
Adonis
THE MYTH of Adonis was localised and his rites celebrated
with much solemnity at two places in Western Asia. One of these was Byblus on
the coast of Syria, the other was Paphos in Cyprus. Both were great seats of the
worship of Aphrodite, or rather of her Semitic counterpart, Astarte; and of
both, if we accept the legends, Cinyras, the father of Adonis, was king. Of the
two cities Byblus was the more ancient; indeed it claimed to be the oldest city
in Phoenicia, and to have been founded in the early ages of the world by the
great god El, whom Greeks and Romans identified with Cronus and Saturn
respectively. However that may have been, in historical times it ranked as a
holy place, the religious capital of the country, the Mecca or Jerusalem of the
Phoenicians. The city stood on a height beside the sea, and contained a great
sanctuary of Astarte, where in the midst of a spacious open court, surrounded by
cloisters and approached from below by staircases, rose a tall cone or obelisk,
the holy image of the goddess. In this sanctuary the rites of Adonis were
celebrated. Indeed the whole city was sacred to him, and the river Nahr Ibrahim,
which falls into the sea a little to the south of Byblus, bore in antiquity the
name of Adonis. This was the kingdom of Cinyras. From the earliest to the latest
times the city appears to have been ruled by kings, assisted perhaps by a senate
or council of elders. 1
The last king of Byblus bore the ancient name of Cinyras, and was beheaded by
Pompey the Great for his tyrannous excesses. His legendary namesake Cinyras is
said to have founded a sanctuary of Aphrodite, that is, of Astarte, at a place
on Mount Lebanon, distant a day’s journey from the capital. The spot was
probably Aphaca, at the source of the river Adonis, half-way between Byblus and
Baalbec; for at Aphaca there was a famous grove and sanctuary of Astarte which
Constantine destroyed on account of the flagitious character of the worship. The
site of the temple has been discovered by modern travellers near the miserable
village which still bears the name of Afka at the head of the wild, romantic,
wooded gorge of the Adonis. The hamlet stands among groves of noble walnut-trees
on the brink of the lyn. A little way off the river rushes from a cavern at the
foot of a mighty amphitheatre of towering cliffs to plunge in a series of
cascades into the awful depths of the glen. The deeper it descends, the ranker
and denser grows the vegetation, which, sprouting from the crannies and fissures
of the rocks, spreads a green veil over the roaring or murmuring stream in the
tremendous chasm below. There is something delicious, almost intoxicating, in
the freshness of these tumbling waters, in the sweetness and purity of the
mountain air, in the vivid green of the vegetation. The temple, of which some
massive hewn blocks and a fine column of Syenite granite still mark the site,
occupied a terrace facing the source of the river and commanding a magnificent
prospect. Across the foam and the roar of the waterfalls you look up to the
cavern and away to the top of the sublime precipices above. So lofty is the
cliff that the goats which creep along its ledges to browse on the bushes appear
like ants to the spectator hundreds of feet below. Seaward the view is
especially impressive when the sun floods the profound gorge with golden light,
revealing all the fantastic buttresses and rounded towers of its mountain
rampart, and falling softly on the varied green of the woods which clothe its
depths. It was here that, according to the legend, Adonis met Aphrodite for the
first or the last time, and here his mangled body was buried. A fairer scene
could hardly be imagined for a story of tragic love and death. Yet, sequestered
as the valley is and must always have been, it is not wholly deserted. A convent
or a village may be observed here and there standing out against the sky on the
top of some beetling crag, or clinging to the face of a nearly perpendicular
cliff high above the foam and the din of the river; and at evening the lights
that twinkle through the gloom betray the presence of human habitations on
slopes which might seem inaccessible to man. In antiquity the whole of the
lovely vale appears to have been dedicated to Adonis, and to this day it is
haunted by his memory; for the heights which shut it in are crested at various
points by ruined monuments of his worship, some of them overhanging dreadful
abysses, down which it turns the head dizzy to look and see the eagles wheeling
about their nests far below. One such monument exists at Ghineh. The face of a
great rock, above a roughly hewn recess, is here carved with figures of Adonis
and Aphrodite. He is portrayed with spear in rest, awaiting the attack of a
bear, while she is seated in an attitude of sorrow. Her grief-stricken figure
may well be the mourning Aphrodite of the Lebanon described by Macrobius, and
the recess in the rock is perhaps her lover’s tomb. Every year, in the belief of
his worshippers, Adonis was wounded to death on the mountains, and every year
the face of nature itself was dyed with his sacred blood. So year by year the
Syrian damsels lamented his untimely fate, while the red anemone, his flower,
bloomed among the cedars of Lebanon, and the river ran red to the sea, fringing
the winding shores of the blue Mediterranean, whenever the wind set inshore,
with a sinuous band of crimson.