinster was found who
a
318 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
had taken neither food nor drink in fourteen years. She did not
appear wasted, except that she had to lie in bed continnally. ' '
''The year 1722 was a fruitful year. Many women gave birth
to triplets. At Ahorn, near Coburg, a woman gave birth to four
boys, and at Corin on the Lossa another woman had four girls.
At Petersburg a poor woman gave birth to six living children.
At Arozzo, near Florence, a woman childless during 47 years of
married life, gave birth to a son in her 86th year."
''At Temesvar there were living, in 1727, a couple, the man
172, the woman 162 years old; they had been married for 146
3'ears, and their great-grandson was 26 years old."
"The Bavarian baron, Babone of Ahrensberg, Avith two wives,
had 32 sons and 8 daughters, all of whom grew to maturity.
But the following story takes the medal! "The sister of
Emperor William of Bavaria, Avho Avas murdered in 1256, Avas
Margaret, Duchess of Henneberg. Once upon a time a poor
woman, carrying tAvins in her arms, asked her for assistance.
But the Duchess drove her away, calling her a Avhore, saying that
it was impossible to haA^e tAA^o children at one time from one man.
The poor woman called upon God to prove her innocence and
prayed that He would cause Margaret to have as mam^ children as
there Avere days in a year; she then Avent away. At her next
confinement the Duchess gave birth to 365 children, all living, and
each of about the size of a little chick, one-half l^oys and one-half
girls, all of which were baptized by the Bishop of Utrecht, nam-
ing all the boys 'John' and all the girls 'Elizabeth.' But they
all, as Avell as the mother, died the same day" (Fig. 170).
And mind you, these stories before publication passed the
critical (?!) censorship of the editorial force of an Encyclopedia
of History! They ivere practically vouched for as true! There
Avere a feAV such stories in regard to Avhich doubt Avas expressed,
but this simply emphasized that AAdiere no doubt Avas expressed,
they Avere approved as being verified and true.
It is definitely claimed by some ecclesiastical Avriters that it
is better to believe hy faith than by reason ; that there are many
things that our reason may reject, and that it becomes our duty
to believe them anyhoAV. This is easily said, but an lionest man
can not do this. As most people look at the subject, things that
are contrary to reason can not and nmst not be accepted; it is dis-
honest to do so. No])ody Avould make this a duty, Avhen it applies
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
319
to stories like the above ; why should it be a duty to other matters
even more important than those.
There are those who can, or protend they can, believe what
they are told; they make good "believers." There are others who
doubt and can not ])elieve until they are convinced of the truth of
a statement. AVhethor this statement is actually true or not has
nothing to do with the case, for if anyone is convinced that some-
thing is true and he believes it, it might nevertheless be untrue,
and vice versa.
Scientific men approach various prol)lems from a sceptical
standpoint; they hold aloof from conclusions while they inves-
tigate. Their researches ma^^ lead them to believe certain con-
clusions, or they may be confirmed in their attitude of doubt ; in
i^l'P:*
Fig. 170. — Three hundred and sixty-five children at one birth, from Welt-Gremaelde
G-allerie. 1740-1780.
the latter case we call this mental attitude scepticism — which is
practically a despairing of a possibility to know the truth; it is
an honest doubt regarding what Herbert Spencer called the
* ' Unknowable. ' '
Agnosticism is also a doubt, but one that has not come to any
final conclusion; it leaves the mind open to further argument.
Practically, an agnostic is in the position of one who asserts "I do
? >
not know." The terms "agnostic" and "agnosticism'' were in-
troduced by Huxley in 1869 ; they were suggested by the inscrip-
tion " agnosto tJieo" (to the unknown God), Acts xvii, 23.
Many think that Atheism and Agnosticism are the same thing,
but they are not. Atheism was very popular about the middle of
the nineteenth century ; it was characterized by David in the fift^^-
320 SEX AND SEX M^ORSHIP
third psalm: "Tlie fool liatli said in his heart, There is no God."
The ''fool" part of this ]oroposition is not the imbelief in a god,
but the pretending to a knowledge in regard to the existence or
non-existence of a god that is not given to man. It is an opinion
that is as unjustifiable as the positive assertions in regard to the
existence and to the nature of God made by those of the opposite
mental temperament.
Atheism means a denial of the existence of God; most men
who call themselves atheists are not so in fact; to not believe in
the existence of a God because we are not convinced that he exists
is not atheism, but agnosticism; an agnostic does not believe in
God because he has not been convinced that a God exists, and per-
haps believes that it is impossible to have any knowledge on the
subject; and atheism pretends to know positively that there is no
God, which is quite another matter. It is for this reason that athe-
ists are few now while agnostics are quite plentiful.
The poet Young expressed the sex-diiference in regard to
this subject as follows :
"Atheists have been but rare; since nature's birth
Till now, she-atheists ne'er appeared on earth."
Although Cicero thought ''that we are led hy nature to tliink
that there are gods, and as Ave discover, Inj reason, of what descrip-
tion they are," neither of these propositions is easy for us to
accept. We can not, by reason, come to any positive knowledge
of a God or Creator of tlie universe; yet it is just as difficult to
imagine that the universe created itself; if we allow ourselves to
be influenced by the greater intuitive insight of women, to believe
that there is a God, we may possibly believe the truth; but Ave can
not know it. Therefore, from the standpoint of reason, alone,
agnosticism is most alluring; from the standpoint of inherited
ideas and from intuition, theism appeals to us. But atheism is
more or less foreign to human nature.
Pliny the Elder (I Century, a.d.) did not deny the gods, but
he said: "It is ridiculous to suppose that the great head of all
things, Avhatever it be, pays any regard to human affairs."
Among the ancient philosophers agnosticism Avas not uncom-
mon; but among the early Christians faith Avas substituted for
reason. It is related of Tertullian, an early Christian Avriter, that
he claimed faith to be higher than reason, and gave the folloAving
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 321
as an example: "Crucifixus est Dei films; et morhms est Dei filius;
prorsus est quid incpfnm est. Et sepidtus, resurrexit; cerium
est, quia impossihile est.'' Which moans: "The Son of God was
crueiiied; and the Son of God died; this is true hecanse it is silly.
And having heen Imried, he rose again; this is to he depended
upon, because it is impossible." The age when such reasoning
was acceptable is fast disappearing. To believe that God could
make the sun stand still for Joshua is asking one to believe what
is impossible; to say that it "must be true because it is absurd,"
is worse than no argument at all.
Hugo Grotius, who lived from 1583 to 1645 was one of the
first, or possibly tlic first writer on law, who tried to establish a
proper basis for the laws of government outside of the Bible;
and he wrote: "The law of nature is unalterable; God Himself
can not alter it any more than he can alter a mathematical axiom.
The law has its source in the nature of man as a social being ; it
would be valid even if there were no God, or if God did not inter-
fere in the government of the world."
AVhat Grotius says of law is true of all our beliefs. They
must not go against the laws of nature; if any statement goes
against the laws of nature, or against conunon sense, it can not
be believed; it is unhelievahle.
Lycanthropy
AVhen Lycaon, the first mythical King of Arcadia, introduced
the worship of Zeus into his country, he invited the god to be his
guest at a banquet (he made a sacrifice) at which he set before
the god a dish cooked from human flesh (made a human sacrifice).
Zeus was so disgusted and offended that he pushed the dish away
and punished the King by changing him into a wolf ; according to
some other authors he killed him with a thunderbolt (Fig. 171).
Superstitious men in all times believed that magicians, sor-
cerers, witches and the gods could accomplish changes of this kind
at will; the assuming of the forms of animals or other forms is
called Lycanthropy, — a Greek word implying a change to a wolf,
as in the case of were-wolves — but is made to include all changes
of former identity.
Witches (Fig. 172) made themselves invisible by anointing
their bodies with an ointment made of human fat; or they could
322
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
make candles by the light of which they could see, but to others
the darkness remained, by digging up the body of a child, cutting
off its fingers and pulling wicks through them and using these as
candles.
Sorcerers changed themselves into were-wolves or vampires,
or they could fly through the air, etc. Belief in the power of
sorcerers, fairies, witches, etc., to assmne different shapes, or to
change others into animals was very widespread. Fairy tales and
folklore abound in stories of this character.
Of course, what men could do, the gods could also do, and so
Fig. 171. — Lycaon, changed to a wolf.
Engraving, XVIII Century.
Fig. 1/
70 — ' ' Tho Witelies, ' " painted about
1500, by Hans Baldung.
we find stories in mythology, especially in Greek mythology, of
changes of this kind. It is not the intention to enumerate many
such cases ; a few will suffice.
A curious story of belief in lycanthropy was found among
the ancient Aztecs. The prehistoric Mexicans believed that preg-
nant women would be changed to beasts, and their children to mice,
if any mistakes were made in the rituals of certain solemn sacri-
fices which were offered by women in an "interesting" condition.
An example of lycanthropy was related on p. 5, about Puru-
sha, a Hindu deity, and the creation of the various animals.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
323
Alcmene was the Avife of Electryon, king of Mycena; Jupiter
fell in love Adtli her, and assuming the shape of Electryon, while
the latter was away from home, went to Alcmene and slept w^ith
her. From this union resulted Hercules, a mortal, who after his
death was changed into a god.
Greek legend records that Jupiter fell in love with Antiope,
the beautiful daughter of the river god Asopus. Jupiter assumed
the shape of a satyr, and committed rape on Antiope. Then
Epopeus, King of Sicyon, took her against her will, but he was
compelled b}^ her uncle Lycus to give her up again. On the way
^V^.5^i' ^
Fig. 173. — Title page of Webster's
work on witchcraft (1719) ; shows the
witches as a fever delirium.
rig. 174. — Daphne pursued by Apollo,
changed to a laurel tree. EngTa%-ing,
XVIII Ceaitury.
home she gave birth to the tmiis Amphion and Zethus ; some said
that Amphion was the son of Jupiter, while Zethus was the son
of Epopeus.
Ovid relates a story that Actaeon, while hunting in the forest
with his hounds, came upon a secluded nook where the goddess
Diana was bathing in company with her attendant nymphs. The
virgin goddess felt so outraged at ha\dng been seen naked by
Actaeon, that she changed him into a stag, who was then chased
by his OAAm dogs and torn to pieces.
324 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Jupiter changed himself into a bull, to abduct Europa; into
a golden rain, to find access to a tower in which Danae was con-
fined, after which he accomplished his desires by impregnating
her; he changed himself into a swan to approach Leda, whom he
made pregnant; and a number of similar stories are told of this
amorous god.
Apollo became enamoured of the nymph Daphne and pursued
her to commit rape; she appealed to the river god Peneus, who
changed her into a laurel tree (Fig. 174) ; Apollo decreed that
ever after wreaths of laurel leaves should be conferred on victors,
and he himself wore such a wreath.
As a rule, the sex was not changed in such transformations.
The Scandinavian god Loki, a spirit of evil, however, changed
himself into a mare, and fooled the eight-legged horse of Wodan.
Many transformations into stars are told, but of these more
elsewhere.
The Kingfisher is a bird inhabiting the territory about the
Mediterranean Sea (the Alcedo ispida of the ornithologists) ; it
is blue-green above and rich chestnut on the breast. In medieval
times it was believed to have been the bird which was sent out
from the ark by Noah ; at that time however the Kingfisher was
a very plain gray bird. It flew straight up to heaven to get a
wide survey of the waters of the flood, and in so doing came so
near the sun that its breast was scorched to its present tint and
its back assumed the color of the sky overhead.
Its dried body kept in a house protected against lightning
and kept moths out of the garments.
In Greek mythology the unfortunate Ceyx and Alcyone were
transformed into Kingfishers.
ORIGIN OF RELIGIOUS IDEAS
We have no basis for fixing the time when mankind com-
menced to be interested in speculations about the gods and god-
desses. When we look at the features of the Pithecanthropus
(p. 26) we can readily see that such a creature, called ''pre-
human" by some, but generally admitted to have been archaic
human, could not philosophize on such subjects. His habits were
probablj^ similar to those of the animals about him; he does not
look as if ho had liad speech, and his intellectual wants were
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
325
exeeedm.^-ly limited. It is doubtful whether his actions were gov-
erned by reasoning; more likely they were instinctive, satisfying
his hunger, his sexual desires, etc., and perhaps being able to
make rude stone implements, or dig shelters or burrows for
himself. We can not imagine that he formed any ideas of a re-
ligious character, except perhaps that he may have been afraid
of ghosts, or dreams, which has even been observed in dogs. But
the P itliecanihro'ims , who probal)ly lived from 2,000,000 to 500,000
years ago, did not live in Western Asia, or in Southeastern Eu-
rope, in the neighborhoods where we find the first traces of an
intellectual development of man.
Nor is it likely that any man of the Piltdown or the Eoan-
Fig.
175. — PiltdowTi man, reconstructed Fig. 176. — The Neanderthal man; after
from skull found in Sussex, England.
Osborn's Men of the Old Stone Age.
tliropos (dawn of man) type, the earliest form of man found in
Europe, who lived there 500,000 years to 100,000 years ago was
capable of great intellectual accomplishments (Fig. 175).
In the latter periods of the Glacial age appeared still another
type of man, Avho,like the preceding, probably came from Asia,
but who certainly was not a European product of evolution ; he was
the Neanderthal man (Fig. 176), who lived in Southern Europe
(France, Spain, Italy, etc.) 50,000 and more years ago. This gen-
tleman also does not strike us as having much ability in the way
326 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
of deep thinking or speculating on the Unkno^vn. The man of
Les Chapelles aux Saints was a relative of his.
The last invasion from Asia was still another type, called
"Old man of Cro-Magnon" (Fig. 177). A restoration of his fea-
tures is here sho"v\m; teeth are replaced in the skull and the lat-
ter, or a cast of it, is covered on one side Avith sculptor 's modeling
wax, to the thickness the soft parts of the head usually have, and
his type is thus "restored." This man came from Asia, perhaps
15,000 to 30,000 years ago. He was in all probability the author
of the wonderful paintings and sculptures that have been discov-
ered in the caves of Southern Europe, and he was of the type of
Fig'. 177 — Cio-maguoii man; lestoied by coveiing the skull with modeler's wax to depth
of soft tissues on living men.
our European ancestors, who descended from this Homo sapiens
(the knowing man, or the wise man).*
This was probably the type called "Aryan stock" Avhich,
originating in inner Asia, spread out over India, westward to
Greece and beyond to Europe. It was probably the first type of
*It is interesting to learn in this connection that a statement was published in September,
1918, under tbe auspices of the French Academic des Inscriptions, regarding- the finding of another
cave in Southern France containing ancient cave paintings. These works of art are estimated to
be 30,000 years okl, and inchidc figures of reindeers, bisons, horses, bears, elephants, and rhinoc-
eroses; also, a bas-relief figure of a lion. The most curious figure is a silhouette of a man in mo-
tion, whose head and body are joined by an enormous neck ; the tipper and lower limbs are per-
fectly human, but the end of the vertebral column is prolonged into a distinct tail, and he goes
on-all-foiirs.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 327
limnan to wliom we can ascribe some of tliat priiiiitive Tolklorc
already referred to as having been developed in the regions about
the eastern end of the Mediterranean basin ; and if this is so, then
speculations about an unkno^\m world, a world of ghosts, of de-
mons, of gods and goddesses, first originated in the brains of this
mighty type of man, before whom the previous types disappeared,
whether by war and conquest and extermination, or by being ab-
sorbed by interbreeding — who can tell?
How Myths Travel and Become Modified
AVhen primitive man invented a fable to explain any phenom-
enon of nature, he may not have intended deliberately to start a
religious belief or theory. But as Avith the proverbial liar, who
tells a story so often that he finally believes it himself, some of
these myths gained credence as facts. Also, as in the case Avhen
any one of us hears a good story, we like to pass it along, or tell
it to a new audience. While some of the hearers soon forget such
fables, others retained them and repeated them, although with
slight variations which, b}^ many repetitions, became more dis-
similar but still retaining the general character of the original
version.
The progress of a story Avas once illustrated thus : When first
told, it Avas a lie ; a few years later it was referred to as a fake ;
after 25 years it Avas a fable ; after two centuries it had become a
myth; after five centuries it AA^as a tradition; one thousand years
had made it into an accepted belief, and at the end of two thou-
sand years it had been proclaimed as a dogma of faith.
The myth of Adam and Eve, for instance, traveled practically
around the Avorld ; it AA^as knoA^Ti to most of ancient Asia and Africa,
Avhen Europe was practically terra incognita; later it Avas dissem-
inated throughout Europe and on the discovery of America it
was carried there also. In Ceylon, at Adam's Peak, there is a
foot-print of Adam to Avhich pilgrimages Avere made many cen-
turies ago by the early inhabitants of that Island Avhen our Euro-
pean ancestors were still savages ; this footprint of Adam is prob-
ably just as authentic as the one of Jesus, Avhich is sIioaati in the
garden of a convent on the Mount of OUa^cs, near Jerusalem. The
names of Adam and Eve originated in India; they are Sanskrit,
and the early Joavs probably got their account in Genesis from
East Indian sources.
328 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
As already referred to, the myth is known to many people
but in some cases with different names and modified details. It
was accepted into the sacred writings of the Hindus, Jews, Chris-
tians, Mohammedans, etc., and is believed in by millions of peo-
ple who regard it as fact and not as myth.
We have also seen how similar ideas were believed in ancient
Egypt and India and Mexico and Yucatan. How such stories
were so widely disseminated can not, perhaps, always be traced;
but we can get some idea from known transmigrations of such
ideas.
In Dutch Guiana (South America) there are three tribes of
descendants of run-away slaves, mixtures of negro and Indian
blood, who are called by the Dutch "Bosch-Negers." These bush
negroes have in their religion traces of African Voodooism, South
American or Indian mythology, together with curious traces of
former Christian influence; their religion is a curious mixture of
lielief in a number of Pagan deities, but their chief god is Gran-
god (grand God), his wife is Maria, and his son is Jesi Kist.
The Javanese are generally Mohammedans, but their original
religion was a crude animism, a belief in a world-soul which per-
meates all things ; since everything, even sticks or stones, con-
tains some of this world-soul, fetichism is a part of this belief.
To tliis original belief they have added a lot of later ideas, so that
their present system of belief consists of a mass of incongruous
conceptions, separate elements having been taken from various
religions with which they have come into contact.
They are nominally Mohammedans, and while worshipping
they utter the Arabic formula "There is no God, but God, and
Mohammed is his prophet;" Init it is doubtful Avhether they un-
derstand what it means. They worship a great many spirits which
they call Hyang or Yang ; every village has its o\\m Hyang on whom
depends the weal or woe of that conununity; the altars for these
Hyangs are erected under trees and offerings of incense or flowers
are made to them.
Some of these spirits are equivalent to Disease Demons and
must be propitiated ; thus Mentik causes smut in the rice fields ;
Sawan produces convulsions in children; Dengen causes gout and
rheumatism; Ki gives men wealth in exchange for their souls;
Joseph (from the Koran) gives them beautiful children; they
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 329
pray to Moses for bravery, to Solomon for wisdom, to Jesus for
learning, etc.
The Congoese religion (inner Africa) is a gross feticliism or
animism, and their fetiches are made hy their sorcerers from
snail-shells, bird-dung, feathers, etc., and are supposed to possess
great magical powers; but their most potent fetiches are Chris-
tian crucifixes, to which they ascribe greater magical powers than
ever did the Christians, and they consider themselves exceedingly
lucky if they can get one of these charms or phylacteries.
Abyssinia contains several tribes, but the majority are Cau-
casians, although of very dark complexion. They are a well-built
people. Their religion is a primitive Christianity, corrupted by
many Pagan superstitions and Judaic ritual ; for instance, they
circumcise their boys, follow the Mosaic rules about food, they
baptize their children according to the Greek church rules and
keep the feast and fast days of that church; they worship many
saints and especially they worship the Virgin whom they call the
Queen of Heaven and Earth, and Avhom they consider the mediator
between themselves and God; marriages are patriarchal and po-
lygamy is permitted, but the children of the same father but by
different mothers grow up at enmity Avith each other. They also
worship the river Ga])a, which they consider sacred, as the Hindus
do the Ganges; on the feast of St. John the Baptist great disor-
derly crowds of Christians bathe in this river, and again, on
Christmas daj^, they bathe but in a devout and orderly manner.
It seems that one sacred bathing day is tainted with survivals of
l^hallic festival ideas, and the other is more in accordance with
Christian ideas.
Before the time of Mohannned the Arabs were Pagans and
worshipped many gods and goddesses ; when Mohammed promul-
gated his religion the Arabs adopted this religion, the main tenet
of which is expressed in the formula : "There is no God, but God ;"
this formula is repeated at the beginning of every prayer by a
Mohammedan, yet the Arabs did not notice anything incongruous
in continuing the worship of their former deities, who, they said,
were sons of Allah; in Mecca the goddesses, probably forms of
Astarte, were considered to be daughters of Allah.
As is the case with most other religions, they ascribed to their
gods and goddesses the same sexual relationships that prevailed
among themselves, and Allah therefore was a polygamist ; and he
330 SEX AND SEX WOESHIP
had two wives, Al-Lat and Al-Ozza. Mohammed did not combat
these views but merely ascribed a lower rank to the ancient Pagan
deities, reducing some of them even to demons and kobolds, etc.
About the time of the beginning of our Era there was a period
of great unrest among the thinkers of the world. Greek philosophy,
Platonism, Neo-Platonism, Manichaeism, Montanism, Gnosticism,
made great inroads on the older faiths, and Judaism underwent
many changes. Then, when Christianity came, it too met with all
the other competing ideas, and while at first it was fairly free from
Pagan ideas, it soon adopted the policy of making converts by
adapting itself to their views, so as not to make a change from
one of the other faiths to Christianity too abrupt or difficult.
The Christian Church took over everything it possibly could
and gave Christian explanations for the Pagan festivals, philos-
ophy, etc. ; in this way the simple faith of the early Christians be-
came swamped with foreign ideas, but the church-fathers amal-
gamated all the ideas into one more or less congruous mass of
doctrines, so that it has been fairly said, that "modern Chris-
tianity is based on pre-Christian Paganism and post-Christian
metaphysics." Much of what modern Christians believe is not
based on the Bible, but is derived from other sources.
For instance, at a very early stage of Christianity, they be-
lieved in One God; the belief was Unitarian; by about the begin-
ning of the third century the belief that Jesus Avas a son of God,
and was himself a God, prevailed quite generally, and then when a
third person, the Holy Ghost, was accepted by the church, the
belief was Trinitarian. These two divisions were fairly even in
numbers; but the influence of Origen (a fanatical self-castrated
zealot) established the theory of the Trinity more and more firmly,
until by about 400 a.d. the belief in the Trinity was general.
The philosophical definition of the Trinity varied much ; some
holding that the Father, Son and Holy Ghost were but different
names for the same God, l)ut manifesting himself in different
phases, and that the Trinity was of the same order as when Plato
and the later philosophers said of man that he was a Trinity of
Soul, Mind and Body. So God manifested himself as the Creator
(Father), the Redeemer (Son), and the Giver of Life (Holy
Ghost) ; but all three were but manifestations of different functions
or phases of the same thing, of the same God. Others, and pos-
sibly the majority, believed that each of these three was a dis-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 331
tinct individuality, and wliile tliey still spoke of One God, they
really had in nihul Three Clods,
WHAT ARE THE GODS?*
The habit of considering one religion (yonr own) as true and
all others as false, is as old as the religions themselves; but this
intolerance was more marked in medieval Christian religions than
at any other time.
Most of us, probably, inherit our faiths; it takes courage to
change them, when convinced that they are wrong. Even then,
though we are convinced that we can not believe them any longer,
it is seldom due to any real conviction, but mainly from mere
sentiment.
After all, the old Greek philosopher Philemon was as near
right as is posible for the human mind to be, when he said: "Re-
vere and worship God; seek not to know more; you need seek
nothing further."
The Greeks originally merely called the gods theoi — dispens-
ers, but had no names for them.
"Whence the gods severally sprang, whether or no they had
existed from eternity, what forms they bore — these are questions
of which the Greeks knew nothing until the other day, so to speak.
For Homer and Hesiod were the first to compose theogonies."
(Herodotus, about 450 b.c).
"We are led by nature to think that there are gods, and we
discover by reason of what nature they are." (Cicero.)
In a well-knoMai and very valuable book on Phallic worship
the author ascribes to Homer a prayer to god: "Hear me, 0 King,
whoever thou art!" This is misleading; Homer had very definite
ideas about the gods, and according to him each river had its
own deity. The prayer is ascribed to Odysseus, who is swimming
toward land, but encounters a strong current of a river emptying
into the sea; he does not know what river it is, but prays to the
unknown god of that river, and his prayer is heard; he escapes
from the seaward current and lands safely.
The fables told about the gods were known to be the imagin-
ings of their poets and writers by the higher classes among the
*By gods we mean here all non-natural or supernatural beings, imagined in any form, but
endowed with human attributes and generally as sexual beings; often, even, as very salacious beings.
332 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
ancients, bnt liy the ignorant plebs or public they were believed
as true,
Plato and Socrates candidly confessed that they would not
attempt to define the groat First Cause.
Menander, a Greek Gnostic, said: "Seek not to learn who
God is; they who are anxious to know what may not be kno^vn,
are impious." Menander anticipated the views of Herbert Spen-
cer about the "Unknowable" by several thousand years.
Some modern, as well as ancient writers say that all gods
were men ; in other words, that they were deified heroes. This is
probably true of many but does not apply to all. Herbert Spen-
cer's idea that the origin of the god idea must be sought in an-
cestor worship is a similar view.
Some explain the myths about the gods as a deification of
elementary forces and phenomena ; thus, rivers are sons of Terra
(earth) and Oceanus (ocean) ; the evaporated water from Ocean
falls on Earth (fertilizes her) and streams and rivers result. The
story of the war of the gods and Titans becomes merely an alle-
gorical account of the war of the elements. Some of the ancient
philosophers saw in these stories of gods and goddesses only a
physical, ethical, religious or historical explanation of the uni-
verse; Theogenes, for instance, considered Homer's writings to
be merely a physical philosophy, or as we now call it — natural
philosophy, or Physics.
Eumerides thought that there was nothing supernatural, and
that the mythologies were merely attempts at a historical expla-
nation of physical facts. The early Christians, like Augustine,
rather favored this view, and they thought that Zeus, Aphrodite,
and the other Greek gods and goddesses were originally real per-
sons, not divine, but diabolical, who had become transformed by
tradition into deities.
Porphyry ascribed to the myths about the gods a meaning
which was partly moral and partly deeply theosophical; the reli-
gious elements were for the purpose of controlling the masses.
This was also Aristotle's view, who considered the stories
as allegories invented by statesmen and legislators, "to persuade
the many, and to support the law."
Plutarch, in an essay on Superstition, said that "ignorance
about the gods which makes the obstinate man an atheist also be-
gets credulity in weak and pliant minds. The atheist fears notli-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 333
ing- because he believes nothing; the superstitions man believes
there are gods, l)nt they are unfriendly to him. A man who fears
the gods is never free from fear, whatever may befall him. He
extends his fear beyond his death and believes in the 'gates of
hell/ and its fires, in the darkness, the ghosts, the infernal judges,"
etc.
The Neo-Platonists taught that God and matter were the
same thing; they believed what is now termed "rationalism," a
realism amounting to materialistic pantheism: "Omnia unum,
quia, quicquid est, est Deus." (All things are one, because, what-
ever is, is God.)
Pantheism taught that the whole universe was endowed with
and pervaded by a divine but immaterial mind which manifests
itself in the plant as well as in the animal and man, in the instinct
of the bee as well as in men. On the death of any living organism,
its soul did not perish but simply reverted to the all-pervading
intelligence, to enter into new organisms as needed.
"It is not possible for us to set God before our eyes, or to
lay hold of him with our hands, which is the broadest way of per-
suasion that leads into the heart of man. For he is not furnished
with a human head on his body, two branches do not sprout from
his shoulders, he has no feet, no swift knees, no hairy parts ;* but
he is only a sacred and unutterable mind flashing through the
whole world with rapid thoughts." (Parmenides, born 515 b.c.)
The Pythagoreans said that all things were made of numbers ;
numbers are the true realities of the universe. The following is
an account of some of their theories recorded by Aristotle :
"But amongst these, and prior to them, those called Pyth-
agoreans, applying themselves to the study of the mathematical
sciences, first advanced these views ; and having nurtured therein
they considered the first principles of these to be the first prin-
ciples of all entities. But since, among these, numbers by nature
are the first, and in numbers they fancied they beheld many re-
semblances for entities and things that are being produced, rather
than in fire and earth and water; because, to give an instance,
such a particular property of numbers is justice, and such, soul
and mind; and another different one is opportunity; and it is the
case, so to speak, in like manner with each of the other things.
'Meaning, he has no genitals.
tThe ancient elements of material things.
334 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
"Moreover, also in mmibers discerning the passive conditions
and reasons of harmonies, since it was apparent that, indeed, other
things in their natnre were in all points assimilated nnto numbers,
and that the numbers were the first of the entire of nature, hence
they supposed the elements of nmnbers to be the elements of all
entities, and the Avhole heaven to be an harmony and number.
* * * Undoubtedly do these appear to consider number to be a
first principle, and as it were, a material cause of entities, and as
both their passive conditions and habits, and that the even and
the odd are elements of mnnber; and of these, that the one is
finite, and the other infinite, and that unity, doubtless, is composed
of both of these, for that it is both even and odd and that number
is composed of unity, and that, as has been stated, the entire
heaven is composed of numbers.
"But others of these very philosophers affirm that first prin-
ciples are ten in numlier, denominated in accordance with the fol-
lowing co-ordinate series, namely: —
Bound Infinite. Square Oblong.
Unity Plurality. Good Bad.
Rest Motion. Odd Even.*
Straight Crooked. Eight Left.*
Light Darkness. Male Female.* ' '
As demonstrated above, numbers are the cause of the exist-
ence of All Things ; numbers are as the Gods.
Xenophanes said (about 550 b.c.) : "There is one God, the
greatest among gods and men, neither in form nor thought like
unto mortals. He sees all over, thinks all over, and hears all
over. But without toil he sways all things by the thought of his
mind. And he abideth ever in the same place, moving not at all;
nor doth it befit him to go about, now hither, now thither. But
mortals think that the Gods are born as they are, and have percep-
tion like theirs, and voice and form.
"Yes, and if oxen or lions had hands and could paint with
their hands and produce works of art as men do, horses would
paint the forms of the Gods like horses, and oxen like oxen. Each
would represent them with bodies according to the form of each.
So the Ethiopians make their Gods black and snubnosed ; the
Thracians give theirs red hair and blue eyes. Homer and Hesiod
*For the importance of these series, see Gemetria, p. 104 and p. 194, as having bearing on sex.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 335
have ascribed to tho Gods all iliiii.i;s that are a shame and a dis-
grace among men, thefts and adulteries and deception of one an-
other. * * *
"There never was nor wdll be a man who has clear certainty
as to what I say about the Gods and about all things; for even
if he does chance to say what is right, yet he himself does not
know that it is so. But all are free to guess.
"These are guesses something like the truth. The Gods have
not sho"\\Ti forth all things to man from the beginning, but by
seeking they gradually find out what is better."
Protagoras (about 500 b.c.) said: "Concerning the Gods, I
can not say whether they exist or not. ' '
We have previously referred to Hesiod's theories of religion;
it is practically a history of sexual relations and sexual deeds and
valor of the ancient gods.
The helplessness and dependence of men on the will of the
gods is told by Hesiod in this fable: "Now then -will I speak a
fable to kings, wise even though they are. Thus the hawk ad-
dressed the nightingale of variegated throat, as he carried her
in his talons, when he had caught her, very high in the clouds.
"She then, pierced on all sides by his crooked talons, was
wailing piteously, whilst he victoriously addressed his speech to
her:
" 'Wretch, wherefore criest thou? 'tis a much stronger that
holds th«e. Thou wilt go that way by which I may lead thee,
songstress though thou art: and my supper, if I choose, I shall
make or let go. But senseless is he who chooses to contend
against them that are stronger, and he is robbed of victory and
suffers griefs in addition to indignities.' " * * *
"AVhen he has suffered, the senseless man learns this. * * *
Whoso giveth fair Judgment to strangers and to citizens, and
does not overstep aught of justice, for these a city blooms. * * *
"For them bears Earth much substance: on the mountains
the oak at its top indeed yields acorns,* and midway bees ; * * *
women bear children like unto their sires ; * * * and the fer-
tile field yields its increase. But they, to whom evil, wrong and
hard deeds are a care, to them Avide-seeing Jove, the son of Cronos,
destines punishment. ' '
'Before Demeter taught the Greeks the art of agriculture, they lived mainly on acorns.
336 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Tliales (about 585 b.c.) was said to be the first person who
affirmed "that the souls of men were immortal," and he was the
first person who discovered the path of the sun * * * and who
defined its ma.^"nitude as being seven hundred and twenty times
as great as that of the moon. * * * But Aristotle and Hippias
say that he attributed souls also to lifeless things, forming his
conjectures from the nature of the magnet and of amber, * * *
And the following is quoted as a saying of his: "God is the
most ancient of all things, for he had no birth: * * *"
Cicero (born 105 b.c.) said: "Should I attempt to search into
antiquity and jDroduce from thence what the Greek writers have
asserted, it would appear that even those who were called their
principal gods, were taken from among men up into heaven. " * *
"And this may further be brought as an irrefragable argu-
ment for us to believe that there are gods, — that there never was
a nation so barbarous, nor any people in the world so savage, as
to be without some notion of gods."
Herodotus (about 450 b.c.) said: "From where each god
comes, whether they have always existed and what their forms
may be, all this is known, so to say, only since ^^esterday and the
day before that. For Hesiod and Homer, who lived not more than
four hundred years before me, invented a history of the gods for
the Hellenes, and gave each god his name and his honors, and who
designated their accomplishments and their forms."
Lucretius was a Roman writer of the last century b.c; he
wrote largely also on science. He is celebrated for his clearness
as a thinker, noted for his bold and logical statements of specula-
tive theories, and his application of them to the interpretation of
human life and of nature. All moral and physical facts are con-
sidered by him in their relation to one great organic system or
power, which takes the place of a deity and which he calls Natura
daedala rerum (the skilful nature of things) and the most benefi-
cent manifestations of which he symbolizes and almost deifies as
''Alma Venus" (propitious or indulgent love). In his concep-
tion of nature are united the ideas of law and order, of ever-
changing life and the dependence upon each other of the immensity
of the universe, individuality and all-pervading subtlety under
which the universe is conceived by his intelligence, and his imag-
ination.
He disclaims a belief in a supernatural government of the
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 337
world by powers in tho nature of gods, lie does not helieve in a
futnre life, but the main oliject is to controvert the popular ideas
of the Olympian gods and to combat the belief in the horrors of
Hades.
Pliny the Elder (about 60 A.n.) believed in a religion of Hu-
manity Avhich Avas a i^recursor of the modern religion of positivism
or of Humanity as expounded in the nineteenth century by Comte.
He said : "Nature and nature's work are one ; and to suppose there
is more than one universe is to believe there can be more than one
nature, Avhich is madness (furor) ; if there is a god, it is vain to
inquire his form or shape ; He is entirely a Being of feeling and
sentiment and intelligence and not of tangible existence. God is
what Nature is ; God can not do what Nature can not do ; He can
not kill himself, nor make mortals immortal; nor raise the dead
to life; nor cause one who has lived not to have lived at all, or
make tA\dce ten anything but twenty."
He saluted Nature as the parent of all things: ''Salve, parens
rerum omnium Natura!" (Hail, Nature, the parent of all things).
"Homo est Creator Dei!"
Livy tells of Numa Pompilius, that, in 181 b.c, two boxes were
found buried at the foot of the Janiculum, one purporting to con-
tain his body, and one purporting to contain copies of his writ-
ings. The first was empty; the other contained 14 books relat-
ing to philosopln^ which "lieing found to have a tendency to
undermine the established system of religion" were immediately
burned publicly.
The spirit of persecution for the sake of a difference of
opinion is old; it comj)elled Socrates to drink the poisoned cup,
and it has prevailed in an especially virulent manner during the
persecutions of the early Christians under Nero, Caligula, Cara-
calla, and other Roman emperors, as well as under the Inquisition
in the medieval Christian church.
The following is a literal translation from an Encyclopedic
History of the World, published in 1740 to 1780 :
"In the year 1688 there was a nobleman, Casimirus Linzynsky
Podsedeck Brzesky, who not onl}" orally denied the true nature of
God but also tried to maintain such opinions in his writings, and
who proved thereby that he was a public atheist, which is a rare
338 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
occurrence, since secret atlieism and a subtle denial of God is un-
fortunately much practiced in this Avorld.
"This nobleman was arrested at Warsliau by order of the
Bishop, because there was found among other horrible blasphe-
mies in his devilish writings, composed in the hellish sulphur pool,
the folloA^nng axiom: "Dens non est creator hominis, sed homo
est creator Bet, qui Deum sihi finxit ex nihilo." (God is not the
creator of man, but man is the creator of God, who made a God
for himself out of nothing.)
"Notwithstanding this, several devilish Poles, also claiming
nobility, tried to defend the evil-minded man, by which means the
trial was actually delayed until the next year. But on the 5th day
of February, 1689, he was first tried in public council, then deliv-
ered to the ecclesiastical authorities under the bishop of Lieif-
land, deputed for the trial, who declared him guilty and delivered
him to the high court of the realm. Here the Lithuanian bishop
acted as accuser and submitted especially a book of fifteen sheets
Avhich Brzesky had written Avith his own hand, and in which he
had diligently collected all evidence from heathenish and other
blasphemous scribes by which the true nature of God is denied,
and in which he closed each chapter mtli the final sentence: "Ergo
non est Deus.' (Therefore, God does not exist!) And he did
this not for the purpose of searching for the truth, as was proved
by this, that he added: 'We atheists believe thus, and this is our
conviction.' We omit other blasphemous quotations.
"The accused asked for an advocate, but this was peremp-
torily refused. On the 29th of the month Linzynsky's accuser and
six other witnesses, took the required oath, that they had not
brought the accused to this trial through malice, and had found no
other of his writings but those produced in court, consequently
had withheld nothing that might serve for his defence ; whereupon
Linzinsky on the first of March recanted his errors in church, on
which occasion the condemned man lay on a specially constructed
platform {' chavot' or scaffold) in front of the altar in the pres-
ence of the whole congregation. After the sermon the bishop sat
down before him on a chair while a priest read to him a revoca-
tion and retraction of his hellish errors, which he repeated word
for word, amidst many tears. When this was concluded the bishop
granted him absolution for his sins and administered a moderate
flagellation, after wliicli tlie bishop descended from the platform,
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 339
whilst the atheist iinph)red tlie mercy of (lod. of t]ie king, and of
the people.
"On the 18th of the same month the death sentence was pro-
nonnced on the defendant Linzynsky by the Chief Marshal, to
this etTect: that his writings, while he holds them in his hand,
shall be burned on the market place, after which he shall be taken
beyond the limits of the city and be burned alive, his goods to be
confiscated, the house in which he lived to be torn down and the
place whereon it stood to be left vacant forever. As the sentence
was being read the Bishop of Rosen and the Bishop of Lieff-
land approached the throne of the king and asked for a milder
sentence, whereupon the condemned man spoke, while he fell on
his knees, and amidst many tears, asked that the torture of having
his hand burned with his Avritings held in them, and of his being
burned at the stake be changed to decapitation, which the king
graciously granted. The sentence Avas thereupon executed, so
that the condemned man held his Avritings at the end of a stick
Avhile he burned them; then he Avas decapitated, his body taken
beyond the city limits and there burned; the ashes Avere loaded in
a cannon and tired in the direction of TartarA^"*
Julius Caesar Vanninus, of Taurisano, Italy, born at Naples,
Avas arrested in 1619 at Toulouse for having uttered "atheistic
sentiments," and Avas condemned to be burned at the stake. His
offence AA^as really that he had good-naturedly ridiculed the pre-
tensions of some astrologers and said something about the stars
which Avas not approved by the ecclesiastical authorities. ^Yhen
he AA^as about to be executed, his tongue Avas torn from his throat
with pincers and then cut off and burnt, at Avhich, as the editor
rather gleefully remarks, "he roared like a bull." After that he
was burnt at the stake.
These two examples shoAv a peculiar spirit of persecution, or
intolerance, Avhich made it difficult of arguing about the beliefs of
the masses or eA^en of indiAdduals. But it Avas a Avidely spread
spirit of intolerance and many thousands of dissenters from the
authorized faith Avere burnt at the stake. BetAveen the years 1600
and 1670 the inquisition in Spain alone burnt aliA^e 31,912 Adctims.
Curiously enough, this mode of execution Avas introduced to avoid
spilling human blood (Fig. 178).
*Tartary is sometimes used as a synonym for hell.
340
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
In many countries tlie victims were burnt naked, so that the
blistering of the skin and the writhing of the muscles and the
contortions of the limbs would be more impressive as a deterrent
for the onlookers. Such was the case for instance in Mexico.
Also, in German works on history the autos de fe are usually
figured with tlie victims naked.
Fig. 178. — Burning of John Underbill, on Tower Green; Tower of London.
Fig. 179. — Burning of negro at Texarkana, Texas, February 20, 1892.
In Spain, etc., the victims wore a single garment, the "san
benito," on which were figured devils, etc. ; when the fires were kin-
dled this garment readily burned away and the victim was prac-
tically naked.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 341
A papal bull, in 1816, put an end to torture and death at the
stake for opinion's sake.
Burning at the stake has been resorted to, however, in our
owTi country by mobs, mainly for the punishment of negroes who
committed rape on wliite Avomen or girls (Fig. 179).
Primitive Beliefs
There are l)ut few people who have no theories about super-
natural powers ; most people have some ideas of this kind though
they may be hazy and lack system; but they may have some in-
definite dread of certain unknoAvn influences of this kind, akin
to the fear experienced by many when they are in the dark in a
strange place.
The Anamese, of Cochin China, have no religion; they have
certain ceremonies in honor of their ancestors, but these do not
seem to be of the nature of worship.
The Bechwana had no traces of religion or of belief in super-
natural powers, except such as they have acquired from mission-
aries, etc., since their first contact with other people.
The Bongo people have no idea of a deity, but they believe
in a sort of ' ' luck ; ' ' they go naked, but wear an ornamental girdle
about the waist. They are very low in the social scale ; marriage
is by purchase, Imt a man may not buy more than three wives.
The ancient Greek writers made mention of some troglodites,
or cave-dwellers in Africa, that they were rude people living in
caves or excavations in the sides of hills, that they owned the
women in common (promiscuous cohabitation), were cannibals of
the stone age, had no religion and no language (meaning no
Greek!) and that they extended even to Europe. This may be an
early reference to a tribe or race still very numerous in the dense
forests of Africa, who still live mainly on hmnan flesh supplied
through wars, or by Arab traders in slaves, in exchange for gold,
rubber and ivory.
In South America, the Charruas of Uruguay (in 1512, as re-
ported by the missionary Juan Diaz de Solis) had no trace of
any religion; their habits were very simple, and they had neither
the vices nor the superstitions of the other South American
Indians.
Likewise the Botocudos, another South American Indian
342 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
tribe, had no religion (remember, that religion must be accom-
panied by worship) of any kind, but they were afraid of ghosts.
They believed that the moon was the Creator of the world, but
they did not worship the moon. They had neither a trace of re-
ligion nor a trace of clothing of any kind. Several tribes of In-
dians in Brazil are cannibals, and go entirely naked ; they have no
religion of any kind.
The Juangs of Bengal, the Fuegians and the Andamanese
are said to have no idea and no word for God, no idea of a future
life and no religious ceremonies of any kind.
The Veddahs are an aboriginal tribe in Ceylon. They are
a diminutive tribe, the men about 5 feet tall, and the women less.
They are cave-dwellers, clothe themselves mth a few leaves, do
not use fire but devour their food uncooked and eat whatever they
can get, vermin, reptiles, etc. They can not count, nor have they
any idea of marking the time of day, much less of weeks and sea-
sons ; they can not distinguish colors and they never laugh. They
have no conceptions of any supernatural beings or gods, but they
believe that there are certain anthropomorphic beings, or evil
spirits (who may however be real men of neighboring savage
tribes) and they hold rude dances accompanied by shouts to
scare away these beings.
The Hottentots of Africa are not much higher; they can
count only to 20 ; but they hold their women in very high esteem,
the men even swearing by their sisters. The only trace of reli-
gion, if so it can be called, is a form of totemism; the women
eat apart from the men, but this is on account of a peculiar form
of tapu; hares and rabbits may be eaten by women, but not by the
men, while the blood of beasts and the flesh of moles can be eaten
by men but not by the women. Curiously enough, swine are tapu
to both men and women and are not eaten at all.
Eeligion is a feeling, either of fear, or of gratitude, which
arises in the minds of men in the presence of unkno^^m influences
which either harm or benefit them ; but it does not necessarily fol-
low that this feeling is a religion, although it disposes to religious
sentiments. It is only when man begins to ascribe volition or
thought to such powers, and when he tries to propitiate them by
offerings or worship, or to influence them by prayers, that it be-
comes religion.
It is extremely doubtful whether early primitive man was
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 343
even as far advanced as the Bechwana, Bongo, Cliarruas, Boto-
cudos, Juangs, Fuegians, Esquimaux, or similar tribes, and prim-
itive man may liave continued in such condition for untold ages,
hundreds of thousands if not several millions of years. In fact,
man must liave made considerable advancement before he had
any urgent mental disposition to speculate beyond his most im-
mediate wants, the ability to satisfy hunger and to gratify his
sexual desires. But when he felt a need of satisfying a desire to
understand nature about him, and to speculate about the causes
of phenomena about him, this primitive religious desire was prob-
ably an indistinct naturism, or an awe inspired by the natural
phenomena conjectured as living and conscious powers; it was
but natural for primitive man to attribute the hmnan character-
istics of life, action and thought, and especially of sex, to all phe-
nomena or forces of nature, thus creating in his o^vn mind various
gods presiding over winds, floods, heat of summer, frost of A\dn-
ter, etc, ; these creations of the imagination of primitive men have
been called departmental gods, which must have antedated by
many generations any higher conceptions of deities.
Possibly one of the earliest ideas of the supernatural was
the fear of ghosts; Avhen the savage dreamt of seeing a departed
dead friend, he naturally concluded that he saw his friend him-
self in ghost form; he dreamed of seeing him with his weapons,
clothes, etc., therefore he knew that these had souls or ghosts
also ; this led to a belief in animism, a belief in a sort of souls
inhabiting everything, and fetichism was the result. Simjole ob-
jects, such as sticks and stones, feathers, etc., Avere supposed to
be capable of exerting magical poAvers, or to act as talismans, and
were thought to be able to compel the imknoA\ai poAv^ers of nature,
or primitive gods, to Avork the A^dll of the possessor of the talis-
mans. A modified belief in fetiches survives eA^en among our-
selves ; for lucky coins, buckeyes, horse-shoes or SAvastika stick-
pins, amulets and charms, medallions, and A^arious gems as birth-
stones, etc., are A^alued by many.
Bishop CallaAvay says that the Bushmen of Africa call God
Ikquum, Avhicli means ' ' Father Avho is aboA^e. ' ' On the other hand,
a Bushman said that his tribe Avorshipped tAvo rocks or stones,
one male, one female. They pray to the male rock for success in
hunting; the female rock is supposed to be an evil spirit, and if
they are unsuccessful and fail to secure any game, they beat the
344 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
female rock. As usual, the female gets the worst of it! These
fetich stones of the African ' ' sacred places ' ' are often meteorites,
wliich were everywhere regarded with superstitions reverence and
awe (Fig. 180).
The propitiation of ghosts was probably the basis of many
early religious offerings, among the lower races.
To keep the ghost of the departed chief contented in the other
world, his belongings in this world were sent there with him. His
wives, horses and slaves were killed and buried with him, or in
many tribes, were buried alive in his grave.
In some African tribes a deep and large grave was dug into
'^;/;^.'?
Fig. 180: — African fetieli place; a tree and twO' stones.
which the chief's wives and slaves were put, with their ankles and
wrists broken, so they could not try to climb out of the pit; the
chief was laid on top of them and they Avere left Avithout food or
drink, but guarded so that none might escape, until all were dead
Avhen the grave was filled up; the clothes, ornaments, weapons,
etc., of the chief Avere burned so that the ghosts of these things
might go to the other Avorld also. Such or similar were the first
propitiatory otforings to the ghosts, — ^mention of it is found in
the Rig-Vedas, the Zend-Avesta, in the early books of the Jewish
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 345
Bible (the Pentateuch) as well as in tlie Avritings of the ancient
Egyptians, Greeks and Eomans.
Suttee, in India, was a similar practice. It is not a part of
Bralnnanism, hnt was (or is!) a survival of a very ancient rite.
On the death of a husband his favorite wife voluntarily went on
the funeral pile and was burned ^\ith his body, so that she miglit
serve him in the other world. The Avord means ''good wife;" the
practice is now forbidden by law, but there is reason to believe
that suttee is still practiced in isolated districts. The widoAv usu-
ally is intoxicated with stupefying and. poisonous drinks, so that
she hardly appreciates Avhat she is doing, and shortly before she
goes to the funeral pj^re the priests administer a big dose of
opium, so that it is possible that she is beyond feeling much pain.
Most nations in Asia, Africa and America sacrificed wives,
slaves, horses, etc., on the graves of their dead, before they came
in contact Avith civilized ideas.
The music at the Avakes of the Irish was originally meant to
scare aAvay cAdl spirits Avhich might lie in Avait to take the soul of
the departed.
Among some North American Indians, they go out in front
of the dead man's tepee and sing, shout and shoot off their fire-
arms for a similar reason. In some tribes they light and main-
tain a fire for four days, to light the Avay to the happy hunting
grounds.
The ancient Greeks and Romans placed a small coin in the
moutli of the dead, so the corpse could pay his ferriage OA^er the
Styx; the Irish place a coin in the dead man's hand — no telling!
He might need it!
Some trilies in Guinea throAV their dead into the sea, so as
to get rid of the ghosts ; modern Egyptians turn the body of their
dead around and around as rapidly as possible so as to make the
soul dizzy; the ghost can not orient itself Avell, then, and is not
likely to find its Avay back ; the natiA^es of Australia tie the hands
of a corpse together so that it can not scratch itself out of the
graA^e to haunt them; in some parts of Southeastern Europe a
stake is driven through the body of the corpse in the graA^e, to
preA^ent it coming back as a A^ampire or Avere-Avolf ; and still other
tribes moA^e their encampment after a funeral, so the ghosts can
not trace them. In all these measures Ave see a fear of ghosts.
The Avorship among the Greeks of the Manes, or the ghosts
346 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
of the departed, was a part of ancestor-worship, which is a wide-
spread form of religion, to which reference has already been
made; in it there is little fear of ghosts, but the latter are sup-
posed to preside over and to influence the affairs of the living.
The ghosts became beneficent powers, and were worshipped ac-
cordingly; they were not feared but honored.
It is a peculiarity of the human mind and imagination that
it can not originate anything entirely new ; for instance, there are
traditions and fables about dragons. A dragon may be a tradi-
tion reaching back to the memory of man in early times; the
Piasa bird which was figured on Chautauqua Bluff in Illinois, was
possibly due to the memory and experience of early mankind
transmitted to the moundbuilders who probably painted this bird,
from the times when pterodactyls flew about, a terror and men-
ace to primitive man. The dragons of art are composite crea-
tures, vnth heads of serpents or eagles, the wings of birds, the
claws of carnivora, etc., creatures such as never existed except in
the imagination of man; yet every part of the dragon was like
something that man had seen, otherwise he could not have evolved
such a creature from his imagination.
This applies to religion as well as to art. Whatever primi-
tive men imagined or fabled about gods and supernatural beings,
was based on something of which he had knowledge. Man could
and did imagine gods as spiritual powers, of course ; but he gave
no shape to such gods. When it became necessary to represent
them, it was in animal forms, or anthropomorphic.
Aristotle denied that the gods had ethical virtue, or that
they concerned themselves about the Avorld or its inhabitants;
Spinoza says the idea of God being an intelligent being, or an
Intelligence, who is free to act or to remain passive, or as ruling
the world, is too anthropomorphic to be true. The general sub-
stitution of the term ''Supreme Being" for "God" means noth-
ing ; it does not change the underlying idea of Some One who rules
over us, which idea is rejected by most philosophers, though ac-
cepted by the masses. Many philosophers accept Herbert Spen-
cer's term for all supernaturalism ; they call it the "Unknowable."
But in the main the axiom proclaimed by Linzynski (p. 337)
is correct: ''Homo est Creator Dei" Man necessarily imagined
gods in shapes with which he was familiar, and Avhether he fig-
ured them as men or as beasts or as combinations of both, they
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
347
contained no unknown elements. I show here the Assyrian con-
ception of Asshur, the chief of the gods, as an example of primi-
tive imagination (Fig. 181).
Even the Bible tanght anthropomorphic ideas, for the dec-
laration, "God created man in his ovm. image," necessarily im-
plies a reversed statement that God is like man, for if man is made
in the image of God then God must have the shape of man. The
Bible relates a nmnber of occasions when God appeared in hmnan
shape to some of the Old Testament heroes or patriarchs.
The original religion, natnrism or fetichism, or the adoration
of natural phenomena as living powers, must have developed in
the course of long ages into anthropomorphic theism or poly-
theism ; and among these many deities one may have become more
Fig. 181. — The Assyrian god Asshur; with the pine-cone symbol of the lingam in his
right hand.
and more important, and have come to be worshipped as the main
god or as the only god.
Just as man was led to consider the gods as like unto himself,
he could not imagine the gods as li\dng under other conditions or
relationships than himself. And as primitive man probably es-
teemed his sexual appetites as the most important to himself, with
the possible exception of his appetite for food, so he imagined the
gods and goddesses to live in similar relationships as men. And
as they could not conceive any higher social or political organi-
zation than they had themselves, they imagined the gods to live
348 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
in hordes, or organized tribes, or as kings among their people,
just as men lived.
No nation created a single or only god in their thoughts, but
they peopled the supernatural world with endless numbers of su-
pernatural beings, fauns, njanphs, sileni, demons, dragons, angels,
fairies, elves, kobolds, etc., who were the subjects or formed the
society or community in which the gods lived and ruled.
In the primitive worships the gods were the forces of nature,
and were conceived as demons, spirits, or as animal or men-like
beings. The gods were not the natural phenomena themselves,
but the lords ruling over and producing these phenomena; thus,
in India, Rudra was not the lightning, but the god of lightning, the
god who produced the lightning ; in Greece, Jupiter cast his light-
ning shafts and thunderbolts; he produced the lightning but light-
ning Avas not the god. Among the Teutons Wodan was the chief
god, whose son was Donar (Donner), the lightning god, but light-
ning and thunder was an effect, not a god.
When we come to consider the phallus, the male organs of
generation, and the yoni, or vulva, the female sexual organs, as
symbols of religion we want to bear this distinction well in mind.
These organs were not the gods, they were not worshipped, but
they were the symbols of the powers or gods who manifested them-
selves through these organs, and the symbols became sacred by
the reflected godlike attributes they represented.
Idols and Images
Idols are figures representing the gods and are worshipped
in their stead. By the ignorant and superstitious masses, these
images or idols are regarded as the gods themselves, but by those
capable of doing some thinking, they are regarded merely as vis-
ible objects or syml)ols intended to call to mind the ideal or ab-
stract powers they represent. Of course these symbols may be
looked upon with gross or idealized eyes, just as the nude in art
may call up salacious or pure thoughts.
It is in regard to Pagan idols, just as it is with our modern
religions ; the figures of madonnas, saints, etc., are not idols, even
thougli some of the more ignorant worshippers attach miraculous
attributes to such statues, paintings, medallions, etc., while to the
thinking devotees they merely serve to remind of the ideals these
figures make concrete for better understanding.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
349
Among Pagans, the idol itself is often the object of worship,
but not necessarily always; and among highly educated Pagans,
as among the Greeks and Romans, the statues of their gods and
goddesses were not idols but merely images or symbols of the
deities.
Among barbarian nations, it was, and is, a custom to carry
the gods (or idols) into battle, in the belief that they would aid
their people in the fight. There can be no doubt of the efficacy of
this close partnership of god and his people (meaning here not the
Israelites, but any believers in the particular idols they had with
them) because it naturally stimulated the valor of the fighting
men.
^ivkk^^iliuui^
Fig. 182. — Wooden idols of the Fiji Islanders.
In Arabia it is the custom for a warlike force to take with
them some courageous maiden of the tribe, who is mounted on a
])iack, or blackened camel ; she loudly sings about the prowess of
her tribes-people and of the aid that Allali is to them, and deri-
sively about the cowardice and other contemptible traits of their
enemies; her own people being incited to greater deeds of valor
and the enemies being depressed by her insults.
A similar condition prevailed when Joan of Arc led the
French in battle in the 15th Century.
We have already learned that in Madagascar when the men
go to Avar the women at home dance war dances; the knowledge
that the Avomen are dancing, urges the warriors to added bravery.
350 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
In such cases there is a distinct sexnal stimnlns exerted by think-
ing of their women while lighting.
Among the Germans the close partnership of God and the
Kaiser is practically an article of faith and is a powerful influ-
ence in encouraging the troops. Whether they believe this to be
the God of the Bible or the old German war god Odin or Wodan
is immaterial; the stimulating eifect on the courage of the igno-
rant and superstitious among the Germans in battle is marked.
Idols or images of gods w^ere used in very ancient times.
Among the Israelites of old idolatry Avas forbidden, as appears
from numerous passages in the Bible, of which I quote but one;
Exod. XX, 4: ''Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven images
or any likeness of any thing that is in heaven above, or that is in
the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth; thou
shalt not bow down thyself to them nor serve them. ' '
Fig. 183. — Aztec idols; the first one is male, the second female; the third holds a cornu-
copia but the sexual parts are not shown.
Graven images were forbidden, which discouraged sculpture
and art of every kind; molten images are forbidden in other pas-
sages, by which were meant figures cast in moulds ; for instance,
while Moses went up into the mountains to receive the tablets of
the law, the Israelites demanded that Aaron, the High Priest,
should make some visil)le image of God, which he did by casting
an image of an Apis bull (a golden calf) made from the orna-
ments offered by the people for that purpose; the form of the
image was in accord with the Egyptian religion under which they
had lived so long. The real gist of the commandment, and the
reason for its enactment was of course in the last sentence, but
the Jews construed it to mean that such images should not be
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
351
made. That tliis was not the intention, follows from reading
Num. xxi, 8: "And the Lord said unto Moses, Make thee a fiery
serpent and set it upon a pole ; and it shall come to pass, that every
one that is bitten, Avhen he looketh upon it, shall live." If the
commandment meant to prohibit the making of an image, God
would not have commanded Moses to make one (Fig. 184). The
same is true of the figures of cherubims God directed Moses to
make and place on the ark of the covenant.
