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Passages similar to: Asclepius — Section XXIV
Source passage
Hermetic
Asclepius
Section XXIV (4.)
And now I speak to thee, O River, holiest [Stream]! I tell thee what will be. With bloody torrents shalt thou overflow thy banks. Not only shall thy streams divine be stained with blood; but they shall all flow over [with the same]. The tale of tombs shall far exceed the [number of the] quick; and the surviving remnant shall be Egyptians in their tongue alone, but in their actions foreigners. XXV
Mesopotamian
Other Accounts: River Address (9)
O, River, thou art mighty! O River, thou art supreme! O River, thou art righteous!
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Mesopotamian
Other Accounts: Dragon Myth (OBV.23)
"Thou hast sent me, O lord, [to ...] the raging (creatures) 2 of the river
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Ancient Egyptian
Chapter CXLIX (57)
When the river is full and green like the flowing sap which comes out of Osiris, I take its water, I draw from its flood like the great god who is in...
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Ancient Egyptian
Texts Of Miscellaneous Contents, Utterances 677-683 (679)
2031 To say: Thy water belongs to thee; thine efflux belongs, to thee; thine inundation belongs to thee, 2031 issuing from Osiris. 2032 Thou makest...
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Ancient Egyptian
Texts Of Miscellaneous Contents, Utterances 628-658 (630)
1788 To say: Osiris N., this source is in thee; 1788 I am the water-hole; I am the flowing (or, overflowing).
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Ancient Egyptian
Texts Of Miscellaneous Contents, Utterances 611-626 (619)
1747 To say: Raise thyself up, N.; raise thyself up, great nw; 1747 raise thyself up from (lit. on) thy left side, place thyself on thy right side....
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Western Esoteric
Inferno: Canto XII (6)
Then people saw I, who from out the river Lifted their heads and also all the chest; And many among these I recognised. Thus ever more and more grew...
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Ancient Egyptian
Chapter XXXII (7)
Back, thou Crocodile of the North, who livest upon that which lieth between the hours. What thou execratest is upon me. Let not thy fiery water be...
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Ancient Egyptian
Texts Of Miscellaneous Contents, Utterances 578-586 (581)
The north wind refreshes; 1551 it raises thee as Osiris N. 1552 Ssm.w comes to thee, bearing water and wine; 1552 nti-mnwt.f (comes) bearing the vases...
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Western Esoteric
Purgatorio: Canto XXXI (1)
"O thou who art beyond the sacred river," Turning to me the point of her discourse, That edgewise even had seemed to me so keen, She recommenced,...
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Ancient Egyptian
Chapter CI (1)
O thou who art devoid of moisture in coming forth from the stream; and who restest upon the deck of thy Bark: as thou proceedest in the direction of...
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Ancient Egyptian
Charms, Utterances 275-299 (286)
The red crowns (i.e. water-flowers) praise 427 the tiw-sii; the tiw-sii belong to him who has elevated the red crowns. 427 Hail, we two!...
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Ancient Egyptian
Texts Of Miscellaneous Contents, Utterances 554-562 (559)
1392 To say: "Come in peace," says Osiris; "come in peace," says Osiris to thee. 1392 The marshes are filled for thee; the river-banks are inundated...
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Sufi
The Travelers who ate the Young Elephant (11-20)
Turn the realm of Pharaoh upside down? And if it were not so, how did Noah with one curse Make East and West alike drowned in his flood? Nor could...
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Ancient Egyptian
Chapter IV (1)
It is I who travel on the Stream which divideth the divine Pair, I am come, let there be given to me the lands of Osiris
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Western Esoteric
Purgatorio: Canto XIV (3)
It goes on falling, and the more it grows, The more it finds the dogs becoming wolves, This maledict and misadventurous ditch. Descended then through...
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Ancient Egyptian
Chapter XXIX (1)
Back thou Messenger of thy god! Art thou come to carry off by violence this Whole Heart of mine, of the Living Living XYZZY But I shall not surrender...
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Western Esoteric
Purgatorio: Canto V (6)
My frozen body near unto its outlet The robust Archian found, and into Arno Thrust it, and loosened from my breast the cross I made of me, when agony ...
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Ancient Egyptian
Chapter LXIV (9)
“Behold the Lord of his Flood; see, the Shoulder is fastened upon his neck and the Haunch upon the head of the West” offerings which the two...
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Ancient Egyptian
Charms, Utterances 275-299 (282)
423 To say: Lo, this foreign country of the mouth of the river, this is thy complaint: 423 "This foreign country of the mouth of the river belongs to...
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