The
Sirius Mystery
Robert
K.G. Temple
Page
98 9
x 8
= 72
"(Re
is another form of the more familiar
Ra.)"
TheRA
Expeditions
Thor
Heyerdal
1970
Page
14
"The
largest reed boats in Peru were depicted as two deckers.
Quantities of water jars and other cargo were painted in on
the lower deck, as well as rows of little people, and on the
upper deck usually stood the earthly representative of the
sun-god the priest king, larger than all his companions,
surrounded by bird-headed men who were often hauling on
ropes to help the reed boat through the water. The tomb
paint-ings in Egypt also portrayed the sun-god's earthly
represen-tative, the priest-king
known as the pharaoh,
like an imposing giant on his reed boat, surrounded by
minature people, while
/
Page
15 /
the
same mythical men with bird heads towed the reed boat
through the water.
Reed
boats and bird-headed men seemed to go together, for some
inexplicable reason. For we had found them far out in the
Pacific Ocean too, on Easter Island, where the sun-god's
mask, the reed boats with sails, and the men with bird heads
formed an inseperable trio amomg the wall-paintings and
reliefs in the ancient ceremonial village of Orongo, with
its solar observ-atory. Easter Island, Peru, Egypt. These
strange parrallels could hardly have been found further
apart. Apparently they could hardly furnish better proof
that men must have arrived inde-pendently at the same time
in widely seperated places. Appar-ently. But what was even
more strange was that the aboriginal people of Easter Island
called the sun ra.
Ra
was the name for the sun on all the hundreds of Polynesian
islands, so it could be no mere accident.
Ra
was also the name for the sun in ancient
Egypt.
No word was more important to the ancient Egyptian
religion
than Ra,
the sun, the sun-god, ancestor of the
phar-aohs.
The one who sailed reed
boats, with an entourage of bird headed men. Giant
monolithic statues as high as houses had been erected in
honour of the sun-god's earthly
priest-kings
on Easter Island, in Peru and in ancient Egypt. And in all
three
places, solid rock had been sliced up like cheese into
blocks as big as railway trucks and fitted together in
stepped pyramids designed on an astronomical basis according
to the movements of the sun. All in honour of the common
ancestor, the sun, Ra.
Was there some connection, or was it just coincidence?
The
Magic Mountain
Page
252 continues /
As
they sat, behold, there came Hofrat Behrens through the
garden. He had taken his midday meal in the dining hall
to-day, folding his gigantic hands before his place at Frau
Salomon's table. After that he had probably been on the
terrace, making the suitable personal remark to each and
everybody, very likely displaying his trick with the
bootlaces for such of the guests as had not seen it. Now he
came lounging through the garden, wear-ing a check
tail-coat, instead of his smock, and his stiff hat on the
back of his head. He too had a cigar in his mouth, a very
black one, from which he was puffing great white clouds of
smoke. His head and face, with the over-heated purple
cheeks, the snub nose, watery blue eyes, and little clipped
moustache, looked small in proportion to the lank rather
warped and stooping figure, and the enormous hands and feet.
He was nervous; visibly started when he saw the cousins, and
seemed embarrassed over the neces-sity of passing them. But
he greeted them in his usual picturesque and expansive
fashion, with "Behold, behold, Timotheus!" go-ing on to
invoke the usual blessings on their metabolisms,
while /
He
prevented their rising from their seats, as they would have
done in his honour.
Page
253 /
he
prevented their rising from their seats, as they would have
done in his honour.
"Sit down, sit down. No formalities with a simple man like
me. Out of place too, you being my patients both of you. Not
necessary. No objection to the status quo" and he remained
stand-ing before them, holding the cigar between the index
and middle finger of his great right
hand. How's
your cabbage-leaf, Castorp? Let me see, I'm a connois-seur.
That's a good ash - what sort of brown beauty have you
there? "
Maria
Mancini, Postre de Banquett, Bremen, Herr Hofrat. Costs
little or nothing, nineteen
pfennigs in plain colours - but a bouquet you don't often
come across at the price. Sumatra-Havana wrapper, as you
see. I am very wedded to them. It is a medium mixture, very
fragrant, but cool on the tongue. It is a medium mixture,
very fragrant, but cool on the tongue. Suits it to leave the
ash long, I don't knock it off more than a couple of times.
She has her whims,of course, has Maria; but the inspection
must be very thorough, for she doesn't vary much, and draws
perfectly even. May I offer you
one?" "Thanks,
we can exchange." And they drew out their
cases.