The Teraphim were Jewish household gods, similar to the
Eoman Penates; they were also called "images." Perhaps these
were some of the "strange gods" referred to in the Bible.
During the Babjdonian captivity the Jews became acquainted
with the profuse ornamentation of Assyrian and Babylonian tem-
Fig. 184. — Serpent erected by Moses in the desert. From a copperplate of 1740.
pies and imitated it occasionally themselves, but after the captiv-
ity, when they had returned to their old homes, the prophets be-
came very active in denouncing the making of images and the wor-
ship thereof, carrying the above commandment to the extreme,
construing it to forbid all art, even of architectural sculptural
ornamentations.
This aversion to the imitative arts, at least as far as it is
applied to images of living beings, was adopted from the Jews
by Mohammed, to the extent that artists were not even permitted
to represent the human features for purposes of portraiture.
Statues or paintings of the human form being forbidden by the
Koran, could not do away, however, with the appreciation of
human beauty, but it could be indulged in only by having pretty
352
SEX AND SEX AVOESHIP
girl slaves or odalisques, whose main duty it was to go about
naked or very lightly clad in the homes of the wealthy Moham-
medans; these slaves were mainly obtained from Georgia or Cir-
cassia, which produced and still produce the most beautiful
women. These slaves did not do much work, but entertained with
music, songs, story-telling or dancing, or by serving refreshments ;
they were themselves waited on and guarded by Nubian slaves or
eunuchs, by way of contrast or foil, the value of which was already
understood in ancient Egypt.
In ancient times the Germans had no idols to represent their
deities ; in fact, they did not even build temples. Nor were idols
Fig. 185. — A meuliir or stoue pillar in Jajian.
or images extensively Avorshipped in ancient Asia Minor, but the
deities were symbolized by natural objects, such as serpents, trees,
stones, etc. ; or no images or symbols of any kind were used. For
example, when the Greeks first settled near the northern shores of
the Black Sea, in Russia of today, about 800 b.c, they met there a
people whom they called the Scythians. Hippocrates and He-
rodotus both tell us about them, but the only thing we are inter-
ested in is their gods. Their highest deity was feminine — Tahiti —
the goddess of the hearth or famil}^ She was probably the same
goddess as the later Goddess Vesta of Rome, the goddess of the
domestic fire and the hearth.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
353
To primitive people making; a fire is a slow process, and a fire
is not allowed to go out. The central fire in a village was a sacred
symbol of the hearth, and to keep np this fire was the duty of the
women, or in some cases, of special priestesses delegated for that
duty ; in Kome, for example, the Vestal Virgins had charge of the
sacred fire. The hearth was generally esteemed as an altar sa-
cred to home and the household, hence the goddess of the hearth
was an important goddess.
Then after Tahiti came a god of heaven; next, his wife, the
goddess of earth; a sungod or male god and a goddess of fecun-
dity or of fruitfulness, the two accounting for the productivitj^ of
family, fields and flocks ; and two gods called by Greek names,
Heracles and Ares. These two were not peculiarly Scythian, but
were common to all Iranians, or the inhabitants of Iran or what
Fig. 1S6. — The Stoue Doctors of Montcountur ; each figure represents a different saint,
who, on being invoked, is supposed to have power to cure some particular disease.
is now Persia, Beluchistan, and from Kurdistan to Afghanistan.
These deities were purely ideal, no shape being ascribed to them,
and they were not represented by images or sj^nbols of any kind,
with the sole exception of Ares who had as his altar a huge heap
of brushwood and as his symbol a sword; to Ares were made of-
ferings of sheep and oxen, and also every hundredth captive taken
in war.
The habits and governments of the Scythians were cruel, des-
potic and bloodthirsty, yet their ideas about their gods Avith the
exception of Ares, were far more ethical than was usual in those
early days. AVe must bear in mind that even the early Jews in-
dulged in bloody sacrifices, including human otferings.
Some of the Iranian gods became heroes and eventually gods
354 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
among the Greeks and Romans ; Heracles became Hercules, Tahiti
became Vesta, etc.
In Greece, in the archaic stage of their art, undraped figures
were practically unknown, but as the skill of the artists increased,
they ventured to make their gods and goddesses nude, as they
themselves often went about. After the stage of worshipping
stones or simple pillars as images of their gods, came a period
representing the body as a pillar, with the head more or less real-
istic, and on the front either a penis or a vulva to designate a
distinction of sex.
Fig. 187. — "The Rock of Ages," a modern statue.
The Bible speaks of such pillars in various terms — heap of
witness, stone of help, stone of Israel, rock of our salvation, high
tower; David said "my rock" and we say "Rock of Ages" (Fig.
187).
Pan, a Greek god, was worshipped mainly in Arcadia. He
was the herdsmen's god, and the giver of increase in flocks. He
was a god of music, dance, and song, and he was fond of spending
his time in chasing, dancing and sporting with the mountain
nymphs. There are different versions as to his parentage; his
father was variously said to be Zeus, or Hermes, or Apollo, or
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
35.5
Odysseus, or quite a iiiiuiber of others; liis mother was Oenoe,
Callisto, or Penelope. When the latter is named as his mother,
he had no individual father, hut his paternal ancestors were said
to be all the suitors of Penelope. ITe was represented in the
fields as a pillar with a brutish head and with a phallus on the
front of the pillar ; at least this was a much more usual form than
some other figures which were half human and half goat, like the
satyrs (Fig. 188). As with all the representations of deities, the
older forms, before art had advanced far enough to produce more
Fig. 188. — Worship of Pan, who is repre- Fig. 189. — Youug girl confessing hcv love
sented as a pillar. affairs to Venus.
perfect forms, were of this primitive and crude type; and as art
developed, the forms of the deities became more beautiful.
Pan had a very loud, coarse voice ; when he laughed or called
or shouted, men were seized with a "pan-ic;" his name "Pan" is
said to be from his many fathers, "all" the suitors of Penelope.
The earliest figures of Venus were similar pillars, but with a
beautiful feminine head and feminine parts in front (Fig. 189).
In Great Britain many stones were erected by the ancient
Druids. Some of these were supposed to be male, others female.
In Cornwall, for instance, there are some rude stone monuments
called the Nine Maidens and near them is a single stone called the
Old Man.
356 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
The most celebrated stone monnment of this kind is Stone-
Jienge, which, according- to Stukely, was the cathedral of the Arch
Drnid of all Britain. This temple was originally built in the form
of a circle of arches, consisting of two upright stones with another
laid across the top, making a circle (feminine) of arches (also
feminine) surrounding some gigantic monoliths (masculine).
Until quite recently this Druidic monument was private property,
but it was recently presented to the British government, who
will take measures to preserve this celebrated ruin for all time.
At Chulpas, in Peru, is a stone circle similar to Stonehenge.
The round towers of Ireland were symbols of the erect ling-
don ; the round Tower of Kildarn, Ireland, is 130 feet high.
In Egypt, in the city of On (the right testicle) was a temple
with a red granite monolith, still standing, 70 feet high, a symbol
of the sun or the (male) creator.
In front of many Egyptian temples were great monoliths,
often in couples, one male and one female. ''Cleopatra's needles,"
one of Avliich is now in Rome, the other in the city of New York,
,,were such a pair of phallic pillars.
So also in Asia Minor, among the Phoenicians, Philistines and
other neighbors of the Jews, the gods were sijmholised as pillars,
or trees, etc. ; Baal, for instance, was represented as a pillar of
stone, and the cromlechs, or dolmens, were stones of this kind,
but marked also cemetery locations, as it appears that burials
were preferably done in holy ground, or in "God's Acre," even
in very early times. Dolmens and cromlechs are found through-
out Asia, for instance, in Syria, and are generally considered
proof of very early occupancy of a country by settled inhabitants ;
they were the earliest symbols having religious meaning. They
were rude images of the phallus. Asherah, the stem of a tree, was
a symbol for Ashtoreth, the Accadian Venus.
More rarely animals became symbols for certain deities, with-
out, however, being themselves considered deities. Thus, in Greece,
the owl was a symbol ofJPallas Athena (Minerva) ; it is often
called the "bird of wisdom." In Egypt, the vulture was the sym-
bol of Suben, the "mother goddess" of the Egyptians; it was also
the symbol for "maternity;" but neither the owl nor the \nilture
was considered to be in itself a deity.
Iji very early, or Aryan times, the deities of India were ideal
deities, not represented by idols or pillars. They were of com-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 357
paratively high ethical vahio, l)iit their worhsi]) l)ecame degraded
to a crude and coarse idol worship which still prevails, and which
abonnds in plain and covert symbolism for the penis and vulva.
The Hindus represent Siva and his Sakti, or consort, by
coarse phallic and yonic symbols, often plain or coarse representa-
tions of the male and female sexual parts.
India is said to have about three hundred millions of deities,
many of which are represented in idols ; a peculiar feature of these
idols is that many have four or six or more arms, to indicate the
greater power of the gods ; this idea is, however, very ancient,
being part of the Asiatic folklore from which the Greeks took
their ideas of the "Hundred-Handers" in Homeric times. Prob-
ably there are more idols in India than in all the balance of the
world together; but this great profusion of idols is of compara-
tively recent date — of post-Buddhistic times.
The Sivayites or worshippers of Siva (also called Lingayats
or Lingacitas) carry about on their persons amulets in the shape
of a phallus, which is the sacred symbol of Siva; it is used in
India in a similar manner as the cross with us.
Idolatry also prevails extensively in Africa and the Pacific
Islands, the images often being grotesquely ugly. In ancient Aztec
religions also, idols were worshipped.
When idols or images were introduced into the temples of
Greece and Rome, this led to the development of the noblest form
of imitative art. The Homeric deities were powerful and very
anthropomorphic beings, capable of pain and pleasure, able to
assume any form they wished, as Avhen Jupiter changed himself
to a swan to seduce Leda, to a bull to rape Europa, or to a shower
of rain to impregnate Danae. The Greek gods could have sexual
connection (often by rape) or intermarry Avith mortal women.
In the main the Eomans had the same deities but more spiritual-
ized ; that is, the Roman deities were not as concupiscent and de-
praved sexually as the gods of Greece. The gods and goddesses
of Rome were almost pure abstractions, and there were no stories
about their marriages, amours, etc., until after Greek influence
began to exert itself in Rome.
The Greeks were very sunny in disposition, and great admir-
ers, in a noble way, of human beauty. Their religion was one of
cheerful influence, and as they conceived their gods and goddesses
as men and women, but of a most perfect type, the Greek artists
358 SEX AND SEX WOKSHIP
made every effort to represent their divinities in the most perfect
and beautiful human forms, but also with the sexual desires and
failings of men and women.
Greek art became the best art, and what is good in modern
art, we owe largely to the influence of the Greek artists ; our art-
ists choose sul)jects for representation in sculpture and painting
from the mythology of the Greeks.
In modern Christian religions, the two branches of the Cath-
olic church, the Roman and the Greek, permit the use of images in
their church services ; these are not to be considered as idols, any
more than the ancient Greek figures of gods and goddesses.
At the Council of Trent, a.d. 1545-63, the church of Rome,
after much debate and many expressions of differences of opinion,
finally formulated the doctrine regarding images, which is held
by the church today; the images of Christ, the Virgin Mary and
of the Saints may be placed in the churches and due honor be paid
to them, b}^ kissing, genuflexions, prostrations, etc. ; but prayers
before these images are not supposed to be addressed to the im-
ages, but to the higher ideal personalities represented by them.
In the Greek Catholic church the sacred images, so-called
"Ikons," are made in stiff archaic style, to avoid any purely hu-
man effect that a truthful representation of the body might engen-
der. Nude, or incompletely or only partially draped representa-
tions of the human figure are forbidden, and only ''half-lengths"
(from the waist up) are permitted 'Uit oinnis stultae cogitationis
occasio tollatur" (that every opportunity for foolish thought may
be removed). No representation of God or any member of the
Trinity is attempted, and therefore the crucifix, Avhich is so im-
portant a symbol in the Roman branch of the Catholic church, is
not used in the Greek church; the nudity of the crucified Christ
which has no injurious influence on the Western branch, would
scandalize the membership of the Eastern branch of the Catholic
faith.
In the Roman branch of the Catholic church the crucifix be-
came a very sacred symbol. The body of Christ on the cross is
nearly naked.
The cross is figured in various shapes: The St. Anthony
cross is the same as the tau cross, which was probably the actual
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
359
shape of tlie cross on which Jesus died (Fig. 190). The Latin
cross is the form of the cross most commonly seen in modern
Christian art; the gronndplans of many churches and cathedrals
are of this shape. The St. Andrew's cross, or crux decussata, is
so called because St. Andrew was supposed to have been crucified
on a cross of this shape. Plato used the cross of this shape. In
former days it was used to tie criminals who were sentenced to l)e
whipped. The Greek cross has four even limbs ; this is the shape
of the Red Cross of civilized nations. The Maltese cross is used
in church and secret society regalia and ritual ; probably first used
by the Crusaders. The Catholic Priest's cross is a Latin cross
with one cross-bar; the Cardinal's cross has two cross-bars and
TtX+*
Fig. 190. — Upper row, tau-cross, Latiu Fig. 191. — Marks on ancient pottery,
cross, St. Andrew's cross, Greek cross, either as charms or as trade-marks. Tlie
Maltese cross ; lower roio, cardinal 's cross, cross and its derivatives, such as the
pope's cross, trefiee (in heraldry), crux swastika, preponderate,
ansata, coronation symbol.
the Pope's cross has three cross-bars; the latter form is frequent
in Egyptian art. The Treflee is a cross the ends of which are
trefoil in sliape; it is used in heraldry. The crux ansata (cross
with a handle) was used all over the world from India, Assyria,
Babylon, Egyi)t, to SAveden and Denmark (old Runic) and in the
Western Continent. In inverted shax)e it is the coronation symbol
in European countries. It is the anhh of the Egyptians, the sym-
bol of life, because it represents the feminine yoni in union with
the masculine tau cross.
360 • SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
SEXUAL RELATIONSHIPS OF THE GODS
Nearly all religions of the world recognize orders of inferior
or minor deities, spiritual beings Avhich were immortal or nearly
immortal and therefore partaking of the nature of the gods. These
beings rank below the leading deities, or the gods and goddesses
who are supposed to take part in the government of the world
and who are worshipped. I do not recall a single religion which
has only one god or one supernatural being. These lower orders
of spiritual powers seem to have been needed to satisfy the imag-
ination of mankind, to be the hoi polloi or the plebs, to make a
public over Avhich the higher gods could rule.
Yet some of these beings were conceived to take active part
in the management of the world and in the affairs of mankind;
and they are nearly all imagined in the shape of sexual beings,
some of them in fact as being very concupiscent, except only the
angels, of whom more later on.
Spirits such as fauns, satyrs, sileni, gnomes, kobolds, njanphs,
dryads, elves, fairies, etc., all have sex.
Hesiod relates that the men of the golden age after their
deaths became demons, guardians and Avatchers over mortals.
The ancient word "demons" (daemones) did not convey the same
idea that is meant by our word demon; in Greece the daemon
(demon) was a good spirit or guardian angel, while in Rome this
spirit was preferably called a genius, also meaning guardian an-
gel. Among some people they were supposed to be the ghosts of
the dead, as Hesiod said.
Empedocles, Plato and others divided the demons into two
groups, good, kindly and beneficent powers, and evil, malevolent
and vicious beings. In the Christian religion these good demons
were afterAvards transformed into angels and the bad demons
into devils, or into hellish imps, a sort of assistant or apprentice
devils.
Belief in demons is by many considered to be superstition,
but others, as the modern spiritualists and even members of some
religious sects still consider them to be real existences. Many
believe these demons to be the causes of various diseases, and per-
sons afflicted "with epilepsy, h^^steria, mania, or even with the de-
lirium of fever, were supposed to be afflicted with evil spirits or
devils. Exorcisms of various kinds, ranging from the magic of
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 361
savages to the religions rites of Christians, were practiced to ex-
pel evil spirits or demons, while prayers, amulets, crucifixes, in-
cantations and pliylacteries of various kinds are used to guard
against them.
Phylacteries are charms or amulets which are worn as a pre-
servative against disease or danger of any kind. A crucifix, or
even the sign of the cross made with the hand became a powerful
charm of this kind ; it could open locked doors ; counteract the
action of poison ; cure bites of rabid animals ; or exorcise evil spir-
its. The relies of martyrs had similar virtues.
Pliny, the Elder, said that "true it is that a collar of amber
beads worn about the neck of young infants is a singular preven-
tive against secret poison and a counter-charm for witchcraft and
sorceries."
We read (Mark v, 1-13) that Jesus exorcised a crowd of un-
clean spirits from a possessed man and made the spirits enter into
a herd of swine. Cyril, Tertullian, Chrysostom and other church-
fathers taught that epileptics or "demoniacs" were really under
the influence of demons or evil spirits, who had to be exorcised,
justifying themselves in this belief by quoting Jesus as having
also believed thus.
The barring of the passage of evil spirits, or their exorcism,
could be secured by the Pythagorean pentagram (also called
pentageron or pentagon) which was at one time considered a
wonderful mystic symbol or figure ; it "was used as the sign of the
cross is now used by the Catholics, and is in fact still used from
Ireland to China as a magic charm. According to Lucian it was
used by the Pythagoreans as a salutation and as a symbol of
health, made with the hand in front of themselves, as the Catho-
lics make the sign of the cross, when they "cross themselves."
Among the Teutons and Norsemen this sign was supposed to
represent a footprint of one of the "swanfooted" Norns (see
page 406) ; when Christianity was introduced the Norns were re-
duced to wdtches, and after that this sign, together with the sign
of the cross, was placed on door-sills and door-frames to keep
away witches or "drudes." This pentagram is shown in cut A;
and also the method of making the sign with the hand, in the direc-
tion indicated by the arrow, sho^^^l in cut B (see page 362).
Another powerful charm was that shoA\m in cut C. It consists
of the Greek letters alpha and cmwga, the first and last letters of
362 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
the Greek alphabet, combined Avith the monogram of Christ (ch
and r). It meant that Christ was the beginning and the end of all
things.
John Baptisia von Helmont (1577) considered the natural
phenomena as the action of spiritual powers or demons. Thunder
is the voice of a demon Kakadaemon, who was the executor of
God's will through which the eartli and those who dwell therein
are frightened into being good ; earthquakes are due to blows ad-
ministered to the earth by this "angel of the Lord;" etc. This
was therefore a good demon or angel.
In the apocryphal book Tobit occurs the story of the love of a
demon, Asmodeus, for Sara, the daughter of Raguel, whose seven
husbands were slain in succession by the demon on their marriage
nights. At last Tobit exorcised the demon by burning the heart
and liver of a fish. Asmodeus (Jewish) is often called the genius
of matrimonial unhappiness.
A. B. C.
In Bulgaria and adjacent Slavonic lands there still prevails
the superstitious dread of were-wolves and vampires. The were-
wolves are human beings who can change themselves by magic
arts into a demon having the shape of a wolf (see p. 321) ; these
demons are closely allied to the vampires but differ in being
living human beings who can change back to the human form.
They are fond of eating humans, and may attack people whom
they meet ; or they are fond of eating corpses and are supposed to
disinter and eat the dead. A mark by which they can be recog-
nized when they have their human form is that the eyebrows meet
or are continuous over the nose.
The vampire is a nocturnal demon, a dead person who comes
out of the grave, to suck the souls or the blood out of his victims,
or to eat out the hearts of the living. This superstition is an
effort to account for wasting diseases, as tuberculosis, etc. There
are two theories of what vampires are ; the one just stated being
the more common one. But they are also sometimes thought to
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 363
be like the were-wolves, sorcerers or witches cannibalistically in-
clined, who can change themselves in form. By "strength" some-
times is meant semen; the vampires are also noctnrnal demons
who sucked the strength from the penises of their victims ; this
was sometimes merely a fear or sensation caused by nocturnal
emissions accompanied by dreams, but may have been actual per-
sons fond of doing this. All through the ages this practice has
prevailed ; in primitive times sucking or kissing the penis of a chief
was like the king's touch in England or France, a cure for many
troubles; it was supposed to be especially efficacious for curing
sterility in women. Among the Druses the Sheik or chief grants
audiences on certain days to women who wish to kiss his lingam
for this purpose; in modern times Browii-Sequard's elixir was
made from the testicles of slaughtered animals, and a proprietary
medicine made from testicles is also on the market. Mohammedan
women kiss the penis of a priest or of an idiot, neither of which
is supposed to be erotically affected by such a caress. Sucking
the fresh semen is sometimes now considered a sovereign remedy
for wasting diseases, or, as in the houses of prostitution, an un-
failing cosmetic remedy to produce a fine complexion. Anyhow,
when surreptitiously done by night-prowlers, the latter were taken
to be vampires and the victim was too frightened to make any out-
cry.
The CJiaraha-Samliita, the oldest Hindu medical treatise ex-
tant, says: "Of all things that promote strength, the best is the
flesh of the cock. Of all tilings that increase the semen is the vital
seed of the alligator." This shows that the taking of fresh (vital)
semen of an animal was considered a wonderful remedy for "loss
of vitality," and sucking it from the penises of men has been a
practice of both men and women for ages, antedating Brown-Se-
quard's theories for many centuries.
When a corpse was the vampire, it Avas supposed to remain
ruddy and lifelike in appearance ; if a dead person is supposed to
be a vampire this can be remedied by opening the grave and driv-
ing a stake through the body into the ground, but a surer plan is
to cut off the head and burn it. If the person had heavy e^^ebrows
continuing and meeting above the nose, the precautions just stated
were sometimes taken when he or she was first buried, as a pre-
cautionary measure. The priests in the Balkan lands also may
364 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
use the formula of the church for exorcism when attending the
funeral.
It is almost impossible for us at the present time to realize
in what dread Christian conununities stood of these demons or
devils. The world or air was full of hosts of evil spirits and of
contending armies of angels, who battled for the souls of the
humans.
The ancient Assyrians believed in incuhi and succuhi, whom
they called lilit; this belief was transferred to the Jews, probably
during the Babylonian captivity, and from this came the story
told by the Rabbinical traditions, the Talmud, of Adam's first
wife Lilith, a demon. She, however, left Adam and "took up"
wdth Beelzebub, or Baal-Zebub, the master of flies, who protected
mankind from the noxious insects.
The vampires, or drinkers, and the incuhi and succuhi, de-
mons who cohabit with men and women while they sleep, are
simply nightmare effects, mainly probably due to involuntary
emissions of semen Avhile in a half-awake, or dreaming, condition.
The belief in succuhi (nightmares) as demons, led to a belief in
the vampires.
In the Zend-Avesta, the ancient sacred books of the Persians,
demonology was worked out to the minutest details. The Persian
religion believed in two great rival influences, continuously at
war with one another; they were Ahura-Mazda (Ormuzd) who
was a god of light and good, and Ahura-Mainyes (Ahriman) a god
of evil; each was attended by innumerable hosts of attendant
demons, the good spirits being opposed by the evil ones who tried
to spread sin in the world.
This belief had great influence on three other faiths from
which so much that is now called Christianity Avas derived, namely,
en the Jewish, or Talnmdic teachings, on Manichaeism, and on
early Christianity.
Manichaeism was a rival religion witli early Christianity dur-
ing the early centuries of our era. It taught that Satan made
Adam and Eve; the latter Avas seductive sensuousness, to which
Adam fell victim through sexual desire. We have already learned
about this elseAvhere. The Manichaeists also believed that Satan
seduced Eve and that Cain and Abel Avere the sons of Eve by
Satan.
Men or Avomen could obtain Aveird poAvers of Avitchcraft by
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
365
making compacts Avitli these demons, and so general was the be-
lief that even sober, supposedly scientific men, editors of encyclo-
paedias, theologians, physicians, professors, etc., believed this.
It was also thought that magical powers could be obtained through
good demons by abstaining from sexual contact mth women, fast-
ing and pious meditations.
Simon Magus was a celebrated magician (about 60 a.d.) and
he caused himself to be taken for God. He was a Gnostic. He
taught that the apostles were merely magicians. He called him-
self "the great power of God"— ''^^o sum sermo Dei"— ''I am
Fig. 192. — St. Ignatius exorcising evil
spirits to cure epilepsy.
Fig. 193. — St. Eadegonde exorcising evil
spirits.
the word of God ! " He traveled in company with a certain woman
named Helena, Avho was a prostitute Avhom he had bought in the
city of Tyre, who, he claimed, "was the first conception of his
mind, the mother of all things by whom in the beginning he con-
ceived the thought of making angels and archangels."
Simon Magus publicly announced that he would ascend to
heaven on a certain day, and his demons actually carried him up
in the air to a considerable height ; St. Peter, who was at the time
in Rome, used exorcisms on the demons, who thereby lost their
magical powers and were no longer able to raise him farther, but
366
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
dropped him, so that he fell and broke his neck. All this is au-
thentically related as "history" in a work of 1740.
Figure 192 shows St. Ignatius exorcising the evil spirits who
caused epilepsy; it is copied from a medieval altar-piece.
Also, St. Radegonde is shown as exorcising evil spirits from
a girl who afflicted others by aid of the demons in her (Fig. 193).
The witches' sabbath was a nocturnal meeting of witches,
usually said to have been held on the Brocken or Blocksberg, a
mountain peak of the Hartz mountains, on Walpurgis night. Here
Fig. 194. — "Eeturn of the Witches," from painting by Falero.
the witches and the demons cohabited in promiscuous freedom.
This shows the return from the meeting (Fig. 194).
The Christian church thought it possible for witches to con-
ceive and give birth to the fruits of such unions, and multitudes
of women and their children were tried and convicted and burnt.
It was thought that wherever the demon had touched the witch,
she became anaesthetized so that she would not feel anything.
The mode of examining a supposed witch was to strip her naked
and cut or puncture her body at many places to find the anaesthe-
tized spot; she soon became hysterical from fright and no longer
was conscious of the pain, and so was easily convicted (Fig. 195).
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 367
Another method of tryin^j^ a witch was to strip her naked and
then tie her right tlmmb to the big toe of the left foot, and the
thumb of the left hand to the right big toe, her arms thus making
the sj^mbol of the cross ; she was then thrown in deep water, Imt
held by a rope around the waist, in case she should sink. If she
was a witch she would float ; if she sank she was taken out of the
water and acquitted. As a naked human body has a specific grav-
ity a little less than water, the average body will float if the per-
son does not struggle too much, consequently the average sus-
pected person would be convicted. Tying the arms in cross-
fashion was to keep the devils from coming to the aid and inter-
fering with a fair ordeal trial.
It is a question whether the witches' sabbath was altogether
Fig. 195. — ' ' Trial of a Witch, ' ' from a painting.
imaginary, or whether it had a foundation in fact by the secret
survival of some of the ancient festivals — Faunalia, Saturnalia,
Liberalia, Floralia, etc.
We have learned that among primitive people marriage was
not known, but that promiscuous cohabitation was practiced ; man-
kind imagined that certain lower spiritual beings practiced this
type of relationship. The fauns, in Roman mythology, were minor
deities who presided over and fostered the productive powers of
the soil, increasing the crops, and of animals, increasing the herds ;
they lived in the forests and fields, and in order to set all nature
a good example, spent much of their time in pursuing and raping
nymphs; in other words, they were the original ''chippie-chasers"
(Fig. 196).
368 SEX Al^B SEX WORSHIP
Botli the male f annus and the female fauna could foretell the
future. In honor of these rural gods the festival of the Faunalia
was celebrated, which was supposed to be presided over by Pria-
pus or Pan, and on Avhich occasions the people indulged in pro-
miscuous intercourse as a religious rite. As stated above, these
festivals may have survived in secret, with their mibridled and
unnatural sexual orgies, and have been the "sabbaths" of the
witchcraft courts. Under torture, those arrested may have made
confessions that were true ; or the victims of torture may in some
cases merely have confessed to a traditional knowledge of folk-
lore, of this licentious rite of worship of Pagan gods.
Satyrs were half human, half bestial spirits that haunted the
woods; they were probably fabled offspring of the union of hu-
mans with the goats of Mendes (see p. 435). They were very
Fig. 196. — NATTipbs were pursued ' ' on sight ' ' by fauns, sileni, satyrs, and gods. This
shows Apollo pursiuing the nymph Daphne.
salacious, fond of wine and women, and ever chasing nymphs,
from which characteristic we have the medical term of satyriasis ;
from the nymphs we get the term nymphomania (Fig. 197). Mod-
ernized and adopted into Christian mythology they became devils,
like the demons.
The sileni were similar to satyrs and f aims, but were of higher
grade; they were educated, learned beings, Avho often instructed
humans in useful arts.
Nymphs were female spirits similar to faims, but exquisitely
beautifully human in form; Hesiod called them the "ever-youthful
maidens of heaven;" he said they lived 9720 times as long as
mortals. They lived in the fields and woods, and were supposed
to be continually pursued by fauns, satyrs and sileni. The wor-
SEX Al^B SEX WORSHIP 369
ship of nymphs was general in rural districts in Greece and Rome ;
they were considered as pretty and kindly spirits, fond of Avatch-
ing over and caring for children, but no priesthood was required
in their service. Offerings were made by the worshippers them-
selves, consisting of flowers, fruits, and libations of wine.
Naiads were nymphs of springs and small streams; hama-
drvads, or dryads, were nymphs of trees and woods ; each partic-
ular tree or spring or small stream having its ovni special dryad
or naiad, just as each larger stream or river had its own river-
Fig. 197. — A family of satyrs, and a pillar of Pau.
god. The dryads, from their close connection A\dth trees, were
supposed, like them, to have sprung from the soil.
Marriages of humans with nymphs were supposed to be pos-
sible. At marriages, the nymphs were prayed to for blessings;
the bride was bathed by her attendants in the spring or sprinkled
with water from the spring in which manplis or naiads resided.
All these feminine forms of minor deities were called ''maid-
ens of heaven" or "daughters of Zeus." They all lived in pro-
miscuous relations with fauns, satyrs and sileni.
Mention may be made of a few more of the important de-
mons. Aziel was the familiar demon (or guardian angel) of Dr.
Faustus, the myth concerning whom was described by Goethe;
370 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
he is the fallen angel Azael, mentioned in the Talmud; Solomon
went every day to him for wisdom. Michael, Raphael, Uriel and
Gabriel guarded the four quarters of the demon-circle. The ex-
orcisms of the medieval church were addressed to the leaders of
the demons — Satan, Pluto, Ariel, Petrus and Adonis.
The good gods of one religion Avere often reduced to evil pow-
ers in rival religions, just as the daemones of the Greeks became
the devils or demons of the Christians. In the same manner, when
the ancient Aryan religion was divided into the Zarathustrian
or Persian and the Brahmanic faiths, the Devas, or bright and
good gods of the Hindus became the evil demons of the Persian
faith. So also Christianity did not discard the nature-deities of
Paganism, the Lares, Fauns, etc., but retained them as realities,
as evil demons, Avho, in nearly all of their sexual practices were
represented as evil and sinful.
But there were also good powers of this kind. The genius
of the Eomans and the daemon of the Greeks was a form of guard-
ian angel or guiding spirit ; every person was accompanied by one
of these spiritual guides to lead him or her through the labyrinth
of life's mysteries.
The idea of angels is old; Moses already spoke of them.
Philo calls the word of God — angel; also — idea of ideas, bread
of life, light-world, first born of all creatures, etc.
After the disappearance or merging of the old religions into
the Christian religion, which took their places, these agencies
were transformed into "angels," or "guardian angels." These
were conceived by the Christians as real entities ; for instance, in
certain districts of France, we are told, the belief in guardian an-
gels survives in a very realistic form, and when one person meets
another he salutes not only him, but with a special and profound
obeisance, also his guardian angel, who, though unseen, is imag-
ined to be his constant companion.
According to the Bible there are no female angels; they are
always referred to as " he " or as the ' ' angel of God. ' ' The word
angel means a messenger or bringer of tidings; in the Old Testa-
ment they are represented as able to walk and talk with men, but
in the New Testament they are only rarely visible, as for instance,
the angels at the birth of Jesus, and the angel who guarded his
tomb.
According to Jewish Avriters they were regularly organized
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 371
into a hierarchy; Gabriel was one of four great archangels; he
was named as the angel who destroyed Sennacherib's hosts (see
p. 43) ; he is supposed to preside over the domestic fire, or all
fire; over thunder and lightning, the ripening of the crops of the
soil, etc., showing therefore the same attributes as the nature
gods of Greece and Rome.
According to the Koran, he dictated this book to Mohammed.
In the l^ook of Enoch, an apocryphal Jewish liook, an account
of a revolt of some angels in heaven is given ; the conquered rebels
are expelled from heaven and arrive on earth as "fallen angels;"
they were all males, they settled down with the daughters of men,
and produced a race of giants. The rebellion of the angels, under
the leadership of Satan, is a prominent feature of Milton's Para-
dise Lost.
The generally prevailing belief that in the hereafter we will
become angels in heaven, is based on the teachings of Swedenborg
and others, on the songs of revivalists, etc., but is not taught by
the Bible. Such songs as
"I want to be an angel
And with the angels stand, ' ' etc.
have given rise to the popular belief; but the Bible implies that
angels are neuters, or without sex :
Mark xii, 25 : " For when thev shall rise from the dead, thev
neither marry nor are given in marriage, but are as the angels
which are in heaven." They do not become angels; they only re-
semble angels in being sexless.
In medieval church art they were represented as males, and
naked because they were without sin. The illustration (Fig. 198)
shows an angel from a medieval tomb in Florence.
Our modern method of representing angels is a result of
the "modern decadence in art;" Ave would rather see and repre-
sent pretty women and girls just as artists prefer to x)aint naked
goddesses and nymphs and dryads to painting saints in long black
gowais and hoods.
Belief in saints, angels, etc., is not considered to be incom-
patible mth a religion professing the worship of one God, because
these powers are not worshipped, but merely venerated.
As to w^hat angels are, opinions differed. Pliilo said they
were disembodied human souls who inhabit the air; the Gnostics
372
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
said they were emanations from God ; Origen said that up to his
time (about 230 a.d.) the ecclesiastical authorities had not deter-
mined at what time they were created, or of what nature, or how
they were.
"While the Christians generally believe that angels exist, their
history indicates that they are probably entirely imaginary beings.
In ancient religions there were deities resembling our mod-
ern angels, feminine, and either good or bad; as for instance the
daemones of the Greeks and the genii of the Romans.
The Valkyrs were virgin nymphs of Valhalla, the heaven of
Fig. 198. — An Angel on a medieval tomb Fig. 199. — "The Sirens," from a paint-
in Florence, Italy. ing by Thumann.
the Norsemen ; they went out armed, and momited on fleet horses,
to take part in the battles waged by the Norse warriors. They
took the warriors, whom the Norns or gods had designated to be
slain, conducting them over the bridge of the Northlight to Val-
halla, where they gave them mead (the drink of the gods) from
the skulls of their enemies. It was a custom in many lands to
make drinking vessels out of the tops of skulls. The A^alkyrs
therefore were messengers of the gods to summon warriors to
Valhalla.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 373
On the other hand, tlic Greek sirens were feminine creatures,
wlio, like the LorehM, the Rhine maiden, of dernian mytliology,
lured hoatsmen or mariners to destruction (Fig. 199).
The God of the Jews and the Chi'istians, Jehovah, is a celi-
bate male god; for several centuries during the early period of
Christianity this remained so; hut the Christian theologians soon
dro]ipod the original Unitarian conception and introduced a meta-
physical conception of Jesus as the Son of God.
The expression "sons of God" was very ancient; we find it
already in Gen. vi, 2 : ' ' The sons of God saw the daughters of men
that they were fair; and they took them wives of all which they
chose." The expression "sons of God" is used many times in
the Old Testament ; the phrase was possibly taken from the Hindu,
from which the myth of Adam and Eve came, and may be based
on the Hindu myth that Brahma produced the men, and that his
sakti or wife, Sarasvati, created women. "Sons of God" or Bne
Elohim meant illustrious teachers, prophets, etc., who, in a sub-
ordinate way partook somewhat of Divine nature, by their supe-
riority over the mass of mankind. The early Jews taught that
the "logos, the word which was with God from the beginning, the
first outflow of light from the eternal source of light," lived in
the saints so that they could cure all diseases, and this same idea
was taught by the early Greek philosophers, Plato, Pythagoras,
etc., and mse men, great teachers or physicians, were called proph-
ets or ' ' sons of god ' ' by the ancient Greeks and in the Orient gen-
erally. The early Christians misconstrued this term and took it
literally; the early church-fathers were not great philosophers,
but they thought that if any great man was worthy to be called
' ' son of God, ' ' surely Jesus was that man, and they called him so.
Then as the influence of neighboring faiths made itself felt,
they introduced the theory that he had been begotten by the Holy
Ghost (a late development in the idea of the Christian God) and
that he was born of a virgin. However, in neither Jemsh nor
Christian religion is there reference to marriage.
But it is different when we turn to the immediately preceding
religions, the Roman and the Greek. The Greek is by far the most
explicit about the amours of the gods, who are represented as
adulterers, as practicing incestuous, licentious and cowardly re-
lationships not only with goddesses, but Avith mmiphs and human
women. The Hindu gods are figured in the same way ; every rela-
374 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
tion that existed between men and women was imagined also
to exist among the gods; man imagined the deities in his own
likeness.
Incest and Rape
Among men in later times certain women were set apart whom
they might not marry; but among primitive people such prohibi-
tions did not exist, any more than among animals. When all the
women belonged to the tribe or clan, any woman may have been
taken by any man.
Probably the earliest prohibition would have been the sexual
mating of parents with children. We read (Gen. xix, 30-38) : "And
Lot went up out of Zoar * * * and dwelt in a cave, he and his
two daughters. And the firstborn said unto the yoimger, Our fa-
ther is old and there is not a man in the earth to come in unto us
after the manner of all the earth: Come let us make our father
drink wine, and we will lie with him, that we may preserve seed
of our father. * * * Thus were both the daughters of Lot with
child by their father. ' '
St. Paul, writing to the church in Corinth, said (I Cor. v, 1) :
**It is reported commonly that there is fornication among you,
and such fornication as is not so much as named among the gen-
tiles, that one should have his father's wife."
Julia, the mother of Caracalla, Emperor of Rome, pretend-
ing not to know that he was present, stripped herself naked. When
Caracalla saw her beautiful body he exclaimed: "I'd like to, if it
were lawful!" to which she replied: "If you would like to, it is
lawful! Do you not know that you are emperor and can make
the laws!" She then submitted to his embraces and lived there-
after as his wife and queen.
It is related that Hippocrates cured the King Perdiccas (436
B.C.) of Macedonia of a consumption produced by the king's inor-
dinate but hopeless love and desire for his stepmother Phila.
The pharaohs of Egypt usually married their sisters and
made them their queens. CleojDatra was married to her brother
Ptolemy.
Cambyses Avas told that his brother Smerdes was scheming
to become king in his place; so he had the brother killed, upon
which their mother committed suicide. Cambyses had taken his
full sister as wife ; once he arranged a combat between a lion and
a dog, but when the dog was being overcome, the dog's brother
SEX AND SEX WOKSHIP 375
who was being held in leash near by, tore loose and the two dogs
overcame the lion. Cambyses laughed, but his wife (and sister)
began to cry ; asking her why, she replied it was because some an-
imals had more brotherly love than some human beings; at this
answer Cambyses felt so sad and hurt that he had his sister-mfe
killed also.
The ancient Germans married their sisters ; in Southern Ger-
many it was not abolished until the end of the VII Century, a.d.
The Gods Lived Like Men
Amnion was a great god in ancient Egypt ; he was also called
''Amen-Ra Kanmt-fe," "the husband of his mother."
The word "Amen" at the end of our prayers has come to
us from this god, "Amen," "Amen-Ra," "King of the Gods,"
and this ai)peal to him is used because his people had faith that
he would hear their prayers ; yet he took his mother to wife.
Hesiod says: "And earth, in sooth bare first indeed like to
herself (in size) starry heaven, that he might shelter her around
on all sides. * * * • but afterward, having bedded with heaven
(her son) she bare deep-eddying Ocean, Caeus and Crius," etc.
This describes the incestuous loves of heaven Avith his mother
earth.
Odin, Wodan or Watan was the main god of the Teutons or
ancient Germans ; the sun and moon were his eyes and he supported
the vault of heaven on his shoulders. He carried a hammer which
the god Mjolner made for him, which was a boomerang for it
returned to his hand after he threw it at anyone. He begat the
earth with his daughter Jord; he also had a son by Jord, Thor,
who consecrated marriages with his hammer ; the early Christian
missionaries told the Norwegian Pagans that Thor was the same
as Jesus and that his hammer was the crucifix, so as to convert
them more easily. Thor was the second in rank and the strongest
of the Aesir, or Norse pantheon; he was the god of storm and
thunder.
Demeter (Greek) represents the producing power of the
earth. The simplest worship of Demeter supposed her to have
been outraged, whereupon she hid in a cave (winter) where cold
and death prevailed; at last she bathes in a sacred stream, her
child is born and the life of spring reappears on earth.
376 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
As Proserpina (also called Persephone), the daughter of
Demeter, was gathering flowers with her playmates in a meadow,
the earth opened and Pluto, the god of the underworld, appeared
and forcibly carried off Proserpina to be liis queen in Hades.
Her mother went about all the world seeking her daughter, and
when she could not And her, she forbade the earth to bring forth
any crops of the field; notliing greAv, not even grass, and all an-
imals and mankind would have starved if Jupiter had not com-
manded Pluto to return Proserpina to her mother. This was cele-
brated in the Eleusinian Mysteries, a celebrated Greek festival.
Anymone, daughter of Danaiis, went to get water for her
home, during a drought ; she had to go some distance, so she took
her javelin along. On the way she met a stag and threw the
spear at it, but missed the stag and hit a sleeping faun who awoke
and pursued her. She was near the sea, so she appealed to Nep-
tune, who heard her and saved her from the faun, but kept her
for himself. So she became the mother of Nauplius, by Neptune.
Lara was a goddess in Olympus, in attendance on Juno ; she
learned some scandal in connection with one of the amours of
Jupiter, the husband of Juno, and tattled to the latter. Juno
probably made things uncomfortable for Jupiter for awhile, so
Jupiter had the tongue of Lara cut out, and sent her to the under-
world in charge of Mercury ; he took a fancy to Lara and commit-
ted rape on her on the way, in consequence of which she gave birth
to the two Lares.
And there are many more such stories in all the mythologies
of the earth ; when these m5^ths were invented, the people were still
savage, cruel, unethical, coarse; they saw nothing wrong in com-
mitting incest or rape themselves, and so could not conceive of
anything improper in the gods doing likewise.
Monogamy — Polygamy
A great many gods and goddesses were married, but fidelity
and conjugal virtue were practically unknoAvn. We must remem-
ber that among humans in those early days monogamy was prac-
tically unkno^^^l; that they practiced polygamy; therefore they
could not imagine a strictly monogamic union for the gods. One
of the couples to whom little or no scandal attached was Osiris
and Isis, in Egypt ; they Avere faithful one to another, and an ex-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 377
emplary couple if we overlook that they were brother and sister.
In Greece, Juno was an exemplary wife, but perhaps too
frigidly chaste, so that she disappointed her husband Zeus, who
was a regular Don Juan.
Here is what Hesiod said of Zeus : ' ' Jui^iter, king of the gods,
made Metis first his wife * * * next he wedded bright Themis
* * * and Eurymone, daughter of Ocean, who had a very fair
form * * * then he came to the couch of much-nourishing
Demeter * * * and next he was enamored of beautiful-haired
Mnemosyne * * * l)nt Apollo and Artemis, a lovely offspring,
Latona, in sooth brought forth, after union in love with aegis-
bearing Jove * * * and last, made he blooming Juno his spouse
* * * then to Jove, Maia bare glorious Hermes * * * and
Alcmene after union in love with cloud-compelling Jove bare Her-
cules * * * ." And this emmieration says nothing of other
amours, as with Europa, Leda, Danae, and dozens of other
''daughters of men," of whom Jupiter was very fond.
But this is enough to show that in connection with the gods,
ideas of sex were very prominent among the ancients.
For an example of birth from a female without a male, among
the deities, see p. 109.
PHALLIC WORSHIP
This term is generally used when we refer to sex worship;
strictly speaking it refers only to the worship of the male organs
of generation — the phallus.
The British Encyclopedia, in speaking of Christianity, says:
"All Paganism is at lieart a worship of nature in some form or
other, and in all Pagan religions the deepest and most awe-in-
spiring attril)ute of nature was the power of reproduction. The
mystery of birth and becoming was the deepest mystery of na-
ture; it lay at the root of all thoughtful Paganism and appeared
in various forms, some of them of a more innocent, others of a
more debasing type.
"To ancient Pagan thinkers, as well as to modern men of sci-
ence, the key to the hidden secret of the origin and preservation
of the universe lay in the mystery of sex. Two energies or agents,
one an active generative (male), the other a feminine passive or
susceptible one, were everywhere thought to combine for crea-
378 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
tive purpose, and heaven and earth, sun and moon, day and night,
were believed to co-operate to the production of being. Upon
some such basis as this rested almost all the polytheistic worship
of the old civilization, and to it may be traced back, stage by stage,
the separation of divinity into male and female gods, the deifica-
tion of distinct powers of nature, and the idealization of man's
own faculties, desires and lusts, where every power of his under-
standing was embodied as an object of adoration, and every im-
pulse of his will became an incarnation of deity. But in each and
every form of polytheism we find the slime track of the deification
of sex; there is not a single one of the ancient religions which
has not consecrated by some ceremonial rite even the grossest
forms of sexual indulgence, while many of them actually elevated
prostitution into a solemn service of religion."
Then the article proceeds to tell how all this is different in
Christianity.
When we consider that mankind, when they first invented re-
ligions, were of a low ethical standing, superstitious, cruel, unciv-
ilized and gross, we can realize that they were not able to formu-
late religions of a higher ethical development than they themselves
had. In its origin, the worship of sex was as pure in intent
and as far removed from any ideas of anything unclean or ob-
scene as any of our own religions. And the rites which to us now
seem to have been indecent, were practiced by primitive peoples
without any idea that they were not pure and devout.
Yet from such ideas, by gradual evolution or development,
arose our own religions, presenting identically similar ideas of
faiths, although in what we consider a purer form.
The Uliity of Religions, one definition of Unitarianism, is
that all religions seek to Know the Truth, and to worship God,
or the ''Power that works for Good," as Channing expressed it.
The majority of people believe in revelation as the source of our
religions; but ancient as well as modern writers have held the
idea that our religions are due to a process of evolution.
Cicero thought that ''as we are led by nature to think that
there are gods, and as we discover by reason of what description
they are, so, by the consent of all nations, we are induced to be-
lieve that our souls survive ; but where their habitation is, and of
what character they eventually are, must be learned from reason. ' '
Even some of the early church-fathers imply that religious
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 379
sentiment was a natural growth from previous cruder beliefs.
Clement of Alexandria, for instance, thought so.
Others have thouglit so of all other religions except our oivn,
as is distinctly claimed in the article "Christianity" in the En-
cyclopedia Britannica.
David, in the 116 Psalm (v. 11) said: ''I said in my haste,
all men are liars. " If he had been a modern man, he might have
added the polite prevarication — "present company excepted!"
This polite attitude toAvard our own religions is adopted by
some writers on Phallic Worship for fear of hurting the feelings
of some readers; it is an attitude adopted by some writers, who
do not refer to Christian ideas for fear of giving offence, and they
even misrepresent the truth in this regard. But if we are to have
a fair knowledge of the subject, the suppression of part of the
truth, for politeness' sake, is not permissible.
Our individual religion is rarely the result of study and
thought, but rather, the result of habit and inheritance; we are
what we are. Christians, Mohammedans or Pagans, Catholics,
Presbyterians or Methodists, etc., because our parents were such:
and we take the religion we have inherited on faith, because,
either we have no time, or no facilities, or no ability to study the
matter critically and impartially to ascertain the truth; or, we
have not the education that will enable us to judge for ourselves,
and so the "laissez faire" policy of accepting our inherited faith
and not worrying about it, may seem best, and probably is best,
to the greater majority.
It is related that Bishop Wolfrannum converted the French
King Eadbodus (713 a.d.) to Christianity. As the king was about
to enter the baptismal font, he asked the bishop where his ances-
tors were — in heaven or hell! The bishop said that as they all
had been heathen, they were no doubt in hell. King Radbodus
thereupon stepped out of the font and said that he would rather
remain as he was and be with a kingly line hereafter, in hell, than
with a lot of beggars in heaven (Fig. 200).
In all religions there is a worship of a Power, or Powers,
greater than ourselves and outside of ourselves, a power, in whose
grasp we are as helpless and impotent as was the nightingale in
the claws of the hawk, as told in the fable by Hesiod in the old
Greek Bible (page 335).
Primitive man conceived many forms or manifestations of
380 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Divine Power, and therefore polytheism, or a belief in many gods,
is a peculiarity of Pagan people.
In whatever form this Divine Power was conceived, it al-
most always took the form of the worship of a sexual power that
created all nature. The burden of most religions is — "worship
thy Creator." The Creator, in practically all nations of Aryan
extraction, was the "Father," "our Father," "our Father who
art in Heaven!"
Among Aryans the most primitive idea was, that Uranus or
Sky overlay and held Gaea or Earth in one unending sexual em-
brace, from which resulted the creation of all things ; so thought
the Greeks and Eomans.
Or the Spirit of God brooded over the waters and generated
Fig. 200. — King Radbodus refuses to be baptized. In medieval ti'mes those about to l)e
baptized had to be nailed.
the earth and all that is therein; so thought the ancient Jews.
Possibly only a male god was intended in Genesis and the ascrib-
ing of feminine character to the waters may be a later philosoph-
ical interpretation.
Power, Strength, Brute Force, in storm or torrent, in man or
beast, always inspired awe. The flash of lightning, the crash of
thunder, the roar of the hurricane, struck terror into the heart of
man and made him recognize his own insignificance in the pres-
ence of the po^ver that he imagined to be the cause of these phe-
nomena (Fig. 201).
All manifestations of nature which were inexplicable to primi-
tive man, or which he could not produce, control or check, he
ascribed to a power which he called "God."
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 381
"A voice in tlie "wind I do not know;
A meanini^ on the face of the higli hills
Whose utterance I can not comprehend ;
A something is behind them: That is God!"
In all religions the deepest and most awe-inspiring attribute
of nature was the power of procreation or of reproduction. Even
St. Paul said: "A man * * * shall be joined imto his wife,
and they two shall be one flesh. This is a great mystery!''
Nature held no greater mystery than the mystery of birth,
and the origin of life; and this deepest riddle of nature attracted
the thoughts and attention of philosophers since very early times.
Fig. 201. — ' ' Origin of Religious Sentiment, ' ' from a painting by Kauffniann.
I have endeavored, in the quotations from the ancients to give
some idea of the great importance of this question to their minds,
and to give some of the theories they arrived at in the effort to
solve the mystery.
In all times since man began to think at all, the secret of his
own origin and existence must have most profoundly engaged the
thoughts of man. As long probably as man was able to have a
conscious ajopreciation of the blessings of life or existence, man-
kind was thankful to the Creator; and this thankfulness is the
burden of all religions to this day. All Christian literature is full
of the command, "Worship thy Creator," but this is not de-
382 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
manded in the Bible, which merely says, "Remember thy Cre-
ator" (Eccl. xii, 1).
Ideas as to the nature of the Creator have changed, and the
tracing of these changes gives lis some slight insight into the mode
of revelation Avhich has imparted to man his ideas of God ; rmming
through all religions we find the same thankfiilness to the power
that gave us our being ; in every form of religion we find traces of
the deification of sex.
The Lingam: General Considerations
It must have been noticed at quite an early time that no child
was born unless the man first copulated with the woman; how
completely male man claimed the credit for the creation of a new
human being appears from the theory of Anaxagoras (about
450 B.C.) that the embryo was formed altogether from the seed of
the father and that the mother merely furnished the place for its
development, as the seed of a plant might be placed in the ground
and grow. (See p. 140.) This theory, that the man "gave chil-
dren to his wife" is still held by some, as appears from the fre-
quent use of the expression "he made her a child." In Gen. xxx,
1, Rachel is quoted as having the same idea for "when Rachel
saw that she bare Jacob no children, Rachel * * * said unto
Jacob, Give me children, or else I die. ' '
Male man, on account of his physical strength, subjugated
the women and children, so that they looked up to the father of
the family with awe, as to a sort of household divinity, especially
as in many tribes, and even in some advanced nations, the man
held absolute sway over liberty and even over life and death of
his women, children and slaves.
Herbert Spencer believed that ancestor worship was the first
and the original religion.
The chief characteristic of the man, the male organ of genera-
tion, came to be looked upon as the symbol of the authority,
strength and power of the father, or creator of his family, and
eventually as a symbol for the Creator himself.
The subordinate position accorded to woman in such religions
we have already considered (see p. 66).
Among the Greeks the male organ, penis and two testicles,
was called phallus, wherefore we call sex worship also phallic
worsiiip. (Fig. 202.)
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
383
Among the ancient Phoenicians the penis was called "Asher,"
meaning: "The Upright, The Powerful, The Opener." The lat-
ter term referred to the rupturing of the hymen in the first coi-
tion with a virgin. Philo tells us about some of the Phoenician
gods, for instance: One of these accounts tells about "Chrysor,
the Opener," corresponding to the Egyptian god Ptali, or the
Phoenician Asher "the opener," which means the one who first
fertilizes a virgin, he who ruj)tures the hymen and "opens the
door to the womb," the Avay to the vagina. Possibly Ptah was con-
sidered identical with "Baal-Peor," the "Master of the Open-
ing," the "Master of the Hole" or the "Master of the Vulva."
J^ V'm&aaM.f'^^nwmyncirtluiyyyt''j /-^^^
6^
Fig. 202. — The phallus and its Fig. 203. — Phallic sjiiibols used by the alchemists in
symbols. medieval times.
Similar ideas prevailed among the ancient Israelites; the Bible
speaks of God Jehovah as the opener; Gen. xxx, 22: "and God
remembered Rachel, and God hearkened to her and opened her
womb;" Gen. xxx, 31: "and Avhen the Lord saw that Leah was
hated he opened her womb ; ' ' etc.
Oaths were taken by appealing to some god; or by touching
something sacred to some god ; among the ancient Jews, by laying
the hand on the penis of the one to whom the oath was given.
Like elsewhere in the Bible, the translators were ashamed of the
plainness of the "word of God" as they found it in the original
text and undertook to reprove God, by improving on his diction,
384 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
and they translated phallus or penis in Hebrew into "loin" in
English.
The touching or kissing of the Bible, when taking an oath, was
the same idea — touching something sacred. And onr merely hold-
ing up our right hand still retains the idea ; it implies an appeal
to heaven to witness the truth of the statement. The oath origi-
nally therefore was calling on Asher, or Baal, as a witness.
The Bible tells us that this deity was called ''Baal" or "The
Master;" or "Baal-Peor"— the "Master of the Hole," or Vulva,
among the Pagan neighbors of the ancient Israelites. Among the
Hindus the penis is called "lingam," and it is reverenced as the
visible representation of the Creator by more than three hundred
millions of Asiatic people today. In the ruins of ancient Egyptian
temples this symbol is often represented in realistic form, as seen
in sculptures from many ancient Egyptian temples. And from
Egypt it Avas transferred to Greek worship by Melampus. It is
also represented thus in some of the ruins of Aztec temples.
Among the Egyptians a figure of it was also used as a char-
acter in their hierogl3q3hic writings, "man" or "father;" ^ i^
it was mainly used as an ideograph, and meant "in front," "be-
fore," "generation," or "man."
But more frequently the lingam was represented s^miboli-
cally (Fig. 202) : — as a simple pillar; as a pillar with two stones
at the base to represent the testicles whence our popular word
"stones" for testicles, as well as the Biblical word for them (Lev.
xxi, 20) ; as a pillar with a transverse bar, like a capital letter T
upside do^m ; or as this could not readily be seen when surrounded
by a crowd of worshippers it was also symbolized as the "tau
cross," like a letter T.
We must always remember that to primitive man, as well as
to Pagan minds, there is nothing indecent in the natural physi-
ologic use of any organ of the human body. God did not create
Adam and Eve Avith a sense of shame regarding their naked bod-
ies. Therefore the idea of shame about sex matters Avas in a
sense unnatural; to use the figures of the sexual organs as sym-
bols of creative poAver Avas natural and Avithout intention of any
erotic meaning. The use of these symbols Avas for religious Avor-
ship; the only other use made of them Avas for burial places;
therefore, the temples and the tombs or graves Avere marked Avith
SEX AjStd sex worship
385
these sacred figures, and it stands to reason tliat no people would
desecrate these places with anytliing- that suggested impropriety
or ohscenity or vulgarity to them.
The erection of pillars of stone was already referred to
(p. 35()) ; dolmens and shnilar pillars abound throughout tlie
world ; but these, perhaps for similar reasons as those tliat influ-
enced the ancient Jews, were plain stones, for the use of hewn
stones to make an altar was forbidden in Exod. xx, 25; ''and if
thou wilt make me an altar of stone, thou shalt not build it of
hewn stone, for if thou lift up thy tool ux)on it, thou hast pol-
luted it." But in other nations the stones were often he^\m, even
in quite realistic phallic shapes.
\MAli-^i. iruiiu^. 9rt£a^
''XiJ^ '^^%ft: 7'«*-'*fW. "pt '^'^^
Fig. 204. — Towers, pillars, tombstones and menhirs as symbols of the phallus.
From these pillars have come our own tombstones, no longer
phallic except in being erect stones or monuments; and also our
towers and steeples of various shapes and sizes, but all uncon-
sciously retaining the uiDriglit form of primitive phallic pillars.
The tower of St. Vincent's church in St. Louis was originally
quite realistically i^hallic, but after the c^^clone in 1896 destroyed
the old steeple, the new one Avas not quite so suggestive of the
original motive of all steeples. There is practically^ no part of
tlie world which is Avithout jihallic joillars or toAvers.
The phallus Avas also SAmibolized as an arroAv, the tAvo barbs
signifying the testicles.
Man literally created or imagined God in his own image; the
386
SEX AND SEX AVORSTTIP
penis was ^'Aslier," the powerful, the opener; the right testicle
was called "Ann" or ''On," and was supposed to be superior
and to produce male offspring (see p. 144); the left testicle was
called ''Hoa" and Avas supposed to give rise to female offspring.
"Writers have given various reasons why the right testicle
was male ; it was usually larger tlian the left one ; or the left hung
lower and Avas therefore inferior. Neither statement is univer-
sally applicable and prol)al)ly neither one is correct. The right
side of the hofhj Avas male in antiquity, as Ave learnt in the old
Fi"-. 205.— A
mail siiowiiu
liaii ill slia|)(> of ui>iii;ht tiiai)i;l(' (in the jnibes.
theories of the Kal^balah, tlie Greek theories of conception, the
tAvo series of the Pythagorean numbers : Riglit and Left, Male and
Female (see p. 334), etc.
