ANCIENT EGYPT - THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD by GERALD MASSEY ΔΔ
BOOK -5-
THE SIGN-LANGUAGE OF ASTRONOMICAL MYTHOLOGY.
(THE PRIMITIVE AFRICAN PARADISE)
[Page
249] IT may be said that the dawn of African civilization
came full circle in Egypt, but that the earliest glimmer of the light
which turned the darkness into day for all the earth first issued from
the inner land. The veriest beginning must have been coeval with the
creature that first developed a thumb to wield a weapon or to shape an
implement for human use, when in the far-off past but little difference
could have been detected twixt the monkey and the Pygmy race of human
aborigines. It is improbable that we shall get back any nearer to a beginning
for the human being among the types extant than with those forest dwarfs,
of whom a recent traveller says: “They have no records or traditions
of the past, no regard for time, nor any fetish rites; they do not seek
to know the future by occult means, as do their neighbours; in short,
they are, to my thinking, the closest link with the original Darwinian
anthropoid apes extant” . These little folk of the forest are still upon
the lowest step in the ascent of man. Not because they have retrograded,
but because they have never grown. So far as is known, the Pygmies have no
verbal language of their own, whatsoever words they may have gathered
from outsiders. Otherwise, language with them is the same as it was in
the beginning,with
a few animal sounds and gesture-signs. They have no totems, no signs
of tattu scored upon their bodies, no rites of puberty, no eating of
the parent in honour for the primitive sacrament. Judging
from specimens of
the Pygmies that have been brought to England from the Ituri Forest,
the foundation of the negroid features,
the thick lips and
large, spreading nostrils, was laid in the Pygmean phase of development,
but up to the present time the Pygmy
has only reached
the “peppercorn” stage of hair, and has not yet attained the “kinky” locks
of the full-blooded negro.
A German traveller
lately claimed to
have discovered a
people in the forests
of Borneo who show some vestige of the ancestral tail. He saw
the tail on
a child about six
years old belonging
to the Poenan
tribe. There was
the appendage, sure
enough - not very
long, but plainly visible, hairless, and about the thickness of
a man's little finger
(Daily Chronicle, August 10th, 1904).
Also the persistent [Page 250] rumour
that some remains
of a semi-simian
race are yet extant
among the hidden secrets of the old dark land is not incredible,
to the
evolutionist. According
to Lady Lugard, there
is a tribe in Nigeria
who are reputed not to have lost their tails (Daily Mail, March
2nd,1904). The
African Pygmies, however, have not publicly proclaimed the tail.
The one sole race
that can be traced among the aborigines all over the earth, above
ground or below, is the dark race of a dwarf negrito type, and
the only one possible motherland on earth for these preliminary
people is Africa. No other country possesses the necessary background
as a basis for the human beginnings. And so closely were the facts
of nature observed and registered by the Egyptians that the earliest
divine men in their mythology are portrayed as Pygmies. Following
the zootypes, the primitive human form of Elder Horus was that
of Bes, the dancing dwarf. Bes is a figure of Child-Horus in the
likeness of a negroid Pygmy, He comes capering into Egypt along
with the Great Mother, Apt, from Puanta in the far-off south,
In reality, Bes-Horus is the earliest form of the Pygmy Ptah. In both the dwarf is the type of man in his most primitive shape. The seven powers that co-operate with Ptah are also represented as seven Pygmies. Thus the anthropomorphic type comes into view as a Pygmy! Moreover, Ptah, the divine dwarf, is the imperfect progenitor of the perfect man in his son Atum. In this way the Egyptian wisdom registers the fact that the Pygmy was the earliest human figure known, and that this was brought
into Egypt from the forests of Inner Africa and the record made in the mythology. In this mode of registering the natural fact the Egyptians trace their descent from the folk who were the first in human form - that is, from the Pygmies.
We have now to summarize
a few of the pre-Egyptian
evidences for the
Inner African beginnings.
In one of the later
chapters of the Book of the Dead (No.
164) - later, that
is, in position-there
are some ancient
mystical names which
are said to have
been uttered in the
language of the Nahsi
(the negroes), the
Anti, and the people
of Ta-Kenset, or
Nubia. Dr. Birch
thought this and other chapters were modern because of
the presence of Amen-Ra,
But the later insertion
of a divine name
or title does not
prove the fundamental matter of the chapter to
be late. In this
the Great Mother
is saluted as the
Supreme Being, “the
Only One” ,
by the name of Sekhet-Bast,
the goddess of sexual
passion and strong
drink, who is the
mistress of the gods,
not as wife, but
as the promiscuous
concubine - she who
was “uncreated by
the gods', and who
is “mightier than
the gods” .
To her the eight
gods offer words
of adoration. Therefore
they were not then
merged in the Put-circle
of the nine. It is
noticeable too that
Sekhet is not saluted
as the consort of
Ptah. Sekhet was
undoubtedly far more
ancient than Ptah. But the point is that
the outlandish names
applied to her in
this chapter are
quoted from the language
of the negroes, therefore
parts of the Ritual
had been composed in those languages;
and if in the languages,
then in the lands
where these languages
were spoken, including
the country of the Nahsi, who were so
despised by the dynastic
Egyptians. This we
claim as a partial
recognition of the [Page
251] southern origin of the “Egyptian mythology.
In agreement
with this, the
Great Mother
may be identified
in (chapter 143)
as Apt of Nubia,
who had a shrine
at Nepata on
her way to Egypt, Khept, or Khebt. In a text upon
a stele among
the Egyptian
monuments at
Dorpat it is
said to the worshipper,
“Make adoration to Apt of the dum-palms, to
the lady of the
two lands” (Proc.
Sac. Bib. Arch.,
March 6th, 1894,
p. 152). In this
text the old
first mother
Apt appears as
goddess of the
mama-tree, that
is the dum-palm,
which in Egypt is a native of the south. This
points to the
farther south
as the primeval
home and habitat
of the most ancient hippopotamus goddess, she
who thus preceded
Hathor in the
southern sycamore
as Mother-earth
or Lady of the Tree, and who
in the dum-palm
was the “mama” or
mother of the
Inner Africans.
The King of Egypt
as the Suten dates
from Sut. The dignity
is so ancient that
the insignia of the Pharaohs evidently
belong to a
time when the
Egyptians wore
nothing but the
girdle of the negro, and
when it was
considered a
special distinction
that the King
should complete this
girdle with a piece
of skin in front and adorn it with the tail
of a lioness
behind. The oldest
and most primitive
form of the sacred
house in Egypt known
from inscriptions of the ancient empire is a hovel dedicated
to Sut for a
temple. It looks like a hut of wattle-work without dab, and is a prehistoric type of building in the Nile valley, belonging to a civilization immeasurably lower than that of Egypt. (Erman, p. 280.) Sut the son of Apt was the deity of the first Egyptian nome. Sut is synonymous with the south from which he came with Horus-Behutet, who halted by the way as deity of the second nome. Milne-Edwards has shown the African origin of the ass, and
this was preserved by the Egyptians in its pristine purity of form. The serpents of equatorial Africa have their likeness in the huge reptiles portrayed in pictures of the Egyptian under-world. The sycamore fig of Hathor and the palm tree of Taht were imported into Egypt from Central Africa. The burying-places of Abydos, especially the most ancient, have furnished millions of shells, pierced and threaded as necklaces, all of which belong to the species of cowries used as money in Africa at the present day (Maspero, Dawn of Civilization,
Eng. trans., p. 57).
The hoes and wooden stands for head-rests used by the Egyptians
have their prototypes among the East Central African tribes (Duff
Macdonald). Dr. Peters found various customs among the Wakintu
in Uganda which made him think the people were connected with
the ancient Egyptians. One of these was the practice of embalming
the dead and of excavating the rocks. Also their burial “mounds
are conical, he says, and look like pyramids.
One might fill a
volume with figures from Inner Africa that were developed and
made permanent in the symbolism of Egypt.
“My
lord the lion” is an African expression used by the Kaffirs and others in
speaking of the lordly animal, also of the chief as lion-lord. So likewise
in Egypt Osiris as king of the gods was, “my lord the crocodile” , and
King Assa is also called “my lord the king” , as a crocodile. (Rit., ch, 142,
line 17, Prisse. Pap. 41). Again, the lion of Motoko is a totem with
the Kaffirs in the neighbourhood of Fort Salisbury, Mashonaland. They have
a
priest of the lion-god called the Mondoro, who is venerated as a sort of
spirit in lion shape. [Page 252] Sacrifices
are offered annually to the lion-god at the Zimbabwe of Mashonaland; and
it is held by the natives that all true men pass into the lion form at death,
precisely the same as it is with the Manes in the Egyptian Ritual, who exclaims,
on living a second time, “I am the lord in lion form” ( ch. 4), and who rises
again when divinized in that image of superhuman power. Such types were Inner
African when totemic, and, as the lion of Motoko shows, they were also venerated
as representatives of spiritual or superhuman powers which were deified in
Egypt as the crocodile divinities Apt, Neith, and Sebek, and the lion-gods
Shu, Tefnut, Sekhet, Horus, and Atum-Ra.
In the Egyptian judgment scenes
the baboon or cynocephalus sits
upon the scales as the tongue of the balance and a primitive determinative
of even-handed justice. This was an Inner African type, now continued in
Egypt as an image of the judge. In a Namaqualand fable the baboon sits in
judgment on the other animals. The
mouse had torn the tailor's clothes and laid it to the cat, the cat lays
it to the dog, the dog to the wood, the wood to the fire, the fire to the
water, the water to the elephant, and the elephant to the ant; whereupon
the wise judge orders the ant to bite the elephant, the elephant to drink
the water, the water to quench the fire, the fire to burn the wood, the wood
to beat the dog, the dog to bite the cat, and the cat to bite the mouse;
and thus the tailor gets satisfaction from the judgment of the wise baboon,
whose name is Yan in Namaqua, whilst that of the cynocephalus is Aan in Egyptian. This
in the European folk-tales is the well-known nursery legend of “the
pig that wouldn't go” . How then did this Bushman or Hottentot fable get into
the lowermost stratum of the folk-tales in England ? We answer, the same
way that “Tom Thumb” did, and “Jack the Giant-killer” , the “House
that Jack Built” , and many more which are the poor relations reduced from
the mythology of Egypt to become the märchen
of the world. Again, the youthful hero who is Horus in Egypt, Heitsi Eibib
among the Hottentots, and the redoubtable little Jack in Britain, is also
an Inner African figure under the name of Kalikalange. The missionary Macdonald
says, “We know a boy who assumed, much at his own instance, the name
of Kalikalange, the hero about whom there are so many native tales, reminding
one of the class of tales to which Jack the Giant-killer belongs” (Africana, vol.
i. p. I 15). This is
the hero who slays the giant or dragon of drought and darkness, or cuts open
the monster that swallowed him; who rescues the lunar lady from her imprisonment,
and who makes the ascent to heaven by means of a tree, a stalk, or, as in
the case of Child-Horus, a papyrus reed. In his Uganda Protectorate (vol.
ii. p. 700) Sir H. Johnston has reproduced a local legend of creation derived
from the natives, which contains certain constituent elements of the nursery
tale of Jack the Giant-killer. “Kintu” was the first man. When
he came from the unknown he found nothing in Uganda – no
food, no water, no animals, nothing but a blank. He had a cow with him, and
on this he lived. The cow represented the earth as giver of food. Kintu is
a form of the universal hero, the hero to whom the tests are applied for
discovering whether or no he is the real heir. Kintu eats or [Page
253] disposes
of 10,000 carcases of roasted cows, and thus proves himself to be the man
indeed, as does Jack who outwits the giant in a similar manner. The story
includes the
beanstalk (or the bean), with other fragments found in the European märchen,
including the bringing of death into the world through the disobedience of
Kintu, the first man, or by his violating the law of tabu. The Wakintu of
Uganda or
Rhodesia derive their name from Kintu, the first man of the Central African
legends.
In a Zulu legend the under-world is the land of cannibals. Here dwells the devourer from whom the youthful hero makes his escape, together with his sister, by climbing up a tree into the sky country, just as Horus climbs the tree of dawn in coming forth from the under-world. We read in the Ritual of a golden dog-headed ape which is “three palms in height, without legs or arms” . The speaker in this character says, “My course is the course of the golden cynocephalus, three palms in height, without legs or arms, in the temple of Ptah” (Rit. ch. 42, Renouf). What this means no mortal knows. It is known, however, that the dog-headed ape as Ani the saluter was emblematic of the moon. Now, in the Kaffir story of Simbukumbukwana there is a child born without legs or arms, who obviously represents the moon in its changes. He began to speak on the day of his birth. “The girl that was first born, who grew up in the valley and lived in the hole of an ant-heap” , is called his sister. She has the power to give him legs and arms by repeating his name and saying, “Have legs and arms!” and to deprive him of them by saying “Shrink, legs and arms!” This, as a figure of waning and waxing, helps us to understand the dog-headed ape of gold as an image of the moon in the waxing and waning halves of the lunation. In “the story of the glutton” the conquerors of the swallower are the mother and her twins. These, in an Egyptian form of the mythos, are Sut and Horus, the twin brethren, who war against the monster as two lions, the Rehu, on behalf of their mother, who is the lady of light in the moon (Rit. ch. 80). In this way we can trace some of the oldest of the folk-tales concerning the deluge and the lost paradise, the hero as the wonder-working child who climbs a tree or stalk and slays the monster of the dark, to Inner Africa, and follow these and others in the mythology of the Egyptians on their way to becoming the universal legends of the human race. The mythology, religious rites, totemic customs, and primitive symbolism of Egypt are crowded with survivals from identifiable Inner African origins. The Egyptian ka or image of a spiritual self was preceded by various rude but representative images of the dead. Livingstone tells us that the natives about Lake Moere make little idols of a deceased father or mother. To these they present beer, flour, and bhang; they light a fire for the spirits to sit round and smoke in concert with their living relatives. The Ewe-speaking natives of the Gold Coast also have their kra or eidolon, which existed from before the birth of a child and is exactly identical with the Egyptian ka (Ellis, A. B., Ewe-speaking-Peoples, p. 13). It is a common practice with the Bantu tribes described by the author of The Uganda Protectorate for the [Page 254] relatives of deceased persons to carve crude little images as likenesses of the dead, and set them up for worship or propitiation. Offerings are made to these in place of the later ka of the Egyptians. The earlier type of the departed was a bodily portrait. Hence the mummy. The ka is a later spirit likeness. But both imply the same recognition of the ancestral spirits that live on after death. The spirit huts provided for the honoured dead in the dense forests of Central Africa, as by the Wanyamwezi for their musimo, by the Congo Pygmies (Geal), and by the Nilotic negroes, which the Portuguese called devil houses, are prototypes of the ka-chambers in Egyptian tombs. Erecting a little hut for the spirits is a recognized mode of propitiation. Lionel Décle, as we have seen, describes his Wanyamwezi as making little huts of grass or of green boughs even when on the march, and offering them to the musimo or spirits of their ancestors ( Three Years in Savage Africa, pages 343-6).
One
of the funeral offerings found in Theban tombs is a loaf of bread in the
shape of a cone (our pastille), or a model in burnt terra-cotta that images
the loaf. Why the offering should be conical is admittedly unknown. This
typical cone is Inner African, and in a most peculiar way. The Yao people
have the custom of making an offering to the dead in a conical form. They
do not know how to make bread, but their offering to the spirits consists
of a little flour. This they let fall slowly from the fingers on the ground,
so that it may form a pile in the shape of a sugarloaf. If the cone should
shape perfectly it is an omen that the offering is acceptable to the spirits.
It may be suggested in passing that the conical shape of the pile in flour
and the funerary loaf was derived from that of the grave-mound of earth or
stones dropped over the buried corpse as the still earlier tribute offered
to the dead. British
peasants give the name of “fairy loaves” to
the fossil echini or sea-urchins found in Neolithic graves. Obviously these loaves were representative of funerary food that was likewise offered to the dead. The
skeleton of a young woman clasping a child in her arms was discovered
in a round barrow on Dunstable Downs, the burial mound being edged
round with these fairy loaves.
Again, in the mysteries
of the Yao people
the young girls are
initiated by a female
who is called the “the cook of the mystery” (mtelesi
wa unyago). This
is the
instructress
who makes the mystery
or is the “cook” that prepares
it, and who is mistress
of the ceremony.
She is the wise woman
who initiates the
girls, and anoints
their bodies with
an oil containing
various magical
ingredients. She
clothes them in their
earliest garment,
the primitive
loin-cloth, that
was first assumed
at puberty with proud
pleasure, and afterwards
looked upon askance
as the sign of civilized
woman's shame. Now
this primitive personage
has been divinized as the
Cook in
the Kamite pantheon.
In Egyptian, tait signifies
to cook, and this is the name of a goddess Tait who is the
cook in paradise
and the preparer
of the deceased in
the greater mysteries
of the Ritual, where
she is the cook of
the mystery more
obviously
than a cook as preparer
of food. Deceased,
in speaking of his investiture for
the garden of Aarru, cries, “Let
my vesture be girt on me by Tait
!” [Page 255] that
is, by the goddess
who is the divine cook by name,
and who clothes the
initiate in the garment
or girdle that here takes the place
of the
loin-cloth in the
more primitive mysteries of Inner
Africa (Duff
Macdonald, Africana, vol. i. pp. 123-126;
Rit., ch. 82, Renouf).
The Egyptian record
when correctly read
will tell us plainly
that the human birthplace
was a land of the papyrus reed, the crocodile, and hippopotamus;
a land of the great
lakes in Karua, the
Kolôe of Ptolemy, or in Apta at the horn point
of the earth - that
is, in Equatoria,
from whence the sacred river ran to brim
the valley of the
Nile with plenty. The track of civilization with cities springing
in
its footprints is
seaward from the
south, not upward
from Lower Egypt, which was a swamp when Upper Egypt was already
the African
home of civilization.
The Egyptians always
gave priority to
the south over the delta in the north. Also the south was and
is the
natural habitat of
the oldest fauna
and most peculiar
of the sacred zootypes. It is in vain we judge of the race by
the figures and
faces of the rulers
portrayed in monumental
times. Primary
data must be sought
for amongst the Fellaheen
and corroborated by the skulls. Captain Burton wrote to me in
1883, saying, “You
are quite right about
the African origin
of the Egyptians, and I have sent home a hundred skulls to prove
it” . (Does anyone know what became of these
skulls ?)
The African legends tell us that the Egyptians, Zulus, and others looked backward to a land of the papyrus reed as the primeval country
of the human race, and that on this, as we shall see, the Egyptians founded
their circumpolar paradise in the astronomical mythology. There
is a widespread African tradition, especially preserved by the
Kaffir tribes, that the primeval birthplace was a land of reeds.
The Zulus told the missionary Callaway that men originally “came out of a bed of reeds” . This birthplace in the reeds was called “Uthlanga” ,
named from the reed. No one knew where it was, but all insisted
that the natal reed-bed of the race was still extant. It was a
sign of lofty lineage for the native aristocracy to claim descent
from ancient Uthlanga, the primeval land of birth. The Basutos
identify Uthlanga the human birthplace with a cavern in the earth
that was surrounded by a morass of reeds. They also cling so affectionately
to the typical reed that when a child is born they suspend a reed
above the hut to announce the birth of the babe, thus showing
in the language of signs that
the papyrus reed is still a type of the primitive birthplace
in which Child-Horus was cradled on the flower of the papyrus
plant or reed. The Zulu birthplace in the bed of reeds was repeated and continued in the nest of reeds and the morass that were mythically represented as the birthplace of the child, which was constellated as the uranograph of Horus springing from the reed. What indeed is the typical reed of Egypt, first in the upper, next in the lower land, but a symbol of the birthplace in the African bed of reeds ? Lower Egypt, called Uat in the hieroglyphics,
has the same name as the papyrus reed. Also Uati is a title of the great mother Isis who brought forth Child-Horus on her lap of the papyrus flower. Uat in Egyptian is the name of Lower Egypt; Uat is the oasis, Uat is the water, Uat is wet, fresh, evergreen Uat is the reed of Egypt, the papyrus reed, and a name of the most ancient mother in the Kamite mythology. [Page 256]
Seb,
the father of food, is clothed with papyrus reeds. The Mount
of Earth was imaged as a papyrus-plant in the water of space.
Lastly, the Mount of Amenta in the Ritual rises from a bed
of papyrus reeds.
Hor-Apollo says of
the Egyptians, “To denote
ancient descent they
depict a roll of papyrus, and by this they signify primeval food” (B.
I, 30). This is the
same as with the
Zulus. The papyrus reed, Uat, was turned into a symbol of most
ancient descent precisely because it
had been the primeval
food of the most ancient people, a totem of the most ancient mother
of the race when called
Uati in Egypt, and
a type of the African paradise. As the symbolism shows, people
were sometimes derived from and represented
by the food on which
they lived. Thus the papyrus reed that symbolizes ancient food
and long descent would be the sign
of the people who
once lived on or who ate the shoots of the water plant. The
Egyptians continued
to be eaters of the lotus and papyrus shoots. Theirs was the land
of the reed, and
they, like the Zulus or the Japanese or the Pueblos, were the
reed people in accordance with the primitive mode of
heraldry, just as
with the Arunta tribes the witchetty-grub people are those who
live on the witchetty-grub as their special totemic
food. In later times
the papyrus plant was eaten by the Egyptians as a delicacy. Its
shoots were gathered for that purpose annually.
Bread made from the
roots and the seed of the lotus was the gourmand's delight. Lily
loaves are mentioned in the Papyrus Anastasi. It
is said in the Hymn
to the Nile that when food is abundant the poor man disdains to
eat the lotus or papyrus plant, which shows
that it had been
his diet when other food was scarce. The lotus and the papyrus
are the two water plants worn as a head-dress
by the two figures
that represent the Nile south and north, and who are often seen
binding the flowers to the Sam symbol of Upper
and Lower Egypt,
as if joining the two countries together as the one land of the
reed. Uthlanga is not irrecoverable.
We glean from other
Zulu legends that this was the African birthplace in the bed of
reeds, where the two children, black and white,
were born of dark
and day, and where the race of the reed people broke off in the
beginning. This cradle of creation is repeated
mythically with Child-Horus
in his nest of reeds or bed of the papyrus plant, when the field
of reeds was figured in the heavens
as the primitive
paradise of food and drink.
In the so-called “cosmogony” of the Japanese it is set forth that the first thing in which life appeared on earth at the beginning was the reed, and the earliest land or “country-place stand” (Kunitoko tachi) was the land of the reed. Japan was named as the central land of the reed expanse from the fields of reed, whether geographical on the earth or astronomical in the fields of heaven. The “great reed” of the Japanese mythos is identical with the papyrus reed that represented the Mount of Earth in Egypt or the lotus of Meru in India. Any country figured as being atop of the reed would be the midland of the world, as Japan is said to be, and the Kamite reed will explain why the land of the Kami should be called Ashi-hara, the plain of reeds, when the reed is identified with the papyrus plant. Ashi-hara no naka tsu Kuni, “the Middle Kingdom of the Reed Plain” , which [Page 257] lies upon the summit of the globe, is an ancient name for Japan. This, if mundane, corresponds to the land of the papyrus reed in equatorial Africa, the summit of our earth; or, if only mythical, i.e., astronomical, to the reed field of the Aarru paradise upon the summit of the mount in heaven. Again, the great reed standing up out of the water is identical with the typical mount of earth in the Navajo mythology. As the mount grew higher, higher grew the reed. At the time of the deluge all that lived took refuge there, and were rescued from the drowning waters by the reed. This is the papyrus reed which cradled Horus amid the waters, like the infant Moses in the ark of bulrush, applied in a folk-tale on a larger scale (Matthews).
It
is now proposed to seek for the birthplace of the beginnings in Central Africa,
the land of the papyrus reed, around the equatorial lakes, by the aid of
the Egyptian astronomical mythology and the legendary lore. In the first
place, the Kami of Egypt, like the Kami of Japan, identify themselves by
name as the reed-people. And the goddess Uati is the African great mother
in the bed of reeds. For it was thence, in the region of the two lakes and
in the land of the papyrus reed, that souls in the germ first emanated as
the soul of life from water. The Kaffir tradition thus appears to preserve
the natural fact which the Egyptians rendered mythically by means of the
reed plant as a symbol of the primeval birthplace on earth with Horus issuing
from the waters on the reed, which became the lap of life, the cradle and
the ark of the eternal child, who is also called the shoot of the papyrus,
the primitive Natzer.
A spring of water weIling from abysmal depths of earth, that furnished food
in the papyrus reed and other edible plants, is the earliest form in which
the source of life was figured by the Kamite mystery teachers. This is recorded
in the Ritual (ch. 172). It was in the birthplace of the reeds and of the
reed people in the region of the reeds that light first broke out of darkness
in the beginning in the domain of Sut, and where the twin children of darkness
and of light were born. The Mother-earth as
womb of universal
life was the producer
of food in various kinds, and the food was represented as her offspring.
Horus on his papyrus imaged food in the water plant as well as in the later
lentils, the branch of the tree, or in general vegetation.
The
stands of the offerings presented to the gods in the Ritual are commonly
crowned with papyrus plants, which commemorate the food that was primeval.
Thus the doctrine of life issuing in and from the papyrus reed was Egyptian
as well as Japanese. Naturally the earliest life thus emanating from the
water was not human life, but this would be included sooner or later in the
mythical representation. Hence the legend of the first man, or person who
issued from a reed in the water of the deluge. In this American Indian version
the reed is a figure of the birthplace instead of the Zulu bed of reeds,
or Uthlanga, the land of reeds, but the typical origin is the same; and as
Egyptian the mythos is to be explained.
The origin of a saviour in the guise
of a little child is traceable to Child-Horus, who brought new life to
Egypt every year as the Messu of the inundation. This was Horus in his
pre-solar and pre-human
characters of the fish, the shoot of the papyrus, or the branch of endless
years. In a later stage the image of Horus on his papyrus [Page
258] represented the young god as solar cause in creation. But
in the primitive phase it was a soul of life or of food ascending from the water
in vegetation, as he who climbs the stalk, ranging from Child- Horus to the
Polynesian hero, and to Jack ascending heavenward by means of his bean-stalk.