"There's
a thourough-bred for you," the Hofrat said, as he displayed
his brand. "Temperament, you know, juicy, got some guts to
it. St. Felix, Brazil - I've always stuck to this sort.
Regular 'begone, dull care,' burns like brandy, has
something fulminating toward the end. But you need to
exercise a little cau-tion - can't light one from the other,
you know - more than a fellow can stand. However, better one
good mouthfull than any amount of nibbles. "
They
twirled their respective offerings between their fingers,
felt connoisseur-like the slender shapes that possessed, or
so one might think, some organic quality of life, with their
ribs formed by the diagonal parrallel edges of the raised
here and there porous wrapper, the exposed veins that seemed
to pulsate, the small in-equalities of the skin, the play of
light on planes and edges.
Hans
Castorp expressed it: A cigar like that is alive - Fact.
Once, at home, I had the idea of keeping Maria in an
air-tight tin box, to protect her from damp. Would you
believe it, she died! Inside of a week she perished -
nothing but leathery corpses left."
Reight
said wah Alizzed, being a being, being mysterious. These be
for thee scribe.
The
Book Of The Dead
E.A.Wallis
Budge 1899
Page
vii
"Although
mummification is so closely associated with the Egyptians,
there is no evidence of the practice during the earliest
period of the civilisation; and when it did develop,
prohibitive expense put it out of the range of the majority.
Excavation shows the body buried whole in an embryonic
position, as if in preparation for rebirth; it was
accompanied by food and implements necessary for the
journey. Later evidence indicates disposal of the dead by
burning or dismemberment, perhaps partly to scatter the
spirit of the deceased and dissipate any malevolent
influence which he might exercise on the living. Coinciding
with the transfer of the seat of royal power from Thebes to
Memphis, a quite different and contradictory approach to
burial was devised: that of embalment and mummification.
Preservation of the physical body was regarded as essential
to any continued existence... "
Alizzed
said the scribe, in unison with each other, why repeat that
which has passed this way before.
Repeat
after me said Zed Aliz, ours is not to reason why, ours is
but to do or ...
You
seem to forget, added Zed Aliz, we are looking for pattern,
particularly, numerical pattern.
Knowing
all the while the scribe had forgotten
nothing.
"In
The Book of the Dead the title of Lord of the Dead is
attributed to Osiris.
In
one of his aspects he was personification of the corn,
linking him to the annual cycle of birth, growth and death.
Then there is a separate legend of his apotheosis as God of
the Dead, with power to resurrect men from death as well as
corn from the ground. Osiris was of divine origin and
reigned as a king on earth; having reclaimed the Egyptians
from savagery and cannibalism, he gave them laws. He
introduced the cultivation of the vine and corn, travelling
to distant parts in order to spread their benefits. At
length he returned triumphantly to his homeland, but his
brother Set,
with seventy-two
accomplices, was bent on his ruin. He stealthily obtained
Osiris's measure-ments and constructed a highly decorated
coffer corresponding to the size of his brother. In the
middle of a feast he jestingly promised the coffer to the
man
/
Page
viii /
whom
it fitted exactly. Osiris
was the last man to try it, and had no sooner stretched
himself out than the conspirators surged forward, slammed
down the lid, nailed it soldered it with molten lead and
flung it into the Nile. The coffer floated out to sea,
finally drifting ashore at Byblus, where an erica tree
suddenly sprang up and enclosed the chest in its
trunk."
Here
yon scribe being unable to believe the half of it and as a
joke I think, writ 'erica' I have found it, and
after- wards, seeking for a sign, saw a gloria in excelsis
seven ringed rainbow, crossing a blood red dawn, born of a
estranged night sky.
"Isis,
the sister and wife of Osiris, heard of this occurrence and
travelled to Byblus in order to request the coffer. After
many tribulations she succeeded in recovering it, and then
hid it while on a visit to her son Horus. As
luck
would
have it, Set stumbled upon the coffer while out hunting
recognised the body, and cut it into
fourteen
pieces
which he scattered. Isis now set out to recover the limbs;
with the help of the gods she reconstituted the body of the
murdered Osiris, swathed it in linen bandages and performed
all the other requisite rites. As she fanned the cold body
with her wings Osiris revived and thenceforth reigned over
the land of the dead. 9
The Egyptian hopes by means of magical identification, to
reenact the rescucitation of Osiris.