The syllable Ben in H.el)reAv means Son ; thus, Benaiah means
son of the Lord. AVe read in the thirty-fifth chapter of Genesis
(v. 16-20), ''And they (Jacol) and his people) journeyed from
Bethel and * * * Rachel travailed, and she had hard labor.
And it came to pass Avhen she Avas in hard labor that the mid-
Avife said unto her, Fear not, thou slialt have this son also —
and it came to pass as her soul Avas in departing (for she died)
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 387
that slie called liis iiaino Ben-Oiii ; hut his father called him Ben-
jamin, And Rachel died, and Avas hnried. * * * And Jacoh
set a ])illar on her "'rave."
The name Ben-Oni means son of On (son of the ri<;ht testi-
cle) ; the name Benjamin means, Son of the riii,ht side. We may
recall in this connection the importance of the rii^ht side as male
in connection Avith hei^-etting and in connection with the theories
abont the Avonib. Also, this quotation shows the antiquity of
grave-stones, to which reference is made on page 385.
The lingam was also represented by a very sacred form, the
Fig. 206. — S}nnl)ols dei'ived from |)ul)ie triangle and t'loni iiliallus.
pyramid or upright triangle, ''the sacred male friangle/' with its
apex upward, derived from the shape of the pubic hair of the man,
which Avas so characteristically different from the pubic hair of
the woman (Fig. 2()(i). This triangle symbolized the Trinity
among the most ancient people of Avhose religion Ave have record,
the Hindus, and probably CA^en before them, among their Aryan
ancestors; so also, among the ancient Egyptians, and as I shall
presently sIioav, also among modern Christians.
The lingam Avas also Avorshipped in the shape of the lotus
floAA^er or bud in India, China, Egypt and other Oriental conn-
388
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
tries, and was transplanted from these Pagan religions to Chris-
tian art as the lily or "fleur-de-lis." The lily is often a symbol
of God the Father in Christian chnrch art, where the Madonna
and child and lily are symbolical of the "Holy Family;" or the
lily is conventionalized in paintings \V and in sculpture •S* ;
also as the thyrsus, (the Bacchus sceptre or swibol) or bunch of
grapes, or as a pine-cone or pine-apple (see for instance the pine-
cone in the hand of the Assyrian god Ashur (Fig. 181); the
lingam is also shown as a divining rod, a two-forked stick, the
stick representing the penis, the two forks the testicles; or as a
Fig. 207. — Temple Dome at Srinugur; capital of Cashmere Valley, India.
clover leaf or shamrock, or in the shape of the Greek and Rus-
sian orthodox cross with three cross-bars, which latter is also
the cross of the pope of the Roman church, and was already in
use in the ancient Egyptian religious symbolism, and on the lids
of sarcophagi.
The shamrock is an Irish emblem of the Trinity; it is a leaf of
any one of several three-lobed varieties of plants {Trifolkmi pra-
tense, T. rcpens, or other clovers, or of Oxalis or water-cress).
The Irish believe that St. Patrick used a leaf of this kind to ex-
plain the Trinitj^ — one leaf yet three leaflets. On St. Patrick's
day, every devout Irishman wears a little bunch of shamrock.
This shows the dome of a temple in Srinugur (Fig. 207),
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 389
the capital of Caslniiei-e, in India. It represents the three mem-
bers of the phallic trinity. This form is also occasionally seen
in church windows, built in triplets, with the middle section lon,£?-
est ; its origin is the same as that of the dome.
Such windows can be seen in a church on South Grand Ave-
nue in St. liouis ; a sketch of such windows is sho^\m below :
f%
p
JJ u,
In the forests of India there are many shrines with realis-
tic figures of the lingam to which sterile w^omen make pilgrimages
that they may touch these holy images with their vulvas, in the
hope that they may then conceive. Some Hindu sects teach that a
woman who dies a virgin can not enter heaven; if a girl is pre-
vented from having connection with a man, as Avhen a man dies
and leaves a child widow (for girls are married when three to
six years old, and a widow can not remarry), such a widow goes
to a shrine and Avith a sacred stone phallus or lingam ruptures
her hymen, so that the angel guarding the gates of heaven, when
he examines her, will find that she has done her duty in regard to
coition and will let her in.
Medals and jewelry in the form of the lingam were Avorn by
Greek and Roman matrons and maidens, to make them fertile;
similar charms are frequently Avorn as amulets in modern Egypt.
In some parts of Europe cakes in the form of the male organs
are eaten by the Avomen on certain festi\^al days for the same
jmrpose. Pregnant women Avore images of the male organ, in
the hope that the frequent sight of them might produce bo}^ chil-
dren by pre-natal suggestion or influence; or they had pretty
little naked bo}^ slaves to Avait on them. (See Fig. 207-A.)
In the XIII and XIV Centuries the Abbey church of Cou-
lombs, Diocese Chartres, France, claimed to possess the prepuce
or foreskin of Jesus, Avhich had been cut off Avhen he Avas circum-
cised, and it Avas believed that Avlien a j)regnant Avoman touched
this relic, she Avas assured of a safe and easy confinement.
Henry V of England borrowed this relic in order that his Avife
Katherine might touch it, after Avhich he returned it to the abbey.
We liaA^e already learned that the main deities of India are a
Trinity of Brahma the Creator, Vishnu the Preserver, and Siva
390
SEX AND SEX WOItSHIP
the Destroyer (and Rei)i"()clue('r) ; these three corresponded to
the Greek and Roman Female Trinity of the Parcae or Fates,
and to the Scandinavian Trinity of the Norns. The Egyptians
worshipped quite a number of deities in sets of three, some male
only, others in sets of father, mother and child; for example,
Osiris, Isis and llarpokrat. In Egyptian hieroglyphics ''father,
mother and child" was written thus:
<=^^'f
Up to tJie Second Cenlui\ Christianity was a monotheistic re-
ligion, like tliat of the Jews; but about the time mentioned the
Bishop of Alexandria introduced first the worship of the Father
and Son, then of Father, Son and Holy Ghost, or the Trinity, to
Fig. 207-A. — Abraxas Medals; used as charms against disease. No. IV is a phallic
cluiiin, tlie god Pan, to cuie or prevent sterility.
facilitate proselytism among the Egyptians, and ])y the end of the
Fifth Century, the theory of a triune God Avas accepted also by
the other churches outside of Egypt.
The illustration (Fig. 209) shows a very antliroi)()morphic con-
ception of the Ti'inity which originated among the monks of Sa-
lerno, whither the idea had probal)ly been brought by some mis-
sionaries returned from India in imitation of the Hindu Trimurti,
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
391
ill the XIII Coiituiy. This same form of Trinity was found as an
altar piece in Cailiolie churches in the l^liilipiniics, when tlie
U'nited States acquired lliciii from Spain.
Images of th<' fructiryiiii;- god Pan (see page 355), oi- T^riapus,
were erected in the fields of ancient Hellas and Rome to insure
increase in crops, iiocks and family. Such figures were usually
pillars, hut often with a head, or a figure of a phallus in front;
Figure 210 shows a youthful couple offering flower wreaths to
Pan, with their j^etitions for offspring. A figure of a sitting Pri-
^^,3^
Fig. 208.
The Pareac, or Fates," by Fig. 209.— Tlie Trinity, invented at 8a-
Thumann. lenio, in the XIII Centuiy.
apus, with an erect penis, was kept in the temples, to which pros-
pective brides were taken l)y the priestesses who explained to
them the sexual functions of the man's parts. The brides usually
sat on the lap of tlie naked god, with his organ introduced into
their vaginas, thus rupturing their hymens as an offering to the
deity. From the permanent rigidity or erection of the god's penis
we have the medical term of priapism.
In Egyptian temples the walls were much thicker below than
above; the sides of the doors, or entrances, were therefore of an
392
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
irregular sliapo, more or less trapezoid; the sides were narrowest
above and wider toward the bottom. The sides of the temple
entrances were nsnally heavily decorated with sculiDtiires, but the
space is often divided into two or more panels. Here we see a
Fig. 210. — "Offering to Pan," from a painting.
:^-. ■
/ . '\ ■ ■
r
1
/
L!?jagw:?lS5CS3ijrs33T^
T-jOm^Si-T i/ ^i"d.:i:^--.
T«B.il
i'jg. 211. — Monoi)htlia oilering to Scti, same as 212, but realistically represented.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
393
panel from siieh a templo ciiti-ance at Kariiak, ropreseiitiiiii: tho
Pharaoh Meneplitha offering libations to Seti, who was the Egyp-
tian ''Giver of Life." This divinity is here represented in re-
alistic form, and the object of worship — the phallus, is boldly
slioAMi (Fig. 211) ; on another panel in the same entrance the
same thing is sho-\\Ti, bnt the realistic phallus is replaced by the
''Uas sceptre," a symbolic representation of the phallus, the
parts resembling the arrow or the divining rod in their signifi-
y
n
Fig. 212. — Menephtlia offering to Seti, symbolical.
Fig. 213. — Pyramid of Chaeops and Sphinx, Egypt.
394
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
cance (Fi^-. 212). Male deities in E^^'vptian temples are often
indicated by carrying- this icas in their hands, but frequently they
held their real organs in their hands.
The pyramids of Egypt Avere gigantic symbols of Seti, the
Creator. I have already explained the origin of this symbol, the
sacred male triangle, as based on the shape of the hairy triangle
on a man's pubes. It was not confined to the wonderful edifices,
which served as the tombs for the Pharaohs who erected them.
Chaeops, who built this pyramid, lived about 3050 b.c. The pyr-
amid is 480 feet high and 764 feet square at the base. Some
rt'"
Fig. 214. — Two gniii ouardiiio- a tonil), Gi/.t-li, Egypt.
authors have surmised that it was at fii-st intended as a tomb for
an Apis bull (Fig. 213).
Figure 214 shows the entrance to one of the Egy])tian tombs,
where two genii or guardian deities or angels hold this triangle
figure of God before themselves in place where the real organs
would be, had they been represented realistically.
Ruskin criticised this triangle (Fig. 215) from a medieval
Christian church; he says that Gothic ai't was so crude that it
represented an angel in this image, with a face so imperfect that
the mouth was forgotten. Ruskin did not know, apparently, that
this was the sacred male triangle, and that what he mistook for
eyes and nose was really the "lingam and stones." Or if he
did know, he did not wish to state the truth.
SEX AND SEX WOTISIIII
39.3
In the ''AVelt-Gemaelde-Cjiallerie," a woik already referred
to, we find a copper-plate cut of God appearing to Moses in the
hurnino- bush (Fig. 21(1). This male triangle represents the male
god Jehovah. We shall have occasion to see several other cuts
from this same work.
The "Kurfuersten-Bibel" is a translation of the Bible by
Martin Tjuther, and is so called because in the front part of the
book are the likenesses of the dukes who assisted Luther in the
work of the Reformation. It is a very large book, weighs about
30 or 40 pounds, and is curiously illustrated with fine copper-
plate illustrations (publ. in 1768).
Fit"-. 215. — A Gothic male tiiaiii'le.
Fig. 21(3. — God appeariui;- to Moses in the
burning bush.
I show in Fig. 217 a reproduction of the title page. Note
here the upright triangle or pyramid, immediately over the head-
ing ''Biblia;" above this on the base of the cornice occur the head
of an angel — St. Matthew ; the head of a lion — St. Mark ; the head
of a bull — St. Luke; and the head of an eagle — St. John.
The man on the left is Moses, with the two tablets of stone,
pointing to Jesus on the right, to symbolize that the Old Testament
was a precursor of Christ who was the fulfillment of the proph-
ecies of the Old Testament, the Law and the Prophets.
Christ is represented naked, as he was the "man without sin,"
therefore represented without the insignia of sin — clothing.
396
SEX AND SEX AVOPvSHIP
On the base of the structure, on the left, is the Agnus Dei, or
Lamb of God, a lamb tied ready for slaughter and sacrifice, which
symbolizes Jesus offered for the sins of humanity; and to the
right, the cup and plate of the Eucharist, the s^^mbolical sacrifice
of Jesus in the Ncav Testament dispensation. Most of these dif-
ferent symbols point to a phallic origin.
Figure 218 is an illustration of God appearing to Moses on
Mt. Nebo, delivering the tablets of the Ten Commandments to
Moses. The sacred male triangle represents the God Jehovah.
Among the ancient Jews it Avas forbidden to make images to be
IBLIA
flu'clrtiif'C
iici-Snitjiljl
Fig. 217.— Title page of the
f uersteu-Bibel. ' '
' Kur-
Fig. 218. — God appearing to Moses on
Mount Nebo.
worshipped. "Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image,
or any likeness of aiiythiufj that is in heaven above, or that is
in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth. Thou
shalt not bow down thyself to them, nor serve them * * *"
(Exod. XX, 4-5).
This commandment has been kept by the ancient Israelites,
and still more strictly by the Mohammedans; the latter take the
fourth verse of this quotation out of its context, prohibiting the
ivorship of all such images, and they prohil)it the making of im-
ages, even as portraits or works of art, so that a rich Turk, in-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
897
stead of ha^dng• marble or bronze statues of nymplis, will prob-
ably keep pretty naked Georg-ian or Circassian slave girls to orna-
ment his lionse.
So God was represented by syDthols and not by images, and
this triangle was a favorite method of figuring God.
The " Kurf uersten-Bibel' ' also has this illustration (Fig. 219)
of the V Chapter of the Apocalypse of St. John; and the halo
above the head of God is a male triangle or pyramid.
Likewise, this same triangle is used as a halo for God in this
Fig. 219. — God and halo ; also Saints
Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, and the
Agnus Dei.
Fig. 220. — A modern picture of a mass;
God with triangular lialo.
copy (Fig. 220) of a modern print representing the liberation of
a soul from purgatory in answer to masses said for the repose of
the souls of the dead.
In medieval Christian church art a modification of the tri-
angle was used to represent the Trinity (Fig. 221). The mean-
ing of the male and female triangles seems to have been somewhat
hazy and the female triangle was sometimes used for the male
trinity. Sometimes the two lower side limbs of this triangle
398
SEX AND SEX AVORSHIP
were curved outward, giving tlie design the sliape of a heraldic
escutcheon. "Est" means is and non est means is not; "pater"
is father, " filins" is son, and " spiritus sanctns" is lioly gliost;
and the Avord dens means (Jod. A slightly diiferent form of it
can l)e seen in a stained AvindoAv in Christ Church Cathedral,
Episcopal, in St. Louis.
Yet another use of the triangle (Init tlie feminine or inverted
pyramid, probal)ly due to ignoi'ance on the part of those Avho de-
termined on its use) is that Avliich syml)olizes tlie Avar work of
the Y. M. C. A. It carries on its three faces the description of
Plato, of the triune nature of man; Plato taught that man con-
Fig. 221.— The Trinity. A medieval desi'
but still in nsc.
SPIRIT
T-TT-
jC
■'-■''■'■
7
Y.W.C.A
Fig. 222. — Tiie upper is the
feminine tiiangle as used by the
Y. M. C. A. ; the lower, as used by
the Y. W. C. A.
sisted of body, mind and spirit. It is of course possible that the
female triangle Avas designedly chosen to symbolize that our sol-
dici's Avent to Avar in defence of tlie holiest object, pure Avoman-
hood, against the brutal attacks and misuses of the enemies (Fig.
222). In the triangle used by tlie Y. AV. C. A. for tlieir war-A\()rk
the shape is correct — feminine.
This (Fig. 223) represents a Cupid (Amor or Eros) teasing
a nymph; it is entitled '^LoA^e Resisted." The God of LoA^e,
Cupid, is usually represented Avith a bow and arroAv, or a quiver
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
399
full of arroAvs, wliiHi aro symhols of tlie liiii2;ain, erect from law-
ful ()]• couju^'al love. (Sec also Fig-. 35.)
Tills idea is also found in tlie art of India (Fig. 224), A\'1i('i'e
tlie God of Love, Kama-Deva, is represented as sliooting an ar-
row made of a lotus bud, tlic lattei' a symbol of ilie masculine organ
or lingam, as already explained. The bow is sujiposed to be made
of sugar cane. The god is sometimes figured as riding on a dove,
or on a sparrow; both emlilematic of much coitional ability.
Dionysus, or Bacchus, the God of Wine, Drunkenness and
Fig.
223.--" Love Resisted;" the arrow
is a symbol of the lingam.
Fig. 224.— The lliiulu tiod of love.
Debauchery, was worshipped in ancient Greece and Rome, and
the rites on his festival days were accompanied by nnbridled sex-
ual excesses. The Dionysus' sceptre was a staff surmounted by a
tigure resembling a bunch of grapes (the latter is called in botany
a "thyrsus") and is known as the thyrsus sceptre (Fig. 225) ; the
figure is not very definitely represented and may resemble a pine-
cone or a pine-apple. This symbol represents the penis erect
under the influence of illicit love, or passion, or lust; it is a very
frecpient ornament on the roofs of Christian churches, such as
St. Peter's at Rome, etc.
400
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
This illustration is from a modern painting, and figuratively
represents a girl playing with the lingam of a man (Fig. 226).
Figure 227 is an artistic representation of the conflict that goes
on in a man's mind, between lawful love and illicit iDassion or
lust; the arrow of Eros is the symbol of the lingam erect under
influence of lawful love, Avhile the staff held by the Bacchante, or
priestess of Bacchus, is the symbol of a lingam erect under the
excitement of lustful desires. From Eros, the Greek name of the
god of love, we have such terms as erotic, and from Amor, his
^'139
Fig. 225. — A Faun and Nympli, playing Fig. 226. — Girl playing with a Dionysus
with a Dionysus rod. rod.
Boman name, such words as amorous, and all other words A\hirh
are derived from these word-stems.
The Temptation of St. Anthony (Fig. 228) is a popular sub-
ject for illustration by modern artists. St. Anthony was a very
holy man, a celibate recluse, but a preacher of Christianity to
multitudes who flocked to visit and hear him. His sanctity and
his continence were above reproach.
To undermine the influence of this holy man, some heathen
men tried to have him seduced and then to expose him, caught in
flagrante. When the beautiful courtesan who was hired to bring
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
401
this about, tried her seductive wiles upon liiiii, to avoid succumb-
ing to the temptation llie saint bit off the end of his tong'ue that
the pain miglit divert liis tlioughts from tlie h)voly vision before
]iim, and from the carnal desires she inspired. It is but fair to
say, that the story is considered to be merely an allegory of the
"memory pictures" which troubled him in his dreams, Avhile the
probable explanation is, that the whole story belongs in the same
category as the story of William Tell and the apple, and George
AVashington and the cherry tree — historical fakes.
Fig. 227. — Amor and Bacchante, by Les- Fig. 228. — Tenii)tation of St. Anthony,
sing.
Menander, a pre-Christian Gnostic, said: "Of all wild beasts
on earth or in the sea, the greatest is a woman." Many of the
early church-fathers held similar views, and the early saints
taught that woman was unholy and made as a temptation to man,
and that she was to be shunned at all times as one would shun
sin and evil. Even St. Paul said: "It is good for a man not to
touch a woman" (I Cor. vii, 1). Sexual connection was the great-
est of all sins.
402 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
The poet Granville wrote:
"Mankind, from Adam, have been women's fools;
Women, from Eve, have been the Devil's tools;
Heaven might have spared one torment when we fell ;
Not left us women, or not threatened hell. "
And Milton sighs in Paradise Lost:
"Oh, why did God create at last
This novelty on earth; this fair defect
Of nature, and not fill the Avorld at once
With men as angels, Avithout feminine!"
Wlien Christianity came, and in fact even long before then,
many ascetic men thought that the greatest merit Avas to abstain
from those things that were most pleasant, and as the most cher-
ished indulgence was sexual congress with Avomen, these fanatics
swore off this indulgence altogether, even going so far as to try to
subdue all desire by fasting, self-castigation and self-denials of all
kinds, as is still the case in some of our modern religious celibate
orders; and if these measures did not succeed in deadening all
desire for woman, these men did not hesitate to castrate them-
selves, as has already been related of Origen and the Skopsi,
in order the more surely to escape all temptation, in obedience
to the command in the Bible: "But I say unto you: That Avhoso-
ever looketh on a Avoman to lust after her, hath committed adul-
tery Avith her already in his heart. And if thy right eye offend
thee pluck it out and cast it from thee : for it is profitable for thee
that one of thy members should perish and not that thy Avhole body
should be cast into hell."
To shoAv that St. Anthony Avas not such a self-mutilated
fanatic, or anchorite, but sul)ject to the ordinary temptations of
the flesh, the medieval artists affixed the T-shaped symbol of the
lingam to the regalia of the saint, as in this Avoodcut of about
A.D, 1525, by A^on Leyden. In this illustration the Avoman tempt-
ress was the devil in disguise, as shoA\m by the horns, and that
she was not a chaste Avoman is implied by her pregnant belly.
Medieval art Avas often coarse and crude in expressing itself,
but it generally succeeded in making itself plainly understood
(Fig. 229). '
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
403
This same idea was also expressed in an altar-piece, at Wei-
mar, in wliicli the staff is surmounted by the tau cross, which on
this account is also kno^^^l as the "St. Anthony's Cross."
This T-shaped cross was tlie sliape of the cross used l)y the
ancients for crucifixion. The projection above the head of Jesus
was not part of the cross, but a label on wliicli was the derisive
inscrij)tion : "Jesus Nazarenus, Rex Judaeorum" (I. N. R. I.).
In earlier Christian architecture this was also the form of
the ground-plan of churches and cathedrals, just as at present
the four-limbed or Latin cross is used.
!^v
Fig. 229.— " Temptation of St. Anthony," by Von Leyden.
The origin of the latter kind of cross is sought in a figure of
a staff (the erect lingam) surrounded by a ring (yoni) or circle,
as still used in many tomlDstones iii Turkish cemeteries, or as
shown in the cut below :
Here (Fig. 230) is a picture Avhicli shows the same combina-
tion of staff (lingam) and ring (yoni) and therefore signifies
coition or the two sexes in union. This explains the meaning of
what Ruskin said of these two crosses ; he said the tau cross was
404
SEX ATs^D SEX WORSHIP
the ''cross of suffering" (the male unsatisfied by woman), and
the Latin cross Avas the "cross of trimnph" (the male satisfied
by union Avith woman).
We have already learned that the ancient Aztecs or Quiches
were acquainted with representations of the crucifixion and that
the cross Avas a sacred symbol in Yucatan. Fig. 8 on page 33
was a mould cut in stone; copies Avere made in relief by taking-
impressions in moist clay and then drying in the sun, as is done
in Central America to this day Avith their statuettes of adobe.
AVlien the first Spaniards discovered America they found this
figure in use in religious Avorship.
Fig. 230. — Fresco by Fra Angelico da Fiesole, S. Marco, Florence.
The Trinity
The earliest form of religion in Bal)ylonia appears to haA^e
been a sort of fetichism, or Shamanism, Avhich Avas similar to
that Avhich is still belie\^ed in by the Samoyeds and the subarctic
tril)es of Siberia. According to this belief the Avorld swarmed
Avith spirits or demons, to which diseases and disasters Avere due
and against Avhicli protection Avas sought in A^arious mascots and
charms. The cherubs, the Avinged bulls and other creatures of that
kind, Avhich guarded the entrances, doors or Avindows to the
houses, Avere charms used to protect against these demoniac agen-
cies, just like Ave ourselves use such charms on our oAvn churches
and houses.
The introduction of sex Avorship and of sex symbols Avas a
later dcA^elopment, not only in Babylon, but in probably all reli-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
405
gions wliicli adopted such ideas. The phallic worship was intro-
duced from barbarous people, as for instance from Accadia,
Phoenicia, etc., and although some authors sj^eak of it as incul-
cating noble ideas and "divine acts," such was not i-eally the
case, but phallic worship and especially phallic festivals every-
where seem to have been a degeneration from these forms of
religion.
In Asia Minor several people worshipped Aslier, Ann and
Hoa (page 383), whicli personified or symbolized the penis, and
the right and the left testicles. This was probably the first ''trin-
ity" that was worshipped anj^where, and from this were derived
i"Mo
Fig. 231. — Phallic symbols still used on our houses.
other forms of trinities, not so distinct^ or coarsely sexual.
In Babylon, in quite early times, they Avorshipped a trinity
consisting of "Na," the sky, ''Ea," the earth, and "Mulge," the
underworld. The underworld of those days, however, was not
yet the "hell" of more modern religions, but more like the "ha-
des" of the Greeks, as will be explained later on.
The ancient Egyptians believed in a Supreme Being at once
father and mother (similar to tlie hermaphrodite gods already
considered) ; from this idea originated the worship of deities in
triads — father, mother, and son : Osiris, Isis and Harpokrat, for
instance.
The Egyptian religion extended over a period of more than
406
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
5000 years during which it underwent many changes; also, dif-
ferent districts or provinces, or even cities, had different cults
and different dialects, so that the names of the gods and goddesses
seem dissimilar although they may well have meant the same dei-
ties. The result is a great confusion in formulating in our times
a consistent theory of Egyptian mythology or religion. Yet we
know that many deities were worshipped in sets of three, three
being a sacred mrniber.
Only Osiris (father), Isis (mother) and Horns or Harpokrat
(son) were worshipped in every part of Egypt. Pta or Phtah
was also generally considered to be the actual creator or demi-
urge. Thoth assisted Osiris in judging the souls of the dead, and
he had a wife, Ma-t, the goddess of truth ; they were worshipped
as a couple. Ea was the Supreme God.
Then there were various triads, whose w^orship was local;
we will consider them in a tabulated list:
FATHER :
MOTHER :
CHILD :
TERRITORY :
Amen-ra,
Mut,
Khnus S
Thebes
Ptah,
Paklit or
Sokliet,
Imlioten $
Memphis
Haruer,
Tasen-nefcrt,
Pnebto-pkhrut $
Ombos
Sebek,
Hatlior,
Khnus $
Ombos
Num,
Sati,
Ankt 5
Nubia
Num,
Nelaout,
Harp-pkhrut,
Latapolis
Munt,
Rata
Har-pklirat,
HerraoBthis
Osiris,
Isis,
Horus, $
All Egypt.
These were the ''Holy Families" of Egypt; they were wor-
shipped more devoutly than the other deities, and their influence
on more modern ideas and religions will become apparent far-
ther on.
It is not necessary here to consider the other deities, although
some had very distinct sexual significance, as for instance Suben,
goddess of maternity, etc.
The ancient Phoenicians worshipped as a triad or Trinity,
the Sun, Moon and Earth. The Greeks and Romans had the triad
of the Fates or Parcae, already considered (p. 391), who s^in-
bolized Past, Present and Future. The Norsemen or Scandina-
vians had a similar triad ; they Avere three maidens, Urd, Ver-
dandi and Skuld, wlio also symbolized Past, Present and Future;
they sat under the Tggdrasil tree in Asgard and determined the
fates of gods and men. Tlie Trimurti, or Hindu Trinity, was an
SEX AND SEX WOKSTTTP 407
inseparable trinity of Bralinia (middle), Vishnu (right), and
Siva (left). The syllable Om is the symbol for this trinity, Avhich
has already been described on page 9. It is explained that the
letter 0 is a combination (or intermediate sound) of the vowels
a and n = 0. A stands for Brahma, Z7* for Vishnu, and M for
Siva. This trinity in India is however mainly the object of phil-
osophical belief, for the masses worship Siva alone.
The Padma Purana (a sacred book) says: ''In the beginning
of Creation the great Vishnu, desirous of creating the world,
produced from the right side of his body himself as Brahma;
then in order to preserve the world he produced from the left side
of his body Vishnu; and in order to destroy the world he pro-
duced from the middle of his body the eternal Siva. ''Some wor-
ship Brahma, others Vishnu, others Siva; but Vishnu, one, yet
threefold, creates, preserves and destroys ; therefore, let the pious
make no distinction between the three."
The conception of Siva was evolved from Indra, the god of
the raging storm, for which reason Siva is usually represented
dark blue, of the color of the storm-cloud.
In India the male triangle is sometimes used as a symbol
for this trinity.
In ancient Mexico and Central America a trinity was also
worshipped: Toliil, the thunder; Avihix, lightning; and Gagavitz,
the thunderbolt.
The Bible does not contain the word "Trinity;" but the early
Christians commenced at an earh^ period to philosophize about it,
and God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Ghost were
accepted as members of this triad. The idea of God the Father
was the old Biblical god of the Jews ; in the year 325 the Coun-
cil of Nice affirmed the divinity of Jesus as Christ, and in the
year 381 the Council of Constantinople added the doctrine of the
divinity of the Holy Ghost. From this the theory of the Trinity
was deduced, which is that these three are not separate but to-
gether constitute only one God- — or Unity. The Trinity in Unity
was declared to be an article of faith by the Church. One sect
of Christians, however, maintained for some time a belief in Tri-
theism, or in Three Gods, separate one from another, like an
Egyptian triad.
*In old alphabets » and x' were alike in shape.
408 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
After the Reformation of Luther, Unitarianism became com-
mon ; this sect believes that God the Fatlier is the onl}^ and a nni-
personal God, as opposed to Trinitarianism, or the l)elief in the
Trinity.
In ecclesiastical art and symbolism, a representation of the
trinity was common, in the form of the sacred triangle (see
p. 398).
About the year 400, Arius taught that there was a time Avlien,
from the very nature of son-ship, the son did not exist, because a
father must be older than his son. But the Church, at the Coun-
cil of Nicaea, decreed that those who say that there was a time
when the Son of God was not, and that before he was begotten he
Avas not, and that he was made out of nothing and is created, or
changeable or alterable, be cursed or anathematized. This estab-
lished the Trinit}^ as an article of faith.
The Sabellians, a Christian sect, taught that the Trinity was
to be understood as meaning three manifestations or attributes
of the same god; in other words, the Sabellian god Avas formu-
lated in the shape of man as defined by the Greek philosopher
Plato, Avho taught that man consisted of body, soul and spirit;
the Greeks thought that Mother Earth gave man his body, the
moon gave him the soul, and the sun the spirit.
But it seems likely, that if human thought liad not been so
thoroughly imbued with the trinity of the phallus, the other triads
and the trinity might never have been considered or evolved at all.
The phallus was a trinity, acting as one impregnating unit, al-
though composed of three separate and differently-functioned
parts.
PLANT WORSHIP
The worship of trees was prevalent in ancient times, as is
learned from the. frequent mention of ''groves" in the Bible.
The trees, however, were symbols, both of male and of female
qualities, in different countries and among different people. The
worship was not as important as that of animals, anthropomor-
]:»hic gods and goddesses, and natural objects, as sun, moon and
planets; in our times the festival of the May-pole and the Christ-
mas tree are survivals of ancient Pagan tree-worship.
Prior to the V Century, Christmas was not a Christian fes-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 409
tival; instead, the 2r)tli of March was celebrated as the anniver-
sary of the Annunciation, or the Conception, liy Mai-y; this day
was also called Ladij Daij in some parts of Europe, where Our
Ladij, etc., are also terms often applied to Mary. But in the
V Centur}' this festival was made less important, and the hlrth
of Jesus, nine months later at full term, on the 25th of December,
was made a Christian festival, mainly, probably, to substitute a
Christian festival for the old Pagan festival of the Saturnalia
(December 17 and 18) and the Opalia (December 19 and 20).
The Komans had been in the habit of celebrating these days, by
an exchange of presents, especially to children who were remem-
bered with dolls and toys ; the rooms were decorated with ever-
greens and tapers were lighted, because at this festival the old
fires were extinguished and neAV fire obtained from the temple of
Vesta; the transition from such a festival to one a few days
later, mth the accompanying gifts, burning candles, decorated
evergreen trees, etc., was not abrupt l)ut easy, and the old Pagan
Saturnalian rites gave way more readily to the Christian inter-
pretation of the festivities.
In England the festival in honor of the winter solstice, which
had been celebrated by the burning of the Yule log, by decorating
the home with evergreens and mistletoe (which was sacred in
Druidic times) and with, burning candles and much feasting, was
changed also to a festival with a Christian interpretation. The
old decorated tree and evergreens were retained, but the associa-
tion with tree-worship Avas minimized and finally lost.
Primitive people generally believed that forests, streams,
springs, meadows, hills and vallej's were populated by supernatu-
ral beings, but not divine or inmiortal or of godlike nature, such
as fauns, sileni, dryads, nymphs, etc., who sported al)out in more
or less abandon.
In Arcadia, for example, a row of tall cypress trees were sup-
posed to be inhabited by spirits called at irdpBtvoi, the virgins; but
the most usual name for these spirits was i-v/te^at, or n^miphs.
In Germany is a group of three trees which have been ven-
erated for centuries, called the ''Three Graces" (Fig. 232), after
the ''Three Graces" of the Greeks (Fig. 233). The beauty and
symmetry of the trees readily explains why they were called
"The Tliree Graces."
Figure 180 shows a "sacred place" in Africa; a tree, repre-
410
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
senting the lingam, and two stones, usually meteorites, intended to
represent the testicles. Moses already called the testicles stones,
and we still do so in ordinary language, although "nuts" is also
frequently used. The ancients said that the goddess Astarte in-
vented the use of "inspired" (meteoric) stones, Avhich were used
in the treatment of the sick by waving them over the patient
in practically the same manner as the North American Indians
wave "big medicine" stones over their patients. These stones
were sometimes dressed in robes, or they were held in the hand
while offering sacrifices. Philo said that meteoric stones were
sacred, because they were considered to be divine messengers,
jiis&SsSa^^^T^e*
Fig. 232.— Tliree gigantic trees in Ger- Fig. 233.
many, named the ' ' Three Graces ' ' on
account of their graceful proportions.
-"Three Graces," hy Thorwald-
sen.
having fallen out of heaven; they were usually worshipped in
connection with trees as here shown. In the days of early aero-
nautics, when Montgolficr and other Frenchmen developed the art
of ballooning, a balloon passed over a village but above the clouds
so tliat it could not l)e seen. Tlie l)alloon was rapidly falling, so
l)allast was thrown out, and among the articles throAvn out was a
three-legged wooden stool; the descent of this stool was observed,
and the priest was notified, and the stool was placed in the church
SEX AISTD SEX WORSHIP 411
as a very sacred relic — because it liad fdlleii oiil of heaven! A
similar idea rendered the meteorites sacred.
The sacred stones were not considered to be idols, but were
merely venerated as symbols of the deities. But occasionally they
were supposed to be inhabited by the god whom they symbolized.
This was also the view held in regard to sacred trees or groves,
of which some mention is due.
In Caanan, in ancient times, plant worship was common, and
the Israelites frequenth^ lapsed into idolatry connected with tree
worship, as is evidenced by the numerous references in the Bible
to the "groves;" this is said to be a euphemistic translation of
the places where the grossest forms of sexual excesses and aber-
rations were practiced in honor of Baal Peor (the Master of the
Hole, or Vulva) and Ashera, the female principle in nature.
Ashera meant the "Happy One," and the symbol was the trunk
of a tree. According to some authors, Ashera meant the symbol
or idol of Ashtoreth, rather than the name of the goddess herself.
The goddess Ashtoreth, Astoreth, Ashtaroth, Astarte (Gr.),
Islitar (Assyr.), Istarah (Pers.), was the same goddess; the name
is from the Greek word aaryjp (Lat. aster), a star. She was sym-
bolized by the moon or by tlie planet Venus. According to some
authors the words "grove" or "groves" in the Bible should be
"Ashtoreth" (sing.) or "Ashtaroth" (plur.) ; the word "grove"
being an error in translation.
These "groves" are referred to in the Bible with great dis-
approval, and their worshij) was considered as idolatry; it is
true, that in very ancient times, long before the times of Moses,
Abraham planted a grove and this is mentioned without being
condemned ; Gen. xxi, 33 : " And Abraham planted a grove in
Beer-sheba and called there on the name of the Lord." But
more usually the planting of groves is strongly condemned ; Dent.
x\d, 21 : "Thou shalt not plant thee a grove of any trees near unto
the altar of the Lord;" or I Kings, xvi, 33: "And Ahab made a
grove; and Ahab did more to provoke the Lord God of Israel to
anger than all the kings of Israel that were before him." Also —
II Kings, xvii, 16: and Israel "made them molten images, even
two calves, and made a grove * * * and served Baal."
We shall learn more about Baal later ; we are considering here
only his temples or places for worship — the groves.
Baal was often represented by sun-pillars or stones, and
412 . SEX a:n^d sex worship
Asliera hy trees, the word "groves" meaning the heathen com-
bination of these male and female symbols. The African ''sacred
places" (p. 344) are survivals of the "groves" of the Bible.
The earliest use of stone pillars used in ancient Israel and in
Canaan were probal^ly not phallic in shape or significance, but
merely marked "holy places," as is referred to in Gen. xxviii,
20-22 : ' ' And Jacob vowed a vow, saying, If God will be with me,
and will keep me in this way that I go and Avill give me bread to
eat, and raiment to put on, so that I come again to my father's
house in peace; then shall the Lord be my God: and this stone,
which I have set for a pillar, shall be God's house."
But later on, by the times of Moses, the pillars seem always
to have had phallic significance and were condemned, and in the
groves the trees or tree-stems stood for Ashera and the i)ine-
cone for Baal.
In these temples or groves of Canaan were congregated many
priests, also temple attendants, female and male prostitutes (sod-
omites) whose earnings went into the temple treasury.
The Hindus believed that Krishna brought with him from
heaven the sacred tree Parijata, which drives away hunger, thirst,
disease, old age and other evils. In India, also, a plant was (and
is) worshipped which is called Soma; it grows in Northern India
{Asclepias acida) from which in Vedic times an intoxicating
drink was made, which was gratifying to men and gods. This
plant is sacred. Also, the lotus is worshipped in India, as well
as in Egypt and other countries.
In Egypt there grow white, blue and red lotus flowers; the
white {Nympliaea Lotus) and blue {Nymphaea caendea) lotus
were sacred in ancient Egypt and are an essential ornament in
temple ornamentation (see Fig. 234) ; the open flower sjanbol-
ized the lingam, but the bud was also used for the same thing.
The Buddhists practice plant-worship, although it is not spo-
ken of in their Avritings.
The Hawaiians worshipped as a deity a plant which yielded
a very fme textile fiber ; fish-nets made of it have been known to
have been in use for over fifty years. It is called Olona {Toucliar-
dia latifolia) and it gives the strongest and most duralile fiber in
the world.
In ancient Assyria the "grove" or "tree of life" was repre-
sented ill sculpture as sliOAvn in Fig. 235; the central pillar
SEX AND SEX WOKSITIP
413
represents a Ihigaiii, Avitli its apex in contact witli a symbol wliich
represents the clitoris; tlie arcli is tlie "door of life" or yoni,
and the thirteen flowers which it bears mean the thirteen men-
strual epochs of the woman in a year; menstruation is still spoken
of as the "flowers."
In later tinu^s the alchemists used a similar svmholism; in
Fig. 23-1. — Offering to Soli by Pharaoh Meneplitha; see lotus tlower and buds behind
tlie god.
Fig. 235. — An Assyrian Tree of Life.
this illustration of the marriage of the sun and moon, the par-
ents of the "philosophers' stone," the plant also has these thir-
teen menstrual "flowers" (Fig. 236).
In ancient Greece and Rome trees were supposed to he the
habitations of dryads, nymphs, fauns and satyrs ; many still be-
414
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
lieve such creatures to exist, but now under the names of fairies
or elves, ''the little iieople," ''the good people," and in Ireland,
the banshee.
Dodona, in Epirus, was the seat of an ancient Greek sanc-
tuary and oracle; the latter was considered second only to the
oracle at Delphi, Avliich was the most celebrated of all Greek
oracles. The method of gathering the response of the oracle
was by listening to the rustling of the leaves of an old oak tree,
which was supposed to be the seat of the deity; this was perhaps
but a reminder of tree-worship of former times.
In Rome and Greece there were also goddesses who presided
Fig. 236. — Mai-riage of the sun and moon, parents of the Philosopher's stone;
alchemistic.
over plants, as Ceres, the goddess of crops, Flora, the goddess of
flowers, Pomona, the goddess of fruits, etc.
The wife of Tyndareus, the King of Sparta, attracted the
notice of Zeus by her beauty, and he seduced the queen. From
this union resulted a daughter, the goddess Helena, who pre-
sided over the welfare of children. Unmarried maidens cele-
brated festivals in her honor, and at these festivals she was wor-
shipped in the form of a sacred tree.
Then in various countries "hoianomancy" or divination from
leaves (usually sage or fig) was practiced; letters were written on
leaves and then the wind was allowed to toss these leaves about;
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 415
after a certain time those that remained were arranged to spell
words or sentences, which were accepted as the answers from the
gods. The fig-tree and the fig were sacred; Adam and Eve cov-
ering themselves with fig-leaves. The names of two rivers in
paradise, the tree of life, and the seducing serpent in Genesis, are
originally Persian and Hindu stories. The fig is a symbol of the
feminine, because it resembles in size and shape a human uterus
or Avomb.
In various parts of the world tree worship is still extant; for
instance, in America, Africa, Asia and Australia. Even in Eng-
land we find reminders in such names of places as Holywood,
Holyoak, etc. ; among the people known as the Chersonese, the
spirits are still worshipped in groves of trees, or in the forests —
the good spirits in groves of deciduous trees and the bad spirits
in groves of coniferous trees; the latter are supposed to be
haunted by the North American Indians.*
The Wych (witch) Hazel {Ulmus montana) is indigenous in
Great Britain, and in parts of Europe. It has had an extensive
cult, as its name ("witch") implies, in connection with super-
natural powers or witchcraft; it was the favorite source for ob-
taining the divining rod with which to find water for wells, hid-
den deposits of minerals,. lost articles, etc.; in many parts of Eu-
rope twigs of this tree are used when driving cows to the bull.
Divining rods are of great antiquity (Hosea iv, 12) ; Agric-
ola, in 1557 a.d. mentions their use in locating veins of ore. Their
use in finding Avater is still practiced amongst us.
Plants were worshipped in ScandinaA^a (the Norse tree
Iggclrasil) and in Germany (Fru Holler, etc.) ; they are still a
A^ery important feature in China, Japan, etc.
Asgard AA^as the home of the Aesir (or the Olympus of the
Norse gods). When the Aesir, the pantheon of the Norse gods,
created men they connected Midgard, the home of men, Avith As-
gard, the home of the gods, by a bridge Avhicli men call rainboAV,
Avhich also leads to the sacred fountain of Urd, situated in the
shade of the tree Iggdrasil Avhere the gods take council. Three
of the Aesir found tAvo trees, one an elm tree from Avhicli they
fashioned the first Avoman, the other an ash tree, from AA^hich they
fashioned the first man.
*An interesting example of this superstition is described in the novel To Have and to Hold,
by Mary Johnston.
410 SEX AXD SEX WORSHIP
The Druids held the oak-tree and the mistletoe in great ven-
eration, especially when the latter Avas fonnd on an oak-tree, thus
combining the sanctity of the two plants; when thus found, a
priest clad in white garments cut the mistletoe with a knife made
of gold, and then tA¥o white hulls were sacrificed under the oak
tree on which the mistletoe was found.
Pliny records that the Druidic name for mistletoe meant
''All Heal," or "Heal All;" he also said that mistletoe was con-
sidered good " conceptum foeminarum adjuvare, si omnino secuni
liahemit" (to aid conception on the part of Avomen, if they have
a little of it with them"). In olden times, as Ave learn from the
Bil)le, Avomen took pride in heing fertile and in having children;
tliey Avere not desirous, as is noAv too frequently the case, to avoid
the pains of childliirth and the bother of rearing children.
Mistletoe Avas also supposed to l)e a charm of particular bene-
fit in Avomen's troubles of various kinds, and Avas therefore kept
in the rooms of a married couple.
It Avas sacred to the Goddess Mylitta in Phoenicia, in Avhose
temples it Avas used for decorative purposes. Every Phoenician
Avoman Avas obliged, once in her lifetime, to have connection Avith
a man not her husband, as a religious rite in the temple of My-
litta; when she Avas ready to do this, she Avent to the temple and
sat under a sprig of the suspended mistletoe, and any man Avho
saAV a Avoman "under the mistletoe" could ask her to accompany
him to one of the alcoves provided for the purpose, Avhere, after
having paid her some money, he had connection Avith her. The
money Avas offered by the Avoman on the altar of the temple to the
goddess.
One of the botanical names of the mistletoe is Mylitta; and
AA'^hen Ave see a girl or Avoman under the mistletoe at Christmas
time, Avhen it is extensively used as a decoration, Ave may kiss
her ; but Ave can not expect the priA^ileges originally conferred by
the plant.
The custom of employing holly and other plants for decora-
tive purposes at Christmas time, is regarded as a surA^A^al of the
customs of the Roman festiA^al of the Saturnalia, or of the old
Teutonic custom of hanging cA^ergreens in the clAvellings as a ref-
uge for the sylvan spirits, to shelter tliem from tlie frost, suoav
and sleet of outdoors.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 41'
Mandrake Roots
When a plant or plant-part bore a resemblance in shape to a
hnman body, or to hnnian parts, superstitions people attached
certain virtues to these plants or plant-parts, and especially were
they regarded as potent charms to compel love on the part of
persons of the opposite sex for the one who was the possessor
of such a charm. This belief was very widespread and was based
on the Bible.
Gen. XXX, 14-16: "And Reuben went in the days of wheat
harvest, and found mandrakes in the field and brought them to
his mother Leah, Then Rachel said to Leah, Give me, I pray thee,
of thy son's mandrakes. And Jacob came out of the field in the
evening, and Leah went out to meet him, and said. Thou must come
in unto me; for surely, I have hired thee with my son's man-
drakes. And he lay with her that night."
Also, in the Song of Songs, the bride says: ''Come, my be-
loved, let us go forth in the field ; * * * let us get up early in
the vineyards ; let us see if the vine flourish, whether the tender
grape appear, and the pomegranate bud forth ; there will I give
thee my loves. The mandrakes give a smell,* and at our gates
are all manner of pleasant fruits, new and old, which I have laid
up for thee, 0, my beloved" (Cant, vii, 13).
In some of the old herb books may be found drawings of
plants which are supposed to represent plant-parts in human
shapes; for instance, this illustration from the Ortus Sanitatis
or Garden of Health, published in Augsburg in 1486, represents
on the left a ''paradise tree" and on the right a Narcissus plant
(Fig. 237).
As already stated, the superstitious esteem of mandrakes
dates back at least to 1750 b.c, to the times of Jacob. It is fre-
quently represented in medical books, when books were still writ-
ten by hand, centuries before the invention of printing from mov-
able type.
A drawing of such mandrake (or alraun) roots is here shown
(Fig. 238) from a very old medical work.
When a mandrake plant was found, the ground was partly
removed from about the root, and it was tied to a dog; the mas-
*Cruden, in the Concordance, says that there are male and female, mandrakes; the female
mantlrakes have a fetid odor, while the male mandrakes are fragrant.
418
SEX AXD SEX WORSHIP
Fig. 237. — From the Ortiis Sanitatis, 1486. Para-
dise tree and Narcissus.
Fig. 2,38.— Mandrake (or al-
vaun) roots; very old illustration.
Fig. 239. — Mode of gathering mandrake roots.
.-.-yft^t
-*s -J
«
rig. 240. — Mandrake Roots, from the Codex NeapoHtanus, at Yiouna.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
419
tev of tlie (loo- tlioii went to some distaiieo, and called the dog,
who struggled till the root came loose; tlie man y)nt wax in liis
Fig. 241. — The goddess Heuresis giving
mandrakes to Dioscoiides; 512 a.d.
Fig. 2-42. — Mandrake (^false) at one
time property of Emperor Rudolpli II, of
G-ermanv.
<5^r>. .*-'^.
i^-'l
Fig. 243.— Two carrots.
Fig. 244. — A carrot.
ears and blew on a horn so that he could not hear the fearful
yelling of the mandrake root, Avhich would have killed him if he
had heard it (Fig. 239).
420
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
This shows a drawing of mandrake roots, after figures in
the Codex NenpoHfanus in the National Library, at Viemia (Fig.
240).
The goddess Heuresis giving mandrakes to Dioscurides ; from
the Codex Constantinopolitanus, a.d., 512 (Fig. 241).
#
V
Fig. 245. — A parsnix) root.
Fig'. 246. — Two parsnip loots grown togetliei'.
Figure 242 shows a false mandragora, which once belonged
to the Emperor Eudolph II, of Germany. Such a root was often
dressed up and kept as a kind of minor idol, or charm; it was
considered of great value in obtaining the love of anyone of the
opposite sex, and a compliance with sexual desires, hj anyone
on whom the owner had set his heart.
Of course, this is merely a superstition, Imt the appearance
of some plant parts almost compelled such beliefs.
Figure 243 shows two carrots, A\hich on account of their
bifid appearance, would in olden times have been such charms.
And also a carrot (Fig. 244), which much more closely re-
sembles a female body than those just sho^sAai. Ginseng roots are
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
421
Fig. 247. — A sweet potato and a scar on a piece of oak bark.
f
Fig. 248. — An ordinary potato.
Fig. 249. — Elecampane root, altered by
adding a head of cork.
422 SEX AXD SEX WORSHIP
very often suggestive of liiuiiaii bodies or liuinaii parts, and are
very liigiil^^ prized as aphrodisiacs by the Chinese.
How close this resemblance to a human body may be, is
shown in this photograph of a parsnip root, absolutely untrinnned
or unaided by art, just as it grew (Fig. 245).
Also, these two parsnip roots (Fig. 246) were grown together
in this peculiar manner ; a student who had heard my lectures on
reproduction in plants, sent me this, Avith the remark that he did
not believe a word of what I had said of sexual reproduction in
plants, because he had "caught 'em at it."
Here (Fig. 247) is a potato and a piece of oak-bark with a scar
on it ; they remind strongly of certain parts of the human body, and
would have been well adapted to confirm believers in such love
charms in their ideas.
Figure 248 is a potato having a striking phallic resemblance.
In fact, if anyone is on the lookout for such growths they can be
found in almost unending profusion; nevertheless, some people
help them along by trimming, ciitting off some parts or adding
others ; the illustrations shown are of uiialtered specimens. I add
one, however, of Elecampane root (Fig. 249), in which the head was
made of cork and was glued or nailed on.
Plant Names
How much the minds of men ran on sex matters, when they
named the plants and ascribed to them various attributes sug-
gesting men and women, may be inferred from the following
story. To read it aright, ignore the botanical names and read
down the right-hand column of English names.
A ROMANCE OF PLANT NAMES
I
Chapter
I
(In
THE
Pulpit)
Ipomoca purpurea
Morning- glory.
Lohclia Cardinalis
Cardinal
Stryclinos St. I gnat
ii
Saint Ignatius;
Arum triphyllum
Jaek-in-the-piilpit,
Fyrus malus (var.)
Minister ;
Aconitum Napellus
Mouksliood
Mitella diphylla
Bishop's cap,
Impatiens pallida
Slippers
Dij)fiacus pilosus
Shepherd's staff
SEX AND SEX WORSTTIP
[23
Solidago odor a
Alyssum saxatile
Impatiens fulva
Ascyrum Crux- A ndrcae
Asphodclcs ramosus
Haniinctiliis acris
Golden rod
Basket of gold
Speckled jewels,
St. Aiidipw 's Cross,
Silver rod,
Gold cup.
Lychnis dioica
Linaria iiemiis
Pynis Mains (var.)
Gnaphalium polyccphuhi iii
Salvia verbcnaca
Chaviaeliriam Carolinianum
Ornithogalum nutans
Angelica officinalis
Gnaphalium dioica
(The Sermon)
' ' Cross of Jerusalem !
Honesty,
Never fail.
Live forever;
Christ's eye
Blazing Star
Star of Bethlehem ;
Holy Ghost!
Life everlasting! "
Chapter II
(Father Confessor)
Tragopogon pratensis
Hernandia sonora
Scutellaria lateriflora
Aconitum Napellus
Nuphar advena
Amarantlms melancholicus
Actaea alba
Noontide.
Jack-in-a-box,
Skull-cap,
Friar's cowl
Biandy bottles
Nun's whipping rope
White beads.
(Penitent Sinners)
Agrostis ulha
Eupatorium pcrfoliatu m
Bromus sccalimcs
Senecio Jacohea
Muhlenbergia diffusa
Triodria cuprea
Orysa saliva
Phleum pratense
Capsella hursa-pastoris
Dicentra cucullaria
Aristolochia SipJio
Capsella inrsa-pastoris
Senecio cineraria
Lychnis flos-cuculi
Bidens bi-pinnata
Echinospermum Virginicum
Saponaria officinalis
Nigella Damascena
Bidens frondosa
Mantisia (var.)
Dianthus barbatws
Red top
Joe Pye,
Cheat ;
Stinking Willie
Nimble Will,
Tall red top
Paddy,
Timothy,
Pick-pockets;
Dutchman 's breeches
Dutchman's pipe
Shepherd 's purse ;
Dusty miller;
Ragged robin
Beggar's stick
Beggar 's lice ;
Bouncing Bet
Ragged Lady,
Cuckolds ;
Opera girls.
Sweet William
424
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Phlox maculata
Artejnisia Ahrotanum
Osmorrhiza longistylis
TrilUum pendulum
Viola tricolor
Atriplex liortensis
(Dinner)
Pyrus Malus (var.)
Galatea glabella
Castilleia coccinea
Lathyrus pratensis
Pyrus Malus (tar.)
Satureia liortensis
Lemna minor
Salvia officinalis
Trifolium arvense
Linaria vulgaris
Solamum Dulcamara
Nasturtium officinale
Valerionella olitoria
Pyrus Malus (var.)
Coffea arahica
Pyrus Malus (var.)
Wild Sweet William,
Boy's love;
Sweet Cicily,
True love;
Stepmother
Bonny dame.
Victuals and drink;
Milk pea
Painted cup
Everlasting pea ;
Hominy ;
Savory
Duck's meat,
Sage;
Rablnt 's foot
Butter and eggs;
Bitter-sweet
Water cress
Lamb lettuce
Green cheese.
Coffee.
M'^ine.
Chapter III
(In the Meadow)
Mirabilis Jalapa
Mirabilis longiflora
Claytonia Virginica
Pyrus Malus (var.)
Erigenia bulbosa
Bhexia Mariana
Clematis vitalha
Nepeta glechoma
Banunculu'S aconitifolia
Lilium bulbiferum
Tiosa centifolia
Bellis integrifolia
Osmorrhisa brevistylis
Abrus precatorius
Spiraea salici folia
Nepeta glechona
Pyrus Malus (var.)
SisyrincJmim Bcrmudian
Eupatorium p'urpureum
Spiraea lobata
u in
Four 0 'clock
Afternoon ladies ;
Spring beauty
Sweet June
Harbinger of Siiring.
Meadow beauty
Ladies' bower;
Hedge maids
Fair maids of France.
Lily,
Rose,
Daisy,
Sweet Cicily,
Blaok-eyed Susan,
Meadow-Swect
Haymaids.
Red cheek.
Blue-eyed Lily
Queen of the meadow.
Queen of the prairie.
(The Bath; Disrobing)
Polygonicum persicaria Ladies' thumb
AnthylUs vulneraria Ladies' fingers
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
425
Digitalis ptirpurea
Capsicum tctragonum
Liatris scariosa
Melia Azedarach
Coptis trifolia
Digitalis purpiirea
Polygonmn sagittatum
A Icliemilla vu Igaris
Bhos cotimis
Narcissus bulbocodiuni
Croton tinctorium
Clematis vitalba
Cesium veneris
Cardaminc pratcnsis
Cliionanth'us Virginica
Phalaris Canariensis
Lotus corniculata
Cypripedium puhescens
Cypripedium spectabile
Nymi^haea odorata
Cypripedium candidum
(Bathing)
Dipsacus sylvcstri-s
Nymplmca odorata
Naias flexilis
Proserpinaca palustris
Spiranthes auiamnalis
Adiantaiii Capillus-Vcneris
Adiantain pedatum
Scandix Pecten-Veneris
Colchicum autumnale
Aplectiim hyemale
Mantisia (var.)
Naias Canadensis
Pyrus Mains (var.)
Speoularia perfoliata
Specularia speculum
Fairy fingers;
Scotch l)onnets,
Gay feathers
Beads
Gold threuil ;
Ladies' gloves
Tear-thumb
La-dies' mantle
Purple fringe ;
Hoop petticoats
Red patch;
Bind-with
Venus' girdle,
Ladies ' smock
White fringe ;
Garters
Shoes and stockings,
Lady's slipper
Showy ladies' slippers;
Sweet Lily,
Small white Venus' slipper.
Venus ' Bath ;
Water lily,
Naiad
Mermaid ;
Ladies' tresses
Venus' hair.
Maiden 's hair,
Venus' com!) ;
Naked ladies
Adam and Eve
Dancing girls
Water nymph.
Water.
Venus looking glass,
Ladies' looking glass.
(SuRPKiSED BY Hunters)
Chcnopodium Bonus-Uenricus Good Kin
Sarracenia purpiirea
Polygonum orientale
Pyrus Malus (var.)
Spiraea hyperacea
Iris versicolor
Draoocephalum parviflorum
Centaurea Cyanus
Mcrten-sia Virginica
Scabiosa arvensis
Pyrus Malus (var.)
Arum triphyllum
Henry
Huntsman 's cap
Prince 's feather ;
Queen Anno
Bridal wreath;
Blue flag
Dragon 's head ;
Blue-cap
Blue bells.
Blue buttons.
Wealthy
Lord and Ladies
426
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Saiwnaria officinalis
Sarracenia flava
Equisetum hyemale
Hippuris vulgaris
Eleusine Indica
Cynoglossum officinale
LoAirus nohilis
Dipsacus Sylvestris
Mirahilis Jalapa
Pyrus Malius (var.)
London Pride.
Trumpets
Horse-tail
Mare 's-tail
Dog's-tail;
Hound's tongue,
Bay.
Venus' bath
Wonder-of -the-world !
Maiden 's blush.
(The Peeper)
Aluria officinalis
JatropJia stimulosa
Abies communis
Celosia cistula
Arundinaria macrosperma
Stvllingia Syivatica
Cytisiis Laburnum
Hydrastis Canadensis
Euphrasia officinalis
Vinca major
Jaek-l)3--the-hedge
Tread lightly
Spruce
Cockscomb ;
Cane
Cock-up-hat
Golden chain
Golden seal;
Eye-bright
Hundred eves.
Nigella Damascena
Clielone glabra
Op hiog lossu m vulg at 1 1 m
Ipomoea pandurata
Chamaelirium Carolinian um
Citrus Aurantium
Frenanthes serpentaiia
Viola tricolor
(The Temptation)
Devil-in-a-bush
Snakchead
Adder's tongue;
Man-of-the-earth,
Devil's l)it,
For1)iddcn fruit,
Gall-of -the-earth ;
Love in idleness.
(The Fall)
Nigella Damascena Love-in-a-mist:
Biinicx Patientia
Ligustrum Vulgar e
Potentilla palustris
Pisum Sativum
Passions
Pri\y
Five fingers;
Pea.
Chapter IV
(The Xext Nicuit)
Pyrus Malus (var.) Sununer
Solanum nigrum
Ornithogalum umbellatum
Circaea Lutetiana
Mirabilis Jalapa
Aletris farinosa
Clematis (var.)
