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CHAPTER VII.
DEMONIACAL POSSESSION, DREAMS, GHOSTS, LUCKY AND
UNLUCKY DAYS, HOROSCOPES, PROGNOSTICATIONS, TRANSFORMATIONS, AND THE
WORSHIP OF ANIMALS.
THE Egyptians, in common with many other Eastern nations, believed that
certain sicknesses and diseases might be cured by certain medicaments pure
and simple, but that others needed not only drugs but the recital of words
of power to effect their cure. There is good reason for thinking that some
diseases were attributed to the action of evil spirits or demons, which
had the power of entering into human bodies and of vexing them in
proportion to their malignant nature and influence, 1
but the texts do not afford much information on the matter. Incidentally,
however, we have one interesting proof that foreign peoples believed that
the Egyptians were able to cure the diseases caused by demoniacal
possession, and the exercise of their power
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on the occasion described was considered to be so noteworthy that the
narrative of it was inscribed upon a stele 1
and setup in the temple 2 of the god Khonsu at
Thebes, so that all men might read and know what a marvellous cure his
priests had effected. It appears that king Rameses II. was in Mesopotamia
"according to his wont, year by year," and all the chiefs of the countries
round about came to pay their respects to him, and they sought to obtain
his goodwill and protection, probably even an alliance, by bringing to him
gifts of gold, and lapis-lazuli, and turquoise, and of every kind of
valuable thing which the land produced,
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and every man sought to outdo his neighbour by the lavishness of his
gifts. Among others there came the Prince of Bekhten, and at the head of
all the offerings which he presented to His Majesty he placed his eldest
daughter, who was very beautiful. When the king saw her he thought her the
most beautiful girl he had ever seen, and he bestowed upon her the title
of "Royal spouse, chief lady, Râ-neferu" (i.e., "the beauties of Râ,"
the Sun-god), and took her to Egypt; and when they arrived in that country
the king married her. One day during the fifteenth year of the king's
reign, when His Majesty was in Thebes celebrating the festival of Amen-Râ,
a messenger came to the king and reported the arrival of an ambassador
from the Prince of Bekhten who had brought rich gifts for the royal lady
Râ-neferu. When he had been led into the king's presence, he did homage
before him, saying, "Glory and praise be unto thee, O thou Sun of the
nations; grant that we may live before thee!" Having said these words be
bowed down and touched the ground with his head three times, and said, "I
have come unto thee, O my sovereign Lord, on behalf of the lady Bent-ent-resht,
the younger sister of the royal spouse Râ-neferu, for, behold, an evil
disease hath laid hold upon her body; I beseech thy Majesty to send a
physician 1 to see her." Then the king
straightway ordered the books of the "double house
p. 209

Stele recording the casting out of the devil from the Princess of
Bekhten. On the right the king is offering Incense to Khonsu Nefer-hetep,
and on the left a priest is offering incense to Khonsu, "the great god who
driveth away devils." (From Prisse, Monuments, plate 24.)
p. 211
of life" to be brought and the learned men to appear, and when they had
come into his presence he ordered them to choose from among their number a
man "wise of heart and cunning of finger," that he might send him to
Bekhten; they did so, and their choice fell upon one Tehuti-em-heb. This
sage having come before the king was ordered to set out for Bekhten in
company with the ambassador, and he departed; and when they had arrived
there the Egyptian priest found the lady Bent-ent-resht to be possessed of
a demon or spirit over which he was powerless. The Prince of Bekhten,
seeing that the priest was unable to afford relief to his daughter, sent
once again to the king, and entreated him to send a god to his help.
When the ambassador from Bekhten arrived in Egypt the king was in
Thebes, and on hearing what was asked he went into the temple of Khonsu
Nefer-hetep, and besought that god to allow his counterpart Khonsu to
depart to Bekhten and to deliver the daughter of the prince of that
country from the power of the demon that possessed her. It seems as if the
sage Tehuti-em-heb had been sent to Bekhten by the advice of the god, for
the king says, in addressing, the god, "I have come once again into thy
presence"; but in any case Khonsu Nefer-hetep agreed to his request, and a
fourfold measure of magical power was imparted to the statue of the god
which was to go to Bekhten. The god, seated in his boat, and five other
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boats with figures of gods in them, accompanied by chariots and horses
on the right hand and on the left, set out from Egypt, and after
travelling for seventeen months arrived in Bekhten, where they were
received with great honour. The god Khonsu went to the place where Bent-ent-resht
was, and, having performed a magical ceremony over her, the demon departed
from her and she was cured straightway. Then the demon addressed the
Egyptian god, saying, "Grateful and welcome is thy coming unto us, O great
god, thou vanquisher of the hosts of darkness! Bekhten is thy city, the
inhabitants thereof are thy slaves, and I am thy servant; and I will
depart unto the place whence I came that I may gratify thee, for unto this
end hast thou come thither. And I beseech thy Majesty to command that the
Prince of Bekhten and I may hold a festival together." To the demon's
request Khonsu agreed, and he commanded his priest to tell the Prince of
Bekhten to make a great festival in honour of the demon; this having been
done by the command of Khonsu the demon departed to his own place.
