MESOPOTAMIA; ACTION & INACTION
Having now arrived at
this curious state of all-or-nothing uncertainty, we may want to work
back towards something a little more firm; back from existence
or non-existence, through "potentiality" and
"non-potentiality," to our last position of somewhat
stable footing: action versus inaction. And here, as it
happens, we encounter a third strain of sky-god/serpent tandems which
should, by now, have occurred to any reader with even a passing
knowledge of Near Eastern mythology. Set geographically between the
Egyptian Hrwyfy/Apep, and the Indo-European Indra/Vritra, we find the
Babylonian clash of Marduk and Tiamat. Yet this antagonistic duo
falls in between still another pair of pairs as part of a broader
tradition of Mesopotamian creation tales — the beginnings of which,
as the esteemed Harvard professor of Assyriology, Thorkild Jacobsen,
suggests in his 1976 book The Treasures Of Darkness, "lie
in a theomachy, a prolonged conflict between representatives of two
opposed principles: the forces of motion and activity (the gods), and
the forces of inertia and rest (the older generation of powers)."
In terms of mythic
chronology, the story goes something as follows: All beings emanate
from the initial intercourse of Tiamat (Akkadian for "sea"
or "abyss"; described by Lurker as "the
personification of salt water ... the primeval dragon-like monster of
original chaos"), and the previously addressed Apsû
(meaning "deep water"; "personification of the
sweet-water ocean lying under the earth"). This mingling of
salt and fresh water produces the first gods, Lahmu and Lahamu, whose
names Jacobsen relates to water-born silt, explaining that "the
speculations by which the ancient Mesopotamian sought to penetrate
the mystery of origins were based, apparently, on observations of how
new land came into being. Mesopotamia is alluvial, formed by silt
brought down by the rivers." From them descend all further
generations of gods until, as we read in the Babylonian Enûma
Elish, their numbers and raucous doings begin to irritate Apsû
no end:
Their ways have become
noisome to me!
I am allowed no rest by
day;
by night no sleep
Let me abolish, yea,
let me smash to bits their ways
that peace may reign
(again) and we may sleep.
As Jacobsen contends,
"with the birth of the gods, a new principle — movement,
activity — has come into the world. The new powers, the gods,
contrast sharply with the older ones who stand for rest and
inactivity." It is for this reason that Apsû plots to
kill-off the gods, but one of this new breed, Ea/Enki (whom we met
earlier, with Apsû, in relation to the "alluvial"
Port Lands site), gets wind of these plans and strikes first by means
of his own magic waters (Lurker notes, with respect to his Babylonian
name, "Ea," "it has been suggested that the name
means 'water-house', but this is not generally accepted by scholars."
The earlier Sumerian "Enki," meanwhile, allegedly
translates as "lord of the earth" or "lord of the
nether-regions"). As Jacobsen then writes, "while Apsû,
succumbing to the magic, lay asleep, Ea took from him his crown and
cloak of fiery rays, killed him, and established his own abode above
him." This is the E-abzu temple at Eridhu, as mentioned
before in relation to Eridanus, Canopus, Babel, and the cosmic mill
(being, perhaps, the retroactive source of Ea's name, as well).
Additional to this, the taking of the cloak and crown, as described,
suggests some transfer of solar properties (the deposing of one "red
king" by another), leaving Ea now with the powers of water, sky,
and earth. So ends the first chapter in this trilogy of cosmogonic
warfare.
The second chapter, of
course, involves Tiamat and Marduk, as the former now too becomes
annoyed with the gods' constant stirrings. Deprived of sleep (her
belly "roiled"), and with the added incentive of venging
her husband's murder, she seeks to finish what Apsû began. But
once again Ea learns of these plans, as does his ambitious son, the
storm-god Marduk (from the Sumerian Amar-utuk, meaning
"calf of the sun-god"), who offers to vanquish Tiamat
himself on the condition that he is made king of the gods. This being
agreed to, Marduk slays primordial Tiamat, along with her chief
general, the demon Kingu (with the aid, it should be noted, of what
is described as a mysterious "red paste" or "potion").