Now, of all the lands on earth there is no reed land to be compared with
the land of the reeds round the equatorial lakes, where the papyrus grows
about the waters in jungles and forests so dense that a charging herd of
hippopotami could hardly penetrate the bush, which stands out of the water
full fifteen feet in height (Johnston, H. H.), and there if anywhere upon
this earth Uthlanga, the original reed land or
birth land in the
reeds, will yet be found. That is the natural fact which underlies the mythical
representation when the Egyptians show us Horus “on his papyrus” rising from
his natal bed of the papyrus plant. Child-Horus on his papyrus is the reed-born
in mythology who reflects the natural fact of the human birthplace in the
field, the bed, or nest of reeds on earth or in heaven - that is, the African
oasis of the beginning, whether the offspring represents food or other elemental
force. Now the Egyptian
Aarru or paradise, established by Ra, was “a field of reeds” in seven
divisions, and these were papyrus reeds which sprang up from the marshes.
Thus the Kamite paradise was a land of the papyrus plant repeated on the
summit of the mount in heaven at the north celestial pole (Naville, Destruction
of Mankind).
According to their way of registering a knowledge of the beginnings, the
Egyptians were well acquainted with the equatorial regions, which they designated “Apta” ,
the uppermost point, the mount, or literally the “horn-point” of
the earth. This was afterwards reproduced at the highest point above, when
the primeval birth land was repeated as the land of rebirth for spirits in
heaven.
It has now to be shown that much of tile sign-language of astronomy
which still survives on the celestial globe is interpretable on the ground
and for the reason that the fundamental data of the underlying mythos was
Egyptian, although the commencement in Africa may have been indefinitely
earlier than the fulfilment in Egypt. From
the beginning certain types evolved in the Egyptian mythology have been configurated
in the planisphere, many of which remain extant on the celestial globe today.
As a concept of primitive thought life came into the world by water. Hence
in the mysteries of Osiris water is the throne of the eternal. Earth itself
was the producer or the mother of the element, the wet-nurse in mythology,
and water was her child by whom an ever-renewing source was imaged as a type
in Child-Horus, the eternal child. Water, we shall see, was self-delineated
as very heaven. Drought was self-delineated as a huge black reptile coiling
round the mount of earth night after night and drinking up the water of light
day after day. Darkness and light were self-delineated as two immense, wide-winged
birds, one black and one white, which overspread the earth. The great squat-headed
evil Apap in the Egyptian drawings is
probably a water
reptile, and possibly represents the mysterious monster of the lakes in the
legends of Central Africa. But, wheresoever its habitat in nature, it supplied
one of the types that were depicted in the astronomical ceiling of Kam -
the types that have now to be followed [Page
259] by
means of the mythography
in the Sign-Ianguage of the starry sphere, amongst which Apap, the “hellish
snake” of drought and dearth and darkness, still survives as our own constellation “Hydra” ,
the enormous reptile
imaged in the celestial waters of the southern heaven. The hero of light
that pierced the serpent of drought
or the dragon of
darkness was also represented as the golden hawk (later eagle), and at Hermopolis
the Egyptians showed the figure
of a hippopotamus
upon which a hawk stood fighting with a serpent (Plutarch, On l
and 0., p. 50). Now, as the hippopotamus was a zootype of the Mother-earth in the water of space, the hawk and serpent fighting on her back portrayed the war of light and darkness which had been fought from the beginning, the war that was a primary subject figured in the astronomical mythology. The hawk represented Horus, who was the bruiser of the serpent's head. Thus the same conflict that was portrayed at Hermopolis may be seen in the constellation
of Serpentarius as a uranograph depicted in the planisphere.
The
Egyptians called the equator Ap-ta, as the highest land or summit of the
earth. This, the earthly Apta in the equatorial regions, was then rendered
mythically as the Apta or highest point of the northern heavens in the astronomical
representation. And naturally the chief facts of the earthly paradise were
repeated for a purpose in the circumpolar highland. Hence the Aarru paradise,
as a field of papyrus reeds oozing
with the water of life that supplied the world, from the two great lakes
into which the element divided at the head of the celestial river or the
White Nile of the “Milky Way” . In coming down the Nile from Karua, the lake
country, the migrants had to pass through parching desert sands, which made
the south a synonym for Sut, as it is in Egyptian. Their future heaven
was in the north, whence came the blessed breezes with the breath of healing
from the very land of life. And all the time ahead of them was that fixed
polar star in the
north-fixed, that is, as a centre of rest and peace amidst the starry revolutions
of the heavens. Emerging
from the wilderness, they saw in Egypt an oasis watered by the river Nile
. Cooler breezes brought the
breath of life to meet them on the way, and plenty of sweet, fresh water
realized the heaven of the African.
The Kami found their
old lost paradise in “Uat” , the name signifying
green, fresh, well-watered.
Uat was literally the land of wet as water. Here then was heaven in the north,
heaven as the north,
heaven in the water
and the breezes of the north. And on this they founded a celestial garden
or enclosure, which was configurated
by them in the northern
heaven as the primitive paradise of edible plants and plenty of water. The
river Nile was traced back by
the Egyptians
to a double source.
This in later times
was localized at
Elephantine, but not originally. The Nile was known to issue from
the two great
lakes which were
the southern source
of the river according
to the Ritual. A tablet discovered at Gebel Silsileh refers to
two
of the ancient festivals
of the Nile which
had fallen into disuse
in the time of Rameses II. In this it is said, “I know what is
written in the book-store kept in the library,
that whenever the
Nile cometh forth from the two fountains, the offerings of the
gods are to be plenty” (Records
of the Past, vol. x, 41). The river was timed [Page
260] to come forth from its double welling-place on
the 15th of Epiphi,.
and the inundation
to reach Gebel Silsileh, or Khennut, on the I5th of Taht. The
first of these dates corresponds
to our May the 31st;
the second to August
the 4th . This allows two months and three days for the inundation
to travel from its
swollen and overflowing
double-breasted source,
wheresoever that was localized, to Gebel Silsileh. The length
of the river from
the Victoria Nyanza
to the sea is now
estimated at 3,370 miles. It is less than 3,000 to Silsileh, and
water flowing at the rate
of only two miles
an hour would make
3,120 miles in sixty-five days. This
seems to afford good
evidence that the two fountains were identified with the two lakes,
and that the double source was afterwards
repeated locally
lower down at Elephantine. The Egyptians had tracked the river
to its sources “in the recesses” , called “the Tuat of the south” ,
and the inundation
to the bursting forth and overflowing of the southern lakes at
high flood (Hymn to the Nile; also Ritual, ch.
149).
The mother of water
in the northern heaven
was imaged as the
water-cow. Another type of the birthplace was the thigh or
haunch of the cow,
and one of the two
lakes at the head
of the Milky Way in the region of the northern pole was called the “lake
of the thigh” . The
Osiris (ch. 149),
on attaining the
divine regions of
water, air, and food,
or, as we say, heaven,
exultingly exclaims, “I alight at the
thigh of the lake” . This was the thigh of the cow that was constellated
in heaven at least
twice over, as a
sign of the birthplace,
when the birth was
water, or Horus, the child of the inundation.
Now the name of Tanganyika,
from the African “tanga” for,”the
thigh” and “nyika” for
the water, signifies
the lake of the thigh
or haunch. But the
thigh is only a symbol
which in Sign-language
denotes the birthplace
that was imaged more completely by the Cow itself; the
water-cow of Apt,
in Apta, which represented
earth as the great
mother and giver of the water that, according to
the legend, burst
forth from the abyss
in the deluge of
the inundation when
the lake was formed at first. The
lake of the thigh
= Tanganyika was
constellated in the northern heaven by name as a uranograph, and
this lake of the thigh or
haunch was the lake
of the water-cow.
Hence we find the cow and the haunch are blended together in one
group of stars that is
labelled the “Meskhen” , as the womb or birthplace at the summit
of the pole. {P.
289.} And, although
this lake in Africa is a little over the line to the south, it
is near enough to have been
reckoned on it, and
therefore to have
been the earthly prototype of the great lake at the horn-point
of the northern pole which
the Ritual denominates
the “lake of equipoise” as well as the lake of the thigh.
Amongst the other
signs that were configurated at the summit of the northern heaven
as object-pictures of the old primeval homeland
were the fields of
the papyrus reed, the waters welling from unfathomable depths,
the ancient mother as the water-cow of Apt, who was the
living image of Apta
as the birthplace in the reeds. Thus, with the aid of their uranographs
the Egyptian mystery teachers showed
the birthplace in
the fields of the papyrus plant; the reed bed in Uthlanga, where
the black and white twins of darkness and day
were born ; the birthplace
of the water flowing from its secret source in the land of the
two lakes called “the [Page
261] lake
of equipoise“ and “the lake of the thigh” , or Tanga,
whence the name Tanganyika.
There was the water that for ever flowed in fields for ever fresh
and green, which figured
now the water of
life that has no limit, and the food that is eternal in the Kamite
eschatology. In the astronomy Apta
was the mount of
earth as a figure of the equator, whereas the summit of the circumpolar
paradise was the mount of heaven as
a figure of
the pole. In the
final picture to the Ritual (ch. 186) the mount of Amenta stands
in a morass of the papyrus reed. The
cow that represented
the great mother is portrayed in the two forms of Apt the water-cow
and Hathor the milch-cow, as the typical
mother amongst the
reeds in the place of birth on the earth and thence of rebirth
in heaven. Thus, as we interpret it, the imagery
of equatoria was
commemorated in the uranographic representation or Sign-language
of the astronomical mythology.
Sir Harry Johnston
sees traces of the
Egyptian or Hamitic
influence amongst
the more primitive
dwarfs and negroes
of the equatorial
regions, but this
he speaks of as the
result of a returning
wave from the Nilotic
races. Assuredly
the Kamite race of
migratory colonizers
on the lower Nile
did return in later
times in search of
the old home. Their
voyages by water
and travels by land
had become the subject
of popular tales.
But this was as travellers,
adventurers, naturalists,
and miners who explored
their hinterland,
dug for metals or
gems, imported strange
animals, and transplanted
precious trees to
furnish incense for
the goddesses and
gods. It was not
the grown up, civilized
Ruti of Egypt, who
called themselves “the
men”
par excellence, that went
back to beget the
ape-like race of negroid dwarfs
in the central
regions of Africa,
or to people the impenetrable forests
with non-civilized,
ignorant, undeveloped
manikins. That was not the route
of evolution.
It is an ancient
and world-travelling
tradition that heaven and earth
were close together
in the beginning. Now
the heaven signified in the oldest
of all mythologies, the Kamite,
was the starry heaven of night upraised
by Shu as he stood upon the mount
of earth. This was the heaven in
which the stars of our two Bears
revolved about the pole. The writer
of the present work has seen in
equatorial regions how the Southern
Cross arises and the Bears go down
for those who are going south. The
northern pole-star dips and disappears,
and with it sinks the primal paradise
of mythology in general that was
configurated in the stars about
the pole. On coming north again,
the old lost paradise arose once
more as paradise regained. At a
certain point, in regions of no
latitude, the pole-star rests for
ever on the horizon in the north,
or, as the Egyptians figured it,
upon the mount of
earth in Apta. The
heaven of the ancient legends and
of the equatorial astronomers was
close to the earth, because the
pole-star rested on the summit of
the mount like Anup on his mountain.
Such traditions were deposited as
the mythical mode of representing
natural fact, however much the fact
may be obscured. Now, the ordinary
heaven of night and day could not
supply the natural fact. Heaven
is no farther off from earth than
ever. Yet there is a starting point
in the various mythologies that
is equivalent to this beginning,
at which time heaven rested on the
earth, and was afterwards separated
from it by the mythical uplifter
of [Page
262] the sky. The name
of heaven denotes
the up-heaven. Nut or Nu the Egyptian
name for
heaven, has the meaning
and the sign of up-lifted. And there
was
but one starting
point at which the heaven could
be said to rest
upon the earth. This was in the regions of no latitude, where the pole-stars were to be seen upon the two horizons. As the nomads travelled towards the north, this heaven of the pole, which touched the earth in equatoria, naturally rose up from the mount, or, as mythically rendered, it was raised by Shu, who stood upon the steps of Am-Khemen to reach the height, and push the two apart with his huge staff that was the giant's figure of the north
celestial pole. There were no solstices in Apta. Time, if any, was always equinoctial there. And on this equal measure of day and dark the first division of the circle, the sep or turn-round of the sphere, was founded. When Shu upraised the sky it was equally divided between Sut and Horus, the portion of each being half of the water, half of the mount, or half of the twenty-four hours. And this was the time made permanent in Amenta, where the later register for all such simple mysteries was kept. There are twelve
hours light and twelve hours dark in this nether-world, the same as in the equatorial regions. It is the equinoctial time of Shu and Mati. The earth was not an upright pillar in Apta, with the starry sphere revolving round it on a horizontal plane. The risings and settings of the stars were vertical, and the two fixed centres of the poles were on the two horizons, or, in accordance with the Egyptian expression, on the northern and the southern sides of the mount of earth. The sky, as the celestial water, was also
divided into two great lakes, one to the north and one to the south of the mount. These
survive in the Ritual as the Lake of Kharu and the Lake of Ru
to the south and the north of the Bakhu hill “on which heaven resteth” (chs. 108 and 109). The system of dividing the celestial water was apparently founded on the two great equatorial lakes at the head of the Nile, which were repeated in the two lakes of Amenta and in the other pictures of the double source of the great stream now figured in heaven at the
head of the Milky Way as “the stream without end” .
The Egyptians
also preserved traditions
of Ta-nuter, the
holy land that was
known by the name of Punt or Puanta. Maspero spells the
name Puanit. The
present writer has
rendered it Puanta.
One meaning of anta,
in Egyptian, is yellow
or golden. Hence
Puanta the golden. The name is applied
in the Ritual (ch.
15) to the land of dawn, or anta, as the golden = the land
of gold. This was
the mythical or divine
Anta in Amenta where
the tree of golden Hathor grew. In that case, Puanta or Punt
is identical with
the orient in the
mythos. But the land
of Puanta is also geographical, and there was an Egyptian
tradition that this
divine country could
be reached by ascending
the river Nile (Maspero, Histoire
Ancienne, p. 5). It
was reported that in a remote
region south you came to an
unknown great water which bathed
Puanta or the holy land, Ta-nuter.
This, we suggest, was that
nearest and largest of all
the African lakes, now called
the Victoria Nyanza, from which
the river Nile debouches on
its journey north. We gather
from the inscriptions of Der-el-Bahari
that the inhabitants of that
Puanta for which the expedition
of Queen Hatshepsu sailed were
lake-dwellers. The houses,
built on piles, were [Page
263] reached
by means of ladders, and pile-dwellings imply that the
people of Puanta were dwellers
on the lake. Further,
it is recorded on the monuments that two naval expeditions
were made by the Egyptians
to the land of Puanta. The
first occurred in the reign
of Sankh-Ka-Ra, the last king
of the eleventh dynasty, long
before the expedition to Puanta
was made in the time of Queen
Hatshepsu (eighteenth dynasty).
The leader of this earlier expedition was a nobleman named
Hannu, who describes his passage
inland through the desert and
the cultivated
land. On his return to Egypt
from the gold land, he speaks
of coming back from the land
of Seba, and thus far identifies
the one with the other. He
says: “When I returned
from Seba, or Seboea, I had executed the king's command,
for I brought him back all
kinds of presents which I had
met with in the ports of Puanta,
and I came back by the road of Uak and of Hannu” (Inscription,
Rohan). In the story of the shipwrecked sailor the speaker
says of his voyage: “I was going to the mines of Pharaoh, in a ship that
was 150 cubits long and 40 cubits wide, with 150 of the best
sailors in Egypt” . He was shipwrecked on an island, which turned out to
be in the land of Puanta. The serpent ruler of the island
says to the sailor: “I
am prince of the land of Puanta” . It
is not said that this was the land of the mines, but he was
sailing to the mines when he reached the land of Puanta (Petrie, Egyptian
Tales,
pp. 82, 90). An inscription found in the tomb of Iua and
Thua (of the eighteenth dynasty ), which tomb was rich in
gold, informs us that the gold had been
brought from “ the lands of the south” . Also the Mazai tribes are known
to have had relations with the people of Puanta. Puanta,
as a geographical Iocality is said to lie next to the spirit
world, or the land of the shades,
which is spoken of as being in the south, but as far away
as sailors could go up-stream; in fact, it was where the
celestial waters came from heaven
at the sources of the Nile. This surely means that Puanta,
the gold land, was at the summit of this world, and therefore
closest to the next, where
there was nothing but the firmamental water betwixt them
and the islands of the blessed.
If
Mashonaland should prove to be the gold land of Puanta, this would be the
geographical Puanta, not Arabia, from which the golden Hathor and the hawk
of gold originally came. The symbolism of the ruined cities of Mashonaland,
discovered by the explorer Bent, suffices at least to show that the Egyptians
of a very remote age had worked the gold mines in that country. Horus on
his pedestal or papyrus is a figure not to be mistaken, whether the bird
is a hawk or
a vulture, for there
was also a very ancient Horus of the vulture that was the bird of Neith.
The hawk or vulture on the pedestal or papyrus (Uat) was indefinitely older than the human type of Horus the child in Egypt. Horus as the hawk or vulture, standing on the column within the necklace zone or cestus, was the child of Hathor; and these two, Hathor and Horus, were the divine mother and child. The gold hawk of Horus is connected
with the Egyptian mines, whilst precious metals and stones, especially the turquoise, were expressly sacred to the goddess Hathor. The Egyptian goddess Hathor, as a form of the Earth-mother, was the mistress of the mines, and of precious stones and metals, called mafkat. It was here she gave birth to the blue-eyed golden Horus as her child,
her golden calf or hawk of gold. The [Page 264] Egyptian labourers who worked the mines of the turquoise country in the Sinaitic peninsula were worshippers of this golden Hathor and the golden Horus. These two are the divinities most frequently invoked in the religious worship of the Egyptian officers and miners residing in the neighbourhood of the mafkat mines. Also
the name for a mine in Egyptian is ba or ba-t, and baba, or babait, is a plural
for mines, likewise for caverns, grottoes, and lairs underground. Moreover, this
district of the Sinaitic mines was designated Baba or Babait by the Egyptian
miners. And this name of Baba or Babait, with the plural terminal for the mines,
would seem to have been preserved and repeated for the Zimbabwe mines in Rhodesia,
the Egyptian word being left there by the Egyptian workers. Lastly, as Mafekh
or Mafkhet is a title of Hathor, as mafekh is an Egyptian name for the turquoise,
for copper and other treasures of the mines, as well as of Hathor, one wonders
whether the name of Mafeking was not also derived from the Egyptian word “mafekh” .
The earliest Ta-Neter or holy land of the Egyptians, then, was Puanta in the
south, which was sacred on account of its being the primeval home. But in the
mythos the place of coming forth had been given to the sun god in the east, and
this became the holy land in the solar mythology which has been too hastily identified
by certain Egyptologists with Arabia as the eastern land.
At present we are more
concerned with the original race and its primitive achievement than with the
return wave from Egypt in the later ages of the Pharaohs. The oasis in Africa
was a heaven on earth, a paradise in nature ready-made in the vast expanse of
papyrus reed. Egypt from the beginning was based on the oasis, Uat. We might trace a form of the heptanomis with which Egypt began in the seven oases: the great oasis of Abydos, called Uaht, the great Theban oasis, the oasis of the Natron Lakes, the oasis of EI-Kargeh, the oasis of Sinai, the oasis of Dakhel, and the oasis of Bahnesa.
Maspero says the Great Oasis had been at first considered as a sort of mysterious
paradise to which the dead went in their search of peace and happiness. It
was called Uit or Uat. As late as the Persian epoch the ancient tradition found
its echo in the name of the “Isles of the Blessed” (Herod. iii. 26), which
was given to the Great Oasis. “So soon as the deceased was properly equipped
with his amulets and formulas, he set forth to “seek the field of reeds” (D.
of C.,
English translation, page 183). The “field of reeds” was the field
of Uat, the papyrus reed, which had been repeated in the heavens, from the
Uat
of Egypt;
the Uat
of the oasis, the Uat of the reed land that was
in the beginning.
For those who lived on the papyrus shoots, when this was a primeval food, there
was a world of plenty in the region of the lakes, which would be looked back
to as a very paradise by those who wandered forth into the waterless deserts
and suffered cruelly from thirst and hunger midst the arid wastes of burning
sand. In seeking “the field of reeds” Deceased was going back in spirit to
Uthlanga, the cradle in the reeds, or to Karua, the land of the lakes ; to
Apta, .the starting-point; to Puanta, the ever-golden ; to Merta, the land
of the two eyes, or some other form of the primitive paradise, where, as the
Ritual has it, he would drink the waters of the [Page
265] sacred river at the sources of the Nile. This
was the land where food and water had been abundant enough to furnish a type
of everlasting plenty for the land of promise in the astronomical mythology and
the eschatology.
It is necessary to postulate a commencement in equatorial regions, in order
that we may explain certain primeval representations in the land of Egypt.
We see a deluge legend originating in the woman's failing to keep the secret
of. the water source, which was followed by an overwhelming, devastating flood.
We see that a legend of the first man - he who brought death into the world
by disobeying the law of tabu - is indigenous to the natives of Uganda. A primitive
picture of “the beginning” is also presented in an African story which was told to Stanley by a native of the Bashko on the Aruwimi River, and called “The Creation of Man” . It is related that “In the old-old time all this land, and indeed the whole earth, was covered with sweet water. Then the water dried
up or disappeared. No living thing was moving on the earth, until one day a large toad squatted by one of the pools. How long it had lived or how it came into existence was not known, but it was suspected that the water must have brought it forth from some virtue of its own. On the whole earth there was but this one toad” -
which in relation to water was the frog. Then
follows the legend of “creation” . The toad becomes the maker of the primal human pair which came into being in the shape of twins (like Sut and Horus, or the Zulu black and white twins in the bed of reeds), and these are said to be “the first like our kind that ever trod the earth” .
(Stanley, H. M., My Dark Companions and their Strange Stories, pages 5-30.) The
legend we judge to be an African original relating to the primordial water in
which the earth was figured as a “large toad” , or frog, at the time when no other
living thing moved on the earth, and there was no human creature known. The frog
floating on the water in the act of breathing out of it was an arresting object
to primitive man, and this became a type of earth emerging from the water of
space. The constellation of Piscis
Australis was known to the Arab astronomers as the frog. Indeed, the two fish, the southern fish and the whale, were named by them as the two frogs (Higgins, W. H., Names of the Stars and Constellations). But, whichever type was first, a monstrous frog or huge fish, a turtle or the water-cow, it was a figure of the earth amidst the firmamental water, in the lower part of which was the abyss. And here the primal pair are also born as twins, like Sut and Horus. In Egypt the
north celestial pole was variously imaged as a mountain-summit, an island in the deep, a mound of earth, a papyrus plant or lotus in the waters of immensity, a tree, a stake, a pole, a pillar, a pyramid, and other types of the apex in heaven.
In Equatoria there was neither pole nor pole-star fixed on high in
the celestial north. On the other hand, there were two
pole-stars visible upon the two horizons, north and south.
These, according to the Imagery, might be represented by two
jackals, two lions, two giraffes, mountains - the mount and horizon
being synonymous - two trees, two pillars of the firmament,
or by the two eyes of two watchers. “Heaven's-Eye Mountain” is
a Chinese title for the Mount of the Pole (De Groot, Fêtes
d'Emoui, i. 74). This
would [Page 266] apply when only
one pole-star was visible, Rut in Equatoria there were
two poles or mountains with the eyes of two non-setting stars upon the summits,
the only two fixed stars in all the firmament. These we hold to be the “pair
of eyes” or merti that were also a pair of jackals
in the Kamite astronomical
mythology. But first of the two poles as pillars.
Josephus has preserved a tradition concerning two pillars that were erected in the land of Siriad. He tells us that the children of Seth (Egyptian, Set) were the inventors of astronomy, and in order that their inventions might not be lost, and acting “upon
Adam's prediction that the world was to be destroyed at one time
by the force of fire, and at another time by the violence and
quantity of waters, they made two pillars, the one of brick, the
other of stone; they
inscribed their discoveries upon them both, that in case the pillar
of brick should be destroyed by the flood, . the pillar of stone
might remain and exhibit those discoveries to mankind, and also
inform them that there was another pillar of brick erected by them: Now this remains in the Land of Siriad to this day” .
(Ant. B., i, ch. 2.) Plato likewise speaks of these two
columns in the opening
of Timaeus The place where the two pillars, or one of them, traditionally
stood was in the land of
Siriad. Where that
is no mortal knows, but Seri in Egyptian is a name for the south.
Seri is also the mount that is figured as
the two-fold rock
which is equivalent to the pillars of the two horizons, south
and north, Seri is also the name of the giraffe, a zootype of Sut, the overseer. Siriad,
then, we take to be the land of the south where the pillar “remains to this day” . According to John Greaves, the old Oxford astronomer, “these pillars of Seth were in the very same place where Manetho placed the pillars of Taht, called Seiread” (English Weights and Measures). It is possible to identify the missing pillar of the two, the pillar of Sut in the south. There was a southern Annu and a northern Annu in
Egypt, and possibly a relic of the two poles may be recognized in the two Annus, viz., Hermonthes, the Annu of the south, and Heliopolis, the Annu of the north, The original meaning of Annu appears to have been the place of the pillar, or stone, that marked the foundation which preceded the sign of station or dwelling-place. There was an Egyptian tradition which connected Sut, the inventor of astronomy, with Annu, as the original
founder of the pillar, which makes him the primary establisher of the pole. As an astronomical character Sut was earlier than Shu. The Arabs also have a tradition that one of the pyramids was the burial-place of Sut. The pillar of brick, being less permanent, went down as predicted in the deluge as a figure of the southern pole, whereas the pillar of stone remained for ever as an image of the north celestial pole, or of Annu,
the site of the pillar, in the astronomical mythology. It is reported by Diodorus that Annu (Heliopolis in the solar mythos) was accounted by its inhabitants to be the oldest city in Egypt. Which may have been mystically meant, as Annu was also a city or station of the pole, the most ancient foundation in the northern heaven, described in the eschatology as the place of a thousand fortresses provisioned for eternity.
