From
Ritual to Romance
Chapter I
Introductory
In view of the extensive
literature to which the Grail legend has already given birth it may seem that the addition
of another volume to the already existing corpus calls for some words of apology
and explanation. When the student of the subject contemplates the countless essays and
brochures, the volumes of studies and criticism, which have been devoted to this
fascinating subject, the conflicting character of their aims, their hopelessly
contradictory results, he, or she, may well hesitate before adding another element to such
a veritable witches' cauldron of apparently profitless study. And indeed, were I not
convinced that the theory advocated in the following pages contains in itself the element
that will resolve these conflicting ingredients into one harmonious compound I should
hardly feel justified in offering a further contribution to the subject.
But it is precisely because upwards of thirty
years' steady and persevering study of the Grail texts has brought me gradually and
inevitably to certain very definite conclusions, has placed me in possession of evidence
hitherto ignored, or unsuspected, that I venture to offer the result in these studies,
trusting that they may be accepted as, what I believe them to be, a genuine Elucidation
of the Grail problem.
My fellow-workers in this field know all to well the
essential elements of that problem; I do not need here to go over already well-trodden
ground; it will be sufficient to point out certain salient features of the position.
The
main difficulty of our research lies in the fact that the Grail legend consists of a
congeries of widely differing elements--elements which at first sight appear hopelessly
incongruous, if not completely contradictory, yet at the same time are present to an
extent, and in a form, which no honest critic can afford to ignore.
Thus it has been
perfectly possible for one group of scholars, relying upon the undeniably
Christian-Legendary elements, preponderant in certain versions, to maintain the thesis
that the Grail legend is ab initio a Christian, and ecclesiastical, legend, and to
analyse the literature on that basis alone.
Another group, with equal reason, have pointed to the strongly marked Folk-lore
features preserved in the tale, to its kinship with other themes, mainly of Celtic provenance,
and have argued that, while the later versions of the cycle have been worked over by
ecclesiastical writers in the interests of edification, the story itself is non-Christian,
and Folk-lore in origin.
Both groups have a basis of truth for their arguments: the features upon which they
rely are, in each case, undeniably present, yet at the same time each line of argument is
faced with certain insuperable difficulties, fatal to the claims advanced.
Thus, the theory of Christian origin breaks down when faced with the awkward fact that
there is no Christian legend concerning Joseph of Arimathea and the Grail. Neither in
Legendary, nor in Art, is there any trace of the story; it has no
existence outside the Grail literature, it is the creation of romance, and no genuine
tradition. On this very ground it was severely criticized by the Dutch writer Jacob van
Maerlant, in 1260. In his Merlin he denounces the whole Grail history as
lies, asserting that the Church knows nothing of it--which is true.
In the same way the
advocate of a Folk-lore origin is met with the objection that the section of the cycle for
which such a source can be definitely proved, i.e., the Perceval
story, has originally nothing whatever to do with the Grail; and that, while parallels can
be found for this or that feature of the legend, such parallels are isolated in character
and involve the breaking up of the tale into a composite of mutually independent themes. A
prototype, containing the main features of the Grail story--the Waste Land, the Fisher
King, the Hidden Castle with its solemn Feast, and mysterious Feeding Vessel, the Bleeding
Lance and Cup--does not, so far as we know exist. None of the great collections of
Folk-tales, due to the industry of a Cosquin, a Hartland, or a Campbell, has preserved
specimens of such a type; it is not such a story as, i.e., The Three Days
Tournament, examples of which are found all over the world. Yet neither the
advocate of a Christian origin, nor the Folk-lorist, can afford to ignore the arguments,
and the evidence of the opposing school, and while the result of half a century of patient
investigation has been show that the origin of the Grail story must be sought elsewhere
than in ecclesiastical legend, of popular tale, I hold that the result has equally been to
demonstrate that neither of these solutions
should be ignored, but that the ultimate source must be sought for in a direction which
shall do justice to what is sound in the claims of both.
Some years ago, when fresh
from the study of Sir J. G. Frazer's epoch-making work, The Golden Bough, I
was struck by the resemblance existing between certain features of the Grail story, and
characteristic details of the Nature Cults described. The more closely I analysed the
tale, the more striking became the resemblance, and I finally asked myself whether it were
not possible that in this mysterious legend--mysterious alike in its character, its sudden
appearance, the importance apparently assigned to it, followed by as sudden and complete a
disappearance--we might not have the confused record of a ritual, once popular, later
surviving under conditions of strict secrecy? This would fully account for the atmosphere
of awe and reverence which even under distinctly non-Christian conditions never fails to
surround the Grail, It my act simply as a feeding vessel, it is none the less toute
sainte cose; and also for the presence in the tale of distinctly popular, and
Folk-lore, elements. Such an interpretation would also explain features irreconcilable
with orthodox Christianity, which had caused some scholars to postulate a heterodox origin
for the legend, and thus explain its curiously complete disappearance as a literary theme.