Out of Tiamat's lifeless body, Marduk fashions the current
terrestrial heavens and earth (with her tail becoming the Milky Way),
after which he "heaped a mountain over Tiamat's head, pierced
her eyes to form the sources of the Euphrates and the Tigris,"
with Jacobsen further explaining "the Akkadians have
but one word for 'eye' and 'source,' inu, and
presumably considered them in some way the same thing."
Then, from Kingu's blood, he creates human beings in order that they
might build him a capital called "Babylon" — "gate
of the gods," from the Akkadian bāb + ilani. Here
we could loiter some time and re-expound upon all the interconnected
implications of gateways, solar/storm-gods, occular water sources,
and Luciferian kings of Babylon. But let us first proceed to the last
chapter of our tale.
With the advent of
humanity, we now come to the third and final battle of these
motion/inertia wars (although, historically speaking, this legend
likely predates the previous two, being first recorded in the
Sumero-Akkadian Epic of Atrahasis). With the ancient forces of
Apsû and Tiamat now laid to permanent rest, it is time for the
gods themselves to be kept awake by the movements of some new
species. Specifically, it is the weather-god Enlil (Sumerian "lord
of the wind"), brother of Ea, who is most perturbed by these
bothersome pests. As Jacobsen tells it:
Man multiplied so
rapidly that after 1,200 years the din of the ever-increasing human
population had grown to such proportions that Enlil could get no
sleep: 'the land was bellowing like a bull.' Enlil, thoroughly vexed,
had the gods agree to send a plague, hoping thereby to diminish the
number of humans and thus the noise.
Ea, however, intervenes
once more, and, with the help of his servant Atrahasis, convinces the
human multitudes to lessen their noise, and increase their worship,
before the gods firmly commit to their scheme. This satisfies Enlil,
for the time being, until another 1,200 years pass and the whole
problem begins anew. This time Enlil threatens a drought. Ea, again,
has the humans repent, but eventually the cycle revolves back to
noise. Enlil, now thoroughly fed-up, unleashes a flood that envelops
the whole human realm. Only Atrahasis, forewarned by Ea through the
reed walls of his hut, is spared (and, now, think back to our
"submerged" and "reed-thatched" Thackeray), along
with his family and livestock who all escape in a great boat. From
this tale, of course, descend those of Utnapishtim in the Gilgamesh
epic, Noah in the Bible, Deucalion of Greek legend, and another
Hellenized interpretation in which Atrahasis is known as Xisuthros
(and Ea, interestingly enough, is likened to the familiar Cronos).
Yet this tale, itself, may descend from an even older account wherein
Enlil sends not a flood, but a giant monster named Labbu, whom Lurker
describes as "possibly in the form of a snake, and associated
with the Milky Way" — and whom we must then associate, at
least in part, with Tiamat, Airavata, Apep, and the rest (perhaps
especially so with that "whirlwind" Typhon, recalling
Enlil's very own name).
Having thus outlined
Mesopotamia's "theomachy of opposed principles," what
further meaning might we read into it's overall symbology? Jacobsen,
in his structural analysis of the Enûma Elish, sees
these episodes as a great political allegory representing the
historical evolution from original anarchy, through primitive
democracy, to a stable, paternalistic monarchy whereby the youthful,
active gods overthrow the inactive, older gods who no longer possess
governmental initiative and, thus, stand "in subtle ways, for
the dead hand of a powerful old cultural tradition." We may
further observe that the recurring cycles of destruction (or
attempted destruction) are highly reminiscent of the theoretical
"world era" cataclysms of our cosmic mill precession. Their
specific formulation as one generation continually warring against
the next would also seem to touch upon a universal theme, presaging
such later, more well known narratives as the Greek hostilities of
Uranus, Cronos, and Zeus (although Jacobsen identifies this
parricidal sub-plot as symbolizing the gradual Babylonian conquest of
its "parent civilizations," Sumer and Akkad).