The two pillars of Sut and Horus were primal as pillars of the two [Page 267] poles thus figured in the equatorial regions as the two supports of heaven when it was first divided in two portions, south and north; and the pillar or mount of the south was given to Sut, the pillar or mount of the north to Horus. The typical two pillars are identified with
and as Sut and Horus in the inscription of Shabaka from Memphis, in which it is said, “The two pillars of the gateway of the house of Ptah are Horus and Sut” . The present interpretation is that the typical two pillars or props originated as figures of the two poles, the single pillar being an ideograph of Sut, that these were established in the two domains of Sut and Horus to the south and north of the land in which the veriest dawn of astronomy first occurred, and that the types were preserved and re-erected in the
earth of eternity as the two supports of the heaven suspended by Ptah for the Manes in Amenta, even as the sky of earth had been uplifted and sustained by the two poles of the south and north in Equatoria. Sut and Horus, then, were the twin props of support twice over, once in Equatoria as the two poles, once in Amenta as the two tats of Ptah. Further, two brothers, Sut and Horus, as the founders of the two poles in building the heavens for the ancient mother, may explain the American story of the two brothers
who planted each a cane in the house of their grandmother when they started on their perilous journey to the land of
Kibalba. The old mother
was to know how they fared by the flourishing or withering of the tree or cane,
and whether they were alive or dead. Grimm traced the same legend in the story
of the two gold children who wished to leave their home and go forth to see the
world. At parting they say, “We leave you the two golden lilies: from these you
can see
how we fare. If they
are fresh we are well; if they fade we are ill; if they fall we are dead” . Now the reason why this story is told in Central America, in India, and in Europe we hold to be because it was first told in Africa and rendered mythically in Egypt.
It appears quite possible that a form of the two typical pillars which were visible at the equator also survives in the two sacred poles of the Arunta natives in Central
Australia. These people “down under” have no northern pole
or pole-star of the north, but they carry two symbolic poles
about with them, which they erect wherever they go as signs
of locality or encampment, both of which are limited to the
south and the north. One is called the nurtunja. This, so
to say, is the north pole of the two, and is never met with
in the south. The other, called a waninga, is always limited
to the south. The nurtunja is typical of the northern and
the waninga of the southern part of the Arunta tribe. Each
of these, like the Egyptian tat-pillar, is a sign of establishing
or founding, as is shown from its use in the ceremony of
young man making. In Greek myth the temple of heaven was
raised on high by two brothers, who in one version are Trophonios
and Agamedes, the builders of the temple of Apollo. The sinking
of Trophonios into the cave also corresponds to the engulfing
of Sut in his going down south with the disappearing pole.
One
of the two legendary pillars of Seth disappeared, the other remained. And
when the nomads of the equatorial regions had begun the movement northward
on the way that led them down the [Page
268] Nile, they would gradually lose sight of the southern pole-star,
and whatsoever else had been configurated with it in the nightly heaven would
sink below the horizon south, like a subsidence of land in the celestial
waters. Thus in astronomical mythology a fall from heaven, a sinking down
in the waters called a deluge, and a lost primeval home were natural occurrences
as certain stars or constellations disappeared from sight for those who travelled
northward from the equatorial plain. And these celestial events would be
told of as mundane in the later legends of the “Fall” and “Flood” and
man's lost paradise of everlasting peace and plenty. It is enough, however,
for the present purpose that a star or constellation first assigned to Sut
sank down into the dark abysm south, and disappeared from the ken of the
observers who were on their journey of three thousand miles down into the
valley of the Nile. It is certain that Sut went down south to some sort of
nether-world, and so became the power of darkness in Amenta, when our earth
had been completely hollowed out by Ptah, and Amenta below became the south
to the circumpolar paradise in the celestial north.
The ancient Egyptians
had no antipodes on the outside of the earth. Amenta in the nether-world
was their antipodes. Their two poles were celestial and sub-terrestrial.
The north pole was at the summit of the mount. The
south pole was in
the root-land of the earth below. The Ritual describes the ways of darkness
in the entrance to the Tuat as
the tunnels of Sut,
which tends to show that a way to the nether-world was made by Sut when his
star and standing-ground went under in
the abyss of the
beginning in the south, where the Egyptians localized the tuat or entrance
to the under-world, which was the place of
egress for the life
that came into the world by water from “the recesses of the south” .
Without doubt the
contention of Sut and Horus began with the conflict of darkness and light
or drought and water when these were elemental
powers, and the birthplace
of the twin brothers, one black, one white, was in the bed of reeds. This
phase was continued by the
twins that likewise
struggled for supremacy in the dark and light halves of the moon, which imaged
the light eye of Horus
and the dark eye
of Sut. But the war extended to the whole of nature that was divided in halves
betwixt the Sut and Horus twins,
were the first-born
of the ancient mother in two of her several characters. In Central Africa
the year is divided into two seasons
of rain and drought.
These are equivalent to the two opposite domains of Horus and Sut as powers
of good and evil. The winds
of the north and
south follow suit. The wind from the north in the rainy season is warm and
wet and beneficent; on the other
hand, the wind that
comes up
from the South Pole
is witheringly dry, the wind therefore of Sut, the power inimical to man
and animal in physical nature.
(Johnston, Brit. Centr. Africa, p. 42.) The desert drought,
like darkness, was
an element assigned
to Sut. As this was
the region of drought
and sterility and
typhonian sands,
and Sut the tawny-complexioned
was the force that
dominated in the
south under the same
name, we may see how and where he
first acquired his
character in Egyptian
mythology as representative
of the arid desert opposed
to water, fertility,
and food. Thus
Sut versus Horus
imaged [Page
269] the
south versus north.
Sut was deadly as
the drought; Horus
was “right as rain” .
This contention of
the combatants and
of the south versus
the north was continued
in the stellar mythos
until their reconciliation
was effected by some
other god, such as
Shu, Taht, or Seb.
When Sut, or his star, went down from
the horizon, mount
or pole in the south,
he gradually sank
to the lowermost
parts of the abyss which in the eschatology was called the secret
earth of Amenta.
Here his character
as the opener of
roads or ways in
the astronomy was continued into the
Egyptian eschatology
by Ap-Uat or the
jackal as the conductor
of souls. He was
the deity of the dark. In the oblong zodiac
of Denderah the two
jackals of the south and north,
continued in the
solar mythos, are
figured opposite to each other. These represent the two
forms of Ap-Uat,
the opener of ways,
who was imaged as
a jackal, the seer
in the dark. One
jackal was known
as guide of the southern ways, the other as opener of the northern
ways. No Egyptologist
has gone further
than to suggest that
this north and south
may have been in Amenta-as they also were.
But no one has dared
to dream
of a beginning with the primitive paradise in Equatoria.
EGYPTIAN WISDOM
Deluded visionaries, lift your eyes,
Behold the truths from which your fables rise !
These were realities of heavenly birth,
And ye pursue their shadows on the earth.
“The
wisdom of the Egyptians” , said Augustine, “what was it but astronomy?” ( City
of God, B. 18, ch.
39). The answer is that
it was not simply the science
of astronomy in the modern
sense, but astronomical
mythology was the subject
of subjects with the ancient
“mystery-teachers of
the
heavens” , as the Egyptian
Urshi or astronomers were
self-designated. The most
puerile report of all which
has played false with us
so long is the exoteric
tradition in the Hebrew
Pentateuch.
Professor Sayce
has asserted that “Babylonia
was really the cradle of
astronomical observation” ( Hibbert
Lect., p. 397). To which
one might reply with the
wise Egyptian, “Do you really
know that, or is it that
you only pretend to know?” The
author of Researches
into the Origin of the
Constellations of
the Greeks,
Phoenicians,
and Babylonians
also
claims
a Euphratean
origin
for these,
whilst
admitting
that “Egypt
was
not indebted
to any
foreign
region
for
her
original
scheme
of constellations,
which
are
entirely
or almost
entirely
distinct” (Robert
Brown,
Jun.).
But
it
is useless
or
puerile
to
discuss
the
genesis
of
astronomical
mythology
with
the
African
originals
omitted,
and
without
allowing
for
the
alterations
that
were
made
by
Greeks
and
Euphrateans
in
the
course
of
transmitting
a celestial
chart.
To
omit
the
Kamite “wisdom” from
the
reckoning
is
to
dispense
with
evolution
and
leave
no
ground
for
a
beginning
-
no
gauge
of
time
nor
data
of
development. Moreover, the primary question of the origins is not astronomical but mythological. The types of this Sign-language had [Page 270] been founded in totemism. These were first employed for distinguishing the human motherhoods and brotherhoods. They were reapplied to the elemental powers in mythology,
and afterwards repeated in the constellation figures as a mode of record in the heavens which can still be read by aid of the Egyptian wisdom, but not by means of the Semitic legendary lore. The primitive constellations might be described as Egyptian ideographs configurated in groups of stars, with the view of determining time and season and of registering the prehistoric human past.
The principle of
representation was
similar to that of
the modern teachers
who draw their diagrams
upon the blackboard.
In like manner the
mystery teachers of the heavens approximately shaped
the constellation
figures on the background
of the dark, to be
seen at night and
to be expounded in the mysteries. For example, if they
were desirous of
memorizing some likeness of
the old primeval
home in Apta at the
horn-point of the
earth, this would
naturally be done by repeating the especial imagery
of the equatorial
regions at the highest
point of beginning
in the northern heaven
as seen in Egypt. Or, if they wished to
show that the river
of the inundation
issued from an abyss
of water in the remotest
south, this could
be accomplished by constellating the course of the
stream in heaven
on its long and winding
way from the star
Achernar to the star
Rigel at the foot of Orion. Hence the water of the
inundation was depicted
in and as the river
Eridanus. The contest
between Horus the
lord of light and the serpent of the dark was made uranographic
in the “ Serpent-Holder” . The
conflict betwixt
Horus who came by
water and the dragon
of drought was exhibited
by the Apap-reptile
being drowned in the inundation as the monster “Hydra” . The scene
configurated in the southern heaven where the
conqueror Orion rose
to bruise the serpent's
head or crush the
dragon under foot
is also represented in the Ritual when Apap is once more put
in bonds, cut up
piecemeal, and submerged
in the green lake
of heaven ( ch. 39). Other imagery in
the planisphere bears
witness to the drowning of the
dragon Apap in the
waters of the inundation.
The monster imaged in “Hydra” is
treated as carrion
by the crow that
is perched upon it,
pecking at its dead
body. Or, if we suppose
the mystery teachers of the heavens wished
to constellate a
figure of the mount
of earth amidst
the waters of surrounding
space, and that this
was in the time of
the most primitive
mound-builders, when
no conical pillar could as yet be carved in wood or stone,
how would they figure
the object-picture
forth as a uranograph
? The earth was thought of as a mount amid
the firmamental water,
and to image this they would naturally
raise a mound of
earth. At the same
time the heap of earth had acquired a sacred character in relation
to the dead, and
had become a kind
of altar mound piled
up with
offerings of food.
And such a figure
we find in Ara, the
southern altar or
the altar mound.
The earliest altar
raised had been the mound of earth, and this was used
to typify the mount
of earth. Aratos,
speaking of “the southern altar's sacred seat” ,
calls this constellation “a mighty sign” .
Manilius says of
the constellation, “Ara mundi templum est” (Astron.
i.427). It is traditionally
connected with the
war of the earth-born
giants or elemental
powers which were
succeeded by the
glorious ones or khuti in the astral [Page
271] mythos.
The Mesopotamian
mound-builders likewise
show us that the
most primitive type
of foundation was the mound, that the earth-mound passed into
the foundation
of brickwork as the
pillar, and the pillar
culminated in the
Ziggurat. So in Egypt the earth-mound led
up to the pyramid
with steps, that culminated in
the altar-mound of stone.
The Chinese still call the altar a mound. Because of its being a figure of the
earth amidst the N un, the altar-mound was raised immediately after the deluge
in the Semitic mythos. In this way the teachers who first glorified the storied
windows of the heavens, like some cathedral of immensity, with their pictures
of the past, are demonstrably Egyptian, because the Sign-Ianguage, the mythos,
the legends, and the eschatology involved are wholly Egyptian, and entirely independent
of all who came after them. The so-called “wisdom of the ancients” was Egyptian
when the elemental powers were represented first as characters in mythology.
It was Egyptian when that primeval mythology was rendered astronomically. It
is also Egyptian in the phase of eschatology. Speaking generally, and it would
be difficult to speak too generally from the present stand-point, the Egyptian
mythology is the source of the märchen, the legends, and the folk-lore of
the world, whilst the eschatology is the fountain-head of all the religious mysteries.
that lie betwixt the earliest totemic and the latest Osirian, that were ultimately
continued in the religion of ancient Rome. The mysteries were a dramatic mode
of communicating the secrets of primitive knowledge in Sign-Ianguage when this
had been extended to the astronomical mythology . Hence, we repeat, the Egyptian
urshi or astronomers were known by the title of “mystery teachers of the heavens” ,
because they explained the mysteries of primitive astronomy.
For
one thing, a later theology has wrought havoc with the beginnings previously
evolved and naturally rendered. And we have consequently
been egregiously misled and systematically duped by the Semitic perversions
of the ancient “ wisdom” . There was indeed “a fall” from
the foothold first attained by the Egyptians to the dismal
swamp of the Assyrian and Hebrew legends. In Egyptian mythology
compared with the Babylonian the same types that represent evil in the one
had represented good in the other. The
old Great Mother of Evil, called the Dragon-horse in the Assyrian version,
was neither the source nor the product of evil in the original. The serpent-goddess
Rannut, as renewer of the fruits of earth in the soil or on the tree, is
not a representative of evil. We hold that moral evil in the mythical domain
is an abortion of theology which was mainly Semitic in its birth. The Kamite
beginning with the Great Mother and the elemental powers which are definite
and identifiable enough in the Egyptian wisdom became confused and chimerical
in Babylonian and Hebrew versions of the same Sign-language; the dark of
a benighted heaven followed day. Elemental evils were converted into moral
evil. The types of good and ill were indiscriminately mixed, pre-eminently
so in the reproduction of the old Great Mother as Tiamat. Originally she
was a form of the Mother-earth, the womb of life, the suckler,
the universal mother
in an elemental phase. But the types of good and evil were confounded in
the later rendering. The creation of evil as a [Page
272] mis-creation of theology is plainly traceable in the Akkadian,
BabyIonian , Assyrian, and Hebrew remains. The Great Mother, variously named
Tiamat, Zikum. Nin-Ki-Gal, or Nana, was not originally evil. She represented
source in perfect correspondence to Apt, Ta-Urt, or Rannut in the Egyptian
representation of the Great Mother, who, howsoever hideous, was not bad or
inimical to man; the “mother and nurse
of all” , the “mother of gods and men” , who was the renewer and
bringer forth of
life in earth and
water. Nor were the
elemental offspring
evil, although imaged in the shape of monsters or of
zootypes. As Egyptian, the seven Anunaki were spirits of earth, born of the Earth-mother
in the earth, but they were not wicked spirits. The elements are not immoral.
These are a primitive form of the seven great gods who sit on golden thrones
in Hades as lords of life and masters of the under-world. Moreover, the seven Nunu or
Anunas can be traced to their Egyptian origin.
In the Cuthean legend of creation
we are told that the great gods created “warriors with the body of a bird” and “men
with the faces of ravens”.
“Tiamat gave them suck” .
“Their progeny the mistress of the gods created” . “ In the midst of the (celestial)
mountains they grew up and became heroes” and increased in number. “Seven
kings, brethren, appeared. as begetters” - who are given names as signs of personality
(Babylonian Story of Creation: Records of the Past, N.S., vol. i. p. 149).
Now the seven children of the great Mother as Egyptian were produced as two plus five.
The Sut and Horus twins were born warriors or fighters. They are portrayed as
two birds, the black vulture or raven of Sut and the gold hawk of Horus. These,
the first two children imaged as two
birds, one of which is black, will or may account for the two bird races, one
of which had the face of a raven and were a black race, or were the black-heads” in
Akkad. The Sut and Horus twins were succeeded by five other powers, so that there
were seven altogether, all brothers, all
males
or begetters - the seven which constituted a
primary order of gods, as fellow-males who
were the “Nunu” of Egypt, which became the Anunas or primordial male deities
of ancient Babylonia. But the seven nature powers evolved in the Egyptian mythos
were the off-spring of the great Earth-mother, not the progeny of Apap. They
were native to the nether earth, but were not wicked spirits. They are spoken
of in the Ritual (ch. 83) as'' those seven Uraeus-deities who are born
in Amenta” . The serpent
type is employed to denote the power, but it is the good serpent, the Uraeus-serpent
of life and of renewal, not the evil reptile Apap. These the Euphrateans changed
into the seven evil spirits or devils of their theology. The spawn of Apap in
Egypt are the Sebau, which were numberless in physical phenomena and never were
portrayed as seven in number. The Euphrateans turned the evil serpent Apap into
Tiamat, the old Great Mother in the abyss of birth, where she has been supposed
to have brought forth the seven powers of evil and to have been herself the old
serpent with seven heads. In Egypt, happily, we get beyond the rootage of mythology
in Babylonia and Akkad. The goddess Rannut was a form of the Earth-goddess as
the serpent-mother. The serpent brood or dragon progeny of Rannut are mentioned
in the Ritual,
where they have become
a subject of ancient knowledge in the [Page
273] mysteries
(ch. 125). Elsewhere
they are called the seven divine Uraei or serpents of life. There are
no
seven serpents of death, no seven evil serpents, in the Kamite representation.
The seven Uraei,
though elemental,
born of matter, and of the earth earthy, like their mother, are not evil powers;
neither are they in the same
category with the
Sebau of Apap or the Sami-fiends of Sut ; whereas in the Euphratean version these
have become seven wicked spirits
as the evil brood
of the Great Mother Tiamat. They are also portrayed as the seven heads or potencies
of an infernal snake, which had
been Egyptian, but without the seven heads, the types of good and evil being
mixed up together as Euphratean. The Kamite elemental powers were just the powers
of the elements represented by zootypes. They
might be sometimes fearsome, but they were not baneful. The inimical forces of
external nature, the evil spawn of drought, plagues, dearth, and darkness, called
the Sebau or the Sami, had preceded these, whereas in Babylonia the two categories
are confused and the seven have been reproduced as altogether evil. They are
seven-fold in all things evil: seven evil demons, seven serpents of death, seven
evil winds, seven wicked spirits; seven in the hollows of the earth, seven evil
monsters in the watery abyss; seven evil incubi, seven plagues. But even these
seven baleful and injurious spirits of Babylonia originated as powers of the
elements, no matter where. Hence the first is a scorpion of rain ( cf. the curse
of
rain); the second is a monster with unbridled mouth (thunder); the third is the
lightning-flash; the fourth is a serpent; the fifth is a raging dog;
the sixth is a tempest;
the seventh is the
evil wind. Here the whole scheme of evil is meteorological, and is based upon
bad northern weather (Sayce, Magical
Texts, H. L., p. 463).
The theological perversion
and the degradation of the
type are traceable in Babylonia.
The seven serpent powers were
originally
the same. In Egypt
they are the seven spirits
of the earth. And of the seven
in Babylonia it is said in
the
magical text from Eridu: “those
seven in the earth were born.
Those seven in the earth
grew up. Those seven from the
earth
have issued forth” (Sayce,
H. L., pages 463 to 469). Only
in Babylonia the Great Mother
as the crocodile type of water
has
been confounded with the
Apap-reptile of evil, and made
to spawn the evil powers in
the darkness of later ignorance.
We
can watch the change in a Babylonian
version of the
mythos. The seven nature forces
here originated as seven evil
powers; they were “rebellious
spirits” and “workers
of calamity” that were “born in the lower part of heaven” , or the firmamental
deep. (War of the Seven Evil Spirits: Records, vol. v.; also vol. ix,
143.)They are called “the
forces of the deep” , for ever rising in rebellion. In short, they are one with
the Sebau of the Ritual, who were the progeny of Apap, which have been confounded
with the “seven” elemental
spirits who were not originally evil. The beneficent great Mother-earth who had
been imaged by the sloughing serpent as a type
of renewal and re juvenescence was transmogrified into the serpent of theology,
the very devil in a female guise, the author of evil that was ultimately represented
as a woman who became the mother of the human race, and who doomed her offspring
to eternal torment ere she gave them birth in time. The Hebrews follow the [Page
274] Babylonians
in confusing the
Uraeus-serpent of life with
the serpent of death.
The primal curse was brought into the world by Apap the reptile of drought,
dearth, and darkness, plague
and disease, but
the evil serpent began and ended in physical phenomena. Apap never was a spiritual
type, and was never divinized,
not even as a devil.
The beneficent serpent Rannut represents the mother of life, the giver of food
in fruits of the earth or
the tree. She is
portrayed as the mother both in the form of a serpent and also as the human mother.
But good and evil have been
badly mixed together
in the Hebrew version of the Babylonian perversion
of the Egyptian wisdom.
The
way in which the Kamite mythos was converted into Semitic legendary lore
and finally into Biblical history is palpably apparent in the story of the
fall. The woman offering fruit as temptress in the tree was previously represented
in Sign-Ianguage as the serpent which was the symbol of renewal in the tree,
as is shown when the reptile offers the fruit to the man. Thence came the
serpent-woman, who was a compound of the zootype and the anthrotype, and
who was damned as Mother Eve, and deified as Rannut, the giver of the fruits
of earth. Conclusive evidence of the way that changes were made in the appropriation
of the prototypes and their re-adaptation to the change of fauna and likewise
of later theology, can be shown in relation to the primordial great mother
who is Tiamat in Babylonia. One of her typical titles is the “dragon-horse” ,
and as the Egyptians had no horse, it might be fancied at first sight that
such a compound type as the dragon-horse, which also figures in Chinese mythology,
was not Egyptian. The ancient Egyptians had no horse, and their dragon was
a crocodile. The hippopotamus was their first water-horse as male - that
is, the water-bull. As female it was the water-cow. Now, the old first genetrix
Apt (Khept, or Ta-Urt), when represented as a compound figure is a hippopotamus,
that is the water-horse, in front, and a crocodile, that is the dragon, behind.
The dual type of
Tiamat the dragon-horse is based on the crocodile and hippopotamus, which
are to be seen combined in the two-fold character of the great Mother Apt,
and these two animals
were unknown to the fauna
of Akkad and Babylonia.Thus
as Babylonian they are not
derived directly from nature,
but from the mythology and
the zootypes that were already
extant in Egypt as African.
Horus,
as Sebek, was the great fish
of the inundation, typical
of food and water. This great
fish is the crocodile, which
was applied to Horus as a figure
of force in his capacity of
solar god, the crocodile in
Egypt being a prototype of
the mythical dragon - not the
evil dragon, but the solar
dragon, which was known in
relation to Sebek and to Saturn
as the dragon of life. In one
of the Greco-Egyptian planispheres
this dragon keeps its original
form and remains a crocodile.
It is portrayed as a constellation
of enormous magnitude, and
is truly the great fish of
Horus-Sebek that was first
of all a figure of the inundation
constellated in the stellar
mythos and reapplied to the
power that crossed the waters
as the solar Horus of the double
horizon (Drummond,
Oed. Jud. PI. 2). The only
form of evil to be found in
the abyss was the dark and
deadly power of drought,
that, as feared,
might drink or dry up all the
water. This was figured as
the Apap-reptile [Page 275] or some other form of the monster Hydra, the prototypal serpent of the sea. The mother of life in the abyss was the giver of water as the wet nurse of the world, not the destroyer of the water.
In Babylonia the
tree of life was
changed into a tree
of death.The
serpent in the tree
that offers fruit
for food, as Rannut,
the giver of food
and representative
of Mother-earth,
was transformed into the evil serpent that “brought death
into the world and
all our woe” ,
but which had originated
as a beneficent figure
in the Kamite representation
of external nature. The
transmogrifying of
Tiamat, the mother
of all and suckler
of the seven elemental
powers, into the
dragon of evil might be followed on other lines of
descent, as in the conflict
of Bel-Merodach and
the dragon. In the
Egyptian representation
Apap the dragon of
drought is drowned
in the water by Horus
of the inundation,
whose weapon therefore is the water flood. Now in warring with
Tiamat the deluge
is the “mighty
weapon “wielded by
Bel” . Bel (launched)
the deluge, his mighty
weapon, against Tiamat,
inundating her covering” , or
drowning the dragon
of drought. Thus
Tiamat is destroyed
by Bel with the deluge,
where Apap was drowned
by Horus in the inundation.
This again shows that the great Mother
Tiamat, the suckler,
as the giver of water,
had been converted
into the evil dragon
of drought. The good crocodile has also
been transmuted into
the evil dragon and
portrayed as falling
down head foremost
from the starry summit of heaven to be trodden
under foot and crushed
beneath the heel
of Horus, who is
Herakles in Greece,
Krishna in India, Merodach in Assyria. It was the
same with other fauna.
The pregnant hippopotamus
was changed for the
always female bear
or the pregnant woman.
The two dogs have
been substituted for the two jackals of the south and
north, the first
two openers of the
roads in heaven.
The eagle of Zeus takes the place of the hawk of Ra, and the
raven, the black
Neh of Sut ; the
legend follows, and
the conflict betwixt
the eagle and the serpent is substituted for that of the warring
hawk and serpent
in the Egyptian mythos.
The huge Apap-reptile
of drought and darkness
has been supplanted by the chimerical
monster that is slain
by Gilgames the solar
god. And
when the totemic matriarchate has been followed by the patriarchate, and the
goddess of the “living word” in heaven has been changed in the Euphratean system
for the lord who is “the voice of the firmament” ; when the waterman has replaced
the multi-mammalian wateress, the cow or sow of an earlier system of signs; when
the heroes, or mighty ones, have been superseded by simple shepherds of the heavenly
flocks - it becomes a question of very minor import who made the changes and
forged the counterfeits, or whether the originals were deliberately disguised
by the Akkadians or Babylonians, Phoenicians or Greeks.
