The lyric and tragic poets were conscious of this contrast.It would be difficult to discover a more marvellous combination of seemingly inexplicable contradictions, of belief in the history of gods utterly distinct from the faith which guided the practice of men, of an immoral and impure theology with a condition of society which it would be monstrous to regard as utterly and brutally depraved. Yet, in some way or other, this repulsive system, from which heathen poets and philosophers learnt gradually to shrink scarcely less than ourselves, had come into being, had been systematised into a scheme more or less coherent, and imposed upon the people as so much genuine history. What this origin and growth was, is (strange as it may appear) one of the most momentous questions which we can put to ourselves, for on its answer must depend our conclusions on the conditions of human life during the infancy of mankind. Of the answers which have been given to this question, it can be no light matter to determine which furnishes the most adequate solution.
Conflicting views as to its origin.Two theories only appear to attempt a philosophical analysis of this vast system. While one repudiates the imputation of a deliberate [5]- ↑ ἐμοὶ δ᾽ ἄπορα γαστρίμαρ-
γον μακάρων τιν᾽ εἰπεῖν· ἀφίσταμαι.
Pindar, Olymp. i. 82.
Pindar's objection is a moral one; but Herodotos proceeded to reject on physical grounds the legend which told of the founding of the Dodonaian oracle (ii. 57), as well as some of the exploits of Herakles (ii. 45). It was, however, a moral reason which led him practically to disbelieve the whole story of Helen's sojourn at Troy (ii. 120). - ↑ Works and Days, 247–253.
- ↑ Ζεὺς ὅστις ποτ᾽ ἐστίν
Agamemnon, 160. - ↑ Oid. Tyr. 863–871.
- ↑ sentiment of the same age, or of times separated by no long interval; and in the latter poem the action of Zeus in the legend of Pandora (which is also related in the Theogony) is utterly unlike that of the Zeus who figures in all the didactic portions of the work.