When the Prince of Bekhten saw that Khonsu was thus powerful, he and
all his people rejoiced exceedingly, and he determined that the god should
not be allowed to return to Egypt, and as a result Khonsu remained in
Bekhten for three years, four months, and five days. On a certain day,
however, the Prince was
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sleeping., and he dreamed a dream in which he saw the god Khonsu come
forth from his shrine in the form of a hawk of gold, and having mounted
into the air he flew away to Egypt. The Prince woke up in a state of great
perturbation, and having inquired of the Egyptian priest was told by him
that the god had departed to Egypt, and that his chariot must now be sent
back. Then the Prince gave to Khonsu great gifts, and they were taken to
Egypt and laid before the god Khonsu Nefer-hetep in his temple at Thebes.
In early Christian literatures we find a number of examples of demoniacal
possession in which the demon who has entered the body yields it up before
a demon of greater power than himself, but the demon who is expelled is
invariably hostile to him that expels him, and he departs from before him
with every sign of wrath and shame. The fact that it was believed possible
for the demon of Bekhten and the god Khonsu to fraternize, and to be
present together at a festival made by the Prince of the country, shews
that the people of Bekhten ascribed the same attributes to spirits or
demons as they did to men. The demon who possessed the princess recognized
in Khonsu a being who was mightier than himself, and, like a vanquished
king, he wished to make the best terms he could with his conqueror, and to
be on good terms with him.
The Egyptians believed that the divine powers frequently made known
their will to them by means of
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dreams, and they attached considerable importance to them; the figures
of the gods and the scenes which they saw when dreaming seemed to them to
prove the existence of another world which was not greatly unlike that
already known to them. The knowledge of the art of procuring dreams and
the skill to interpret them were greatly prized in Egypt as elsewhere in
the East, and the priest or official who possessed such gifts sometimes
rose to places of high. honour in the state, as we may see from the
example of Joseph, 1 for it was universally
believed that glimpses of the future were revealed to man in dreams. As
instances of dreams recorded in the Egyptian texts may be quoted those of
Thothmes IV., king of Egypt about B.C. 1450, and Nut-Amen, king of the
Eastern Sûdân and Egypt, about B.C. 670. A prince, according to the stele
which he set up before the breast of the Sphinx at Gizeh, was one day
hunting near this emblem of Râ-Harmachis, and he sat down to rest under
its shadow and fell asleep and dreamed a dream. In it the god appeared to
him, and, having declared that he was the god Harmachis-Khepera-Râ-Temu,
promised him that if he would clear away from the Sphinx, his own image,
the drift sand in which it was becoming buried, he would give to him the
sovereignty of the lands of the South and of the North, i.e., of
all Egypt. In due course the prince became king of Egypt under the title
of Thothmes IV., and the stele
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which is dated on the 19th day of the month Hathor of the first year of
Thothmes IV. proves that the royal dreamer carried out the wishes of the
god. 1 Of Nut-Amen, the successor of the great
Piânkhi who came down from Gebel Barkal and conquered all Egypt from Syene
to the sea, we read that in the first year of his reign he one night
dreamed a dream wherein he saw two serpents, one on his right hand and the
other on his left; when he awoke they had disappeared. Having asked for an
interpretation of the dream he was told:--"The land of the South is thine,
and thou shalt have dominion over the land of the North: the White Crown
and the Red Crown shall adorn thy head. The length and the breadth of the
land shall be given unto thee, and the god Amen, the only god, shall be
with thee." 2 The two serpents were the
symbols of the goddesses Nekhebet and Uatchet, the mistresses of the South
and North respectively. As the result of his dream Nut-Amen invaded Egypt
successfully and brought back much spoil, a portion of which he dedicated
to the service of his god Amen.