In the course of
the present inquiry we shall learn that the creation exoterically described in
the Semitic legends of the beginning was not cosmogonical. Neither was it what
one writer has called it, “the cosmography of appearances ,. (Schiaparelli, Astronomy
in the Old Testament). It was Uranography, not cosmography, and uranography
is
Sign-language constellated in the stars. That which has been called “chaos” in
the “legends of creation” was
a condition in which there was neither law nor order, time nor name, nor means [Page
276] of
representing natural phenomena. But it does not mean there were no natural phenomena
because there had been no mode of expression. “Things” existed even when they
had no name or record in the Babylonian mythology. It was never pretended in
the Egyptian wisdom that there was any creation of the elements. Ground
to stand on, food to eat, water to drink, air to breathe, had always been, and
were in no wise dependent upon any mode of representation; whereas the mythical
representation did depend
upon the elements or nature-forces being already extant to be named or to be
constellated and become pictorial for the purpose of the mystery teachers. In
no land or literature has the mythical mode of representation been perverted
and reduced to drivelling foolishness more fatally than in some of the Hebrew
legends, such as that of Jonah and the great fish, which is connected with the
origin of the fish-man in mythology who was born of a fish mother whom we shall
identify with the constellation of the southern fish, and Horus of the inundation.
The most ancient type of the fish was female, as a representative of the great
Mother-earth in the water. This as Egyptian was the crocodile. She
was the suckler of
crocodiles in the inundation. She was the bringer forth as the great fish or
crocodile in the astronomical mythology. One of her children was the crocodile-headed
Sebek, who made the passage of the Nun by night as sun god in the solar mythos.
The fish-man was at first the crocodile of Egypt, next the crocodile-headed figure
of Horus who is called “the crocodile god in the form of a man” (Rit. Ch. 88).
The deceased assumes this form to cross the waters in the nether-world, because
it had been a figure of the solar god in the mythology. The
conversion of the crocodile god in the Nun to the fish-man of Babylonia is thus
made plausible. Jonah is a form of the fish-man in the Biblical story (which
is neither mythology nor eschatology), and therefore a figure of the solar god
who made the passage of the waters as Horus the crocodile or as Ea the fish-man
of Nineveh. As usual in later legend, the anthropomorphic rendering refaces and
thus defaces the type. It was the fish itself that swam the waters of the inundation.
It was the typical fish that swam the nocturnal waters, or the sun god represented
by the mighty fish, whereas, this being “history” , Jonah is made mere man, and
therefore needed the great fish to carry him across the Nun or to land him at
Nineveh. Birth, or rebirth, from the great fish in the Lower Nun is one of the
oldest traditions of the race. It was represented in the mysteries and constellated
in the heavens as a means of memorial. The
great fish that landed Jonah on dry ground may still be seen as “Ketos” with
its enormous mouth wide open at the point of emanation from the Nun, just where
the landing-place on earth is represented in the equatorial regions on the celestial
chart.
Naturally there would be some changes in the constellations with the change of fauna as the primitive wisdom passed from land to land, but that is a different matter from working the oracle of the celestial orrery on behalf of false and therefore all the more virulent theology. It can be demonstrated that the astronomical mythology of Egypt passed into Akkad and Babylonia, with the race of the Cushite “black-heads” , to become the wisdom of the “Chaldees” and the Persian magi in after ages, including such primary types as [Page 277] the abyss of the beginning in the lower firmament, the Great Mother as a fish or dragon = crocodile in the abyss, and the fish-man born of the fish-mother from the abyss.
According to the legend related by Berosos, a divine fish-man, Oannes, or Oan, who had his dwelling in the Persian Gulf or Erythrean Sea, came forth from thence to teach the Chaldeans all they ever knew, when, as it is said in the native tradition, the people wisely “repeated his wisdom” ( W. A. .l, ii. 16, 37-71). In all probability the instructor as a fish-man in Babylonia was represented by Ea, whose consort was Davki or Davkina,
the Earth-mother corresponding to the Egyptian Great Mother, one of whose names was Tef. “Among the chief deities reverenced by the rulers of Telloh was one whose name is expressed by the ideographs of a ‘fish' and an 'enclosure', which served in later days to denote the name of Nina or Nineveh” (Sayce, Rib. Lectures, p. 281). The same sign, i.e., of a fish, and enclosure in the Egyptian hieroglyphics, signifies An, to appeal, to show, to teach, as did the fish-man. An in Egyptian is a name of the teacher,
the scribe, the priest. An was the fish in Egypt. An, with the fish for ideograph, is an ancient throne name that was found by Lepsius among the monumental titles on a tomb near the Pyramids of Gizeh (Bunsen, Egypts Place, vol. ii. p. 77). This An, to show, to reveal, An, the fish of the enclosure, An, the teacher, as the fish, is the likeliest original of the Oan or Oannes who issued from the waters to show the Babylonians how to live, as the mythos was reflected in the later legend. Horus-Sebek was the earliest
fish-man known to mythology. He calls himself the fish in the form of a man. Yet he issued from the female fish as a fish, the crocodile as son from the crocodile as Apt the mother and not as a man ejected from the mouth of a fish, as the legend reads when ignorantly literalized. The fish-mother also survived in the divine lady Nina, who was represented by the ideograph of a fish enclosed in a basin of water (Sayce, Hib. L., p. 37), which has the same significance as the fish-mother in the lake at Ascalon.
But to reach a beginning
the bottom must be
plumbed in the abyss or nether parts of the firmamental Nun upon
the outside of the mount by means of which
the earth was imaged
in the astronomical mythology.
The abyss was known
by various names
in different versions of the mythos. It is the Phoenician
baev or deep. It
is the bau of the Hebrew Genesis. It is the bau or
bahu as Egyptian.
The word bahu is also a name for the god of the inundation called the power of the southern
lakes. “I am Bahu the Great” is
said four times over
(in the Magic Papyrus)
at the breaking forth of the water power from its southern source
in the abyss of the
dragon, the crocodile,
or the Southern Fish (Records, vol.
x. p. 149). The Egyptian
also has an earlier
form of the word bahu in “bab” , for the well
or whirlpool as a
welling source of water. Another term for this outrance from the
Nun is the tepht,
which signifies the
abyss, the source,
the outlet. The Tiavat or Thavath of Berosos is a form of the
Great Mother as a type
of the watery abyss
which is the Egyptian
tepht, the abyss, the source, the well, the hole from whence the
water issues, the dwelling
underground where
the dragon-horse
gave suck to her brood of monsters in the earth. Tepht or Tept
is also an Egyptian name for the old
first Great Mother
as a [Page 278] figure
of source. This
likewise had been applied to the place of emanation for the waters
of the Nile which issued from the well of source, the bahu, tepht,
or tuat. But the tepht of source, the lair of the dragon, the “hole of the snake” had
been the outrance of the Nile from the abyss before there was
a goddess Thavath or Tiamat in Assyria. So was it with the bau,
bahu, or bab. These names had been applied to the source of the
inundation itself and localized in Egypt before they were repeated
in the astronomical mythology to become a subject of Semitic legendary
lore. The bau, the bahu, or bab is Egyptian. The tepht and tuat
are likewise Egyptian; and these names had been (already) applied
to the source of the inundation and to the facts of earth that
formed the mould of the astronomical mythology.
In the later Semitic
legend it was said the earth was founded on the flood, as if it
were afloat upon
the water of the
abyss. But according to the primary expression the earth stood
on its own bottom in the water, at the fixed centre, with the
tree upon the summit as a figure of food and water in vegetation.
The mythical abyss of the beginning was the welling-place of water
underground where life was brought to birth by the Great Mother
from the womb of the Abyss. In
the Ritual this is described as the tuat, a place of entrance
to and egress from the lower earth of Amenta. It is a secret Deep
that nobody can fathom, which sends out light in the dark, and “its offerings are eatable plants” . It is the birthplace of water and vegetation, and therefore, more abstractly, of life. The bottomless pit is a figure that was derived from this unplumbed deep inside the earth itself. From this abyss the
Mother-earth (as womb of life) had brought forth her elemental progeny as the perennial renewers of food to eat, water to drink, and air to breathe.
The tuat in the recesses
of the south is likewise
identified in the hymns as the secret source of the river Nile,
which is thus traced to the abyss. Such
was the birthplace
of the beginning, the birthplace of water in the beginning from
which the papyrus plants arose as the primeval
food, and as the
fact is registered in the Ritual. In the Magic Papyrus the abyss
is comprehensively spoken of as “the water's
well” . It is the habitat of the dragon called “the crocodile coming
out of the abyss” . It is also the lair of the Apap-monster,
of whom it is said
by Shu, “If he who is in the water opens his mouth, I will let
the earth fall
into the water's
well” , being the “south made north, or the earth turned upside
down” (Records, vol. x.). Here
the two dragons can
be identified together
as the crocodile-dragon of water and the Apap-dragon of drought,
that were at war from
the beginning as
antagonists in the
abyss. The strife in the abyss was betwixt the crocodile of water
and the fiery dragon of drought,
the two dragons of
good and evil, Sebek-Horus
and the dragon or reptile of Apap. Both were born of the abyss;
hence the Scholia
on ch. 17 of the
Ritual add, “The
devourer comes from
the lake of Puanta” , or the water of the abyss
which the Egyptians
traced to the “recesses” in the south. The
beginning in heaven,
as on earth, was with water. Water was the first thing rendered
uranographically, not created, in the southern
hemisphere. This
when gathered into one place “ was
localized as “the water” . The [Page
279] Egyptians
had a huge southern
constellation dedicated to Menat the wet-nurse, called “the
Stars of the
Water” (Egyptian Calendar
of Astronomical Observations ). The “Southern
Fish” and “Ketos” are
both depicted in
this water of the
south or the abyss. Aratos, speaking
of the stars in the
neighbourhood of
these great fishes
or monsters
of the deep, says “they are all
of them called' the
water'” (Aratos,
line 399, Brown).
Earth, the Great Mother, was imaged
as the breeder
of life and the bringer
forth from this abyssal water in
the south.
She was represented
in two mythical characters. In one
she is the mother
who brought forth
on dry ground, as the hippopotamus
(or its equivalent
type) ; in the other
she was the mother of life in water
who is figured
as the Southern Fish
low down in the deep of the southern
heaven.
In mythology that
which has been called
“creation” begins with duplicating
by dividing: darkness
was divided from
light, dry land as breathing-place was divided from water; the
north was divided from the south,
and earth was divided
from heaven, as in
the Japanese creation. So the power of the two monsters (in the
Book of Enoch) “became
separated on the
same day, one being
in the depths of the sea and one in the desert” -
that is, one in the
water, as Leviathan ( the crocodile or
dragon ), and one
as the hippopotamus on dry ground. Enoch asks the angel to show
him “the
power of those monsters
and how they became separated on
the same day of creation,
one in the depths
of the sea, above the springs of waters, and one in the dry desert” . It
is
said of the two monsters
that they had been
prepared by the people of God to become
food.
In this there is a broken
ray of the refracted mythos.
The
two monsters had represented
food and drink from the first,
one as the mother of life
in the earth, the other in
the
waters. These
two monsters were prepared
for food in the garden or
enclosure of the beginning.
The name
of one is Behemoth, the name
of the other Leviathan. Behemoth
is the Egyptian Bekhamut,
the female hippopotamus,.
and Leviathan
answers to the crocodile
or dragon of the deep. The
rabbis repeated a true tradition
when they rendered the Biblical “Behemoth” not
as a plural of majesty,
but as a pair of beasts.
They were a pair of beasts
in the
mythology of Egypt. The
female
Behemoth was the original
Great Mother Kep, or Apt;
the male
was her son. The crocodile
also, as zootype, was both
male and female. For his
purpose, however, Enoch
makes Leviathan
male monster and Behemoth
female. Of course the type
is or may
be differentiated by the
sex. The two monsters in
the Egyptian
starry scheme are both
female
as two forms of the Great
Mother, who was the hippopotamus
in her fore-part and the
crocodile
behind, or the crocodile
in
the
south and the hippopotamus
in the north. Thus the hippopotamus
and crocodile which were natural
in the Nile had become two
huge, indefinite monsters
of
legendary lore in the Book
of Enoch, and the two survived
as the types of dry and wet, for land and water. The suggestion now to be made
is that the two monsters of
dry and wet, or earth and
water, were constellated as
the Southern
Fish and Ketos, or the Whale,
but that the whale has been
substituted for the hippopotamus
by the Euphrateans or the Greeks.
The Southern Fish on the celestial globe is portrayed in the act of [Page 280] emaning a stream of water from its mouth, whereas the monster Ketos is depicted as the breather out of the water, the two being representative of the earth as the mother of life in the water called the abyss. In the Sut and Horus mythos the first two children of the ancient mother represent the conditions of
dry and wet. They were born twin because the conditions were co-extant in earth and water. In the course of time everything that was dry, desiccative, or of the desert was ascribed to Sut, whereas the products of water were assigned to Horus. Hence the two monsters were continued as types of the twins. The hippopotamus of earth as male was given to Sut. The crocodile of water was given to Horus, to typify the fish as food of the inundation.
The “abyss of waters” is described by Berosos as the habitat of most hideous
beings, which had been produced by a “two-fold principle” that was as yet undiscreted
into wet and dry. “The person who was said to have presided over them was a
female named Omoroca” . Then came Belos “and cut the woman asunder, and of
one half formed the earth, and of the other half the heaven or firmament” .
This is a mode of discreting the two-fold principle of the dry earth and the
celestial water. The story told by Berosos is a later legendary form of the
mythos. The duplication of the mother-hood is the same, but with a change of
type. The later woman has taken the place of the cow that was cut in two, divided,
or made twain as the water-cow of earth and the milch-cow of heaven. Omoroca
is the Great Mother who was one as the representative of earth, and
was then divided to become the representative of earth and water. The formation
of earth
and heaven out of the halves is identical with separating earth and water and
distinguishing wet from dry.
The “creation” with which we are now concerned
is uranographic as a mode of fashioning and giving names to the earliest
constellation figures,
those that were truly
primitive. Thus in the beginning of the astronomical mythology there is a figure
of uncreated ground that stands in space or amidst the firmamental water.
If
we use the word “creation” , which has been so ignorantly abused, the first
creation figured in the astronomical mythology was the birth of water or, more
abstractly, of life from the water, the source whence came the inundation with
its blessings to the rain less land of Egypt. As Plutarch reports, the Egyptians
held that water was “the beginning and origin of all things” -
that was, as an element of life. Hence in the Osirian mysteries the throne of
the Eternal rested on the element of water, and Horus the child-saviour, the
Messu or Messiah, came by water in the power of the southern lakes. So in the
building of the heavens the beginning was with water, or the firmament imaged
in its aerial likeness. Thus
it might be said the heaven was made from water, as it is said in the Babylonian “legends
of creation” ,
the water based on being the abyss of source. According to the present reading
of the data, water had been recognized as the first and most vital element of
life. Hence the beginning of all recorded human thought with water. Water in
Africa was life indeed, where drought was very death. Horus on his papyrus as
lord of water was the lord or life. One Egyptian name for [Page
281] heaven
is kabhu, derived from water, or the inundation, as “the cool” and that which
makes cool. Paradise was where water was plenteous. Hence water was divinized
as heaven, and heaven is figured in the hieroglyphics as water suspended overhead,
the firmament being held aloft on four sustaining props as water lifted up. There
was no such crying want of water in Babylonia, no such devouring dragon of drought
in Akkad, therefore no such raison d'etre for the origin from water as in
Africa.
The birth of water from the abyss of earth
is figured in the “Southern
Fish” . The star Fomalhaut
at the mouth of the Fish denotes
the point of emergence whence
the stream is seen ascending
from its source beneath the
constellation of Aquarius.
A soul of life from the element
of water was manifested by
the fish as Horus the crocodile,
also by Horus cradled on the
water-plant. Thus the water
element was fundamental in
the making of the heavens.
This was as the firmamental
water. Earth as the mother
of life and giver of water was portrayed in the abyss as a great fish emaning
water from its mouth, which represents the fact that the earth in the abyss had
been already recognized as giver of life because it was the source of water,
the primary wateress or the wet-nurse of mythology. She, the Great Mother, as
we read the heavenly story-book, was next constellated in the Southern Fish as
the producer of life and sustenance from water in the unfathomable abyss.
In
various legends there is a beginning with a world all water. This is one with
the Egyptian Nu or Nun. In the beginning was the Nun. Thus saith the primordial
word. Not in the beginning of the heavens and earth, but in the beginning of
the uranographic representation or entification in the astronomical mythology.
The Nun is a name in Egyptian for the firmament when imaged in the similitude
of water, the
world that was all
water at the intellectual starting-point. There is a relic of the ancient wisdom
on one of the Assyrian tablets, the gnosis of which we hold to be Egyptian,
and that as such it can be unriddled and read. As it is said, “the heaven was
created from the waters” . The earth was pre-existent. This is called the
work
of “Ansar and Kisar” , Who ” created the earth“, i.e.,
when “creation” had been rendered cosmogonically. But “the heaven was created
from the waters” which were firmamental and uranographic. The non-Semitic legend
of Cutha describes the beginning with a condition of non-entity or pre-entity;
there was nothing but an amorphous world of water. As it is said, “the whole
of the lands were sea” ; “the abyss had not been made” below, nor was there
any seat of the gods above. There was no field of reeds; no tree of life had
been
planted in the midst of an enclosure. There flowed no stream from the abyss
“within
the sea” of
the celestial water (Pinches, T.G., Records of the Past, 2nd Series, vol.
vi. page 107; Sayce, Assyrian Story
Of Creation,
New Series, vol. i. pages 133 to 153). This, when bottomed,
means that configuration of the signs in the astronomical
mythology had not as yet begun. But as space the firmamental
water was extant, and dry earth itself had stood for ever in
the midst thereof; earth and water were the uncreated substance
which had no beginning, any more than they had in the Egyptian
Nun. The monsters born of Tiamat had
their home in the ground of earth. It was there she suckled [Page
282] them. Earth as the natural fact preceded the abyss in the
astronomy. As
Professor Sayce observes, somewhat naïvely, “There was already an earth
by the side of the deep” (H. L., p. 377). No. Earth was the ground to go upon
in the deep, and this was the Mother-earth which brought forth in and from the
deep that was depicted as the abyss, or as the Great Fish in “the water” of
the southern heaven. It was in the extreme south that the Babylonians also placed
their entrance to the under-world or the abyss. That is where the Egyptians had
already localized the outrance from this mysterious region whence the
inundation came. Here was the “Ununait” or place of springing up that was
first applied to water in the pre-solar mythos, the water that was pictured in
its
rising from the fish's mouth.
The abyss or great deep of the beginning was represented in the mysteries as
the Lake of the Great Fish. It was related by Ktêsias
of Knidos that the sacred lake was seen at Bambykê or
Hierapolis. It was also said that in this lake the life of Derketo, daughter
of Aphrodite, was saved by the fish. And as the great fish of Kam was the crocodile,
the likelihood is that the Lake Meoris, sacred to the crocodiles in Egypt, was
also a form of the lake which represented the place of birth that was commemorated
in the mysteries and told of in the legends as the abyss of the beginning, the
birthplace or fontal source of water=life. A figure of the “abyss” or “deep” survives
still in the “basin” . Large
ewers filled with
water were used for purificatory rites in the Babylonian temples. These were
called
apsu, for “deeps” or “abysses” . Tanks were used by the Egyptians for their baptistries.
The baptismal font still images the fount of source. As a mythical or celestial
locality the Gulf of Eridu is a mundane form of the abyss that was in the beginning.
This was the birthplace where the Earth-mother brought forth as a dragon or great
fish, the mistress in the abode of the fish. Hence it was the place from whence
not only the fish-man Oannes, but the seven fish-like men or annedoti, ascended
before the time of the Assyrian deluge. The source of water underground most
naturally suggested the idea of a primordial deep, an unfathomable gulf, a bottomless
pit. This was then applied to the point of beginning in the lower Nun or firmamental
water where the abyss was figure in the uranographic representation.
If,
as we suggest, the story of the heavens was written by the
race here generalized
as “the Egyptians” , and if that race descended
from the equatorial
regions like the great river flowing from its source, it
is to the southern hemisphere we must look for
the imagery which
first reflects the mythology. The southern constellations
are comparatively
few, but their character in relation to the Egyptian wisdom
is unmistakable. Besides which, these uranographs
of the beginning,
or the first time, could not all have originated as Euphratean,
because so many of the stars were too far south
to be seen or constellated
in Akkad or Babylonia.
The Southern
Fish is figured as
the bringer forth of water - that is, of life or of Horus the fish from the
abyss. Ketos the monster represents
the mother in another
character. This, as we suggest, is the mother in the water emaning life upon
dry land as did the water-cow. The head of the monster is half out of the deep,
with jaws agape and gasping like a fish on dry ground, sufficient to show that [Page 283] these
are a fish-form of the dual motherhood that was imaged as a crocodile and water-cow,
as two cows, as two women, or as the woman Omoroca, who was cut in halves by
Belos. If the sphere is carefully examined it will be seen that a stream of
water is gushing upwards from the fish's mouth and apparently ascending towards
the figure of Aquarius on the ecliptic. Hitherto it has been assumed that water
in heaven always ran downwards from the northern pole into the abyss of the
south; that the water from the urn of Aquarius was being
poured into the mouth
of the Southern Fish, and the river Eridanus started from the star Rigel at
the foot of Orion and came to an
end at the star Achernar,
its course being from north to south, or from right to left of the sphere.
But this reckoning has now
to be reversed.
On the celestial
globe, then, the
life of the world
that was born of
water and imaged
as Ichthus the fish is represented still as issuing from the
mouth of “the Southern Fish” . The word that
issued from the fish's
mouth is mentioned
by the writer of
a hymn to Merodach, in which it is said, “The
holy writing of the
mouth of the deep is thine” (Sayce, Hib.
Lectures, p. 99). If
this is rightly rendered,
the word of Ichthus
had then become the written word. Still,
it issued from the
mouth of the deep,
which was that of the fish-mother, or the fish's mouth.
Now, the mystical
emblem known by name
as the vesica piscis is
still a form of the
fish's mouth,
or
outrance into
life. The
present writer once
thought the vesica
was uterine. And
it is such as a co-type,
but not in its origin,
because the child
first born of it
was not the human
child! It is
the emaning mouth
of that fish which
gave birth to water
as the life of the
world and to the
saviour who came
to Egypt by water
as the fish of the
inundation. In the
language of obstetrics,
the outrance of
birth is called the
os tincae or
tench's mouth. That
is the mouth of the
fish, not because
the origin in this
instance was uterine,
but because the fish's
mouth was first,
and this has been
continued as a symbol
of the birthplace
when that which was
pre-human was reapplied
to the human organ.
In the course of
doctrinal development
geometrical and anatomical
figures are blended
in the vesica as
a symbol of the womb.
It was not so when
the great mother
(of life in water)
was imaged in the
Southern Fish. It
becomes so, to all
appearance, when
the door of life
is figured in the
shape of a vesica
at the feminine (or
western) end of a
Christian church.
The fish's mouth
was figured in the
heavens as the primordial
door of outrance
into life when the
soul of life came
to the world by water. And although the true meaning may have been suppressed by over-laying the doctrine, enough survives in the symbols to show that the child Christ in the Virgin's arms encircled by the vesica
piscis has the
same significance
as had the figure
in the planisphere
where the water of
life is issuing from
the fish's mouth,
and the star of annunciation
is the star Fomalhaut.
Only the water of
life, still represented
by Ichthus the fish,
is personalized in
later iconography
by the human child
as the type of eternal
re juvenescence.
The oval being a
co-type with the
fish's mouth, the
Virgin and her child
are a later equivalent
for the divine mother
bringing forth her
fish in the lake,
piscina, basin, or
other water type
of the primordial
abyss, as in the
astronomical mythology.
The vesica survives in Freemasonry as well as in the [Page 284] Christian
Church, which was founded on the fish and font in Rome. It
represented an archetypal
and ineffable mystery as a geometrical symbol, not one that
was simply anatomical. Speaking of the vesica, Dr. Oliver
says this mysterious
figure vesica piscis possessed an un-bounded influence on the details of sacred architecture, and it constituted the great and enduring secret of our ancient brethren. The plans of religious buildings are determined by its use, and the proportions of length and height were dependent on it alone (Oliver Descrip., p. 109).
The
springs of water issuing forth
as from the breast of the
Mother-earth made her the wet-nurse
to her
children. As Apt she nursed
her hippopotami; as Rerik
she gave milk to her young
swine;
as Neith she was the suckler
of her crocodiles; as Hathor,
the cow-headed, she was the
milch-mother who was said
to give the white liquor that
the glorified ones love. In
each of these forms she was
a type of Mother-earth, as
we learn from the mythology.
The
mundane source of water
touches the origin of what
has been designated the worship “of
wells and springs, which
was at first a propitiation
of
the superhuman power of Mother-earth
by those who needed water,
and who, like the Egyptians,
sought to be nursed at the
dugs of the cow when
reborn
above as the glorified.
In
Ireland there could be no
religious place without
a
holy weIl. St. Columbkille
is said to have “sained” three
hundred well-springs that
were swift [running]” (Whitley
Stokes, Three Middle Irish Homilies). “ Well worship” ,
so called, is propitiation
of the power in the
well. This
was the spirit of
running water, which
as an element had
the credit of giving
life and the power
of purifying. The
doctrine is extant as Osirian in the Ritual (ch. 17),
where the water is
a lake of healing
at which all defects
are washed away and
all stains obliterated. The speaker says, “I
am purified at the
two great lakes” (the
lake of natron and
the lake of salt)
which purify (or
sain) the offerings
that living men (on
earth) present to
the great god who is there - that is, Osiris, who had
taken the place of
the mother as the
source of life in
water. The point
is that the water purified or sained the offerings that
were made to the
power in the lake
or well or living
spring. But the Great
Mother was the first to be solicited for water - she who
was the wateress
in the abyss, the
primary Great Mother
in mythology, the
water-cow as Apt in Egypt, the water-horse as
Tiamat in Babylonia.