Nightshade
Ten 0 'clock
Enchanter's nightshade
Beauty of the night
Blazing stars.
Ladies' bower.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
427
(Sleeping Innocence)
Solan II in sum n if cm m
Clematis erecta
Galium veriim
Galium Iriflorum
Galium verum
Ligustrum vulgare
Sisyrinchmm Bermudi<inum
Dianthus deltoides
Lilium Canadensis
Mirabilis Jalapa
Antennaria Margareticmn
Houstonia caerulea
Polyiricham vulgare
Diantlius caryophyllus
Tulipa Gesneriana
Leucanthemum vulgare
Sosa canina
Galium verum
Viola tricolor
Sleepy night shade
Upright viigin 's bower,
Yellow bed-straw
Sweet-scented bed-straw
Our lady's bed-straw;
Prim
Blue-eyed lily,
Maiden pink
Nodding Lily;
Beauty-by-night
None-so-pretty
Innocence,
Golden maiden hair;
Pink
Tulips ;
White daisy
Hips ;
Maid's hair
Heart's ease.
(The Tempter)
Dianthus barbatus
Graphalium arenarium
Polygonum pcrsicaria
Polygonum Bistorta
Staphylea trifolia
Solidago odpra
Solidago rigida
Stillingia sylvatica
Sweet John;
Golden locks,
Red shanks,
Red legs
Bladder nut
Red rod
Rigid golden rod,
Queen's delight.
(Repulsed)
Artemisia Abrotanum
Nympliaea odorata
Viola tricolor
Lactuea sativa
Cannabis Indica
Viola tricolor
Lilium candidum
Colchicu m autum nale
Nigella Damascena
Lichen igniarius
Taxus Canadensis
Impatiens pallida
Lad's love;
"Sweet Lily,
Kiss me!
Lettuce
Bhang !
Cuddle-nie-to-you ! ' '
White Lily
Upstart,
Love-in-a-puzzle ;
Spunk ;
' ' Yew
Touch mc not ! ' '
(The Rape)
Eumex Patientia
Viola tricolor
Tritoma uvaria
Passions ;
Kisses.
Red-hot poker
428
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Iinpatiens pallida
Brassica rapa
Sednm album
Phytolacca dccovidua
Bidens fondosa
Folyanthus tuherosa
AmarantJnis mcldnclwUcus
Quick in the hand.
Rape
Prick madam
Poke
Stick tight
Mistress of tlie night
Love-lies-bleeding.
(His Escape)
Bercliemia volubilis Supple Jack
Junons effnsiis
Veronica officii) aUs
Viola tricolor
Iluinulus Lupulus
Rush ;
Speedwell,
.Tohnny- jumper
Hop !
(Remorse)
B'uta gravcolens
GnapltaUinii dccarrens
Rue
Everlasting
Chapter V
(Consequences)
Gentiana Pneumonanthe Autumn bells;
Brunella vulgaris
Eubigo alnea
Senecio amrea
Tanacctum vulgare
E uph rasia lielioscupa
Triticum repens
Self-heal
Blight,
Female legulator
Tansy
Little good ;
Quickens.
(The Baby)
Ualesia tetraptcra Snow drop
Lcucoium vernnm Snow flake.
LimnantJtemum lacnnosntm Floating heart j
AmarantliKs lii/poclioiidriacus Lovely bleeding
PyrvfS Mains (var.) Mother,
Pyrus Mains (var.) Delicious
Arum Maculatum Cocky Ijaby;
Carica Papaya Papaw?
(Her Folks)
Sam b itcus Canadensis
Aralia hispida
Asclepias curassivica
Artemisia Abrotaniim
Bubia tinctoria
Pyrus Mains (var.)
Medicago liipii Una
Heracliuiii Janalitm
Andropogon muricatus
Aralia racemosa
Elder
Wild elder
Red head
Old man
Madder ;
Brother Jonalliau
None-sucli
Madness;
Kus-kus
Life-of-man.
SEX AND SEX WORSTTTP
429
(Revenge)
Antirrhinum majws
Typha latifoUa
Yucca aloefolia
Aralia spinosd
Capsicum anuuuni
Atropa Belladonna
Centaurew Niger
Lythrum hyssopifoUa
Achillea Millefolium
Nuphar advena
Digitalis purpurea
Pyrus communis
Bumex sangmnea
Ciouta Maculata
Bull-dogs,
Cat-o '-nine-tails,
Spanish daggers
Hercules ' club
Chilly
Deadly nightshade ;
Logger-heads
Loose strife
Nose-ltleed
Spatter-dock,
Bloody fingers
Blood good
Bloody dock
Death-of-man.
(The Funeral)
Monotropa uni flora
Quercus nigra
Fraximus Americana
Boccella iinctoria
Convolvulus panduratus
Viburnum prunifoUum
Digitalis purpurea
Corpse plant
Black Jack
Ash
All bones
Man-in-the-gronnd ;
Sloe
Dead men 's liells.
(The MouiiNEii)
Scahvosa alropurpurea Mouininj
)i idc
Sedum telephium
Bumex Futientia
Melissa officinalis
Brunella vulgaris
Scabiosa atro purpurea
Buchnera Americana
Cypripedium pubescens
Finns Strobus
Daphne alpina
Myosotis arvcnsis
Live-long
Patience,
Balm
Heal-all ;
Mourning widow
Blue heart
Bleeding heart
Pine ;
AVidow-wail
' ' Forget-me-not ! ' '
(Apologetically Explanatory)
The style of this narrative is somewhat' alirupt and jerky, and there is an
unusual scarcity of verbs; the story is suggesti\e, rather than descriptive.
But it's the old, old story, sung and told a thousand times in a thousaiid
variations since the days of Good Queen Margaret of Navarre.
(Moral)
The Moral? Well, tlie same as in the Heptameron: "Beware of the Men!"
(Chorus of Readers)
Castanea Americana "Chestnut!"
430 SEX AXD SEX WOr.SHIP
ANIMAL WORSHIP
In early stages of the development of religious tliouglit in
savage nations, animals were worshipped as divine, and as the
nations and their thoughts advanced to a higher plane, these
animals ceased to be considered as the divinities themselves and
became merely symbols for more or less anthropomorphic gods.
Mam^ primitive people believed that they were descendants
from certain animals, which were their totems, and while this
idea is now restricted to savage tribes, it was at one time com-
mon even among such people as the ancient Greeks, who, how-
ever, in those days were not much above savages ; while totems
were not worshipped, they were regarded Avith a sort of reverence,
and could not be killed nor eaten, but it does not imply that these
totems were considered as divinities.
A curious account of their totem is that of the Thibetans be-
cause it almost gives the idea that they have a traditional belief
in their relationship to the apes, etc., dating back, perhaps, to the
times of the evolutionary stages, ages ago. The Thibetans claim
to be descendants of an ape and a female demon; these had six
children of whom they tired and whom they abandoned in a for-
est. Years afterwards the ape returned and found that the six
had increased to five hundred descendants from the original six
brothers and sisters ; of course, incest was not known or ab-
horred in primitive horde communities, any more than among
animals. These descendants were very poor, in need of every-
thing, and hardly able to keep themselves from starving. So the
ape asked the god Chenresig to be their guardian, to which the
latter consented; he threw out five kinds of grain which the ape-
demons ate, whereupon their tails and hair grew shorter, and
they began to speak and to clothe themselves, and finally became
changed to men.
A very ancient conception of god is the turtle, on account of
the resemblance of its head and neck to the lingam. The turtle
therefore became a symbol for the lingam, the demiurge or actual
creator, the Origin and Sustainer of all things. In the Hindu cos-
mogony (Fig. 250) the earth was supposed to be supported on the
backs of four elephants, Avhich in turn Avere supported on the
back of a turtle Avhich swam about, like a gold fish in a fish-globe.
SEX AND SEX WonSlflP
431
Avitliin tlio celestial erystal si^lieres tliat upheld ilie sun, moon and
stars.
Medieval clmrelies were often decorated witli paintings or
sculptures of Adam and Eve, sometimes with representations of
coition between animals, more rarely between humans, or other
references to the divine creative sexual powers ; here is shown,
in a carved banister in a German church, coition between animals,
the head of the penis carved in the shape of a turtle's neck and
head (Fig. 251). This turtle head was the origin of our speaking
of the f/Ians penis as the "head of the penis."
Fig. 250. — Hindu Cosmogony.
It was largely this kind of ikons or images that were de-
stroyed by the iconoclasts of medieval times.
In ancient Ass^a^ia the l)ull was the actual male creator or
progenitor of mankind; he was generally represented as winged,
to indicate his divine nature. The bull was also worshipped in
other Oriental lands, from Egypt eastward, in India, Japan, etc.;
in I]gypt, for instance, as the Apis bull.
The Apis bull was supposed to be an incarnation of Osiris,
the male principle in nature, but this bull was not merely a sjmilool
432
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
for Osiris, he was Osiris himself. He was supposed to have been
born of a virgin lieifer, who was rendered pregnant by a moon-
beam or a flash of lightning. When an Apis bnll died, another
was sought by the priests, who recognized him by certain birth-
marks, a black hide with a white triangle (male pyramid) on his
forehead and a crescent on his side, and under his tongue a swell-
ing or tumor like a scarabaeus insect ; as the priests always found
a new Apis ])ull, this seems to show that the Egyptian priests were
experts in marking or branding cattle, and could produce the re-
quired characteristics of the Apis god at will.
When the new god was discovered he was taken to Nilopolis
where he Avas specially housed and fed on milk for four months.
When mature enough, he was taken to a ship, at the time of the
new moon, which was a festival in Egypt, and conducted in cere-
monious state to the temple at Memphis, where for the first forty
days after his arrival he was seen and attended only l)y wouion
Fig. 251. — Wood 'carvings from a frieze ina cliurch at Ancllan (about 1050 a.d.). See
first picture (coition) in upper row.
who fed him and exposed themselves to liim, by submitting to
sexual union with him, for this was the custom with the bull at
Memphis and the ram or goat at Mendes ; this practice is referred
to in the edict of Moses in Lev. xviii, 23: "Neither shalt thou
lie with any beast to defile thyself therewith; neither shall any
woman stand before a beast to lie doA\ai thereto; it is confusion."
The mother of the god Apis was housed in a separate temple
compartment and was attended by a special detail of priests ; she
was the goddess Athor, represented in sculpture like a woman
with a cow's head. She was the Venus of the Egyptians.
Because Isis was the wife of Osiris, of whom the Apis bull
was an incarnation, Jsis was often represented in sculpture as a
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
433
cow, or a goddess with a cow's licad, but she was not worshipped
in the form of a living cow. The cow, in Egyptian art, was also
a symbol for the "sky" or "dawn," for which symbol she was
represented with her belly painted blue and dotted with stars.
When gods and goddesses were represented as animals, or
as Imman bodies with animal heads, they were of more or less
savage and coarse nature; the Apis bull and the Athor cow rep-
resenting in the coarsest and plainest manner the male and female
powers in nature.
When the Apis bull died he was supposed to have resmned
his heavenly form of Osiris for a while; the dead bull was em-
balmed or mummified, and placed in a tomb amid great demon-
Fig. 252. — The Egyptian goddess Isis; sometimes reprcvsuiitLd as a woman, as a woman
with a cow's head, or as a cow, nursing her child Honis.
strations of national mourning. He was called Sarapis or Ser-
apis, and the tombs where the bulls were buried was called the
Serapion; as in the case of the Pharaohs and their queens, so
also in the case of the dead Apis bull, the genitals were gilded,
although in some cases, either to do special honor to the bull,
or to a queen, the penis of the Serapis was placed in the vagina
of a queen and buried in that way.
Cows were sacred to Isis, and were not offered as sacrifices
in Egypt; only bulls being offered in the temple rites.
Egyptian mythology lasted more than 5000 years, and some
of their stories about their deities became modified in the course
of time, so that earlier and later accounts do not always tally;
moreover, every town in Egypt had its own sacred animals or
434 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
fetiches (mascots) and its oavh local divinities; also separate
dialects of speech and hence varying names. This has created a
great confusion in trying to make a correct account of Egyptian
religion.
The Israelites during their sojourn in the wilderness remem-
bered this Egyptian worship and prevailed on Aaron to erect for
them the image of the Apis god (a golden calf) while Moses was
on the mountain with God, to receive the tablets with the Ten
Commandments; also, under various kings, they lapsed to this
kind of idolatry.
In Greece, Minos, a mythical king of Crete, became a god
pig_ 25.3. — Sacred bull in Ummernath Cave, India. Many thousand pilgrims come
to this cave annually to worship this bull (see at foot of the man).
after death, and became the judge of the dead ; he was considered
to be the same as the sun-god, his wife Parsiphae being the moon-
goddess. They were symbolized as a bull and a cow. Parsiphae
fell in love Avith the bull of Minos, and gave birth to the fabled
Minotaur, which was half human, half bull.
Jupiter changed himself to a bull to rape Europa.
In India, also, the Inill was and is worshipped ; as, for instance,
a sacred bull at Ilallibeeb, India.
Here the cow also was held in great honor, but the extent to
which this worship is now carried in India is comparatively mod-
ern ; for instance, in Nepal, a small independent state northeast
SFA' AXD >FA' WOltSHTP
435
of Hindustan, nj) to ({uite rceoiit times, it was considered to bo
murder to kill a eow, and this Avas punishable by death.
The Hindus l)elieve that the God Indra, g'od of the sky, some-
times assumes the shape of a l)idl and lives for a time on earth.
In Persia, the urine of tlie eow is us(h1 as holy water is used
in our Catholic churches.
Figure 254 shows a statue of a bull in a park in Tokio, Japan;
the devotee touches the sacred form in the hope that this will cure
her rheumatism.
Among the ancient Assyrians the goat was the symbol for
sexual vigor, and was worshipped as a lingam god or deity. The
Fig. 254. — A Lull in a park in Tokio, Japan.
goat was also worshipped at Mendes, in Egypt; here men cohab-
ited with she-goats and women with male goats or bucks in honor
of the Ram, who was the god of Mendes. He had no special name,
but was simply called the Ram, but his worship was similar to
that of the Apis god, but was not limited to a few privileged
women, but any woman could resort to the temple and submit
herself to one of the male goats which had been trained to enjoy
the unnatural union ; or men could cohal)it Avitli female goats.
This theme furnished a favorite motif for wall-paintings in the
bath rooms of Roman villas in Herculaneum and Pompeii.
The origin of the fabled satyrs may possibly be sought in
these strange unions, for the belief that coition with animals can
436
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
result in pregnancy was conmion at one time and is not yet en-
tirely extinct. The Greek satyrs were supposed to be inordi-
nately concupiscent, ever chasing nymphs, whom they seized and
raped whenever they could; from this characteristic we have the
term satyriasis.
Later on, the satyrs, or sileni, which were similar, became
changed in popular belief or superstition into the popular Chris-
tian notion of the devil, with bats' wings, horns, tail and cloven
foot.
Cattle, cats, monkeys, ibises, and other animals were and still
are sacred in many Oriental countries, although not necessarily
revered as deities or as symbols for sexual divinities.
The Zulus, North American Indians, Chinese, Peruvians and
Fig. 255. — Goat worship at Mendes, in Egypt.
some other people believe that ''thunder-birds," snakes, dragons,
and other beasts inhabit the heavens, and hunt the sun and the
moon, attempting to swallow them, thus causing eclipses; many
of these people, when they see an eclipse beginning, clash their
shields, shout, beat driuus or tom-toms, shoot firearms and make
as much noise as possible to scare away the beast that is trying
to devour the sun or moon.
Certain animals were associated with certain deities, with-
out however being Avorshipped; although occasionally, they were
considered as symbols for the deity, as the owl for Pallas Athena
in Greece, or the \-ulture for Suben, the goddess of maternity,
in Egypt.
Thus, the eagle was sacred to Jupiter, the owl to Athena, the
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
437
peacock to Juno, the doves to Venus, the raven to Apollo, the
hawk to Odin (Norse), etc.
In ancient Assyria doves (or pigeons) were sacred to Semi-
ramis (a mythical queen) who was merely a variant of Ashtoreth,
the Assvrian and Accadian Venus, later on the Venus of the Greeks
and Romans ; the reason why the doves were sacred to these deities
was because the sound made by cooing doves sounded like the As-
syrian word for coition.
The ass was sacred to Hestia or Vesta. A legend said that
the goddess was sleeping in a pleasant meadow when Priapus
saw her ; in obedience to his nature, he sneaked towards her Avith
Fig. 256. — Athena and cocks as symbols Fig. 257. — The god Priapus as a cock,
of victory; from a vase given as a i)rize from a Greek temple.
in the Olympian Games.
the intent of committing rape on her. The ass of Silenus was
browsing in the same meadow, and to thwart Priapus he brayed
so loud that the goddess and all the gods of Olympus were aroused
and Vesta's virtue and reputation were saved; but this was not
done with the intention of saving Vesta, but for the purpose of
annoying the god Priapus.
In Christian sj-mbolism the dove is the Holy Ghost, the lamb
represents Jesus (as the Agnus Dei, or lamb of God), the snake
represents the devil; Matthew is accompanied by or represented
by an angel, Mark by an ox, Luke by a lion and John by an eagle.
438 SEX A-NB SEX WORSHIP
The cock, or rooster, on account of his almost unlimited activ-
ity as a male, was at an early time made a symbol of masculine
power and vigor. This drawing (Fig. 256), from a vase given
as a prize at the ancient Olympian games, shows victory symbol-
ized by Pallas Athena, with the cock on a phallic pillar.
We still use the cock as a sjanbol of victory in politics ; and
we call the penis itself a ''cock." It was used on the Christian
tombs in the catacombs of Rome to express the victory achieved
l)y the resurrection of Jesus, over death.
And finally, this is the representation of a bronze figure of
Priapus which was found in an ancient Greek temple (Fig. 257).
We have learned that the anthropophagi imagined that when
they ate a fallen enemy, his valor or other good virtues were con-
ferred on them; similar ideas were held in regard to certain ani-
mals, the Charaka-S amhita, an ancient Hindu medical work, teach-
ing, for instance, that to eat the flesh of the cock will confer his
vigor as a male on the eater.
While some other animals were occasionally used as symbols,
or connected with various superstitions, the above is sufiftcient to
give us an idea of their worship, either as deities, or reverence
for them as symbols for anthropomorphic gods.
SOME OF THE GODS
Assyrian and Babylonian
It is 1)eyond the scope of this book to mention in detail the
various theologies and mythologies and the gods and goddesses
thereof; but it Avill prove of interest to learn how nmch sex had
to do with them, and the theories about them.
Beginning with the Assyrian and Babylonian gods, Ave learn
that the most ancient recorded religion among these people was
a Shamanism or demon worship similar to that Avhich is still
prevalent among the people of Northern Asia.
Some of their spirits or demons were later on promoted to
gods, at the head of which Avas a triad or trinity — Na or Anna,
the Sky, Fa, the Earth, and Mulge, the Lord of the UnderAvorld.
The various attributes of deity Avere conceived of as separate
deities and the sun-god gradually rose to the highest place, thus
leading to a solar worship.
3EX A^T> REX WORSTITP 439
The neigliboriiii'' people, all of tlieiii Seiiiitic, adoj)ted this
same belief; the old trinity of Anna, Ea and Mulge became Ann,
Ea and Bel (or Baal) who were all children of Zica or Zicara
(the Sky) ; Ea was now the god of life and knowledge, the Lord
of the Abj^ss and the hnsband of Balm (the Bolm of Gen. i, 2) ;
Bel was the Deminrge and Bel-merodach became the special god
of Babylon.
In accordance to Semitic ideas, each god had a female princi-
ple or goddess as consort; each Baal had a Baalat ('^ every laddie
has his lassie"), who was some modification of Ishtar or Astarte.
Bel with his consort Serna headed the pantheon.
Then there was a moon-god, a sun-god, and an air-god, these,
together with the previously mentioned Anu, Ea, Bel and Serna,
making the "Seven Magnificent Deities."
The next social rank was that of the "Fifty Great Gods;"
then the "Three Hundred Spirits of Heaven" and the "Six Hun-
dred Spirits of Earth;" among the latter were seven spirits who
were born "without father or mother, and these seven produced all
the sickness and evils that prevailed on earth.
The five planets then known were added to the seven "Mag-
nificent Deities," making together the "Twelve Chiefs of the
Gods."*
Pliny, the Elder (born 23 a.d.), wrote: "Epigenes, a writer
of very great authority, informs us that the Babylonians have a
series of observations on the stars for a period of seven hundred
and twenty thousand years, inscribed on baked bricks. Berosus
and Critodemes, who make the period the shortest, give it as four
hundred and ninety thousand years. From this statement it would
appear that letters have been in use from all eternity."
The Babylonians originated many myths which were adopted
by the Semitic people (including the ancient Jews) as for instance
the story of the flood as later found in the Bible. The Babylonians
said that Tam-zi, the "Sun," rode in his ark above the rain-
clouds during the rainy season ; the story of the creation and the
fall of Adam and Eve, of Abraham's attempted sacrifice of Isaac,
have all been found in the cuneiform records ; from the Assyrians
they were learned by Moses (or Ezra).
*Some authors state that the "twelve great gods" (and goddesses) were the following Greek
deities: Zeus, Poseidon, Apollo, Ares, Hephaestos, Hermes, Here, Athene, Artemis, Aphrodite,
Hestis and Uemeter. This, however, is not the generally accepted version.
440 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
The Babylonian Hades, the Jewish Sheol and the Greek Hades
were practically identical.
One Babylonian story tells how Ishtar descended into Hades
in search of her dead hnsband Dnzi. Balm, the Queen of the Un-
derworld, afflicted Ishtar with many diseases and kept her a
prisoner in Hades until the sun-god, brother of Ishtar, complained
to the moon-god, who sent a sphinx to Hades ; the sphinx poured
the waters of life on the imprisoned Ishtar and liberated her.
When Ishtar entered Hades, ''the land whence none return,
the place of gloom," the queen of Hades commanded the warder
*' fling wide the opening of the gate for her, and as old rule re-
quires, strip her of all she wears!"
Then the warder
''took the mighty diadem from off her head * * *
He took away the jeAvelled earrings from her ears * * *
He took away the golden chains about her neck * * *
He took away the ornaments of her breast * * *
He took away the studded girdle of her waist * * *
He took away her bracelets and anklets * * *
He took away the garment covering lier nakedness."
As soon as Ishtar entered the land whence none return, Al-
latu saw her * * * Then Allatu said :
"Go, open my gate and cast forth Ishtar
With disease of the eyes strike her * * *
With disease of the loins strike her * * *
With disease of the legs strike her
*
With disease of the heart strike her * * *
Her whole body strike with disease." * * *
"The sun-god went and stood before his sire, the moon,
Yea, in the presence of King Ea flowed his tears;
'Ishtar,' he cried, 'from deeps of earth returns no more.
Since Ishtar has entered the land whence none return
The bull has not served the cow nor the ass the she-ass.
No male has approached the female.' "
The moon-god then takes pity and orders that Ishtar be set
free; and all usual sex-life is restored on earth. The above are
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 441
extracts from the Assyrian cuneiform account of Islitar's trip to
Hades.
From this same folklore, no doubt, was derived the similar
Greek story of the descent of Proserpina to Hades.
In the x\ssyrian (Accadian) liymns to the gods are many
passages that remind of the psalms of David: "My God, my cre-
ator, take mine hands — guide thou the breath of my mouth — 0,
Lord of Light! — Li heaven, who is high? thou alone art high — 0,
Lord, my transgressions are many; great are my sins-
? J
Phoenician
In Phoenicia the chief god was Baal-Samaim or Lord of the
Skies; his ^viie or mistress was Tanis, the Tyrian Astarte. (The
Sidonian Astarte was supposed to be a virgin goddess.) The
Phoenicians offered human sacrifices to Baal (called also Moloch
in the Bible). To Molocli parents offered their first-born children
by burning them as burnt offerings; and during periods of idol-
atry the ancient Jews made the same kind of offerings to Moloch.
Baal means lord, 0A\aier, especially as expressing the rela-
tion of the husband to the ^\^f e ; Baal is the sun-god or the male
principle in nature. Among the Chaldeans, Bel (or Baal) was
the highest god; he divided the darkness from the light and cut
the woman who ruled over ''the all" into two halves, out of which
he then fashioned heaven and earth.
The Phoenicians called their chief god "Asshur" (Asher,
the penis, the "happy one"), "the king of all the gods."
The Sun or heaven-god had a wife, but she Avas sometimes
said to be the Moon, and in other records, the Earth.
The Phoenicians were great travelers and traders; it is re-
corded that they went as far as AYales to trade products of their
own lands for the tin of the Welsh mines; they introduced the
knowledge of the alphabet to various people. Also, they carried
information about their gods wherever they went, and the Scan-
dinavians adopted an originally Phoenician god, Thor, who be-
came the Norse God of Storms or Thunder-God.
Among the Philistines prevailed the worship of Dagon.
When Samson w^as captured by the Philistines they put out his
eyes and put him to work grinding corn; they took him to the
temple of Dagon, to rejoice over his captivity and it was this
442 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
temple, together with the assembled multitude, that he destroyed
by pulling do\^^l its pillars (Judges xvi).
Dagon was represented as half human and half fish; he was
widely worshipped and many temples were erected to him. He
had a wife who was called Ashtaroth or Atargates; her temple
was at Ascalon. She was represented as a lish Avith a human
head. She was a modification of Istar or Ishtar or Astarte.
The fish was worshipped as the symbol of fertility, both on ac-
count of its OA\Ti fertility, a female fish laying millions of eggs,
and because it lives in the life-giving and fertilizing elementi —
water.
According to Philo the chief gods of Phoenicia were two
triads— Sun, Moon and Earth, and Rivers, Meadows and Waters.
Mountains were sacred because they were nearer to heaven than
the plains; hence the esteem in which "high places" Avere held
among the Philistines. The prophets Avaged Avar against the
worship on the high places, as recorded in the Bible.
Philo (of Byblus) said that El Avas the highest god of Byblus
and that Elohim Avas subordinate to him ; El Avas the first to order
circumcision and to demand the sacrifice of the first-born, either
an only son or a virgin daughter, to the sun-god. In historical
times the sun Avas the chief god, but he Avas Avorshipped in tAvo
of his attributes; when he was adored as the god of heaA^en, the
earth was regarded as his Avife ; Imt Avhen he Avas the god of light,
the moon Avas his Avife.
The Phoenicians believed that El Avandered off over the earth
toAvards sunset, leaving Byblus to the management of his wife or
queen Baaltis during his absence; this accounts Avhy her Avor-
ship Avas more important in Byblus than that of El himself. Baal-
tis becoming lonesome accepted the attentions of a youthful lover,
Eliun or Shadid; but Avhen El returned he killed Eliun Avith his
SAVord.
In other places Astarte, the moon-goddess, Avas said to be
the Avife of El; Baaltis and Astarte Avere probably the same, and
their Avorships Avere alike, consisting largely of Avild orgies of
sexual excesses.
The religions of tlie Canaanites and Israelites Avere both
based on a Avorship of the powers of nature, Avhich Avere consid-
ered as antagonistic to their Avelfare by tlie ancient Jcavs, Avhile
the Canaanites considered them to be favorable and benign.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 443
The Jews were stern and moral in character, tlie Canaanites,
tender, sensuous and immoral in tendency.
The Canaanites worshippcnl Baal (the Lord) and his wife or
consort Ashtoreth or Asherah (the happy one) ; tliere was also
a masculine form of the word Asherah, Aslier (the linj^am, the
happy one).
"When Leah had a son she said: "Happy am I for the daugh-
ters will call me blessed; and she called- his name Asher" (Gen.
XXX, 13). The symbol for Asherah was the stem of a tree, and
for Baal or Asher the cone of the pine. The worship consisted
mainly in licentious sexual practices in the ''groves" or holy
places, which worship was also indulged in by the ancient Jews
during periods of idolatry.
''And Israel abode in Shittim, and the people began to com-
mit whoredom w^ith the daughters of Moab. And they called the
people unto the sacrifices of their gods" (Num. xxv, 1-3).
During the idolatry under King Manasseh the Israelites went
back to their former half-pagan idea of Jehovah, and they as-
cribed to him a consort or wife to whom they gave the name
"Queen of Heaven." They wanted their god to enjoy the same
privileges that all the other gods of the neighboring tribes had,
the sexual enjoyments that a w^ife can give.
Persia
Hermippus recorded that Zoroaster lived about five thousand
years before the Trojan war, the date of whicli was believed to
be about two thousand years b.c, or about four thousand years
ago ; this would make the age of Zoroaster about nine thousand
years ago.
But this date depends on the same disposition of the mind
of early man to exaggerate the ages in former times, as we see
in the ages of the patriarchs in the Bible.
Xanthus said that Zoroaster lived six thousand years before
Xerxes ; Aristotle also said that he lived at a verv early date. All
ancient writers agreed that he was a real and not a mythical
character.
Modern scholars accept the latter conclusion but place his
age at about the time of Moses (1400 b.c.) or even later, about
1000 B.C.
444 SEX AXD SEX WORSHIP
Zoroaster (or Zarathiistra) was the founder of the Persian
or Iranian mythology or religion. The main idea of his theology
was that there was a dualism, Good and Bad, that were at ever-
lasting war with each other. The sacred books are the Gathas,
which together constitute the Zend-Avesta. At the beginning there
were two spirits — Ahura-Mazdao (Ormuzd) represented Good,
and Angro-Manyush (Ahriman) was Evil. Both spirits were
demiurges, or creators. The Parsees say that both of these gods
evolved themselves out of primordial ooze; this seems to be an
attempt at explaining their genesis in a natural manner.
Ormuzd was Light and Life, Law aild Order, everything that
is noble, good and true. Ahriman on the otlier hand was Dark-
ness, Death, Evil, everything that is filthy and objectionable in
the w^orld. Plutarch, a Greek writer, said in regard to this Zoro-
astrian theory of an evil deity, as well as of a good one, that, "if
nothing can happen without cause, and good can not furnish cause
for evil, it follows that the nature of evil, as of good, must have
an origin and principle of its OA\ai."
Each had his followers, attendant spirits who were practi-
cally the armies of the two lords; whenever they met, these tAvo
armies would fight for the possession of the human souls after
death.
After death the soul of the departed came to a bridge over
which lay the way to heaven ; here a record of his life was made
by an accountant; if the soul had a good record it was per-
mitted to cross the bridge and go to heaven, but if evil predom-
inated in the account, it was sent to hell; if the record was evenly
balanced the soul went to an intermediate jolace which was a kind
of purgatory where it remained to the final day of judgment.
Man can help Ormuzd, or Good, by being pious and upright,
or he can help Ahriman, Or Evil, by being mcked. In this theol-
ogy there is little or nothing of a sexual nature; in fact, it is
singularly free from the usual conceptions of those earl}^ times.
The Parsees worship Zarathustra, and the sun and fire as
symbols of Good ; on getting up in the morning a Parsee first says
his prayers to the sun; he then rubs a little holy water, called
nirang (cow urine), on his forehead to protect him against the in-
fluence of the devas or evil spirits, the attendants of Ahriman;
for this, nirang is an infallible specific.
During the captivity of the Jews they adopted some of the
SEX AND SEX WOrvSITTP
445
Zoroastrian demoiiology, inehuling a belief in Aliriman (Beelze-
bub, Satan), the Spirit of Evil; and the belief in the devil was
adopted in turn from the Jews by the early Christians. So also,
a belief in purgatory ; although a form of this idea was also knowm
to the Greeks, from which it may have been taken by the Christians.
Egypt
The Egyptian religion is difficult to explain, because it lasted
nearly 5000 years and underwent many changes ; then there were
Fig. 258. — Justice; a modern abstract idea, syrabolized or personified as a goddess witli
swordi and scales.
many dialects so that the same deities were known by different
names; different cities had different cults; etc. All of this gave
rise to much confusion.
It is held by some that the Egyptian religion was a mono-
theism to the initiated, while to the masses it Avas an almost un-
limited polytheism; this is explained, that the different attributes
of the one god were personified b}^ various symbolic gods ; that
many of the gods and goddesses were simply personified ideas, as
when we figure Justice like a woman holding a scale, or Piety as
a woman kneeling and supporting the crucified and dead Christ.
446 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
However, the masses conceived these attributes as separate
deities. Most of the male deities had mates, or female deities or
goddesses, but these were of subordinate rank and totally unim-
portant, being imagined only for the comfort and pleasure of the
corresponding gods who would have been lonesome if they could
not enjo}^ occasional sexual delights.
There were two main orders of deities, the group of Ra and
the group of Osiris. Ra is the sun; Amen-Ra signified the intel-
lectual attributes of Ra; his group consists of Ra, Mentu, Atmu
and Shu. Mentu and Atnm are merely a division of Ra into his
two phases, the rising and the setting sun, the sun of the upper
and the sun of the lower world, Avhile Shu is the Light of the sun ;
Shu is the son of Ra, and his wife, Tefnet, is the daughter of Ra.
Marriages of brothers and sisters were proper among the Egyp-
tians, so the gods might l)e expected to marry their sisters also,
because men always imagined their gods to be like themselves.
The Osiris group was not related to the Ra group. Seb and
Nut had a son Osiris, who became the main god of this family
connection ; he married his sister Isis and they had a child, Horus
(or Harpokrat). Horus married Hathor. Hathor and Isis were
nearly alike and the cow was sacred to both; also, both were at
times represented as a cow.
Osiris was the Sun and Isis Avas the moon. Osiris was the
masculine begetting principle in nature; to show his power and
vigor in this capacity, he was sometimes represented vnth three
phalli ; Isis was the feminine principle ; their most sacred symbol
was the lotus with red blossoms ; symbolic of the rising and setting
sun, because it opened at sunrise and closed at sunset. Both
Osiris and Isis were supposed to have been originally Greek de-
ities, hence this order of deities was not related to the Ra family;
tliey were, one miglit say, naturalized foreigners. The Egyptian
religion was sombre, sad, despondent, gloomy; at their festivals
a coffin was brought in as a reminder of the ultimate destiny —
death.
Horus is said to have introduced the more cheerful Greek
views of religion.
The god Ptah or Phtha was the god who prepared the mat-
ter from which Ra or Amen-Ra created the world; Ra was the
sun-god, the soul of the world, of the masses of Egyptians. Chnum
was the breatli of Ra, Avhich stirred the primeval waters.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
447
Tliotli Avas tlie moon-god, and was called the 'Hongne of Ra,"
though Ra is also said to have created the world l)y a Avord of
connnand. Tlioth, Thoti or [\\'t was the same as the Greek god
Hermes, the god of letters or learning; lie was ordinarily repre-
sented with the head of an ibis and as carrying a tal)let and a reed
pen in his hands, but sometimes also with the nas. Among his
titles were "lord of truth," "the chief in the path of the dead,"
and the "scribe of the truth." It was his special office to be pres-
ent in Amenti (underworld) when the souls were judged, to see
their deeds weighed in the balance and to record the result. It
was also he, who in the realms below wrote for the good souls,
Avith his own fingers, the "Book of Respirations" which protects
rfWiR^mi?ii?iiwwfii?-«^
Fig. 259.— The Worship of fSeti, the
Creator; from a sculpture in the ruius of
Kariiak, Egypt.
Fig. 260. — The goddess Netpe,
bearing the ankh, or symbol of life
and the feminine sceptre.
them, sustains them, gives them life, and causes them to breathe
Avith the souls of the gods forever and e\^er. Thoth Avas an author
of many medical books, and of the "Ritual of the Dead" Avhich
treated of the funeral rites.
Only Osiris and Isis were AA^orshipped throughout Egypt. All
the other gods and goddesses AA'^ere of a local character.
The sjanbolism of the Egyptians Avas A^ery phallic; many gods
shoAA^ed a penis or carried a penis sceptre (Fig. 259). Many a
448 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
goddess was figured with the sacred feminine triangle (Fig. 260),
or showed her bare breasts, or carried the female sceptre of the
prolile breast. And many a deity carried the ankh or symbol of
life ; and many of the gods are represented as masturbating.
Yet with this excessive display of sex s^anbolism the Egyp-
tians did not cohabit with women in their temples, as did the
Greeks.
''None of the Christian virtues," said Chabas, "is forgotten
in the recorded Egyptian code of morality ; piety, charity, gentle-
ness, self-command in word and action, chastity, protection of
the weak, benevolence towards the humble, deference to superiors,
respect to property in its minutest details, all is expressed there."
The Osiris M3rth or Mysteries
Very early in savage communities certain mysteries were
kept from the general knowledge of the pul)lic and imparted only
to members of certain secret societies; these organizations cele-
brated and perpetuated certain stories about gods or goddesses,
as for instance in Greece the Eleusynian mysteries about Demeter
and Proserpina. So there were mysteries in ancient Egypt about
Osiris and Isis.
Osiris was the Good Principle; he was at enmity with his
brother Seth (Typlion), the Bad Principle, and the two were in
endless conflict for the salvation or destruction of human souls.
Seth schemed to destroy Osiris, so he made a beautiful chest, and
at a celebration offered to present it to anyone who could lie
dowm in it. When Osiris tried it, Seth closed the lid and had it
nailed up and then threw it in the Nile.
Isis then Avandered about Egypt hunting her husband Osiris.
(The same folklore myth that we find in the Greek story of De-
meter, or in the Assyrian mjih of Ishtar.) She finally found the
chest but it was empty; Setli had found it and taken out the
body of Osiris which he cut into little bits which he scattered all
over Egypt. Isis hunted the fragments and buried each one on
the spot where she found it, which accounts for the numerous
graves of Osiris in Egypt. She found all the parts except the
phallus, the genital organs ; so she had a realistic model of these
parts made and dedicated them in a temple, where they were
Avorshipped, and this accounts for the introduction of phallic Avor-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 449
ship ill Egypt. This Osiris iiwth formed tho nucleus of tlie Osiris
Mysteries, or tlie teacliings of one of tlie secret societies of
antiquity.
Ammon was the local god of Thebes ; he was often represented
with the head of a ram. Various cities in Egypt worshipped their
gods under different animal shapes, and the inhabitants of such
cities could not eat the animals like their gods in shape. It is
probable that this animal worship was but a survival of early
totemism.
Thoth Avas a moon-god, the measurer of time and weights.
He was the same as the Greek god Hermes. Thoth is of interest
mainly because he was the reputed author of the Egyptian books
on medicine, and of the "Ritual of the Dead." To this god the
Egyptians ascribed forty-two books on medical practice, but
Seleucus ascribed to him twenty thousand books, and Manetho,
thirty-five thousand, five hmidred and twenty-five books. He is
particularly concerned in securing the welfare of the souls in the
underworld, wherefore his worship was very important in connec-
tion with tlie funeral rites.
Greece
Cronus was the youngest of the Titans, the children of Ura-
nus (Sky) and Gaea (Earth). After he had castrated his father
Sky, he became the ruling god; he married his sister Rhea. It
had been foretold to him in an oracle that he would be deposed
by one of his OA\m children, so he swallowed them one after an-
other as soon as they were born. He swallowed Hestia, Demeter,
Hera, Hades and Poseidon. At last Rhea gave birth to Zeus
(Jupiter), but she hid him and handed to Cronus a rock wrapped
in swaddling clothes, which Cronus swallowed. AVhen Zeus grew
up he administered an emetic to his father Cronus and saved all
of his brothers and sisters alive. Among them, also, Cronus threw
up the stone; this stone was kept at Delphi, and divine honors
were paid to it.
Similar swalloAving stories, probably derived from the same
stock of folklore, were found among the Bushmen, Kaffirs, Basutos,
Indians of Guinea, etc.
The Romans called Cronus Saturn; he was the god of agri-
culture, hence he was represented with a sickle; in astrology and
450
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
alchemy liis symbol is a male cross with a sickle, the same as is
now used to express neuter forms in animal and plant life (see
p. 530).
Our "Father Time" with Ms scythe is Saturn modernized.
Fig. 261 is entitled "The Flight of Time;" old Father Time is
hurrying an unwilling victim along.
Saturn's wife was Ops (Plenty), an earth-goddess of crops
'and harvest; she was the goddess of property, wealth, riches and
power; also, she was the patroness of husbandry, tlie benefactress
of farmers. The festival of the Opalia, in her honor, occurred on
December 19th.
In honor of Saturn the festival of the Saturnalia was held;
Fig-.
261. — Tempus fugit (Time
Flies), and drags his unwilling vic-
tim with him.
Fig. 262.— Our "Father Time" is de-
rived from Saturn (Cronus) by mistal^e;
the word Chronos (time) and Cronus (Sat-
urn) were confounded.
during this festival his feet were untied, but otherwise they were
kept tied so that the god could not run away.
Zeus was the same as the Vedic god Dyaus pitar; in Etrusca
or ancient Greece he was known as Tina; in Rome as Jupiter.
The Greeks addressed him in their prayers as ZevTrdrep (Zeupater),
"Zeus the Father." In both Greece and Rome he alwavs re-
tained the attributes of ruler over the natural phenomena, the
changes of the heavens, the variety of seasons, etc. He was
Jupiter Lucretius, the god of the briglit sky, as Avell as Jupiter
SEX AND SKX WORSHIP 451
Pluviiis, the god of ilie rainy sky ; llie god of light and of darkness,
of the tlmnder and of i-ain.
In Greece he remained a nature god, and many sexual ad-
ventures were related of him, l)ut in Kome a more moral char-
acter was attributed to him, and he was worshipped as a fatherly
ruler of mankind ; the guardian and protector of the higher in-
terests of human society, and tlie especial guardian of the sanc-
tity of oaths. The Romans swore "by Jove," and we still do so
to this day.
The word-stem of Jupiter is ''Jov" (pronounced Yohv),
which reminds of the Jewish name for God — Yahwe or Jhov.
Zeus, by whatever name he was called, was heaven or sky;
Leto was the same as Gea or Earth. In Greece Hera (Latin,
Juno) was his official or chief wife, and therefore the Greeks rec-
ognized Earth or Leto merely as one of Jupiter's concubines.
Homer represented Zeus as a powerful but good-natured and
amorous deity and tells many stories of his amours, but none of
lycanthropous changes, or transformations to animal forms, to
carry out his amours, such as are told by Hesiod.
Zeus combines many features of early and late Greek periods,
and these stories do not always seem to be consistent with each
other; the animal stories told by Hesiod are prol)ably reminders
of totem times; Zeus is called the ''aegis-bearing," that is, clad
with a goat pelt; this seems to refer -to the Greek goat-clan, to
Avhich also Athena belonged (see p. 220).
Zeus was very profligate, and the number of his inamoratas
was legion; not only goddesses and nymphs but also human
queens, and ordinary daughters of men, if only they were fair-
looking, appealed to his taste ; but his service or worship was not
of a phallic type, nor were phallic symbols employed in connection
with Zeus as they were mth Dionysus.
Poseidon (Latin: Neptune) pursued Demeter to commit rape;
she changed herself into a mare and fled, but the god pursued her,
and as a result she gave birth to the winged horse Arion. This is
a similar story to the Hindu tale about Purusha and the origin of
the various animals.
Mercury, or Hermes, had many children by mortal women
but only one by the goddess Aphrodite (Venus) ; this one \vas
named after both his parents — Hermaphroditus. Mercury car-
452 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
ried the caduceus, a male sceptre around which two serpents were
twined, signifying the lingam erect from sexual passion.
Hermes (Greek) was represented as a pillar supporting a
bearded head, and with a phallus on the front; such pillars stood
all over the city of Athens. Hermes was the god of fertility and
reproductive power ; he also bestowed wealth in flocks and herds.
Like the sileni, Hermes, or Mercury, was an ardent pursuer of
nymphs.
Mars Avas the Roman god of war ; his name is supposed to be
derived from mors, death ; but some say from mas, male ; his spear
was a thunderbolt and his shield a storm-cloud. As a heaven-god
and giver of rain he presided over fertility and increase ; for this
reason, probably, he was worshipped, together with Juno the god-
dess of women and child-birth, in religious ceremonies connected
with marriages, by Roman matrons at the festival of the
Matronalia.
A goddess named Nerio was sometimes mentioned as his wife.
There was also a goddess Bellona, goddess of Avar, who was some-
times said to be a daughter or sister of Mars, at other times a
wife of Mars. Greek mythology recounts quite a number of
amours of Mars with Venus, the wife of Vulcan (Gr. Hephaes-
tus), and he had a number of children by several human women.
As opposed to these Avarlike deities, Irene Avas the Greek god-
dess of peace.
The Greeks relate hoAv once Ares (Mars) gave Demeter oc-
casion to be jealous, although she Avas not his Avife, and to con-
vince her that she had no cause for jealousy, he castrated a ram
and showed her the testicles, saying that they Avere his OAvn. The
same story, hoAvever, was also related of Zeus and Demeter.
Mars Avas said to be the son of Zeus and Juno.
Vulcan (Gr. Hephaestus) was the God of Fire; the volcanoes
Avere supposed to be the chimneys of his forge. Aphrodite (Ve-
nus) Avas his Avife, although some authors mention Maia (or
Majesta) as his wife. At a festival called Volconalia animals Avere
throAvn into the fire as sacrifices; in early times the victims Avere
human beings. Caeculus and Servius Tullius were called "sons
of Vulcan" because their mothers had been impregnated by sparks
flying from the anvil of Vulcan; some say, by sparks flying from
the fire of the hearth.
Pluto Avas the god of the underworld in Greek mythology; he
SEX AISTD SEX WORSTTIP 453
was also called Hades. Ho was a son of Cronus and Rhea, and
was a brother of Zens and Poseidon. His wife was Proserpina,
danghter of Denieter, whom he carried off l)y force, and ^^■hose
adventures gave rise to the Eleusynian mysteries. The under-
Avorld was called Hades, after the god who presided over it, but
in it the dead reposed in a lethargic existence, no idea of either
punishment or reward after death being held by the early Greeks
or Romans.
Pluto therefore has no similarity to the Christian devil, be-
cause he is only the guardian of the souls after death; he is not
a tempter or seducer of mankind, since all, the good as well as the
bad, finally came to rest in his care.
Cupid or Amor (Gr. Eros) was the god of love and desire;
hence such terms as amorous, erotic, etc. He was a son of Zeus
and Gea, or of Zeus and Venus, or of Zeus and Artemis, or of
heaven and earth, or of Night and Erebus. The ancients said he
was the most beautiful of all the gods ; he was generally repre-
sented as a child with wings, and with bow and arrows. He was
a nature-god presiding over love as seen in sexual passion in hu-
man beings. He was a constant attendant on Venus (Fig. 34).
It is not necessary to describe in detail all the Greek and
Roman gods, but it is desirable that we become acquainted with the
most licentious one of them — Dionysus (Latin, Bacchus), the god
of the vine (or wine), sometimes called the god of drunkenness
and debauchery ; he was the son of Semele, a daughter of Cadmus,
the king of Thebes, by Zeus.
He was also the god of the fertilizing spring rains, and there-
fore of the resuscitation of life in spring, after the Avinter sleep.
His mother died while he Avas an infant, so Hermes (Mer-
cury) brought him to the nymphs at Nysa, by Avhom he Avas reared.
When he greAv up he traA^eled extensiA^ely, to introduce the
culture of the A^ne and the making of Avine, and incidently, he
taught the Avomen how to indulge in the Avilder orgiastic super-
sensual excesses, such as Avere taught later on in special schools in
Rome, to slave girls Avho then commanded specially high prices in
the slaA^e markets from luxury-loving lourchasers. These sexual
excesses have been kept alive in the memories of men and Avomen
by the practices in the houses of prostitution; they are the so-
called "perversions" of our oAvn times, but since they are trans-
mitted by teaching from generation to generation, they cannot be
454 SEX AND SEX WOESHIP
said to be due to ''perverted instincts." They were the popular
themes of the paintings in the bathrooms of Herciilaneum and
Pompeii and otlier Eonian villas. These practices constituted the
main elements of the festivals in honor of this god, the Dionysia,
or Bacchanalia.
Pentheus, king of Thebes, opposed the aberrations introduced
by Dionysus, but he was killed by his wife, Avho mistook him for
a wild animal, during one of her frenzied spells.
Lycurgus, a Thracian king, also attempted to oppose the
practices taught by Dionysus, and attacked Dionysus, Avho saved
himself by jumping into the sea where the nymph Thetis received
him kindly.
Where Dionysus was favorably received he rewarded this
by instructions in the raising of the vine and the making of wine.
Fig. 263. — Erigone, daughter of Icarius, priest of Bacchus, commits suicide.
He taught Icarius how to prepare this drink but Icarius told some
ignorant peasants and laborers about it, and when they made
wine and got drunk, they imagined that they had been poisoned,
and they killed Icarius and threw his body into a ravine; his
daughter Erigone sought him, and her dog discovered his body,
whereupon she hanged herself; but modern artists, realizing that
in art one wdio hung himself or herself is a repulsive sight, substi-
tuted suicide by poisoned Avine, w^hich looks better. However, at
the festivals in honor of Dionysus, trees were decorated by hang-
ing small images of Erigone on them (Fig. 263).
The features of the Dionysus cult to be remembered, are the
drunkenness and the sexual excesses, of which more will be said
under "festivals."
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
455
Dionysus became acquainted witli Ariadne, at Naxos, where
Tliesens had abandoned her; she became the wife of Dionysus,
and the celebration of this marriage formed a prominent and ex-
uberant feature of the festivals in honor of Dionysus.
The leopard was sacred to Dionysus ; for this reason Ariadne
is usually represented as lying on a leopard skin rug, or as riding
on a leopard. The goat, ass and bull were also sacred symbols of
this god (Fig. 264).
The stories about him are probably Indian (Hindu) in their
Fig. 264. — ' ' Ariadne and the Leopaixi, ' ' by Wanneker.
origin, King Soma, an intoxicating Hindu drink, being the origin
of them.
Dionysus was worshipped at Attica with rude and very gross
s\anbolism, every variety of exuberant sexual aberration being
perpetrated in his temples in his honor. His sjanbols were the
thyrsus sceptre, a rod surmounted by a thyrsus or bunch of grapes,
or a pine cone, but the main one was the image of the phallus
which was carried by men and women in the processions in honor
of Dionysus, and very prominently displayed in his temples.
In art he was represented as wearing an ivy wreath and car-
rying the thyrsus; also frequently as a pillar, sometimes with a
45(3 SEX AT^D SEX WORSHIP
human head, but more frequently with merely a phallus in front.
Dionysus was supposed to go away in the fall and to return
in spring; Avhen he came back in spring all nature revived, the
]:)lants sprouted and animals mated ; this gave rise to the festival
called the Greater Dionysia, which festival still continues as our
Easter festival, with the same giving of ornamental eggs, etc.
As usual, the church has put a Christian explanation on this fes-
tival; instead of the old folklore stories of a return of Demeter
or Persephone, or of Ishtar, or Dionysus from the winter's sleep
in the underworld, the festival is said now to celebrate the resur-
rection of Jesus after his trip to the underworld, or to hell.
Pan or Priapus, as god of fertility, has already been men-
tioned; this god was worshipped more especially among rural
communities in a sort of harvest festival wliicli ^vas accompanied
by extravagantly Avild sensual and sexual indulgences.
India
Probably in no country has the worship of the powers of na-
ture as symbolized by the genital organs of man and Avoman, been
carried to greater excess than in India.
Veda, in Sanskrit, means knowledge, more particularly, in-
spired knowledge. The oldest Hindu sacred writings, or Bible,
includes the Rig- Veda, the Sama-Veda, the Yagur- Veda and the
Atharva-Veda, which are generally spoken of as the Vedas. They
are written in verse (see extracts on p. 111). To the Sanhita (col-
lection of h^^mns) of each Veda was added a Brahmana, or prose
commentary; Upanishads, or speculative treatises; Sutras, short
sentences or aphorisms ; Vedangas, books on pronunciation, me-
tre, grammar, vocabularies, astronomy and ceremonial, all of
which are necessary to a full imderstanding of the Vedas. The
Vedas are supernatural or divine, but the other books mentioned
are human.
The Vedanta are philosophical treatises on religion; the
modern ones are pantheistic.
The Puranas are legendary accounts of the universe; they
emphasize some of the special Brahmanic theories, but they are
comparatively modern ; probably not over one thousand years old.
The Tantras are later than the Puranas ; they are the sacred
writings of the Saktas, who are Hindu worshippers of the wives
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 457
of tlio ,i2:ods of tlio Triiuui'ti. The Saktas, tliercforo, are really
worshippers of the feminine powers of nature. This worship ap-
plies especially to the sakti of Siva, under any of her varions
forms, as Parvati, Devi, Kali, Bhavani, Dnr^'a, etc. This Avor-
ship is already indicated in the Puranas but is much elaborated
in the Tantras, where many magic and mystic rites, consisting
largely in gross and licentious practices, according to our stand-
ards, are taught.
The Mahabharata is a very ancient epic poem, of about 100
B.C., which contains some statements that show its antiquity by
reference, for instance, to a polyandric .union of the princess
Draaupadi with the Pandu or Pandava princes.
In very ancient times the Hindus worshipped Dyaus Pitar
(Zeus pater, or Jupiter), together with Varuna, the all-embracing
firmament, Mitra (or Mithra), the light of day, and Surya, the
life-giving sun.
Some of the oldest myths in India say that heaven and earth
begat all the other gods, which is the same folklore stock Avith which
we have already become acquainted in the Greek Bible by Homer
and Hesiod.
Prajavati is sometimes ranked with the gods of the Trimurti,
and is then called the Fourth God (''Four Great Gods"), but
others say he is the creator of all the gods and of the world
(probal)ly identifying him ihus with Heaven).
Also, in olden time the phallus was not as promiscuously
displayed and adored as now, for Ilrvasi, according to a Vedic
myth, was not allowed to see her husband Pururavas naked, ''for
such is the custom of women. ' ' The same idea is told in the story
of Amor and Psyche, by the Greeks.
* In the oldest of the Vedas, the Rig- Veda, probably com-
posed from 1400 b.c. on, but at first orallj^ transmitted, Indra
(Fig. 2) Avas the god of the Sky, the Atmosphere, the Cloud-
Compeller, the god of thunder, or thunder ; he was the chief god,
Avho in company Avith Agni, or Fire, Avas adored by the Hindus.
In those early days, the Avomen Avere held in great esteem and
suttee Avas unknoAvn; the Ganges Avas not yet sacred; and the
Trimurti Avere as yet unknoAvn.
The Trimurti (Trinity) Avere the Three Great Gods, some-
times grouped Avitli Prajavati as a Fourth, to constitute the
"Four Great Gods." Each of the Trimurti Gods (Brahma,
458 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Vishnn and Siva) or male principles, had a sakti, or female
consort or female energy. Vacli or Sarasvati was the wife of
Brahma, and was regarded as the goddess of speech and learning ;
Sri or Lakshmi was the wife of Vishnn and is the goddess of
beauty and fortune; Uma, or Parvati, is the wife of Siva, but
Parvati is also called Kali (the Black One) or Durga (the Ter-
rible One) or Maha-Devi (the Great Goddess). While Siva was
the god of destruction and reproduction, in more modern times
he is more generally described as a male generative god, and is
s^mibolized by the lingam or phallus; and his sakti or consort.
Kali, is now more generally recognized as the destructive agency.
This is simply an early exemplification of Kipling's line: "The
female of the species is more deadly than the male."
To explain the frequency of the figures of the lingam in the
temples and the groves of the forests, the Hindus relate, that
once upon a time the gods were called together to consult about
some important matter, but when all had arrived Siva was still
absent. After waiting for a long time, they finally sent a mes-
senger to look up Siva and bring him to the conference. This
messenger knocked at Siva's door, but receiving no answer, he
walked in and found Siva busy with Parvati, in sexual activity;
nor would Siva quit, but kept right on, and told the messenger
to tell the gods that he would come when he had finished with the
work he was then doing. The other gods ordered that in com-
memoration of Siva's activity, the whole country should be filled
with phalli, and that the lingam should be the symbol for Siva
ever thereafter.
There are many other gods; Indra, the god of the sky, was
also called the god of the East; Agni (Fire or Fire-god) Avas also
god of the Southeast; Surya, the Sun, of the SoutliAvest; etc.
The wives of these other gods were called Apsaras, or Lovely
Nymphs.
Rudra is the "God of the Roaring Storm;" he represents
Siva in his capacity as destroyer, and is sometimes identified
with Siva. Siva is also symbolized as "Nandi" the Sacred Bull,
which animal is sacred to Siva, symbolizing his creative or sexual
power.
The popular belief at present in India pays little worship
to Brahma; it is mainly a worship of the elementary forces of
nature, syml)olized as supernatural beings with the sexual pow-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 459
ers of men and women, and with intellectual powers greater than
those of man.
Tlie fonr castes in India spranji: from the numth, the arms,
the thig-hs and the feet of Pnrusha who is the Hindu demiurg-e.
The Brahmans are the hi<;"hest of these castes, and are believed
to be 'Uwice-born," once as a divinity and once as a human be-
ini?. A Hindu may not marry a woman of a higdier caste than his
own, but he may marry a girl of any caste or of each caste lower
than his o\ra, provided he has a wife of his own caste. Hindus
are polygamous, but may not marry a fourth woman ; when they
have married three wives, they next marry a babul tree, then a
fifth, a woman, and so on.
Since the beginning of our era, the worship of Brahma has
almost ceased; there are only two or three temples in his honor,
now existent.
Vishnu, the Preserver, is still worshipped. In ancient times
he was the god of the shining firmament, but Indra, the god of
the sky or atmosphere has taken his place, to a great extent.
In his function as Preserver or Redeemer, Vishnu has ex-
perienced a number of ''atavars" or incarnations. The first
time he assumed the shape of a fish, and warned Manu of the
coming of the flood. Next, he appeared as a turtle, and carried
the world on his back, and thus saved it from destruction when
the other gods "churned up the sea," or, metaphorically, ''rocked
the boat." The eighth time he was incarnated as Krishna, the
ninth time as Buddha. He will reappear once more in a tenth
atavar, after w^hich will come the destruction of the world.
In his eighth atavar Vishnu appeared as Krishna ; his mother
was Devaki; Kama, a demon king, tried to kill him, but his fa-
ther, a warrior, hid him. When he was a young man he mar-
ried tAvo wives, but he also spent much time among sixteen thou-
sand milkmaids ; his favorite among these was his mistress Badha.
The Rajputs are an aristocratic clan of the population of
Karanli, a native state of India, who claim to be descendants of
Krishna ; the}^ should be a very numerous clan, if they also claim
as ancestresses his milkmaid companions.
In this incarnation Vishnu had one thousand names, one of
which — Juggernaut — is well kno^^^l ; the name means "Lord of
the world." Some of his other names mean "Savior," "Re-
460 SEX AND SEX AVORSHIP
deemer," etc., and some of the stories told about liim are similar
to stories told about Jesus.
8iva and his wife Parvati are the most important deities in
India at the present time.
Worship or adoration among the lower classes in India con-
sists in frequently repeating the names of the deity; some of them
train parrots to do this for them, they getting all the credit for
the repetitions of the holy name ; the names of Vishnu, Krishna-
Eadha, and of Sita-Ram are thus adored.