Chapter
70 expresses
the hope that the physical body will germinate the spiritual
body (sahu); this can only come about if the physical body
is not corrupt, hence the importance of performing the
appropriate ceremonies and the obsessional fear
of decay:
Homage
to thee, O my divine father Osiris, thou hast being with
thy
members.
Thou didst not decay, thou didst not become worms, thou
didst not
become
corruption. . .putrefy. . .I shall not decay, I shall not
rot, I shall not
putrefy,I
shall not turn into words, I shall not see corruption. . . I
shall have
my
being; I shall live; I shall germinate, I shall wake up in
peace . . . the form of
my visage shall not disappear; mine ear shall not become
death. . . no
baleful
injury shall come upon me. My body shall be established, and
it shall
neither
fall into ruin nor be destroyed upon this earth.
10
Such
a desperate incantation speaks for itself.
Understanding
the terms used by the Egyptians to denot various aspects of
man is no mean undertaking. One exasperated commentator went
so far as to exclaim 'Here, as in everything relating to the
region of ideas or thought among the Egyptians, there is an
absolute want of system or logic'. 11 This is
scarcely
surprising when one considers that The Book of the Dead
covers a period from 1580 - 1090 B.C., thus antedating by
many centuries the first coherent speculations of the
Greeks; then again there was a tendency to retain the old in
conjunction with the new, rather than one system displacing
another. Readers are referred to the Wallis Budge
introduction, as well as to the views of Petrie, Breasted 13
and Brandon. 14 It is Brandon who
rightly
/ Page
ix /
points
out that terms such as ka
and ba
are
not products of abstract speculation but 'attempts to define
various areas of experience'. 15
Before
the deceased can gain admission to the imperishable kingdom
of Osiris, he must submit to a judgement. The Egyptians have
the distinction of being the first people to reach the
conception that a mans conduct in this life decisively
affects his post-mortem destiny; it is a landmark in the
history of ethics. The process is depicted in Chapter 125.
The deceased recites two declarations of
innocence, or negative confessions, ranging from broadly
moral assertions (Ihave not killed, poisoned, caused
weeping, ill-treated animals) to more ritual pronouncements
(I have not captured the birds of the gods, extinguished a
fire by force). The first declaration is made to Osiris, the
second to forty-two assembled deities, both being
accompanied by repeated protestations of purity. An
enumeration of the deceased's good deeds ensues, together
with a ritual test of the names of the parts of the door
through which he hopes to pass. Another scene is to be found
in Chapter 30,
where
the deceased appeals to his heart (ab, more or less
synonymous with conscience) not to bear witness against him
when he is weighed in the scales of virtue. Although the
special pleading implied in the self-justification of the
negative confession is inconsistent with an impartial
evaluation of the ab, the presence of purely moral as
opposed to ritual and superstitious elements mark a
significant advance. The
post-mortem conceptions of the Egyptians are certainly a
great deal more sophisticated than those found among the
primitives, although less subtle and psychologically
consistent than the doctrines of
The
Tibetan Book of the
Dead,
with which some readers may be familiar. The book is
nevertheless a fascinating cultural document which can
enrich one's appreciation of the customs and modes of
thought of some of our distant ancestors who also struggled
to come to terms with death.
Alizzed
said, death must concentrate the mind wonderfully,.
The
scribe preparing for a re-cap. Writ
Hurrah
for Ra, and three cheers for the re, in
repetition
The
scribe is having a blinder
'fourteen'
x
'seventy-two
accomplices'
14
x 72
1008
Joseph
And His Brothers
Thomas
Mann
Page
890
8
x 9 x 0 = 72 /
"...The
ancient records dazed her small and scheming brain, so that
she made up her mind to have Pharaoh stung by a serpent, to
instigate a palace revolt and set on the throne of the two
lands not Horus- Amenhotep, the rightful heir, who was
sickly anyhow, but the fruit of her own womb, Noferka-Ptah.