The primordial
abyss had originated
as the source of
water in the earth.
The well-spring underground was the fact in nature upon which
the fabled fount
of immortality and the subterranean lake of the waters of life
were founded in the divine nether-earth. Water
generated by the
earth was that which came from very source itself thus visualized
as wet-nurse of the world. Every spring or bubbling
fount of liquid life
that issued from this source below was suggestive of a deep without
a bottom; the tepht, the bab, or bau of source
that was afterwards
represented in the astronomical mythology and constellated at
the very foundation of the southern heaven
as the mystical abyss. The first abyss was in the earth. The abyss of firmamental water is outside the earth; it is figurative because celestial. The Nun was heaven entified as water. But there had [Page 285] been
two waters actual in external nature, as the waters that rose
up in the fountains, wells, and springs of earth, and the water
that fell in dew and rain from heaven. This was portrayed as falling
from the tree of wet, which is the Egyptian tree of N ut or of
heaven as water. Thence water from the well was the water of earth,
and water from the tree was the water of heaven. These two water
sources in earth and heaven were figured as the abyss or well
below and the tree of rain above, with Apt or Hathor the Mother-earth
in the abyss, and Nut the heavenly mother in the tree of wet above.
And these two types seen in the well
and tree are universal
signs of so-called “water worship” with the oldest races in the
world. The holy Well or water-hole is commonly found beneath the
sacred moisture-dropping tree. The stone erected as an altar underneath
the tree is almost as common. This was a place of propitiation
and appeal to the elemental power. Libations of blood were poured
out on the stone. Offerings were suspended on the tree; gifts
were cast into the well and magical invocations made. The
well suffices to establish the fact that the primitive want was
water. But the source was dual in the water of earth and the water
of heaven. The source in earth was imaged in the well as a form
of the abyss. The water that fell from heaven was imaged by the
tree of Nut. The altar-stone is representative of earth. Thus
it is a meeting-point for the sycamore of Nut (the tree of celestial
water, as Egyptian), the altar of earth, and the abyss of water
under the earth. The object of the rite is the spirit or power
that sends the water from its “double source” in earth and heaven,
with the stone as altar for the sacrificial offering. The Egyptian
old first mother, who is a hippopotamus in front and crocodile
behind, and who is repeated in the Babylonian dragon-horse Tiamat,
still survives in British tradition as the water-horse or kelpie,
and also as the dragon. The river Yore near Middleham is held
to be haunted by a water-horse (Longstaffe, Richmondshire,
p. 96). The River Auld Grandt, that springs from Loch Glaish in Ross-shire, is dreaded as the abode of the water-horse. Sometimes the presiding power of the water in the well is indicated by the fish, sometimes by the frog. Once the dragon of drought left his co-type in a northern holy well. At the Devil's Causeway between Ruckley and Acton there is a well in which the animal type is the frog, and the largest of these, which naturally enough appears but seldom, represents the devil Apap. In one instance two old women are said to keep the secret of the water. These are equivalent to the two fish, the two cows, and the woman who was cut in two.
The double source of water having been identified as the water of earth and
the water of heaven, the type of duality was applied to the firmamental water in the astronomical mythology, and heaven, as water, was divided into the two waters of the lower and upper firmament, the typical being founded as a figure of the actual. These two waters are also constellated in the two celestial rivers of Eridanus and the Milky Way. The one reflects the river of the inundation, therefore the water of earth below, emaning from the lower Nun or the mythical abyss. The
other is the “great stream” of the Via Lactea. The inundation rose up in the south. Its ebullient superhuman forces in the Ritual are called the powers of the south. These powers [Page 286] of
the south are in attendance “at the moment when the lord of his flood is carried forth and brings to its fulness the force that is hidden within him” (ch.64).
And when once we know which way the river runs in heaven, Achernar
in Eridanus becomes our guide star from the south. From that the
river travels northward to Orion's foot, or rather to the point
at which Orion rises up as Horus of the inundation. Otherwise
Horus is brought to birth on his papyrus, as depicted in the Egyptian
drawings.
The two waters of
earth and heaven
are both recognizable
in the double
source assigned to
the river Nile. In
some of the traditions
it is described as
emanating from the
abyss of earth, in others as falling from the
skies. Both origins
are mentioned in
the Hymn to the Nile.
In the first stanza
the water is said to descend from heaven. In line
thirteen we are told
that “the Nile has made its retreat in Southern
Egypt. Its name is
not known beyond
the Tuat” . Thus
the retreat of the
Nile in the south
is identifiable with
the abyss as the
earthly source of
the inundation, and its name is not known beyond
the boundary of that
other world from
whence it issues.
In Inner Africa the
rains came from the cool heaven (Kabhu) of the north,
and therefore in
that quarter (or
half) was the creatory
and source of the
celestial waters, as the fact was figured for ever
in the constellation
of the Water-Cow.
In the hymns of adoration
to the Nile the river
is addressed as coming forth and bringing
all good things to
Egypt from the north,
whereas the geographical
Nile came with the
inundation from the south. The Nile that issued
from the two lakes
of a double source
was celestial in
the north. The Nile
that “made
its retreats in Southern
Egypt” (hymn 13)
was the mundane Nile
which came from the
north to the south
above, and from the
south to the north below. As Hor-Apollo shows, two
of the Egyptian vases
denoted water from
a double source,
one being the earth
as generator of water, the other heaven when the
rains fell in the
southern parts of
Athiopaeia
(B. I. 2 I ). The
urn was a figure
of the inundation.
Aquarius was called the constellation of the Urn by the Arab astronomers. We shall understand the sign of “Krater” better if we take it is an extra-zodiacal image of the urn, which not only represented the inundation and its bounty, but also the abyss of source from which the weIling waters came. The two urns are followed by the two vases at a later stage. Howsoever poured out, water was the primary means of fertilization. When the goddess pours out a libation from her vase - or two divine personages from two vases - on the water plant or shoot of palm, the signification is the same as when the wet-nurse Hathor suckles Horus as a child of Neith the crocodile as a calf. According to the most primitive imagery in Egypt, the waters of the inundation issued from the Mother-earth as the water-cow, the wateress in the primordial abyss or water source. But when the sky was looked to as a source of water, heaven was represented as the milch-cow, and the river flowing from the highest source was imaged as the Milky Way. Thenceforth there were two cows. The cow of earth was the water-cow, and the milch-cow was the cow of heaven. The water-cow of earth was constellated in the stars of the Great Bear, the milch-cow of heaven in the group now known as Cassiopœia, or the Lady in the Chair, which [Page 287] was the earlier constellation of the Haunch or Meskhen as a figure of the birthplace when the birth was typical of life in water (see fragment from a Theban Tomb, p. 289).
THE DROWNING OF THE DRAGON.
The “mystery of evil” , about which theologians ignorantly prate, was very simple in its origin. Water, food, and light were naturally good. Their opposites - thirst, hunger, darkness, and disease - were as naturally bad. In this way the origin of evil had its rootage in the conditions of external nature for which man could nowise be held responsible. The rest is mainly the result of a primitive doctrine being developed in the domain
of theology. For example, Sut, the anthropomorphic devil of the later Egyptian religion, was previously the pre-anthropomorphic representative of drought, dearth, and darkness long before the type of evil had been personalized in the figure of a satanic Mephistopheles as the tempter of womankind. Thus the representative of evil, “that old serpent” in mythology, became the author of evil in theology, and the devil was evolved in the moral domain according to the eschatology.
At
the commencement of mythical representation in Africa we
meet the adversary of man in the shape of a monstrous serpent
or devouring dragon. This in Egypt is the Apap-reptile, the
dragon of
drought or the serpent of darkness. In one phase Apap is
the devourer of the moon in her eclipse, in another it is
the destroyer of vegetable life, and in a third it drinks
or dries up all the water, or there is a mortal fear lest
the monster should do so. This was the primal adversary or
prototypal Satan.
There is a saying that “the devil is known by his long tail” ,
and the long tail of Satan may be seen as the appendage of
Apap the serpent
of evil in the southern constellation Hydra. The
Egyptians also have a class of evil beings called the Sebau.
These were the spawn of the reptile Apap, born of darkness,
drought, and other malefic influences in physical phenomena
that were found to be inimical to man. The type of Apap,
a flat-headed Inner African snake, is universal. It is the
Bushman all-devourer Kwai Hemm,
who swallows the
mantis-deity at night and brings him forth again alive by
day; it is the Norse dragon or worm, the Greek python, the
throttling ahi
or vrittra of the Vedas. With the Indians of Brazil it is
still “the great serpent who is the owner of night” .
It is the snake,
toad, or frog (in the legends) that swallows all the water
in the world. Possibly the Apap-monster of Africa may be
recognized
even by name in Australia. In the centre of the continent
whirlwinds occur that lift up columns of dust two or three
hundred
feet in height. The Arunta call them Apapa. The Warramunga
say an unfriendly spirit, an Orantja, travels about in these
on the look-out to kill black-fellows. Whether this be the
old dragon of the desert or not, it is noticeable that the
name of the Apap in Egyptian signifies to mount on high,
become tall, vast, gigantic, like the swirling dust and darkness
of the sand-storm (S. and G., N. Tribes, p. 632). [Page
288] Here
begins the war betwixt the evil serpent and the woman, who
is the Great Mother in mythology. It was the Apap-reptile
who brought darkness, drought, and death into the world.
The mother was the earliest slayer of the dragon, and the
son of the woman followed as her helper. She may be seen
as Isis, a form of the lunar goddess, spearing the head of
Apap in the dark waters of night (Wilkinson). She may also
be heard in this character as the Lady of Light, who exclaims, “lighten
up the darkness and overthrow the devouring monster” (Rit.,
ch. 80). In the Kaffir folk-tales we find the original mythos
of the monster in three of its phases. In the story of “The Great
Chief of the Animals” (Theal, page 163) the victim swallowed
by “ the terrible monster” is
the moon-mother. She tears her way out of the monster as
the deliverer of herself, and sets free all her children
whom the devourer as dragon of darkness had previously swallowed.
The bows and arrows with which the twin brothers kill the
monster tend to identify their weapon with the lunar bow
that was periodically drawn and nightly employed to overcome
the power of darkness. There is perhaps a further hint that
the mother represents the moon, inasmuch as the children
of the woman had been left for safety in charge of the hare,
which is a lunar zootype. In another
Kaffir tale
the woman is mother of the twins who correspond to Sut and
Horus as the twin powers of light and darkness brought forth
by the mother-moon in her dual lunation. In a third the swallower,
called “the Inabulele” (Theal, page 79), is slain by
the hero Sikulum, who answers to Horus as slayer of the Apap-dragon.
Propitiation of a superhuman nature power for food and drink was the most primitive form of the appeal that ultimately culminated, as we know, in worship. The gods of Egypt from the beginning represented food and drink, not only as givers of sustenance - they were the sustenance in food and liquid. The Great Mother was the suckler or wet-nurse. Hathor offered food in the sycamore-fig and Isis in the persea tree of life. Child-Horus was the shoot, the branch, the calf, lamb, or fish. Seb, god of earth, was the father of aliment. Plenty of food and water first made heaven palpable to primitive or archaic men on earth. Hence the primitive paradise was imaged as a field of food. At one stage seven cows were configurated as the type of plenty that was eternal in the heavens. The tree of life was planted in the midst of the celestial oasis. Upon this grew the fruit as food on which the gods and the glorified were fed. The mother of food in the oasis of the papyrus plant, Uat, was divinized in the goddess Uati, as a mother of all things, fresh, flourishing, and ever-green. The deity Atum-Ra, who first attained the status of “holy spirit” in the eschatology, says of himself, “I am the food which never perishes” (Rit., ch. 85). Horus of the inundation was constellated on his papyrus as the ever-coming shoot (Plan. of Denderah) he was also the giver of food as the fish, the calf, and the lamb, that were made celestial types in the astral mythology. An infinitude of water was an African ideal of the divine. A spring of water weIling from the bosom of the earth made her the mother of life, and life that came by water was then divinized in Horus on his papyrus plant as the food-bringer. Thence came a saviour to the land of Egypt as Horus of the inundation Horus the shoot or [Page 289] natzer, Horus as Ichthus the fish, Horus the mother's child who came by water. It is possible to show that Horus on his papyrus or lotus was the African original of Jack who climbed the bean-stalk. It may be premised that the stalk up which the spirit of vegetation climbs to furnish food was an earlier type than the tree of life, and that the fact was preserved in the Egyptian mythos. Also the tree of Tammuz in Eridu was “a stalk” . Now the lotus in Egypt was literally a bean-stalk. Its large seed was known as the bean of Egypt. Thus when the lotus = papyrus was employed for the figure of food, and Horus, as the elemental spirit of vegetation, ascended the stalk to take his seat upon “the flower” , he was the youth who climbed the “bean-stalk” to slay the giant Apap at first in nature, next in the mythos, and lastly in the legends. When water was the life, and Mother-earth was the source, she was imaged as the great fish, and her young one was the lord of life as the food-bringer in the inundation. Horus of the inundation was a real, ever-coming saviour of the world as periodic bringer of water and the food of life, who came in several characters. In one of which he was the fish. In one he climbed the stalk of the papyrus plant as the soul of vegetation. As the young hero it was he who fought and overcame the dragon of drought at one season and the serpent of darkness at another. A power of perennial renewal was perceived in nature. This was manifested by successive births. Hence the child-god of Egypt became a type of the eternal, ever-coming by rebirth in time and season and the elements of life and light, which in the character of Horus was at first by food and water. This was the eternal, ever-coming, ever-renewing spirit of youth. In the illustration from a Theban tomb the Great Mother, who in one form is a crocodile, has just given birth to her child, Horus, Har-Ur, as the young crocodile poised on end in front of her. It is a picture of the young child that was brought forth annually from the water by the mother, who was constellated as the Crocodile or Hippopotamus at the northern centre of the planisphere. The history of Horus is depicted in the heavens as if upon the walls and windows of some vast cathedral of immensity.
This
was the subject of subjects in the astronomical mythology. He was conceived
of a virgin mother in the sign of Virgo. His birth or advent was announced
by the star Phact in the constellation Columba. The [Page
290] earliest mother who conceived as a virgin in mythology was
represented by the sacred heifer of the immaculate Isis. Also by the white
vulture in the cult of the Virgin Neith. She was the dove of Hathor in the
worship of Iusāas,
the mother of Iusa.
The human only comes in as a challenging element when the mythos is related
as history. When the woman took the
place of the heifer,
the vulture, the dove, or other zootype of virginity - that is, when the
type was humanized and Horus imaged
as a child - the
doctrine of incarnation, or the incorporation of a spirit of life in matter,
had entered into the human sphere.
Thus the mystical
virgin and child in human guise, whether in Egypt or in any other land, was
a result of doctrinal development,
and the doctrine
itself could not be understood without a knowledge of the earlier phase.
When the type of the Great Mother and her
youngling had been
changed from the totemic zootype to the anthrotype, and the goddess was imaged
as a woman, a child became the figure
of a superhuman power
that was ever-coming, ever-renewing, ever-repeating, ever-incorporating or
incarnating,
ever-manifesting
in phenomena. Then~ the youthful god was naturally born as a child. This
was Har-Ur, the child of Isis or the Virgin
Neith. Horus the
child or shoot, on the papyrus or on his mother's lap, is representative
of the resurrection and renewal of life
for another year.
Horus came to Egypt as saviour of the people from the dreaded drought. He
came, invested with “the power of the southern lakes” to
drown the dragon
in the inundation. In
one phase Horus is the saviour as the bringer of the water. In another he
is the child of light. In both he comes to wrestle with the enemy of man
in various natural phenomena on earth, and likewise in the internecine struggle
which is represented by the astronomical mythology as the war in heaven,
and which maybe summed up as the
war of Horus and
the dragon. Horus brings the water of the inundation which is the source
of life to Egypt. The little one is cradled
on the Nile in his
ark of the papyrus reed. He is assailed by Apap, the dragon of drought, who
lies in wait to destroy the young
deliverer when he
is born. As bringer of the waters Horus slays the dragon of drought, which
would otherwise have drunk the inundation
dry. He also treads
the serpent of darkness under foot as the renewer of light. Under the name
of Iu-m-hetep,
Horus came as the
proverbial “prince of peace” . The
word hetep denotes peace or rest, plenty of food, and also good luck.
His coming in this character had a very tangible significance, for the inundation
brought the season of rest to Egypt, which was celebrated by the Uaka festival,
when the prince came out of Ethiopia as the giver of rest to the weary, bread
to the hungry, water to the thirsty, and wine for the
periodic wassail. In the solar mythos Horus became the lord of light, but food
and drink were first, according to the human needs.
The fabled “war in heaven” began
with the contending elements that strove with each other for supremacy, whether
as light and darkness, water and drought, or food and famine.
Thus
Horus of the inundation came by water as the deliverer when the land was
suffering from the dragon of drought. The picture was then constellated in
the southern heaven. Horus the victor was represented by Orion [Page
291] rising from the river and wielding the insignia of his sovereignty.
His weapon is the club of Herakles in Greece; it was the whip of ruling power
as the Egyptian khu. He rises from Eridanus as conqueror of the hydra-dragon
that is overwhelmed beneath the waters when the drought was put an end to
by the lord of life with the water for his weapon. Here is a motive for the
war betwixt the dragon and the infant that was born to universal rule or
predestined to be king. Horus also came as conqueror of the dragon of darkness.
But it is of more importance to know
that the evil reptile
Apap represented drought and famine, disease and death. This was the mortal
enemy of man that drank up all the water in the world ; hence the battle
for the water. All the earth round the warfare of the
hero with the monster is for water as well as for light, because the monster
is representative of drought as well as darkness. At first it is the water-reptile
in the African lake; then the “hellish snake Apap” drinks up the water of
the Nile. In Australia it is the monstrous frog that drinks up all the water.
It is also the chimerical, malignant
wild beast that is slain by Gilgames. This struggle, as some of the drawings
show, is literally over the water. Lastly, it becomes the sea-monster
of the Greek mythology, whereas the original conflict was for drinking water.
When Horus came by water as Ichthus the fish who gave himself for food, he
swam the deluge of the inundation when there was no boat or ark to breast
the waters.
But when the bark was built Argo is constellated as the ark of Horus. This is figured in the planisphere with the child on board and the devouring Apap coiling round it seeking to destroy the babe, the infant saviour of the world, who brings the food and water as the lord of life.
Now Sothis in its
heliacal rising was
not the only star
of annunciation at the birth of Horus the child. Farther south,
the Dove, or rather the star
Phact, was also a
harbinger of the
inundation. Still farther was the glorious star Canopus, the pilot
of the Argo at the starting-point
of the journey by
water, which was
the river Nile as the terrestrial water imaged uranographically.
The Egyptians commemorated the
birthday of the world
- that is, of the
age, the cycle, the beginning of time, as the day when Horus rose
up on the lotus, or papyrus,
from the waters of
the Nun. Otherwise
stated, this was the natal day of Horus in the
inundation, which
was afterwards applied
to Atum by the priests of On or Annu in the eschatology. Thus
the birthday of the inundation
was the birthday
of a primordial year,
or the birthday of the world. The constellation Hydra represents
the Apap-reptile of
the Egyptian mythos.
This is a monster
extending over some one hundred degrees in the planisphere. From
lack of better knowledge,
this type of evil
has been called the “water-serpent” , which gives
no clue to its character.
It is figured in
the water of the southern heaven, and is that fearsome monster
which in various legends drinks
up all the water. In
the later solar mythos
Apap, the enemy of
Ra, is the blind devourer darkness. But as the adversary of the
elder Horus - he of the
inundation - Apap
or Hydra is the dragon
of drought. Drought in the old dark land was veritably “the curse” ,
and the evil dragon as its deadly image
was the primitive
type of physical, not of moral evil. The inundation was the source [Page
292] of
life to Egypt. It
was her annual salvation, and Horus, or Sebek the fish-man, was
her saviour. The earliest saviour ever known
was the
giver of food and
drink to those who were famishing. This is the origin of a saviour
as the shoot of a water-plant, the branch
of a tree, or a great
fish - the bigger the better, as a sign of abundance. This was
how a saviour could be represented as Ichthus
the fish. This was
how a saviour could come by water to the world; hence the subject
of subjects
was the war of elements,
of darkness in conflict
with the light, of drought with the waters, of sterility with
fertility, of dearth
with plenty.
The
powers of good and
evil, represented in the mythos, were also figured in the stars
and portrayed in the religious
drama as the eternal
conflict of the twins
Sut and Horus, of Shu and the impious rebels, of Ra and the Apap-reptile.
In the earliest
mythos Horus precedes
Ra as the eternal
antagonist of the dragon or serpent. This is the first Horus who
was the seed of the Great
Mother, whom the
Semites call “the woman” . He bruised or pierced
the serpent's head
at one season, and
was bitten by the serpent in the heel at another. One was the
season of renewal for the
waters, for food,
for the growing light,
and for the breezes of the north.
The
other was the season of drought, of sterility , of darkness, and for the
withering blast of the desert. “In Upper Egypt” , says Maspero, “there is
a wide-spread belief in the existence of a monstrous serpent that dwells
at the bottom of the river Nile”
(Dawn of Civilization,
Eng. trans., p. 90). This is
the Apap-dragon of evil, especially
of drought. Hence the crumbling
of the banks and the falls
of earth in the dry season
are attributed to the great
serpent which lies at the bottom
of the river, where it was
drowned by the inundation with
great rejoicings of the people
every year. It is as the fiery
dragon of drought that the
Apap is spoken of in an inscription
of Amenhetep III. In this,
vengeance is threatened on
those royal secretaries who
neglect their duties to the
Theban god Amen-Ra, and it
is said, “They shall
become like the hellish snake
Apap on the morning of the new year , they shall be overwhelmed
in the great flood” (Brugsch, Egypt, p. 210, Eng. trans. in one
vol.). The morning of the new year was at that time determined by the heliacal
rising of Sothis as announcer of the inundation in which the Apap-dragon
of drought was drowned. This picture is to be seen in the planisphere with
the figure of the fiery Hydra overwhelmed in the water of the inundation.
It was represented in the mythology that when Horus had conquered Apap in
one of his great battles the reptile sank, pierced with wounds, into the
depths of the waters, and this event was said to have occurred at the very
moment of the new year (cited by Maspero from Birch and Chabas, The Dawn
of Civilization, Eng. trans., p. 159). This is the exact position of
Hydra in the waters of the south, as still shown on the celestial globe. Thus
Hydra, as the drowned, dead reptile, forms a fellow picture in the planisphere
to that of Apap drowned in the lake of heaven, according to the description
in the Ritual (ch. 39).
That Apap was cut up and drowned in the waters of the inundation
is likewise shown by the constellation Corvus, or the Crow.
The bird stands on the body of the monster, and, as Aratos
remarks (line 449) [Page
293] “seems
to peck the folds
of its prey. Corvus thus plays its part as scavenger of the
inundation, and at the same time demonstrates that Hydra
is drowned and dead. Thus far
we see that certain natural facts
were given a celestial setting as object-pictures in the
stars. The abyss of the beginning was constellated as “the water” low down
in the south. The birth of water from the Mother-earth was
figured in the Southern Fish.
Horus, the young deliverer who came by water periodically
as the bringer of food, was shown in the shoot of the papyrus
plant; he also figures as
Ichthus the fish. The river of the water of life was represented
by Eridanus, which can be traced back to its birthplace in
the abyss, with the inundation
rushing from the southern lakes. Various herald-stars of
Horus and the waters,
like Fomalhaut, Achernar, Canopus, and Phact, can also be
identified according to their rising at different stages
of the progress made by Horus down into
the valley of the Nile.
We will now take a turn round the
zodiac, with a view of briefly identifying
its signs with the seasons of Egypt and the characters in
the mythology, the first and foremost being that of Horus,
the eternal, ever-coming child.
As represented in the zodiac, Horus of the inundation was
conceived by his virgin mother in the sign of Virgo. This
was the promised prince of peace
who came to rest the weary from their work and to labour
for them while they rested, listening to the waters and the
welcome word the inundation
brought. Then was
the message of good tidings sent as if from heaven itself, which was made
known by the mother of the babe. She first sang the song of invitation, “Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest” .
The mother of life was now descending with the waters, or with Horus in utero,
as the most blessed among women, the virgin brooding over her conception
and inwardly working out the mystery of fertilization and fulfilment. In
the mythical rendering of natural fact a child or youngling had been made
prime mover of the universe. “I have set myself in motion” , says Child-Horus (Rit., ch. 42). “I am the heir, the primary power of motion and of rest” (Rit.,
ch. 63A). The doctrine is repeated when the Greeks maintained that Eros
was the primal cause of all things (Hesiod, Theogony). Babe-Horus in his coming forth is compared with the lotus or papyrus issuing from the great stream.
The birthplace of
water (and of food) in the abyss of source became the birthplace
of Horus in the inundation. This was represented in the later
mythos by the swamps and marshes in which Isis hid herself
with her babe and suckled
Horus in a secret place. The water in which Horus came to
Egypt was the inundation of the Nile that burst up from the
abyss - the bau, the tepht
of source in the recesses of the south.