Among the Hindus it is considered a great disgrace to have a
daughter unmarried; to obviate this, infanticide of females is
practiced, because Brahmanic weddings are very expensive; for
the same reason, to run no chance of their remaining unmarried
the girls are married off when three to six years old; in those
tropical countries girls are of marriageable age when ten or
tAvelve years old. But the main reason for these early marriages
is a religious requirement that coition, or the consummation of
marriage, should take place immediately after the first appear-
ance of menstruation. Puberty occurs in that tropical country
at about ten to twelve years; so the girls are married young so
tliat when menstruation occurs, no time will be lost in comply-
ing with the religious demands. But some husbands do not wait,
but use their little girl wives, often lacerating, crippling and para-
lyzing them and ruining them for life.
China
The Chinese "Book of Changes" by Wan Wang (1150 b.c.)
teaches that all material things in this world were produced by
two great male and female vivifying elements, the Yin and the
Yang, which proceeded from the Tai-Keih, or the First Great
Cause. The Chinese philosophers say that when from the union
of the Yin and the Yang all existing things, both animate and in-
animate, had been produced, the sexual principle was conveyed
to and became inherent in all of them. Thus heaven, the sun, the
day, etc., are considered to be male, while earth, moon, night, etc.,
are female.
This idea of sexuality pervades every department of knowl-
edge in China, and is constantly referred to in every subject,
anatomy, medicine, botany, etc. The emperor, whose ancestor
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 461
was a miraculously born son of lieavon, worships as high priest
the two divinities, heaven and earth, which appear to correspond
to the old Greek Uranus and Gaea (Heaven and Earth).
Japan
The Ume (plum-tree) is usually accompanied with its insep-
aral)le companions, the pine-tree and the ])aml)0), all in tlic form
of dwarf-trees. These three have come down the ages from time
immemorial as symbols of all that is desirable in life. One of
the first things taught a child is that "Sho-chiten-bai" (or pine-
bamboo-plum) means good luck and happiness. The pine-tree
is the symbol for masculine strength, endurance, loyalty and lon-
gevity. The plum-tree is the symbol for the feminine, and stands
for sweetness and chastity, the fundamental virtues insuring do-
mestic joy. The bamboo, because it bends before the storm with-
out breaking, has the significance of moral uiirightness and of
grace; though pliant it never breaks.
The three virtues, endurance, sweetness, and strength in
yielding, make a trinity of virtues that to the Japanese appear to
be absolutely satisfying.
Mexico
We have alreaclv considered how religious ideas mav have
come from Europe or Asia to America in prehistorical times, so
will need to say nothing farther on that matter here.
In Guatemala the creator was the "Feathered Serpent"
whose name was Gucumatz.
The Toltecs Avorshipped Quetzalcoatl, who was a great deity,
a white man Avith black hair and a long beard ; he taught them to
lead a virtuous life, to hate Avar, to sacrifice no men or beasts on
the altars, but only bread and floAvers and perfmiies.
The ancient Mexicans counted time by cycles of fifty-tAvo
years. At the beginning of a ncAV cycle a noAv sacred fire Avas
kindled on the naked breast of a human sacrificial Adctim. They
had a supreme god, ' ' Teotle ; ' ' also a rival deity of eA^ il ; these are
supposed to have been brought from Asia (see page 31).
Tonatiuh and Motztli Avere nature gods — sun and moon. The
Avar god Huitzilopochtli Avas said to have been supernaturally con-
ceived; according to one account he Avas a deified great Avarrior;
462 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
luit accordiiio; fo anotlior account lie was the licad of the jMoxican
pantheon. His idol was a huge basalt rock on one side of which
was his image, while on the other side was his wife, the goddess
of war Tayaomiqni.
Centeotle was the goddess of the all-nourishing maize or
Indian corn; she was the patroness of the earth and the "mother
of the gods." There were also other deities, a goddess of pleas-
ure, a god of pulc[ue (strong drink), etc., and the usual subor-
dinate nature-spirits of hill and vale, woods, rivers, etc.
THE ETERNAL FEMININE
General Considerations
We pass on to the consideration of what Goethe called "Bas
Ewig Weihliche'^ (The Eternal Feminine), the attributes of con-
ceiving and producing, and of nourishing.
Fertility was always highly prized, as when Moses said:
"The Almighty shall bless thee with blessings * * * of the
breasts and of the womb" (Gen. xlix, 25) ; or when the Psalmist
sings: "Thy wife shall be as a fruitful vino by the sides of thine
house; thy children like olive plants round about the table" (Ps.
cxxviii, 3).
On the other hand, sterility was recognized as a curse, as
when Hosea invokes the wrath of God on Israel for their sins : —
"Give them, 0, Lord! a miscarrying womb and dry breasts."
(Hosea ix, 14).
The relationship of the woman to the child and her agency
in producing a new being obviously must have been recognized
before reasoning connected the sexual act of the man with this
process. Her power to produce may have been recognized at a
vquito early time as a divine power, presided over by a deity enti-
tled to homage and thanks.
The priority of the recognition of the relationship of mother-
hood makes it probable that the earliest ethical inspirations of
the race were associated with the name of "Ma" — Mother — ^even
as the first articulate sounds of the human child — "ma, ma," —
are believed to utter her sacred name ; therefore the most primi-
tive conceptions of a creative power or deity probably took the
form of worship of the feminine, of motlierhood, of the woman,
the "Madonna."
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
4():]
When a preacher once (k^seribed to his liearers tlie creation
of Adam and Eve, lie tohl them that "(jlod {'reated Adam in Ids
own image." "Glory to God!" responded some of the audience.
''And then," continued the preacher, "God created Eve, also in
his own image, but with a difference" — and "Thank God for the
Difference!" came the response from the congregation. Thank
God for the Differe/nce!
The two things Avhich Avould attract our attention first in a
naked woman (Eig. 265), are the peculiarly feminine charms of
the beautifully rounded breasts, and the mons Veneris with its
covering of hair. This hirsute adornment oj: the pubes of the
Fiy. 265. — The origin of the sacred femi-
nine triaaiffle.
Fig. 266. — The origin of feminine sym-
bols; the circle represents the breast, the
feminine triangle the mons veneris.
woman is in the form of an inverted pyramid, a triangle with its
apex down, the reverse of the sacred male triangle. Compare
with this figure the mons veneris of some unfortunate girl to
whom the goddess Ossipaga has been unkind (see page 514),
and to whom she has given an insufficiently developed pelvis ; such
a girl has a contracted pelvis, a pelvis which has a masculine build,
and the pubic hairy ti-iangle is also masculine in form.
These features of the vigorous, well-formed woman gave rise
to the sacred symbols of the feminine Powers in Nature — the
Circle, and the "Sacred Feminine Triangle" (Eig. 266).
4G4 SEX AND SEX WOKSIIIP
Besides these we have the variations — the circle with a dot
in the center, the breast with its nipple; the "Assyrian bell,"
really the breast in profile, which, at the end of a staff constitutes
the Eg3^ptian feminine sceptre ; the triangle Avith a slit, as the
pubes would appear if the}^ were devoid of hair; the doubly-
pointed ellipse, the conventional figure for the vulva, to which Job
referred nearly 3500 years ago as "the door of my mother's
womb" (Job iii, 10) and Avhieh in religious symbolism is known
as the "door of life" because it is literally the door through
which Ave Avere ushered into life; and lastly, the oval and the
diamond or "lozenge," as conventionalizations of the doubly-
pointed ellipse.
The deity Avho iDresided OA^er the feminine functions Avas Avor-
shipped as a goddess in various religions, for instance, as the
moon, as Ma, Isis, Cybele, Islitar, Ashtoreth, Astarte, Diana,
Freya, Venus Genetrix, etc., and Avas then represented either as
a realistic beautiful Avoman, or s}anbolically as just explained,
or in the form of some animal, as a coav, etc.
While in most religions the male principle Avas acknoAvledged
as the most important there Avere religions in Avhicli the female
principle Avas the principal deity, as for instance, Tahiti, the
highest deity of the ancient Scythians. According to the accen-
tuation of one or the other of the feminine attributes, the creative
or the nourishing poAvers, one or the other set of the symbols of
the circle or the triangle was used.
Vulva
The external feminine sexual parts (page 151), the AT.ilA^a, is
called "yoni" in India; it is still very Avidely Avorshipped in Asi-
atic religions and the worshippers of feminine attributes are
called "Yonicitas." In subsequent references to the vulva Ave
will speak of it as the "yoni."
Yoni is Sanskrit and means A^ulva, uterus or origin; it is the
female poAver in nature. The Supreme Being, wishing to begin
creation, divided himself into tAvo parts, Brahma and Nature;
from Brahma all males originated ; from Nature, all females ; but
the female is regarded as the real force in nature and most de-
serving of worship.
We Avill first speak of the worship of the producing or crea-
SEX AND SEX WORSHTP
465
tive poAver, and the symbols derived from the yoni. This draw-
ing- (Fig. 267) shows tlie figure of an idol found by Sehliemann
in the ruins of the ancient City of Troy; it is probably over 3000
yeaTS old. Note the triangle, and the swastika symbol in the
triangle. Compare this figure with the one of Ishtar (page 468)
and notice that the pnl)ic curls are represented in a similar man-
ner, which was probably due to primitive implements.
A similar figure was found among the carvings of the trog-
lodites, the ancient primitive cave dwellers in Southern Europe,
to which an age of about 30,000 years is attributed.
As man values the sexual parts of his wife as his most sacred
Fig. 267. — Au idol found in the ruins
of Troy, by Sehliemann; note the swastika
sign in the triangle.
Fig. 268. — An Egyptian goddess holding
a feminine sceptre before her.
and exclusive possession, the feminine triangle of the mons Ven-
eris became a most sacred symbol, standing for everything in life
that is holy, pure, chaste and trne. It is used in this sense in
innumerable figures of goddesses in Egyptian temiole ruins, as
for instance in the figure of the goddess Netpe (Fig. 260, p. 447) ;
this also shows the sacred feminine sceptre, a profile breast on
a staff, shown also in the temple sculpture (Fig. 268).
In Gnostic and early Christian times word-charms were much
466 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
used. . One of the most popular of these was the Abracadabra
charm; the word was said to be from Ab, Ben, Ruach, ACADosch,
Hebrew for Fatlier, Son and Holy Ghost. When engraved on a
medal it constituted a powerful charm to protect against disease
and misfortune. The word was generally arranged in the form
of the feminine triangle, thus :
ABRACADABRA OR ABRACADABRA
ABRACADABR BRACADABR
ABRACADAB RACADAB
ABRACADA ACADA
ABRACAD CAD
ABRACA A
ABRAC
ABRA
ABR
AB
A
The derivation of the triangle A^^th a slit or fissure in the
lower part of the triangle became very apparent when a woman
sat with outstretched legs on an altar in the temples of yonic wor-
ship ; or in Oriental harems where etiquette requires that the pubes
shall be kept denuded of hair, by shaving, pulling out, or by de-
pilatories ; or in girls before puberty.
At the age of puberty a girl's hips widen, the breasts enlarge,
and the pubic hair appears; unlike Orientals, Avho have this hair
removed, Occidental people allow it to grow and consider it beau-
tiful in proportion to its profuseness.
In an Egyptian mural painting the mistress of the household
was represented as clad in a diaphanous robe, plainly allomng
the hairy pubic triangle to be seen; from the remarks on per-
fumery, yon will remember that the Egyptian women took pains
to make this feature specially attractive by perfuming it. Among
the ancient Egyptians and Jews, a heavy growth of pubic hair
was considered a great physical charm, and Ezekiel compared
Jerusalem to a young bride in these words: "Thou art come to
excellent ornaments; thine breasts are fashioned and thine hair
is gro\\Ti whereas thou wast naked and bare" (Ezek. x\a, 7).
Among us, men are fond of admiring this feature of women, fond
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 467
of toying with tlio little curls, and they playfully call it "pussy."
Women are usually more or less apathetic to sexual caresses
and often it becomes necessary to produce in them a proper de-
gree of excitement by manual or labial caresses, to dispose them
favorably for sexual enjoyments ; probably the caress most gener-
ally resorted to by the male is the manual caressing of the breasts
or of the voni with its little curls of hair. In Oriental lands, as
well as in the Bible, the yoni was called "the door to the womb;"
the caress just referred to was resorted to by the lover in Solo-
mon's Song (Cant, v, 4) where the bride says: "My beloved put
in his hand by the hole of the door, and my bowels were moved for
r
%■■■
Fig. 269. — Fertility sign in a field in Mexico; Zuiii and Aztec.
him." When he caressed her yoni, she became erotically excited.
The naked mons of a young girl is exquisitely beautiful, as
is showni in this plaster-cast of a virgin mons (Fig. 270). Notice
the lines of the angles between the mons and the thighs, between
the two thighs, and the slit between the labia or lips. This gave
rise to the "sign of fertility" which signified not only potential
powers of fertility, but also was a sjmibol of virginity.
Here is a photograph (Fig. 269) of the symbol of fertility
erected in a field of Mexico to invoke the blessings of fertility or
fruitfulness for the seeds that were soa\ti in this field.
In precisely the same manner and for the same purpose this
468
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
sign is used by the Hindus in India, as shown in cut A, and hy the
Zunis in New Mexico, as showni in cut B.
Y
Y
A.
B.
Our artists represent neither the pubic hair nor the slit in
their paintings or statues. The ancients, on the other hand, glo-
ried in perfect womanhood and deified and adored the attributes
thereof. This is a figure of Ishtar, the daughter of Bel or Baal,
the goddess of fertility of the ancient Phoenicians. The conven-
Fig. 270. — A jJlHster cast of a virgin Fig. 271. — The Phoenician Goddess
mens veneris; the origin of the sign of Islitar; after a small ivory figure in the
fertility. British Museum.
tional method of indicating curls is quite peculiar, but frequent.
The original of the figure shown is a small ivory statuette now
in the British ^Museum (Fig. 271).
Among the Greeks and Romans Aphrodite or Venus, being
the goddess of physical and promiscuous love, was represented
naked, and her posture called attention to her Avomanly charms —
tlic l)i"easts and the pudendum or sexual pai'ts (Fig. 144, p. 292).
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 469
In her temples men and women worshipped by indulging in
coition in her honor. The genitive of her name is Veneris, and
by changing the last syllable to the infinitive ending, the verb
''venerare" was obtained, and from this in turn the word ven-
eratio, or veneration, which originally meant the form of worship
just mentioned, but which wdth us now means merely an act of
veneration or worship.
While on the one hand the worship of the Feminine led to
extravagant forms of adoration or veneration, it also led to the
opposite extreme, fiendish excesses and cruelties. For instance,
there are frequent references in the Old Testament to the follow-
ing practice : Moses conmianded the Israelites to destroy all males
of their enemies utterly, and that not even the unborn males might
escape, he said, "Now therefore kill * * * every w^oman that
hath lvnoA\Ti man by lying with him" (Num. xxxi, 17) ; and Ave are
told in the Second Book of Kings, of Menahem, the son of Gadi,
ruler over Israel, that "Menahem smote Tiphsah, * * * and
all the women, therein that were with child he ripped up ' ' their
bellies (II Kings xv, 16).
Hosea, the prophet, pronounced this curse on Samaria: "Sa-
maria shall become desolate ; their infants shall be dashed to pieces
and their women with child shall be ripped up" (Hosea viii, 16).
This seems to have been a peculiar feature of warfare among
people of Asia Minor ; a few years ago, when the Turks massacred
the Armenians long before the present war, Avhen they captured
a pregnant woman they made bets as to the sex of the foetus in
her womb, after which they cut open her belly to decide the bets.
The Sistrum (Fig. 272) is sometimes spoken of as a musical
instrument, because it was used as a sort of rattle to accompany
religious dances and ceremonies in the ancient temples of Egypt.
It is really a symbol of the yoni locked or barred, and there-
fore of virginity, and in this sense is here shown as carried by
the goddess Isis, who was worshipped as a virgin mother of
Horns, just as Mary is worshipped as a virgin mother of Jesus.
The origin of this symbol must perhaps be sought in a cus-
tom which still survives in the Soudan, and which has no doubt
been brought down from remote antiquity. In Africa women are
property or chattel, and are bought and sold. Virginity is highly
prized, there as elsewhere, and in some parts of Africa the father
rivets an iron ring through the labia of his child-daughter (Fig.
470
SEX AND SEX WOESHIP
273) which remains until she is sold to a husband, when the latter
removes the ring- with a file and replaces it with a padlock or har-
ness of which he alone has a key.
A similar procedure was in vogue among our own ancestry
until comparatively recent times; in fact, some writers say that
it is still in use in some of the primitive conununities in Europe.
The medieval "chastity belts" figured on page 84 were com-
mon, and many are still shown in European musemns. Such
things were possible only in an age when the patient Griseldis
was a possibility; when wives were taught to think, as expressed
by Eve to Adam, in Paradise Lost:
Fig. 272. — Isis, holding the sistrum or Fig. 273. — Origin and meaning of tlie sistrum.
symbol of virginity.
i i
* *
>>
what thou bidst
Unargued I obey; so God ordains;
God is thy law, thou mine ; to know no more
Is woman's happiest knowledge and her praise.
This is the Christian or New Testament doctrine. We read
in the letter of St. Paul to the Colossians, ii, 22: "Wives, submit
yourselves unto your husbands as unto the Lord * * * there-
fore, as the church is subject mito Christ, so let the wives be to
their husbands in everything."
I will not devote nmch space here to the symbolic representa-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
471
tions of the yoni and the womb. As ancient religions were
mainly sexual explanations of natural phenomena, many natural
objects were explained with these religious ideas; for instance:
Among the Greeks and Romans Oceanus was the father, Gaea or
Terra (Earth), the mother, and the rivers were the children.
Caves, grottoes, etc., became symbols of the womb; arches, the
entrances to caves or to tombs, became symbols of the ''door to
the womb, ' ' the yoni. In some Asiatic temples the lower part, or
auditorium, was oval and symbolized the feminine, while the stee-
ple symbolized the masculine. So also, arks of various kinds were
Fig. 274. — Eock-carved entrances to
tombs, in Palestine.
Fig. 275. — ^Stonehenge consists of a circle
(/em.) of arches {fern.) surrounding some sin-
gle (mase.) monoliths.
supposed to represent the feminine — the ark of the covenant, for
instance.
Many grottoes were sacred in ancient, as well as in modern
times, not only in Pagan lands but in Christian lands as well.
For instance, Unnnernath cave, in India, is a shrine of pilgrim-
age, where a "sacred bull" is worshipped. While this is a very
sacred shrine, the bull is very small, being only knee-high to the
man ; it represents a zebu bull, no doubt.
In modern times the association of the virgin Avith the grotto
is well knoA\m — Lourdes, for example.
472 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Church windows, niches, etc., are often made in shapes to
suggest the yoni, and frequently serve as recesses for the hous-
ing of rehgious statuary.
In some religions the devotees passed through arches or yoni-
sliaped holes in stone slabs, as a symbol of "being born again,"
or of being purified and cleansed of their sins.
The shell as a symbol of the yoni is common; Venus is often
represented with the shell (Fig. 276). This has been explained to
refer to her birth from sea-foam, associating the shell with the
sea; but there are so many illustrations of shells in art, in which
Fig-. 276.— "Venus in a Shell," by Finelli.
this explanation will not fit, tliat w^e must seek another and more
plausible interpretation.
As Venus is tlie goddess of physical love, the meaning of the
shell in connection Avitli Venus is not difficult to understand; it
is a symbol of the yoni.
I showed the triangle in two guardians of an Egyptian tomb,
indicating by its position the meaning of this triangle as a lingam
(p. 394). In a similar manner the shells, as hold by the m'lnphs
in this votive tablet from a temple of Aesculapius, show their
meaning as symbols of the yoni by the position in which they are
held (Fig. 277).
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
473
When the Barrison sisters came to tliis country, they were
advertised as the wickedest girls in the world; they were dancers
and singers. Thoy are hei'e (Fig. 278) i-c presented in their cele-
Fig. 277. — A votive tablet in a Eoniaii temple of Aesculapius; nymphs holding shells as
symbols of the yooii.
Fig. 278. — The Barrison Sisters, in their song and dance: "Do you see my little pussy?"
))
brated song and dance, entitled: ''Do yon see my little pussy?
The manner in which they hold the little kittens shows to what
''pussies" they had reference; this renders clear the meaning of
the shells in the votive tablet referred to.
474
SEX AXD SEX WORSHIP
When the Romans went to a temple they dipped their hand
or fingers in a font of "holy water," before they adored the
gods or goddesses ; this was done by kissing the hand and waving
it toward the gods (throwing a kiss) or by kissing the image,
or the feet of the image of the deity; this method of adoration is
still in vogue in the Catholic church, both as to the use of holy
water and as to the form of adoration by kissing holy objects or
images. The font in which the holy water is contained is often in
the shape of a shell, or a shell is held by an angel.
Figure 279 represents Maya-Deva, a Hindu goddess, in two
different poses, or rather in two variations of the same pose, that
Fig. 279.— The goddess Maya-Deva, showing Fig. 280.— Lower, Horus worship-
her yoni; India. ping his mother, Isis, symbolized by
a yoni; upper, a door of life, from
a dagopa in India.
of calling attention to the sacred symbol of the yoni ; in one pose,
the .yoni is rather realistically shown as a doubly-pointed ellipse,
in the other more figuratively or symbolically, as a diamond
shaped lozenge.
In the illustration shown in Fig. 280, the upper figure is a
"door of life" from an ancient Dagopa of Junnar Cave, Bombay
Presidency, India. The lower figure represents Horus worship-
ping his mother Isis, who is symbolized by the yoni, often euphe-
mistically referred to as the "lozenge;" both figures are symbols
of the "door of life" or voni.
SEX AND SEX AVORSHTP
475
111 modern ecclesiastical symbolism this figure is explained as
the ^'vesica piscis;" this is especially the case when it is an oval
or elliptic aureola enveloping the whole figure of Christ, or of
Mary, or of a saint; it is explained to mean a fish, or a fish-
l)ladder. The Greek word for fish, tx^^'^, contained in consecutive
order the initials of the Greek words for ''Jesus Christ, Son of
God, the Savior. ' ' Hence it, and the fish, became sacred in Chris-
tian art. In the Brahmanic religion it is taught tliat Vishnu, in
one atavar, or incarnation, assmned the form of a fish to act as the
savior of the world.
Fig. 281.— Elliptic shape of woman.
Fig. 282. — Immaculate Conception ; from
the Rosary of the Blessed Virgin, 1524.
The doubly-pointed ellipse is the best-known symbol or rep-
resentation of the yoni; it adorns or disfigures nearly all public
"comfort" places, urinals, etc., and is probably one of the first
figures a boy learns to draw or to understand. But it does not
necessarily always mean the yoni ; it is sometimes used merely as
a symbol for a woman, because the body of a well-formed w^oman
with its full hips and pelvic development has this elliptic shape.
Among the ancient Romans a woman of easy virtue, a haetera
or a public prostitute, was simply called a "cunnus," which
476
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
^
Fig. 283. — Meeting- of Mary and Eliza-
beth. Altar-piece in Cologne (about
1400 A.D.).
Fig. 284. — "The Resurrection," from a
painting by Raphael and Perugino.
Fig. 285.— Mary in a door of life, Fig. 28(3.— A few impressions of medieval
from an altar-piece by Niccolo Aluimo, seals, in the shape of the circle (breast), the
A.D. 1500. female triangle (pubes) and the oval or ellipse
(yoni).
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 477
meant exactly tlie same tiling as when among onr lower classes
she is called a *'cnnt," while a decent woman is called a "skirt."
So in ancient religions, the most characteristic feature of
the woman, the yoni, was nsed to symbolize the whole woman,
but not as a lewd woman, but as a moral woman or even as a god-
dess, as in the representation above, of Harpokrat or Horns wor-
shipping his mother Isis.
Occasionally this figure signifies the womb, as in this illus-
tration of the "Immaculate Conception" from a book entitled
"Rosary of the Blessed Virgin," which was published in Venice
in 1524, and Avhich was approved and licensed by the Holy
Inquisition (Fig. 282).
This is a medieval altar-piece, painted about a.d. 1400, and
now in Cologne. It represents the meeting of Mary and Eliza-
beth, to each of whom the angel had announced that she would
conceive and bear a son. Here again the doubly-pointed ellipse
symbolizes the womb, rather than the ATilva. Note the figure of
St. John in the womb of his mother Elizabeth, kneeling' in adora-
tion before Jesus in the vromb of Mary (Fig. 283).
Jesus said "I am the door," and "I am the resurrection and
the life." In Fig. 284 "The Resurrection," by Raphael and Peru-
gino, Jesus is represented as the door to Eternal Life, but the
figure is that of the East Indian door of life — the yoni.
This shows a demon of disease attempting to destroy a babe ;
the mother prays for help and Mary appears in a door of life and
frustrates the designs of the demon. The painting is by Niccolo
Alunno, about 1500 a.d. (Fig. 285).
Saints, Madonnas, etc., are often shown in the door of life;
the seals of many abbeys, cathedrals, etc., and the sacred or
blessed medals from many shrines are in the same form; I have
a large collection of impressions of such seals and the doubly-
pointed ellipse and its modification, the oval, are conunon among
them. Sacred medallions and amulets are often in this shape.
The oval is the groundplan of the old Mormon tabernacle in Salt
Lake City. In the ancient land of Slieba (recall the Queen of
Sheba) the gromidplan of temples Avas oval; Ishtar was one of
the goddesses in whose honor this shape was adopted (Fig. 286).
In Yemen (in South Arabia) the temples were built with
elliptic groundplan, in honor, probably, also of Ishtar. But then,
478
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
the oval and the ellipse were merely modifications of the same
figure, representing the same idea. While many temples existed
in Yemen (Saba, in ancient times) but little is known about the
religion taught in them; Athtar was their sun-god and Sin their
moon-god ; the mother of Athtar seems to have been the sun itself.
Ruskin figured this window of Dumblane Abbey (Fig. 288)
which he declares is the most beautiful window in all England.
Comparison with the dramng of a \nilva (Fig. 42, p. 151), shows
what this window reall}^ represents — a yoni complete in all its
^^y
•I'.'-fW'. 11,..': 1 il,^ I ^svrw■s3feLl■ -iLi.T:] ir'VyO^,^'
Fi.y. 287.— KSeal of Litchfield Cathedral, Fig. 288.— Window of Dumblane Abbey,
England. England. (Compare with Fig. 42.)
parts — labia majora, lal)ia minora, clitoris, vestibule and orifice.
In some medieval churches a realistic yoni was sculptured on the
keystone of the arch of the main door.
At one time, when a female camel or a mare died, the yoni
was cut off and nailed to the stable doors to ward off evil, or what
is the same — "for good luck." Later on the horse-shoe was sub-
stituted as being less coarse, or more euphemistic.
From similar motives svml)ols of the voni were attached to
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 479
houses or huilt in in clmrclies, etc., as we saw in the Avindow of
Duml)lane Al)bey, AYe now nse the TTindu diamond-shaped sjnn-
bol of the yoni, the lozenge, which is sho^^^l as held before her hy
Maya-Deva, in Fig. 279, on onr slate roofs, the inner slate red, to
represent more realistically the mucons membrane Avithin the lips
of the yoni. Based on a partial connt I estimate that this sacred
emblem of the yoni occurs more than 100,000 times in the city of
St. Lonis alone.
We will noAv consider a peculiar form of the adoration of the
Feminine, which is based on a Avidespread, if not universal habit,
the caressing by passionate men of the bodies of their sexual
mates with lips and tongue. Such labial caressings are common
enough in animals, as for instance among cattle, Avhere the cow
licks the body of her calf; among the Esquimaux, where the in-
tense cold makes bathing, or even Avashing, impossi])le, the mother
Avashes her child as the cat does her kitten, by licking it Avith her
tongue.
Figure 289 shoAvs one of the griffins so common on medicA^al
buildings in Southern Europe; the large figure is from the roof
of the church of Notre Dame in Paris, and a modification of it
can be seen on the DeSales church toAver in St. Louis.
The loAver figure is copied from Ruskin who saA^s that it is
an ornamentation on the church of St. Mary the Beautiful, in
Venice ; it is also used hundreds of times in the same city as Avell
as elseAA^here.
Kisses on all parts of the body of a Avoman are recognized as
normal in sexual caressings by most Avriters on the subject. In
one of the letters submitted as CAudence in the celebrated Cail-
laux trial in Paris (1914), Caillaux Avrote to Mrs. Caillaux: "With
a thousand million kisses on all parts of your adorable body, I am
yours, etc."
In India the lingam and yoni, and A^arious combinations of
the tAvo, are Avorshipped by many millions of deA^otees, as repre-
senting Siva and his Sakti Kali. The principal ceremony in their
Avorship of the feminine principle requires a young, beautiful
and naked Nautch girl or temple attendant, as the living repre-
sentative of Kali, the yoni goddess. To the liAung yoni of this
girl the priest addresses his homage; she is seated on the altar
with legs spread AAude apart to display the sacred symbol, Avhich
the priest kisses and to Avhicli he offers food and libations in sa-
480
SEX AND SEX WOKSHIP
cred vessels called "argha" which are shaped like a yoni. After
these offerings have been consecrated by touching them to the
living yoni, they are distributed among the Avorshippers and par-
taken of as a sacred religious rite, analogous to the cakes eaten
in honor of Huitzilopochtli, in Mexico, or the consecrated phallic
cakes in medieval Europe, or to the Lord's Supper in Christian
ritual ; this is followed by the chanting of sacred texts and dances
by Nautch girls, the dances resembling the danse du ventre or
"belly dance" of Egypt.
This worship is indicated in this representation (Fig. 290) of
Fig. 289. — Large figure from roof of iig. 290. — Maha-Kali, wife of the god
Notre Darae, Paris; small one, from Siva, India.
Cliurch of St. Marv tbe Beautiful, Venice.
Maha-Kali, consort of the god Siva, the Destroyer, by her putting
out her tongue.
Near Yeddo, in Japan, is a grotto (symbol of the womb) in
which there is a colossal but realistic sculpture of a yoni to which
pilgrim devotees pay adoration now as they have done for ages
past ; this sculpture has been worn smooth and polished from the
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
481
myriads of kisses and caresses with the tongue that have been
bestowed upon it by the devout worshippers.
I'ig'ure 294 shows a curious pillar found in an Egyptian tem-
ple, and figured by Rawlinson. The opened lotus flower is a sym-
bol of the lingam while the two lotus buds are the testicles; the
heads over these masculine symbols do not protrude their tongues ;
on the front (and presumably on the reverse) is a head with pro-
truding tongue and below it is a yonic oval to show the object to
which the adoration is directed.
In some Asiatic nations, a guest kisses the yoni of the hostess,
o.ooo
o
■O
kOOCC
Fig. 291.— Aztec head, from Mexican Fig. 292.— Tlie Egyptian god Phtlia, the
Antiquities, by Kingsborough. Opener, adoring virginity, symbolized by the
sistrum.
or touches his food to it, as a sign of gratitude for hospitality
shown.
In this sculpture from an Egyptian temple we see Phtha,
adoring the sistrum, or barred yoni, the symbol of virginity or
chastity to which Phtha, the Opener, pays his devotions, by mas-
turbating and by protiiiding his tongue (Fig. 292).
In Syria there is a peculiar sect — the Nezaires. Their religion
is a queer mixture of depraved Christianity, intermingled with the
sex-worship of other Asiatic people. They worship God, but be-
lieve Christ. to have been merely a prophet like Mohammed; they
pray to the prophets of the Old Testament, the apostles of the New
Testament, and to the Virgin Mary; they practice polygamy.
482
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
They celebrate several festivals, the most solemn of which
is the "festival of the womb," On this festival day they gather
in their places of worship to perform the most sacred and solemn
Fig. 293. — A totem pole in Alaska, from a Fig. 294. — A curious pillar in
model at Chicago World's Fair, 1893. an Egyptian temple. After
Rawlinson.
Fig. 295. — Aztec serpent worship, from Kingslnirdugh 's IMexican Antiquities.
ceremonies of their religion; the women bare themselves and the
men salnte the women with a holy respect, reverently kneeling
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 483
before them, oiiibracing' tlieir thighs, and humbly and devoutly
kissing their al)domens and genitals, which is done promiscuously,
from which feature of their devotions comes their title: ''The
Adorers or Worshippers of tlie Womb."
Here is the figure of a totem pole from Alaskan countries
(Fig. 293) ; note the legs spread wide apart — a woman's legs, for
they are labeled by the symbols of the yoni and the profile breast
on each foot; the Alaskan artist did not know how to represent
the act of adoration with lips and tongue except by turning the
face the wrong way, but the tongue is where the yoni would be, if
the legs alone had been figured; or where the tongue would touch
the voni if the head were turned around. A model of this totem
Fig. 296.— Aztec calendar stone.
pole was at the World's Fair in Chicago and is now in the Field
Museum.
This adoration seems to have been imiversally knowm, for it
is found on both continents and on the islands of the Pacific ocean,
"from Greenland's icy mountains, to India's coral strand." This
(Fig. 291) is the same gesture from an Aztec temple in Yucatan,
Central America; and in the following illustration (Fig. 295) from
an Aztec temple, showing serpent Avorship, the Avomen shoAv the
same facial gesture.
That these mean the same worship of woman, or of the Fem-
inine, is shown in this sculpture of the "Aztec Sun," or calendar
stone, from a monument at Xochicalco, Mexico (Fig. 296) ; the
sculpture is in the form of a cross. One author says of this figure :
484 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
* ' In all Mexican nionnments it is indicated with protruding tongue,
expressing the light and heat poured upon the earth."
We might possibly accept such an interpretation, for want of
a better one, if it were not that below and in front of the tongue
we see the yoni, which shows that here we have the same idea as
in the sculptures of the Eastern Continent, the humble adoration
by man of the creative and generative powers and functions of
woman, symbolized here by the sun-god adoring Eternal Fem-
inine Nature, the yoni.
In Oceanica the same worship prevailed; this (Fig. 297) is
an elaborately carved Avindow frame from New Zealand, which
was pu])lished in an Auckland magazine or paper. Unfortunately
Fig. 297. — Maori window, Sandwich Islands.
the editor of the paper thought that the important feature in the
illustration was the Maori girl, and he cut doA\m the top of the
frame; but enough is left to show that the same adoration was
meant in the carved frame.
I came across a design of wall paper of which Fig. 299 is a
photograph ; it was an expensive and handsome paper in gold pat-
tern on a maroon ground. Notice the satyr-heads. Unfortu-
nately the colors did not allow of getting a good photograph ; but
by painting the pattern in white a better result was obtained
(Fig. 298). There is the fleur-de-lis symbol of the lingam; the
satyr head protrudes his tongue, ready to caress the \mlvas, for
one of which each paw is reaching out.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
485
It follows from these considerations that the head mentioned
by Ruskin as occurring on the church of St. Mary the Beautiful,
in Venice, really means al)ject self-abasement in adoration of
womanhood or of virginity.
Fig. 298. — One motif of wall paper, painted white to give better contrast.
Fig. 299. — A modea-n wall paper design.
The practice is not obsolete amongst us, although it is now
considered merely as a loving caress and not as a religious rite.
"WTiile labial sexual caresses are considered \aces bv some, oth-
486
SEX AISTD SEX WORSHIP
ers boliove lietero-sGxiial labial and liii.i^ual eiidcariiiciits quite
proper. Sivartlia, in a curious book entitled The Booh of Life,
says:
''The liunian form exhausts the possibilities of form-beauty
in our solar system (Fig. 300). The more beautiful curves, the
ellipse and parabola, are repeated many times. The bosom of
woman — the ivory throne of Love — derives its exquisite beauty
of form from both the ellipse and the parabola.
"Viewed as a whole the front of the face and of the body is
attractive, and the back is repulsive. The organs of sense, the
wy
■p.r.'sces— 15 ia"*^ rfWi>OtS»y,
*^- y>t^<";>>°:oW-'a
Fig. 300.— From the "Book of Life," by
Sivartha.
Fig. .301.— From the "Book of Life," by
Sivartha.
>?
eye, ear, tongue, nose and tactile sense are all located in front.
Note that, as shown in this figure, the breast and pubes are
ruled over by Venus, Avhile the nates are under the malignant
influence of Saturn, and are the seat of aversion, whence the al-
most universal invitation to kiss them, when one wishes to express
contempt.
''The physical use of every part of the face (Pig. 301) is the
base of its mental use — the social organs, or those of affection
and love 'arc sweet.' The affection of the mother is actually con-
nected with the physical nourishment of the child. The faculties
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
487
of sex-lovG, sneli as devotion, desire, mating and luxury, have
their signs in the fuhiess and breadth of the red part of the lips.
The lips are the most sensitive organs of touch of any of the face
and this sense is closely connected with all expressions of sex-
affection.
"The body is the foundation on which the mind is built
(Fig. 302). Each division of the bodily functions corresponds in
its character with a division of the mental faculties — which retain
a close sympathy of action with the corresponding parts of the
body. The front part of the brain is connected with the front
Fig-. 302.— From the ''Book of Life," by Sivartha.
part of the body and limbs, and the back with the back part of
these. The upper and the lower parts of the body repeat each
other in action and sympathy. The anatomists have shown that
the nose is connected with the anus; the upper lip with the peri-
neum ; the mouth with the genitals ; the tongue with the penis and
the clitoris and the chin with the pubes."
Marcellinus (IV Century a.d.) said of Eoman patricians,
"when anyone meets and begins to salute them * * * tliey
offer their knees or hands to kiss;" persistent flatterers tried to
kiss their thighs, but when the patron impatiently turned away,
the kiss was apt to be bestowed on the back part of the thighs, or
even on the nates.
488
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Worship of Alma Natura, or of the Nourishing" Power of Nature
(Worship of the Breast)
We now come to the consideration of the worship of the
breast. The most beautiful feature of a woman is, beyond doubt,
the bosom with the breasts; the Kabbalah (p. 194) makes it the
syml)ol for beauty. The bosom of the woman has been held sa-
cred in all times as the throne of love, the seat of affection, and
among the ancients was held especially sacred to Venus, Goddess
of Love.
^,^-rsxmM s.r.
Fig. 30o. — Venus nursing the Loves.
One writer said that the bosom of woman exhausts the pos-
sibilities of form-beauty, and that nothing more exquisitely beau-
tiful exists or can be imagined.
The breast, apart from the aesthetic function of charming
the male, is for the purpose of nourishing the offspring, as shoAvn
ill tills illustration, entitled: Venus Nursing the Loves (Fig. 303),
The breast of woman has been worshipped from time im-
memorial, and has given rise to the most sacred religious senti-
ments and symbols. About the breast have clustered some of the
sweetest memories and the purest practices of mankind. Man
finds refuge from business cares and worries, finds peace and con-
tentment in the "bosom of his family." The calm delights of
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 489
handling, fondling, kissing and caressing the breast of his wife
far ontweigh in lasting happiness the intciisci-, l)riefei' and less
refined pleasnres of sex.
' ' My beloved is like a bundle of myrrh to me ; his head shall
lie between my breasts all the night;" sang the bride in Solomon's
Song; and Solomon said in Proverbs (v, 18, 19): ''rejoice with
the wife of thy yonth; let her breasts satisfy thee at all times;
and be thou ravished always with her love."
Roman lovers were in the haliit of having their drinking cups
modeled after the shapes of tlio breasts of their sweethearts or
mistresses ; a cast of the breast was taken and the interior of the
cnp was moulded upon the outside of this cast, often in gold.
In some Arabian tril)es a man who is pursued in blood-feud
and closely pressed by his enemies, will take refuge in a strange
tent or camp and kiss the bare breast of a woman ; he thereby be-
comes a son to her, a brother of her sons and a relative of her
relatives, as well as a member of her tribe, and he will be pro-
tected as such, for it is considered that he has sucked at her
breast. This same idea was already expressed in the Song of
Solomon (viii, 1) : 0 that' thou wert as my brother, that sucked
the breasts of my mother!"
The adoration of the breast, in the foiin of the worship of
motherhood, or Madonna-Avorship, is the highest type of worship,
and is ages older than the Christian religion. Its symbols are the
purest and the least carnal of the symbols of sex-worship; "the
circle," says Emerson in one of his Essays, ''is the highest em-
blem in the cipher of the world."
The breast as an object of worship is here shown (Fig. 304)
in profile on the bosom of an Egyptian goddess. That she is a
goddess is shown by her holding the ankh or symbol of life in her
hand, as well as by the sceptre with the profile breast.
In ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics the signatures of kings,
queens, etc., were enclosed in a panel-like figure, called a cartouche.
The deciphering of these hieroglyphics Avas made possible by the
finding of the "Rosetta stone" on Avhich was an edict in three
different languages, two of Avhich were known, and led to the
deciphering of the third in hieroglyphics. Hieroglyphics in early
times were a form of ideographs or picture-writing, but later on
became phonetic representatives or letters, only these letters were
in the shape of animals, etc., instead of the arbitrary signs we use.
490
SEX AjSTd sex wokship
The language was old Coptic, a language which was known when
the Rosetta stone was found.
Consider tlie cartouche or signature of Cleopatra (Fig. 306),
Fig. 304. — Ma or Maiit, the Great Mother. Fig. 305. — The goddesses of North
Egyptian temple sculpture. Egypt and South Egypt, crowning Ptol-
emy. Notice the breasts.
(Sl^l^^
K EOPA T ^
(Mm
1
Fig. 306. — Cartouche or signature of Fig. 307. — Annunciation, fro m t h e
Cleopatra, from the Rosetta stone. Bruchsaal Evangelnrium. Carlsruhe, end
of XII Century.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 491
in the npper line; the lower line is that of Ptolemy. The first
sound in Cleopatra is that of K; the Gothic word for knee was
keloi : therefore the trian(!,le of a bent knee was used to represent
this letter. The name for lion Avas lanoi, therefore the figure of
a lion represented the first letter of the word — 1' — and so on.
The interesting part of the signature of Cleopatra and other
Egyptian queens is that the name is followed by the representa-
tion of an egg and a profile breast, which means that the signa-
ture is that of a female — a woman. The cartouche of Ptolemy —
male, a man — is followed by no symbols.
"We have already met Avith a similar condition in the figure
of an Alaskan totem pole (Fig. 293) in Avhich the legs are labeled
as feminine by a figure of a yoni and a profile breast. Ancient
Egypt and Alaska Avere far apart before Columbus discoA^ered
America, yet AA^e haA^e here the same symbolism to express the
feminine.
In a most literal sense modern science teaches Yonicitas doc-
trines, for it maintains that the highest manifestation of life, to
Avhich all other manifestations are subordinated, is the OAmm or
egg. In a scientific sense the human oAoim, then the OA^ary Avhich
produces it and the Avomb in AA^hich it deA^elops into a child, and
consequently in a Avider sense, Avoman, Avho contains them all, is
sjTnbolic of the best and greatest achieA^ement of creative power
in nature.
The egg has in all ages been considered a sacred emblem of
spring; of the rejuvenation of nature after the Avinter sleep. In
Pagan times ornamented eggs Avere presented to friends, to cel-
ebrate the re-aAA^akening of life in the spring; and this Pagan
festiA^al, but thinly disguised as being emblematic of the resur-
rection of Christ, persists in our Easter festival and its attend-
ant gifts of Easter eggs.
Apuleius, an ancient Roman Avriter, said: "I saw in the egg
the emblem of inert nature Avliich contains all that is and that is
possible to be."
Tavo eggs are given to a Chinese bridegroom on the day of
his marriage, as a token of the A\4sh that his Avife may prove
fruitful.
Pictures of the annunciation often contained SAmibolic sex
references during the middle ages (Fig. 307). The angel that
appeared to Mary announced to her (Luke i, 31) : "Behold thou
492
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
slialt conceive in tliy womb and bring forth a son and thon slialt
call his name Jesus." We recognize here the conventionalized
''fleur-de-lis" or lily, a symbol of God, as the agency by which
Mary was to conceive. AVhen the Christian era, or our present
chronological system began, about the Sixth Century, it was calcu-
lated that Christ was ''conceived in the womb" on the 25th of
March, year 0. However, a mistake in calculation was made, and it
Fig-. 308. — A bronze figure found in Fig. 309. — Assyrian goddess of maternity,
some subterranean temples in Sardinia. of about 2100 B.C.
is now known that Christ was l/orn in the year 4 b.c, or four years
earlier than is ascribed to the beginning of our era. The 25th
of March is now celebrated as the feast of the Annunciation.
Later on, it was perhaps realized that the act of begetting is
generally a rather private affair, so the birth of Christ Avas chosen
as a festival, and was celebrated nine months later, on the 25th
of December.
An angel also announced to Elizabeth that she Avould bear a
son- who Avas to ]:)repare the Avay for Christ. Fig, 283 on page
47() represents the meeting of Mary and Elizabeth, by an artist
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
493
of Cologne, about tlic year 1400, or about 500 years ago. Note
that in this altar-piece both are represented "Avitli child" or preg-
nant, as indicated by the fulness of abdomen as well as by the
Fig. 310. — Aztec Madonna; painting.
Fig. 311. — Aztec Madonna; sculpture.
symbol of the ''door of life." John kneels in the womb in adora-
tion of Christ and Mary.
Quite recently some valuable finds were made in some under-
ground temples in Sardinia. Among them were bronze figures
of a woman and child (Fig. 308). These figures may have been
494 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
votive offerings, but if, as is more likely, they represented a
mother-deity, then it is the oldest madonna-worshix) of which we
know, as these figures are estimated to be about ten thousand
years old, or about six thousand years older than the Assyrian
goddess of maternity Avho had before this find been supposed to
be the oldest madonna idol; and it is five or six thousand years
older than the Egyptian Isis-worship, of which we have many fig-
ures and representations.
Figure 309 represents the Assyrian Gcddess of Maternity,
just referred to. This figure is estimated to be about four thou-
sand years old. This same idea, the worship of motherhood, is
shown in this Aztec painting of a madonna (Fig. 310), found in
a pre-historic Yucatan temple ruin ; the madonna sits on a throne,
suckling her child. Here is another Aztec madonna (Fig. 311),
resembling more or less closely our modern sculptures of a
madonna.
Parthenogenesis
Supernatural impregnation, or conception by a virgin, so-
called ''parthenogenesis" or ''immaculate conception" is a fea-
f;ure of many religions; it was believed by the credulous and
superstitious of many lands that a virgin might conceive without
a man, supernaturally ; the idea occurs in many mythologies and
religions.
Ileitzi-Ibib is a Hottentot deity Avho was believed to have
been born of a cow; sometimes, however, a human virgin is said
to be his mother; she became pregnant after eating of a certain
plant.
The Thlinkeets of Alaska relate of their god Yehl that he
was miraculously conceived by his mother Avho swallowed a peb-
l)lo which impregnated her.
The Rig- Veda says that Indra was miraculously born of a
virgin cow, a heifer.
The Apis god in Egypt was said to have been miraculously
born of a virgin cow who was impregnated liy a moonbeam or a
flash of lightning.
The Mexican god of war, Huitzilopochtli, was born of a vir-
gin, a devout person who one day Avhile attending in a temple,
saw a ball of feathers floating before her in the air ; she took the
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 495
feathers and deposited them in lier l)osom, soon after which she
found herself pregnant and in due course of time the dread deity
was born.
The Greeks believed that after the god Jupiter in the form
of a swan had impregnated Leda, she laid two eggs (Fig. 312)
from each of which twins were hatched ; Castor and Clytemnestra
issued from one, and Pollux and Helen from tlie otlier. These be-
came prominent characters in Homer's Iliad.
The Greeks accepted as a fact that a virgin or a female could
give birth to children ivithout the cooperation of any male, not
even a god; Hesiod related as clear a case of parthenogenesis or
Fig. ?.12. — "Leda and Swan, " from a i^ainting.
genesis without a male, as was that of the phylloxera (see p. 64).
Hesiod said: "Night bare also hateful Destiny and black Fate,
and Death ; she bare Sleep, likewise, she bare the tribe of Dreams ;
this did the goddess gloomy Night bare after union ivith none/'
A somewhat peculiar version of supernatural birth is the
Greek story of Pygmalion ; he was a sculptor and fell in love with
a statue he had made ; beseeching Venus, the goddess of love, to
give life to the statue, the goddess heard his prayer, and Pyg-
malion married the miraculously born virgin.
Also, Rhea, a vestal virgin, bathing in a water sacred to
Mars, became pregnant and gave birth to twins, Remus and Rom-
ulus. Amulius, king of Alba, threatening to punish her for her
49G
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
transgression of the vows of chastity taken by vestal virgins, she
claimed that Mars himself was the father, and she was spared but
the two children were exposed, but Avere saved by being suckled
by a "she-wolf "^ — a lupina (Fig. 313).
In connection with this story it should be borne in mind, that
an arch in Latin is called ^^ fornix;'' that under the arches of the
Colosseum congregated the lowest class of prostitutes in Rome,
who there conunitted all the crimes and practiced all the perver-
sions they could conceive of or that were demanded by their male
visitors, hence "fornicatio" meant the practices committed under
the arches; from this we have our English word "fornication."
Frequently also, these women robbed or even murdered un-
wary men who displayed wealth or perhaps were drunk; lience
Fig. 313. — Remus and Ro'inulus, nursed by a she-wolf.
they were called "she-wolves," and it was one of these women,
Laurentia b}^ name, who, coming upon the exposed infants, was
touched with instinctive motherly pity, and adopted and raised
them.
It was said of many of the eminent teachers and heroes of
antiquity that inunaculate conception was their origin. For in-
stance : Budantsar, tlie first ruler of the Mongols, was miracu-
lously conceived by a Avidow. Gautama (Buddha) in India Avas
born of a virgin ; so Avas Fohi of China ; the Shakarf of Thibet.
In Thibet many chutuktus (cardinals) are considered to be in-
carnations of deities just as are the lamas. The early Christians
adopted the same theory to account for the birth of Jesus, of
Palestine.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
497
The Chinese believe that once a maiden walked in the fields
and a rainbow descended from heaven and embraced her, in conse-
quence of which she conceived ; her son became the first emperor
of China, The rainbow, in China, is a serpent deity; therefore
China is called the Celestial Empire, because the first emperor
was begotten by a celestial deity. The emperor of China is called
the ''Son of Heaven."
Of Lao-Tze, already mentioned, who was a celebrated Chi-
nese philosopher who lived about fifty years before Chung-fu-tze
Fig-. 314. — The goddess Anukah nurs-
ing the pharaoh Rameses; Egyptian tem-
ple.
Fig. 315. — Tlie Ephesian Diana, now in
the Vatican Museum, Rome.
(Confucius), it is related that a meteor fell from heaven and
impregnated his mother (see also p. 16).
Some theologians of the middle ages believed that Mary was
impregnated through her ear (!) because the Bible says: (John
i, 1) "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with
God, and the Word was God," (John i, 14) ''and the Word was
made flesh, and dwelt among us."
Similar ideas were held in Egypt about some of the Phara-
498
SEX AND SEX WOESHIP
ohs, who were generally worshipped as gods ; the goddess Annkah
nursed the pharaoh Rameses II (Fig. 314).
Among the oldest forms of madonna-worship of which we
have positive knowledge is the worship of Isis ; she was the mother
of Harpokrat, or Horns, the myths regarding whom resembled
closely some of those told about Jesus. Isis was sometimes rep-
resented as a cow, or with a cow's head. In the Louvre is a beau-
tiful bronze statue of Isis in human form. (See also p. 433.)
Originally the madonna and virgin worships were probably
not the same; for instance, I can recall no story that Diana had
Fig. 316. — Devaki mirsing Kiishuu ; the tray full of animals has the meaning of
the heads on the base of the Diana of Ephesus ; the worshipper forms the male and
female symbols ^^dth the fingers of her right hand.
a child or children. But these two worships became blended in
such a way that sometimes Isis was considered as a virgin-mother,
while others considered her as a matron, the wife of Osiris and
mother of Horus or Harpokrat.
After the introduction of Christianity in Egypt the Isis-
worship and other idolatry Avas discouraged by the bishops of the
Christian church, although often against the wishes of the Egyp-
tian Christians. About the year 500 a.d. there was such a strong
tendency in Egypt to forsake Christianity and go back to the wor-
SEX AKD SEX WOrvSHIP
499
ship of the Femmine, or Isis, that Cyril, at tliat time Patriarch or
Bishop of Alexandria, introdnced the Isis-worship into Christian-
ity by declaring- Mary, the Mother of Jesus, to be worthy of divine
worship. Thus was Maryolatry, the worship of the Feminine,
introduced into Christian Avorship.
The myth that Mary was a virgin when she gave birth to
Jesus may be merely the transplanted Isis-myth; Imt it is more
generally and probably more correctly ascribed to an error of
translation from Hebrew into Greek; the words for ''young
woman" and "virgin" in Hebrew resemble each other just as
closely as the equivalent words "Junge Frau" and "Jungfrau"
in German; the translator of the gospels from Hebrew to Greek
made the error of translating the Hebrew word for "young
Fig. 317. — Mother Earth as Madonna, Alchemistic; goat nursing Hercules, and a she-
wolf nursing Remus and Romulus.
woman" into the Greek word for "virgin," and the error in
course of time became an article of orthodox belief.
You have no doubt read in the Book of Acts, how St. Paul
came to Ephesus to preach, and how it happened to be a holiday
and all the populace was shouting: "Great is the Diana of the
Ephesians!" (Acts xix, 28 and 34).
This (Fig. 315) is the statue of the goddess wlio was wor-
shipped in the temple at Ephesus at that time; it is now in the
Museum of the Vatican, at Rome. Her multiple breasts signify
that her nourishing powers sufficed for all created beings, Avhich
is further symbolized by the many animal heads on the pedestal.
Figure 316 is not a picture of the Madonna Mary, but is an
500
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
ancient picture of Devaki nursing Krishna, who was an atavar or
incarnation of Vishnu, and is reputed to have been born much
earlier than Gautama or Buddha; I have failed to find a definite
date for the birth of Krishna, but it was probably between 1000
and 500 b.c. The myths concerning Krishna resemble those told
also about Horns and Jesus, and some authors believe that they
are one and the same stories accepted by different people. All
three were called Saviors or Redeemers.
The trays full of animals have the same significance as the
Fig. 318. — Juno as a Madonna.
Fig. 319.— " Madonna and Child," by
Loieuzetti.
heads of animals on the base of the pedestal of the Diana of the
Ephesians. Note the hands of the worshipper; the sign of the
yoni made with the thumb and the index finger, and the other three
fingers extended as a symbol of the masculine triad or trinity.
We often speak of "Mother Earth;" Earth, as Gea, is as
old a deity as the beginning of Greek mythology. The conceit
is old and general and the names given to this goddess in various
lands were so similar as to argue a common origin. Ma or Mama
means Mother in nearly all languages of the world. Ma or Maut
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
501
was an Egyptian deity; she was Earth, the ''Good mother." We
learn from the Rig-Vedas, the sacred hooks of the Hindus, that
all things were produced by Brahma through union with Maya,
the ''good mother of all the gods and all other beings." Maya
is still worshipped in India. She was also worshipped in ancient
Greece and Rome, under the name of Maia, the daughter of At-
lantis; she was "Bona Dea" the good goddess, the good Dame,
the mother of the gods; her worship extended over Europe, as
Maye in France and Spain, May Queen in England, etc. In pre-
Fig. 319-A.—" Jesus and St.
John, ' ' by Eaphael. Cliurch of St.
Peter, Perugia, Italy.
Fig. 319-B.—" Mother and Child,"
by Hugues.
historic Mexico she was w^orshipped as Mayoel, the "mother of
the gods and men;" and since about 500 a.d. her worship has
been officially recognized by a large portion of Christendom under
the name of Maria (Ma-[r]-ia), the good mother, our Lady, Notre
Dame, Mother of God, Madonna, Queen of Heaven.
Ma means Earth or Nature, and the whole worship means
thanks to Mother Earth who brought forth, nourishes and sus-
tains. Figure 317 represents Mother Earth as a Madonna.
Juno, the wife of Jupiter, was also represented as a madonna
502
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
by the ancient Greeks and Romans (Fig. 318). She was called
'' Mother of the Gods."
Here is a copy of a painting by Lorenzetti, a well-known
Italian painter, of tlie "Madonna and Child" (Fig. 319). Rnskin,
speaking of the worship of Mary in Florence, said: ''The Ital-
ians wonld not now worship the Madonna, if countless Greeks and
Goths had not for ages bowed in adoration before the Virgin;"
and in another place, speaking of Giotto, he says: ''But Giotto
came from the fields and saw with his simple eyes a lovelier worth.
Fig. 320. — The Madonna gives St. Bern-
hard of Clairvaux a taste of her milk.
Fig. 321. — Mary, Queen of Heaven.
and he painted — the Madonna and St. Joseph and the Christ —
5'es, by all means if you choose to call them so, l)ut essentially —
Mamma, Papa, and the Baby."
It was related of St. Bernhard of Clairvaux that the Virgin
Mary appeared to him and granted him a taste of milk from her
breast as a mark of especial favor. This painting (Fig. 320) is
of the year 1450 a.d. In German}^ a ^vme is made which is called
" Lieb-f rauen-milch " (dear lady's milk or madonna milk), which
is reputed peculiarly Avell-flavorecl and is highly esteemed.
Madonna-worship is the Christianized worship of the breast,
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
503
or of motherhood. The words ''Ma donna" are Italian and mean
*'my lady." The madonna is generally represented in altar-
sculptures as holding her child, more rarely as nursing it; she is
sometimes croA\med, even with a real jeweled cro^vn in richer
churches, and is called "Queen of Heaven" (Fig. 321).
Human ideas have never conceived a holier object for our
sympathy and tender regard than a mother with her child, and
the religions of all ages have delighted in holding before us this
subject for our adoration. The mother and child is a popular sub-
ject for illustration in modern art (see Fig. 319-B).
'^^Z^il
m^^-:
Fig-. 322. — A madonna fig-ure (clay pot-
tery) found where East St. Louis, Illi-
nois, now is. The figure belongs to Prof.
H. M. Whelpley, of St. Louis.
Fig. 323. — Madonna consolatrice, by Dou-
g^ereau.
Even in the art of the mound builders this subject is repre-
sented (Fig. 322). I am not sufficiently familiar with the mound
builders' art to venture a guess about the motif of this vessel, but
some authorities on the subject do not think it had any reference
to madonna worship. To me it appears to be the same idea ex-
pressed in the Aztec art — madonna cult ; but even if it merely shows
a mother and her child, it shows that this subject appealed to the
504 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
esthetic emotions of the prehistoric inhabitants of North Amer-
ica, as it did to other people elsewhere.
The '^ Consoling Madonna," by Bougnereau, is an example
of the ideally highest type of womanhood, the madonna consol-
ing a mother on the death of her child (Fig. 323) ; we find this
type among the ''sisters" of the Catholic church, among the
"deaconesses" of the Protestant churches, and among the nurses
of our hospitals, and especial^ among the heroic nurses of the
Eed Cross; God bless them all, Protestant, Catholic or Infidel;
these Sisters of Charity deserve the adoration of every true man !