The
first steps toward the goal of overturning the dynasty,
bring-ing in a new time and elevating the nameless
near-favourite to the rank of goddess-mother had been
successfully taken. The plot was hatched in Pharaoh's house
of women; but through certain officials of the harem and
certain officers of the guard who had been eager for new
things, connections had been established, on the one hand
with the palace itself, where a number of friends, some of
them highly placed - a head charioteer of the god, the chief
of gens-d'-armes, the steward of the fruit stores, the
overseer of the King's herds of oxen, the head keeper of the
Kings ointments, and certain other's - were won over for the
enterprise; and on the other hand they got in touch with the
outer world of the residential city, where through the
offi-cer's wives the male kindred of Pharaoh's graces were
drawn in and engaged to stir up Wese's population with evil
talk against the old Re, who by now was nothing at all but
gold and silver and lapis lazuli.
In
all there were two
and seventy
conspirators privy to the plot. It was a proper
and a pregnant number, for there had been just
seventy-two
when red Set lured Usir into the chest. And these
seventy-two
in their turn had had good cosmic ground to be no more and
no less than that number. For it is just that
number of groups of five
weeks
which make up the three
hundred and
sixty
days of the year, not counting the odd days; and there are
just seventy-two
days in the dry fifth of the year, when the gauge shows that
the Nourisher has reached his lowest ebb, and the god sinks
into his grave. So where there is conspiracy
anywhere in the world it is requisite and customary for the
number of conspirators to be seventy-two. And
if the plot fail, the failure shows that if this number had
not been adhered to it would have failed even
worse.
Now the present plot did fail, although it had the benefit
of the best models and all the preliminary steps had been
taken with the greatest care. The head keeper of ungents had
even succeeded in purloining a magic script out of Pharaoh's
book-house and, follow-ing its instructions, had shaped
certain little wax images; these were smuggled about here
and there and were calculated to produce by magic a mental
confusion and bewitchment such as must assure the success of
the undertaking. It was decided to put poison in Pharaoh'
bread or his wine or in both; and to use the ensuing
confusion for a palace coup..."
Page 891.
8
x 9x 1 = 72
7
+ 2 = 9 /
"...
And then all at once the lid blew off. Possibly at the last
minute one of the seventy-two
'
seventy-two accomplices'
x 'fourteen
pieces' iz 1008
TheFingerprints
Of The Gods
Graham
Hancock
Page
274
"The
pre-eminent number in the code is
72.
To this is frequently added 36,
making
108,
and it is permissible to multiply
108
by 100 to get 10,800
or to divide it by 2 to get 54"
Good
news said Zed Aliz after a long long journey guess who's
arrived. Who's arrived said the scribe. Why, John of course,
said ZedAliz. Alizzed welcomed the good brother wah John and
introduced the rest of the blessed and loved brothers and
sisters, and when appropriate, invited him to help put
Humpty-Dumpty together again. Will you do that John said Zed
Aliz.I will do that with alacrity said wah John refreshing
himself by eating sticks of celery, one stick at a time,
upside down and back to front at that.
Clarity with alacrity John said Zed Aliz. John prepared to
put his spoke in. Will
that be just two pence of spoke in. said the
scribe.
Make it ninepence wah scribe, said the good brother. A
pence, and eight, and spell the eight azin
light
Thus,
the scribe dutifully recorded.
The
three then initiated a ceremony of reverance to the
supremely creative wholesome awesome majesty of the That.
And
Zed Aliz Zed did take yonder good brother John's appence,
and eight, and threw them off an anywhere somewhere, high
point, cum vantage point, of the Magic Mountain. The three
of them, and shadows n' all, of which there were now enough
to brighten the darkest day. All listening intently,
counting, the ling sound of the tinkle upon the one at a
time outcry of each
sound. After the return
of the eighth echo, Alizzed added it to the remaining
appence, whereupon the the Ark of the Golden Rainbow
appeared. Offering their
most heart rending joyous thanks for That, they marked the
spot with bunches of imaginary wild flowers, and gathering
the strength of their experience, began to move off, Indian
file style, forwards, and backwards, downwards and upwards.
It started to rain.
City
Of Revelation
John
Michell 1972
Chapter
14
The
Number
1080
Page
149
"In
contrast to the solar 666,
the association of the number 1080
are terrestrial and lunar, of water as opposed to fire. All
these canonical numbers have correspondences in many
different fields. 1080
expresses the influence of the moon on the forms and cycles
of nature, and relates the spirit of intuition, or the
guidance of the unconscious mind, to the moon-drawn tides in
the waters of the earth. It also has a particular reference
to the measurement of time and astronomical distances,
illustrated in the following
examples
There are 10,800
seconds in three hours; 1080
is the average number of breaths which a man takes in 1
hour.