In the first volume of my Perceval studies, published in 1906, I hinted at
this possible solution of the problem, a solution worked out more fully in a paper read
before the Folk-lore Society in December of the same year, and published in volume XVIII.
of the Journal of the Society. By the time my second volume of studies was ready
for publication in 1909, further evidence had come into my hands; I was the certain that I
was upon the right path, and I felt justified in laying before the public the outlines of
a theory of evolution, alike of the legend, and of the literature, to the main principles
of which I adhere to-day.
But certain links were missing in the chain of evidence, and
the work was not complete. No inconsiderable part of the information at my disposal
depended upon personal testimony, the testimony of those who knew of the continued
existence of such a ritual, and had actually been initiated into its mysteries--and for
such evidence the student of the letter has little respect. he worships the written word;
for the oral, living, tradition from which the word derives force and vitality he has
little use. Therefore the written word had to be found. It has taken me some nine or ten
years longer to complete the evidence, but the chain is at last linked up, and we can now
prove by printed texts the parallels existing between each and every feature of the Grail
story and the recorded symbolism of the Mystery cults. Further, we can show that between
these Mystery cults and Christianity there existed at one time a 'Eucharistic' Feast, in
which the worshipers partook of the food of Life from the sacred vessels.
In face of the proofs which will be found in these pages I do not think any fair-minded
critic will be inclined to dispute any longer the origin of the 'Holy' Grail; after all it
is as august and ancient an origin as the most tenacious upholder of Its Christian
character could desire.
But I
should wish it clearly to be understood that the aim of these studies is, as indicated in
the title, to determine the origin of the Grail, not to discuss the provenance
and inter-relation of the different versions. I do not believe this latter task can be
satisfactorily achieved unless and until we are of one accord as to the character of the
subject matter. When we have made up our minds as to what the Grail really was, and what
it stood for, we shall be able to analyse the romances; to decide which of them contains
more, which less, of the original matter, and to group the accordingly. On this point I
believe that the table of descent, printed in Volume II. of my Perceval
studies is in the main correct, but there is still much analytical work to be done, in
particular the establishment of the original form of the Perlesvaus is highly
desirable. But apart from the primary object of these studies, and the results therein
obtained, I would draw attention to the manner in which the evidence set forth in the
chapters on the Mystery cults, and especially that on The Naassene Document,
a text of extraordinary value from more than one point of view, supports and complements
the researches of Sir J. G. Frazer. I am of course, familiar with the attacks directed
against the 'Vegetation' theory, the sarcasms of which it has been the object, and the
criticisms of what is held in some quarters to be the exaggerated importance attached to
these Nature cults. But in view of the use made of these cults as the medium of impacting
high spiritual teaching, a use which, in face of the document above referred to, can no
longer be ignored or evaded, are we not rather justified in asking if the true importance
of the rites has as yet been recognized? Can we possibly exaggerate their value as a new
factor in the evolution of religious consciousness?
Such a
development of his researches naturally lay outside the range of Sir J. G. Frazer's work,
but posterity will probably decide that, like many another patient and honest worker, he
'builded better than he knew.'
I have carefully read Sir W. Ridgeway's attack on the
school in his Dramas and Dramatic Dances, and while the above remarks explain
my position with regard to the question as a whole, I would here take the opportunity of
stating specifically my grounds for dissenting from certain of the conclusions at which
the learned author arrives. I do not wish it to be said: "This is all very well, but
Miss Weston ignores the arguments on the other side." I do not ignore, but I do not
admit their validity. It is perfectly obvious that Sir W. Ridgeway's theory, reduced to
abstract terms, would result in the conclusion that all religion is based upon the cult of
the Dead, and that men originally knew no gods but their grandfathers, a theory from which
as a student of religion I absolutely and entirely dissent. I can understand that such
Dead Ancestors can be looked upon as Protectors, or as Benefactors, but I see no ground
for supposing that they have ever been egarded as Creators, yet it is precisely as vehicle
for the most lofty teaching as to the Cosmic relations existing between God and Man, that
these Vegetation cults were employed. The more closely one studies pre-Christian Theology.
the more strongly one is impressed with the deeply, and daringly, spiritual character of
its speculations, and the more doubtful it appears that such teaching can depend upon the
unaided processes of human thought, or can have been evolved from such germs as we find
among the supposedly 'primitive' peoples, such as e.g. the Australian tribes. Are
they really primitive? Or are we dealing, not with the primary elements of religion, but
with the disjecta membra of a vanished civilization? Certain it is that so far as
historical evidence goes out earliest records point to the recognition of a spiritual, not
of a material, origin of the human race; the Sumerian and Babylonian Psalms were not
composed by men who believed themselves the descendants of 'witchetty grubs.' The Folk
practices and ceremonies studied in these pages, the Dances, the rough Dramas, the local
and seasonal celebrations, do not represent the material out of which the Attis-Adonis
cult was formed, but surviving fragments of a worship from which the higher significance
has vanished.
Sir W. Ridgeway is confident that Osiris, Attis, Adonis, were all at one
time human beings, whose tragic fate gripped hold of popular imagination, and led to their
ultimate deification. The first-named cult stands on a somewhat different basis from the
others, the beneficent activities of Osiris being more widely diffused, more universal in
their operation. I should be inclined to regard the Egyptian deity primarily as a Culture
Hero, rather than a Vegetation God.