Above all, however, we
would seem to have in these myths a fertile source for the prevailing
sky-god/water-dragon correlation that we've been symbolically
transposing into the figure of a potential "red king." But,
of course, long before any of our cursory studies, this particular
archetype (or some variant thereof) had been identified and well
documented by numerous other students of art, history, and religion;
generally being brought under the heading of Chaoskampf (the
"struggle with chaos"), following the lead of various late
19th century German scholars working in these fields.
Indeed, this archetype
has even come to the attention of psychology, having been, perhaps,
most fully elaborated within the writings of Erich Neumann, a direct
disciple of Jung, for whom the serpent (specifically in the form of
the self-consuming ouroboros) is the mytho-symbolic Alpha and
Omega of both individual and collective consciousness; the slaying of
which represents a universal stage in the progression from an
undifferentiated unconscious, through a feminine/maternal and
masculine/paternal psychic hierarchy, into a final unified,
transcendent self-awareness. In short, one defeats the sleeping
dragon to become the woken dragon himself — and, while Neumann, in
his landmark The Origins and History of Consciousness, does
not specifically touch on the sleep symbolism of these particular
Mesopotamian myths, it (and very much more that we've skirted thus
far) seems more than merely implied in passages such as these:
One has no need to
desire to remain unconscious; one is primarily unconscious and can at
most conquer the original situation in which man drowses in the
world, drowses in the unconscious, contained in the infinite like a
fish in the environing sea ... So long as the infantile ego
consciousness is weak and feels the strain of its own existence as
heavy and oppressive, while drowsiness and sleep are felt as
delicious pleasure, it has not yet discovered its own reality and
differentness. So long as this continues, the uroboros reigns on as
the great whirling wheel of life, where everything not yet individual
is submerged in the union of opposites, passing away and willing to
pass away.
Parallelling Jacobsen,
though one stratum deeper, Neumann recognizes that before one can
slay the serpent of chaotic anarchy and take on the burden of
political rule, one must first slay the serpent of unconscious chaos
and take on the burden of psychic control. Yet this task is no small
feat, and never quite accomplished, for the serpent always lies in
wait for another chance to strike — its death is but a sleep, and
any slaying but a dream. In this way, the serpent is immortal because
the serpent is primordial. It is from the serpent that we emerge, and
it is to the serpent that we return; pulled back into its underworld
lair whenever a lapse in order (either social or individual) occurs.
Indeed, it is to the serpent that we rightly belong. As Neumann puts
it, while waking consciousness is literally the "desired"
state — a heroic "reality" spurred-on by a mysterious
"counteracting force ... a veritable instinct impelling man
in this direction" — this state, at least at the universal
level, is not a "natural" one. Our "instinct"
runs contrary to the inherent slumbering unconscious of which
"one has no need to desire." Further towards this
end:
Even
today we can see from primitives that the law of gravity, the inertia
of the psyche, the desire to remain unconscious, is a fundamental
human trait. Yet even this is a false formulation, since it starts
from consciousness as though that were the natural and self-evident
thing. But fixation in unconsciousness, the downward drag of its
specific gravity, cannot be called a desire to remain unconscious; on
the contrary, that is the natural thing ... The ascent toward
consciousness is the “unnatural” thing in nature; it is specific
of the species Man ...The struggle between the specifically human and
the universally natural constitutes the history of man’s conscious
development.
Here,
it would seem, our very existence comes into conflict with the
natural order of things. Yet, as children and subjects of nature
itself, how can we, or anything we do, be any less "natural"
than anything else? It is interesting to note, in the formulation of
this paradox, Neumann's use of such physical terms as "gravity,"
"drag," and "inertia." Terms which, wittingly or
unwittingly (consciously or unconsciously), relate back to our
initial conflict of action versus inaction — though
not necessarily in the mere sense of waking versus sleeping minds,
but, perhaps, in that even earlier sense of potentiality. One
wonders, in fact, if this conflict is so deeply felt, so ingrained in
the being of consciousness itself, that it harkens to a stage
preceeding the very possibilities of consciousness or unconsciousness
— beyond any potential desire, will, or instinct — down to the
physical basis for any such development, to the point of animacy
itself; where conceivable life vies with the eternally dead; where
the swirling chaos of unconsciousness confronts the state which
resists any swirling at all.