1080
years is a twenty-fourth part of the great year, so it takes
1080
x 2 years for the sun to progress through one sign of the
zodiac. Heraclitus wrote that civilization is destroyed by
fire every 10,800
years, and 108,000
years is a quarter division or season of the Hindu Kali Yuga
of 432,000
years."
In
his World Systems Galileo wrote, 'The apparent
diameter of the sun at its average distance is about half a
degree of 30 minutes; this is 1.800
seconds, or 108,000
third order
divisions. . . . The
diameter of the sun contains the diameter of a star of the
sixth magnitude 2160
times (1080
x 2). ' Hipparchus counted 1080
stars of first magnitude brightness.
In metrology: 1080
feet = 888 remens
and 1080
square
mega-lithic
yards is equal to 888 square yards. Further instances of the
number 1080
in the ratios of meterology and sacred geometry are given in
earlier chapters.
There are 108
beads in the buddhist rosary, 10,800
stanzas in the Rigveda, each with 40 syllables, and
10,800
is the number of bricks in the Indian fire altar.
108º
is the angle formed by two sides of a pentagon, which is a
yin or lunar figure in contrast to the solar
hexagon
As
a lunar number: 1080
miles is the radius of the moon, and
108
/
Page
150 /
is
the atomic weight of the corresponding metal, silver. The
femine nature of the number is consistent with gematria,
for
1080
= "...The Holy Spirit."
= "... Fountain of
Wisdom."
= "... Semele, spelt in Phrygian-
Thracian inscriptions
..."the goddess who corresponds to Ge, the spirit of the
earth..."
1081
= "...the abyss, the bottomless pit
of
revelation.
As the number 666
suggests worldly and material things, the dominance of the
male, the procreative power of the sun so
1080
represents the humane and spiritual values of the opposite
pole. 666 is the conscious part of the mind ruled by the
intellect; 1080
is the depths below the level of consciousness, the dark
waters where the light of the sun is unknown, and the tides
respond to the influence of the moon. There is an affinity
between the monthly lunar cycle of the female, the power of
intuition and the waters of the earth that is expressed in
the number 1080,
the radius of the moon measured in miles. Prophetesses and
oracles are the natural channels for the spirit that is
generated through this number, for prophecy, though its gift
is not confined to women, is itself a female, yin
quality" "...(prophecy = 1082).
Holy wells were formerly attended by women, who passed on
their duties in the same manner as witches, from aunt to
niece. Oracles placed themselves by springs and over clefts
in the rock, where the spirit arising out of the earth might
induce the prophetic trance. The word Delphi means vagina,
for such places were conceived as orifices in the female
body of the earth. Women, mystics and lunatics are
particularly susceptible to the influence of the moon and
thus to the power of its corresponding number,
1080,
which may become manifest to them..."
"The
spirit of the fountain of wisdom and the beast from the
bottom-less pit have the same number and respond therefore
to the same evokation. Thus the mystic's vision and the
lunatics nightmare derive from the same source; the
individual is alone responsible for the different forms they
assume.
In the present age the meaning of
666
seems rather easier to grasp than that of
1080,
for while the intellect and the rule of authority are
familiar to all, the attributes of
1080
are less generally appreciated. There is a mystery about
this number of which, no doubt something further will be
understood within the next few years, as more people are
drawn to investigate a remarkable feature of ancient
science, that we have only recently begun to recognise.
1080
refer to a principle that links the dark forces of intuition
with underground water and
/
Page
151 /
with
inspiration received through the medium of the earth under
the influence of the moon. There is here an obvious poetic
correspon-dence, but the matter goes beyond that, for it now
appears that there is a real connection between the sites of
underground springs and the presence of a spirit that may
have a considerable influence on human and animal life. This
was certainly believed in the past, and the evidence now
available suggests that life in former ages was to a large
extent regulated in accordance with the tides and movements
of the mysterious telluric currents, which are associated
with the holy spirit through the number
1080.
The matter is in need of further exploration before any firm
conclusions are reached, but the following notes may
indicate a certain line of thought in connection with this
number.
On the south wall of St Mary's Chapel, Glastonbury, the
words JESU MARIA are carved into the stone. If these words
are written in Greek,..." ".. their value is
1080.
In the crypt beneath the Chapel there is an ancient well.
There is also a well in the pre-historic buried chamber on
which Chartes Cathedral is built, and the same feature is
commonly found at other sites of sanctity.
