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

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 />

contents, remained enclosed in a fortress on the ‘eastern frontier’ of<br />

Egypt until a great many years after Ra’s ascent to heaven. When Geb<br />

came to power he ordered that it should be brought to him and unsealed<br />

in his presence. In the instant that the box was opened a bolt of fire<br />

(described as the ‘breath of the divine serpent’) ushered from it, struck<br />

dead all Geb’s companions and gravely burned the god-king himself. 12<br />

It is tempting to wonder whether what we are confronted by here might<br />

not be a garbled account of a malfunctioning man-made device: a<br />

confused, awe-stricken recollection of a monstrous instrument devised by<br />

the scientists of a lost civilization. Weight is added to such extreme<br />

speculations when we remember that this is by no means the only golden<br />

box in the ancient world that functioned like a deadly and unpredictable<br />

machine. It has a number of quite unmissable similarities to the Hebrews’<br />

enigmatic Ark of the Covenant (which also struck innocent people dead<br />

with bolts of fiery energy, which also was ‘overlaid round about with<br />

gold’, and which was said to have contained not only the two tablets of<br />

the Ten Commandments but ‘the golden pot that had manna, and<br />

Aaron’s rod.’) 13<br />

A proper look at the implications of all these weird and wonderful<br />

boxes (and of other ‘technological’ artefacts referred to in ancient<br />

traditions) is beyond the scope of this book. For our purposes here it is<br />

sufficient to note that a peculiar atmosphere of dangerous and quasitechnological<br />

wizardry seems to surround many of the gods of the<br />

Heliopolitan Ennead.<br />

Isis, for example (wife and sister of Osiris and mother of Horus) carries<br />

a strong whiff of the science lab. According to the Chester Beatty Papyrus<br />

in the British Museum she was ‘a clever woman ... more intelligent than<br />

countless gods ... She was ignorant of nothing in heaven and earth.’ 14<br />

Renowned for her skilful use of witchcraft and magic, Isis was particularly<br />

remembered by the Ancient Egyptians as ‘strong of tongue’, that is being<br />

in command of words of power ‘which she knew with correct<br />

pronunciation, and halted not in her speech, and was perfect both in<br />

giving the command and in saying the word’. 15 In short, she was believed,<br />

by means of her voice alone, to be capable of bending reality and<br />

overriding the laws of physics.<br />

These same powers, though perhaps in greater degree, were attributed<br />

to the wisdom god Thoth who although not a member of the Heliopolitan<br />

Ennead is recognized in the Turin Papyrus and other ancient records as<br />

the sixth (or sometimes as the seventh) divine pharaoh of Egypt. 16<br />

12 Ibid.<br />

13 Hebrews 9:4. For details of the Ark’s baleful powers see Graham Hancock, The Sign<br />

and the Seal, Mandarin, London, 1993, Chapter 12, p. 273ff.<br />

14 Cited in Egyptian Myths, p. 44.<br />

15 Sir E. A. Wallis Budge, Egyptian Magic, Kegan Paul, Trench, London, 1901, p. 5; The<br />

Gods of the Egyptians, volume II, p. 214.<br />

16 New Larousse Encyclopaedia of Mythology, p. 27. If Set’s usurpation is included as a<br />

377

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