With regard to Attis and Adonis, whatever their original character (and it seems to me
highly improbable that there should have been two youths each beloved by a goddess, each
victim of a similar untimely fate), long before we have any trace of them both have become
some intimately identified with the processes of Nature that they have ceased to be
men and become gods, and as such alone we can deal with them. It is also permissible to
point out that in the case of Tammuz, Esmun, and Adonis, the title is not a proper name,
but a vague appellative, denoting an abstract rather than a concrete origin. Proof of this
will be found later. Sir W. Ridgeway overlooks the fact that it is not the tragic death of
Attis-Adonis which is of importance for these cults, but their subsequent restoration to
life, a feature which cannot be postulated of any ordinary mortal.
And how are we to
regard Tammuz, the prototype of all these deities? Is there any possible ground for
maintaining that he was ever a man? Prove it we cannot, as the records of his cult go back
thousands of years before our era. Here, again, we have the same dominant feature; it is
not merely the untimely death which is lamented, but the restoration to life which is
celebrated.
Throughout the whole study the author fails to
discriminate between the activities of the living, and the dead, king. The Dead king may
as I have said above, be regarded as the Benefactor, as the Protector, of his people, but
it is the Living king upon whom their actual and continued prosperity depends. The detail
that the ruling sovereign is sometimes regarded as the re-incarnation of the original
founder of the race strengthens this point--the king never dies--Le Roi est mort, Vive le
Roi is very emphatically the motto of this Faith. It is the insistence on Life, Life
continuous, and ever-renewing, which is the abiding characteristic of these cults, a
characteristic which differentiates
them utterly and entirely from the ancestral worship with which Sir W. Ridgeway would fain
connect them.
Nor are the arguments based upon the memorial rites of definitely
historical heroes, of comparatively late date, such as Hussein and Hossein, of any value
here. It is precisely the death, and not the resurrection, of the martyr which is of the
essence of the Muharram. No one contends that Hussein rose from the dead, but it is
precisely this point which is primary importance in the Nature cults; and Sir W. Ridgeway
must surely be aware that Folk-lorists find in this very Muharram distinct traces of
borrowing from the earlier Vegetation rites.
The author triumphantly asserts that the fact that certain Burmese heroes and heroines
are after death reverenced as tree spirits 'sets at rest for ever' the belief in abstract
deities. But how can he be sure that the process was not the reverse of that which he
postulates, i.e., that certain natural objects, trees, rivers, etc., were not regarded as
sacred before the Nats became connected with them? That the deified human beings
were not after death assigned to places already held in reverence? Such a possibility is
obvious to any Folk-lore student, and local traditions should in each case be carefully
examined before the contrary is definitely asserted.
So as far as the origins of Drama are concerned the Ode quoted later from the Naassene
Document is absolute and definite proof of the close connection existing between the Attis
Mystery ritual, and dramatic performances, i.e., Attis regarded in his deified,
Creative, 'Logos,' aspect, not Attis, the dead youth.
Nor do I think that the idea of 'Mana' can be lightly dismissed
as 'an ordinary case of relics.' The Influence may well be
something entirely apart from the continued existence of the ancestor, an independent
force, assisting him in life, and transferring itself after death to his successor. A
'Magic' Sword or Staff is not necessarily a relic; Medieval romance supplies numerous
instances of self-acting weapons whose virtue in no wise depends upon their previous
owner, as e.g. the Sword in Le Chevalier à l'Épée, or the Flaming
Lance of the Chevalier de la Charrette. Doubtless the cult of Ancestors plays
a large rôle in the beliefs of certain peoples, but it is not sufficiently solid
foundation to bear the weight of the super-structure Sir W. Ridgeway would fain rear upon
it, while it differs too radically from the cults he attacks to be used as an argument
against them; the one is based upon Death, the other on Life.
Wherefore, in spite of all the learning and ingenuity brought to bear against it, I
avow myself an impenitent believer in Sir J. G. Frazer's main theory, and as I have said
above, I hold that theory to be of greater and more far-reaching importance than has
hitherto suspected.
I would add a few words as to the form of these studies --they may be found
disconnected. They have been written at intervals of time extending over several years,
and my aim
has been to prove the essentially archaic character of all the elements composing
the Grail story rather than to analyse the story as a connected whole. With this aim in
view I have devoted chapters to features which have now either dropped out of the existing
versions, or only survive in a subordinate form, e.g. the chapters on The
Medicine Man, and The Freeing of the Waters. The studies will, I hope,
and believe, be accepted as offering a definite contribution towards establishing the
fundamental character of our material; as stated above, when we are all at one as to what
the Holy Grail really was, and is, we can then proceed with some hope of success to
criticize the manner in which different writers have handled the inspiring theme, but such
success seems to be hopeless so long as we all start from different, and often utterly
irreconcilable, standpoints and proceed along widely diverging roads. One or another may,
indeed, arrive at the goal, but such unanimity of opinion as will lend to our criticism
authoritative weight is, on such lines, impossible of achievement.   
|
|