A dragon and the solar-god in his sky chariot; detail from the Spledor Solis |
What, then, might we say of this newly acknowledged conflict? Well, first we might note that it appears very old — and almost strangely so. While today it is commonplace to view the world in terms of animate (living or sentient, dynamic or motile) and inanimate (non-living, insentient, static, immotile) objects, given the animistic tendencies of so much primitive culture, wherein even a stone may be imbued with spiritual life, it is by no means obvious that our earliest ancestors should have seen things in this fashion. It is somewhat remarkable, then, that perhaps the oldest written language on record, Sumerian (crucible for all of our dragon-slaying mythology), seemingly divided the world in just this way by categorizing its nouns into animate and inanimate gender classes. Indeed, only one fourth of all the world's known languages employ grammatical genders at all, and of them, just a tiny handful delineate along lines of animacy. Intriguingly, elements of such animacy are found mostly within obscure-to-isolate language groups such as Basque, Elamite, Japanese (by verb tense), and certain Kartvelian branches like Georgian (tellingly, perhaps, of the "land of St. George") — as well as various Native American vocabularies, including the Anishaanabe of our local Mississaugas.
In the days when Sumerian
was still in use, the nearby ancient Afro-Semitic languages of
Egyptian, Akkadian, and Hebrew employed the more typical masculine
vs. feminine dichotomy, wherein the animacy of all things
(to some abstract extent) is taken for granted. Of course, many of
the current Indo-European tongues employ this dichotomy, as well. It
is thought, however, that the earliest Proto-Indo-European languages
initially began as animate/inanimate, for we see this
found among the ancient Anatolian dialects (Hittite being the most
prominent of these). Presumably the animate class later
subdivided into masculine and feminine genders, with
the inanimate either disappearing or morphing into a neuter
gender, as is seen in the major classical languages of Latin, Greek,
and Sanskrit (and as lingers even within our English he/she/it
complex of pronouns). One, then, wonders how this gender division and
transformation might have been reflected in the subsequent tripartite
organization of the Aryans; in the threefold nature of such mythical
masculine/feminine/indeterminate amalgams as
Indra/Sachi/Airavata; and even in our binary-to-trinary partition of
positive, negative, and neutral opposites —
all as detailed above.
Whatever the case, it
would seem to demonstrate that any purely animate/inanimate
bifurcation is not usually long in sustaining itself once ensconced
in a sufficiently mature system of language. We might also say,
looking at this situation from the other end, that certain "immature"
notions of animism are not long in re-establishing themselves, even
within the constructs of an inhospitable linguistic system. Our
"unnatural instinct" towards consciousness would seem to
eventually have us impose it on everything else. Yet, conceptually,
the initial distinction of animate vs. inanimate clearly remains, and
thus we might expect some early expressions of this distinction to
have survived, in spite of it all — perhaps even through some
"animation of the inanimate." What, after all, could be
more natural for the ancient, animating mind than to embody
the essence of inert matter in the figure of a sleeping god, or god
of sleep; a slumbering dragon, or some other such character — the
inscrutable, indifferent representation of absolute static
(non)potential?
Apsû, Tiamat, and
Enlil, of course, would all seem to fit this bill. Then, beyond the
Mesopotamian template, we might cite such exemplars as the Greek
Hypnos or the Roman Somnus, the Egyptian Tutu, and the Irish Caer
Ibormeith — a goddess who's name translates as "yew berry"
(as seen related to York), who alternates life between a maiden and a
swan (shades of the Dioscuri and the Northumbrian King's
Daughter), and who resides in the waters of Loch Bel Dracon
("Lake of the Dragon's Mouth"). Add to these the dormant
Hindu giant Kumbhakarna, the dozing Norse giant Skrýmir, and
even the mytho-geological "Sleeping Giant," a rock
formation sacred to the Anishaanabe Ojibwe, found roughly one day's
drive north of Toronto, at the evocatively named Thunder Bay
(recalling our previous storm-gods).
