dress of feathers.
Upon the door and bolt the dust hath blown."
[1] One of the names of Nergal.
[2] Or "whose enterer goeth not forth."
Seven gates gave access to this place of gloom, and the porter, as he
let the visitor in, took from her (the goddess Istar in the narrative)
at each an article of clothing, until, at the last, she entered quite
naked, apparently typifying the fact that a man can take nothing with
him when he dieth, and also, in this case, that he has not even his
good deeds wherewith to clothe himself, for had they outweighed his
evil ones, he would not have found himself in that dread abode.
On the arrival of Istar in Hades, Eres-ki-gal commanded Namtaru, the
god of fate, to smite Istar with disease in all her members--eyes,
sides, feet, heart, and head. As things went wrong on the earth in
consequence of the absence of the goddess of love, the gods sent a
messenger to effect her release. When he reached the land of
No-return, the queen of the region threatened him with all kinds of
torments--the food of the gutters of the city were to be his food, the
oil-jars of the city (naptha?) his drink, the gloom of the castle his
resting-place, a stone slab his seat, and hunger and thirst were to
shatter his strength. These were evidently the punishments inflicted
there, but as the messenger threatened was a divine one, they were
probably not put into execution, and he obtained his demand, for Istar
was set free, receiving back at each gate, in reverse order, the
clothing and ornaments which had been taken from her when she had
descended thither. It is uncertain whether Tammuz, for whom she had
gone down, was set free also, but as he is referred to, it is not
improbable that this was the case.
WORKS BEARING UPON THE RELIGION OF THE BABYLONIANS AND ASSYRIANS
Hibbert Lectures, 1887. The Religion of the Ancient Babylonians, by
Professor A. H. Sayce.
The Religious Ideas of the Babylonians, by the Author, 1895 (Journal
of the Victoria Institute, also separately).
The Religion of Babylonia and Assyria, by Morris Jastrow, jun., 1898.
(German edition, vol. i. 1905, vol. ii. in progress.)
Babylonian Religion and Mythology, by L. W. King, M.A., 1899.
Gifford Lectures, 1902. Religions of Egypt and Babylonia, by Professor
A. H. Sayce.
The O.T. in the Light of the Records of Assyria and Babylonia, by the
Author, 1903. (The portions referring to Babylonian Mythology.)
The Hymns to Tammuz
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