Scott expressed the same idea in one of his poems :
''0, woman! In our hours of ease
Uncertain, coy and hard to please;
And variable as the shade
By the light quivering aspen made;
When pain and anguish wring the brow
A ministering angel thou!"
During the French Revolution, toward the end of the Eight-
eenth Century, the French people worshipped woman in the shape
of a statue of Nature, from whose bare breasts flowed streams
of water. Also, as an actual woman, the "Goddess of Reason"
(Fig. 324), Avho Avas carried in triumph through the streets of
Paris to the Cathedral, where she was placed on an altar and
worshipped as a Divinity.
Underlying all yonic forms of religion are the same ideas
which we find in Comte's "Religion of Humanity." This rejects
all theories of the supernatural and declares that the Supreme
Object of the individual love and devotion should be Humanity.
"Humanity is but an abstraction and forbids the glow of
adoration with which service is touched in all religions which
offer a personified object for adoration. As an aid to their faith
nearly all religions recognize sacred symbols, not indeed to be
confounded by clearer minds with the original object of adora-
tion, but worthy of reverence in its place as its special repre-
sentative and reminder. In precisely this sense the sacred em-
blem of Humanity is Woman. In Avoman Humanity is enshrined
and made concrete for the homage of man.
The adoration of Avoman, Avhich may almost be called the
a I
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
505
natural religion of the modern man, springs from his recognition,
instinctive when not conscious, that she is in an express sense,
as he is not, the type, the representative and the symbol of the race
from which lie springs, of that iimnortal and mystical life in
which the secret of his ovm is hid. She is this, not by virtue of
her personal qualities, but by virtue of her mother-sex which
consecrates her to the interests of the race."
''Woman, any woman, every woman, is marvelous enough.
But when we think of all they stand for, the fineness of them
compared with our man grossness, that wonderful power of crea-
tion in them — their mother-sex — their exquisite delicacy, com-
bined with the big-souled capacity for sacrifice and suffering that
^:
■^"^
Fig. 324. — "Goddess of Reason," French Revolution, from a painting by Coessin.
dwarfs any of men's petty burdens into insignificance — God
knows, a man should bow his knee in adoration before even the
least of them ! ' '
The extent to which the mention of "mother" appeals to our
minds, especially in times of distress, was shown at one of the
largest cantonments when a great opera singer asked the soldiers
to select the song they Avanted smig. Out of a dozen popular num-
bers submitted, the choice was overwhelmingly in favor of a mother
song.
This adoration of woman finds expression in many defer-
506
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
ences and courtesies that real men pay to women, and it finds its
most striking expression in the "Law of the Sea:" "Women and
Children First!''
No nobler example of the worship of woman was ever seen
Fig. 325.— Sinking of the Titanic.
Fig. 326.— "The Lion in Love," by Gardet.
than ill the case of the Titanic Disaster (Fig. 325), when 1,500
men went to their deaths, that Avomen and children might live.
"Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down
his life for his friends" (Jolm xv:13), says the Bible. Then the
laying down of life for strangers, only because they are women.
SEX AND SEX WOKSHIP
507
must be greater than love. It is religion — the Worship of the
Mother-Sex !
''The Virgin-ideal has l3een set up by the larger part of
Christendom as the object of Divine honors. The Feminine, not
the Masculine, ideal supplies the inspirations of art and the ro-
mance of literature. Man's tendency to worship woman, while
naturally blending with his passionate attraction toward her,
does not spring from the instinct of sex, but from the instinct of
race" and is found in its highest development among the most
civilized people.
Fig. 327.— "Worship," by Sinding.
This statue represents the admiration,
adoration, adulation and veneration of
woman by man.
Fig. 328.— "Night," by de Courton.
They who think most reverently on this mystery of sex, feel
the pre-eminence of woman most profoundly and they realize the
influence Avhich Woman — ]\Iother — Wife — Sweetheart — has over
our thoughts and actions. They appreciate the words of the poet
Moore in his poem, ''Sovereign Woman
, J?
"Disguise our bondage as we will,
'Tis Woman — Woman rules us still!"
508 SEX AND SEX WOESHIP
This is often s^nnbolically represented in Art; the more ani-
mal and passionate natnre of man is allegorized by a wild ani-
mal which is tamed and held in control by gentle woman, as in
this statue of The Lion in Love (Fig. 326).
In ancient Rome, in the theatres, etc., the same idea was
often very realistically represented. Gigantic winged phalli were
represented as being saddled, bridled or harnessed, and ridden or
driven by naked women; these frescoes or sculptures were in-
terpreted as "Minerva, or divine wisdom, the feminine side of in-
telligence, guiding and controlling masculine energies and pas-
sions;" similar representations are seen in Kaulbach's painting:
"Who Buys Love-Gods?"
This idea of adoration of womanhood was well expressed in
this wonderful statue, entitled "Worship," by Stephen Binding,
a Norwegian sculptor (Fig. 327).
"God took the dust and said: 'Lo, I am there!'
And threw it forth on the Empyrean free ;
And Nature saw a star burst forth and be
A throne of Life and Light divinely fair!"
"Then fell a rain-drop in his hollow hand:
'Be thou its sovereign ocean,' murmured he.
And there arose a silver-turbaned sea
To frame the tropic glory of the land."
"A spirit hovered near; he staid its flight;
'Love, rule this life, and compass all the earth!'
And lovely Woman sprang to instant birth.
And where she reigns are Joy, and Peace, and Right!"
ABOUT GODDESSES
Some goddesses have been mentioned in connection with the
gods, and in the general considerations in previous pages, — ^^ve
need not repeat.
Assyrian and Babylonian — Mylitta was the Phoenician god-
dess of love ; she conferred the pleasure during coition. In prac-
tically all countries of Asia Minor some goddess similar to or
identical with Mylitta was worshipped.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 509
Astarte was the Aceadian form of this goddess ; she was wor-
shipped in what is now Mesopotamia. From the Accadians prob-
ably originated all the coarser, or unchaste ideas and practices of
worship. From them also was obtained the consecration of the
seventh day, which was transmitted from them to the ancient
Jews, from whom we inherited it. The Tyrian Astarte (also called
Tanis) seems to have been propitiated bj^ licentious and promis-
cuous sexual excesses in her temples.
Islitar or Astarte (Ashtoreth, Ashera, Cybele, etc.) had a sim-
ilar function as Siva in India — Destruction and Reproduction.
From the Accadians, Phoenicians, etc., her worship extended to
Greece, but here she became knoA\Ti as Aphrodite, the goddess of
beauty and sensual love ; the Greeks considered doves and pigeons
sacred to her, because they are the most prolific of birds.
Of the Zodiac signs, Virgo, the Virgin, represented Ishtar,
the Assyrian Venus or Isis ; these goddesses were said to be both
mothers, and virgins; just as is the case in modern Christian
doctrine.
Semiramis was a mythical queen of Assyria, but what is told
about her is only a variant of the Ishtar or Astarte myth. The
great charms of Semiramis and her sexual excesses are simply
stories about the sexual indulgences in the Astarte or Ishtar
worship.
Egypt. — Isis or Hathor corresponded most closely to Ishtar,
and many of the attributes of the Phoenician goddesses applied
to these two goddesses, Isis, the wife of Osiris and Hathor, the
wife of Horus.
Bast or Bubastis was an Egyptian goddess, the counterpart
of the Greek Diana, goddess of chastity.
The ''Great Goddess" of Thebes was Maut, Muth or Mut,
which means Mother. Similarly, Ishtar or Ashtoreth was called
the Spouse, the Mother, the Nurse.
The ancient Celts (Irish) worshipped Ana, the wife of their
chief god Ogma, as the "mother of the gods."
Cybele or Rhea Cybele, mother of Zeus, was originally a
Phrygian goddess ; her worship originated in Asia Minor and was
probably due to the same ideas as the Ishtar worship; in Crete
and Phrygia her worship was accompanied by orgiastic dances,
of the "danse du ventre" or "couchee-couchee" type, intended
to arouse sexual emotions. In Phrygia she was the goddess of
510 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
mountains, caves and of the liannts of wild animals. Her name
Cybele was tlie Phrygian word for cave, and the cave Avas the sym-
bol for the 'Svomb of nature."
Cybele was called the ''mother of god" by the Greeks; this
name was applied to many goddesses in many different mytholo-
gies, and formed part of the folklore from which all mythologies
drew their ideas.
Among the Lydians Cybele was known as Omphale; it was
part of the fate of Hercules to serve for a time as slave to Queen
Omphale (see Fig. 371).
Sesostris was an Egyptian pharaoh (2300 b.c.) ; he conquered
the greater part of the then known world, including the greater
part of Africa, Lybia, Palestine, and even parts of Europe, and
as far east as India. Wherever he went, he introduced the worship
of Isis (the worship of the Feminine) by erecting pillars with a
yoni or doubly-pointed ellipse or door of life carved on their
front.
The Historia Umversalis, x)ublished in 1740, says that he did
this to humiliate the nations he had conquered, by suggesting that
they were not men but a race of women. This indicates that at
the date of publication, little or nothing was knoMm in regard to
the worship of sex; the deciphering of Assyrian, Egyptian and
other ancient sculptures is of so recent a date that we may expect
a far greater knowledge on this subject in the course of time.
Greece.— The worship of all goddesses in their capacities as
mothers was adopted by the Greeks, and especially in the form of
Aphrodite the sexual attractiveness of womankind was deified
and personified.
We recall Hesiod's account of her birth from sea-foam
(p. 108) ; because she originated from the genitals of the castrated
Uranus (Sky) she was also called Urania, but nevertheless this
Greek derivation of one of her names does not make her a Greek
goddess ; she was originally an Asiatic deity, Astarte of the Phoe-
nicians, the Mylitta of the Assyrians, etc.
Paphos was a city on the west coast of Cyprus ; the city was
of Phoenician origin. Here was a great temple devoted to the
worship of Venus, wherefore she was sometimes called the Pa-
phian goddess. The cultus was Asiatic, that is, it abounded in
sexual excesses in the temples, which were not of Greek origin but
of lower and more savage Asiatic origin. This is important to
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 511
remember wlien we consider the festivals, as the iineliaste and
obscene practices are by many writers described as Greek in
character, whereas they were of Barbaric introdnction. Diony-
sns, too, as we have learned, was of Asiatic origin, and these two
deities, Dionysus and Aphrodite, were mainly responsible for the
coarser and more carnal features of Avorship among the Greeks
and Romans.
Venns (Aphrodite), goddess of beauty and love, was essen-
tially the goddess of the sensual or carnal feature of love. She
was married to Vulcan (Gr. Hephaestus) but she was not particu-
larly noted for fidelit}^ and chastity ; her amours with Adonis, and
also with Mars, were celebrated in many an ancient poem. Amor
(Gr. Eros) was said to be her son.
Before the introduction of sculpture, she was represented by
a stone or pillar, just as Ashera, Ishtar or Isis were represented,
but after the introduction of sculpture she was represented as a
woman ; it was easier to represent her draped, therefore her most
archaic sculptured forms are as a draped woman. The most noted
figures of Venus are the Venus at Cnidos [now lost, but of which
the Venus de Medici (Fig. 162) is probably a copy] and the Venus
of Milo (Fig. 128). The half-draped Venus of Milo is a transi-
tion form from the fully draped figures to the totally nude forms.
AVhen Praxiteles made a statue of Venus for the temple at
Cnidos, the people went wild over its beauty. When Venus heard
of this statue in her honor, she went to the temple to view it, and
Avhen she saw it, she was astonished, and exclaimed complainingly :
''Wlien did Praxiteles see me thus unveiled?"
As the universal goddess of love, she presided or reigned
over every phase of nature and reproduction; her worship was
based on the same underlying ideas of the Ishtar-Astarte-Mylitta
worship of Asia Minor; her worship was introduced into Greece
about 1500 B.C., and therefore she had become sufficiently identi-
fied with Hellenic religion to have become a Greek goddess by
Homer's time.
She was the goddess of love and beauty, and no people ever
venerated and adored physical beauty more highly than did the
ancient Greeks. At tirst she was considered the goddess of do-
mestic or connubial love, but later she also was regarded as the
goddess of the hetaerae or public women; in this capacity she
provided opportunities for coition or sexual enjoyment for men
512 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
who otherwise might have tried to seduce or rape young maidens,
and she was therefore considered, like Artemis, a guardian over
the chastity of young women. In some places she was considered
like Eileithyia, a goddess of childbirth.
In all ages since Praxiteles' time, artists have exhausted their
skill in representing her as the most beautiful naked woman in
sculpture or painting.
Venus had as attendants the ''Three Graces" or the Char-
ites; Satyacravas is a Hindu name for the sun; charis is an old
adjective meaning "bright," originally applied to the light-illu-
mined clouds at sunrise (the dawn) ; the dawn became personified,
like most other natural phenomena and the goddess Charis was
born. As the sun gives light, life and fertility, Charis became his
attendant goddess, a goddess of the freshness and vigor of life,
of fertility and of growth.
In Greece the Indian goddess grew into a triad, and the Three
Graces (Fig. 233) became the incarnation of all sensuous loveli-
ness of appearance and grace, of cheerfulness and attractiveness
in nature and in the mental traits or morals. They were Aglaia,
Euphrosyne, and Thalia ; tliey were attendants at the court of Ve-
nus, adding to the attractiveness of her retinue. In early art,
before the artists had become skillful enough to make nude stat-
ues, they were represented draped, but on account of their loveli-
ness they were at an early date represented naked, and are now
always so figured.
Another important goddess of the Greek pantheon was Hera
(Juno) ; she was a daughter of Cronus and Rliea, and was there-
fore a full sister of Zeus as well as his wife. Mankind in those
early days had no ideas of incest, and gods and men freely mar-
ried their sisters. Some authors do not agree that Juno was iden-
tical with Hera, but the above is a statement of the more popular
belief.
Juno was a more important divinity in Rome than in Greece.
She was not an Aryan, or Asiatic, goddess, but was a native
Etruscan (early or archaic Greek) divinity, which accounts for
the much purer worship and conception of her character, for the
coarsely s~exual ideas held in regard to Venus are almost entirely
absent from her worship. She is concerned almost entirely with
human affairs; she protected the state and society, and was the
patroness and careful guardian of women. Her various functions
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 513
were separately worshipped, so that under the name of Virginen-
sis she watched over and protected young maidens; as Pronuhn
Jiigalis, Domiduca, etc., she presided over marriage ceremonies
and inducted maidens into wifehood; as Matrona she presided
over their married life and as Lvcina she was their helper and
supporter in their trials during childbirth. In her honor the fes-
tival of the Matronalia was held in March, at wiiicli only women
of unquestioned reputation, maidens and matrons against whom
there had never been even the whisper of insinuation, could par-
ticipate.
She had as attendants also innumerable spirits, called Ju-
nones, female genii, or guardian angels, one of whom accompanied
and watched over every girl and woman. A Avoman swore by her
Juno, a man by Jove, but a lover swore by the Juno of his sweet-
heart.
Juno is the most moral goddess of antiquity, one of the few
goddesses against whom no rumor of scandal was raised ; she was
perhaps too frigidly chaste, even according to our present stand-
ards, and like in human society today, her husband sought else-
where the happiness that her austerity denied him; she was the
ardent advocate of conjugal fidelity and the bitter foe of infidelity ;
wherefore we find the many stories of her persecutions of the
companions of her husband in his love affairs; they form the
theme of many a Greek poem, Juno had four children. Mars, Vul-
can, Hebe and Ilithyia.
AVhen her son Vulcan married Aphrodite, she became the
mother-in-law of the latter, and no doubt had many Ijitter mo-
ments over the escapades of her daughter-in-law.
Hebe was the daughter of Zeus and Juno. In Greek house-
holds the unmarried daughters served the refreshments to the
guests of the home. As the gods were fashioned on the pattern
of the humans, Hebe became the cup-bearer in Olympia to dis-
pense the nectar or aiubrosia to the guests at her father Zeus'
court.
On one occasion, while serving the drinks to the gods, she
accidentally fell, in such a manner as to expose her body so as to
shock the modesty of Minerva, who demanded that she be relieved
as cup-bearer. Soon afterwards Hercules died and was made a
god and Juno gave him Hebe for wdfe.
lo was a high priestess of Juno (or Hera), and Jupiter fell
514 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
in love with her; she was changed into a white cow, l)ut the ac-
counts vary as to the "why;" some say Jupiter changed her to
hide her from the rage of Juno, others say that Juno changed her
in jealous revenge.
Artemis, or the moon, presided over childbirth and assisted
women suffering from the peculiar ailments of women; she was
therefore a gynecologist. Associated with her was Carmenta, the
goddess of midwifery. Carmenta had two assistants, goddesses
who presided over the positions of the foetus in the womb; they
were Prosa and Postverta, and they were implored for assistance
according to whether it was a frontal or an occipital presentation.
After birth the goddess Ossipaga took charge of the child and pre-
sided over the growth of the bones; of course, the shape, nature
and growth of the bones largely determined the development of
the infant and therefore among a beauty-loving people like the
Greeks, Ossipaga was of considerable importance.
In the Moon Fairy, by Kaulbach we have a modern represen-
tation of the moon as the spender of blessings on the people
(Fig. 329).
Among the goddess attendants of Juno was Iris, the rainbow;
as the rainbow united heaven and earth. Iris was called the golden-
winged messenger of the gods to men.
Hesiod said:
"Eurybia too, l)are to Crius, after union in love, huge As-
traeus and Pallas * * *.
"And next Phoebe came to the much-beloved couch of Coeus;
then in truth having conceived, a goddess by love of a god, she
bare dark-robed Latona * * *."
Zeus had been married to a number of other goddesses be-
fore he married his sister Hera or Juno, One of these earlier
wives was Metis (Intelligence). Just w^liat became of his earlier
wives, whether he got lid of them by divorce, or like Henry the
Eighth of England, by killing them, I do not know; but he swal-
lowed Metis, in consequence of which Pallas was formed and was
boi'n from his brain.
She was kno^m also as Pallas Athena and among the Romans
as Minerva. She presided over skill and industry, and she in-
vented spinning and weaving, or the manufacture of textile fab-
rics; she tamed horses, played the flute and developed to some
extent the arts of medicine.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 515
As an elemental or nature-goddess she presided over what
took place in the sky ; she hecanie a war goddess, referring to the
wars (storms) in the clonds. Bnt her main function was to pre-
side over the accomplishments of the human mind. The owl
was sacred to her, and was therefore called the bird of wisdom.
Latona, mentioned above, was made pregnant by Zeus, and
wandered about trying to find a place where she might be deliv-
ered and avoid the persecutions of the jealous Juno. She came
to Delos, at that time a rock which floated in the sea; but when she
alighted on it the gods fixed it firmly to the bottom of the sea, so
that Latona might rest and be confined.
Fig. 329.—' ' The Moon Fairy, ' ' by Kaulbach.
She gave birth to twins, Apollo and Diana, about whom more
is said on page 549.
In Lycia Latona Avas a goddess of fertility, and was identi-
fied with the earth goddess ; the names Leto, Leda and Latona are
variants of the Lycian word Lada, which means Lady.
Demeter Thermophorus was the goddess of marriage, and her
worship was limited to women.
Fortuna, a Roman goddess, was sometimes called Fortuna
virilis; women prayed to her because she secured and maintained
for them the affections of their hus])ands.
516
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Flora Avas the Eoman goddess of flowers (Fig. 330) ; Ceres
was the goddess of crops.
Flora was an ancient Italian deity ; she was not a Greek deity ;
she was married to Zephyr, the Westwind. She was said to have
been a courtesan who became very wealthy, and she established a
festival in her own honor, the Fl or alia, the main features of
which were indulgences in the practices of the profession in which
she had accumulated her wealth. Naturally this idea suggested
manv licentious ceremonies. While Flora was not an Asiatic
Fig. 330.— Flora, Goddess of Flowers.
goddess, her worship was clearly framed after the model of that
of Venus and tlie other Asiatic goddesses.
About Ceres (Demeter) we will speak under the heading
"Festivals" on page 568.
The Teutons and Norsemen had goddesses who were very
similar to the goddess Fortuna. The Norse goddesses Lofa and
Vor were protectors of lovers — the first because she united the
faithful in marriage, the second, because she punished the faith-
less. The Teutons had a mother goddess by the name of Zizi;
from her name the Germans no doubt got the word zit^Sn for
teats or nipples, and we in turn the word "titties" or "titts."
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 517
From absurd ideas of propriety these two words, common as they
are, are not defined in some dictionaries.
Tlio Erinyes were Greel^ goddesses wlio Avere the avengers of
lunnan misdeeds or inqnities ; they were called Furies by tlie Rom-
ans.
The Moerae, or Parcae, or Fates, were similar to the Xorse
Norns or ''Weird Sisters," representing- Past, Present and Fu-
ture.
In the later Greek myths the Erinyes w^ere also three; Alect
(hatred), Megaera (jealousy), and Tisiphone (revenge).
Many of the gods and goddesses of Greece and Egypt were
alike, except in name, as the languages were so different. We
have already learned that many of the ideas of the Egyptians and
Aztecs were similar.
Nath, Pakht, Sekhet, Mut, Suben and Nati were all deities of
the female principle in ancient Egj^pt, It does not mean, how-
ever, that these were all different goddesses but they may have
been merely different names in different parts of Egypt for the
same idea. They corresponded in a general way with the Ishtar-
Venus cult.
When and hoAV the Egyptian ideas were transferred to Mex-
ico, or vice versa, has caused much speculation; the British Ency-
clopedia says that there can be no doubt that communication ex-
isted between these two lands. At all events the Aztecs had god-
desses that were equivalent to Ceres, Lucina, Flora, and Venus,
of course under Aztec names.
The early Christians, as has alread}^ been stated, were a so-
cialistic society mostly made up from members of the lower
classes, slaves, laborers, etc. ; necessarily, they were also more or
less ignorant and superstitious and credulous enough to accept
beliefs that could not appeal to the educated classes. The belief
in parthenogenesis, birth from a virgin, was so general a feature
of religious folklore that it was accepted as the truth by people
from the extreme east, as China, to the extreme west, not only of
the eastern continent, but of the western continent as well; we
have cited examples of this belief from Quiche and Mexico to the
Thlinkeets of Alaska.
Add to this the adoration of the Roman emperors as gods
(which was really only extravagant flattery and not believed by
the educated people) and it was but natural that the early Chris-
518 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
tians should have adopted such a belief in regard to their own
God, and therefore it was taught at a comparatively early period
that Jesus was miraculously born of a virgin. The Prot-Evan-
gelium Jacohi (Second Century) relates some particulars about
Mary that are interesting; her father was a shepherd named
Joachim and her mother was Anna, who had remained childless
to old age, over which the aged couple grieved very much. An
angel announced to Anna that she should conceive, and in due
course of time Mary was born. From her third to her twelfth
year Mary spent her time in the temple "as if she were a dove
that dwelt there, and she received food from the hand of an
angel;" Joseph was made her guardian by the priests. "V^Hien it
was discovered that she was pregnant, Joseph and Mary were
brought before the high priest; both asserted their innocence but
they were acquitted only after they had been tried with ' ' the water
of the ordeal" (see Num. v, vs. 11 to 31). That she was a virgin
when she gave birth to Jesus is accepted as a doctrine by the
Catholics as well as by most Protestant Christian faiths.
But in the Fifteenth Century a theory was broached that
Mary herself had been conceived in a similar manner because the
church considered it improper for a mere mortal woman "born
in sin" to be the mother of Jesus. At the council of Basle, in
1439 A.D,, it was decreed that it was not contrary to reason to be-
lieve that her mother Anna conceived her in a supernatural man-
ner; but this belief was left optional with the laity. Some uni-
versities in France made belief in this doctrine a condition for
a degree, but it was not until 1849 that Pope Pius IX promulgated
the theory of the "Immaculate Conception" to be an article of
faith, and that not to believe was heresy. The "Immaculate
Conception" therefore does not refer to the pregnancy of Mary,
but to the pregnancy of Anna.
Nearly thirteen hundred years earlier than the proclamation
of Mary's immaculate conception the church had disputes over
the conception of Jesus; in the earliest periods, Jesus was con-
sidered a man like other men, and the Christians were what we
now call Unitarians. Nestorius, the patriarch of Constantinople
(428-431 A.D.), said in a sermon : "Let no one call Mary the Mother
of God, for Mary was a human being, and that God should be born
of a human being is impossible." Nestor and his followers did
not deny that Mary was the mother of Jesus, nor that Jesus Avas
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 519
Christ, the Son of God, but they protested against calling her
Theotokos or ''Mother of God." However, the influence of Cyril,
patriarch of Alexandria, prevailed, and the general folklore, which
named so many goddesses ''Mother of God" or "Mother of the
Gods" was also accepted into the Christian faith.
These remarks a])ont Mary were placed under the heading
of "Goddesses," not because Mary is considered as a goddess,
but because she is considered as apart from all human women by
virtue of her miraculous conception of J esus and her oi\ai miracu-
lous birth. Moreover, she is worshiped to a degree far above the
adoration of the saints. She is prayed to as an intermediary be-
tween mankind and her son Christ, or God.
Mere Mortal Women
In the classical period of Arabian supremacy in literature,
during the "dark ages" in Europe, it was an established rule
that all poems, or qnasidelis, no matter what their subject might
be, must begin \\dth passages or stanzas mentioning women and
their charms, "so that the hearts and the minds of the readers
might become favorably disposed toward the poem." For this
reason the En-Nerib, a celebrated Arabian poem, begins with
verses treating of women and love.
A story somewhat similar to that about Ahasuerus and
Esther (see p. 238), is told about a Lydian king. Tlie story of
Esther is Persian and is foreign to Jewish literature. In Asia
Minor, as in the Mohannnedan lands today, women were kept in
seclusion; therefore Vashti was rightly offended when her hus-
band, the king, wanted to show her to his guests. Kemember that
in those days, a queen wore but little more than a veil (see Nef-
ert-Ari-Ahmes, Fig. 89).
Long before Alexander the Great, the Greeks imported silk
at Cos, where it was woven into a gossamer tissue, the famous
cos vestis, which revealed rather than clothed the form. This
fabric was also called ventus textilis, or textile breath, in view
of its extreme thinness and transparency. A similar fabric was
worn by rich women in all Oriental lands.
"About 1170 B.C. there was a Lydian king, Candaules,
who had an exceedingly handsome wife of whose beauty he
boasted to his highest minister, Gyge. The latter did not say
much and Candaules thought that he doubted his word.
520
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Candaules hid Gyge in his room so that when the queen un-
dressed, Gyge mig'lit see the queen's beauty for himself. But
when Gyge attempted to sneak from the room, the queen saw him,
and he confessed how he came to be there. She was very angry
and sent him Avord that either she would have him killed, or he
should kill the king and become her husband, as it was not right
that anyone should live that had seen her naked, except a hus-
band. So Gyge chose to become king."
Under the reign of Cambyses (500 b.c.) a man by the name
of Conon was condemned to be locked up in a prison, without
food or drink, until he starved to death. His daughter asked
permission to visit him daily, which was allowed her, but she was
first carefully searched that she might smuggle in no food nor
drink. When after some time her father showed no signs of Aveak-
Fig. 331. — Antipater murders his mother Thessaloniea.
ening a Avatch Avas kept on her and she Avas caught in the act of
giA^ng her father the milk from her breasts, for she Avas a nurs-
ing mother; it Avas reported to the authorities, and Avas consid-
ered so notable an example of filial love and duty (piety, as it Avas
called in earlier times) that they pardoned the father and re-
Avarded the daughter.
Cassandra left tAvo sons, each of Avhom aspired to the croAvn.
Antipater (about 320 b.c), the older, thought that his mother,
Thessaloniea, inclined to favor the younger and he became so
angry that he went to kill her himself. She implored him "liy the
breasts that had nourished him," at the same time exposing her
bosom to his sight, but he killed her ncA'ertheless. History re-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 521
lates this as if the act of impiety towards her hreasts was a very
heinous aggravation of licr murder (Fig. 331).
When Nero (36-68 a.d.) sent executioners to kill his mother
Agrippa, she bared her belly to them and asked them to stab her
in the abdomen because it had borne such a monstrosity as Nero.
Under the emperor Tiberius a traitor, Sejanus, was arrested,
and he and his whole family were sentenced to be beheaded.
Now it happened that he had a daughter who was unmarried and
still a virgin; but Roman law said that no virgin might be put
to death. So Tiberius ordered the executioner to ravish the
daughter of Sejanus in public, so that it might be generally
kno^\m that she was no longer a virgin; he then had her beheaded.
Hipparchus, King of Athens, sought to seduce Harmodium
to ''Greek Love" {coitus in ano), but was refused Iw Harmodius.
Hipparchus thereupon seized and raped the sister of Harmodius,
who in turn revenged his sister by stabbing Hipparchus to death,
but was arrested ])y the guards. The concubine of Harmodius,
Leaena, was put to the torture to find out any accomplices of
Harmodius, but she bit off her tongue and spat it at the inquis-
itors so she could not say anything against the friends of Har-
modius.
Tamerlane (1402 a. d.) defeated the King Bajazeth. He
carried Bajazeth about with him in an iron cage, in which he was
fed on what he could secure, after the dogs had been fed, from
their leavings, mth his hands tied behind his back. He was
taken from the cage and compelled to get down on hands and
knees as a stool when Tamerlane Avanted to mount his horse.
And Bajazeth 's wife, a beautiful princess of Servia, he kept as a
slave to serve him at table, nearly nude, with Bajazeth in his cage
brought where he could see this. Bajazeth at last beat out his
brains against the bars of his cage.
Mencius (about the third century b. c.) was a great Chinese
philosopher, considered second only to Confucius. His father
died when he was three years old, and he was brought up by his
mother. Her praises were sung by a great writer in the last
century b. c, and ever since, for 2,000 years now, she has been
adored as the "model mother of China."
Heinrich von Meissen (1260-1318 a.d.) was a poet better
knoMTi as Frauenlob. He wrote poems about the Holy Virgin;
he wrote in favor of saying "Fran" instead of "Weib," and he
522 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
wrote much in exaltation of woman. Hence he is called ^'Frau-
enlob" (the Praise of Woman).
And in these days, when the question of "votes for women"
is so much and so favorably discussed and acted upon, the fol-
lowing, from Persia, is refreshing and encouraging: Bahi or
Bahy is a modern Persian sect. Persia is the least orthodox of
the Mohammedan lands, for the prophet himself is considered
second to his successor, Ali, and his sons. It was founded by
Teyed Mohammed Ali, assisted by three apostles and one woman,
Zerryn-Taj, better known as Gourred-Oul-Ayn (''consolation of
the eyes") bestowed in admiration of her exceeding loveliness.
The doctrines are pantheistic, their morality is pure and cheerful
and women are treated better than by any other Asiatic people.
Concubinage and polygamy are forbidden, as well as asceticism
and mendicancy. A council of nineteen members presides over
the sect and it is a rule that at least one member of this council
shall be a woman.
Light is dawning in the East!
SEXUAL UNION AMONG DEITIES
General Considerations
Conjugal couples (sexual union) were Avorshipped in many
countries; in fact, nearly all gods in all nations are supposed to
have a sexual mate ; as Brahma and Maya, Siva and Kali, etc., in
India; Osiris and Isis, Ptah and Paslit, etc., in ancient Egypt;
Jupiter and Juno, Vulcan and Venus, etc., in ancient Greece and
Rome.
In the early period of Christianity there Avas a sect called
"Gnostics" whose peculiar doctrine was, that it is a prime duty
of every man to follow the suggestions of his instincts or desires.
At one of their festivals the men and Avomen assembled in a
darkened room, all naked, and every man seized a Avoman and
cohabited A\dth her; in the darkness this led to promiscuous and
incestuous license in the name of religion.
The sign of the Gnostics (Fig. 332) consisted of a six-sided
star, composed of the male and female triangles intertAvined, just
as the real pubic hairy triangles of the man and Avoman would
also form this six-sided star during coition. This sign is knoAvn
among the JeAvs as "DaAdd's Shield," and is used as an archi-
tectural ornament on their synagogues, altars, etc. ; it is also em-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
523
broidered on the canopy held over the bridal couple during an
orthodox Jewish wedding.
In India it is called Swastika, meaning a symbol or amulet
of good luck ; the Saivas mark their sacred vases with this sign ;
the upright pyramid signifies Siva, who with these three points
unites in himself the attributes of purity, truth and justice; the
inverted or female triangle is his consort, Sakti or Kali, with the
same attributes.
The Rosicrucians used it frequently in this form and with
various explanations, and also in another form, two stone or wood
triangular blocks superimposed one on the other.
By the early Christians this sign was engraved on medals
which were worn as amulets to ward off evil and disease; it is
now often used as one of the pendants in the markers for hymn
and prayer books ; also occasionally as an architectural ornament.
Fig. 332 — Sign of the Gnostics. Known Fig. 333. — Thor's Hammer, or Swas-
to tlie Jews as David's Shield. Usual tika symbol. A symbol of polyandric
form on left ; on the right, an alehemistic union — one woman and several men.
form. See this sign in pubic triangle in Fig.
267.
It is part of the seal of the theosophic societies and is fre-
quently seen as part of the mystic signs of secret societies. It
was much used also by the alchemists.
The symbol also occurred in ancient or pre-historic Aztec
ruins, in Yucatan and Central America; it was found, for in-
stance, in the ruins of Uxmal, in Yucatan; and it was found in
Aztec temples in Mexico.
The shape of an ornament that is quite popular with us at
present is sho\^Tl in Fig. 253, on the left; it is also called "Swas-
tika" and is a charm to conjure good luck.
Like the sign of the Gnostics it represents sexual union, but
of the polyandric type. It was used by the ancient Phoenicians
and other Orientals, and was called by them the ''cross of the
Four Great Gods." It is based on the peculiar Asiatic custom,
524
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
still prevalent in Thibet, of polyandry, one woman having sev-
eral husbands. It represents, figurativelj^, fonr male organs
serving for one female organ. The derivation, more coarsely
represented, is also sho^^^l (Fig. 333).
This symbol was considered in Scandinavian or Norse myth-
ology to represent lightning, and was called Thor's Hammer; but
it also had a phallic significance, for with it Thor was supposed
to bless or consecrate the newly married couples.
In the Eddas it is related how the god Thor lost this ham-
mer at one time, it having been stolen by the giant Thrym; the
latter refused to surrender the hammer to its o^\mer, except on
Fig. 334.— An Irish cioss; some were Fig. 335.— Hands in blessing: First,
Pagan, others early Christian, but all were male trinity ; second, Hindu s^Tiibol
symbolic of polyandric union. through which worshippers gaze at
sacred objects; third, male and female
symbols ; fourth and fifth, sexual union.
the condition that the goddess Freya should be given to him for
a wife. Upon this Thor disguised himself as a woman, pretend-
ing to be Freya, thus succeeding in meeting Thrym ; he then slew
the giant and recovered his hammer.
This cross was used in its realistic form, as shown in the
right-hand lower figure, in heathen and in medieval Christian
temples, churches, and church paraphernalia. A modified form
is the Maltese cross, which dates from the time of the crusades, is
the l)adge of the Knight of Malta.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
525
The Irisli round towers were by many held to be phallic
moniuiients; otliers ascribed tlieni to early Christian origin.
Probably there were both kinds of tow^ers. The ''brochs" or
round towers of Scotland appear to have been of pre-Christian
origin.
The Irish pre-Christian cross was a modification of the
Swastika idea, and was often covered with erotic carvings.
Charms of goodwill, or of blessing, are used in all religions
in the form of certain gestures of the hands of the priests while
blessing (Fig. 335). The upjDer left-hand figure symbolizes the
male trinity; the upper right-hand figure an East Indian door of
Fig. 336. — Atlain and Eve ; the fall and expulsion from paradise, by ^lichelangelo,
from Sistine Chapel, Vatican, Rome.
life through which worshippers gaze at certain sacred objects in
the temples; the lower left-hand figure symbolizes the male trin-
ity, together with the door of life, or yoni; and the lower middle
and right-hand figures show the lingam and yoni in imion as in
ancient Rome.
Sexual union was often realistically represented, even in
Christian churches in the middle ages in France and England.
Adam and Eve, both naked, were commonly represented in me-
dieval churches, usually one on either side of the main entrance
on the door frame; sometimes together, as in this drawing from
the ceiling of St. Michael's church in Hildesheim, Germany (Fig.
120) ; and occasionally as in sexual embrace. The celebrated
526
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
painting, ''The Adoration of the Lamb," by Van Eyck, was the
central panel of a transportable altar-piece for an army or field
altar; on the two side panels were Adam and Eve, realistically
naked and nnidealized, as was usual in old Dutch art. Both
Adam and Eve are represented naked on the ceiling of the Sis-
tine chapel. Also, on the wall paintings in Basle, known as the
"Basle Death-Dance."
An altar-statue of a naked Eve is still extant in the cathedral
at Schleswig, Germany, as shown in Fig. 124.
Such was the nature of many of the ikons or images, that
were destroyed by the iconoclasts in the times of Cromwell; the
Fig. 337. — Pandora, and the Greek Pantheon. The deities are marked by sym-
bols; Zeus by a sceptre, Juno by a peacock. Mercury by the eaduceus, Ceres by ears
of wheat, Diana l)y a crescent moon, and Venus by being naked, etc. Pandora was
the first woman and her l)Ox sym])olized the vulva.
movement was similar to, but more violent than our modern
Comstock crusade or "VV. C. T. U. agitation for the suppression of
the Nude in Art. A\Tiether the genitals of Adam and Eve, in the
Hildesheim church, were painted out during this crusade, or
whether they never had an}^, I do not know.
Figures representing coition are sold in Mexico, and are said
to be used for the instruction in the mysteries of sex of young
people at the age of puberty. However, I have seen some that
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
527
represented unnatural, or at least niuisnal, sexual practices, so
that possibly these little figurines are merely "erotica."
Such representations were already in use on this continent
by the ancient mound builders; in Fig-. 149 is sho^^^l the form of
a stone pipe found in a mound in Indiana. Another photograph
belonging to the St. Louis Academy of Science, of a pipe taken
from a mound in Arkansas, represents unnatural sexual prac-
tices. Erotic pipes are still carved of meerschaum and are prized
by their possessors; it seems that such illustrations have always
been in use everywhere.
Figiire 304, on page 490, shows the Egyptian goddess
Maut or Ma; the word "Ma" means mother in practically all
Fig. 338. — Xefeit-hotep receives life from Anukah. Aneient Egyptian sculpture.
Life is symbolized by the ankh or crux ansata.
languages of the world, while the word "Maut" meant "good
mother." The goddess holds the female sceptre and the "ankh,"
which is a combination of the tau-cross with the door of life, or,
syml)olically, a union of the lingam Avitli a yoni, signifying sexual
union, and therefore having the significance of "life." It is fre-
quently, if not always, carried in the hands of figures of gods
and goddesses, possibly with the significance of immortality. In
the Christian church this symbol was knowai as the crux ansata,
or the cross mth a handle.
The Symbol is androgynous, combining in one the male be-
getting and the female conceiving powers ; in other words, it sym-
528
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
bolizes the essentially androgynous character of the Almighty
First Canse, the Creative Principle or Power, the Creator — Pro-
creation— Life — God — as already explained.
Here is represented an Egyptian sculpture showing the god-
dess Anukah bestowing life on the Pharaoh Nefert-hotep (Fig.
338). When speaking of tree or grove Avorship (p. 413) men-
tion was made of a sculpture of an Assyrian grove, and a descrip-
tion of it was given. It also symbolized sexual union. The
wings of Babylonian or Assyrian gods, priests and bulls are per-
petuated in Christian art in the wings of our angels.
Fig. 339. — A Hindu sacred place; devotees devote their lives to study the hidden mean-
ings of every feature of these objects.
In India there are many sacred places Avith innumerable
phallic, yonic and androgynous symbols or figures; the most
popular of these is the lingam-in-yoni (Arba) not necessarily
always to be considered as androgynous, but quite frequently
symbolizing deities cohabiting with their saktis or wives — sexual
union (see Figs. 339 and 340).
Yet in the main the following idea is thus shown: ''Praja-
pati is the Universal Spiritual Principle. Everything was non-
existent when Brahma (himself still non-existent) determined
to create the universe. He created the waters by meditation, and
placed in them a fertile seed which developed into a golden egg,
from which he, Brahma himself, was then born, to become the
Creator of all living beings."
This doctrine seems a little abstruse, but if you can not com-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
529
preliend it, contemplato tlio Cliristian mystery of the Immaculate
Conception, of Jesus, God, begetting himself, for Jesus is One
with the Father and the Holy Ghost; they are not separate indi-
vidualities. The Christian faith, as well as the Brahmanic, has
mysteries which reason can not understand; they must be blindly
accepted ''on faith."
Sexual union was sjmibolized by yonic and lingam symbols
joined in various w^ays. These illustrations are, most of them,
self-explanatory; the origin of the Latin cross was a phallic pil-
lar with a yonic ring around it, which, in profile, looks like a cross.
The 10 is a mystic esoteric sign; it means: "Man without
i/^ljMUrA.
Fig. 340. — Sjinbols of sexual union;
the lingam-in-yoni and tlie Aiba are signs
of union ; the syniliol of wisdom is a male
and female triangle joined by the serpent,
or passion.
Fig. 841. — Symbols of sexual union ;
the last one is interpreted : man without
woman is one, woman without man is noth-
ing, together they are 'many (ten).
woman is one; woman without man is nothing; together they are
ten, or many." (Fig. 341.)
In modern science these signs do not mean union, but only the
upper symbol counts ; they are used to designate sex in zoology and
botany (Fig. 344). The Mars-sign for male and the Venus-sign
for female explain themselves; the caduceus of Mercury shows
two cobra serpents in copulation around a rod, the rod being a
symbol of a lingam, hence both sexes are present, and this is the
sign for hermaphrodite; the Saturn-sign means neuter, because
530
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Saturn cut off the phallus of his father Cronos with a sickle; it
represents a lingam or male with a sickle.
We have retained other phallic ideas in our every-day cus-
toms and practices. This (Fig-. 343) is from a painting of the
marriage of the virgin by Kaphael, and the wedding ring and
finger signify symbolically the yoni and the lingam. In this illus-
tration note the tau-cross apron which forms part of the regalia
of the priest; it is worn over the phallus which it symliolizes.
This symbolic union of the bride and bridegroom before the
Fig. 342.— Jugudhatri, Hindu goddess Fig. 343. — " Tlie Marriage of the Vir-
of love; the finger and ring symbols of gin," by Raphael; the finger and ring
sexual union. sjTiibols of sexual union.
guests is merely a refined method of showing what is actually
done in some Polynesian tribes, namely, that the newly-wedded
pair indulge in coition in the presence of the assembled guests
and friends, as part of the wedding ceremony.
In the painting of the Marriage of the Virgin, a young man
in the foreground is represented as breaking a rod; the rod is a
symbol of a lingam; in the Prot-Evangelium Jacohi (see page
518) it is stated that when Mary was married to Joseph a youthful
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
531
lover was so disai)pointed that he emasciihxted himself and be-
came an anchorite; this is implied by his ''breaking his rod."
Among the Romans, the l)ride was taken to the temple of
Priapns, either before the ceremony by the priestesses alone, or
more nsnally after the ceremony, accompanied by the husband
and Avedding party, where she had connection Avith the god, to
whom she thus offered up her virginity.
The position of the wedding ring on the fourth finger is thus
explained: The wedding ring was originally put on the ])ride's
hand in the following manner by the priest: on the thumb, with
the words "In the name of God, the Father;" on the index fmger
with the words "and of the Son;" on the middle finger with the
(5 ^ali
9
^
}
Female
HermaplirocLiU
Neater.)
Neater
rig. 344. — Tliese symbols are used
new to designate the sexes in zo-
ology and l)otany.
Fig. 345. — In the upper right-hand
figure Suben, Egyptian goddess of ma-
ternity, places a ring on a uas sceptre
(symbol of a lingam).
words "and of the Holy Ghost;" then, finally, on the fourth
finger with the word "Amen," thus mimicking the frictional
back-and-forth movements of coition.
Figure 342 is a dra\Adng representing Jugudhatri, the Hindu
Goddess of Love ; note the ring and finger.
In Sanger's History of Prostitution we learn that in ancient
Rome the prostitutes solicited passers-by by sitting in their win-
dows and holding up their hands with thumb and index finger
coming together at the tips to show the symbol of the yoni, a
ring, their stock-in-trade ; if a man wished to accept the invitation
532
SEX AjStd sex worship
lie held up his finger, the sign of the lingam, and the Avoman came
to the door and admitted him.
The vulture was the symbol of the Egyptian goddess Suhen,
the goddess of maternity; she is shown here (Fig. 345) as placing
a ring on the lingam, symbolized by the uas sceptre, mth the
meaning, that she has connection with the god, or that the female
power presiding over maternity requires first, a sexual union
with the begetting power.
Here, in Fig. 346, we see a more realistic representation of
the same thing, but the vulture goddess places the ring, or yoni,
on the erect lingam of the god.
Among tlie Romans the women were subordinate to their
husbands to the extent that the latter could put them or their
Fig. 346. — Same idea as tlie last figure, but more realistic.
children to death if they so chose to do ; yet they were not slaves.
They were not allowed opportunities to learn to read and write,
however, and few women of those days acquired this accomplish-
ment unless they chose to become hetaerae or public women;
these were women who were free to do as they pleased, and chose
to remain single and learn arts or science and to mingle with the
men, but they were not prostitutes by any means, although they
often were "affinities" of some man or other.
The wives were kept in more or less privacy, at least in
earlier times, in harem fashion. Yet the wives had much au-
thority in the home, even in taking part in the management of
the household and estate. But they had to be specially authorized
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 533
to transact business for the liouseliold, and as few of them could
read and Avrite, they were given a seal ring, the impression of
Avhich was recognized as authority from the hnshand to attend to
certain affairs for him.
This ring was given to the wife on the occasion of the wed-
ding and was called a wedding ring ; it was a symbol of authority.
In some Oriental nations in ancient times, rings were worn
by men and women, and on all the fingers of the hand, including
the thumb. At home, Avhere women generally went barefoot, they
also wore rings on their toes. The finger-ring had a hoop, and a
bezel, the latter a flat surface on which a figure or motto may be
engraved or on which a precious stone may be mounted.
Used as a symbol of Avifely authority in ancient times, the
ring became merely an ornament in later days, or sometimes it
was worn as a charm or mascot. Thus from very ancient times
emeralds Avere used as a setting for various reasons; they were
charms that were good for the eyes ; they drove away evil spirits ;
they assisted women in confinement and child-birth; they pre-
vented the wearer from getting drunk; and this use still persists
to the present day in Oriental countries, Avhere they are highly
regarded as talismans, and medical virtues are ascribed to them.
Gipsies, and the Portuguese, Sicilians, etc., generally wear
ear-rings, which they claim keeps them from having eye troubles.
Among most Oriental people (Hebrews and Egyptians ex-
cepted) both sexes wear ear-rings as ornaments; among ancient
JeAYS, as among ourselves, only Avomen Avore them in this man-
ner. Ear-rings -Avere also restricted exclusiA^ely to the use by
Avomen among the ancient Greeks and Romans; the ears of the
Venus de Medici are pierced, shoAving that she originally Avore
ear-rings or ear pendants.
In Europe thumb rings Avere generally Avorn from the four-
teenth, to the seventeenth century.
In the middle ages, or about the seA^enteenth century, Aved-
ding rings had mottoes inscribed on them and Avere then called
''posey rings;" the husband at the Avedding ceremony Avould
place such a ring on the bride's finger, or the officiating priest
did so, and on these rings were inscriptions like this : ' ' LoA^e and
obaye;" "Fear God and loA^e me," or "Mulier viro suhjecta
esto" (The Avoman shall be subject to the man).
Also from very ancient times rings Avere used as charms to
534
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
cure or prevent sickness; tliey were then called "cramp rings."
It is said Solomon placed a piece of Solomon's Seal root in the
bezel, to prevent epileptic seizures, but in more recent times they
owed their virtues to having been blessed by a king or a priest.
The pope wears the apostolic ring of St. Peter on one of his
toes, when he gives audience to pilgrims to Rome, who kneel and
kiss his foot, or the ring on his foot.
The use of the ring as a symbol of the feminine yoni in the
manner of putting it on, has already been described.
SERPENT WORSHIP
General Considerations
The serpent has been the symbol for sexual passion for
thousands of years; when it is represented as tmning around a
Fig. 347. — Marriage of Pelcus and Thetis, from an amphora found at Rhodes.
rod or pillar it means a lingam erect under the influence of sex-
ual passion. The Caduceus of Mercury and the Staff of Aescu-
lapius have this significance. The Christian bishop's staff was
originally a staff with a serpent twined around it.
This illustration (Fig. 347) is from an amphora from
Camirus, Rhodes. Peleus, the father of Achilles, ruled in Phtia;
the gods, noting his piety, rewarded him with a wife in the per-
son of the beautiful Nereid or water-nymph, Thetis. This pres-
entation is here shown, and the serpent which bites Peleus as he
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
535
attempts to embrace Thetis, symbolizes the sexual passion he
feels for her. At this wedding the goddess Eris threw a golden
apple on the table, which liore inscribed on it tlio motto: "To the
fairest of the fair." Hera, Aphrodite and Atliena claimed it, so
Zens appointed Paris to be judge, and he awarded it to Aphrodite,
probably because she was naked and he had better opportunity to
judge how fair she was. This apple is often called the "apple of
discord" (Fig. 348).
The staff of Aesculapius is also called the staff of life; it
symbolizes virility, vigor, health — a lingam erect under the influ-
ence of sexual passion symliolized by the snake (Fig. 349).
Fig. 348. — " Judginent of Paids/' au antique mural painting, Pompeii.
Hygeia (Fig. 350), the daughter of Aesculapius, fed a snake
Vv'itli milk and made the prognosis for the patients who came to
the temple to consult the oracles, from the manner in which the
snake partook of the offered food. In reality, there were large
numbers of temple attendants, or female temple slaves ("daugh-
ters of the god"), whose duty it was to tempt the patients to
sexual congress, and if the man entered with vigor on the sexual
encounter they reasoned that he Avas not seriously sick and that
he Avould recover; whereas, if he remained apathetic and unre-
sponsive, the prognosis was less favorable. Once every year, on
536
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
a certain day, a naked virgin took food into the place where the
temple snakes were kept in the groves of Aesculapius. If the
serpents received her kindly and took the food readily, it i)roph-
esied a fruitful and a prosperous year; but if they looked at the
temple attendant more or less ferociously and refused the food
it was an omen of a bad and unpropitious year.
The Aesculapius' Snake is known in zoology as Coluber Aes-
culapii; it is a native of Italy and grows to be about 5 feet long;
it was well adapted to its use in the temple because it is readily
tamed and perfectly harmless.
The serpent was an object of worship among the ancient
Fig. 349. — Aesculapius, tlie god of Medi-
cine.
Fig. 350. — Hygeia, the daughter of
Aesculapius.
Egyptians; Kneph, the serpent god, was a good demon. His
images in the temples were plentiful. The serpent was the sym-
bol also of the unborn and immortal.
A snake with its tail in its mouth, thus forming a ring or
hoop, w^as a symbol of eternity, and is used in this sense in the
seal of the Theosophic Society.
While sojourning in the wilderness the Jews disobeyed God
and he sent a plague of venomous snakes; to cure those that
were bitten a serpent image was erected, which was done by com-
mand of God; but in this case the serpent was not for worship.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
537
but merely to test the faitli of the people in a promise of God
(see p. 351).
The serpent was also an object of worship among the Hin-
clns. Snake charmers are plentiful in India, and the snake they
usually have is the cobra, one of the most venomous snakes in
the world; but the cliarmers draw out the poison fangs, so that
Fig. 351. — Egj'ptian serpent deities; temple sculptures.
■"•"■'SS**-.^ r-' *?■
^..
Fig. 352.— The Serpent Mound in Ohio, total length 1,000 feet extended.
they are in no danger from the animal, but the public does not
know this.
The mound builders of North America also Avorshipped the
snake; the Serpent Mound in Ohio (Fig. 352) is now a national
reservation, in order to preserve this remarkable monument of
antiquity. The mound is situated on a blulT in the angle of two
538
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
streams meeting and joining to form a larger stream, the forked
waters having the same significance as the divining rod already
mentioned. AVe see here the male triangle head, the feminine
circle, the body of the snake symbolizing sexual passion.
Figure 295 is an ancient representation of an Aztec serpent
worship in the ruins of a Yucatan temple. The human figures
both show their yoni and protrude their tongues, the significance
of which gesture we know.
The Zunis in New Mexico worship the serpent god Kolo-
wissi, or "God of the Plumed Serpent," a rattlesnake, and hold
an annual snake-dance in his honor.
The negroes of the West Indies and South America practice
voodoo worship, and a living baby is sometimes offered during
their nocturnal rites to their deity — a boa constrictor. Voodoo-
ism is a North African religious worship of an all-powerful and
Fig. 353. — The Aztec god Kolowissi — a rattlesnake. Note the solar disc and the
crescent moon and compare with Fig. 361.
supernatural being, the non-poisonous serpent on whom depend
all the happenings occurring in the world; the Avorship is accom-
panied by magic mysteries and cannibalistic feasts.
The Gnostics, a peculiar sect which thrived shortly before
Christianity was introduced and during the first one or two cen-
turies of our era, considered the snake to be a sjanbol of intellect,
because the serpent in joaradise had taught man knowledge; but
we must not forget that "knowledge" had a peculiar meaning in
the Old Testament, signifying carnal knowledge or congress with
one of the other sex, used of both men and Avomen.
Gen. xxiv, 16: Sjoeaking of Rebekah — "and the damsel was
very fair to look upon, a virgin; neither had any man known
her;" or
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
539
T^y^SHX' iniix^hfint cny(f(<ACt(l' ^
Fig. 35-i. — "Temptatiou of Adam and Eve," from a coppeii)latc of 1714 a.d.
Fig. I 355. — ' ' Adam, Eve and the Serpent, ' ' by Boeder.
540
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Num. xxxi, 17: * * * "Kill every woman that hath knoAvn
man by lying with him."
The legend of St. Patrick driving out the serpents from Ire-
land refers to his putting an end to serpent worship which was
practiced by the druids of Great Britain. The greatest charm
among the druids was the anguineum, or "Serpents' Q:gg,^^ said
to have been formed from the froth out of the mouths and the
sweat of a bunch of snakes; Pliny tells us that the test of its
genuineness was that it Avould swim against the current, even if
enclosed in a gold case, and this must be true, as Pliny tells us he
saw such an egg do this.
The serpent in Paradise (Figs. 354 and 355) and the tree of
li #
Fig. 356.— Horns destroying the Great Fig. 357. — Hindu hermaphrodite deity
Serpent Apap, Egyptian ; after Rawlinson. Ardanari-Iswari, serpents as symbols of
sexual passion.
the knowledge of good and evil are generally supposed to refer to
sexual passion, as is expressed by Milton in Paradise Lost:
* liut that false fruit
For other operation first displayed,
Carnal desire inflaming; he on Eve
Began to cast lascivious eyes, she to him
As wantonly repaid ; in lust they burn *
Oh, how unlike
To that first naked glory!
* *
>>
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 541
The Molianimedans have a feast on the tenth day of Mohar-
ran, called Yom Ashoora; it is an anniversary celebration of the
first meeting of Adam and Eve after they had been driven ont of
Paradise.
This is not the place to trace the association of the serpent
M^tli the principle of evil, or of the devil. "Apap" (Fig. 356)
was the Egyptian origin of evil, and was represented as a serpent.
Having inspired Seti to mnrder Osiris, Horns, the son of Osiris,
pnnishes Apap by crushing his head. From this old Egyptian
myth Moses, who had been brought up by Pharaoh's daughter in
all the learning of the Egyptians, borrowed the expression in the
Bible (Gen. iii, 15) where God says to the serpent, "I will put
enmity between thee and the woman and between thy seed and
her seed: it shall bruise thy head and thou shalt bruise his heel."
The serpent has been associated for ages with the idea of
evil, and the dread of the snake is almost universal. The devil
is worshipped by some people on the principle that it is better
policy to propitiate an evil spirit than to worship a benevolent one.
In Persia Ahriman and Dew (Persian deities) Avere spirits
of evil, and were supposed to be poisonous serpents.
This is a Hindu attempt to express in a design the following,
from the Piirana, a sacred Brahmanic book: "The Supreme Spirit
in the act of creation, became two-fold; the right side was male (in-
dicated by the tan cross), the left was Prakriti (female, indicated
by the sign of the yoni). She is Maia, eternal and imperishable."
Again: — "The divine cause of creation experienced no bliss,
being isolated — alone. He ardently desired a companion ; and im-
mediately the desire was gratified. He caused his body to divide
and become male and female. They united and human beings were
thus made" (Fig. 357).
In this figure the serpents are symbolic of the passion Ar-
danari-Iswari experiences ; in some cases the right side is provided
with a realistic penis, and the left side with a realistic \Tilva, in-
stead of the s^^nbolic figures in this illustration. See also p. 139
where a similar theory in regard to the God of the Bible, Jehovah,
is considered.
Philo, a Jewish philosopher contemporaneous with Jesus, said
that Adam was a hermaphrodite being; "God separated Adam
into two parts, one male, the other female, Eve, taken from his
side."
542
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Figure 358 is a copy of Michelangelo's "Creation of Eve"
f I'om the ceiling of the Sistine chapel in the Vatican at Rome.
Pliilo added, that the longing for reunion which love inspired in
the divided halves of the originally bisexual man is the source of
the sensual pleasure, symbolized by the serpent, which is in turn
the beginning of all transgressions.
The early Christian church-fathers claimed that God made a
great mistake when he created "Adam" male arid female.
Justin, Gregory of Nyssa, Augustine and others regretted
that Adam yielded to his passionate desire for Eve, and held that
if Adam had abstained from sexual pleasure Avith Eve he would
have effectually rebuked God and would liave compelled God to
invent some harmless mode of reproduction that would not have
Fig. 358. — "Creation of Eve," by Michelangelo, from Sistine Chapel, Vatican, Eome.
required the co-operation of the sexes, and tlius the world would
have been peopled Avith passionless beings. Through the influ-
ence of these early teachers this became a general belief among
the early Christians, and it accounts for their antagonism to
everything sexual, which persists among many church members
to this day.
We read that God forbade Adam and Eve to eat of the fruit
of the tree of knowledge of good and evil, ])ut the serpent came
and tempted Eve, saying: "in the day ye eat thereof, then shall
your eyes be opened, and ye shall be as gods, knowing good and
evil. And when the woman saw that the tree was good for food —
she took of the fruit thereof and did eat; and gave also to her
husband and he did eat" (Gen. iii, 5, 6).
SEX atntd sex worship 543
Philo explains tliis that Eve represents the sensual or percep-
tive part of man's nature — the senses; Adam, the reason. The
serpent did not venture to attack Adam, or reason, directly; the
senses yield to pleasure and in turn enslave reason and destroy
immortal virtue.