Moreover, there are
certain recurring artistic icons that would seem to expand on this
ancient motif — Sleeping Eros, Sleeping Ariadne, Sleeping Beauty,
and even the mysterious "Sleeping Lady" statuettes found
throughout the neolithic Maltese hypogeum of Ħal-Saflieni. We may
also find this sentiment invested in the countless tales told around
the world of a sleeping hero-king (typically lying in wait for some
auspicious return); be him mythic or semi-fictitious, like our "red
king" Arthur at rest on Avalon, or be him a real historical
monarch, with the most famous example likely being that of the
beloved 12th century Holy Roman emperor Frederick I — known
otherwise as Rotbart or Barbarossa, German and Italian
for "red beard," respectively — who died by drowning and is said to lie beneath a
certain mountain so long as ravens (see Roxborough) fly above it.
Barbarossa, in this medieval manuscript, rides to his watery fate in a Turkish river, en route to the Third Crusade |
Even stiller than those
at sleep, however, are those who pertain to death — and already
we've encountered a myriad of these in the form of various
underworld/afterworld deities. We may simply make some further note
of the Greek Thanatos — brother of Hypnos, significantly enough —
as well as the aforementioned Tutu who served a dual role as the
protective god of both sleep and of tombs. In like manner, Apsû
and Tiamat are, perhaps, also doubled in functional power by way of
being dead (murdered) gods of restless sleep. Their seminal part in
creation also speaks to the familiar implication that all things
somehow arise from the inertia of sleep or death. Just think to the
slain body of Tiamat and the blood of Kingu, then to all the dead and
dying gods catalogued so famously by Frazer; to the blood sacrifices
needed to perpetuate their gifts, and the blood sacrifices needed to
urge their eventual resurrection. Now think again to the deadly sleep
imposed by Ea on Apsû, to the pre-temporal "Dreamtime"
of the Australian Aborigines, or to the cosmogenic dreams of sleeping
Vishnu, reposed on the great serpent Adisheṣa who, in turn, floats
upon the ocean of infinity.
Here we also find another
image often linked with primal nascency; that of water. Of course, as
a fundamental source of nourishment for all living things, this
identification is not to be puzzled over too strenuously. That this
substance should likewise be seen as composing some universal
environment of birth and incubation is also not terribly surprising,
showing obvious uterine qualities from an individual perspective,
while possibly suggesting to our ancient ancestors vague hints of a
distant evolutionary past — echoes of some profound genetic memory,
stirred at the collective, biological level. All would seem to
contribute in part to the biblical "darkness was upon the
face of the deep; and the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the
waters," not to mention all of its various cognates found in
legion around the globe. Why such a vital, and typically active
(literally fluid) element should relate to a case for
inanimacy, though, is not so readily apparent. Nevertheless, it
seemingly does. Just compare the previous quote from Genesis 1
to these opening lines of a Central American creation myth recorded
in the Mayan Popol Vuh:
Lo,
all was in suspense, all was calm and silent; all was motionless ...
The face of the earth was not yet to be seen; only the peaceful sea
and the expanse of the heavens ... there was not a rustle, not a
sound beneath the sky. There was naught that stood upright; there
were only the quiet waters of the sea, solitary within its bounds;
for as yet naught existed. There were only immobility and silence in
the darkness and in the night.
Water, when completely
unaffected by gravity, weather, or inhabitation can, of course,
remain quite still — and, as the old proverb reminds us, still
waters will often run deep (creational waters, presumably, running
"deepest" of all). Such unaffected water is the exception,
however, and generally associated with stagnancy and death. Water is
also still when frozen, again precluding the entrance of life —
though also having the ability to preserve life in stasis, to hold
life unmoving while awaiting a thaw. Such "dead waters,"
then (recalling "Mortimer" here), require an animating
force — "the Spirit of God," Neumann's "unnatural
instinct," or (dare we say it?) our mysterious "red king"
— some fire to melt the ice, or a "churning of the ocean";
a milling which, in turn, propels the great millwheel and begets all
of being as a vast perpetual motion machine.