And as we read the signs, the river Nile was constellated in Eridanus as the river of the inundation. The name of Eridanus, like the celestial river itself, is very sure to have had an Egyptian origin. Eri, later Uri, was an Egyptian name of the inundation, meaning the great, the mighty; whilst tun or tanu signifies that which rises up in revolt, the bursting forth from the gulf or well of the south. Thus rendered, Eri-tana or Iarutana would be the mighty river rising up in the inundation and bursting forth from out the birthplace in the abyss, as is depicted in the Ritual. If we [Page 294] glance at the river constellated on the celestial globe, we see that Eridanus runs one way, from the foot of Orion to the star Achernar, which has been called “the end of the river” . But, if looked at the other way, Achernar marks the point of departure from the south towards the north. And if this river representing the earthly Nile, the replica would naturally run the way of the original. That alone will explain the course of the water and its ending at the foot of Orion, who rises from the river as did Horus of the inundation coming “out of Ethiopia” (or Equatoria), or from that ancient south in which the tepht of source was localized at first as “the water” , and afterwards configurated in the stars that indicate the river of the inundation winding on its northward way. Other stars announced the coming of the Nile, or the birth of Horus in the water of the inundation. The star Phact, says Lockyer, “so little familiar to us northerners, is one of the most conspicuous stars in the southern portion of the heavens, and its heliacal rising heralded the solstice and the rise of the Nile before the heliacal rising of Sirius was useful for the purpose. In Phact we have the star symbolized by the ancient Egyptians under the name of the goddess Tekhi, whose figure leads the procession of the months” (Dawn of Astronomy, p. 224). In the Arabic names of the stars the star Phact is named from a word that signifies “the thigh” , and the thigh was an Egyptian type of the birthplace, as we shall find it also figured in Egypt as well as in the northern heaven. Here it denotes a place of birth and a goddess in the southern heaven. Now, the so-called sacred year of the Egyptians opened at a certain starting-point on the first of the month Taht, or Tehuti, equivalent to our 20th of July. But this month in an earlier star calendar is called the month of the goddess Tekhi. Tekh or tekhi is an Egyptian word for liquid, to supply with drink, and Tekhi is the month of the inundation. But the month Tekhi, or Taht, was not named from the first beginning of the inundation. The previous month, the last of the twelve in the sacred year, was named Mesore, or Mesuri, from mes, for birth, and uri, later eri, the inundation. Thus the actual birth of the river (in one place or other) is marked in the last month of the Egyptian year instead of the first, the question being, At what point of the course did the actual birth take place ? The birth of water, of Horus as Ichthus, had been indicated by the star Fomalhaut at the Fish's mouth; the star Phact was a herald of Horus in the inundation; Canopus, the pilot of Argo Navis, showed that Horus was on board the ark, or on his cradle of the papyrus plant; and the dog-star Sothis was the later guide to the watchers of the heavens in Egypt. If the arrival of the inundation at some particular point is dated by the heliacal rising of the dog-star in the month of Tekhi or Taht (July), the name of the previous month shows the birth of the waters was reckoned to be earlier. This is the month Mesore or Mesuri, and Mesore answers roughly to the month of June. In the sacred year the Ist of Mesore corresponds to our June 15th and to July 25th in the Alexandrian year. Obviously the name of Mesore refers to the birth of the waters farther south, which was announced by the herald star Fomalhaut, Achernar, Canopus, or Phact, according to their position and to the stage of high water at the different times along the route.[Page 295]
The seasons in Egypt have been previously compared with the imagery in the planisphere (Nat. Genesis), but might have been more closely verified. There were but two in the beginning with the Great Mother and her Sut and Horus twins. These were the seasons of the summer waters and the winter drought. The season of the waters and of rest is as plainly pictured in the southern heaven as ever it was actual in the valley of the Nile. That quarter on the celestial globe is full of the inundation and its signs, as it will be for all time. The inundation was not only pictured in the southern heaven rising from its most secret source in the abyss “down south” , which was figured with the mouth of the Fish, and continued running northward in the river named Eridanus ; it was also constellated in the zodiac, and can be traced there in accordance with the seasons of the year. The earliest hint of the inundation is given zodiacally in the month Mesore.
In the Greco-Egyptian planisphere according to Kircher, Horus is figured in the decans of the Twins, at death-grips with the Apap-reptile which the inundation comes to drown. Thus the battle is portrayed twice over, once as the struggle of Horus (or Ra) and the serpent constellated in the decans of the Gemini., and once on the ecliptic as the contest of the Sut and Horus twins.
Amongst the harbingers of the inundation were
the beetles that rolled up their seed in little balls of dung and buried them
upon the river bank for safety against the coming flood. The Nile-beetle was
figured where the Crab is constellated now. Here begins the imagery of the
inundation in the zodiac, with the month Mesore. The beetle, busy on the banks
of the Nile, was set above as a uranograph which showed the beginning or the
birth of the new inundation at some
well-known point in
time and locality. The figure
of the beetle rolling up its
seed with its tentacles is
apparently repeated in the
Akkadian name of this same
month, which is Su Kulna, the
seizer of seed, with Cancer
(or the beetle) for its zodiacal
sign. An earlier
type of Sirius than the dog
was the bennu or nictorax.
This was a beautiful water-bird
that came to Egypt as a herald
of the inundation, and was
given the most glorious of
extra-zodiacal signs. The bennu
was the prototype of the mythical
phoenix. The ibis as
a bird of passage also came
to
fish the waters of the inundation.
This too was constellated for
a symbol. We find it figured
in a zodiac attributed to the
second Hermes - that is, Taht,
the lunar deity (Nat. Gen. Plate).
In this the sign of Cancer
is the ibis-headed god. The
ibis was a typical fisher,
and therefore a sign of coming
plenty to the fishers waiting
for the waters, and their wealth
of food.The
lion in the hieroglyphics is
a figure of great force, and
when the sun had reached the
lion sign the rushing waters
had attained their fullest
volume. As Hor-Apollo tells
us, the Egyptians portray a
lion as a sign of the inundation, “because when the sun is in Leo it augments the rising of the Nile” .
Indeed, he says it happens
at times that one half of the
new water is supplied to Egypt
while the sun remaineth in
that sign (B. I. 21). At the
same time of year the lion
was a figure of the solar force
at furnace heat, an image therefore
of a double force. In the next
sign is the Virgin who conceived
the child that represented
the food which was dependent
on the waters of the inundation.
This was indicated by the later
ear of [Page 296] corn, the green wheat ear of the mysteries, which is held in the hand of Neith or Isis in Virgo, and still survives in the star Spica of this constellation.
The
elder Horus came not only in the water. He
was also the Kamite prototype of Bacchus
as the lord of wine. When Horus came the grapes
were ripe in Egypt and ready to be converted
into wine. The season of grapes is dated
July
13th in the Egyptian calendar.
There is but little left upon the modern
globe of the ancient constellation of the
Vine,
but the star Epsilon, called Vindemiatrix,
is still the sign of grape-gathering, and
as we read in the calender - “July the 9th:
the Nile begins to rise abundantly. July
28th: abundance of grapes” (Egyptian
Calendar. A.D.
1878, p. 19). Vindemiatrix, the sign of grapes being ripe
is described by Aratos
as being so large
in size and bright
in splendour as to
rival the stars in
the Great Bear's
tail, whereas at
present it is but
a star of the third
magnitude (lines
130 to 140). The
grape-gathering in
Egypt is depicted
in or near the signs of Virgo and the Vine. It is said of Horus
at Edfu, “Thou didst put grapes into the water
which cometh forth
from Edfu” .
From that day forth
the water of Edfu
was called the water of grapes - that is,
wine. So anciently
was the metaphor
of the gospel miracle founded on the natural fact. Uaka is a name
of the inundation, and also
of the festival at
which the deluge
of drink was symbolically celebrated by the libation that was
correspondingly colossal.
The vine was not
only set in heaven
to denote the vindemia or time for gathering the grapes, the overflow
was also figured in
the constellation
Crater, or the Goblet,
as a sign of the “uaka” that was held in
Egypt when the land
was full of water and the folks were full of wine. When the constellation
Crater rose it showed that the
urn or vase, an artificial
type of the inundation, was overflowing with the waters that restored
the drooping life of Egypt. At that
time the Egyptians
celebrated a feast in honour of Hathor, at which a deluge of drink
flowed freely. It is frankly described
in the inscriptions
as “the festival of intoxication” ,
and was commemorated
at Denderah in the
month of Taht, the month of the year that opened with the inundation
and the heliacal rising
of Sothis. Various
other fruits were
ripe, including dates. Also water-melons were abundant. But Horus
is the vine, whose advent
was celebrated at
the uaka festival
with prodigious rejoicings and a deluge of drink of which the
vine and cup,
or mixing-bowl, were
constellated as celestial
symbols. The juice
of the grape was the blood of Horus or Osiris in the Kamite eucharist.
Hence the sacramental
cup was figured in
the constellation “Crater” ,
the Goblet, or it
may be the jar, from
the Egyptian karau, a jar, the cup having two characters, one
in the mythology and one in
the eschatology.
In
an ancient planisphere reproduced by Dupuis (Planches de l'Origine de
Tous les
Cultes, No.10) the
swallow appears in close
proximity to Isis the virgin
of the zodiac. In the Egyptian
mythos the swallow represented
Isis in her character of
the widow, when she was
wandering like the bird
of passage from one land
to another' seeking for
her lost Osiris. Thus Isis
in her two characters of
the virgin and the widow
was figured in the zodiac
and in the decans [Page
297] of Virgo,
which two characters are
only to be found in Egyptian
mythology.
Libra, or the
Scales, was at one time
a figure of the equinox,
but its more probable origin
is in relation to the supremely
important waters of the
inundation. The four months
of the water-season, the
first of the three tetramenes,
began with the lion, and
ended with the scorpion.
The inundation reached its
point of equipoise coincidently
with the entrance of the
sun into the sign that was
figured as the Balance
or the Scales. The tortoise
or abtu of the Nile had
been an earlier zodiacal
sign than that of the Scales,
by which it was superseded.
When the Nile-tortoise climbed
the banks of the river to
give itself for food, it
naturally became a self-constituted
sign of the inundation to
be figured in a group of
stars. Thus the tortoise
= Libra would denote the
point at which the earth
was emerging like a tortoise
or a turtle from the deluge
of the waters which periodically
overspread the land.
The
scorpion was not a type
of evil in the zodiac. It
represented Isis-Serkh who
fought for Horus when the
birthplace was in Scorpio.
A fragment of the myth survives
in the Ritual. It is the
merest allusion, but suffices
to show that in the wars
of the solar god (Horus
or Ra) with the enemy Apap,
Isis-Serkh joined in the
battle and was wounded. The
passage is confused but,
as rendered by Renouf, it
runs: “Apap falleth;
Apap goeth down. And more
grave for thee is the taste
(tepit) than that sweet
proof through the scorpion-goddess
(Isis-Serkh) which she practised
for thee, in the pain that
she suffered” .
When the summer solstice
was in the sign of Leo the
autumn equinox occurred
in Scorpio, and it would
be then and there the scorpion-goddess
gave proof of her sympathy
and suffering on behalf
of Horus or of Ra in the
latter mythos. It is evident
that Scorpio was the sign
at one of the cardinal points,
for it is said of Apap in
this battle,“Apap is in
bonds” . The
gods of the south,
the north, the west and
the east have bound him” .
These include the goddesses
as helpers. Hence it is
said to Apap: “Thy whole
heart is torn out by the
lynx-goddess. Chains are
flung upon thee by the scorpion-goddess.
Slaughter is dealt upon
thee by Maati” .
(Rit., ch. 39.) About
the time of the autumn equinox
the water of the inundation
began to subside. At this
point the power of Horus
in the light
was on the wane, and both
were represented now by
him who was born to die
down in the dwindling water
and the lessening light.
The word Serkhu, which is
the name of Isis as the
scorpion-goddess, signifies
to breathe, and to supply
breath. Thus Scorpio
is the sign of a breathing-space
which followed the water-season.
Whilst the sun was in the
constellation Libra (or
the tortoise) the waters had
attained their height and
were resting at the equipoise.
Then it entered the sign
of Scorpio. The scorpion
lived in dry earth, and
was only to be seen when
the waters had subsided.
In
some Egyptian zodiacs (zodiac of Esné) the Sagittarius, or Archer, is the
compound figure of a centaur based on the lion instead of the horse, with
the human face of Shu in front and the face of Tefnut the lioness behind.
Shu was the elemental power of breathing force, and his twin-sister represents
moisture. Her name Tef-nut signifies the dew of heaven, and the dew of heaven
was now the water [Page
298] of earth in Egypt, the breath of Shu and moisture of Tefnut
being imaged as the power of the twin brother and sister. Tefnut, the
sister of Shu, was joined with him in his battles on behalf of Horus. “She
is like fire against the wicked ones” - the Sami and the Sebau, “thundering
against those who are to be annihilated for ever” , as it is said in the
magical texts. When the sun entered this sign the Nile was failing, the
day grew shorter than the night; and Horus needed all the help that could
be given. Hence Shu the fighting force was configurated as the Archer.
Shu, the power of the Air, had been divinized
as the warrior-god who fought for Horus as leader of the war against
the rebel powers of darkness and of drought now mustering their forces in
the
nether-world for renewing the assault.
Nowhere is it more necessary to
compare the face of the underlying fact with the mask of the mythos to see
how closely
the mould was fitted to the features of nature by the Egyptians. In Egypt,
and in that country only, can the time of drought be absolutely identified
with winter. Now the Apap-dragon in Egyptian mythology is the dragon
of drought, and the dragon of drought is the fiery dragon. Hence Apap in the form of Hydra is cut in pieces to be drowned in the water of the inundation. In Egypt only did the figure correspond to fact as the image of drought in winter caused by the dragon of darkness. And it is this correspondence of natural fact to the symbolical figure which will account for the fire-breathing dragon of winter in Europe which survives where it does not apply from lack of the necessary climatic
conditions. The Norse mythology preserves the fiery dragon as a representative of winter in countries where it cannot be correlated with heat or drought. It survives with us in the pastime of snap-dragon sacred to the winter season at Christmas. Here the dragon keeps its character as the representative of drought in relation to the proper season of drought in Egypt as the fire-breathing dragon. Moreover, the dragon of drought and of darkness are one and the same in winter; on that account only did the dragon of darkness apply at winter-time in Europe, and not as the dragon of drought.
Yet,
the drowning of the dragon of drought became a European pastime in many lands
where there was seldom any lack of water, and never any want of it in winter.
According to the seasons of Egypt, at the time when the sun had reached the
sign of the sea-goat not only had the fresh water of the inundation ceased
to flow, the water from the Mediterranean travelling upwards from the sea
was now the stronger current, bitter and brackish and detestable. The
sea-goat is a compound type of goat and fish. The fish signifies water; the
water was now coming from the sea, and the sea-water was naturally imaged
by the sea-goat. Further, it is possible that the salt nature of the water
at this point was indicated by the goat. seeing that a young goat is an Egyptian
ideograph of the word Ab for thirst; or it may be the offensiveness of the
goat represented the repellent nature of “Salt
Typhon's foam” .
When
the sun was in the sign of Aquarius the moon at full had
taken up the leadership by night in
heaven, as the mother-moon. This was she who fetched the
water of life from the lower regions and gave re-birth to
vegetation in the upper-world. The great goddess [Page
299] that
renewed the light above was also the renewer of the waters
from the springs of source in the abyss below. In one legend
which, like several others, is common to Egypt and Babylonia,
the Great Mother, as Isis, also as lshtar, descends into
the under-world in search of the water of life, otherwise
represented as her child, who was Horus or Tammuz according
to the cult. The “Descent of Ishtar” is dated in the Aramaic-Akkadian
calendar by the month Ki-Gingir-na, “the errand of
Ishtar” , which was dedicated to the goddess with “Virgo” as
its zodiacal sign. This descent in search of the vanished
water, the lost light, the disappearing child, was obviously
made by the goddess in her lunar character. It was as the
moon that Ishtar passed through the seven gates on her downward
way when she was stripped of all her glory. (Talbot, The Legend of Ishtar;
Records of the Past, vol. i.) This
search for the water of life occurs some five months earlier in the Babylonian
calendar than in the Egyptian year. Plutarch, in speaking of the mysteries, tells
us that “on the eve of the winter solstice” the Egyptians “carry the cow seven
times round the Temple” , which is called “the seeking for Osiris” .
(lsis and Osiris, 52.) This in the pre-Osirian mythos was the elder Horus as
the mother's child. Plutarch adds that the goddess who in one character is the
earth-mother was in great distress from want of water in the winter-time. The
lost Osiris of the legend was not only signified by the loss of solar potency
that lsis went to seek for, it was also the renewal of water that she sighed
for and wept in the first drops of the new inundation. The disappearance of the
water in Egypt was coincident with the sinking of the sun in the winter solstice;
both were commemorated in the
mourning of Isis.
The journey of Isis in search of the water of life was about the time of the
winter solstice; when the water disappeared from Egypt and the coming time of
drought began. The season coincided with the sun in the sign of Aquarius when
the lost Osiris or Child-Horus was re-discovered by the weeping mother seeking
for the water in the nether-world. The same errand is ascribed to Ishtar in the Babylonian version of the mythos. But in the re-adjustment to the change of season in the Akkadian calendar, the search is given to the month Ki-Gingir-na when the sun was in the sign of Virgo.
The renewer of the water from the beginning was female. At first it was Apt the
water-cow. Then Hathor or Nut the milch-cow, then Isis as the weeping-mother
who had lost her child. In the legend of Leylet en-Nuktah, or “Night of
the Drop” , a miraculous tear was supposed to fall from Heaven on to the Nile,
and, according to Pausanias, it was taught that the rise of the river was dependent
on the drops that fell from the eyes of Isis. In the Coptic calendar the “Night
of the Drop” is
dated Baouneh 11th = June 17th , by means of which the first drops of the inundation
could be traced to the Great Mother
weeping for the lost Osiris, or the earlier Horus of the inundation. Now, when
the tail of the Great Bear pointed
northward and the sun coincided with the sign of Aquarius there was a re-birth
of water from the abyss that issued
from the mouth of Piscis
Australis. The picture of source in the abyss was now repeated, and the
wet-nurse or wateress was constellated in the zodiac as the multimammalian Menat,
who was a later form of Apt the water-cow. [Page
300] The imagery
shows the perennial source of water in the under-world. and that which proceeded
from the mouth of the fish now emanates from the numerous mammæ of the
wet-nurse on the ecliptic. Thus the birth and re-birth of water are represented
six months apart with the Great Bear presiding over both. In other words the
water (or Child-Horus) that was lost to Egypt in the upper world was now re-found
by the Great Mother seeking in the abyss of source from whence she drew the water
of renewal for another year. The abyss was founded in the south. Aquarius is
a southern sign, and it took six months altogether to bring the water from the
abyss to its fulfilment in the inundation. The sun had reached its “Utat” at
the point of southing for the region where the Urn of the waters was to
be refilled; the Nile replenished from the abyss of source configurated as the
fish's mouth. When the winter-sun was low down in the solstice it was southing
slowly through the deep outside the earth. The hidden source of water was the
same, when represented by the wet-nurse in the zodiac, as that from which the
inundation issued in the south. There
was but one abyss, whether this was indicated by the fish's mouth, the dugs
of
Apt, the female breast of Hapi-Mu, or the multi-mammae of the suckler Menat.
At the time when the inundation had run dry in Egypt the February rains were
re-commencing in the equatorial regions. The lakes began to swell and the waters
of the White Nile to rise and rush forth on their joyful journey towards the
north. The new flood only reached the Delta just in time to save the country
from drought and sterility. “Krater” was the urn or water-pot of the inundation.
This in the south was brimming full. But when the sun had reached Aquarius, behold!
the urn was empty. Hence the reversal of the vessel in his hands. The inundation
was poured out. The urn needed to be replenished anew from the well of secret
source, or the mouth of the abyss. Hitherto it
has been conjectured that water from the urn was pouring down-ward toward
the
mouth of the abyss. But this would have no meaning in the mythos by
which the imagery has to be interpreted. The water comes up from that welling-source
depicted low down in the south now looked to for the future inundation. When
the uranograph of Aquarius
is rightly read, we see the last of the inundation in Egypt. The water poured
out from the urn has come to an end. The urn, or bucket, being at times reversed,
is consequently empty. Also
the mode of replenishment from the tepht of source, or well of the deep, is indicated
in the planisphere. On studying the figure of the “southern fish” we see a stream
of water springing up from its mouth in the direction of Aquarius. And this is
met by Aquarius with his empty urn held in position to receive the water of the
new inundation from the welling-source in the abyss.
In the Osirian mythos Isis,
or the cow-headed Hesi, had become the wateress or wet-nurse to the world in
place of Apt the water-cow and Hathor the milch-cow; and now the New Nile was
attributed to the tears which Isis shed for the lost Osiris or the earlier Child-Horus.
when he vanished with the sinking water in the under-world.
It is possible to
take one step further round the zodiac and thus include the sign of the fishes.
But it has to be explained that Horus in the zodiac was not simply the lord
of life, as the bringer
of food [Page 301] and water in
the inundation. Horus in the zodiac was also the solar god, who was the child
conceived in Virgo, as Horus of the inundation, who was Horus of the resurrection,
lord of the harvest, in the sign of Pisces: In the Greco-Kamite zodiacs the fish-mother
gives re-birth to her child as a fish in the constellation of the fishes. (Book
of the Beginnings, Plate.) Also in other monuments, the mother, as Hathor-Isis,
bears the
fish upon her head. Thus
the fish-man or fish-god was re-born of the fish-mother in the abode of the abyss
or the house of the fish, and the point of emergence for the sun-god in the zodiac
was indicated by the sign of the fish or fishes at the time when the crocodile
was the fish of Neith as Sebek-Horus. No representation of the inundation or
the drought is directly apparent in the sign of Aries and Taurus. But the drama
was not limited to the zodiac. The rising Pleiads and the “rainy Hyades” have
ever been the harbingers of water or of spring. One name of the Hyades in Greek
is Hues, the Sows or Suculae,
and in Egypt, Rerit the Sow was a figure of the Great Mother as the wet-nurse
or suckler, who was represented at one time by the seven sows, at another by
the seven cows, at another by the many-breasted Menat as the typical provider
of plenty.
In certain old Egyptian calendars, the periodic triumph of Horus over
the plagues of drought and darkness was commemorated by a festival called “the
wounding of Sut” .
The event is referred to as occurring on the first of the month, Epiphi - May
16th in the sacred year; June 25th in the Alexandrian year. This was exactly
one month
previous to the birth of the new inundation dated July 25th. And as the month
Mesore agrees with the sun in the sign of Cancer or the beetles, so the month
Epiphi coincided with the sun in the sign of the Gemini, who were Sut and Horus
as the twins contending for supremacy in the equinox or on the mount. At
this point Sut was mortally wounded, and the victory of Horus, the bringer of
water and food and the renewer of light, was perfectly complete. (Festival
Calendars of Esné and Edfû.) Now the worst was over. The long
holiday celebrated by the Uaka festival had come at last with its relief. And
here the Egyptian holiday was one with a holy day as the time of rest from labour,
and the great feast of eating and drinking was a mode of giving thanks as well
as of making merry. The fulfiller in the water and the grapes was welcomed in
the drink he brought, with the drinking and the eating, at the festival of intoxication,
dedicated to the goddess Hathor. The history of Horus the child-hero, the eternal
Messu who became incarnate as a typical saviour of the world, was thus portrayed
and could be repeated by all who understood the mythos which was depicted in
the book above.
His birth from the
water was imaged by the figure of Horus on his papyrus, which is represented
astronomically in a scene from the rectangular zodiac of Denderah. Horus in this
is represented by the hawk on the papyrus-plant emerging from the water. By means
of this we can identify the birth of the babe who was born “from between the
knees of Sothis” (Rit.,
ch. 65) as Horus of the inundation.
The walls and windows of the house on high
have been emblazoned like all Italy with pictures of the Virgin Mother and her
child; the [Page 302] Virgin Mother
in one character who conceived, and the Great Mother as bringer-forth in the
character of gestator. The planisphere contains a whole pantheon of Egyptian
deities. They are the gods and goddesses of Egypt, the mythological personages
and zootypes that make up the vast procession which moves on for ever round and
round according to the revolutions of the earth or the apparent revolution of
the sphere. Taking the
same order in which the signs on the ecliptic are read today when Aries has become
Princeps Zodiac: we can identify at least a dozen deities of Egypt with the
twelve signs.
(I) The ram-headed Amen with the constellation Aries;
(2) Osiris, the Bull of Eternity, with the sign of Taurus;
(3) the Sut-Horus Twins with the Gemini;
(4) the beetle-headed Kheper-Ptah with the sign of the Beetle, later Crab;
(5) the lion-faced Atum with the sign of Leo;
(6) the Virgin Neith with the constellation Virgo;
(7) Har-Makhu of the Scales with the sign of Libra;
(8) Isis-Serkh, the scorpion goddess, with the sign of Scorpio;
(9) Shu and Tefnut figured as the Archer with the sign of Sagittarius;
(10) Num, the goat-headed,
who presided over the abyss with the sign of Capricornus
(I I) Menat, the divine wet-nurse with the sign of Aquarius;
(12) Horus of the two crocodiles with the sign of Pisces.
Enough to show that the zodiac was a lower gallery in the pantheon of the Egyptian planisphere. And it is not humanly conceivable that all these gods and goddesses and nature powers of Egypt were constellated as figures in the starry vast by any other than the Egyptian “mystery teachers” of the heavens.
There may have been some kind of stellar enclosure round the pole of Sut in the south before a circumpolar paradise could have
been configurated in the northern heaven by the Astronomers in the land of Kamit. But, even so, it is not necessary to assume a knowledge of Precession to explain the sinking of the pole and its accompanying stars that went down in the southern Deep. To those who travelled northward from the equatorial regions heading for the valley of the Nile there was an actual subsidence and submergence of a human fore-world in the south; This was a matter of latitude determinable
by the stars that sank into the abyss, the natural fact that preceded the figure in mythology. The abyss became the grave as it were of some lost world which had once been real on the earth. But the imagery of this far country has been preserved twice over, and is still extant; once in the constellation figures and once in the double earth of Ptah's Amenta. That fore-world of the south was reproduced by the Egyptians of the north when
they raised their circumpolar paradise to picture for all time some features of the old primeval home. The southern pole star sank into the blind abyss together with the little bit of foothold that was first established. This, in later legend, would become a fall from heaven, or submergence in a deluge, as the fact was figured in the astronomical mythology. Hence we find the legends of the lost paradise: the primal pair as man and cow, the twin brothers, the fall from heaven, the deluge, and other stories as indigenous
products at the centre of the old dark land.
But
the grand scheme of uranographic
representation was completed
in the valley of the Nile where
the north celestial pole had [Page
303] become
the central summit of the starry
system. The south was the scene
of so-called “creation” .