The area of the Stonehenge sarsen circle with diameter
100.8
feet is 108
square megalithic yards.
Guy
Underwood, the dowser, in his The Pattern of the
Past shows plans of the remarkable pattern of
underground water lines he detected below Stonehenge. He
found that the site was an important centre of convergence
for underground streams and fault lines from the surrounding
area, and he located a powerful buried spring near the
centre. Other dowsers who have investigated the site of
Stonehenge are in general agree-ment with Underwood's
conclusions.
Mr
B. Smithett, Secretary of the society of Dowsers, writes
that many practising dowsers, members of the Society and
others, report the presence of underground water below old
churches and other ancient sacred sites. In fact, it is now
believed by dowsers that not only churches, but all
prehistoric stone circles, standing stones, chambered mounds
and dolmens are placed above buried springs or at the
junction of underground streams, and that their sites may
have been determined by these considerations. Over the years
a number of articles on this subject have appeared in the
society's Journal, and research among the records
of local antiquarian societies reveals several others, the
result in all cases being independently obtained. For
example, in the 1933
Transactions of the Woolhope Club of Hereford an article by
Mr Walter Pritchard describes how he watched a dowser trace
the passage of a stream beneath
Arthur's
/
Page
152 /
Stone,
a dolmen at Dorstone, Hereford: he later investigated the
megalithic Four Stones near Old Radnor, finding it to mark
the intersection of two buried watercourses. Underwood's
observation, which has been confirmed by others, is that the
current associated with sacred and megalithic sites reverses
the direction of its flow in accordance with a monthly lunar
cycle.
These
results are obtained in many cases by professional men,
engaged by local councils and building contractors to locate
under-ground faults, lost waterpipes, drains, etc., who have
developed a justifiable confidence in their own accuracy. On
the subject of the connection between ancient sites and
underground water they are in general agreement. Some
important principle of ancient science and civilisation is
involved here, of which virtually nothing is now known. The
solution of the mystery lies in the complete understanding
of all the correspondences of the number
1080
and of the others that re-late to it for they illuminate an
aspect of reality which, for the lack of an adequate
language, has for too long been allowed to remain beyond the
comprehension of
science. In Revelation
and in the apocalyptic works of the Old Testament particular
emphasis is placed on the waters that flow beneath the holy
city or temple. They play an active part both in the
destruction of the old city and in the creation of the new.
Wherever there is a legend of the Temple, it is said that
the waters of the world spring from beneath it. Old maps
show the four rivers of paradise as a cross within a circle
with the holy city at the centre. Jung finds the arche-type
of the New Jerusalem expressed in the cloister with a
fountain at the centre. The formal gardens of Persia, which
are laid out as figures of cosmic geometry, always surround
a central spring of water. In a dry country this water is
conveyed with great labour and in-genuity in culverts, often
several miles in length, from the lower slopes of the hills.
All known ancient cosmic temples, at Jerusalem, Hieropolis,
Cnossos and elsewhere are found to have been built over
extensive labyrinths of chambers and watercourses. F. Bligh
Bond discovered a curious system of tunnels and culverts
below Glaston-bury Abbey. Plato's Atlantis, which is a
cosmic model, Carthage and other cities were arranged in
concentric rings of land and water-ways. In Egypt, Babylon
and China elaborate systems of canals were constructed on a
geometrical pattern, particlarly in the areas surrounding
the great temples. The carefully contrived balance between
areas of land and water was reflected in the pattern of
waterpipes beneath the temple itself. The monks of
Glastonbury made and maintained a wonderful canal system
alongside the prehistoric
/
Page
153 /
causeways
of the country around the Abbey, and these waterways have a
mystical association with King Arthur's legend.
In the third chapter of Man and Temple Dr Patai gives an
exellent account of the legends and rituals referring to the
waters beneath the Temple of Jerusalem and at other cosmic
centres. They were conceived as the female partner in the
annually celebrated marriage between the waters of the earth
and of the heavens. When fertilised, they conveyed benefits
to all the world.
'Quite
a number of legends tell in an interesting variety of
versions about
this subterranean network of irrigation canals that issue
from
underneath
the Temple and bring to each country its proper
power
to
grow its particular assortment of fruits. If a tree were
planted in
the
temple over a spot whence the water-vein issued forth to a
certain
country, it would grow fruit peculiar to that country; this
was known
to
King Solomon, who accordingly planted in the Temple
specimens
of fruit trees of the whole earth.