We will also notice in
these origin tales (and, perhaps, somewhat predictably) a recurrence
of primary nocturnal darkness, and hence an equating of life and
movement with light and day. Again, not a surprising notion with most
of life requiring sunlight, and much of our movement being aided by
vision via light. A rather more interesting correlation between
night, darkness, and some immediately preceeding topics, however,
might be drawn on certain symbolic grounds, for our mythic brothers
Hypnos ("sleep") and Thanatos ("death") were, in
fact, spawns of the god Erebos ("darkness") and the goddess
Nyx ("night"). What is more, if we deign to tread some
slightly precarious linguistic terrain, we will first notice a
compelling similarity between "Erebos" and Neumann's
"uroboros," the circular serpent first found
depicted in such Egyptian texts as The Enigmatic Book of
the Netherworld or The Book of Hidden Chambers, and
thought to represent the underworld deity Mehen who protects the
sun-god Ra during his travels through the darkness of night.
Compelling, yet
coincidental one might say, with "ouroboros" traditionally
coming from οὐρά ("tail") + βόρος
("eating"), and "Erebos" (Eρεβος)
having only various hypothetical etymologies — though
interestingly, Klein, in his Comprehensive Etymological
Dictionary, has it coming from the Hebrew érebh,
meaning "sunset," whereas Lemprière notes, in his
Classical Dictionary, this word was often used by the poets
"to signify the nether world itself." Now consider
Nyx (Νύξ) and her phonological affinity to a particular breed of
Northern European water serpents/spirits: the Norse nykr, the
German nixe, the Old English nicor, and the modern
English nixie. These, and countless more (with the term in its
numerous Scandinavian guises usually referring to a type of "water
horse") are thought to arrive by the PIE root *neigw-
meaning "to wash" or "bathe." This also happens
to be the source of the Old Irish nig-, whence the prefix
necht-, of which the Dictionary of the Irish Language gives
two possible meanings — the first being "a grand-daughter
(? niece)," and the second, "clean, pure; white"
— and which Mallory then has relating to the Indo-European
*nepots-, writing:
Certainly
one of the more intriguing examples is the comparison of the Indic
(and Avestan) Apam Napat 'grandson/nephew of water' with Latin
Neptunus and the Irish Nechtain. The latter two
preserve only the element *nepots 'grandson or nephew' but
were still closely associated with water, the Latin god as the Roman
equivalent of Poseidon, the god of waters, and the Irish figure
Nechtain who maintained a sacred well.
Poseidon,
we'll recall, was sire of the white "water horse" Pegasus
(foal, as well, of the serpent-haired Medusa). Meanwhile, this Irish
well-keeper Nechtain recalls another Irish well-keeper, Dian Cecht,
whom we previously met healing an eye of the underworld deity Midir.
Perhaps Dian Cecht's most famous feat, though, is the slaying of
three serpents found within the body of Meichi, son of the
raven-goddess Morrigan, who's corpses he condemned to the River
Barrow, causing its waters to boil (or "whirl," or
"churn"), thus lending the river its name (from the Old
Irish bhearú meaning "to boil" or "bubble").
We will also note in "Dian" Cecht's own name (thought to
mean something along the lines of "quick power") a
resemblance to such Greek figures as "Diana," the
"Dioscuri," and "Dionysos" — each ultimately
from the PIE root *dyeu-, meaning "to shine." Our
Irish Dictionary, however, gives "dian" in its
more recent sense to mean: "swift, rapid ... sudden ... with
the added sense of eager, impetuous, forceful or vehement, both in
good and bad sense. Of animals and natural objects: generally
implying motion ... Of persons: active."
By way
of this circuitous and, admittedly, speculative route, we would now
seem to have completed a symbolic journey from the inanimacy of sleep
and death, through the darkness of night and the underworld, to a
realm of mythical waters in which we encounter a serpent, spirit, or
other deity, and from which we finally enter into the white light of
animacy. Yet we need not travel so far as all that to collect the
pieces of a story which we've already found. Indeed, it's high time
we return somewhere closer to home; to start working back from our
base in Sumer to the ruins we left in Toronto, now so long ago. To
get there, however, we must take one more detour, through the lands
of those last Indo-Europeans to speak the cause of animacy by name:
the Hittites.