I would do it in a boat, I would do it with a Goat |
Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? |
Pan (ancient Greek: Πάν), the Goat-foot God, is an ancient Greek rustic deity of shepherds, music, male sexuality, and alcohol. He is often identified with the Devil on account of his hooves, horns, and goat legs, and in fact is one of the historical sources for the standard Devil of folklore. He is also a source of inspiration for the Horned God of neopaganism.
His Roman equivalent was Faunus. Pan was the son of Hermes by the nymph Dryope; but other ancient writers say that he was the son of Penelope, wife of Odysseus; Robert Graves repeats a tale that makes Pan the son of Penelope and all the suitors. He had two small goat's horns, and his legs, feet, and tail were those of a goat. He invented the pan pipes, and mastered them well before Zamfir. In Rome, he presided over the Lupercalia, a festival in which young men, naked but for the goatskins they wore, went abroad beating people with goatskin thongs. Women who wished to become pregnant sought out these blows, believing that it helped. Pan was capable of inspiring sheer terror, and the English word "panic" reflects this.[1] The satyrs strongly resembled Pan, having goat horns and nether parts, and were on that account sometimes called Panes by the ancients.
Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable,[2] repeating the Stoic interpretations of Lucius Annaeus Cornutus, tells us:
“”“Universal Pan,
Knit with the Graces and the Hours in dance, Led on the eternal spring.” |
—Milton: Paradise Lost, iv. 266. |
It is good to know that the world has a spermatic principle.
The Greek name of Pan (Πάν) was associated by the ancient Greeks with the word for 'everything' (πᾶν) by folk etymology. In fact, the name of Pan is very likely cognate with the Vedic sun god Pushan, both regularly derivable from a Proto-Indo-European *Péh2usōn.[4] This represents one of the few instances where an ancestral deity name can be reconstructed as far back as the proto-language and means too Pan is a very old deity.
Remarkably, according to the mythos that surround Pan, he had a much lower frag count that most other gods of Greek religion, having not killed or even hurt anyone, preferring to often wander peacefully through the woods, playing a pipe, or dancing despite often scaring the Hell out of whoever ruined his siestas and especially loving to chase nymphs for rather obvious reasons.
According to the Roman historian Plutarch's De defectu oraculorum ("On the Silence of the Oracles"), during the reign of Tiberius (14 - 37 CE) a sailor named Thammus heard a divine voice from the sea, instructing him to proclaim that "the great god Pan is dead" when he reached the shore. The announcement of Pan's death was met with groans and mourning.[5] Christian apologists ran with this legend, claiming that it was Jesus and his resurrection that caused the death of Pan, and with him, the decline of classical paganism.
Later proposals are that whoever listened to that mistook the laments of Tammuz worshippers, who were directed to an Egyptian sailor named Thamus, or that the story is quite similar to a class of widely known tales known as "Fairies Send a Message".
Literary Romanticism launched a revival of interest in Pan. John Keats's Endymion opens at a festival dedicated to Pan. Arthur Machen's 1896 novella The Great God Pan uses Pan as a figure of supreme supernatural terror. In Kenneth Grahame's The Wind In the Willows (1906), the unnamed "Piper at the Gates of Dawn" is inspired by Pan. Most importantly for the later revival of Pan, Aleister Crowley wrote a "Hymn to Pan",[6] identifying him with Bacchus (he was oftener identified with Silenus) and invoking the god in pagan ritual:
“”Thrill with lissome lust of the light,
O man ! My man ! Come careering out of the night Of Pan ! Io Pan. Io Pan ! Io Pan ! Come over the sea From Sicily and from Arcady ! Roaming as Bacchus, with fauns and pards And nymphs and satyrs for thy guards, On a milk-white ass, come over the sea To me, to me... |
—Aleister Crowley, "Hymn to Pan" |
Jack Parsons would frequently recite it during rocket tests.
In 1933, Margaret Murray published the book, The God of the Witches, in which she theorised that Pan was merely one form of a horned god who was worshipped across Europe by a witch-cult.[7] This theory influenced the Neopagan notion of the Horned God, as an archetype of male virility and sexuality. In Wicca, the archetype of the Horned God is highly important, as represented by such deities as the Celtic Cernunnos, Indian Shiva Pashupati and Greek Pan.
According to Robert Ogilvie Crombie's The Findhorn Garden and The Magic of Findhorn,[8] he and other Scottish hippies have reported seeing visions of Pan in various places of rural Scotland. Crombie claimed to have met Pan many times at various locations in Scotland, including Edinburgh, on the island of Iona and at the Findhorn Foundation.