The creation which as Egyptian
literally signifies “of the
first time” . And as we learn
from the inscription of Tahtmes
on the stele of the Sphinx,
the first time goes back to
the days and domain of Sut;
Sut who is traditionally “the
inventor of astronomy” ,
and who as such had erected
the pillar of the pole star.
The domain of Sut was in the
south. And it is shown by the
ancient legends and the primitive
constellations that the beginnings
of the astral mythos were in
equatoria looking south. The
abyss of water was figured
in the south. The earth-mother
in the abyss
is in the south.
The monsters representative
other hugeness were constellated
in the south. The
tree first planted
in the abyss was in the south.
The fore-world that sank down
beneath
the waters of the deluge was
in the south, and according
to
the legend lies today beneath
the waters of Tanga, or the
Thigh, in
the lake of the birth-place,
Tanganyika. Egypt was set in
heaven as
the upper land, and lower Egypt
was repeated in Amenta. The
name
of Egypt is at root Egyptian.
It is derivable from Kep, later
Kheb,
whence Khept, or Khepti, is
a plural
for the double land. Kep-Kep,
another dual form, had been
a name of
Nubia. Kep, or Kheb, signifies
the chamber, the womb, the
birthplace.
It is likewise a name of the
water-cow that was
configurated as a
type of Egypt in
the planisphere.
The hieroglyphic
“Khept” is
a symbol of the birthplace.
This is the Thigh, the Haunch,
or Meskhen of the
Mother Khept (or Apt). Thus the
Egyptian
Nome of the “haunch” was
the Nome of the birthplace
in Khept, Khebt,
or Egypt. When the anthrotype
had succeeded the
zootype we find that
Egypt was figured as a female
lying on her back
with feet to the
northward pointing in the direction
of the Great Bear
constellation. This
was the motherland
in the likeness
of the human mother
who had taken the
place and position of the African
water-cow, an image
of the birthplace
and abode being
thus palpably continued
(Stoboeus, Ecl. Eth., p.
992, from a fragment
of Hermes) as a figure
of Egypt thus identified
by nature and by
name as the birth-place
and bringer-forth. The
“haunch” or thigh is an ideographic
sign that was constellated
in the northern heaven as a figure
of the
birthplace, and if
so in the celestial chart, assuredly
it had the same
significance for
a birthplace on the Libyan bank
of the river Nile,
hence its elevation
to the sphere as a uranographic
symbol of locality.
A place of settlement
is still called the seat, and the
“haunch” in
sign-language was
the seat. Primordially
it was the natural
seat of the squatters who sat with
heel to haunch. And
the same symbol was
figured in the northern heaven to
denote the astronome
of the “haunch” as a seat
or birthplace above,
whatsoever the birth and whosoever
was the
divinized Nomarch,
We may be certain it was not without
intention that
the great pyramid
of Gizeh was founded by King Kufu
in the nome of the
“haunch” , the seat of the
Great Mother, Khebt,
or Egypt. The inhabitants of lower
Egypt also
remained faithful
to the Tree as a twofold sign which
is the sycamore
of Hathor in the
south, and the sycamore of Nut in
the north. There
was a territory of
the upper and lower Oleander, also
of the upper
and lower Terebin
tree. As Maspero remarks, “the principality
of the
Terebin (tree) occupied
the very heart of Egypt, a country
well suited
to be the cradle
of an infant civilization” (Dawn
of Civilization, p. 71, Eng.
tr.). [Page
304] “The
district of the
white wall, marched with that of
the haunch” alongside
of each other on
the Nile, as they were likewise
constellated in the
northern heaven.
Am-Khemen, the paradise of the
eight great gods in the mythology, had its likeness
in the nome of the hare, the chief town of which was
Khemenu, the present Ashmunein, the town of Taht, who
was an eighth to the seven gods in the lunar mythos.
It was upon the steps of the mound in Khemenu that Shu stood as elevator of the cow of Nut = the heaven of the eight great gods, which shows the priority of the nome in Egypt as the prototype of the astronome that was constellated in the northern stars. Kenset is an Egyptian name for Nubia, and according to the pyramid texts there was a celestial locality of the same name in the astronomical mythology which holds the mirror aloft to reflect the Kenset that was prototypal on the earth, as it likewise reflected the nomes of the haunch, the tree, the pillar, or others localized at first below.
Another Egyptian nome was called the Serpent-mountain, which was also repeated above with the great serpent winding round the tree or mountain of the north celestial pole. Thus the beginnings of the race and the environment were depicted for a purpose in the heaven of the north, and the field of the papyrus-reed that furnished the primeval food
in the southern birthplace was set in Heaven, as the Aarru-field of peace and everlasting plenty on the summit of Mount Hetep at the pole.
In the Ritual (ch. 109) the paradise of plenty, first denoted by the water plants,
has become the harvest-field which is surrounded and protected by a wall of steel.
The wheat in this divine domain grew seven cubits high and was two cubits long
in the ear. The barley from
which beer was brewed, was four cubits in the ear, but the original paradise,
the Aarru or Allu, from which the Greeks derived their Elysian fields, was constellated
as the land of the papyrus reed, the shoots of which were eaten as the primitive
food that grew in the greatest abundance in the region of the two great lakes.The
most primitive ideal of paradise was that of an ever-green oasis, in the midst
of the African desert, welling with life-giving water, and with the large-leaved
sycamore fig tree or dom-palm or the papyrus plant at the centre as a figure
of food. Inner Africa contains the prototype of the Egyptian paradise in a land
of welling waters where the food came of itself and was perpetually renewed,
and there was little need for labour. And when the outward movements of the wandering
nomads began, and thirst and hunger were to be faced in waterless wastes of rootless
desert sand, there would be yearnings of regret for the old lost home and birth-land
left behind, now glorified by distance and the glamour of tradition. And so the
universal legend grew which was not absolutely baseless. The felicity enjoyed
in this primeval land of legendary lore is such as was possessed at one time
on the earth,
the upper paradise being a sublimated replica of a lower or terrestrial paradise.
Thus, the primitive paradise of the Egyptians, as a land from which the human
race had come, was constellated in the northern heaven as the top of attainment
in a world to which they were going for an everlasting home, and in a clime where
food and air and water never failed.[Page 305] In the North, an Egypt of the heavens was figured first within the circle of the Greater Bear. This was the land of Khept, as a celestial locality. The circle was then divided into south and north, as double Egypt, upper and lower, and the two halves were described as the domains of Sut and Horus, who were the first two children of the ancient Genetrix, the mother of seven offspring altogether.
Thus, according to the present reading of the astronomical mythology, the imagery configurated in the stars was African in origin, and the teachers of its primitive mysteries were Egyptian. The
seven astronomes in the celestial heptanomis of the seven Egyptian nomes, we hold to have been figured first on earth, and subsequently imaged in the heavens. Following the totemic sept of the sevens Egypt appears to have been mapped out first in seven nomes, and this heptanomis below to have been repeated in the planisphere.
Seven
nomes are said to have been, according to a later transliteration of names,
those of the Memphites, Heracleopolites, Crocodileopolites, Aphroditopolites,
Oxyrhynchites, Cynopolites, and Hermopolites. The great and lesser oases
were considered to be parts of the heptanomis (Budge, E. A. W., The Mummy,
p. 8). The goddess of the Great Bear, Khebt or Apt, was mother of the fields
of heaven when they consisted of the seven astronomes. Those fields of the
papyrus reed were figured within the circle made by the annual turn round
of the seven stars about the north celestial pole. This, in the mythos, formed
the enclosure of the typical tree, which was planted in the midst of the
garden - the tree of life or food in the celestial waters, otherwise the
tree of the pole in the astronomical mythology.The
constellation of the female hippopotamus (or Great Bear) was the mother of
the time-circles. It was a clock or horologe, on account of its wheeling
round the pole once every four and twenty hours. This, or the “haunch” , is
obscurely referred to in the text from
the Temple of Denderah, as the clock or instrument by which the moon-god,
Tehuti, measured the hours. Hence, the hippopotamus remained a hieroglyphic
sign for the hour (Hor-Apollo B, 2, 20). The Great Bear was also a
clock of the four quarters in the circle of the year, as is witnessed by
the saying of the Chinese: when the tail of the Great Bear points to the
east it is spring; when it points to the south it is summer; when it points
to the west it is autumn; when it points to the north it is winter. In Egypt,
when the Great Bear pointed to the south, or, astronomically, when the constellation
had attained its southernmost elongation, it was the time of the inundation,
the birthday of the year, which was also called the birthday of the world.
Now, this is the particular point at which apparently the planisphere, or
orrery, was set at starting, whether two thousand or twenty-eight
thousand years ago. As the celestial globe has come to us
it looks as if a starting-point in time might still be made out in the year of
the Great Bear and the inundation with the tail-stars of the Bear as pointers
to the birthplace of the waters, coming from the south with their salvation,
and with Horus in the ark as the deliverer from the dragon of drought and
thence doctrinally as the saviour of the world. It is a common assumption
that the earliest Egyptian year was a year of 360 days based upon twelve
moons of thirty days each. There
was such a reckoning, and [Page 306] no
doubt its origin was lunar. This would be attributed to the moon-god, Tehuti
(Taht), who was the measurer, although not only as the reckoner of lunar
time; hence he became the opener of the year, beginning with the first month
assigned to Taht. But, in an older table of the months found at the Ramesseum
and at Edfu, the goddess Tekhi is the opener of the year, and not the moon-god,
Taht. Here the first month has the name of Tekhi versus Taht.
The word Tekhi
signifies a supply
of liquid, to supply with drink, and the goddess Tekhi is the opener of the
year with the inundation. We regard
this year of the
Great Bear and the inundation (that of Apt, Menat or Tekhi) as primary. Next
comes the year of 360 days, to which
the five days were
added by Taht; this was lunar, or luni-stellar. The inundation was
a primary factor
in the establishment of time in Egypt and the foundation of the year. The
fact is recognized in the “Hymn to the Nile” when it is said “Stable are
thy decrees for Egypt” ,
that is, in the fixed
periodic return of
the waters. Also, as the teacher of time, the Nile is said to be the inspirer
of Taht,
who was the measurer
of time by means
of the Great Bear, the moon, and the inundation. Under the name of Tekhi,
the Old Great Mother
was the giver of
liquid and supplier
of drink; as Apt or Khept she was the water-cow with a woman's breasts; as
Neith she was
the suckler of crocodiles; as Rerit she was the suckler in the
form of the many-teated
sow; as Hesi (Greek
Isis) she was the milch-cow, and as Menat she was the wetnurse.
Under all these types
she was primordially
the Mother-earth,
and fundamentally
related to the water-source, or in Egypt to the inundation. This
is the
Old First Mother
who was given the
Great Bear as her
constellation in the northern heaven where she became the maker
of the “starry
revolutions or cycles,
and thence the mother
of the earliest year in time. It was a year dependent on the inundation
and determined
by the birth of Horus as the crocodile-headed Sebek who, like
Arthur, was the son
of the Great Bear, otherwise the crocodile of the inundation.
The birth is represented in the astronomical
fragment from a Theban
tomb. In this the Old First Mother has just given birth to her
young crocodile and dropped it in front
of her. Thus we behold
the birth of Sebek, which according to the sign-Ianguage is equally
the birth of another year, at the
moment when the Great Bear's tail is pointing to the birthplace (see fig., p.
289).
One of the
old Egyptian legends,
briefly repeated
by Plutarch, may afford us a hint concerning this beginning of
the year with
the annual revolution
of the Great Mother
in Ursa Major as
the
hippopotamus or crocodile. According
to this the solar god discovered that the Great Mother, Rhea, had been cohabiting
secretly with Saturn. He consequently laid a spell upon her that she should not
bring forth a child in either a month or a year. Then Hermes being likewise in
love with the goddess copulated with her, and afterwards playing counters with
the female moon he won from her the seventieth part of each one of her lights.
Out of the whole he composed five days, and added these to the three hundred
and sixty, which days the Egyptians call the additional days. Who then were the
Kamite originals of the Greek Rhea, Saturn and Hermes? Rhea, like Apt, or Nut,
was the mother of the gods. [Page 307] Saturn the dragon was a form of Sebek, the crocodile-headed Horus, the prototype of the good dragon; and Hermes is the Egyptian Tehuti, the moon-god. The secret connection of the Great Mother with Saturn agrees with the connection between the goddess of the Great Bear and Sebek, who was married to his mother. The
year of the Great Bear and the inundation, or of Apt and Sebek, was found to
be wrong, and this was righted when Taht-Hermes, the measurer of time by the
Great Bear and the moon, had added the five additional days to the earlier year,
and thus established the truer cycle of 365 days to the year, by means of his
co-operation with the moon. Thus the mother of the revolutions established the
earliest cycle of time in the circle of the year which ended when the Bear was
pointing to the birthplace of the water in the south, and the festival of “the Tail” was celebrated for the coming of the inundation. The tail of the Great Bear, as pointer or indicator on the face of the celestial horologe, was obviously still employed and reckoned with for the Set-Heb festival, which was celebrated by the Egyptians every thirty years. This feast, or a section of it, was known by name as “the Festival of the Tail” .
It was the anniversary of some very special year of years. There was a lord of
the thirty-year festival, who was at one period Ptah, at another Horus. The birthplace of the inundation when the Great Bear pointed to it in the southern quarter was a point for ever fixed in the region of the waters, let us say (for the moment) coincident with the sign of Leo. That point did not retrocede. But when the place of birth, as solar, was shifted to the vernal equinox and the equinox receded, the birthplace went with it from zodiacal sign to sign. The time of the sun parted company with the
time of the Great Bear and the inundation, for a cycle of 26,000 years. A great change was made when the time of the inundation was supplemented by the time of the sun. The birthplace of Horus (of the waters) had been in the south at the season of the year when the tail of the Bear denoted the birthplace in that quarter of the heavens and the Great Mother presided over the birth of the child, the crocodile or the papyrus shoot. The birthplace in the solar mythos was shifted, and the point was determined by the position of
the vernal equinox as it travelled from sign to sign in the great circuit of precession: from Virgo to Leo, from Cancer to the Twins, from the Bull to the Ram, from the Fishes to the Waterer. Whether in the pre-solar or the solar mythos, whether as Apt, Tekhi or Hathor, the old Genetrix presided over the birth of Horus, on this great birthday that was commemorated in Egypt as the birthday of creation. It was an unparalleled meeting-point. The star Phact, in the constellation Columba, far south, announced the inundation. Canopus showed the babe on board the bark, ascending from the south. Heralded by Sothis, his dog, Orion
rose up from the river, at the north end of Eridanus, the stellar representative of him who came as Horus of the inundation. This advent is depicted in the monuments (Maspero, D. of C., Eng. tr., p. 97).
Thus
the Egyptian sacred year is that of the Inundation and the
Bear. Its opening coincided roughly with the summer solstice
- when the solstices had at length been recognized - with
the sun in the lion-sign. And of course when the solstice,
or the sun, was in [Page
308] that
sign, the vernal equinox was passing through the sign of Taurus. Now,
the earliest year we read of in Babylonia is that which opened with the vernal
equinox in the sign of the “directing bull” . This was the same year or cycle,
sign for sign, as the Egyptian sacred year with the solstice in Leo, but with
a different point of commencement, the Egyptian starting from the solstice; or
rather from what had ever been
the fixed point of the inundation; the Babylonian from the vernal equinox. Khebt,
the goddess of the Great Bear, was said to “preside over the birth of the Sun” .
In the stellar mythos she had presided over the birth of Horus in the inundation.
But when solar time was
established the child was solar too, and the sun-god Horus Har-Makhu superseded
Sebek of the inundation. His place of birth was shifted to the vernal equinox,
and the birth itself was thenceforth timed no longer to the inundation. Horus,
the Child or Me~su of the inundation, on his papyrus, was now brought forth by
Hathor, with Sothis as the Star of Annunciation. The birth took place in “Sothis” ,
the birthday being determined by the heliacal rising of the star, as well as
by the Tail of Ursa Major. Khebt, or Apt, the Old First Mother, still presided,
as great correlator over all, as if she were the midwife or meskhenat in attendance
at the birth when Hathor had become
the mother. The goddess
Hathor was termed the mistress of the beginning of the year in relation to the
rising of Sothis; and Hathor was a form of the hippopotamus-headed mother of
the beginnings in the Great Bear, with the milch-cow substituted for the water-cow;
both being types of the wetnurse and giver of the precious liquid of life. And
when the celestial figures of the astral Mythology were constellated in the northern
heaven the
ancient Genetrix had been portrayed already in the three characters of mother-earth,
the mother of water, and the mother of breath. But before we have done with the
Great Bear Constellation in the northern heaven we have to point out a primitive
symbol of her who was figured as the mother of beginnings by nature and by name.
A magical implement commonly called the “bull-roarer” is found in divers
parts
of the world. It is one of the simplest things that ever acquired a primitive
sacredness from being made use of as a means of invocation in the religious mysteries
and totemic ceremonies of the past; an implement that is dying out in England
today as a toy now called the “fun of the fair” . The Arunta Churinga shows
that
the “whirler“ - “roarer” or
thun-thunie, originally represented the female. Hence it has the phallic emblem
of the vulva figured on it as a device
in the language of signs. (N. T. P. 150.) Others of the churinga are womb-shaped.
The ornament of others also indicates the
human birthplace. Moreover,
life is portrayed in the act of issuing from the wood, as tree-frogs issued from
the tree. Enough to show the primitive nature of the symbol. It is used in the
mysteries as a means of calling the initiates who are about to be made into men. The
special dance of the nude young women, their exhibition of the embellished organ
and peculiar appeal to the youngsters, demonstrates that the call is made by
female nature at the time for that fulfilment of the male which was the object
of the ceremony. These
women were making the visible call that was audible in the sound of the bull-roarer.
In the course of time the implements had changed hands as [Page
309] the
mysteries became more and more masculine and the women were excluded from the
ceremonies. But the Kurnai have two kinds of “Roarer” , one
of which represents
the inspiring spirit as female; this was primary. At first the “whirler” used
in the mysteries to call the initiates for young-man-making was the voice of
the female calling on the male, to become a man; to be brave in fulfilling the
laws of Tabu and rules of personal conduct; to be true to the brotherhood, and “not
to eat the forbidden food” . The forms of the magical instrument differ, but all
are used for whirling round to make the call. Now Khebt, the Old First Mother
in Egyptian mythology, who was constellated in the Great Bear, is portrayed with
the “bull-roarer” held
in front of her womb. The
name of the Egyptian instrument is “menait” , which literally signifies
the whirler,
from men to rotate, to whirl round. Thus the symbol of the whirling round
can be traced to the
mother of the revolutions
as a figure in the astronomical
mythology of Egypt.
The Great Bear goddess was
portrayed in this position
as the “mother of the revolutions”
and the maker
of motion in
a circle.
Hers was the
primary power
that drew or
turned, hurled
or whirled
the starry system
round about
the pole, as
the mighty
hippopotamus
in the celestial
waters. Her
names of Rerit
and Menait
both
indicate the
character of
rotator, which
is signified
by the menait
in her hands.
The goddess
of the Great
Bear (hippopotamus)
was adored
at Ombos as
the “living
word” . She
is configurated
in the planisphere
with huge jaws
wide open in
the act of uttering
the word, or
of roaring.
The Egyptian
wisdom implies
that the menait
held in front
of the First
Mother signified
the female emblem,
the original
instrument of
magical power.
With the roar
of Rerit the
water-cow called
to her young
bulls, and her
roar would be
imitated by
the bull-roarer,
menait or turndun,
in calling them,
and as the voice
of the female
calling on the
males it was
continued in
the ceremony
of young-man-making,
in the totemic
mysteries. Thus
we find the
goddess Apt,
or Khebt the
roarer, as a
hippopotamus,
the Great Bear, “rurring” or
whirling round,
with the “bull-roarer” as
her sign and symbol, at the centre of the northern heaven
( see fig.,
page 124, also
page 311).
There is a remarkable survival of what may be tentatively termed the cult of the Great Bear amongst the Mandaites or Sabeans of Mesopotomia, who are worshippers of the “living word” .
In the performance of their worship the eyes are fixed upon the pointers
of the Great Bear. They
celebrate a kind of feast of tabernacles annually, for which they erect a tabernacle
called the Mishkena or Meskhen. Lastly, the primordial star-cult of the Great
Bear is also British. In the ancient Welsh mythology the Great Mother Arth is
the goddess of the Great Bear, and Arthur= Horus is her solar son who makes his
celestial voyage with the seven in the ark.
Hitherto Egyptologists have been
inclined to regard the female hippopotamus (our Great Bear) and the “haunch” -
as one and the same constellation. This premature guess is erroneous. They were
both signs of the Great Mother, but in two separate constellations which represented
two different characters. In the Egyptian planisphere, as at Denderah, the female
hippopotamus answers to our Great Bear, whereas the sign of the “haunch” is
on the far side of the Lesser Bear, in the position of Cassiopoea, the lady in
the chair. If [Page 310] we
take the tail-star of the Bear as guide, the constellation Cassiopoea is almost
exactly opposite. Thus when the tail of the bear is pointing north in winter,
Cassiopoea is at its southern elongation. These are two different types of the
Great Mother, who was Apt the Earth-Mother in one character, as the water-cow,
and Nut the Mother of Heaven in the other, as the milch-cow. Also
in the illustration on a Theban tomb the constellation of the “haunch” is widely
distinct from the hippopotamus. And it is this constellation that is distinguished
by name as the “meskhen” with the hieroglyphics written on it which read , Mes-khe-n,
the womb as place or chamber of birth depicted in the constellation of the “haunch” or “thigh” .
It is noticeable that the head of the milch-cow is portrayed upon the “haunch” .
This distinguishes the one cow from the other, the milch-cow of Nut from the
water-cow of Khebt or Apt, or our Great Bear. It also shows that the “thigh” or “haunch” belonged
to the milch-cow, and represented the same celestial “seat” and place of origin
as the later lady in the chair. But, whether it is figured as the cow or Meskhen.
the “thigh” ,
“haunch” , or leg of the cow, it signified the birthplace of the celestial waters
in the mythos and the place of re-birth for souls in the heaven of eternity.
Then follows the tampering and retouching process of the Euphrateans, Greeks,
or other modern claimants to the ancient wisdom. The place of the “seat” or “thigh” was
given to a woman sitting in a chair, and the lady of the chair usurps the throne
of Isis with her seat and the pre-anthropomorphic type that was constellated
ages on ages earlier in Egypt as the cow of Nut or heaven. The “thigh” in sign-language
is a type of birth and thence of the birthplace, when the birth was water, as
we find it constellated in the northern heaven. The star “Phact” (in
Arabic, the thigh) shows us that this birthplace had been constellated
in the southern hemisphere as the sign of Tekhi the giver
of water in the inundation. Thus the “thigh” was figured both in the south
and in the north to signify the birthplace and the birth of water. In the
south the water
was the river Nile, and in the north it is the river of the
Milky Way. These are the two waters of earth and heaven proceeding from
the cow that was
the water-cow of Apt or Tekhi in the earth, and the milch-cow
of Nut in
heaven. As before said,
one of the two great lakes at the celestial pole is the Lake of the “Thigh” or “Haunch” , which is mentioned by name in the Ritual (ch. 149). It is also called the Thigh of Khar-aba, at the head of the canal, or Milky Way. The Lake of the Thigh was the birthplace of the waters above, where the milch-cow or her “haunch” was
a constellated figure of source whence flowed the great white river of the Via Lactea.
The leg (thigh, seat, womb, or haunch) of Nut, the celestial cow, once stood
where the lady in the chair is seated now. Nut, or the milch-cow, was the bringer
to re-birth in this region of the pole. The Seven Powers brought to their re-birth
in Seven Great Spirits were constellated as her children in the Lesser Bear,
as seven stars that never set, but were fixtures for eternity. The two constellations
of the hippopotamus and the “haunch” , or Meskhen, are also found in the rectangular zodiac that was carved upon the
ceiling of the Great Temple at Denderah. - [Page 311]. As may be observed, the two figures of the hippopotamus and the “haunch“ ( or milch-cow) are yoked together by a chain, one end of which is held by Apt, and the other is made fast to the “haunch” or cow. This is in the position of the pole which was the yoke or bond of heaven, and which was known in Babylonia as “the yoke of the enclosure” . The
chain shows that the Great Bear was made fast to the pole for security in its
swing round. It also shows that the pole was once imaged either in or by the
constellation of the “haunch” , the seat, or milch-cow in that region. The leg or thigh was an Egyptian figure of the pole, as we find it in “the leg of Ptah” ,
a constellation which has been identified with the lady of the seat. Hence, “above the leg” is
equivalent to “over the pole” (Ritual, ch. 7, 74, and 98, Renouf).
Heaven as a source of liquid life that dropped in dew and rain upon the earth was likened to a cow, or, in sign-language, was the cow. Apt is the cow of earth and Nut the cow of heaven. Apparently the cow of heaven, or Nut, supplied the earliest foundation for the pole which, as the figure of the cow dislimned, was represented by the leg of Nut (otherwise called the “thigh” , the “haunch” or “seat” ) as the central figure of support in heaven. The
cow being primary, it follows that the “leg of Nut” was an earlier image of the pole than the “leg of Ptah” , the staff of Anup, or the backbone of Osiris - which were also figures of fixity whether at or as the pole of Heaven. The leg or haunch of the cow was then left standing in the midst of the Milky Way. The speaker in the Ritual thus addresses it, “Oh, thou leg in the northern sky, and in that most conspicuous but inaccessible stream” ,
which is elsewhere termed the canal. In the pyramid texts
it is called “the
leg (Uarit) of the Akhemu-Seku” , the stars that never
set - the eternals, as a type of stability (Pepi I, 411).
Cassiopoea, the lady in the chair, also sits in the midst
of the Milky Way. Thus
the “seat” remains, if only as a chair; the white river flows, with nothing to account for it; and the lake of milk, the cow, the haunch, thigh or leg of Nut are all dislimned or have passed away.