The
waters that issued forth from the Temple had the
wonderful
property
of bestowing fertility and health. Legends have it as
in
days
of old so again in the days of the messiah "all the waters
of
creation"will again spring up from under the threshold of
the Temple,
will increase and grow mighty as they as they pour all
over
the land.'
The
stone at the centre of the earth in the Temple of Jerusalem
was supposed to press down the surging waters of the earth,
and the Altar stone at Stonehenge, which could at one time
have stood erect, may have a similar function. The waters
beneath the Temple were not mythical, nor are the stories of
the advantages to be gained from their proper union with the
cosmic element in any way exaggerated. These legends are
poetically true, they have a deep philosophical and
psychological meaning and they recall a vanished world order
founded on cosmic principles. But more than that, they
record a former system of natural science, practised by men
who understood the earth as a living creature, the mother of
all her inhabitants, not only in a poetic sense but
literally as a fact of nature. The prosperity of all life on
the planet was considered to be a reflection of the earth's
own state of health and morale, which was naturally of the
greatest concern to men, the intelligent parasites.
According to the philosophy on which the forgotten science
of antiquity was based, the earth must be regarded as an
essentially female organism, being partic-larly susceptible
to the influence of the moon, and craving seasonal
intercourse with the fertilizing solar shaft.
Every
year therefore, the earth was made the bride of the heavens,
the terrestrial flow was animated by the radiant power of
the sun,
/
Page154 /
All
the correspondences of 1080
were brought together with those of
666;
the opposites were united in the Temple as in Noah's Ark. At
Jerusalem the great ceremony of the year, attended by vast,
exited crowds, took place at the start of the rainy season,
and was intended to promote the union between the upper and
the lower waters. But its purpose was not simply to invoke
the fertilising autumn rains, for the marriage of the
elements prompted a similar desire among the congrgation at
the temple, which spread along the chain of magical
correspondences, infecting all nature with the urge for
union.
Evidently the Temple functioned as the generator and
transmitter of a form of energy which was beneficial to the
earth and all its in-habitants. This was not the belief of
idiots or degenerate savages. To the Jews and to all the
civilised people who possessed the institution of the Temple
it was a self evident fact, which they percieved with their
own eyes. A spirit was generated at the Temple; they saw the
operation, felt its power and observed its effect in the
increased fertility of the countryside. We may speak of
sympathetic magic, mass delusion and invent other names for
phenomena which we are not able to explain, but the fact is
that the performances at the temple led to the actual
invocation of a spirit that provoked a physical reaction
throughout nature.
The
numbers with which we are dealing were once the instruments
of elemental control. Their first and most essential
references is to the natural forces of the cosmos, to the
spirits that are behind all manifestations in wind and
water, as well as in the less perceptible electro-magnetic
currents of the earth and atmosphere. The earliest passages
in the Iching express the relationships between the
principles in terms of cosmic forces. So it is in the oldest
forms of myth and in the basic traditions of the cabala. The
most ancient art, architecture, mythology is always more
impersonal and funda-mental than that which came later. In
the case of the I Ching, suc-cessive generations of scholars
widened the interpretation of the symbols to provide canons
of deportment and etiquette, their original elemental
significance becoming obscured in the process.
The Temple was not merely a symbol of the cosmic order; it
was an instrument designed to fuse the spirit of the sun,
666,
with the soul of the earth, 1080.
In the same way the waters and catcombs beneath the Temple
were not intended simply to represent the water of
inspiration as a monument to the sanctity of the spot, or
for any other such picturesque purpose. they played a
physical part in the process of fusion as the medium through
which the current of fertility, raised in the Temple, was
transmitted across the landscape.
/
Page
155 /
As
the waters beneath the Temple nourish the earth, so the
spiritual water of revelation rises within the human mind.
These two aspects of fertility were formerly linked with the
power of the moon and classified under the number
1080.
But this number, like all others, has its darkside. The
spirit of the waters" "...(=
1007),
known to the cabalists as the bride" "...(=1006), is also
the mother of a hideous, elemental brood, the atavistic gods
of the underworld, represented by St John as the beast from
the bottomless pit (1081).