Since dreams and visions in which the future might be revealed to the
sleeper were greatly desired, the Egyptian magician set himself to procure
such for his clients by various devices, such as drawing magical pictures
and reciting magical words. The following
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are examples of spells for procuring a vision and dreams, taken from
British Museum Papyrus, No. 122, lines 64 ff. and 359 ff. 1
"To obtain a vision from [the god] Bes. Make a drawing of Besa, as shewn
below, on your left hand, and envelope your hand in a strip of black cloth
that has been consecrated to Isis (?) and lie down to sleep without
speaking a word, even in answer to a question. Wind the remainder of the
cloth round your neck. The ink with which you write must be composed of
the blood of a cow, the blood of a white dove, fresh (?) frankincense,
myrrh, black writing-ink, cinnabar, mulberry juice, rain-water, and the
juice of wormwood and vetch. With this write your petition before the
setting sun, [saying], c Send the truthful seer out of the holy shrine, I
beseech thee, Lampsuer, Sumarta, Baribas, Dardalam, Iorlex: O Lord send
the sacred deity Anuth, Anuth, Salbana, Chambré, Breïth, now, now,
quickly, quickly. Come in this very night.'" 2
"To procure dreams: Take a clean linen bag and write upon it the names
given below. Fold it up and make it into a lamp-wick, and set it alight,
pouring pure oil over it. The word to be written is this: 'Armiuth,
Lailamchoüch, Arsenophrephren, Phtha, Archentechtha.' Then in the evening,
when you are
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going to bed, which you must do without touching food [or, pure from
all defilement], do thus. Approach the lamp and repeat seven times the
formula given below: then extinguish it and lie down to sleep. The formula
is this: 'Sachmu . . . epaëma Ligotereënch: the Aeon, the Thunderer, Thou
that hast swallowed the snake and dost exhaust the moon, and dost raise up
the orb of the sun in his season, Chthetho is thy name; I require, O lords
of the gods, Seth, Chreps, give me the information that I desire.'"
The peculiar ideas which the Egyptians held about the composition of
man greatly favoured the belief in apparitions and ghosts. According to
them a man consisted of a physical body, a shadow, a double, a soul, a
heart, a spirit called the khu, a power, a name, and a spiritual
body. When the body died the shadow departed from it, and could only be
brought back to it by the performance of a mystical ceremony; the double
lived in the tomb with the body, and was there visited by the soul whose
habitation was in heaven. The soul was, from one aspect, a material thing,
and like the ka, or double, was believed to partake of the funeral
offerings which were brought to the tomb; one of the chief objects of
sepulchral offerings of meat and drink was to keep the double in the tomb
and to do away with the necessity of its wandering about outside the tomb
in search of food. It is clear from many texts that, unless the double was
supplied with sufficient food,
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it would wander forth from the tomb and eat any kind of offal and drink
any kind of dirty water which it might find in its path. But besides the
shadow, and the double, and the soul, the spirit of the deceased, which
usually had its abode in heaven, was sometimes to be found in the tomb.
There is, however, good reason for stating that the immortal part of man
which lived in the tomb and had its special abode in the statue of the
deceased was the "double." This is proved by the fact that a special part
of the tomb was reserved for the ka, or double, which was called
the "house of the ka," and that a priest, called the "priest of the
ka," was specially appointed to minister therein. The double
enjoyed the smell of the incense which was offered at certain times each
year in the tomb, as well as the flowers, and herbs, and meat, and drink;
and the statue of the deceased in which the double dwelt took pleasure in
all the various scenes which were painted or sculptured on the walls of
the various chambers of the tomb, and enjoyed again all the delights which
his body had enjoyed upon earth. The ka, or double, then, in very
early times was, to all intents and purposes, the ghost of the Egyptians.
In later times the khu, or "spirit," seems to have been identified
with it, and there are frequent allusions in the texts to the sanctity of
the offerings made to the khu, and to their territories, i.e.,
the districts in which their mummified bodies lie.
