~: Discovery :~ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
7 |
![]()
![]() Dead by Sir E. Wallace Budge and, then, to Alan Gardiner's Egyptian Grammar. I learned that the names of the Pharaohs are titles fit for the incarnation of the Divine within the being of a person. A name of some fame which is familiar today is that of: ![]()
![]() this King of the 'Great House' [p'r aA] as the person whose being is the Actual Image of the Unity of Principles which Provide for the Continuous Emergence of Nature....... ![]() person who was living under his rule, the pronounciation of this name was, and still is, simply the enunciation of a pattern of letter sounds. But, the acoustic images of these letter sounds were stored in the graphic images which the ancient Greeks saw as the sacred carvings of the Egyptians; and these Greeks made sense of this perception by making up the word written, now, in the American language: hieroglyphs. The sense of: 'sacred carvings,' fits as, one may observe today, this writing (which was already ancient even for the ancient Greeks) is seen everywhere throughout the Temples; and, of course, upon the, now rare, papyrus scrolls written by the Temple Scribes. ![]()
|
7 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
<> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ <> |
~ | To Page => |
1 ![]() |
2 ![]() |
3 ![]() |
4 ![]() |
5 ![]() |
6 ![]() |
7 ![]() |
8 ![]() |
9 ![]() |
10 ![]() |
11 ![]() |
~ |
BACK![]() ![]() |