In Ezekiel 8, the prophet descends through a secret door
into a chamber below the Temple of Jerusalem 'and behold
every form of creeping things, and abominable beasts, and
all the idols of the house of Israel, portrayed upon the
wall round about'. He hears a voice, 'Son of man, hast thou
seen what the ancients of the house of Israel do in the
dark, every man in the chambers of his imagery ? for they
say, The Lord seeth us not.' Here the sinister cavern
beneath the Temple represents the deep recesses of the mind,
inhabited by the carefully nurtured monsters of individual
fantasy. But the beast in the Cretan labyrinth was no less
real than the crocodiles that inhabited the
subterranean
vaults
of Egyptian temples. That these creatures are also natives
of the imagination is proved by the rumour, endemic in New
York, that the city's sewers are haunted by giant
alligators, a notion which is poetically true of all drains
and tunnels, If not physically so in this particular case.
Under the regime of the temple poetic or psychological
reality was reproduced on the physical plane in accordance
with a system of magical correspondences which we now find
scarcely conceivable, for we are yet infants in the study of
the mind, impeded by the linear and materialistic habits of
thought to which we have been conditioned. Within each man
lies the hidden city, the ideal model of the cosmos, a
standard of reference in every department of life, composed
of all the numbers in creation. This is the city of Plato's
republic:
But perhaps there is a pattern set up in the heavens for one
who
desires to see it and, having seen it, to find one in
himself.' "
At
camp that night the Zed Aliz took an eight, and a one and
fusing them together created fire
The
universe is as large as the mind writ the scribe, without a
second thought.
TheFingerprints
Of The Gods
Graham
Hancock
Page
274
"The
pre-eminent number in the code is
72.
To this is frequently added 36,
making
108,
and it is permissible to multiply
108
by 100 to get 10,800
or to
divide
it by 2 to
get 54,
which may then be multiplied by 10 and expressed
as
540 (or
as 54,000,
or as 540,000,
or as 5,400,000,
and so on).
Also highly
significant is 2160
( the number of years required for the
equinoctial
point
to transit one zodiacal
/
Page
275 /
constellation),
which is sometimes multiplied
by 10
and by factors of ten (to give 216,000,
2,160,000,
and so on)
"
and
sometimes
by 2 to give 4320,
or 43,200,
or 432,000,
or 4,320,000,ad
infinitum."

TheFingerprints
Of The Gods
Graham
Hancock
Page
273
"These he joined to the
360 days of which the year then consisted
(emphasis
added)."
"Elsewhere
the myth informs us that the 360
- day year consists of "12
months of 30 days each".
Note
6
And
in general,as Sellers observes ,
"phrases
are used which prompt simple mental calculations and
an
attention
to numbers ".
note 7
"Elsewhere
the myth informs us that the 360-day
year consists of '12
months of 30
days each'.
Thus
far we have been provided with three of Seller's
precessional: 360,
12
and 30. The
fourth number,which occurs later in the text, is by far the
most important. As we saw in Chapter
Nine,
the evil deity known as Set
led a group of conspirators in a plot to kill
Osiris. The
number of these conspirators was
72."
Set
x
Osiris
36
Set
+ Osiris
9
Thomas
was 80 when he died said Zed Aliz. I wonder if hiz A to
Z was nearer 81 writ the scribe.
The
Magic Mountain
Thomas
Mann 1875-1955
Page
888
"Now
Isis, the Great One of the island, Eset, a millionfold
fertile in guile, felt that her moment was come. Her wisdom
embraced heaven and earth, like that of the old
superannuated old Re himself. But there was one thing she
did not know or command, and the lack of
it
/Page
889 /
hampered
her: she did not know the last, most secret name of Re, his
very final one, knowledge of which would give power over
him. Re had very many names, each one more secret than the
one before, yet not utterly hopeless to find out, save one,
the very last and might-iest. That he still witheld; whoso
could make him name it, he could compel him and outdistance
him and put him under his feet.
Therefore Eset conceived and devised a serpent, which should
sting Re in his golden flesh."
Simple
enough mistake to write servant writ the
scribe
"Then
the intolerable pain of the sting, which only great Eset
could cure who made the worm, would force Re to tell her his
name. Now as she contrived it so was it fulfilled. The old
Re was stung, and in torments was forced to come out with
one of his secret names after another, always hoping that
the goddess would be satisfied before they got to the last
one. But she kept on to the uttermost, until he had named
her the most secret of all, and the power of her knowledge
over him was absolute. After that it cost her nothing to
heal his wound; but he only got a little better, within the
wretched limits in which so old a creature can; and soon
thereafter he gave up and joined the great
majority."
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