Whether there was any general belief that the ka
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or khu could or did hold intercourse with his relatives or
friends whom he left alive upon earth cannot be said, but an instance is
known in which a husband complains to his wife, who has been dead for
three years, of the troubles which she has brought upon him since her
death. He describes his own merits and the good treatment which he had
vouchsafed to her when she was alive, and declares that the evil with
which she is requiting him is not to be endured. To make his complaint to
reach her he first reduced it to writing upon papyrus, then went to her
tomb and read it there, and finally tied the papyrus to a statue or figure
of his wife which was therein; since her double or spirit lived in the
tomb she would, of course, read the writing and understand it. 1
It is a pity that we have no means of knowing what was the result of the
husband's complaint. Elsewhere 2 we have a
fragment of a conversation which a priest of Amen called Khonsu-em-heb,
who was searching for a suitable place in which to build his tomb, holds
with the. double or spirit of some person whom he has disturbed, and the
spirit of the dead tells some details of his life to the living man. The
cemeteries were regarded with awe by the ancient Egyptians because of the
spirits of the dead
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who dwelt in them, and even the Arabic-speaking peoples of Egypt and
the Sûdân, if we exclude the "antiquity grubber," have them in great
respect for the same reason. 1 The modern
peoples of the Sûdân firmly believe that the spirits of those slain in
battle dwell on the field where they fell, or where their bodies are
buried, and the soldiers in the tenth battalion of Lord Kitchener's army
declare that the grave of the gallant Major Sidney, who was shot while
charging at the head of his regiment, in the battle of Abû Hamed, August
7th, 1897, "is watched regularly every night by the ghosts of the native
soldiers who were killed at Abû Hamed, and who mount guard over their dead
commander's tomb, challenging, with every military detail, all passers-by.
So implicitly is this legend credited by the blacks that none of
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them will, after dusk, approach the grave. Any one doing so is believed
to be promptly halted by a phantom sentry, and even the words (in Arabic),
'Guard, turn out!' are often (so the story goes) plainly heard repeated at
some distance off across the desert." 1
p. 222
The Egyptians believed that a man's fate or destiny was decided before
he was born, and that he had no power whatever to alter it. Their sages,
however, professed to be able to declare what the fate might be, provided
that they were given certain data, that is to say, if they were told the
date of his birth, and if they were able to ascertain the position of the
planets and stars at that time. The goddess of fate or destiny was called
"Shai," and she is usually accompanied by another goddess called "Renenet,"
who is commonly regarded as the lady of fortune; they both appear in the
Judgment Scene, where they seem to watch the weighing of the heart on
behalf of the deceased. But another goddess, Meskhenet, is sometimes
present, and she also seems to have had influence over a man's future; in
any case she was able to predict what that future was to be. Thus we read
that she and Isis, and Nephthys, and Heqet, disguised as women, went to
the house of Râ-user, whose wife Râ-Tettet was in travail; when they had
been taken into her room they assisted her in giving birth to triplets,
and as each child was born Meskhenet declared, "He shall be a king who
shall have dominion over the whole land."
p. 223
[paragraph continues] And this prophecy was
fulfilled, for the three boys became three of the kings of the Vth
dynasty. 1 The Seven Hathor goddesses also
could predict the future of a human being, for in the well-known "Tale of
Two Brothers" it is related that, when the god Khnemu, at the request of
Râ-Harmachis, had created for Bata a wife "who was more beautiful in her
person than any other woman in all the earth, for the essence of every god
was contained in her," they came to see her, and that they spake with one
voice, saying, "Her death will be caused by the knife." And this came to
pass, for, according to the story, when the king whose wife she became
heard from her first husband that she had left him and had wrought evil
against him, he entered into judgment with her in the presence of his
chiefs and nobles, and "one carried out their decree," i.e., they
sentenced her to death and she was executed. Similarly, in another story,
the Seven Hathors came to see the son who had been born to a certain king
in answer to his prayers to the gods, and when they had seen him they
said, "He shall die by means of a crocodile, or a serpent, or a dog." The
story goes on to say how be escaped from the crocodile and the serpent,
and though the end is wanting, it is quite clear that he was wounded by an
accidental bite of his dog and so died. 2 The
moral of all such stories
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is that there is no possibility of avoiding fate, and it is most
probable that the modern Egyptian has only inherited his ancestors' views
as to its immutability. 1 A man's life might,
however, be happy or unhappy according as the hour of the day or the day
itself was lucky or unlucky, and every day of the Egyptian year was
divided into three parts, each of which was lucky or unlucky. When
Olympias was about to give birth to Alexander the Great, Nectanebus stood
by her making observations of the heavenly bodies, and from time to time
he besought her to restrain herself until the auspicious hour had arrived;
and it was not until he saw a certain splendour in the sky and knew that
all the heavenly bodies were in a favourable position that he permitted
her to brine, forth her child. And when he had said, "O queen, now thou
wilt give birth to a governor of the world," the child fell upon the
ground while the earth quaked, and the lightnings flashed, and the thunder
roared. 2 Thus it is quite evident that the
future of a child depended even upon the hour in which he was born.
