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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.
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