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Passages similar to: Secret Teachings of All Ages — Fishes, Insects, Animals, Reptiles and Birds
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Western Esoteric
Secret Teachings of All Ages
Fishes, Insects, Animals, Reptiles and Birds (52)
Crocodiles were regarded by the Egyptians both as symbols of Typhon and emblems of the Supreme Deity, of the latter because while under water the crocodile is capable of seeing--Plutarch asserts--though its eyes are covered by a thin membrane. The Egyptians declared that no matter how far away the crocodile laid its eggs, the Nile would reach up to them in its next inundation, this reptile being endowed with a mysterious sense capable of making known the extent of the flood months before it took place. There were two kinds of crocodiles. The larger and more ferocious was hated by the Egyptians, for they likened it to the nature of Typhon, their destroying demon. Typhon waited to devour all who failed to pass the judgment of the Dead, which rite took place in the Hall of Justice between the earth and the Elysian Fields. Anthony Todd Thomson thus describes the good treatment accorded the smaller and tamer crocodiles, which the Egyptians accepted as personifications of good: "They were fed daily and occasionally had mulled wine poured down their throats. Their ears were ornamented with rings of gold and precious stones, and their forefeet adorned with bracelets."
Christian Mysticism
Chapter VII: The Egyptian Symbols and Enigmas of Sacred Things. (1)
Whence also the Egyptians did not entrust the mysteries they possessed to all and sundry, and did not divulge the knowledge of divine things to the...
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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
Chapter XXXII (2)
O Son who conversest with thy father, do thou protect this Great one from these four crocodiles here who devour the dead and live by the Words of...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter VII: The Egyptian Symbols and Enigmas of Sacred Things. (2)
Besides, the lion is with them the symbol of strength and prowess, as the ox clearly is of the earth itself, and husbandry and food, and the horse of ...
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Ancient Egyptian
Chapter LXXXVIII (1)
For I am the Crocodile god in all his terrors
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Ancient Egyptian
Chapter XXXII (4)
Back, thou Crocodile of the West, who livest on the Setting Stars. What thou execratest is upon me. Thou hast devoured the head of Osiris, but I am Rā
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Sufi
The Lion, the Fox, and the Ass (1-11)
A man asked a camel, saying, "Ho! whence comest thou, Thou beast of auspicious footstep?" He replied, " From the hot bath of thy street." The man...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter VIII: The Use of the Symbolic Style By Poets and Philosophers. (1)
They say, then, that Idanthuris king of the Scythians, as Pherecydes of Syros relates, sent to Darius, on his passing the Ister in threat of war, a sy...
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Hermetic
Section XXXVII (5)
It is because of this, Asclepius, those [animals] which are considered by some states deserving of their worship, in others are thought otherwise; and...
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Ancient Egyptian
Miscellaneous Utterances On The Career Of The Deceased King In The Hereafter, Utterances 317-337 (317)
507 To say: N. is come forth to-day at the head of the inundation of the flood. 507 N. is a crocodile god, with green feather, with vigilant...
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Ancient Egyptian
Chapter CLXIX (1)
Thou art a lion, thou art a sphinx, thou art Horus who avengeth his father; thou art these four gods, those glorious ones who are shouting for joy,...
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Ancient Egyptian
Chapter XXXII (5)
Back, thou Crocodile of the East, who livest upon those who devour their own foulness. What thou execratest is upon me. I have come, and I am Osiris
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Mesopotamian
Tablet XI (7)
No one could see his fellow, they could not recognize each other in the torrent. The gods were frightened by the Flood, and retreated, ascending to...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter XXI: The Jewish Institutions and Laws of Far Higher Antiquity Than The Philosophy of the Greeks. (52)
Of those, too, who at one time lived as men among the Egyptians, but were constituted gods by human opinion, were Hermes the Theban, and Asclepius of...
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Jewish Apocrypha
Chapter XLVIII (17)
And he hardened their hearts and made them stubborn, and the device was devised by the Lord our God that He might smite the Egyptians and cast them in...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter V: On the Symbols of Pythagoras. (13)
Therefore also the Egyptians place Sphinxes before their temples, to signify that the doctrine respecting God is enigmatical and obscure; perhaps also...
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Ancient Egyptian
Chapter XLII (50)
This chapter is in itself most interesting, and it is one of the most important as illustrative of Egyptian mythology. It is impossible at present to...
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Gnostic
PHOENIXES, WATER ANIMALS, BULLS OF EGYPT (PHOENIXES, WATER ANIMALS, BULLS OF EGYPT)
Then when Sophia Zoe saw that the rulers of darkness cursed her companions, she was angry. And when she came out of the first heaven with every...
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Neoplatonic
CHAP. XXVIII. (4)
But they thought that their opinions deserved to be believed, because he who first promulgated them, was not any casual person, but a God. For this wa...
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Sufi
Moses and Pharaoh (Summary)
Then follows a long account of the birth of Moses, of Pharaoh's devices to kill him in his infancy, of his education in Pharaoh's house, of his...
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