In magical papyri we are often told not to perform certain magical
ceremonies on such and such days, the idea being that on these days
hostile powers will make them to be powerless, and that gods mightier than
p. 225
those to which the petitioner would appeal will be in the ascendant.
There have come down to us, fortunately, papyri containing copies of the
Egyptian calendar, in which each third of every day for three hundred and
sixty days of the year is marked lucky or unlucky, and we know from other
papyri why certain days were lucky or unlucky, and why others were only
partly so 1. Taking the month Thoth, which was
the first month of the Egyptian year, and began, according to the
Gregorian Calendar, on August 29th, we find that the days are marked as
follows:--

p. 226
Now the sign means "lucky," and
means "unlucky"; thus at a glance it
could be seen which third of the day is lucky or unlucky, and the man who
consulted the calendar would, of course, act accordingly. It must be noted
that the priests or magicians who drew up the calendar had good reasons
for their classification of the days, as we may see from the following
example. The 19th day of Thoth is, in the above list, marked wholly lucky,
i.e., each third of it is lucky, and the papyrus Sallier IV. 1
also marks it wholly lucky, and adds the reason:--"It is a day of festival
in heaven and upon earth in the presence of Râ. It is the day when flame
was hurled upon those who followed the boat containing the shrine of the
gods; and on this day the gods gave praises being content," etc. But in
both lists the 26th day is marked wholly unlucky, the reason being, "This
was the day of the fight between Horus and Set." They first fought in the
form of men, then they took the form of bears, and in this state did
battle with each other for three days and three nights. Isis aided Set
when he was getting the worst in the fight, and Horus thereupon cut off
his mother's head, which Thoth transformed by his words of power into that
of a cow and put on her body. On this day offerings are to be made to
Osiris and Thoth, but work of any kind is absolutely forbidden. The
calendars of lucky
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and unlucky days do not, however, always agree as to a given day. Thus
in the list given above the 20th day of Thoth is marked wholly unlucky,
but in the papyrus Sallier IV. it is wholly lucky, but the reader is told
not to do any work in it, nor to slay oxen, nor to receive a stranger; on
this day the gods who are in the following of Râ slew the rebels.
Concerning the fourth day of the next month, Paophi, the papyrus Sallier
IV. says, "Go not forth from thy house from any side of it; whosoever is
born on this day shall die of the disease aat." Concerning the
fifth day it says, "Go not forth from thy house from any side of it, and
hold no intercourse with women. This is the day wherein all things were
performed in the divine presence, and the majesty of the god Menthu was
satisfied therein. Whosoever is born on this day shall die of excessive
venery." Concerning the ninth day it says, "Whosoever is born on this day
shall die of old age," and concerning the fifteenth, "Go not forth from
thy dwelling at eventide, for the serpent Uatch, the son of the god, goeth
forth at this time, and misfortunes follow him; whosoever shall see him
shall lose his eye straightway." Again, the twenty-sixth day of Paophi was
a lucky day for making the plan of a house; on the fifth day of Hathor no
fire was to be kindled in the house; on the sixteenth day it was forbidden
to listen to songs of joy because on this day Isis and Nephthys wept for
Osiris at Abydos;
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a man born on the twenty-third day would die by drowning; and so on.
But to the three hundred and sixty days given in the calendars of lucky
and unlucky days must be added the five epagomenal days which were
considered to be of great importance and had each its peculiar name. On
the first Osiris was born, on the second Heru-ur (Aroueris), on the third
Set, on the fourth Isis, and on the fifth Nephthys; the first, third, and
fifth of these days were unlucky, and no work of any kind was to be
undertaken on them. The rubric which refers to these days 1
states that whosoever knoweth their names shall never suffer from thirst,
that he shall never be smitten down by disease, and that the goddess
Sekhet 2 shall never take possession of him;
it also directs that figures of the five gods mentioned above shall be
drawn with unguent and ânti scent upon a piece of fine linen,
evidently to serve as an amulet.
