A Lie Never Justifiable | Page 6

H. Clay Trumbull
the match, and shut her up within the sacred
enclosure of the god Balder. Fridthjof ventured within the forbidden
ground, in order to pledge to her his manly troth. The lovers were pure
in purpose and in act, but, if their interview were known, they would
both be permanently harmed in reputation and in standing. A rumor of
their secret meeting was circulated, and Fridthjof was summoned

before the council of heroes to answer to the charge. If ever a lie were
justifiable, it would seem to be when a pure woman's honor was at
stake, and when a hero's happiness and power for good pivoted on it.
Fridthjof tells to Ingeborg the story of his sore temptation when, in the
presence of the council, Helge challenges his course.
"'Say, Fridthjof, Balder's peace hast thou not broken, Not seen my sister
in his house while Day Concealed himself, abashed, before your
meeting? Speak! yea or nay!' Then echoed from the ring Of crowded
warriors, 'Say but nay, say nay! Thy simple word we'll trust; we'll court
for thee,--Thou, Thorstein's son, art good as any king's. Say nay! say
nay! and thine is Ingeborg!' 'The happiness,' I answered, 'of my life On
one word hangs; but fear not therefore, Helge! I would not lie to gain
the joys of Valhal, Much less this earth's delights. I've seen thy sister,
Have spoken with her in the temple's night, But have not therefore
broken Balder's peace!' More none would hear. A murmur of deep
horror The diet traversed; they who nearest stood Drew back, as I had
with the plague been smitten."[1]
[Footnote 1: Anderson's _Viking Tales of the North_, p. 223.]
And so, because Fridthjof would not lie, he lost his bride and became a
wanderer from his land, and Ingeborg became the wife of another; and
this record is to this day told to the honor of Fridthjof, in accordance
with the standard of the North in the matter of truth-telling.
In ancient Persia, the same high standard prevailed. Herodotus says of
the Persians: "The most disgraceful thing in the world, they think, is to
tell a lie; the next worse, to owe a debt; because, among other reasons,
the debtor is obliged to tell lies."[1] "Their sons are carefully instructed,
from their fifth to their twentieth year, in three things alone,--to ride, to
draw the bow, and to speak the truth."[2] Here the one duty in the realm
of morals is truth-telling. In the famous inscription of Darius, the son of
Hystaspes, on the Rock of Behistun,[3] there are repeated references to
lying as the chief of sins, and to the evil time when lying was
introduced into Persia, and "the lie grew in the provinces, in Persia as
well as in Media and in the other provinces." Darius claims to have had
the help of "Ormuzd and the other gods that may exist," because he
"was not wicked, nor a liar;" and he enjoins it on his successor to
"punish severely him who is a liar or a rebel."
[Footnote 1: Rawlinson's _Herodotus_, Bk. I., § 139.]

[Footnote 2: Ibid., Bk. I., § 136.]
[Footnote 3: Sayce's _Introduction to Ezra, Nehemiah, and Esther_, pp.
120-137.]
The Zoroastrian designation of heaven was the "Home of Song;" while
hell was known as the "Home of the Lie."[1] There was in the
Zoroastrian thought only two rival principles in the universe,
represented by Ormuzd and Ahriman, as the God of truth, and the
father of lies; and the lie was ever and always an offspring of Ahriman,
the evil principle: it could not emanate from or be consistent with the
God of truth. The same idea was manifest in the designation of the
subordinate divinities of the Zoroastrian religion. Mithra was the god of
light, and as there is no concealment in the light, Mithra was also god
of truth. A liar was the enemy of righteousness.[2]
[Footnote 1: Müller's _Sacred Books of the East_, XXXI., 184.]
[Footnote 2: Müller's _Sacred Books of the East_, XXIII., 119 f., 124 f.,
128, 139. See reference to Jackson's paper on "the ancient Persians'
abhorrence of falsehood, illustrated from the Avesta," in _Journal of
Am. Oriental Soc_., Vol. XIII., p. cii.]
"Truth was the main cardinal virtue among the Egyptians," and
"falsehood was considered disgraceful among them."[1] Ra and Ma
were symbols of Light and Truth; and their representation was worn on
the breastplate of priest and judge, like the Urim and Thummim of the
Hebrews.[2] When the soul appeared in the Hall of Two Truths, for
final judgment, it must be able to say, "I have not told a falsehood," or
fail of acquittal.[3] Ptah, the creator, a chief god of the Egyptians, was
called "Lord of Truth."[4] The Egyptian conception of Deity was: "God
is
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