The Great Bear made her circuit on the outside of the never-setting stars,
whereas the “leg” or “haunch” was
a constellation in the circle of perpetual apparition. It never set below the
horizon, nor [Page
312] did any of its stars go down through
all the period of the long great year. Thus the bit of foothold in the watery
vast of space was figured
as the “seat” , the Meskhen, womb, or re-birth-place in the heaven of
eternity. The deceased, when speaking of his going forth from the tomb, identifies
this constellation with the place of re-birth above, saying, “I shall shine
above the' haunch' as I come forth in heaven” (Rit., ch. 74). That is, at the
point where the “leg” was constellated to show
the upward way upon the starry map to him who lay looking heavenward “with
a corpse-like face” . Deceased in Amenta pleads for his re-birth above betwixt
the thighs of the divine cow as a type of heaven (Rit: ch. 148), The
Old Great Mother, as the hippopotamus, we repeat, was not within the circle
of the never-setting
stars, in the circumpolar Paradise, It was the milch-cow Hesit not the
water-cow, that “gave the white liquor which the glorified ones love” ;
the milk that flowed from the cow, whether she was divinized
as Nut, or Mehurit the Heaven, or Hathor, or Isis the
cow-headed goddesses. The
cow Hesit was designated “the Divine Mother and fair nurse” as giver of the liquid
of life when this was represented in heaven by the milk of the celestial cow.
This identification of the “thigh” as a totally different constellation from
the Greater Bear will alter the reading of certain inscriptions in which the “thigh” and “Bear” have
been mixed up together. For example, when the alignment was made for the Temple
of Hathor to be rebuilt at Denderah, in the time of Augustus, the King tells
us that he oriented the corners and established the temple as “it took place
before” , whilst looking to the sky and directing his gaze to the Ak of the “thigh” constellation.
Here the “Ak , denotes a central point, the axis or middle of the starry group.
Also when the temple at Edfu was refounded (about 257-37 B.C.E.) the King who “stretches
the measuring-cord” and lays the foundation-stone is represented as saying, that
when doing this his eye was fixed upon the Meskhet or Meskhen, which has been
supposed to be in the Great. Bear. This also was in the constellation of the “haunch” ,
as
may be seen by the fragment from a Theban tomb (p. 289)
where the “haunch” is labelled the “Meskhen” or
chamber of birth which the constellation indicated; the
birth chamber of the cow above, that was copied in the temple
of the cow-goddess below (Lockyer, The Dawn of Astronomy,
p.172).
The cow of heaven as the milch-cow was portrayed
standing or resting on the summit of the mount which was “connected with the
sky” ,
as portrayed in the monuments. This, in the Persian rendering,
was the cow upon the summit of Mount Alborz, In the Norse
mythology it is the cow Audhumla. As the Prose Edda describes
it, “immediately after
the gelid vapours had been resolved into drops, there was formed out of them
the cow named Audhumla. Four
streams of milk ran from her teats, and thus she fed Ymir ” (Prose Edda 6),
just as the cow of heaven suckled Horus. Heaven, as the cow, is called the spouse
upon the mountain. She is the mother of the solar bull, and, as goddess, is described
as suckling her child Horus, and as having “drooping dugs” (Renouf, B. of
D., ch. 62. note 1 ). The Milky Way was pictured as the celestial water,
now called milk, that flowed from the cow of heaven couched upon the [Page
313] summit of the mount, the apex of which was at the celestial pole
whether the cow was called Nut or Hesit, the Arg Roud, Audhumla, or the good
lady. Now if we take the lady on the seat and the “haunch” or “thigh” as
a figure of the cow, the position on the globe is this the lady of heaven =
the cow, or the mistress of the mount, is constellated in the middle of the Milky
Way, which runs in two directions downwards from the summit of the pole. If we
restore the figure of the cow or its co-type the “haunch” ,
this is the exact
spot at which the river of milk once issued from the cow of heaven that gave
her white liquid to Horus and
the glorified
; or
water
to the world
in dew and
rain. The Milky
Way
has been disfigured
sadly by the
Greeks, but
still runs
visibly as the
river
of
the Nun or
great deep,
the white
river
that engirdles
all the earth.
The river
Ganges,
issuing from
the mouth
of
the cow, retains
the primitive
type of a
celestial
source for
the
water that fell
from heaven,
as it was
seen by night
descending
in the river
of the Milky
Way, or in
four streams
that
issued from
the udder
of the cow,
which
supplied
a
figure of
four quarters
to the-mount. The
cow of heaven,
or Nut,
as giver
of
liquid life,
was the
earliest
mistress
of the mountain,
or divine
lady of
the mound.
Then
the type
of the good
nurse, the
suckler,
was made
anthropomorphic
and the
udder of
the cow
was superseded
by the mammae
of
the human
mother.
But it
was a long
way
from the
African
cow or
sow, as
the suckler,
to the
wet-nurse
divinized
in human
form.
Lastly,
the cow
of earth
was
the mother
of salt
water
as well
as fresh
; both
fresh and
salt
water
being found
in the
African
lakes.
The
Albert
Nyanza,
for instance,
is a salt-water
lake, and
one
of the
two lakes
of the
cow
or “haunch” at
the pole
was evidently
a salt-water
lake,
as
the primitive
lake of
purifying
and healing.
One of
these,
repeated
in Amenta,
is called
the salt-water
lake
(Rit.,
ch. 17).
The Zulu
form of
this
celestial
“source” is
a young
woman
who makes
the water.
“Leave
it to
me” says
- Lu,
the Samoan
Nut,
when
there
was
no water,
and she
makes
the water, which
was
salt
(Turner, Samoa,
p.
12).
This
may
account
for
the
origin
of
salt
water
in
heaven.
To
very
primitive-folk
urine
was
the
first
salt
water
used
for
cleansing,
purifying,
and
healing.
The
earliest
soap
was
made
from
the
alkali
in
urine – mixed
with
oil
from
the
human
skin.
The
Inoit,
amongst
others “still
wash
themselves
with
urine” .
The
Banians
of
Momba
wash
in
cow's
urine,
because,
as
they
say,
the
cow
is
their
mother.
An
early
type
of
the
mother
as
wateress
in
heaven
was
the
cow,
and
first
of
all
it
was
the
water-cow.
Urine
was
a
very
primitive form
of
holy
water
as
a
means
of
purifying.
At
the
present
time
holy
water
is
yet sained and
made
sacred
by
adding
the
ingredient
of
salt
to
water
that
is
fresh. Urine
is
also
a
means
of
purifying
when
the
English
schoolboy,
about
to
bathe
in
the
stream,
will
micturate
down
his
left
leg
as
a
protective
charm
against
the
raw-head-and-bloody-bones,
our
form
of
the
Apap
monster,
lurking
at
the
bottom
of
the
water.
Thus,
as
the
pitiful
human
need
was
primitively
reflected
in
the
African
heaven,
the
earliest
water
of
purification,
the
salt
water,
the
source
of
the
lake
of
purification, [Page
314] was made by the cow. And so unbreakable is the
chain with which
the human race, its customs, its theology, and religious symbolism
are bound together from the beginning that
we may be absolutely
certain that this is why salt is put into the baptismal font to
make the water holy. This, we think, also
touches the origin
of the “salt woman” in the Navajo legend who
is described as resting
at the top of the reed mountain which rose up beyond the reach
of the deluge. When the anthropomorphic type
had been adopted
the woman that made the water on the summit of the mount took
the place of the cow. In such ways the matter of mythology was
continued in the heavens on the grand scale of uranographic representation.
In this celestial sign-language, the oldest book of wisdom in
the world was written by the mystery teachers and can still be
read upon the starry scroll of ancient night.
The “upliftings of Shu” , are spoken of and portrayed in the Egyptian Ritual. The first of these is said in ancient legends to have taken place at Hermopolis, where Shu stood on the mound to raise the firmament. This was the mound by which the mount of earth was imaged in Egypt as the altar of the mound-builders, constellated in Ara. At least two of Shu's upliftings can be identified. In his rôle of An-hur, Shu was the uplifter of heaven, or Nut, by name. He is portrayed upon the mount or mound in the act of raising up the cow of Nut with his two hands, or pushing up the heaven assisted by his support-gods. And Kepheus standing on the mount with the rod in his uplifted hand remains a representative of Shu, who stood upon the mound to raise the firmament of Am-Khemen. In his character of An-hur, he was the uplifter of the sky or firmament in the pre-solar mythos. In the solar mythos he becomes auxiliary to Ra, and is called his son, Shu-Si-Ra. He is now the supporter of the sun-god who uplifts the solar orb upon the mount of dawn, or, as it is also phrased, he brings the eye of light to Ra. In doing this he kneels upon the horizon as the uplifter. He is the helper of the solar god (Horus or Ra) upon the horizon when the great battle was waged against the Apap of darkness, who fought so long and fiercely that the god came staggering upwards fainting from his wounds. (Rit., ch. 39.)
It
has been said that all tradition respecting the personage known as “the kneeler” has
been lost. Aratos knew nothing of the character. (Brown, Phainomena of
Aratos, Introd., p. 5.) But in the Egyptian astronomical mythology the
god Shu IS “the kneeler” personified.
In this form he is portrayed upon the horizon or mount of dawn stooping on
bended knee to uplift the solar disk, or to bear it on his head. He who had uplifted
the starry firmament with his two hands, or with the forked stick called
his rod, now represented the force that heaved up the sun in the position
of “the kneeler” . In the “Phainomena” Aratos describes “the kneeler” in
an attitude of worship with arms upraised
“from both his shoulders each stretching on its side about a full arm's length” .
(Brown, lines 66, 69. ) This is the attitude of Shu, but with the solar disk
omitted.“The
kneeler” , then, who is Al Jatha in Arabic and Engonansin in Greek, we identify
with Shu, the deity who kneels upon the horizon to support his father Ra,
the solar god, an his battle with the hosts of darkness. He also passed into
the [Page 315] Eschatology as
the typical kneeler ; thence the keeper of the door in the hall of judgment
is named after Shu, “the kneeler” . The keeper says to the initiate
in the mysteries, “I open not to thee, I allow thee not to pass by me, unless
thou
tellest
my name” . The password, given in reply, is “the knee of Shu” , which he hath lent
for the support of Osiris,
is the name, that is as the supporter of the sun-god in the character of “the
kneeler” . (Rit., ch. 125.) Shu-Anhur,
in his twofold rôle may still be recognized on the celestial chart in the
Constellations of Kepheus and Leo, partly by means of the double Regulus. As
An-hur in Kepheus
he stands upon the mount to lift up heaven with his rod or staff, and as Shu
or Regulus in Leo he is the supporter and uplifter of the solar orb on the horizon
as “the kneeler” .
A picture in the constellation Lyra has survived to show us
how the stories of the solar god were given a starry setting on the background
of the dark. If we refer to this group upon the celestial globe we find a figure
of the winged Disk or Hut which still identifies the constellation with Horus
of Edfu, who is now called Horus-Behutet.
What then was the story told of Horus
in the stars by night which could be read in Lyra when conjoined and illustrated
with the winged Solar
Disk? We are shown a picture of Horus with his lyre, the prototype of Apollo
with his lyre, and Orpheus with his lute. Horus with the lyre or harp of seven
strings was the sevenfold one as a divine type of attainment, the octave and
the height in music. as well as in the building of the heavens. This Horus was
the first form of the AIl-One, or Pan, in whom the Seven Powers were unified
in perfect harmony, or in the music of the spheres. It was Horus who tore out
the sinews of Sut and by depriving
him of power turned the discord of the universe to harmony. He was consequently
depicted in the constellation of Lyra as the maker of music that was played on
the harp, the lute, the lyre, or the sevenfold pipes of Pan as a figure of the
AIl-One.
The Serpentarius, or “Ophinchus huge” was constellated in the Decans of Scorpio as a figure of Horus wrestling with the serpent of darkness. At this stage in the periodical display of the celestial pictures the sun was about to descend into Amenta from the point (say) of the Autumn Equinox in Scorpio, to grapple with the powers of darkness, decay, and dearth now rising in rebellion and gathering together for the annual assault. The drama could not be rendered in imagery directly solar; hence the representation figured as an object picture in the rising stars that showed the Lord of Light at death-grips with the serpent of the dark, in that sign where Horus or Osiris received his mortal wound. Thus, all along, the Gnosis was pictorially portrayed in heaven. Hence when the Osiris obtains [Page 316] command over the celestial water he says, “Collector of souls is the name of my Bark. The picture of it is the representation of my glorious Journey upon the canal” . The bark of salvation in which the souls of the glorified were gathered, we repeat, was solar, whilst the picture shown by night was stellar. The canal is the name of the Milky Way, and on this the glorious voyage was made by the Manes “to the abode of those who had found their faces as the glorified” . In another illustration the great ship of heaven, in the solar mythos, is the Ark of Ra. When seen by day, the solar orb is carried on board together with the solar god and the spirits perfected. But the literature of the subject, so to say, was represented, and the story was repeated, nightly in the stars.
The
blind god “hungering for the morn” is a Greek figure of Orion, which explains
nothing of itself. But Orion is the stellar representative by night of Horus
the solar god in the darkness of Amenta who is An-ar-ef the sightless Horus,
or Horus as the blind god
whose sight was restored to him at dawn. Several constellations, Orion the
hunter, Herakles, Serpentarius, Bootes, are portraits of Horus configurated
in his various characters both mythical and eschatological. Amsu-Horus was
the husbandman twice over as Egyptian; once in the mythology which sets forth
the natural facts according to the seasons in Egypt; and once in the eschatology
which figured the same facts typically in relation to the harvest in the
after-life. Amsu, we consider, was the original of Boötes. On the celestial
globe, high over Spica, Boötes rises with the sickle in his right
hand as a symbol
of the husbandman. Amsu issues from the tomb as the divine harvester, with
the flail in his right hand. He is also the good herdsman, as is shown by
the crook, whether as goat-herd or shepherd, and this character of the husbandman
as guardian is repeated by Boötes in the character of Bearward.
Some
Egyptologists have conjectured that the wars of Horus in the Astronomical
mythology were historical in Egypt. But this is to follow the will-o'-the-wisp
of a popular delusion. The mass of primitive “history” in many lands has
been derived from nursery legends and as folk-tale versions of the Egyptian
wisdom. The lords of light and life that overcame the powers of drought and darkness were converted into ethnical personages and glorified as natural heroes. We are told by Diodorus of Sicily that the Egyptians looked upon the Greeks as impostors who reissued the ancient mythology as their own history; in this they were not alone. But the wars of Horus were fought in heaven and Amenta against the Sebau, the Dragon, the Serpent, with Orion
for one of his great stellar figures. If there is anyone figure constellated in heaven as the hero par excellence, in various characters, it is pre-eminently that of Orion. This, as Egyptian, is Horus or Heru. The word Heru signifies the chief; the one who is the over-lord, the ruler, the mighty one, the hero. This hero as Horus of the inundation was pre-solar. He was the annual bringer of food and drink before there was a sun-god, when the stars were the annunciators of the coming times and seasons to the waiting,
watching world.. Then the character was made solar, and lastly eschatological. Horus the mighty conqueror, the Nimrod, the slayer of the gigantic Apap, is [Page 317] the giant-killer of all later lore, not only as the solar god but also as the earlier elemental power, and the various legends are the reliquary remains of his several characters.
They
have to go a long way round to work who would understand
the scientific grouping of the stars according to the principles
of astro-mythology. For instance, Orion as the hunter and
Lupus the hare are two southern constellations. But
Orion does not mean that a scriptural character was taken
out of the Bible and constellated as a typical sportsman,
and the mighty hunter of a miserable hare. It is an almost
universal representation that the sun or solar god pursues
the moon for ever daily and nightly in a never-ceasing chase.
This is how the story was configurated by the mystery teachers
of the heavens in the grouping of the stars. Such a chase
implies the character of the hunter, and Orion, as representative
of the solar Horus, is the hunter. The pursuit of the moon
is signified by the stellar symbol of the hare. In sign-Ianguage,
and in many lands, the hare has been a lunar zootype as the
wide-eyed leaper that was followed night by night, day after
day, by the solar hunter in his perpetual round. Thus the
hare, known as a symbol of the moon over half the world,
is shown to have been a totemic type of the nome,
and a figure of the
lunar deity in Egypt. The hare was imaged as a primitive
constellation at the feet of Orion, who in one character
was the mighty hunter. But he is not the hunter of so insignificant
an animal as the hare. Neither was Orion the hunter only
a figure of the sun pursuing the moon, or the hare. He was
the mythical hunter in other characters. In the stellar mythos
he was the hunter of the powers of darkness with the dogs
of Horus, Kyon and Prokyon. On coming forth from the darkness
of Amenta in the resurrection, the Osiris says: “I
come forth as a Bennu (a type of Sothis) at dawn” .
“I urge on the hounds of Horus” (Rit., ch. 13).
He
was the hunter of the powers of darkness on behalf of Horus in the solar mythos,
and likewise in the phase of eschatology as Sahu-Orion, or Orion as the Sahu,
that is Horus in his glorious body. We may look on Horus, the original of Herakles,
as the earliest child that ever strangled serpents. He is portrayed in this character
as the child standing upon two crocodiles and crushing the serpents with both
hands. In later legends told of Herakles the Greeks have added the cradle as
a further illustration of the children's story. But, ages earlier, before the
figures were humanized, Horus pierced the serpent of evil when he was represented
in the form of a hawk fighting with a serpent on the back of a hippopotamus at
Hermopolis (Plutarch, I. and 0., p. 50). He also fought the [Page
318] serpent
as an ichneumon or mongoose, and as a cat, each of which preceded the anthropomorphic
type of an infant in the cradle.
The wars of Apap and Horus, or Ra, also of Sut and Osiris in the eschatology,
were thus dramatically rendered in the
astronomical mythology. The grapple first began with Horus and the reptile Apap.
This is repeated by Horus the little
hero crushing the serpent in the constellation of “Ophiuchus” ,
that is by Horus in the character of conqueror who triumphed over drought, darkness,
decay, and finally of death. In a
scene copied by Maspero from the zodiac of Denderah, Horus, on his papyrus, rises
from the waters, and is preceded by
Orion in his papyrus bark. Orion was a figure of the stellar Horus, or Horus
of the inundation. But Horus represented by the sparrow-hawk has become the solar god now born of Hathor the milch-cow. All three appear together in this scene (Dawn of Civilization, Eng. tr., p. 97). Now if we turn to the celestial globe we find Orion standing club in hand as the mighty warrior with one foot on the waters of the river Eridanus = Horus of the inundation invested with the majesty and power of the solar god. In the Egyptian drawing
the two characters are distinct, but in the Greek compound these are blended in the one hero known as Herakles the slayer of serpents as an infant in his cradle.
In very old Egyptian
traditions Sahu-Orion
was represented as
the wild hunter who traversed the nether world by night and hunted
there whilst it was day on
earth. The powers
of darkness, the
Sebau and the Sami, were the objects of pursuit. They are hunted
for food; and the chase, the
capture, killing,
and cutting up of
the carcases are described
in the terminology
of cannibals - so
ancient is the legend of the wild hunter, a form of whom may probably
survive with us as.
Herne= Orion the
hunter. In the solar
mythos the lord of light was Horus, or, later, Ra or Osiris, waging
war upon the evil powers
in the under-world,
and hunting them
to death by night and devouring them as
the mode of destruction; the drama being represented in the stellar phase with
the figure of Orion
as the lord of light
made visible by night. The cannibalism of the past becomes present
in the language of
the inscriptions.
Eating and drinking
were the primary modes of assimilating strength and sustenance. The
idea still lives in partaking of the eucharistic meal in which
the god is supposed to be assimilated by the eating and drinking
of the elements. It is said in the Book of the Dead (ch.149) that
the great spirits, the khus, or glorious ones, “live on the shades of the motionless” .
They eat the souls of the undeveloped dead; eating being applied
to spirit as well as matter.
It is probable
that the giant
as the eater of
the Shades, the
as yet unquickened
souls of the buried dead, was figured in heaven as the
ghoul. The star
Beta in the group
of Perseus, the
hero with Medusa's
head, is called AI-Ghul, the ghoul, in the Arabic names of
the stars (Higgins, The Names of the Stars
and
Constellations, p.
27).
In Amenta the ghoul was
the
eater of the Shades; and
like
many mythical characters
is
the denizen of another earth
than ours. “O eater of
the
Manes” , says the Osiris,
“I am not a thief” .
(125.17.) This is one
of those
who prey upon the dead;
one
of the forty-two types
of terror
which the guilty had to
face
in the great judgment
hall.
Thus, the ghoul or [Page
319] vampire
of another earth that
survives
as eater of the dead
in this world was also
figured in the
planisphere as a type
of terror to evil-doers.
Indeed, Amenta
is a museum full of
such prototypes, and
the ghoul secured a
starry
setting with the rest,
though
the figure is not extant
on our celestial globe. A
striking instance of
the use of the planisphere
in conveying
the teaching of the
mysteries may be seen
in the Ritual.
In some recensions of
the first chapter,
when the Manes enters
the Amenta, one of
the first things he
asks
is to see the starry
ship or floating
ark of the holy Sahus
making its
voyage by night in
heaven. He exclaims,
“Let me see the
Sekhet-Nut of the
holy Sahus; (the ship
of
heaven) traversing
the sky” .
He was in the paths
of darkness and desirous
of seeing the nocturnal
sky with its old
familiar stars by
which he
sought to make out
his way to the place
of re-birth and the
region
of Mati upon the
mount of glory, from
this valley of the
shadow of death.
The constellation
of Horus as Orion
was the ship of the
Sahu, and ark of
salvation configurated
in the celestial
waters as a boat
that
saved the souls
from an eternal shipwreck. This
was the sign of
spiritual resurrection
for the completed
Manes. In another
text the speaker
prays that his soul
may shine as a Sahu
in the stars of
Orion
or Horus. It is
said of Horus
in the “hymn to
Osiris” the
whole earth glorifies
him, when his holiness
proceeds
( on the vault of
the sky) “he
is a Sahu illustrious
amongst the Sahus” , that
is among the spirits
glorified. The
Sahu
is a glorified
form in which
the soul of the
deceased is re-incorporated
for the life
hereafter; this
was represented
by Orion the conqueror
of death
and darkness in
the phase of eschatology.
Now one frequently
finds that this
secondary stage
had been attained
by the Egyptian
mythos before
it went out
of
Egypt into other
lands as the lesser
and the greater
mysteries.
For instance,
there is a constellation
called the Sah
or
Sahu in the
Babylonian astronomy.
This is identical
by name with the
Egyptian Orion,
that is Horus
in his resurrection
as the Sahu or
glorified likeness
of the risen god
or soul; the Sahu
in the planisphere
who
represents the
Manes rising from
Amenta
to the enclosure
on the summit
which was paradise above.
The descent of Herakles
into Hades to grapple with
the triple-headed Kerberus
was preceded by the descent
of Horus into Amenta, where
the devourer is triple-bodied
if not three-headed. The speaker
in this character (Rit., ch.
136 B) says, “Grant that I
may come and bring (to Osiris)
the two jaws of Rusta” , the
outrance from Amenta. Herakles
in the lion's skin is identical
with Horus in the lion-sign,
and his fight with the Lernean
hydra of the Hesperides and
the great wild boar is a repetition
of the battles that were fought
by Horus with the Apap hydra
and the black boar Sut. The
same speaker at the same time
says, “I have repulsed the
Apap reptile and healed the
wounds he made” ,
which is equivalent
to the struggle of Horus with
the monster hydra. The twelve legends of the solar hero Gilgames relating to the twelve signs and the twelve labours of Herakles are, of course, comparatively late, as they are based upon the zodiac of twelve signs which belongs to the final formation of the heaven that was preceded by the heaven in ten divisions, and earlier still by the heptanomis in seven. But the twelve labours of Herakles are zodiacal, and the first of these was at a point of
commencement in the lion-sign. [Page 320] The
Greeks with their accustomed indifference to the facts, and
their fondness for figures and fancies, played many pranks
with the astronomical mythology. It was fabled by them that “an
enormous-crab came to the assistance of Hydra and bit the
foot of Herakles ,when he was doing battle with the dragon
of drought (Apollodorus 2, v. 2). By re-translating Greek fable into astronomical fact, this statement can be read, only
the Greeks have placed the crab on the side of the evil power, which it was not, any more than the beetle. The retouching by the Greeks, like that of the Semites, tended to efface the figures or falsify the meaning of the mythos ; and the astronomical facts are of a thousandfold more importance than all the pretty embellishments of irresponsible fancy. The forms and pictures figured in the planisphere are not merely mythical, they are also celestial illustrations
for the eschatology of the Egyptian Ritual and the oldest religion in the
world. Perhaps the worst perversion of the true mythos made by the Greeks was in their treatment of the polar dragon. This, as already shown, was founded on the crocodile, not on the Apap reptile. The crocodile was the good dragon, the solar dragon, the dragon of life, represented by the stellar Draconis. Apap is the dragon of evil, of negation, and of death. It is not easy to uncoil the dragon, or rather the two dragons, the dragon of light and the reptile of darkness, on Greek ground. The evil dragon was imaged once for all below the ecliptic in the constellation Hydra. But it was the good dragon, not hydra, that coiled by night about the pole of heaven to protect the golden fruitage on the tree of life, the Chinese peach-tree of the pole. So far from Herakles being called upon to make war upon the good dragon, or crocodile, it was a starry image of Horus (Sebek) himself,
who is the prototype of Herakles.
Naturally there must have been some mutilation and disfigurement on the palimpsest of the starry heavens, but this has not effaced the African imagery of the celestial signs, which proves the ground-plan of the structure to have been Egyptian. The present purpose is to trace the raison
d’être and meaning of the constellation-figures as types of characters that were pre-existent in the mythology of Egypt. For, as herein maintained, it was Egypt that peopled the planisphere
and for ever occupies the celestial globe. The heavens are telling nightly of her glory and her workmanship on high, which is more marvellous even than any that she left upon the surface of the earth. The vast revolving sphere unfolds a panorama of her pre-historic past. The constellations form a long procession of her seasons, her goddesses and gods for ever circling round about a wondering world that sees but cannot read the primitive uranographic signs.
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