A cynic once said that Eve was called "woman" because she
brought ''woe to man;" l)ut Eve merely tempts man passively,
by being beautiful ; man tempts woman actively, by being passion-
ate; and man has brought a thousandfold more Avoe to woman
than woman ever brought to man. Ruskin says, that for this
reason, from time immemorial the serpent has been represented
with the head of a man (see Fig. 95).
Old authors called the fruit of Mnsa paradisiaca, a variety
of plantain or banana, "Adam's apple," believing that this was
the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil, possibly on
account of the resemblance of this fruit to a lingam. Other au-
thors l)elieve that the fruit of Citrus medica was the forbidden
fruit ; if this view is correct, then Eve handed Adam a lemon in
more senses than one.
While probably nine out of ten believe that Eve gave Adam
an apple to eat, this is a popular mistake;- the name of the fruit
is not mentioned in the Bible, but the apple was unknoMTi in
Asia Minor, the supposed location of paradise.
In the Pliysiologus, a collection of early Christian allegories,
it is stated that a serpent flees from a man Avho is naked. This
probably means that habitual nudity does away with the many
temptations to sexual passion which are characteristic of clothed
nations — in other words, that nudity, habitually seen, does away
with prurient desires.
An analogous experience is the following: Lola Montez said:
"Show a man but an inch of white stocking above your shoe and
you can lead him whither you will." How times have changed!
A young woman that does not show six or eight inches of stock-
ing over her shoes is now looked on as a prude, and it is quite
common to see the legs of women up to the bend of the knee, as
they enter street cars ; yet the men get less excited now over see-
ing a woman's leg than they did when it was but seldom that they
caught a glimpse of an inch or two of it.
The Kirghiz and other Mongol tril)os worship Shaitan, the
Devil or Bad Spirit. Among the Turks he is called Erlil-; he is
544 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
considered to be the king of the lower workl. Tlie Mongols ap-
pear to be the same stock as the Aztecs or Mexicans, and probably
peopled America in very early times; they extended from Asia
Minor to Southeastern Asia or Cambodia, throughout all of which
territor}^, as well as Mexico, serpent worship extended. Cambo-
dia contains some great temples which are generally regarded as
monuments of serpent worship. Isolated islands in the Pacific
also had serpent worship; for instance, the Fijians, now almost
all Christians, formerly believed in Ndengi, their chief god, who
was a serpent, but he did not bother himself about the world or
its inhabitants.
WORSHIP OF THE HEAVENLY BODIES
The worship of the sexual organs or of the sexual powers,
was a low and rather unrefined method of worship; that it was
practiced innocently, and without thought of doing something im-
proper, does not make it, as some authors claim, a divine theory,
nor was the indulging in coition in the temples a divine act, al-
though it was a perfectly proper physiological act in its proper
time and place. Primitive man, when this Avorship prevailed, was
but little above the animal, like a bull or a dog, who still "inno-
cently" and "without any idea of impropriety" mates with a cow,
or a bitch, as the case may be. But that does not make the act
of the bull or the dog a "divine act."
As man advanced in mental development, the impropriety or
indelicacy of phallic worship and its attendant ceremonies be-
came clearer to him, and while his sexual nature was not rendered
base or improper, it became more and more a private matter, and
instead of displaying the phallus and yoni in the temples they
came to be considered as "privates" or "private parts;" their
functions also came to be considered "private."
Clemens Alexandrinus said, that the worship of the heavenly
bodies was given to man at an early stage, in order that his mind
might be diverted from the contemplation of grosser things to
that of these sublime things, and through them ultimately to
the worship of the Creator; his idea was, that the knowledge of
God was a result of a gradual evolution of ideas, in a perfectly
natural way, beginning with a worship of parents or of sex, then
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 545
of the heavenly bodies, then of the gods, and finally of the Creator
or the One God, the One Great Canse of all Things.
The observation of the stars and planets was naturally un-
dertaken by people who were awake in the night time, and not by
predatory people who lived by the chase — the nomadic tribes who
guarded their flocks and herds at night. Hesiod and Homer were
shepherds and while contemplating the heavens they imagined
those grand poems which developed into the Bible of the Greeks,
and later on became the basis of one of the most joyous and beau-
tiful of religions. The ancients conceived the universe as having
the earth in the center, with the planets circling about it; they
knew seven "planets" — Moon, Mercury, Venus, Sun, Mars, Ju-
piter and Saturn; these were worshipped as the '* Seven Great
Gods" and from them came the sacredness of the numeral seven;
(see Josh. ch. vi) the Jews marched around the walls of Jericho
for seven days, on the seventh day seven times, when the walls fell
down. The Mohammedan pilgrims to Mecca make a seven-iold
circuit around the Kaba, a circular building of rude stones, which
was probably an old Pagan temple dating prior to Mohammed ; it
has been destroved and rebuilt several times, and is considered
very sacred because it contains the ''black stone" (meteoric)
which the pilgrims kiss. This stone is very ancient and dates back
to primitive times when stones were worshipped, but the Moham-
medans say that it was given to Abraham b^^ the angel Gabriel,
the same angel that dictated the Koran to Mohammed.
Hesiod, especially, let his mind dwell largely on the mysteries
of sex, and his poem is practically a sexual genealogy of all di-
vinities; it reminds of a similar tendency in the Bible of the
Jews — ' ' Abraham begat Isaac ; and Isaac begat Jacob ; and Jacob
begat Judas and his brethren ; and Judas begat Phares, and Zara
of Tamar; and Phares begat Esrom; and — begat — begat — etc."
Matth. i. So Hesiod said: ''And Thia, overcome in the embrace
of Hyperion, brought forth the great sun, and bright moon, and
morn * * * ; " etc.
We have already learned that primitive man personified all
things and imagined them endowed mth parts and functions and
desires similar to his own; he must have observed, when finally
his attention was attracted to speculate about the sun, that it
varied in its heat and light according to the seasons ; in the spring
it came farther and farther north, it rose earlier and set later,
546 SEX AISTD SEX WORSHIP
and it spent more time attending to its function, of giving light
and heat and life to earth, fertilizing it and causing growth, pro-
duction, increase in crops and flocks, during the summer than in
winter, when it rose later and set earlier and ''descended to the
underworld" for a greater proportion of the day, causing a de-
cline of increase, or the total cessation of growth and of the yields
of the fields in winter.
When we remember the fundamental feature in the philosophy
of early people to ascribe life, or the ability to give life, to the
male alone, it can not be wondered at that the sun was imagined
to be a powerful male demiurge, and that the active creative func-
tions were attributed to him; while the part played by the earth
(feminine nature) was the passive or purely receptive or conceiv-
ing power attributed to the woman. So it was but natural that
the sun became a male deity.
Many nations worshipped the sun either direct, as now among
the Parsees of Persia and India, or indirectly, as the symbol for
other deities which controlled or guided it in its course, as was
the case, for instance, among the ancient Quiches who called the
solar deity the ' ' Protector of the Sun. ' '
The sun was male ; the moon was smaller, weaker, and there-
fore inferior; naturally it was considered female.
The sun was Osiris in ancient Egypt; Apollo in Greece and
Kome; Balclor among Teutons and Norsemen; etc.
Not all people, however, philosophized alike; and there were
reasons for differences of opinion as to the sex of the sun and
moon. Chemistry, of course, was undreamed of, and the ancients
could not know that the sun favored the assimilation of food by
plants in the daytime, while this food was elaborated into new
cell-tissue in the dark of night, over which the moon presided.
Mark the point to which the tip of a vine (morning-glory or moon-
flower vine) reaches on its string in the morning and again in the
evening ; and do this for a few days ; it will be noticed that there
is comparatively little growth in the daytime but many inches of
growth during the night. Now if this was noticed in early times
the growth w^ould very likely have been ascribed to the moon, and
in consonance with their philosophies, the moon would be the demi-
urge, or the creator, and would be male. In the Assyrian poem of
Ishtar's trip to the underworld (p. 440) we find that the Assyrians
and Babylonians worshipped the moon as a male deity. The same
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 547
was true of other nations. The Teutons called the sun female
and the moon male; and the Germans still do so: "Die Sonne,"
"Der Mond." But the more apparent effect of the sun prepon-
derated and most nations considered it a procreative male. David
spoke of the rising sun as a "bridegroom coming out of his
chamber" (Ps. xix, 5).
Among the Greeks, day and heaven (atmosphere) were con-
sidered masculine and the night female; naturally, the heavenly
bodies ruling day and night ("And God made two great lights;
the greater to rule the day, and the lesser light to rule the night"
Gen. i, 16 )i shared the nature of day and night, and agreed in sex.
In those early days, gender, or purely grammatical sex, was un-
known, and the sex was supposed to be a real sex.
The Rig-Vedas imply that the worship was a nature-worship
connected with the return or rotation of the seasons ; it was there-
fore based on the motions of the sun.
The ancient Hindus and Parsees, as well as the Phoenicians,
based their religious festivals on the seasons, or on sun-worship,
as we also still do with our Easter festival.
The Phrygian festivals were based on the idea that the sun
was asleep in winter and aAvake in the summer ; this was the pre-
vailing idea in the folklore extending around the world. The Teu-
tonic Ostern, the Norse Yule, our Easter, were all connected w^ith
the sunworship, the festivals being usually about the time of
the equinoxes.
In Syria, also, the deity Hadad was supposed to be the "king
of the gods," the sun.
Strange to say, the festivals on the western continent were
based on the same ideas, and, as already explained, were probably
based on the same folklore myths. The Mexicans had an elab-
orate system of festivals derived from the calendar or movements
of the sun; Tonatiuh and Metztli w^ere Mexican nature gods, sun
and moon, man and wife.
The Quiches (Central America) had three great gods, the
Protector of the Sun, or God of the Sun, who was called the ' ' Cre-
ator of Light," a goddess of the Moon, and Haracan (hurricane),
the storm-god. The moon-goddess carried a shell in her hand.
The Incas were the rulers of ancient Peru ; they were believed
to be descended from the sun deity. They and their people wor-
shipped the sun, moon, and evening star, the Spirit of Thunder,
548 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
and the rainbow ; tlioy liad four solar festivals and another at
each new moon; nnlike the Mexicans with their thousands of
human sacrifices annually, the Peruvians very rarely sacrificed
human victims, but on the rare and important occasions when they
made such a sacrifice, the rarest and choicest obtainable victim,
the most beautiful maiden who could be found, was taken as an
offering to the sun.
The "virgins of the sun" were temple attendants who were
consecrated to perpetual chastity, except that the Inca himself
could take any one of them for his owm use ; in other words, they
were the concubines of the Inca. Every now and then, their num-
ber was reduced by sending some home, where they were received
with great honor because they had received the attentions and
caresses of their ruler, who was himself regarded as a god.
The sun and moon were thought to be living beings, by many
nations ; sexually, as already stated, the sun was the male and the
moon the female, man and wife, although the sex was sometimes
reversed, as among the inhabitants of the Andaman Islands, who
consider the sun to be the A\dfe of the moon. This looks logical,
for the wife is usually the more beautiful of the couple.
The Eskimos say that the moon is a girl whose face was soiled
by the sun throwing ashes on her; the Khasias reverse this — the
sun is a girl who soils the face of her male companion, the moon.
The folklore and fairy tales of all lands make mention of the
''man in the moon;" if one looks at the bright full moon, it is
not difficult to make out a profile face of a pretty girl, like the
head on a silver dollar, facing to the left — "the girl in the
moon" — and it does not take much imagination to see the face of
a man kissing the girl on her right cheek.
The Hindus have a queer story about the moon; she is the
bride of the sun, but was faithless, so her husband cut her up
into pieces and usually allows only a part of her to go out or
appear in public, but occasionally he lets her appear in her full
beauty.
Among the Greeks, in early times, the sun was considered
a male deity, but later the sun-worship was somewhat different.
Anaxagoras (500 b.c), of whom we have read before, taught that
the sun was not a deity but a mass of fiery metal, larger than the
Peloponnesus; this is a peninsula of Greece, comprising several
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 549
«
provinces, and is about 2° of latitude (or about 120 miles) in
length and a little less wide.
But some ancient ideas were rather close to the truth ; Eras-
tothenes (born 276 b.c.) calculated that the earth was round and
28,700 miles in circumference (of course he stated the distance in
the equivalent number of stadia, the units then in use). This is
certainly a wonderfully accurate result for so early a date.
In the Greek myths the sun became a fiery chariot* drawn
by horses about the earth once every day ; the horses were guided
by Apollo, the god of the sun. The chariot was sometimes said
to be preceded by the Charites or Graces (Dawn), or by the
Muses.
Apollo was the son of Latona (Leto) and Zeus (Jupiter) ;
his twin sister Diana (or Artemis) was the goddess of the moon.
Apollo had a son by the ocean nymph Clymene, Phaeton by name.
Phaeton begged his father to let him drive the sun chariot around
the world, but he lost control of the horses who ran away, and
driving too near the earth, he scorched it; mountains Avere set on
fire, the rivers and the seas dried up, L^^bia became a desert, and
the Ethiopians were blackened by the heat. Then to save the
earth from destruction, Zeus hurled a thunderbolt at Phaeton and
killed him (Fig. 359).
Anaximander taught that ''the heavenly bodies are wheels
of fire separated off from the fire which encircles the world, and
surrounded by air, and they have breathing holes, certain pipe-
like openings through which the heavenly bodies are seen. For
this reason, too, when the breathing-holes are stopped, eclipses
occur. And the moon appears now to wax and now to Avane be-
cause of the stopping and opening of the outlets."
The story of Jason, dating back before the siege of Troy, is
explained as a sun-myth. The sun was a ram mth a golden fleece,
who flies through the air from the land of the rising to the land
of the setting sun; here the ram is sacrificed and his fleece is
spread out (the golden glory of the sunset) on a tree (the sky of
night with its golden stars) where it is captured by Jason. Jason
sailed in the ship ' ' Argo ; ' ' wherefore Jason was called an argo-
naut. The name suggests the Indian "argha" or sacred yoni-
*Chariots of fire were n. widespread conception. In II Kings ii, 11, we read: "And it came
to pass, * * ♦ that behold, there appeared a chariot of fire, and horses of fire * * * and Elijah
went up in a whirlwind into heaven."
550
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
shaped vessels, and some writers have suggested that the "golden
fleece" referred to the pubic hair.
Jason was an Ionian; the lonians were Avorshippers of the
sun, and great traders and navigators. Jason's trip was a jour-
ney in search of profit (the golden fleece).
Atreus, who lived in Mycenae, possessed a ram with a golden
fleece, which was stolen by his brother. Up to this time the sun
had risen in the west and set in the east; but Zeus now reversed
this and caused the sun to rise in the east. This caused the
brother to repent and bring the ram back to Atreus. Atreus then
Fig. 359.— Phaetou struck dowu by Juiaitei's thunderbolts.
asked him to a banquet at which he served up a dish in which he
had cooked his brother's child. This probably referred to a hu-
man sacrifice. Zeus was so offended that he wrought a great
many trials on Agamemnon, son of Atreus.
Reversing the motion of the sun is from the same stock of
folldore as the story told iii the Bible, Josh, x, 12-13: — "Then
spoke Joshua * * * Sun, stand thou still upon Gibeon, and
thou, moon, in the valley of Ajalon. And the sun stood still and
the moon stayed * * *."
In Polynesia the god Maui compelled the sun to quit his ir-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 551
regular habits and forced him to run on regular schedule and
over a regular route, by giving him a sound thrashing ; ever since
which time the sun has behaved himself.
From sun-worship comes our attitude of prayer in church —
shielding the eyes from the brilliance of the deity; likewise our
method of having the hands of the watch go 'round, following
the motion of the sun; most of our screw^s are cut that way; in
the highlands of Scotland and in England the decanters are
passed around in the same direction; in India it is a sacred rite
at wedding festivals to walk in that way; going around with the
sun works a blessing; going against the sun, a curse (see Josh,
ch. vi).
Erebus (Darkness) and Myx (Night) were brother and sis-
ter, children of Chaos; according to Hesiod Night became the
wife of Erebus; she gave birth to Aether (the upper atmosphere)
and to Day; she was also the mother of the Parcae, of Sleep,
Dreams, Hunger, Fear, Nemesis (Revenge), Strife and Death.
Hekate was a Greek goddess of the moon ; she is simply a va-
riant of Persephone (Proserpina) who as queen of the lower
w^orld is also bed-mate of the sun when he has retired for the
night at sunset; that she was also the wife of Pluto is not incon-
sistent with this statement, for there were and still are people,
whose ideas of hospitality demand that a man should give his
wife to entertain a guest who stays overnight. As companion of
the sun, she became identified with the moon, and confounded
with Diana. Hekate presided over magic arts and spells, and all
incantations were imdertaken at night by the light of the moon.
She was merely the same conceit as Diana or Artemis, but was
worshipped by the more savage tribes of Greece, while Diana was
a more civilized conception.
According to Hesiod, she was a daughter of Asteria, the
starry sky of night. Her symbol, like that of Diana, was a
crescent.
Byzantimn was an ancient Greek city on the Bosphorus, on
the most easterly hill of the seven hills on Avhich stands the mod-
ern Constantinople. During a siege in 390 b.c, by Philip, the
father of Alexander the Great, the Macedonians attempted a sur-
prise attack one dark night ; suddenly the clouds parted, and the
bright moonlight showed the Byzantines their danger in time to
552
SEX AND SEX WOESHIP
repel the attack. Out of gratitude, the Byzantines erected an
altar in honor of the moon, or Diana, or Hekate, and placed a
crescent on their coins.
Constantinople kept the crescent as her symbol, while a Chris-
tian city, and when the Turks conquered it in 1453, they also kept
the crescent as their emblem.
Artemis or Diana was most generally regarded as the moon
7C7W
i'^'^ijr^'
■^SS^j^Sfcs**^ -JiMn., ^JJMitj^ -~JTr £:-
Fig. 360. — The nymph Aiethusa, pur- Fig. 361. — Head-dress represents mar-
sued by Alphaeus, is changed into a spring riage of sun and moon; Karnak te'mple,
of water by Diana. Egypt.
goddess ; she was the twin sister of Apollo ; they were children of
Latona (Leto) and Zeus. In Arcadia she was said to be a she-
bear; which probably meant that she was of the bear-elan (a to-
temistic idea similar to the one which elsewhere said that Athena
was of the goat-clan). Artemis or Diana was a virgin goddess;
ever youthful, innocent, modest and chaste. She Avas the especial
guardian of children and young maidens. Tluis, when Arethusa
was pursued by Alphaeus, she appealed to Diana to save her,
which the goddess did l)y changing the nymph into a fountain of
water. As protectress of girlish purity and chastity, Diana was
also the goddess of prostitutes, like Venus (see page 511).
The moon was Cybele, Astarte, Diana, Hekate, Artemis, Isis,
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 553
etc. The sculpture from a temple at Thebes, Egypt, shows sun and
moon in sexual union or coition, the crude literal conceit of the
sun lying on top of the (crescent) moon (Fig. 301).
Cybele was sometimes called the "Mother of the Gods;" her
cult was brought to Italy by Aeneas, about 360 b.c. The Romans
also worshipped Lucina, whom they confounded with Diana, Ar-
temis and Juno. Cicero tells us that Lucina is implored in pray-
ers during childbirth, because the moon has a great influence on
pregnancy and parturition; this was possibly because experience
showed that most cases of delivery are in the night-time, or under
the rule of the moon.
The chaste Diana, a precursor of the Christian virgin, was
symbolicall}^ represented by the crescent moon, or as a goddess
wearing a crescent as a tiara.
The Angelus in Catholic countries is a ringing of a bell to
call the faithful to recite the angelic salutation. It is rung three
times a day. The prayer is addressed to the virgin Mar}^
A similar call to prayer is found in the Mohammedan re-
ligion; a Muezzin (or Moeddhin) calls the faithful to prayer from
the porch of a high minaret of a mosque. The Muezzins for this
service are generally blind men, because their station overlooks
the roofs of the neighboring houses, where, on hot days or nights,
the women and children sleep naked.
The identification of the moon with the virgin Diana led to
the association of the Virgin Mary with the moon as in the paint-
ing of the "Conception," by Murillo (Fig. 363).
A Greek or Roman matron, when with child, prayed to the
moon, or Artemis, to aid her iri her approaching confinement.
Hekate, or Hera, a moon goddess, also presided over childbirth
in ancient Greece. Many superstitions in regard to the influence
of the moon on fertility persist to this day among agricultural
people ; the moon has an influence on the grape crop, and some will
not trim the vines in the spring when the moon is increasing, but
others will not do so when it is decreasing. A trace of the super-
stition remains, but not a distinct and uniform one. Crops that
mature above ground, like corn, etc., must be planted during the
increasing moon, while crops that mature under ground, like pota-
toes, must be planted during decreasing moon, etc.
. Hekate, the moon, or moon goddess was also the goddess of
witchcraft. Those wdio sleep Avhere the light of the moon could
554
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
fall on them were supposed to become insane, that is, a magic
spell was thrown over them, according to ancient ideas ; from this
belief we derived the word "lunatic." "Tic" is a French Avord
meaning a twitching of the muscles, or a stroke ; as tic douloureux,
neuralgia of the facial nerves and muscles, etc. ; lima is Latin for
moon, therefore luna-tic means a stroke or injury from or by the
moon. This is still generally believed to be true (Fig. 364), and
it is not uncommon in Cuba to see people carrying open umbrellas
over their heads on moonlit nights, to protect themselves against
the injurious effects of the light of the moon.
Fig. 362. — Marriage of suu and moon; Fig. 363. — "The Conception," from a
an aleliemistic representation. painting by Murillo.
The stars were an endless source of observation and specula-
tion to mankind in all times ; and when the planets were conceived
of as gods, it was not difficult to originate similar ideas about the
stars. At a quite early time it was noticed that some stars were
fixed in their places, others changed location ; the latter were sup-
posed to w^ander about in an erratic manner, as is implied in the
Greek word "planetes," our planets.
Among the Greeks Urania (meaning celestial or heavenly)
was a muse who presided over the study of the stars, now called
astronomy; this study, in its present sense, is a comparatively
SEX AND SEX WORSTTIP
555
modern science, as formerly the stars and planets were supposed
to have a controlling influence over the destinies of men, and the
science of reading the horoscope of an individual was called as-
trolog}^ The sky of night with its wonderful array of stars was
a goddess named Asteria. Venus Urania, in her capacity as
heavenly or chaste love, Avas said to he the daughter of Uranus
(Sky) and Light.
The ancient Persians or Iranians, as early as about 600 b.c,
had already formulated a parallelism between the planets Saturn,
Jupiter, Mars, Venus, Sun, Mercury and moon and certain parts
of the human body ; even earlier, the Assyrians had similar ideas ;
and these still are held by some believers in astrology. The plan-
■'—K^j.in.Uiint:,- '
ei^M^!A%^^ - -
»'
Fig. o64. — luflueuce of the moon on the heads of women; from an engraving Ijy Lagniet,
in the XVII Century.
ets and stars were supposed to preside over the destinies of people
and of their rulers, as well as over the destinies of individuals,
and it was the business of the astrologers to forecast horoscopes
or planetary calculations in regard to the newborn and the prob-
able course of their lives. In this connection see illustrations from
Book of Life, Figs. 300, 301, and 302.
The constellations were fantastic combinations of stars sup-
posed to represent various dragons, beasts and other forms.
Xenophanes (about 600 b.c.) was a Greek philosopher who
taught that the sun was a torch and that the stars were candles
which were periodically lit and extinguished. The latter is a
childish idea, but a perfectly natural one. I saAv a little child, after
having seen her elders blow out the candles on her Christmas tree,
556 SEX AND SEX WOKSHIP
try to blow out the stars one night ; and primitive men are merely
children in intellect.
The zodiac was the heaven, wliich l)y its constellations showed
the sun its course and its duties ; the earth was the fixed center
of the universe. It is not pertinent here to go into details about
the zodiacal signs ; suffice it to say that the twelve zodiacal signs
were the ancient '^ Twelve Great Gods."
In India the zodiac had twenty-seven divisions; the equality
of the divisions in the degrees of the heavenly circle they covered
was explained by the theory that the moon ("King Soma") was
obliged to divide his time equally between his wives, the twenty-
seven daughters of Prajapati.
The shapes of some constellations were easily made out, oth-
ers were more difficult to explain. The constellation Ursa major,
the ''Great Bear," the ''Wag-gon," the ''Car of Daniel," which
we know best as the dipper is probably the best known, because it
serves as a guide to finding the North Star. To the Jews it sug-
gested a bier followed by three mourners ; the early Christians
changed this to the bier of Lazarus, followed by Mary, Martha
and Mary the Magdalen as mourners.
Many primitive people believe stars to be men and Avomen;
the Eskimos considered them to lie their ancestors. The Rig-
Veda (India) says that the good in this life become stars after
death.
In Australia the Pleiades were supposed to be a group of
girls; this was also the Greek idea, with tlie addition, how^ever,
that they said that Maia, the oldest and the fairest of the Pleiades,
was the "Good Mother," and they called her also Ma, Cybele, or
Bona Dea (Good Goddess).
Castor and Pollux, in both countries, Greece and Australia,
were said to be young men. Coincidences of this kind are too com-
mon to be due to chance and we are forced to believe that such
ideas were carried from one part of tlie world to another part
during pre-historic times.
The Hyades are five stars which form the head of the con-
stellation "The Bull" (Taurus) said by the Hindus to be a bull
among a herd of cows; they were said to be daughters of Atlas
who were translated to heaven for some pious deed done during
their earthly lives. But enough of detail; only one more thing
need be stated. In the days of Renaud, Descartes, and others
SEX AND SEX WORSTIIP 557
(about 1500-1650 a.d.) it was tauglit that the souls of the dead
woukl 1)6 translated to the stars, where they would meet varying
degrees of happiness according to their deserts. In other words,
it was believed that paradise (TI Cor. xii, 4) was located on the
stars.
PHALLIC FESTIVALS
In early historic tunes marriages of any kind, monogamous
or polygamous, between one man and one or more women, with
the idea that the man content himself with his wife or wives, and
the woman or women with the one man, had not yet become a
general practice; this follows from statements as to the states-
men or rulers who first introduced marriage. For instance, the
Greeks said that Cecrops introduced permanent marriages into
Greece in 2590 b.c, according to the custom of the Egyptians;
this implied that before that time there were no marriages in the
proper sense of the word. It was not considered wrong for a man
to cohabit with any woman who was conveniently available, and
who could be coaxed or forced.
This was the old customary horde or tribal relationship;
no shame or obloquy was attached to coition, so that there w^as
no particular reason why this should not have been done in public.
It is true that some authors, like Sanger, doubt this statement,
but if we accept the theory of evolution as established, mankind
must have gone through such a social state for it was the condi-
tion of the mammal animals from which mankind sprang. Such
conditions, scandalous as they may appear to us, were natural to
primitive people whose ethical sense was still very low and gross,
as were their morals and religions. It was prostitution, as we
now call it, but we attach an obloquy and reproach to this word
which did not apply to the condition in those days.
Keproach and disgrace for such practices was the result of
ages of progress in morals, yet even now marriage is only a
superficial varnish or finish of civilization, and the condition de-
scribed is not yet suppressed; the condition persists in a gross
way in most of our larger cities where regular "houses of prosti-
tution" flourish; or in a more private way, when men keep mis-
tresses; or, as so plainly stated by one of the characters in the
Money-Maker by Irving R. Allen, w^ho compares the advantages
558 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
of his bachelor life with the married life of his friend: "I seek
only the woman whose company I can buy for money. Don't
misunderstand me. That statement is broad enough to cover
everything from the most innocent to the worst thoughts you
have in mind. I purchase only the choicest and most select wares
the city has to otfer. My wooing — a telephone call. The woman
comes into my life only when I am in the mood. And it is all light
and laughter and endeavor to entertain and amuse me. The
darker side of whims and temperament are avoided. For you
see, I pay my price in cash for pleasure. What matter how these
women really feel towards me? What if their sweetness and
kindness is assumed? * * * And when I tire, I pay. The in-
cident is closed, ended, and I am again free to pick and choose,
master of myself."
This describes how life is now! And authors say that such
conditions have existed — alumys, and that they probably will con-
tinue to exist, alivays.
Among the early Jews this condition, Avhich we may for brev-
ity's sake call prostitution, without attaching to it the modern
sense of shame, was common; it was not until the days of Moses
that the sentiment against such practices began to develop ; Moses
forbade the promiscuous cohabitation between Jewish men and
women, but permitted it between the men and the women of the
neighboring tribes, the Midianites, Moabites, etc. Most of the
legislation of Moses Avas based on hygienic grounds, and it ap-
pears that a disease called "issue" in the Bible (probably a form
of gonorrhoea) was a frequent result of these promiscuous con-
nections, which of course must have been indulged in more fre-
quently because plentiful opportunities were offered. So afraid
was Moses of the spread of this disease that he forbade cohabita-
tion within a certain time after menstruation, or the ''custom of
women" as it is called in the Bible (Gen. xxxi, 35).
These conditions were far worse among the Moabites, the
Midianites and other neighbors of the Jews, so that Moses (pre-
tending to speak for God) forbade the Jews to keep alive as
slaves or concubines any women of these tribes when they cap-
tured them in war; only virgin girls were permitted to be en-
slaved but the other women had to be killed.
Conditions in Asia Minor, Syria, Greece, Irania, etc., were
similar. Also in Egypt there were few restraints on proiniscuous
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 559
sexual congress; especially was this true of Egypt, because tlieir
temples abounded in drawings and sculptures of gods and god-
desses showing their genital organs, of phalluses, breasts of god-
desses, and of gods niasturl)ating, gods having seminal emissions,
etc. ; and tlieir clothing was too scant to hide the sexual organs
of the men, tlie lower classes being naked while working and the
wealthy women dressed in diaphanous garments. Temptations
and opportunities beckoned and the moral standards did not re-
strain. No disgrace was attached to being a prostitute, and at
one time girls followed this calling to earn a dowry.
In Greece Lycurgus was the great lawgiver. He organized
the state, and placed a senate of twenty-eight at the head of the
state. Plutarch says that this mystic numl)er was chosen "be-
cause it consists of seven multiplied by four, and is the first per-
fect number after six (see p. 104), being as that is, equal to all
its parts." * * *
"He ordered the maidens to exercise themselves with wres-
tling, running, throwing the quoit, and casting the dart, to the end
that the fruit they conceived might, in strong and healthy bodies,
take firmer root and find better growth. * * * ^nd to the end
that he might take away their over-great tenderness and fear of
exposure to the air * * * he ordered that the young women
should go naked in the processions, as well as the young men,
and dance, too, in that condition, at certain solemn feasts, singing
certain songs, while the young men stood around seeing and hear-
ing them. * * * These public processions of the maidens, and
their appearing naked in their exercises and dancings, were in-
citements to marriage, operating upon the young with the rigor
and certainty, as Plato says, of love, if not of mathematics."
Unmarried persons had certain penalties inflicted on them in
some countries. In Sparta, bachelors were not allowed to see
the gymnastic exercises of the maidens, at which they were naked ;
and on a winter clay they were compelled to march naked around
the market place and sing songs ridiculing their unmarried
condition.
Men were encouraged to lend their A\T.ves to specially well-
formed men, for a time, so that their wives might have perfect
offspring. The houses of prostitution, both in Greece and Rome,
belonged to the state, which stocked them with slaves that could
be enjoyed for a quite small remuneration, yet the profit from
560 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
this ''public utility" was so o-reat that Athens built a magnificent
temple to Venus Castina, the goddess of indecency. Add to all
this that the countries were tropical or subtropical, clothing not
necessary and many of both sexes habitually going naked, the
passions were fiercer in robust bodies, the bonds of matrimony not
very binding, concubinage and prostitution freely permitted and
even encouraged — how can we expect these people to have had
any very high ethical sentiments ! Their religions were tainted
with coarse ethical features, and their ceremonials were often de-
graded and unrefined. Such were the conditions in Egj^pt, Greece,
Rome, etc., where phallic worship was in vogue; we will see the
results in their festivals.
Still further! in Greece it was considered a disgrace for a
young man not to have a lover; "Greek Love," or coitus in ano
was universally practiced.
It was not a disgrace to indulge in Greek Love; it was a re-
proach to be known as not doing so. Even St. Paul makes a
reproach for members of the Christian church to have adopted
this form of love, for he says in Rom. i, 27 : " And likewise also the
men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust
one toward another; men with men working that which is
unseemly. * * *"
Legislators encouraged, rather than otherwise, all natural
and rational use of woman, even if promiscuous, in order to check
the spread of this imnatural vice.
In Rome prostitution was practiced on a very extensive scale ;
it was accepted as a necessity and generally indulged. Men could
not commit adulter}^ except with a married woman; nor could a
wife divorce a husband. The prostitutes were of various ranks;
Sanger tells us that they were graded as follows, but some of
these groups seem a bit doubtful, as the Doris, for example, to
which I find no other reference.
The highest rank of prostitutes were the Delicatae, "kept
women," or mivstresses of wealthy patrons, who corresponded to
the hetaerae of the Greeks. Next came the Famosae, daughters
of respectable families, who followed this calling because they
"needed the money" or because they enjoyed the pleasure; the
Doris {?) were very beautiful women who went naked habitually;
the Lupae, or she-wolves, were poor women who lived in squalid
shelters in the Avoods, under the arches (fornices) of the colos-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
561
seum or toinplcs, in abandoned or ruined buildings, etc., and who
entertained their customers in the alley-ways or even in the less
frequented streets, for there was no street-lighting in those days;
Laurentia, the foster-mother of Renms and Romulus, who saved
their lives when they were aliandoned to die, Avas a lupa or she-
wolf. The Elicariae were bakers' girls or slaves, who were sent
out to sell little cakes of the shapes of the genital organs of men
and women for sacrificial offerings in the temples of Priapus or
Venus, and who carried on the business of prostitution as a side-
line; Bushiariae had their homes in the cemeteries, where they
carried on the business of hiring out as professional mourners,
also with prostitution as a sideline. Copae were the slave serv-
ant-girls, chamber-maids, etc., in taverns and inns, who could al-
Fig.
)(55. — Sign from an inn, found in Pompeii.
ways be hired by the guests as bed-mates for the night; Noctiliae,
or night-walkers, a class resembling our modern street-walkers;
Blitidae, a degraded set of Avomen who were usually drunk on
hliium, a cheap drink or wine; Biabolares, whose fee was a diabo-
lon (about two cents) ; Forariae, country girls who lurked at the
roadsides to pick up a little money; Gallinae, who combined the
trade of prostitute with that of thief; and the Quadrantariae,
whose fee was the smallest copper coin made in Rome (value about
half-a-cent), or a piece of fish, or bread, or a drink.
Then every baker, tavern-keeper, bath-house keeper, barber,
and perfumer kept attendant prostitutes to accommodate their
customers ; no one was obliged to do without the pleasures of sex
562
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
if he could raise the price, which ruled from one-half cent upwards.
Then there were the lupanaria or houses of prostitution, pri-
vate as well as puhlic; the public lupanaria were the property of
the state, stocked with girl-slaves which were at the service of the
public for a very small fee. During the persecutions of the Chris-
tians the pretty girls and women were not killed in the arenas but
were sent to the lupanaria as slaves. The private lupanaria, kept
by bawds, were also stocked with slave-girls, but some houses seem
to have been kept by the women themselves; this sign (Fig. 365)
\j\i-t ^ f'rVJ'^^e^
Fig. 3G6. — Ancient Eoman fruitstand, now in museum in Herculaneum.
of a house of this kind has come down to our time: '^Ad Sorores
Quatiior" — to the Four Sisters. I also show a call-bell of those
days (Fig. 367) from the Museum at Herculaneum.
Respectable Avomen were kept secluded in their homes, except
on holidays, or when they attended the public shows at the Colos-
seum or at the theatres ; these shows were not overly refined, their
comedies often being grossly and coarsely suggestive, the actors
sometimes having monstrous property phalluses fastened in
front; these phalluses Avere usually painted brilliant red, from
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 563
which, iDerhaps, our phrase of ''painting the town red" is a sur-
vival.
AMien women went to the theatres, it was quite "de rigeur"
to wear nothing at all, as we are told by Saint Chrysostoni. More-
over, the slaves of the household were often naked; especially
those who waited on the women of the family. This was sho^\ai in
the dead bodies which were found during the excavations of Her-
culaneum and Pompeii, whicli were destroyed during an eruption
of Mt. Vesuvius.
The public Ijath-houses were palatial institutions, replete with
luxurious appointments. In earlier times the men and women
Fig. 367. — Call-bells, used in ancient Rome ; note hand indicating coition.
bathed in sej^arate establishments, l)ut in later times they bathed
together; and the resj)ectable matrons and girls were no longer
confined to the privacy of their homes ])ut were j)ermitted to
attend the j^ublic plays or the public batlis.
Sanger, in his History of Prostitution describes Roman society
as follows: "Though there were separate sudaria (hot baths) and
tepidaria (luke-warm baths) for the sexes, they could meet freely
in the corridors and chambers. * * * Men and Avomen, girls and
boys, mixed together in a state of perfect nudity, and in such close
proximity that contact could hardly be avoided. * * * Young
men and young women were kept on the premises, partly as bath
attendants, partly as prostitutes. After the bath, the bathers, male
564 SEX AISTD SEX WORSHIP
and female, Avere nihlied dowTi, kneaded and anointed by these
attendants. * * * "\Yonien snhmitted to liave this service per-
formed for them by men. * * *
"At Rome, the walls of respectable houses were covered with
paintings of which one hardly dares in our times to mention the
subjects. Lascivious frescoes and lewd sculptures * * * filled
the halls of the most virtuous Roman citizens and nobles. * * *
Such groups as satyrs and nymphs, Leda and the swan, satyrs
and she-goats were abundant. All of these were daily exposed
to the eyes of children and young girls."
A story is told of a Roman who sued to divorce his wife,
because she had given birth to a mulatto child; her advocate
claimed that the husband himself was to blame, because he had
a fresco in his bedroom of a negro and a white woman cohabiting ;
naturally, by prenatal influence, his wife gave birth to a colored
child! His plan succeeded and the wife was acquitted of the ac-
cusation that she had had connection with a negro !
n* * * religion and law remained to assail a Roman girl.
* * * In every field and in many a square, statues of Priapus
* * * presented themselves to view, often surrounded by pious
matrons in quest of favor from the god. * * * When her mar-
riage approached, the remains of her modesty were effectually
destroyed. Before marriage she was led to the statue of Mutinus,
a nude sitting figure, and made to sit on his knee that the god
might be seen first to have tasted her chastity. ' '
When the couple retired to their room, a chorus of children
sang the epitlialamia, or bridal songs, which, with the most un-
blushing plainness of speech, described what the couple would do
during the night, and in the morning they were greeted A^^th an-
other song stating what they had been doing. In later times, in
Rome, the Epithalamium was sung by girls only; possibly because
the songs were too obscene to be sung by a mixed chorus. And
these nuptial songs, in all their unblushing plainness of expres-
sion, are still a feature at all the Brahmanic weddings in India.
We have now set the stage for the description of the festivals.
When we celebrate our festivals, Easter, Thanksgiving, Christ-
mas, New Years, these festivals, even when of religious origin,
do not imply that all people, or even most people, celebrate them
in an exclusively religious manner. Even those who go to church
on Easter or Christmas forenoons, come home to eat and drink a
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 565
more than usually abundant meal, so that a feast has come to sig-
nify, in one of its senses, a good meal. Then there is visiting, or
going to entertainments, etc. Some years ago when New Year's
calling was still the rage, this festival meant that young men
called at the houses of their women friends, where they were
treated to cake and drinks, so that most of them were drunk by
evening.
Among the ancients the festivals were not much different;
an over-indulgence in the pleasures of every-day life made the
days festival days. In the Bible the word feast implies festival;
the word festival is not used. Originally the feasts were periods
of feasting or eating in Israel and it was not until the times of
Nehemiah that the feasts were made a period of religious observ-
ances. (See page 102).
The Liheralia. — Liber was another name for Bacchus; Libera
for Ariadne, In their honor the feast of the Liberalia was held:
its name implied — ''free from pain or sorrow."
Liber was an old Italian deity who presided over planting
and fructification, and who was later on identified with Bacchus,
the god of drunkenness and debauchery. The festival in his honor
was a spring festival, on the 17th day of March, or planting time.
Varro tells us that on this festival day the phallus, as the symbol
of this god, was carried in procession through the fields and lanes
about Rome to increase the crops. In Lavinium a phallus was
taken to the public market place, Avhere it was crowned with a
garland of flowers by the most respectable and respected matrons
of the city.
In the country the festival was characterized by the grossest
symbolism, and by unrestricted license ; men and women cohabited
along the roadsides in honor of the marriage of Ariadne (Libera)
and Bacchus (Liber), but it was only similar to what was done on
all other days, except that it was done more exuberantly and joy-
ously on these festival days, because work was suspended and
wine Avas more plentifully imbibed.
In the cities the grosser features were less in evidence; the
boj^s who came of age laid aside their boyish garb and assumed
the toga virilis or man's garb. Cakes (phallic and yonic in shape),
honey and oil were offered to the deities in sacrifice.
566 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
The Dionysia
Bacchus was the same as the Greek god Dionysus. In his
honor the festival of the Dionysia was hekl; it was celebrated
most enthusiastically at Attica. Here there were two festivals
annually. The lesser Dionysia was held in December, in the coun-
try, where the vine was cultivated; it was a vintage festival,
accompanied b}^ songs, dances, processions carrying the phallus,
performances by traveling shoA\Tiien, and various rustic sports.
The Greater Dionysia (in Greece; Bacchanalia in Rome) was
a festival held in Athens once in three years. It celebrated the
departure of winter and the reappearance of spring; it is per-
petuated in our Easter festival. The religious part of the festival
consisted in conveying the ancient image of the god, a gigantic
phallus, which had been brought to Athens from Eleutherae, from
the ancient temple of the Lenaeon to another sanctuary, accom-
panied by a chorus of boys and others carrying masks, singing
and rejoicing on the way.
In the early days of Rome only women attended the festivals
of Dionysus, but later on men Avere also admitted and the cere-
monies were held at night instead of in the daytime. The most
important part of the festivals were the ''mysteries;" these were
conducted by secret societies to which the members only were ad-
mitted. The young men were admitted to membership at about
tlie age of twenty years ; men and women congregated at night,
wine flowed in abundance, and the company soon was drunken;
the most outrageous excesses were practiced and the initiates,
youths or maidens, who objected, were murdered rather than have
them complain in public. Even pederasty, men with men, or Les-
bianism, women with women, indulged in whatever aberrations
could be conceived of.
When we remember what occurred daily and publicly in the
bath houses, the imagination can not conceive of all the obscenities
practiced in the privacy of a secret society organized specially
for the purpose of fostering tlie indecencies of phallic orgies. It
would not add anything of value to detail the practices ; we know
from the ancient writers that there was no limit to the vilenesses
that were practiced, and we can realize the intensity of enthusiasm
which must have prevailed in the phallic orgies, from the fact
that St. Paul even reproached the Christians for similar practices.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 567
In recent times various authors have written on Psychopathia
sexualis, describing the sexual aberrations and perversions as
insanities; this book is not intended as a treatise on tribadism,
sadism, etc., but it may be stated that practically all our modern
perversions are deliberate practices, survivals of the old phallic
"mysteries."
Ancient writers tell us that these mysteries w^ere largely or-
ganized for criminal purposes; that murders were planned and
executed, mils forged, perjuries arranged for, poisons prepared
and dispensed, and so on. AVriters on Phallic worship are fond
of dwelling with glowing words on the purity of the ideas under-
lying this Avorship; of the sacredness attached to the objects ex-
liibited, the phalli and yoni, both of the gods and the devotees.
But truth demands the statement that the practices at the Liber-
alia and the Saturnalia were contrary to public welfare and that
the authorities often attempted to suppress them, while on the
other hand the names and histories of the emperors who encour-
aged these festivals, Nero, . Caligula, Tiberius, etc., speak plainly
enough for the real nature of these orgies. We may imagine that
originally the ideas underlying the Avorship of the phallus may
have. been pure, but it is too much of a strain on our credulity to
belicA^e that the "nwsteries" of Dionysus were considered "pure"
and "divine" by any of the participants in the revelries, Avhich
lasted for one month at La\anium, during Avhich time all, even the
otherAvise sedate and noble Eoman ladies, gaA^e themseh^es up to
sexual pleasures and debauchery of eA^ery kind. These festivals
were simply the same thing that occurred in the bath houses daily,
but the practices were done in public, on the streets, in the tem-
ples, before the altars of the gods and goddesses, by nearly every-
body, old and young, male and female, citizens and strangers. It
AA^as practically a mardi gras season, and the "toAvii Avas Avide
open."
Soon after the Festival in honor of Liber, or Dionysus, oc-
curred the festiA^al in honor of Venus, Avhen the same indulgences
prevailed. From this feast Ave liaA^e our Avord " A^eneration, "
Avhich originally meant an act of Avorship of Venus, accompanied
by all the rites mentioned above. During this festival the Eoman
women formed a procession and Avent to the Quirinal, Avhere Avas
kept a gigantic phallus ; they conveyed this symbol of god to the
temple of Venus Ericyna, Avhere it Avas formally presented to the
568 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
goddess, represented in tlie temple by a tigure of a gigantic yoni.
After bringing these two s^aiibols together, with the religious cere-
monies attached thereto, the women escorted the phallus back to
the Quirinal.
The Floralia. — A festival in honor of Flora, the goddess of
flowers. "We have already learned that she had been a prosti-
tute of the Delicatae rank, who became enormously rich from her
earnings. Her festival Avas of the same general character as the
others already described; only more so; it was the most licentious
of all the festivals. On this occasion the prostitutes of Kome
went naked in the streets and the Roman matrons and maidens
enjoyed the privileges of the festivals by doing likewise.
The Eleusinian Mysteries. — A secret society formed to ex-
plain the mysteries of death and reproduction; the festival at
which the myth of Demeter and her daughter Proserpina, or Cora,
was celebrated. The Greek goddess Demeter and the Roman god-
dess Ceres, were identical; the goddess of the crops of the field.
Proserpina was taken by Pluto, God of the Underworld, and
carried to Hades, where Pluto established her as his queen. Her
mother, Demeter, sought her everyA\diere, and finalh^ prevailed
on Zeus to compel Pluto to return her to earth. Zeus agreed to
this but Avith a limitation ; Proserpina was to spend half the year
in Hades and half the year on earth.
When she was in Hades, the fields failed to yield crops and
the flocks to yield increase ; it was Avinter. When she returned to
earth, all nature became rejuvenated, animals mated and seeds
sprouted; it was spring and summer. This was duly celebrated
at the festival called the Eleusinian mysteries, possibly the most
secret and most sacred of all Greek and Roman festivals. But
little of the details of this festival is known, but it Avas similar
in its rites to the other festivals.
The story of Demeter 's trip to Hades in search of her daugh-
ter recalls to mind the Assyrian story of Ishtar's trip to Hades
(p. 440), and Avas simply a A^ariant of the same folklore myth. It
Avas also used in connection Avith Jesus Avho is said to liave gone
to hell (the underworld) for three days.
During a festival in honor of Demeter called Thesmyphoria,
the method of celebrating Avas different to the rites of the other
festivals. The A\dves refused to cohabit Avith their husbands for
a certain length of time in honor of this goddess. Conjugal coi-
SEX Als^D SEX WORSHIP 569
tion was suspended for a time. This pi'obahly inconvenienced the
husbands very little, as other women were not obliged to abstain
from sexual complaisance to the desires of men.
Tlie Lnpercalia. — This was one of the greatest of the Roman
festivals. The Lupercal was a grotto on the Palatine Hill, which
was sacred to Lupercus, the Lycean god Pan. In honor of this
god the feast of the Lupercalia was celebrated in the last month
of the year — February. Lupercus was a god who drove or kept
away the wolves, therefore a protector of the flocks. In his ca-
pacity of Pan he presided over the increase in flocks.
The priests who officiated as celebrants at the altars of this
god on his festival day were called Luperci {Lupercus, i, m. in
the singular) ; they offered a goat and a dog, the goat from the
flocks, the dog a guardian of the flocks ; in archaic times human
beings (possibly some shepherds) were offered instead of the
dog; in memory of this after the sacrifice two young men were
led to the altar, where their foreheads were smeared with blood
from a bloody sword, after which the blood was wiped off with a
cloth dipped in milk, and then, according to the ritual the two
young men had to laugh. A feast followed, after which the priests
cut thongs from the hide of the sacrificial animals, which were
fashioned into Avhips. The priests, or Luperci, then divided into
two bands which ran around the walls of the Old Palatine city,
striking the people who crowded near to be whipped. Especially
was this done by the Avomen who Avere barren, because it was be-
lieved that a stroke on their bare posteriors with one of these
thongs would ''open their Avombs," Avherefore the Avomen thronged
to the city Avails perfectly naked, that they might receiA^ e the full
benefit of the blessings conferred by a bloAv at the hands of the
priests, the Luperci, Avho Avere also naked. The thongs were called
''februa," the festival "Februatio," and the day "dies fehru-
atus;" from these Avords the month Avas called Fehruarius, the
last month of the A'ear in earh" Roman times but afterAvards the
second month, the same as our February.
The festival surA'iA^es, in a Avay, in certain rural districts in
Europe, Avhere on HalloAveen cA^e the domestic animals as Avell as
the Avomen of the household are Avhipped on their bare genitals
by the men, to prevent them from being sterile. The conjugal
Avhippings, especially in Russia, are also surA^A^als of this same
superstition.
570 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
The Agrionia were festivals among the Boeotians in honor
of Dionysus, and were solemnized at night, by women and the
priests only.
Quintillian (35-96 a.d.) wrote a treatise on Education. He
writes: "Would that we ourselves did not corrupt the morals of
our children! * * * We are delighted if they utter anything
immodest. * * * Nor is this wonderful ; we have taught them ;
they have heard such language from ourselves. They see our
mistresses, our }nale objects of affection; every dining room rings
with impure songs; things shameful to he told are objects of
sight. From such practices spring habit and afterwards nature."
The growing generation was deliberately trained to all these
indecencies. The houses of prostitution had signs out, and their
ornaments were of grossly phallic character; the plays on the
stages were immodest and the ladies attended the performances
naked; their lamps were phallic; their jewelry likewise; and no
idea of religion was connected with these things, but they were
purely and plainly immoral and depraved.
The promiscuous interspersing of such terms as "rever-
ently," "devoutly," "pious," "divine," etc., in describing the
sexual practices indulged in l)y devotees at the phallic festivals,
as is done by most of the authors on the subject, does not make
the acts such.
Campbell, in his work on Phallic Worship says that "Bacchic
groups, including seemingly lascivious scenes on vases, lamps, etc.,
are of religious significance and therefore not indecent."
Quintillian, who lived in those days, was not a Christian; he
spoke from no religious prejudice when he condemned these prac-
tices as shown above. And the many wall-paintings found in
Herculaneum and Pompeii, representing in the bed-rooms and
bathrooms of the most elegant homes scenes of indescribable leAvd-
ness and licentiousness, need only to be seen, to convince any-
one that they had no underlying motive of religion.
CONCERNING THE BACCHANALIA
In 186 B.C. the Senate made inquiries.
Livy reported as follows: "A Greek of mean condition came
first, into Etruria * * * a low operator in sacrifices, and a
soothsayer ; * * * a priest of secret and nocturnal rites. These
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 571
mysteries were, at first, imparted to a few, hut afterwards com-
municated to great nnml)ers, l)otli men and women. To their re-
ligious performances were added the pleasures of wine and feast-
ing, to allure a greater number of proselytes. When wine, las-
civious discourse, night, and the intercourse of the sexes had
extinguished every sentiment of modesty, then debaucheries of
every kind began to be practiced, as every person found at hand
that sort of enjoyment to which he was disposed by the passion
predominant in his nature. Nor were they confined to one spe-
cies of vice — the promiscuous intercourse of free-born men and
women; but from this storehouse of villainy proceeded false wit-
nesses, counterfeit seals, false evidences, and pretended discov-
eries. From the same j)lace, too, proceeded poison and secret
murders, so that in some cases not even the bodies could be found
for burial. Many of their audacious deeds were brought about
by treacherj^, but most of them by force; it served to conceal the
violence, that, on account of the loud shouting, and the noise of
drums and cymbals, none of the cries uttered by the person suffer-
ing violence or murder could be heard abroad.
''The infection of this mischief, like that from the contagion
of disease, spread from Etruria to Rome; where the size of the
city affording greater room for such evils, and more means of
concealment, cloaked it at first ; but information of it was at length
brought to the consul, Postumius, principally in the following
manner, Publius Aebutius * * * ^vas left an orphan * * *
and was brought up by his mother Duronia and his stepfather
Titus Sempronius Rutilus. * * * Sempronius, having man-
aged the guardianship in such a manner that he could not give
an account of the property, wished that his ward should be made
away with. * * * The Bacchanalian rites were the only way
to effect the ruin of the youth."
His mother pretended that she had made a vow to introduce
him among the Bacchanalians ; but a freed woman, a noted courte-
san, at one time a slave, warned the young man : " ' May the gods
will more favorable ! ' affirming that ' it would be better, both for
him and her, to lose their lives than that he should do such a
thing;' she then imprecated curses, vengeance, and destruction
on the head of those wdio advised him to such a step. The young
man, surprised both at her expressions and at the violence of her
alarm, bid her restrain from curses for it was his mother who
572 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
ordered him to do so, with the approbation of his step-father.'
' Then, ' said she, ' your step-father * * * is in haste to destroy
your chastity, your character, your hopes and your life.' "
She then explained to him, that ''when a slave, she had gone
into that place of worship as an attendant on her mistress * * *
but that, since she had obtained her liberty, she had never once
gone near it; that she knew it to be a receptacle for all kinds of
debaucheries ; that it was well known that for two years past, no
one older than twenty had been initiated there. When any person
was introduced he was delivered as a victim to the priests, who
led him away to a place resounding with shouts, the sounds of
music, and the beating of cjanbals and drums, lest his cries, while
suffering violence, should be heard abroad."
The young man refused to join and his mother and step-
father drove him from their home; he complained to his Aunt
Aebutia, and by her advice gave information to the consul Pos-
tumius. ' '
The consul set inquiries afoot, brought the matter before the
Senate, and the Senate ''published a reward for any discoverer
who should bring any of the guilty before them, or give informa-
tion against the absent. * * * Great terror spread throughout
the city. * * * Informations Avere lodged against many, some
of whom, both men and women, put themselves to death. * * *
Above seven thousand men and women are said to have taken the
oath of the association."
The upshot was, that the Senate published a decree — "that
no Bacchanalian rites should be celebrated in Rome or in Italy."
"Those Avho had forcibly committed personal defilements or
murders, or were stained with the guilt of false evidence, coun-
terfeit seals, forged wills, or other frauds, all these were punished
with death. A greater number were executed than thro^\^l into
prison ; indeed, the multitude of men and women who suffered in
both ways, was very considerable.
"A charge was then given to demolish all the places where
the Bacchanalians had held their meetings."
The above extracts from a report by Livy place a different
light on the Bacchanalia in Rome than is usually related in regard
to them. In Rome, at least, they were simply a band or secret
society organized for debauchery and crime, and had no more to
do with religion, than have the naked parades of the Donkhobors
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 573
in Canada, or the orgies of the Skopsi in Russia, or than had the
Inquisition in Spain with the religion of the gentle Jesus.
Tacitus (fl. about the end of the First Century a.d.) described
a secular feast as follows: ''Remarkable above all others for dis-
play of luxury and the noise it made in the world, was the feast
given by Tigellinus, which I will describe by way of specimen,
that I may not have to repeat the instances of similar prodigality.
For this purpose, he built, in the lake of Agrippa, a raft which
supported the banquet, which was moved to and fro by other ves-
sels, drawing it after them ; the vessels were striped with gold
and ivory, and rowed by bands of pathics (lascivious men and
women) who were ranged according to their age, and accomplish-
ments in the science of debauchery. He had procured fowl and
venison from remote regions, with sea-fish even from the ocean;
upon the margin of the lake were erected brothels, filled with
ladies of distinction; over against them naked harlots were ex-
posed to view; now, were beheld obscene gestures and motions;
and as soon as darkness came on, all the neighboring groves and
circumjacent dwellings resounded with music, and glared with
lights. Nero wallowed in all sorts of defilements, lawful and un-
lawful; and seemed to leave no atrocity which could add to his
pollution, till a few days afterward, he married, as a woman, one
of his contaminated herd named Pythagoras with all the solem-
nities of wedlock; the Roman emperor put on the nuptial veil;
the augurs, the portion, the bridal bed, the nuptial torches, were
all seen ; in fine, every thing exposed to view which, even in a
female, is covered by the night." (Then followed the burning of
Rome.) "Not all the atonements Avhich could be presented to
the gods, availed to relieve Nero from the infamy of being be-
lieved to have ordered the conflagration. Hence, to suppress the
rumor, he falsely charged the guilt, and punished Avith the most
exquisite tortures, the persons commonly called Christians, who
were hated for their enormities. * * * ^^^^i jj-^ their deaths
they were also made the subject of sport, for they were covered
with the hides of wild beasts and worried to death by dogs, or
nailed to crosses or set fire to, and when day declined, burned to
serve for nocturnal lights."
It appears then, that the fornicating festivals of the an-
cients were not really religious in their rites, however "divine"
the original underlying ideas may have been. The ceremonial
574 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
rites were recognized as corrupt, and the prophets of Israel, the
philosophers of the Pagans, the "sons of God" everywhere de-
nounced them and tried to stop them. Ezekiel said : ' ' Thou hast
taken thy fair jewels of my gold and of my silver which I had given
thee and madest to thyself images of men, and didst commit Avhore-
dom with them" (xvi, 17). And the kings and prophets often had
the priests of Baal and the worshippers of Baal put to death.
Likewise in Rome, when the iniquities of the Bacchanalia,
etc., were introduced, the authorities attempted to suppress these
practices; but the "Mysteries" were secret societies and what
they did was not publicly known; when it finally did become
kno"v\Ti, they were promptly suppressed.
To represent these practices as the authorized ceremonials
of religion, as so many authors on this subject seem fond of do-
ing, is misleading; it would be as if we blamed the Christian re-
ligion for the sexual perversions St. Paul tells us existed in the
churches at Corinth; or as if we blamed the church for the cele-
brated "Disciplina gynopygica" (whipping of women's buttocks)
in Bruges, Belgium, about 1550-1560 a.d., when Cornelius, a priest,
made the women who came to him to confession, undress naked,
and then whipped them on their bare posteriors. This he assured
them, was conducive to their eternal salvation. AVe have learned
something about the odd beliefs of flagellation on the bare poste-
riors in previous pages, and Cornelius may simply have revived
some of these strange beliefs, but he is generally credited with
an erotic desire to see this beautiful feature of Avomen's bodies;
possibly lie had learned something about the adoration of the
buttocks from the writings of Petronius.
