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Passages similar to: Egyptian Book of the Dead — Chapter CLXXXII
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Ancient Egyptian
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter CLXXXII (5.)
Hail, acclamations to thee, god whose heart is motionless, Unneferu, the son of Nut. I am Thoth, the favourite of Rā, the very brave, who is beneficent to his father; the great magician in the boat of millions (of years); the lord of laws, who pacifies the two earths by the power of his wisdom ... who drives away enmity and dispels quarrels, who does what is pleasing to Rā in his shrine
Ancient Egyptian
The Deceased King Arrives In Heaven Where He Is Established, Utterances 244-259 (252)
Ye see him (how) he becomes as, a great god. 272 Introduce N. with trembling; adorn N., 273 who has honoured ye all, (as) he commanded mankind (also t...
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Ancient Egyptian
Ritual Of Bodily Restoration Of The Deceased, And Offerings, Utterances 12-203 (82)
He comes forth with the eye of Horus. One table of offerings. To make a mortuary offering....
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Western Esoteric
Secret Teachings of All Ages
The Life and Teachings of Thoth Hermes Trismegistus (20)
It is doubtful that the deity called Thoth by the Egyptians was originally Hermes, but the two personalities were blended together and it is now...
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Ancient Egyptian
Miscellaneous Texts Chiefly About The Deceased King's Reception And Life In Heaven, Utterances 523-533 (524)
1233 To say: N. is pure with the purification which Horus did to his eye. 1233 N. is Thot who avenges thee (the eye); N. is not Set who seizes it....
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Ancient Egyptian
The Deceased King Triumphs Over His Enemies And Is Recognized By The Gods, Utterances 260-262 (260)
316 To say: O Geb, bull of Nut, N. is a Horus, heir of his father. 316 N. is the goer, the comer, the fourth of these four gods, 316 who have brought...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter V: He Proves By Several Examples That the Greeks Drew From the Sacred Writers. (2)
Now among the Greeks, Minos the king of nine years' reign, and familiar friend of Zeus, is celebrated in song; they having heard how once God...
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Ancient Egyptian
Nut And The Deceased King, Utterances 1-11 (6)
4 To say by Nut-Nekhbet, the great: This is (my) beloved, N., (my) son; 4 I have given the horizons to him, that he may be powerful over them like...
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Ancient Egyptian
Texts Of Miscellaneous Contents, Utterances 602-605 (603)
J�quier, VII 709 + 40). To say: Lift thyself up, father N.; fasten to thee thy head; take to thee thy limbs; 1675 (N. VII 709 + 40). lift thyself up u...
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Ancient Egyptian
Nut And The Deceased King, Utterances 1-11 (7)
5 To say by Nut, the great, (who is) within the encircled mansion: This is (my) son N., of (my) heart. 5 I have given to him the D.t, that he may be...
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Mesopotamian
Tablet II (58)
"[O Anshar], let not the word of thy lips be overcome, (120) ". [Let me] go, that I may accomplish all that is in thy heart." (121) "What man is it, w...
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Greek
Orphic Hymns (XLIV - Dionysius Bassareus Triennalis)
COME, blessed Dionysius, various nam'd, Bull-fac'd, begot from Thunder, Bacchus fam'd. Bassarian God, of universal might, Whom swords, and blood, and...
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Hindu
Viśhwarūpa Sandarśhana Yoga (11.21)
Into Thee enter these hosts of gods, and some in fear extol Thee with folded hands. And bands of Rishis and Siddhas exclaim, “May there be peace!”...
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Ancient Egyptian
A Series Of Old Heliopolitan Texts Partly Osirianized, Utterances 213-222 (220)
I 94 He has come to thee, N.t (Crown of Lower Egypt); he has come to thee, Nsr.t (Uraeus); 194 he has, come to thee, Great One; he has come to thee, G...
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Jewish Apocrypha
Chapter XV (6)
" Behold My ordinance is with thee, And thou wilt be the father of many nations.
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Ancient Egyptian
A Miscellaneous Group, Utterances 453-486 (456)
852 To say: Greetings to thee, Great One, son of a Great One! 852 The w of the pri-wr run for thee; 852 the pri-nsr work for thee; 852 the apertures...
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Ancient Egyptian
Ritual Of Bodily Restoration Of The Deceased, And Offerings, Utterances 12-203 (24)
16 (Nt. J�quier, IX 68). To say: Thot, hurry, carry off the enemy of this N. 16 ----- N. to Osiris.
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Ancient Egyptian
Means Whereby The Deceased King Reaches Heaven, Utterances 263-271 (268)
370 To say: N. washes himself, R` appears, the Great Ennead sparkles; 370 the Ombite is high as chief of the 'itr.t-palace; 371 N. puts humanity off...
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Mesopotamian
Tablet VII (20)
"The God of the Favouring Breeze," "the Lord of Hearing and Mercy,"
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Ancient Egyptian
In Praise Of Nut, Utterances 427-435 (429)
779 To say by Geb: Nut, thou art become (spiritually) mighty: 779 thou wast (already physically) mighty in the womb of thy mother, Tefnut, before...
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Ancient Egyptian
The Deceased King Arrives In Heaven Where He Is Established, Utterances 244-259 (246)
252 See, how N. stands there among (you), the two horns on him (like) two wild-bulls, 252 for thou art the black ram, son of a black sheep. 252 born...
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