From the life of Alexander the Great by Pseudo-Callisthenes 3
we learn that the Egyptians were skilled in the art of casting nativities,
and that knowing the exact moment of the birth of a man they proceeded to
construct his horoscope. Nectanebus employed for the purpose a tablet made
of gold and silver and acacia wood, to which were fitted three belts. Upon
the
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outer belt was Zeus with the thirty-six decani surrounding him;
upon the second the twelve signs of the Zodiac were represented; and upon
the third the sun and moon. 1 He set the
tablet upon a tripod, and then emptied out of a small box upon it models
of the seven stars 2 that were in the belts,
and put into the middle belt eight precious stones; these he arranged in
the places wherein he supposed the planets which they represented would be
at the time of the birth of Olympias, and then told her fortune from them.
But the use of the horoscope is much older than the time of Alexander the
Great, for to a Greek horoscope 3 in the
British Museum is attached "an introductory letter from some master of the
art of astrology to his pupil, named Hermon, urging him to be very exact
and careful in his application of the laws which he ancient Egyptians,
with their laborious devotion to the art, had discovered and handed down
to posterity." Thus we have good reason for assigning the birthplace of
the horoscope to Egypt. In connexion with the horoscope must be mentioned
the "sphere" or "table" of Democritus as a means of making predictions as
to life and death. In a magical
p. 230
papyrus 1 we are told to "ascertain in what
month the sick man took to his bed, and the name he received at his birth.
Calculate the [course of] the moon, and see how many periods of thirty
days have elapsed; then note in the table the number of days left over,
and if the number comes in the upper part of the table, he
will live, but if in the lower part, he will die."

Both from the religious and profane literature of Egypt we learn that
the gods and man in the future life were able at will to assume the form
of any animal, or bird, or plant, or living thing, which they pleased, and
one of the greatest delights to which a man looked forward was the
possession of that power. This is proved by the fact that no less than
twelve 2 of the chapters of the Book of the
Dead are devoted to
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providing the deceased with the words of power, the recital of which
was necessary to enable him to transform himself into a "hawk of gold," a
"divine hawk," "the governor of the sovereign princes," "the god who
giveth light in the darkness," a lotus, the god Ptah, a bennu bird
(i.e., phœnix), a heron, a "living soul," a swallow, the serpent
Sata, and a crocodile; and another chapter 1
enabled him to transform himself into "whatever form he pleaseth." Armed
with this power he could live in the water in the form of a crocodile, in
the form of a serpent he could glide over the rocks and ground, in the
form of the birds mentioned above he could fly through the air, and soar
up and perch himself upon the bow of the boat of Râ, in the form of the
lotus he had mastery over the plants of the field, and in the form of Ptah
he became "more powerful than the lord of time, and shall gain the mastery
over millions of years." The bennu bird, it will be remembered, was
said to be the "soul of Râ," and by assuming this form the deceased
identified himself with Khepera, the great god of creation, and thus
acquired the attributes of the soul of the Sun-god. In the Elysian Fields
he was able to assume any form and to swim and fly to any distance in any
direction. It is noteworthy that no beast of the field or wild animal is
mentioned as a type of his possible transformations into animals.
p. 232
Now the Egyptians believed that as the souls of the departed could
assume the form of any living thing or plant, so the "gods," who in many
respects closely resembled them, could and did take upon themselves the
forms of birds and beasts; this was the fundamental idea of the so-called
"Egyptian animal worship," which provoked the merriment of the cultured
Greek, and drew down upon the Egyptians the ridicule and abuse of the
early Christian writers. But if the matter be examined closely its
apparent stupidity disappears. The Egyptians paid honour to certain birds,
and animals, and reptiles, because they considered that they possessed
certain of the characteristics of the gods to whom they made them sacred.