That simple, proper coition may have had a religious signifi-
cance in an age when sexual functions were considered a sacred
mystery, is not only possible but even probable, for it is a per-
fectly proper and laudable act in the privacy of the connubial
chamber; but that the excesses and the sexual perversions were
religious in character may well be doubted; these were due to
the sinful lusts of the people, and were encouraged by their licen-
tious and libidinous modes of living, hy schools that taught them,
and by the art in the public and private bath-houses.
In India there are even yet festivals of this kind. The Ben-
galese are worshippers of the Saktis ; eight, nine or eleven couples
meet at midnight ; they set up a nude woman, profusely bejeweled
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 575
and worship and adore her with strange rites wliile they indulge
in orgiastic ceremonies. This is spoken of as Tantric ivorship
(taught in the Tantras).
And human nature seems to be the same everywhere; pos-
sibly our "stag parties" with the dancers "dressed in a string
of beads around the waist" are traces or survivals of the festivals
of old, still persisting.
WATER
AVe have already learned that water was regarded as a sa-
cred feminine element from which life was produced. This was
a very logical and simple conclusion due to the observation that
where there was no water, there was a desert A\ithout life; but
where there was water there was also vegetation and animal life.
In a number of Cosmogonies the male principle impregnates
an "abyss of water" which then gives birth to living forms. It
is not necessary to repeat the details — we remind only of the
Bible: — Gen. i, 2: "The Spirit of God moved upon the face of
the waters. * * *" Gen. i, 20: "And God said, Let the wa-
ters bring forth abundantly the moving creature that hath
life. * * *"
This idea was part of the most primitive folklore, and was
adopted into their mythologies by many people. In Greek myths,
Oceanus was a god who begat Avith Tethys a number of children,
the rivers ; this was a nature myth explaining how by the evapora-
tion of water from the ocean clouds were formed, from which
rain was precipitated and the earth was fertilized and rivers were
formed.
Tethys was the greatest of the Greek sea-deities ; she was the
daughter of Uranus and Terra, and became the wife of Oceanus.
By this union she became the mother of the chief rivers of the
world. But let Hesiod tell us of her children:
"But Tethys to Oceanus bare eddying rivers, Nile and Al-
pheus, and deep-eddying Eridanus, Strymon and Maeander, and
Izter of-fair-stream, Phasis, Khesus, and Achilous with silvery-
tide, Nessus and Rho.dius, Haliacmon and Heptaporus, Graniaus,
Aesepus, and divine Simois, Peneus, Hermus, and pleasant-flowing
Caicus; and vast Sangarius, Ladon, Parthenius, Evenus, and Ar-
descus and divine Scamander. And she bare a sacred race of
576 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
daughters, who with King Apollo and the rivers all earth over
bring up men to manhood * * * namely Pitho, Admete, lanthe,
Electra, Doris and Prymus, and goddess-like Urania, Hippo and
Chauene, Rhodia, and Callirhoe, Zeuxo, and Clytia, Idya and
Pasithoe, Plexaure, Galaxaure, lovely Dione, Melobosis, and Thos,
and fair Polydora, and Circeis in nature amiable, and bright-eyed
Pluto, Perseis, lanira, Acaste, and Xanthe, and winsome Petraea,
Menesto, and Europa, Metis, Eurymone, and saffron-robed Tel-
esto. Crenels, Asia as well as desire-kindling Calypso, Eudora,
Tyche, Amphiro, and Ocyroe, and Styx, who truly is eldest of
them all.
*'Now these were born eldest daughters of Oeeanus and
Teth^^s ; there are, however, many others also ; for thrice a thou-
sand are the tapering-ankled Ocean-nymphs, who truly spreading
far and near, bright children of the gods, haunt everywhere alike
earth and the depths of the lake."
The rivers became gods, or became the dwelling places of
gods. This idea led to water worship. The river-god, or the river
personified, came to be worshipped.
The River Styx, a river of Hades or the Underworld, was con-
sidered a very sacred stream, by which the gods swore their most
solemn oaths. Its waters were poisonous, which idea was possibly
a survival of the ordeals by drinking poison, or "bitter water."
Such ordeal waters are also mentioned in the Bible: "And this
water that causeth the curse shall go into thy bowels, to make thy
belly to swell and thy thighs to rot" * * * (Num. v, 22).
The water of the Styx also conferred invulnerability ; Achilles
had been dipped into the Styx when he w^as an infant and could
not be wounded ; but where he had been held by one heel the waters
did not touch him, and before the city of Troy he was killed by an
arrow striking him in the heel.
The River Nile Avas a sacred deity because on the overflow
of this river over the land depended the fertility or sterility of
the fields for each year; to invoke the goodmll of this deity a
maiden was sacrificed annually in ancient times.
When this river rose to a certain height, as shown by the
"nilometers," the god fertilized the earth and produced great
crops. The Nile was considered to be an image of heaven; it
took its source in heaven (the high mountains far south of Egypt).
The Egyptians mourned because the sacred river was devoured
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 577
(absorbed) by the earth and was finally swallowed by the sea;
they therefore hated the sea, and considered it to be the outcast
of the earth.
The Ganges River is a sacred river of India. Pions people
make pilgrimages to it and bathe in its waters to wash away their
sins. Dying people are brought to its shores to be consigned to
its current when they die at one of the temple sites along its banks,
because then their bodies will be carried straight to heaven. Or
they are cremated at one of the ''burning ghats" and their ashes
are stre^Ti on the Avaters, the effect being the same.
Hindu women have bathed for ages, as they do today, in the
streams and tanks that are used also by the men. They bathe at
the same hours, stark naked as are the men, for when they are thus
seen, their sins are forgiven; when only partially undressed, only
a part of their sins are washed away.
We know the sacredness of the River Jordan to the Chris-
tians; it became so because Christ was baptized in this stream.
Water of the Jordan is sometimes brought to Christian lands to
be used for the baptism of princes or important personages. Oc-
casionally, at some of the world fairs, small vials said to be filled
with water from the Jordan, have been sold to the credulous, so
that they might have their children baptized in the waters of the
same stream in which the Savior was baptized.
There are various views held in the Christian church about the
proper way of baptizing ; whether the ones to be baptized should be
infants or adults ; whether baptism should be by immersion or by
''sprinkling;" at one time, and even now in the Greek Catholic
church, those about to be baptized, had to be naked; at baptisms,
sponsors were permitted or even required. The Church of Eng-
land decreed that for every male child there shall be two god-
fathers and one godmother (polyandry!) ; for every female child
two godmothers and one godfather (polygamy?). The Council
of Trent permitted one godfather or one godmother, or at most
two and then of different sex (monogamy!) ; but monks and nuns
could not act as sponsors, as the names ^^ god-father" or "god-
inother" would have been reflections on their vows of chastity.
It is in view of this ruling and the reason given therefor that the
queries are inserted above, regarding polyandry, polygamy and
monogamy. Baptism is a rite of the Christian church which has
taken the place of circumcision among the Jews. It was practiced
578 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
before the days of Jesiis, who was himself baptized. It exerted a
very wonderful effect, according to St. Paul: "For as many of
you as have been baptized into Christ, have put on Christ. There
is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is
neither male nor female; for ye are all one in Christ Jesus" (Gal.
iii, 27-28).
But the equality of "male and female" has not been carried
out in practice; a baptized woman is still considered inferior to
man by many of the believers in orthodox Christianity; in fact,
the equality of women with men and the wiping out of sex dif-
ference in social, political, and religious matters has its greatest
advocates among unitarians and the unorthodox, or agnostics.
The rivers and seas were peopled by water-sprites or water-
nymphs, called Naiads by the Greeks ; nymphs were supposed to
reside in all waters, creeks, rivers, lakes, springs, etc. Then there
w^ere the mermaids, sirens and other fabulous beings like the
Lorelei among the Teutons; they claimed the people who were
drowned as their own, and avenged themselves on those who tried
to save drowning persons, by dro^vning the would-be rescuers also.
Then there was also the idea that certain waters were
holy — "holy water." The use of holy water can be traced back
to Jewish and Pagan practices, particularly Thibetan or Roman,
antedating the introduction of Christianity by centuries. Exod.
XXX, 18 et seq. commands the use of holy water for the use of
priests in Jewish temples; for an extensive account of "holy wa-
ters" read also the forty-seventh chapter of the Book of Ezekiel.
Holy water was also used in India, Thibet, Rome, etc. In the Cath-
olic church salt is added to the holy Avater, but it is not definitely
knoAvn when this was first required; the use of salt for sacrifices
or holy water is old, however; Lev. ii, 13, for instance, directs
"with all thy offerings thou shalt offer salt;" its use for adding
to holy water or for sacramental purposes was already mentioned
in the Iliad, and by Aristophanes and Plutarch.
When a Roman entered a temple he dipped his hand in a vase
with holy or consecrated water which stood at the door. He then
"adored" the gods or goddesses in whose temple he Avas, by kiss-
ing his hand and then waving it toAvard them ("throAving a kiss") ;
or in the adoratio Immilis he knelt or prostrated himself before
the image of the deity.
This old Roman custom is preserved in the Roman Catholic
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
579
church. Whether any idea of sex is associated with the use of
holy water is somewhat doubtful, unless we see in the use of a
font shaped like a shell a survival of an "argha" or East Indian
yoni vessel, associating the feminine with holy water. In Persia
"holy water" or nirang is the urine of cows, therefore associated
distinctly with the feminine.
In the days of Dale, as recorded in his Pharmacologia, the
excrements and urines of various animals and of humans Avere
used as medicines; urine is even now taken as a remedy in ob-
stinate malarial fevers by the lower classes, but I have not found
this use of it accompanied by any preference as to the sex of the
Fig. 368. — King Plieroii, from Welt-Gemaelde Gallerie, 1740.
person from whom it was derived. In the cases where I have met
with the use of urine as a medicine each person took his or her
owTi urine.
In an encyclopedic history of the world, published in 1740, I
found the following interesting account of water (urine) as a rem-
edy: "Pheron, an Egyptian king (successor of Sesostris, fl. about
2300 B.C.), was becoming blind; the oracle ordered him to sleep
"with a Avoman Avho had not slept with any man except her oa\ti hus-
band (others sav, to Avash his CA^es Avith the urine of such a
Avoman) ; he sent for a great number of Egyptian Avomen, but his
eyes did not get Avell until after he had slept Avith his gardener's
A^ife, and Avashed his eyes Avith her urine. From this he concluded
that she Avas the only faithful AAdfe, and he kept her for himself
as queen. All the others he had slept Avith, he concluded were
Avhores, and he had them luirned aliA^e" (Fig. 368).
580 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Whether this stor}^ implies that there is a special virtue in
woman's nrine, I leave to the judgment of my readers.
IS THERE AN IMMORTAL SOUL?
The belief in a soul is an element of very primitive animistic
religions. It was the result of considering inanimate bodies to be
endowed with properties similar to our own. The soul was con-
ceived as a "life principle" even in medical schools up to seventy
years ago. The chemistry of the carbon compounds was called
"organic chemistry" and the substances considered "organic"
were supposed to be the result of this "life principle" and that
they could be formed in no other way. Every thing that lived,
plants and animals as well as man, had in it something of what
was conceived as soul.
A savage saw a dead friend in his dreams, and he was sure
he had seen his soul ; and ' ' soul ' ' and ' ' ghost ' ' came to mean the
same thing in animistic religions. From these primitive ideas
developed a system of theories about souls, even up to the highest
ideas held by the most enlightened people. In quite early religions
the souls were called anima (breath), umbra (shadow), wianes (the
deified souls of the departed), shades, spirits, etc., and they were
supposed to be formed of an exceedingly attenuated substance;
some of the ancients thought they were composed of aether which
meant atmosphere of the upper realms of the sky, not the chemical
substance we now call ether, but more nearly like our ether of
space.
Cicero wrote: "There is naturally in our minds a certain in-
satiable desire to know the truth; and the very region where we
shall arrive, as it gives us a more intuitive and easy knowledge
of celestial things, will raise our desire after knowledge. For it
was this beauty of the heavens, as seen even here upon earth, which
gave birth to that national and hereditary philosophy (as Theo-
phrastus calls it) which was thus excited to a desire of knowl-
edge." * * *
"Our bodies, being compounded of the earthy class of prin-
ciples, grow warm by the heat of the soul. * * *
"AVe may add that the soul can the more easily escape from
this air, which I have often named, and break through it ; because
nothing is swifter than tlie soul; no swiftness is comparable to
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 581
the swiftness of the sonl; which, should it remain uncorrupt and
without alteration, must necessarily be carried on with such ve-
locity as to penetrate and divide all this atmosphere, where
clouds and rain and winds are formed ; which, in consequence of
the exhalations from the earth, is moist and dark; but when the
soul has once got above this region, and falls in with, and recog-
nizes a nature like its own, it then rests upon fires composed of a
combination of thin air and a moderate solar heat, and does not
aim at any higher flight. For then, after it has attained a light-
ness and heat resembling its own, it moves no more, but remains
steady, being balanced, as it were, between two equal weights."
After the time of Origen (about 200 a.d.), the idea of attenu-
ated materiality became changed to an idea of immateriality, or
of a spiritual nature.
''Immortality of the soul is a speculative idea, inquiry into
which is warranted, although theoretically neither demonstrable
nor comprehensible," said Kant.
*'It is not impossible that there may be a future existence.
Our happiness or misery depends upon our own actions here ; ex-
perience teaches us that this will likely apply to a future life
also," said Butler.
The belief that man consists of bod^^, mind and soul was al-
ready held by Plato. It is a very general belief now. A spiritual-
istic theory is that man is not only material as to body, and to
some extent as to mind, but also spiritual (or non-material) as
to soul.
A materialistic view is that man is a machine which in action,
performs the various functions for which it is adapted; it lives,
moves, feels and thinks, and when the machine runs down and
stops, the action also stops. Descartes, Moleschott, Buechner,
Vogt, and others believed thus. As one of my teachers in the med-
ical school said: ''Man is a hothouse; food is the fuel, and the ex-
crements are the ashes; thought is a product or excretion of the
brain, just as urine is a product of the kidneys." Materialistic
ideas are not over-popular now, and Scientists are content to be
agnostics rather.
Both the views, materialistic and spiritualistic, have many
illustrious adherents ; so also has the agnostic view many disciples.
Homer (1000 b.c.) represents Odysseus as having an inter -
582 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
view with the shades in Hades (or hell) ; and he also describes
Elysium (or Paradise). The belief in the immortality of the soul
is therefore very old.
In other passages of Homer's writings Hades is described as
a dreary place where the souls lie in a lethargy, not dead, but
neither conscious. They merely lie about as an unconscious man
lies after a paralj^tic stroke; surely not a very desirable ''immor-
tality."
Isocrates (born 436 b.c.) said: ''When Ceres (Demeter) wan-
dered from one country to another in quest of her daughter, * * *
she received in Attica the most favorable treatment. * * * The
Goddess was not ungrateful for such favors, but in return con-
ferred on our ancestors the two most valuable presents Avhich
either Heaven can bestow or mankind can receive * * * the
practice of agriculture * * * and the knowledge of those sa-
cred mysteries * * * which inspire them with the pleasing
hopes of a happy immortality."
Herodotus tells us that the idea of a life hereafter, or immor-
tality, "was first taught by the Egyptians. Their temple sculptures
illustrated their ideas on this subject; observing that the scara-
baeus insect apparently was produced from dung, they deified it
as the source of immortality. From this insect immortality was
transmitted to the gods, indicated by dotted lines from the insect
to the mouth of the god, since life or breath enters by the mouth ;
and from the phallus of the god (the source of life) dotted lines
pass to the mouths of mortals ; this illustration is plentiful in the
temple of Karnak. In all reverence the ancient Egyptians meant
by this to convey the same idea as is expressed in our hymn :
"Praise God from whom all blessings flow."
Empedokles (fl. 445 b.c.) quotes Socrates: "Then, beyond
question, the soul is immortal and imperishable, and our souls
will truly exist in another world."
Herakleitos (fl. 500 b.c.) wrote: "There aAvait men when they
die such things as they look not for nor dream of."
On the other hand, Lucretius (born 98 b.c.) said: "But if
perchance the soul, in the oimi'ion of any, is to be accounted im-
mortal * * * the notion of those ivho thinli thus is evidently
far removed from just reasoning. For besides that it sickens
from diseases of the body, there often happens something to
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 583
trouble it concerning future events, and keep it disquieted in fear
and harass it with cares ; while remorse for faults, from past acts
wickedly and fooUslilij committed, torments and distresses it.
Join to these afflictions the insanity peculiar to the mind, and the
oblivion of all thino's; and add, besides, that it is often sunk into
the black waves of lethargy." * * *
"How then can soids he possessed of the five senses when
all the organs of those senses have perished?"
Cicero (born 105 b.c.) discusses immortality at length, quot-
ing the opinions of many, but not expressing himself distinctly as
believing or disbelieving, so that it almost seems as if he was what
we now term an agnostic.
Plato (429-347 b.c.) said that the pre-existence and the immor-
tality of the soul were traditional beliefs ; and he quotes the opin-
ions of Socrates to this effect. He himself tried to prove the
affirmative on both these propositions. He quotes Socrates, to
this effect: "Death is merely the parting of body and soul.
"The soul, if pure, departs to the invisible world, but if
tainted by communion with the body she lingers hovering near
the earth and is afterwards born into the likeness of some lower
form. That which true philosophy has purified alone rises ulti-
mately to the gods.
"The soul is the inseparable vehicle of life, and therefore, by
parity of reasoning, the soul can not admit of death, but is im-
mortal and imperishable.
"When the original particles wear out, and the bonds of soul
and body in the marrow give w^ay, the soul escapes delightedly
and flies away. This is the painless death of natural decay."
The Stoics were founded by Zeno, about the end of the Fourth
Century b.c. ; they were a sect who denied the existence of a soul,
and of course, denied an existence after death.
The Hindus believed that the souls were alike, emanating
from the same ultimate spiritual essence {parama-hrahman) , "as
sparks arise from the fire," and destined to return thither.
In the Zoroastrian religion Ahura (The Good) and Ahriman
(The Bad) send out their spirits to fight for the souls of mankind.
Man takes part in the conflict by all his life and activity in this
world. By a true confession of faith, by good deeds, by keeping
his mind and body pure, he aids Ormuzd, the Power of Good ; and
by false confession and evil deeds he helps Ahriman, the Power
584 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
of Evil. The life of man is divided into two periods — the part he
lives here and the part he lives hereafter. AVhat the hereafter
holds in store for him depends on his life here ; all thoughts, words
and actions are recorded in a book; at death he comes to the ac-
countant's bridge which spans over hell, but reaches to heaven.
If his merits outnumber his demerits or sins, he is permitted to
cross the bridge and go to heaven at once ; but if the evil outweighs
the good, he goes to hell. If the two sides of his ledger account
are evenly balanced, he goes to an intermediate state of existence,
where he enters on a probation so that he has another opportunity
to choose between heaven or hell, to one of which he will be as-
signed on the day of final judgment.
Buddha taught: "Life is evil. Karma (sin) is the cause of
this; the number of individuals is always the same; as soon as
one individual dies his credits or demerits live and pass to another,
until finally, by the accumulated merits of many, nirvana comes."
Nirvana is rest — Extinction — Eternal Sleep and Peace. Buddhism
recognizes no immortal soul.
The ancient Greeks represented the soul as Psyche ; from this
we have such terms as psychology, metempsychosis, psychopathia,
etc. In art Psyche is usually represented as a pretty girl with
butterfly wings ; butterfly wings therefore designate the soul in
works of art as much as birds' wings are characteristic of angels,
and bats' wings denote the devil.
In this connection we may consider metempsychosis or trans-
migration of souls. This idea was based on the primitive belief
in regard to the nature of souls ; the soul was the vital principle ;
it existed in the air and was taken in with the first inhalation of
the new-born ; it caused the breathing and when breathing stoppcnl
the body died ; which means, that when the body dies, the soul, or
breath, leaves it and returns to its own element, the air. The souls
are then ready to enter new bodies, either similar to the one they
left, or the bodies of other organisms, so that an animal soul in
one incarnation may be a human soul in the next incarnation, or
vice versa. Whether the soul in metempsychosis can change sex
seems unlikely; because the prevailing ideas concerning souls
consider sex a fundamental characteristic fixed from the begin-
ning and for all time. Such is also the expressed opinion of writ-
ers like Kraft-Ebing and others, who ascribe the sexual perver-
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 585
sions to the entrance at birth of a male soul into a female body, or
a female soul into a male body.
When plants were first recognized as being alive, even though,
as then thought, non-breathing, they were also believed to be acted
on by a life-principle {(iniiiius, pneumus, spiritus, Psyche, soul)
and Aristotle ascribed a soul to plants.
The belief in transmigration of souls originated in India; it
was then adopted in Egypt ; from there it was taken by the Greeks.
Pythagoras and Plato taught it; the latter believed that after
Fig. 370. — "Psyche at Nature's Mirror," from painting by Thumann.
10,000 years the soul returns to God and merges in him. Some
Jewish writers believed it, as well as Origen, the Christian church-
father ; also, Swedenborg, Charles Kingsle}^ and others.
The ancient gnostics held that true gnosis or knowledge con-
sisted in remembering the pre-existent state of existence or incar-
nation, and the souls which could do this attained unusual spir-
itual powers; they were not bound by the ordinary conditions or
conventionalities of life, but were privileged to indulge in pro-
miscuous sexual indulgences, including incest, and the partners
of such holy men were held blameless. This was a great induce-
586 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
ment to remember one's former condition, but it did not therefore
sanctify these practices.
The Mormons teach that souls in endless numbers exist in
the invisible world, awaiting a chance to enter into a human body ;
if they enter a human body they get a chance to become immortal,
and to live either in heaven or hell after the death of the body. If
they do not enter a body before the end of the world, all that have
not by that time entered into a human bod}^, perish utterly. Hence
it became a duty of Mormon women to give birth to as many chil-
dren as possible to save these souls, and as there are more w^omen
than men, polygamy was adopted to increase the birth-rate.
This pre-existence of souls was a very ancient belief. Plato
wrote : ' ' The soul is acknowledged to be prior to the body. ' '
We have already learned the teachings of the Kabbalah
(p. 194) about souls; it taught that souls pre-exist, and are an-
drogynous or hermaphrodite. Wlien the souls are about to enter
human bodies they are divided into their two halves, one male
and one female, and when the bodies they enter grow up, God
causes the two bodies containing the parts of the same soul to
meet and to marry and ''they twain become one flesh," and also
one soul.
While the Kabbalah claims to date back to Adam's time, and
that it contains what God had revealed to Adam, it was in fact
composed about 1000 a.d., and the ascribing to it the greater age
was in compliance to a habit which was indulged in quite exten-
sively, of writing books of prophecy, after the tilings prophesied
had occurred, and then dating the book back so as to make it ap-
pear as if the prophecies had been made before the fulfilment.
One such book Avas called the "Ascension of Moses," which, it
was claimed, was written by Moses to Joshua, but which was prob-
ably written in the early period of our era, just before the destruc-
tion of Jerusalem. Another such book was the "Book of Enoch"
which was ascribed to Enoch ; in Genesis, chap, v, we read ; * * *
"Adam begat Seth * * * Seth begat Enos * * * and Enos
begat Cainan * * * and Cainan begat Mahalaleel * * * and
Mahalaleel begat Jared * * * and Jared begat Enoch * * *"
This is the Enoch to whom the authorship of the "Book of
Enoch" was ascribed. This book was, however, really written
about 150 B.C., or much later than the last of the canonical books
of the Old Testament. It tells about the fall of the angels, how
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 587
they came to eartli and married the daughters of men, and begat
a race of demons ; while written 150 b.c, additions and interpola-
tions were added after the beginning of our era.
And there are numbers of other similar books, Jewish as well
as Christian, which are spoken of as the Apocalyptic Books ; the
words mean Books of Revelation, but as explained their prophe-
cies were false, because the events prophesied had already
happened.
These books are more or less poetical works of the order of
Dante's Divine Comedy; fantastic descriptions of the life of souls
after death. The Revelation of St. John is the most important
one.
Origen, one of the church-fathers, believed in the pre-exist-
ence of souls; and numerous other writers expressed a similar
belief.
Lucretius ridiculed the idea; he said: ''Moreover, to imagine
that souls stand ready at the amorous intercourses, or parturi-
tions, of beasts, to enter into the young, seems exceedingly ridicu-
lous. It appears too absurd to suppose that immortal beings in
infinite numbers, should wait for mortal bodies, and contend em-
ulously among themselves, which shall be first and foremost to
enter. ' '
It is not necessary to inquire into the seat of the soul in the
body ; some have held that it resides in all parts of the body ; some,
that it resides in the blood ; still others, that it resides in the mar-
row. The ancient Babylonians, as we learn from cuneiform in-
scriptions from the library of Ashurbanipal, 2000 b.c, believed
that the liver was the seat of the soul.
We will quote only two opinions by comparatively modern
authors ; Lotze supposed that the soul resided in the pons varolii;
Descartes, that it has its seat in the pineal gland ; but he meant by
soul, not an immortal soul, Imt the "life principle" which, when
it ceased to exert influence upon the body, caused death, and ceased
to exist with the body.
The pineal gland is usually pointed out in the dissecting rooms
as the seat of the soul, but, I suspect, not in a serious but in a
ridiculing manner.
How long ago it was when the Assyrians and Babylonians
wrote about the visit of Ishtar to the Underworld, may perhaps
not be definitely known, but it was far earlier than when Moses
588 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
wrote. We have learned that when anyone entered there, they
were deprived of everything they wore — they were stripped naked.
This idea is simply an expression that physical, material
clothing can not cover or be worn by a spiritual soul. It is a sim-
ilar idea as that held by Swedenborg that in heaven all will be
naked, because clothing is the livery of sin, introduced in conse-
quence of the fall of Adam and Eve, and therefore clothing would
be out of place in heaven where there is no sin. Likewise, in such
poems as Dante's '* Inferno" and similar apocalyptic books, the
souls are described as naked, and they are so figured in Dore's
illustrations, and in any other illustrations of the souls in the
underworld.
The ancient Egyptians were the first to formulate distinctly
the theory that the souls of the upright and good were rewarded,
and the souls of the wicked were punished in the future life (see
page 447). Their god Thoth was the author of the "Ritual of the
Dead" and of the ''Book of Respirations" which protects and
sustains the souls, gives them life, and causes them "to breathe
with the souls of the gods forever and ever. ' '
During their sojourn in Egypt the Israelites necessarily must
have become acquainted with these ideas, but they did not adopt
them, for the immortality of the souls is not mentioned in the
Books of Moses. All Jews believed that God dictated the laws to
Moses, and that he wrote them down in the Pentateuch ; but some
also believed that God told Moses other truths which were not
written down but transmitted orally. The Sadducees said that
Moses wrote down all that God had told him, and as Moses did
not mention immortality^, there is no future life.
The primitive Jewish conception of the underworld was of
an entirely different character than that of the Egyptians ; it was
more nearly like that of the Greeks in regard to Hades ; the Jews
called it Sheol. In the English Bible this is indiscriminatel}^ ren-
dered "hades" or "hell;" but the latter word does not mean what
it means in Christian theology, for the Jewish "Sheol" was a
large vaulted tomb where the ghosts lay like corpses in a sepul-
chre, without mind, or consciousness, in an inexpressibly dreary
condition.
The Book of Enoch was similar to Dante's poem in its con-
ceptions, and is the first mention by a Jewish writer of an unend-
ing punishment of the wicked in hell.
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 589
When we consider the cruel nature of all ancients, their de-
light in seeing others tortured, burnt alive, impaled, crucified,
flayed alive, hands and feet and nose and ears cut off, eyes gouged
out, bellies ripped open, etc., we can get some idea how they con-
ceived their notions of hell. Also, why their ideas represented
God as a vengeful and bloodthirsty God, as can be realized by
reading all the horrors Jehovah threatened against Israel in the
twenty-eighth chapter of Ezekiel. It is possible that the horrors
perpetrated by the bloodthirsty Huns in the recent war, may have
been from a desire of the mad Kaiser to live up to the cruel stand-
ards of war as practiced by the ancient Jews by command of Je-
hovah.
However, if the wicked were to be punished forever, it was
felt to be but logical to reward the good, and the Egyptians and
the Greeks invented a heaven, or elysium, or paradise, as a place
of reward.
Perhaps the earliest mention of such a place is that by Homer
who wrote : ' ' But thou, Menelaus, son of Zeus, art not ordained
to die and meet thy fate in Argos, the pasture-land of horses, but
the deathless gods will convey thee to the Elysian plain and the
world's end, where is Rhadamanthus of the fair hair, where life
is easiest for men. No snow is there, nor yet great storm, nor
any rain; but always ocean sendeth forth the breeze of the shrill
West to blow cool on men."
The popular Christian belief in a heaven or hell was not based
on Biblical teachings, but was taken in greater part from the Book
of Enoch and other apocalyptic writings ; and later on it adopted
much from such poems as Dante's or Milton's descriptions of the
spiritual world. Various persons, saints, etc., Swedenborg and
other religious fanatics, imagined that they saw heaven and hell
in visions ; and their descriptions added new features to the pop-
ular belief ; and they were perhaps just as reliable as the previous
beliefs.
Just as there had been two tendencies in the early Christian
church, one condemning as evil all sexual acts, and the other ap-
proving of honorable wedlock, so these tendencies were reflected
m the theories held about the sexual life in the hereafter.
Christ said (Matt, xxii, 30): ''For in the resurrection, they
neither marry nor are given in marriage, but are as the angels of
God in heaven."
590 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
Swedonhorp^ taught explicitly that sexnal passion will survive
after death ; he says, that in the immortality the good of this life
will become angels of heaven and will inhabit the three degrees
of heaven, the inmost of which is nearest to God, and the abode
of the most perfect bliss. To quote his o^\ti words, from Heaven
and Its Wonders: "The angels of the inmost heaven are the most
beautiful because they are forms of celestial love. * * * they
are naked, because they are innocent and innocence corresponds
to nakedness.
''They who have regarded adulteries as abominable, and who
have lived in the chaste love of marriage, are beyond all others in
the order and form of heaven and thence in all beauty, and forever
remain in the bloom of youth. The deliglits of their love are in-
effable and increase throughout all eternity — ."
The words of Xenophanes apply here: "There never was nor
will be a man who has clear certainty as to what I say about the
gods and about all things. * * * But all are free to guess.
* * * there are some guesses something like the truth."
The early church-fathers were fond of speculations about the
soul and its fate, and many guesses were made by them; only—
they had an idea that they were writing facts.
Paul of Tarsus (St. Paul) Avas a Jew who was converted to
Christianity, and his teachings are among the most important in
forming the Christian faith. He taught that man is under the
influence of two antagonistic principles (similar to the Zoroastrian
Ormuzd and Ahriman), one which he described as if it were an
evil spirit "which dwells in men" Avhich causes evil desires and
which he called "flesh;" the other element in man fears God and
tries to do good; this is "the spirit." Ultimately one or the
other prevails; if the flesh triumphs, the soul will go to hell; if
the spirit prevails, the soul will be saved and go to heaven.
Augustine raised the question, whether, when God separated
the hermaphrodite Adam (Gen. v, 2) he also took part of the soul
and put it in Eve, or whether he blew his breath in her nostrils
and created a new soul for her, or whether she had a soul at all.
A council of the church seriously discussed the latter proposition,
and some Orientals held that women have no souls.
Aquinas, Jerome, Augustine and others seriously debated such
questions as these: "Whether souls go to heaven or hell immedi-
ately after death?" "Whether the sun and moon will really be-
SEX AND SEX WOESHIP 591
come obscured on the clay of Judgment?" "Whether all the mem-
bers of the human body will rise with the body on the last day, and
whether the hair and nails will reappear?"
Christian theories about the fate of the souls after death were
simply an elaboration of the general Pagan beliefs. Early Chris-
tians believed that the end of the world and the day of judgment
was at hand, and that Christ would return to judge the living and
the dead.
From the standpoint of sex we are not interested in the de-
tails of the evolution of the Christian doctrines concerning heaven
or hell or purgatory; so we will close this part of the subject with
a few words about the rulers of hell.
The Jews during the Babylonian captivity adopted some of
the beliefs from the demonology of their captors. From the Jews
these were adopted by the Gnostics, and they, in turn imparted the
belief to the Christians; some critics even claim that Paul held
some Gnostic beliefs.
The belief in an evil, power was as strong among the Chris-
tians as among the Zoroastrians, The devil and his imps were
i-ealities to the Christians up to quite recent times, but the belief
in a devil with hoofs and horns, and forked tail, and wings of a
bat, in a lake of brimstone and fire, is becoming less strong, al-
though it is still held by some preachers, who, figuratively speak-
ing, love to hold their hearers over the edge of the abyss, and
threaten to drop them into it.
"The Devil" is the name applied to the Supreme Evil Spirit,
who is supposed to rule over hell ; he is also called Satan, the En-
emy, the Adversary, the Tempter, the Prince of Devils, Beelzebub,
etc. In alchemistic and magical writings he is called Samael (first
used in the Kabbalah) ; the Kabbalah taught that there are seven
hells, or different compartments, or degrees of punishment, which
are presided over by Samael, the serpent of Eden.
The connection of the devil with the serpent in Eden is a com-
paratively late theory, which is not warranted by any passage in
the Bible, for in the early books of the Bible no evil spirit is men-
tioned ; God himself was the instigator of good as well as of evil,
for God "hardened the hearts of sinners."
Whether the conception of a devil was taken from the Baby-
lonian demonology, or from the Persian (Iranian, or Zoroastrian)
theories about Ahriman is immaterial; to the early Christians he
592 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
was a very real entity, as is evidenced by I Pet. v, 8: "Be sober,
be vigilant; because your adversary the devil, as a roaring lion,
walketh about, seeking whom lie may devour."
The form ascribed to the devil by the Christians is probably
derived from the fabled Greek satyrs, and these in turn were sug-
gested by the Mendesian unions of humans with goats. Modern
Christian theories about the devil are more like the Zoroastrian
than like the Babylonian ideas.
The fallen angels of the '^Book of Enoch" became the devils
of later theology ; they were all males, like the angels of the Bible.
Paradise was a Pagan concej^tion of a place where the souls
would revel in endless festivities, banquets, drink, etc., and where
there is an endless sensuous bliss.
The Mohammedans believe that Al Sir at (the way) is a
bridge over hell, as narrow as the cutting edge of a razor, which
extends from earth to heaven; truly — a "narrow path." Heaven
or paradise is a place where the faithful believers will enjoy com-
panionship and sexual pleasures with celestial angels, or Jiouris,
forever throughout eternity. Some sects of Moliammedans believe
that w^omen have no souls, and therefore can not let their earthly
jealousies interfere with the delights of paradise. Araf is the
Mohammedan purgatory, a place between hell and heaven, where
souls are purified by burning out the dross or evil with fire.
The Norsemen believed that Valhalla (Valholl) was the place
of immortality for those slain in battle ; there were twelve nymphs
of Valhalla called Valkyria, who were mounted on fleet horses
and armed, who went into the battles and took the warriors whom
the Norns (fates) had chosen for death, to conduct them to Val-
halla, where they entertained the souls of the slain with fc^asting
and drinking of mead from cups made of the skulls of their
enemies.
But the most elaborate system of heavenly entertainment is
promised by the Hindu religion. AVe learn from Moore's Hindu
Pantheon that heaven contains many apartments or degrees ; the
analogy to the Christian heaven in this regard is striking, and as
far as relates to this feature, both heavens are probably derived
from the same folklore; Christ said: "In my Father's house are
many mansions" (John xiv, 2).
Special names were given to some of the separate degrees or
stages in heaven; for instance, the paradise of the god Indra is
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 593
called Swarga, whicli is the residence of some of the lower gods
and of deified Hindu heroes. Now a Hindu coming to the lowest
heaven must go through a certain routine of duties which includes
a certain number of luillion times having sexual connection. Mod-
ern Hindus believe that women go to heaven only in the propor-
tion of 20 women for every 108 men; if men therefore have to
wait their turn, it will take a long time until they can go to the
next grade in heaven, where they stay until they have practiced
coition an increased number of times. No Avoman can go higher
than the eighth degree of heaven; so after that, conditions must
vary, or perhaps celestial nymphs are provided. At all events,
heaven is a place of physical sexual bliss, long drawn out. But
time has no significance in eternity, especially when it is supposed
to be so pleasant.
The Jainas (a Hindu sect) say that their first great preacher
(mahavira) appeared on earth 100,000,000,000,000 palya ago; a
palya is the length of time it would take to empty a deep well one
mile square stuffed level full with fine hair, by removing one hair
every century! And this refers to ''time;" what must we sup-
pose eternity with its many millions of sexual raptures to mean.
Modern popular Christianity has modified the medieval ideas
of heaven and hell very much. "Christ's kingdom" is not a place
of sensual or sexual enjo^anent, but promises a rather monoto-
nous existence devoted mainly to music and the singing of hymns
of praise.
It is conceivable that such an existence would become as tire-
some as life became to Ahasuerus, the wandering Jew, of whom it
is related that when Jesus rested for a few moments on his door-
step on his way to Golgotha, Ahasuerus drove him away; where-
upon Jesus told him that he should not die but should wander
until the Judgment day, without rest. Tradition relates that he
appeared in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries, in Hamburg,
Augsburg, Dantzig, Liibeck, Brussels, Moscow, Madrid, etc. This
myth is probably associated with the folklore tales according to
which certain kings and emperors (Nero, Barbarossa) and saints
(Enoch, Elijah) never died; perhaps the myth was to teach the
undesirability of living forever.
A modern school of thought, called Annihilationists, teaches
that only the righteous Avill live forever; that the wicked or "un-
594 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
believers," will not continue to live in endless torment but will
die; their lot will be eternal death.
Still others believed Avitli Origen that God's mercy will result
in the final conversion and saving of all beings, even including the
devil and his followers. The descent of Jesus for three days
to hell was a trip to bring about this conversion. In modern the-
ology this belief is spoken of as "final restitution of all things,"
and those who hold this belief are called Universalists.
We were born without our consent and most of us will die
without our consent; we are helpless and passive playthings in
the hands of nature or of the gods. So we may as well meet what-
ever may befall us as philosophically as we can, doing our duty
here, and trusting for the future to the power that created us;
remembering the lines from the epitaph of Huxley :
i i
And if there be no meeting past the grave.
If all is darkness, silence, yet 'tis rest.
Be not afraid, ye waiting hearts that weep
For God 'still giveth his beloved sleep,'
And if an endless sleep he will — so best."
CONCLUSION
We have not attempted to study mythology exhaustively, nor
to gain a full knowledge of the deities. But we have sought to
trace the influence of the mystery of sex on the human mind, and
especially the influence of sex on the development or evolution of
the religious feeling and sentiment, which is so intimately in-
volved in man 's effort to explain the origin and destiny of our own
existence. We have learned how the human mind conceived the
Creative Power first as a mere physical attribute of his earthly
father, or parents; that this power became spiritualized and per-
sonified as a heavenly father (the Aryan Zeus-Pitar, or the Greek
Zeus, etc.), then as gods like the great Lucifer or Light-giver,
the sun, the moon, planets and stars, and finally as the "Father
in Heaven" of modern Christianity; we have traced the same
ideas running through primitive folklore all over the Avorld, and
from this common reservoir or stock of ideas the different na-
tions and the various religions culled their ideas. We still retain
traces of all the previous forms of religions in our own religions ;
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
595
we continue the use of the finger-ring as a relic of phallic worship,
just as the lanugo of the foetus or of the grown up human being
is a relic and reminder of the fur of his mannnalian ancestry ; we
speak of God as "our father" because ancestor-worship was
one step in the evolution of our religion; we retain a faith in as-
trology and "thank our lucky stars" when we escape from some
dangers, because planet-worship was practiced by our ancestors;
we hold our hands before our eyes during prayer, because untold
numbers of our forebears prayed to the sun and needed to shield
their eyes when they turned to their deity; we still say "by Jove,"
Fig. 371. — Hercules and Ompliale, from painting by Boulanger.
because the ancients worshipped Jupiter; we worship the virgin
because the Egyptians worshipped Isis and we call her Maria be-
cause the Greeks called her Maia; we speak of a holy family, be-
cause the ancients adored deities in sets of "father, mother and
baby;" we "feel blue" when we are sad, because blue was the
color of mourning, and still is so among the Mohammedans, whose
w^omen dye their clothing and faces blue with indigo as a mark
of mourning; we use the sign of the cross, because the ancients
used the pentagon for the same purposes ; we believe, and use, and
do vast numbers of things and rites, because we have inherited
the habit from our ancestors. As these customs or habits or be-
596 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
liefs were simply steps in the evolution of human thought, trans-
mitted from generation to generation, even though modified by
generation after generation, Ave may, if we so desire, consider
this gradual development of thought to have taken place in ac-
cord with a teleological plan, and we may possibly call it "revela-
tion, ' ' agreeing mth the adherents of all religions who recognized
their ' ' sons of gods ' ' as the great teachers to Avhom the gods, or
God, had revealed the hidden mysteries of the universe.
We may agree Avith Clemens Alexandrinus who thought that
Fig. 372. — Christ defending the adulteress.
phallic Avorship was simply one phase of nature-Avorship Avhich led
men to Avorship the heavenly bodies as gods, thus replacing the
cruder and coarser ideas connected Avith the phallus and the yoni,
and Avhich in turn, eventually led mankind to fix the mind, first,
on the heaA^enly bodies, then on the heaA^ens, then on the Spiritual
Powers Avhich liA^ed in the lieaA^ens, until finally they came to a
recognition of the "True God."
Bearing in mind this gradual CA^olution and expansion of
speculations about the supernatural, some authors haA^e described
Christianity as a system of Post-Christian metaphysics based on
SEX AND SEX WORSHIP 597
Pre-Christian Paganism. It is in reality more of a theology than
religion; it demands a belief in myths about Jesus, instead of
the observance of the religion taught by Jesus, who summed up
all the law and all the prophets: "Thou shalt love the Lord, thy
God, with all thy heart and with all thy mind. This is the first
and great commandment. And the second is like unto it: Thou
shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. On these two commandments
hang all the law and the prophets" (Matt, xxii, 37-40).
Jesus said in the Sermon on the Mount: ''Judge not, that ye
be not judged" (Matt, vii, 1) ; and when the adulteress was
brought before him, he, kno^ving human weakness, said: "He
that is mthout sin among you let him first cast a stone at her"
(John viii, 7).
Chubb, an English theologian, maintained that Christianity,
the Christian religion, should not be a doctrine or a belief in
formulated creeds, but a mode of life ; not an avowal of acceptance
of a system of truths or facts, but an effort to live in accordance
with God's will here, in the hope of going to him hereafter.
We might omit the last phrase, and then we could include
many in our definitions of "Christian" who now are looked upon
as infidels or agnostics.
The Reli^on of Jesus Is Charity
"And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these
three; but the greatest of these is charity."
(I Cor. 'siii, 13.)
Men are thinking for themselves and they realize that fables,
m^^ths, traditions and superstitions are not parts of a vitalizing
and inspiring religion.
Men recognize that all religions are essentially alike, and that
the forms of creeds and religious observances and symbols are
human inventions and non-essential; that that religion is best
which makes us most charitable to our fellow-men, and w^ich
succeeds best in promoting
< i
On Earth, Peace, — Good will tow^ard Men!"
We are what we are because we are men and women! And
our religions are what they are for the same reason.
598 SEX AND SEX WORSHIP
We have learned tliat in all realms of human thoughts the
influence of sexual passion has made itself felt, and the love of the
man for the Avoman ahvays has been, is, and always will be a
most powerful factor in controlling human thought and action.
This idea was syml)olized in such myths as that of Hercules
and Queen Omphale, the giant man controlled and subdued by a
gentle woman through love ; or in that of Samson and Delilah, the
strong man lured to ruin by the wiles of a wanton woman.
The most remarkable achievement since the world began is
taking place even now — the mental, social, educational, econom-
ical, political and physical emancipation of woman ; this has been
called the "Dawn of the Age of Woman." The controlling, re-
fining and chastening power of pure womanhood is making the
whole world better.
Dogmas, creeds and observances are fading away, but spir-
itual life, morality, love for our fellow-men, are growing.
"Woman's Empire, holier, more refined
Moulds, moves and sways the fallen, yet God-breathed
mind.
Lifting the earth-crushed heart to hope and heaven."
In this sense, therefore, nature-worship may be considered
as a revealed religion implanted in the very nature of mankind
by the Almighty and Mysterious Power that men call "God;" a
religion which led man from his primitive mental state, step by
step, to better religious thoughts, until finally all that is coarse
will be eliminated from our faiths, and all men will worship
"One God,
as a Spirit, in Spirit and in Truth."
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Tlie following is a partial list oi' books, etc., from which in-
formation has been obtained, that has been utilized in this book,
both for the text, and for illustrations. There were other works,
but their titles have escaped nty memory, and the list of them was
lost, as explained in the preface.
Age of Reason, Thomas Paine.
Alterthuemer Aegyptenland's, published by order of Freder-
ick the Great.
Appleton's Encyclopedia.
Appleton's Science Library, 48 vols.
Armenian Outrages,, various reports.
Arrhenius' Works on Geology.
Art, Rodin.
Baseler Todten-Tanz (Death-Dance).
Bible.
Book of Life, Sivartha.
Book of Martyrs, Knox.
British Encyclopedia.
Campbell's Phallic Worship.
Casanova's Autol)iography.
Charaka Samliita, a Hindu Medical work.
Clavis Sapientiae (Key to Wisdom) printed in 1549.
Comte's Works.
Conflict between Science and Religion, Draper.
Dante's Di^dne Comedy (Inferno, etc.).
Darwin's Descent of Man.
Darwin's Origin of Species.
Drummond, Natural LaAV in the Spiritual World.
Evolution of Sex, Geddes and Thompson.
Fiske's Excursions of an Evolutionist.
Fiske's Destiny of Man in the Light of his Origin.
Geographical Society's Magazine.
Haeckel's Works.
599
600 BIBLIOGKAPHY
History of the Cross (?).
History of Medicine, 7 vols., Kurt Sprangel.
History of the Kod, Rev. Wm. Cooper.
Huxley's Works.
Ingersoll's Lectures.
Isis Unveiled, Mme. Blavatzky.
Kingsborough's Mexican Antiquities.
Koerperstrafen (Corporal Punishments), Dr. Wrede.
Koran.
Kraift-Ebing, Psychopathia Sexualis.
Kurfuersten-Bibel, 1764.
Latin-English Dictionary, White and Riddle.
Leckey's History of European Morals.
L'Egypte, published by order of Napoleon L
Library of Original Sources, 10 volumes.
Lombroso's Works.
Milton's Paradise Lost.
Moore's Hindu Pantheon.
Musee Secret (Pompeian wall paintings, utensils, etc.).
Musentempel, art plates of XVIII Century.
Mythology, M. K. Halevy.
Mythologies, various works.
Nordau's Works.
Osborn's Men of the Old Stone Age.
Phallic Worship, Howard.
Phallism, Worship of Lingam, Yoni and Crosses, 1889.
Plutarch's Lives.
Prang's Atlas of Art.
Prescott's Conquest of Mexico.
Rawlinson's Ancient Egypt.
Rollin's Ancient History.
Ru skin's Works.
Sanger's History of Prostitution.
Science (Magazine).
Science History of the Universe.
Standard Dictionary.
Spencer's (Herbert) AVorks.
Swedenborg's AYritings.
Twenty Years in a Harem ( ?).
Universal Dictionary.
BIBLIOGRAPHY 601
Vogt's (Karl) Works.
Welt-Gemaelde Gallerie, 17 vols. (1740-1780).
International Studio.
Craftsman.
History of Art in Clialdea and Assyria, Perret.
Thirty Seven Nats in Bnrmali.
Fine Arts Journal.
Works on Art.
Illustrations were copied from many of tlie above-mentioned
books, and also from large collections of Photographs and Prints
of Paintings, Sculptures, Photographs of Art Models from na-
ture. Erotica, Perversions, etc.
Suetonius and other ancient writers.
Underwood and Underwood's Photographs.
Reports on Excavations in various lands, Assyria, Egj^pt,
Babylon, Nineveh, India, Rome, Pompeii, Herculaneum,
Greece, etc.
Books on Travel, Constantinople, Turkey, India, Persia, Yu-
catan, etc.
Histories, Biographies, Works on Geology, Palaeontology,
Folklore, Superstitions, Witchcraft, etc.
Impressions of Medals and Seals.
Current Literature, Literary Digest, Magazines, Works on
the Religions of various lands, and many other books, the
titles of which I can not recall now.
GENERAL INDEX
Abracadabra, 466
Abraxas medals, 390
Adam a hermaphrodite, 5, 139
Aesculapius, 53o
Age of earth, 23
Age of mankind, 20, 23
Agnosticism, 319
Agrionia, 570
Alulus, 26, 28
Amor or Cupid, 453
Anabolism, 52
Ancestor worship, 114
Ancient men, 325
Angels, 370
Animals, sex in, 138
Animal worsliip, 430
Anthrojoophagy, 251
Antichrist, 102
Antiquity of the cabaret, 232
Anu, 383
Aphrodite, birth of, lOS
Apis bull, 431
Asher, 388
Arches, 471
Arrow, 399
Art anatomy, 303
Art and ethics, 269
Atavism, 59
Atheism, 320
Avesta, 124
B
Baal, 439
Babylonian account of creation, 110
Babylonian gods, 438
Bacchanalia, 570
Beliefs, primitive, 341
Bible, 9
Brahmanic, 111
of Greeks, 106
on woman, 85
origin of, 12
I iJililes, 7
Biblical cosmogony, 91
Bodies, mature, 310
of children, 309
Youthful, 309
Book of life, 486
Bosom of womnii, 259
Botanomancy, 414
Brahma, 8
Brahmanic bible. 111
Breast, 156
Breast worship, 488
Breeding of live-stock, 27
Bride, perfuming of, 238
Buddha, 16
Buddhism, 14, 17, 112
Budding, 50
Bull, worship of, 431
Burning at stake, 340
Burnt offerings, 220
C
Cabaret, antiquity of, 232
origin of, 232
Cannibalism, 251
Castration, 212
Caves, 121
Celibacy, 205
Census on Avoman, 89
Charms, 361
Chastity belts, 83
Children's bodies, 309
China, 460
Cock worship, 437
Communism, 73
Conception, immaculate, 518
Conclusion, 594
Concubinage, 202
Confucius, 16
Conjugation, 51
Coition, 160
how often, 174
Cosmic egg, 126
603
604
GENERAL INDEX
Cosmogonies, pagan, 113
various, 90, 118
Cosmogony, Biblical, 91
Creation, Babylonian account, 110
of the world, Pliilo, 104
Credulity, 314
Cross, origin of, 403
CiTix ansata, 359
Cupid or Amor, 453
D
Daemones, Greek, 370
Dance, 263
Darwinism, 22
David's shield, 523
"Days" of Genesis, 97
Days of the week, 99
Death, 40
Death-angel, 41
Demiurge, 122
Determination of sex, 60
Devil, 592
Diana of Ephesus, 497
Dimples, 259
Dionysia, 566
Dionysus, 399, 455
Disease demons, 328
Double standard of morals, 199
Dryads, 369
E
Egg, 491
cosmic, 126
Egyptian gods, 445
Elephanta, cave of, 6
Eleusinian mysteries, 568
Ellipse, 475
Epithalamium, 564
Erotic art, 301
Eunuchs, 211
Evolution of sex, 53
Exorcism, 361, 366
F
Face, 256
Fates, or Parcae, 391
Father Time, 450
Fauns, 367
Feet, and legs, 262
Female, 52, 150
Feminine, 462
Feminine symbols, 463
Feminine triangle, 463
Fertility symbol, 467
Festivals, Nehemiah, 102
Festivals, phallic, 557
Fish in symbolism, 101
Fission, 49
Floods, 125
Floralia, 568
Form of woman, 257
Forms of perfumery, 233
G
Gemetria, 102
Gender of plant names, 131
Genesis, days of, 97
Genii, Roman, 370
Ghosts, worship of, 115
Gnostic symbol, 523
Goat worsMp, 435
God as "father," 7
God hermaphrodite, 139
Goddesses, 508
Goddess of reason, 505
Gods, Babylonian, 438
Egyptian, 445
Greek, 449
Indian, 456
like men, 375
Persian, 443
Phoenician, 441
some of the, 438
Golden rule, 16
Greek Bible, 106
Greek gods, 449
Greek love, 58, 560
Groves, 411
H
Hades, 588
Hair, 256
Harem, 188
meaning of, 187
Has a woman a soul? 70, 590
Hearing, sense of, 248
Hell, 588
Heredity, 305
Hermaphrodite deities, 3
Hermaphrodites, 212
Hermaphroditism, 58
Ilosiod 's \\Titings, 107
Hindu phallic symbols, 528
GENERAL INDEX
G05
Hindu triuit}^, 8
Hoa, 383
Holy families, 406
Holy water, 575
Homer's writings, 106
Human sacrifices, 222, 224
Hygcia, 535
I
Iconoclasts, 526
Idealization, 289
in art, 287
Idols, 348
Ikons, 526
Images, 348
Immaculate conception, 518
Immoi-tality, 581
Impregnation, 55
Incense, 228
Incest, 374
Indian gods, 456
Indra, 9
Infanticide, 72
Inferiority of women, 69
Instinct, sexual, 166
Is there a soul? 580
Ishtar's trip to Hades, 440
Isis, 432
J
Japan, 461
Jupiter or Zeus, 451
K
Kabbalah, 193
Katabolism, 53
Kiss, 249
Kissing, 479
Koran, 13
L
Lamaism, 18
Law of the sea, 506
Legend of Sargon, 96
Legs and feet, 262
Liberalia, 565
Life, nature of, 140
Lin gam, 382
Lingam in India, 458
Lotus, 412
Love charms, 250
Lucky days, 103
Lupercalia, 569
Lj'canthropy, 321
M
Madonna worship, 488
Alale, 53, 157
Male triangle, 394
Mammary gland, 156
Man of Java, 26
Mandrakes, 417
Mandaeans, 123
Maniage, 179
by capture, 185
by theft, 186
of sun and moon, 414
to trees, 130
Masturbation, 162
Mature bodies, 310
Medals, 476
Menses, 152
Menstruation, 152
Metempsychosis, 584
Mexico, 461
Mistletoe, 416
Monogamy, 192
among gods, 376
Monthlies, 152
Months, 98
Monstrosities, 59
Morganatic marriages, 203
Mj-ths, 327
N
Naiads, 369
Xames of the days, 99
Nations without religion, 118
Nature of life, 140
of sex, 38
Navel, 123
Nehemiah on festivals, 102
Nirvana, 584
Norns, 361
Nose, structure, 216
Nudity, 275, 294
Numbers, sex of, 104
Numeration, ancient, 102
Nymphs, 368
O
Odophone, Piesse, 231
Odor as sexual stimulant, 242
rutting, 177
(Ku;
GENERAL INt)EX
Onaiiisiii, 1G3
Origin of animals, 5
of religion, 114, 116, ;]24
Osiris, 446
Osiris Myth, 448
Ovum, Iiunian, 153
Pan, 391
Paradise, 589
Parcae, or fates, 391
Partheno-genesis, 57, 494
in insects, 64
Passion, sexual, 175
Pentagram, 361
Perfume for gods, 218
Perfume for himiajis, 230
Perfumery, 213
Perfumes, forms of, 233
Perfuming a bride, 238
Persecutions, 337
Persian gods, 443
Perversions, 171
Phallic festivals, 557
symbols, 387
symbols on houses, 405
Phallus, 159
worship of, 377
Pliilo's statement about Adam, 5
Philo on creation, 104
Phoenician gods, 441
Pitcairn Island, 28
Plant names, 422
gender of, 131
Plant worship, 408
Plants, fertilization in, 136
sex, 127
Plato's statement about man, 5
Polyandry, 187, 200
Polygamy among gods, 376
Polygyny, 187
Prapathaka, 112
Pregnancy, 153, 154
Primitive beliefs, 341
Primitive man, 35
Promiscuous relations, 183
Proportions of body, 304
Prostitution in Rome, 560
Protoplasts, 122
Psyche, 584
Purusha, 5
Pyramid, 394
Qu'ran, 13
Q
R
Races of man, 34
Rape, 374
Realism, 289
Relations men to women, 179
Religion, meaning of, 6
origin of, 114, 116
Reproduction, 48
asexual, 51
sexual, 54
Rig Vedas, 8, 457
River gods, 576
Romance of plant names, 422
Rudra, storm god, 112
Rutting odor, 177
S
Sacred writings, 7
Sacrifices, 218
human, 222
Sargon, legend of, 96
Satyrs, 368
Sculpture, 292
Seals, 478
Sense of heading, 248
of sight, 253
of smell, 127, 213
of taste, 249
of touch, 253
Serpent worship, 534
in paradise, 538
Seven great gods, 99
Sex, ancient theories of, 140, 142
determination of, 60
e^'olution of, 53
in animals, 138
in gods, 360
in mankind, 138
in plants, 127
meaning of, 2
nature of, 38
of numbers, 104
sjTiibols in science, 531
Sexual instinct, 166
Sexual organs, female, 351
GENKRAT. INDEX
607
Scxujvl organs, male, 159
Sexual passion, 175
Sexual unions among deities, 522
Shell, 472
Shiutoism, 14
Sight, sense of, 253
Sileni, 368 ,
Sirens, 373
Sistrum, 469
Six, Philo, 104
Siva, 8
Skopsi, 211
Smell, sense of, 213
Social relations, 179
Son of God, 373
Soul, 580
Spermatozoa, discovery of, 149
Spermatozoon, 158
Spread of ideas, 31
Spread of mankind, 30
Status of woman, 56
Sim and moon worship, 544
Sunday, 101
Swastika symbol, 523
Symbols, 116
of sex union, 529
T
Taoism, 16
Taste, sense of, 249
Temptation St. Anthony, 401
Theories of sex, 140
ancient, 142
Totemism, 128
Touch, sense of, 253
Transmigration of souls, 584
Triangle, feminine, 463
Triangle, male, 394
Trimurti, 8
Trinity, 404
Salerno, 391
Twelve great gods, 98
Thyrsus, 399
U
Unlucky days, 103
Unlucky numbers, 103
Urine as a remedy, 579
Urine as holy water, 579
Valkyrs, 372
Vampires, 362
Vedas, 8
Venus, ])irth of, 108
Virgin worsliip, 499
Vishnu, 8
Vulgarity in art, 287
Vulva, 464
W
Waist, 261
Water, 575
Wedding ring, 530
Weeks, 98
Were wolves, 362
Whipping of women, 82
Witchcraft, 46, 322
Women, mortal, 519
Worship of ancestors, 115
of animals, 430
of navel, 123
of plants, 408
of planets, 544
of sun, moon, and stars, 544
of woman, 507
Writings, sacred, 7
Years, 98
Yoni, 464
Youthful bodies, 309
Zeus or .Tupiter, 451
53604