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Old 12-02-2007, 07:28 PM
Imahotep Imahotep is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 606
15 yr Member
Imahotep Imahotep is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 606
15 yr Member
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I first posted this back in mid-August.

This is, I believe, an English translation of an ancient Greek translation of one of the oldest writings known. It probably dates from before 3500BC and the original ancient Egyptian has been lost. It's likely that the Greeks took great liberty with it.

Isis was an important Egyptian diety and Horus her son. Men were believed to have been trapped in bodies as punishment for sins.




49. This too expound, O lady, mother of mine! For what cause is it that when men still keep alive in long disease, their rational part--their very reason and their very soul--at times becomes disabled?

And Isis answer made:

Of living things, my son, some are made friends with fire, and some with water, some with air, and some with earth, and some with two or three of these, and some with all.

And, on the contrary, again some are made enemies of fire, and some of water, some of earth, and some of air, and some of two of them, and some of three, and some of all.

For instance, son, the locust and all flies flee fire; the eagle and the hawk and all high-flying birds flee water; fish, air and earth; the snake avoids the open air. Whereas snakes and all creeping things love earth; all swimming things--love--water; winged things, air, of which they are the citizens; while those that fly still higher--love--the fire and have the habitat near it. Not that some of the animals as well do not love fire; for instance salamanders, for they even have their homes in it. It is because one or another of the elements doth form their bodies' outer envelope.

Each soul, accordingly, while it is in its body is weighted and constricted by these four. Moreover it is natural it also should be pleased with some of them and pained with others.

For this cause, then, it doth not reach the height of its prosperity; still, as it is divine by nature, e'en while--wrapped up--in them, it struggles and it thinks, though not such thoughts as it would think were it set free from being bound in bodies.

Moreover if these--frames--are swept with storm and stress, or of disease or fear, then is the soul itself tossed on the waves, as man upon the deep with nothing steady under him.




My doctor keeps telling me to drink more water.
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