The bull was a type of the strength and procreative power of the god of
reproduction in nature, and the cow was the type of his female
counterpart; every sacred animal and living thing possessed some quality
or attribute which was ascribed to some god, and as each god was only a
form of Râ, the quality or attribute ascribed to him was that of the
Sun-god himself. The educated Egyptian never worshipped an animal as an
animal, but only as an incarnation of a god, and the reverence paid to
animals in Egypt was in no way different from that paid to the king, who
was regarded as "divine" and as an incarnation of Râ the Sun-god, who was
the visible symbol of the Creator. The relation of the king to Râ was
identical with that of Râ to God. The
p. 233
[paragraph continues] Hebrews, Greeks, and
Romans never understood the logical conception which underlay the
reverence with which the Egyptians regarded certain animals, and as a
result they grossly misrepresented their religion. The ignorant people, no
doubt, often mistook the symbol for what it symbolized, but it is wrong to
say that the Egyptians worshipped animals in the ordinary sense of the
word, and this fact cannot be too strongly insisted on. Holding the views
he did about transformations there was nothing absurd in the reverence
which the Egyptian paid to animals. When a sacred animal died the god whom
it represented sought out another animal of the same species in which to
renew his incarnation, and the dead body of the animal, inasmuch as it had
once been the dwelling-place of a god, was mummified and treated in much
the same way as a human body after death, in order that it might enjoy
immortality. These views seem strange, no doubt, to us when judged by
modern ideas, but they formed an integral part of the religious beliefs of
the Egyptians, from the earliest to the latest times. What is remarkable,
however, is the fact that, in spite of invasions, and foreign wars, and
internal dissensions, and external influences of all kinds, the Egyptians
clung to their gods and the sometimes childish and illogical methods which
they adopted in serving them with a conservatism and zeal which have
earned for them the reputation of being at once the most religious and
most superstitious nation of
p. 234
antiquity. Whatever literary treasures may be brought to light in the
future as the result of excavations in Egypt, it is most improbable that
we shall ever receive from that country any ancient Egyptian work which
can properly be classed among the literature of atheism or freethought;
the Egyptian might be more or less religious according to his nature and
temperament, but, judging, from the writings of his priests and teachers
which are now in our hands, the man who was without religion and God in
some form or other was most rare, if not unknown.
Footnotes
206:1 As recently as 1895
this belief existed in Ireland, for according to the Times of April
2, 3, 6, and 8, Michael Cleary was charged on April 1 at Clonmel with
having, on March 14, burnt his wife Bridget, aged 27, for being a witch,
thus causing her death, at Baltyvadhen,
p. 207 county Tipperary. Johanna Burke
swore that boiling herbs out of a saucepan on the fire were forced down
the throat of the deceased, her husband asking her in the name of the
Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, if she was his wife. He then stripped her
naked, threw her on the floor, and pouring paraffin over her, set her on
fire. Cleary, assisted by J. Dunne, P. Kennedy, W. Kennedy, and others,
next took her to the fire and forced her to sit upon it in order to "drive
out the witch" which possessed her. She was next laid upon the bed and
shaken, while her husband recited the words "Away with you," meaning the
evil spirit, or spirits, and at six o'clock on the morning of the 15th of
March the priest was sent for to exorcise the spirits with which the house
was thought to be filled. A herbalist called Denis Ganey was present at
the time, being charged as an accessory before the fact. The prisoners
were found guilty and were sentenced to terms of imprisonment as
follows:--M. Cleary 20 years, J. Dunne 3 years, P. Kennedy 5 years, W.
Kennedy 18 months, J. Kennedy 18 months, Boland Kennedy 6 months, Michael
Kennedy 6 months.
207:1 Originally published
by Prisse, Monuments Égyptiens, Paris, 1817, pl. 24.
207:2 It is now preserved
in the Bibliotèque Nationale at Paris; for a full description and
translation of it see E. de Rougé, Étude sur une stele Égyptienne,
Paris, 1858.
208:1 Bekh khet,
"knower of things."
214:1 See Genesis, Chapters
xi., xii.
215:1 See Vyse, Appendix,
London, 1842, vol. iii., p. 114 ff.
215:2 See Brugsch, Egypt
under the Pharaohs, Vol. ii., p. 259.
216:1 See Catalogue of
Greek Papyri, vol. i. p. 118.
216:2 A sketch of the god
Besa is given at the end of the papyrus. See the description of the "Metternichstele"
above, p. 147 ff.
219:1 For the text see
Leemans, Monuments Égyptiens, Partie IL, pll. 183, 184, Leyden, 1846,
fol.; for a transcript into hieroglyphics see Maspero, Journal
Asiatique, Sér. 7, tom. 15, May and June, 1880, pp. 365-420.
219:2 See Golénischeff in
Recueil de Travaux, tom. iii., pp. 3-7.
