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Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

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Graham Hancock – <strong>FINGERPRINTS</strong> <strong>OF</strong> <strong>THE</strong> <strong>GODS</strong><br />

and climbed into it with Pyrrha. The king of the gods caused mighty rains<br />

to pour from heaven, flooding the greater part of the earth. All mankind<br />

perished in this deluge, save a few who had fled to the highest<br />

mountains. ‘It also happened at this time that the mountains of Thessaly<br />

were split asunder, and the whole country as far as the Isthmus and the<br />

Peloponnese became a single sheet of water.’<br />

Deucalion and Pyrrha floated over this sea in their box for nine days<br />

and nights, finally landing on Mount Parnassus. There, after the rains had<br />

ceased, they disembarked and sacrificed to the gods. In response Zeus<br />

sent Hermes to Deucalion with permission to ask for whatever he wished.<br />

He wished for human beings. Zeus then bade him take stones and throw<br />

them over his shoulder. The stones Deucalion threw became men, and<br />

those that Pyrrha threw became women. 37<br />

As the Hebrews looked back on Noah, so the Greeks of ancient<br />

historical times looked back upon Deucalion—as the ancestor of their<br />

nation and as the founder of numerous towns and temples. 38<br />

A similar figure was revered in Vedic India more than 3000 years ago.<br />

One day (the story goes)<br />

when a certain wise man named Manu was making his ablutions, he found in the<br />

hollow of his hand a tiny little fish which begged him to allow it to live. Taking pity<br />

on it he put it in a jar. The next day, however, it had grown so much bigger that<br />

he had to carry it to a lake. Soon the lake was too small. ‘Throw me into the sea,’<br />

said the fish [which was in reality a manifestation of the god Vishnu] ‘and I shall<br />

be more comfortable.’ Then he warned Manu of a coming deluge. He sent him a<br />

large ship, with orders to load it with two of every living species and the seeds of<br />

every plant, and then to go on board himself.’ 39<br />

Manu had only just carried out these orders when the ocean rose and<br />

submerged everything, and nothing was to be seen but Vishnu in his fish<br />

form—now a huge, one-horned creature with golden scales. Manu<br />

moored his ark to the horn of the fish and Vishnu towed it across the<br />

brimming waters until it came to rest on the exposed peak of ‘the<br />

Mountain of the North’: 40<br />

The fish said, ‘I have saved thee; fasten the vessel to a tree, that the water may not<br />

sweep it away while thou art on the mountain; and in proportion as the waters<br />

decrease thou shalt descend.’ Manu descended with the waters. The Deluge had<br />

carried away all creatures and Manu remained alone. 41<br />

With him, and with the animals and plants he had saved from destruction,<br />

began a new age of the world. After a year there emerged from the<br />

waters a woman who announced herself as ‘the daughter of Manu’. The<br />

couple married and produced children, thus becoming the ancestors of<br />

37<br />

The Gods of the Greeks, pp. 226-9.<br />

38<br />

World Mythology, pp. 130-1.<br />

39<br />

New Larousse Encyclopaedia of Mythology, p. 362.<br />

40<br />

Ibid., Satapatha Brahmana, (trans. Max Muller), cited in Atlantis: the Antediluvian<br />

World, p. 87.<br />

41<br />

Ibid. See also Folklore in the Old Testament, pp. 78-9.<br />

193

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