220:1 When I visited the
Pyramids of Meroë in 1898 1 took with me the local shêkh, and a man and a
boy to look after the donkeys. Having come to within half a mile of the
pyramids the three stopped and wished me to ride on by myself, and when I
asked them why they did not want to come up the hill to the pyramids with
me the shêkh replied that they had been built by kings whose spirits still
dwelt there, and that it would not be seemly for him and his companions to
"trouble" them. I pressed him to come, but he answered "It is not the
custom of our country to go there," so I walked on by myself. When I had
been in the pyramid field for about two hours taking photographs and
measurements, the shêkh arrived with the boy, but nothing would persuade
him to walk about there, and having seated himself be recited prayers from
the Koran in an undertone, and at intervals urged me to return to his
straw house on the river bank as soon as possible. He was firmly convinced
that the prismatic compass which I used was a talisman, and when he
reached home he thanked God fervently that he had not been molested by the
spirits of the dead.
221:1 See the illustrated
paper The Sketch, No. 332, June 7, 1899, p. 277. The following from
the Times of July 7, 1899, is worth quoting:--
"THE GRAVE OF A BRITISH NAVAL OFFICER IN JAPAN.--Recently a report came
to the ears of the British Consul at Hiogo that the grave of a British
naval officer existed near a village on the island of Hiroshima, in the
Inland Sea of Japan-a place rarely visited by any foreigner-and that, for
some reason, it was carefully kept in order by the peasants in the
neighbourhood. The Consul accordingly communicated with the Governor of
the prefecture in which the island is situated; inquiries were made, and
the Governor was able to send to the Consul a history of the lonely grave.
The story was appended by the Governor to a formal despatch of his own,
and was obviously drawn up by the village headman or some equally humble
official, and it is worth giving in full. The Sylvia, the vessel
mentioned, was for many years engaged in surveying off the coasts of
Japan:--'In the first year of Meiji, corresponding to A.D. 1868, H.B.M.S.
Sylvia was proceeding on a voyage through the Inland Sea when an
officer on board, named Lake, fell ill. He was landed on the island of
Hiroshima, at the village of Hiroshima, in the district of Naka, province
of Sanuki, and prefecture of Kagawa. The Sylvia proceeded along the
coast of Hiroshima and cast anchor at Enoura Bay, to await the officer's
recovery. In a few days, however, he died, and Captain St. John buried his
remains in ground belonging to the temple of Ikwoji above Enoura shrine,
and, having set up a wooden cross to mark the grave, departed. Several
years afterwards, when this monument had almost decayed from the effects
of wind and rain, frost and snow, Awaburi Tokwan, Superior of Ikwoji
Temple, and others said:--"Truly it would be too sad if the grave of our
solitary guest from afar, who has become a spirit in a strange land, were
suffered to pass out of all knowledge." Thereupon Terawaki Kaemon, head of
a village guild, and other sympathisers, such as Oka Ryohaku, set on foot
a scheme for the erection of a stone monument, and, the shore folk all
with one accord p. 222
lending their help, the work was finally brought to completion. This was
on the 7th day of the eleventh month of the fourth year of Meiji--that is,
1871. Since then nearly 30 winters have passed, during which time the
islanders have not neglected to take good care of the tomb. In particular,
from the 10th to the 16th day of the seventh month, old style, there are
still persons found who every year clean and sweep the grave, and,
offering up flowers and incense, mourn for and console the spirit of the
dead.'"
223:1 See Erman, Westcar
Papyrus, Berlin, 1890, hieroglyphic transcript, pll. 9 and 10.
223:2 See Maspero,
Contes Égyptiens, pp. 29-46.
224:1 The uneducated
Muhammadan believes that man's fate is written upon his skull, and that
the sutures are the writing. No man, however, can read them. See the words
of Zayn al-Mawasif in Burton's Alf Laylah wa Laylah, vol. viii., p. 237.
224:2 See Pseudo-Callisthenes,
I. 12.
225:1 See Brit. Mus.
Papyrus, No. 10,474.
226:1 See Chabas, Le
Calendrier, p. 24.
228:1 See Chabas, op.
cit., p. 104.
228:2 The Eye of Sekhet
seems to have taken the form of noxious vapours in the fields at sunrise;
see Chabas, op. cit., p. 78.
228:3 I. 4.
229:1 quote from my
History of Alexander the Great, Cambridge, 1889, p. 5.
229:2 I.e., Sun,
Moon, Zeus, Kronos, Aphrodite, and Hermes; we must add Mars according to
Meusel's Greek text.
229:3 Published for the
first time by Kenyon, Catalogue of Greek Papyri vol. i. p. 132 ff.
230:1 Leyden Pap. V.
(ed. Leemans), col. xi., 1. 1 ff.
230:2 I.e., Chapters
LXXVII. to LXXXVIII.
231:1 I.e., Chapter
LXXVI. |