
  
  Index 
  Previous  
  Next 
  
  
  p. 85
  Fishes, Insects, 
  Animals, Reptiles and Birds
  Part One
  THE creatures inhabiting the 
  water, air, and earth were held in veneration by all races of antiquity. 
  Realizing that visible bodies are only symbols of invisible forces, the 
  ancients worshiped the Divine Power through the lower kingdoms of Nature, 
  because those less evolved and more simply constituted creatures responded 
  most readily to the creative impulses of the gods. The sages of old studied 
  living things to a point of realization that God is most perfectly understood 
  through a knowledge of His supreme handiwork--animate and inanimate Nature.
  Every existing creature 
  manifests some aspect of the intelligence or power of the Eternal One, who can 
  never be known save through a study and appreciation of His numbered but 
  inconceivable parts. When a creature is chosen, therefore, to symbolize to the 
  concrete human mind some concealed abstract principle it is because its 
  characteristics demonstrate this invisible principle in visible action. 
  Fishes, insects, animals, reptiles, and birds appear in the religious 
  symbolism of nearly all nations, because the forms and habits of these 
  creatures and the media in which they exist closely relate them to the various 
  generative and germinative powers of Nature, which were considered as 
  prima-facie evidence of divine omnipresence.
  The early philosophers and 
  scientists, realizing that all life has its origin in water, chose the fish as 
  the symbol of the life germ. The fact that fishes are most prolific makes the 
  simile still more apt. While the early priests may not have possessed the 
  instruments necessary to analyze the spermatozoon, they concluded by deduction 
  that it resembled a fish.
  Fishes were sacred to the 
  Greeks and Romans, being connected with the worship of Aphrodite (Venus). An 
  interesting survival of pagan ritualism is found in the custom of eating fish 
  on Friday. Freya, in whose honor the day was named, was the 
  Scandinavian Venus, and this day was sacred among many nations to the goddess 
  of beauty and fecundity. This analogy further links the fish with the 
  procreative mystery. Friday is also sacred to the followers of the Prophet 
  Mohammed.
  The word nun means both 
  fish and growth, and as Inman says: "The Jews were led to victory by the Son 
  of the Fish whose other names were Joshua and Jesus (the Savior). Nun 
  is still the name of a female devotee" of the Christian faith. Among early 
  Christians three fishes were used to symbolize the Trinity, and the fish is 
  also one of the eight sacred symbols of the great Buddha. It is also 
  significant that the dolphin should be sacred to both Apollo (the Solar 
  Savior) and Neptune. It was believed that this fish carried shipwrecked 
  sailors to heaven on its back. The dolphin was accepted by the early 
  Christians as an emblem of Christ, because the pagans had viewed this 
  beautiful creature as a friend and benefactor of man. The heir to the throne 
  of France, the Dauphin, may have secured his title from this ancient 
  pagan symbol of the divine preservative power. The first advocates of 
  Christianity likened converts to fishes, who at the time of baptism "returned 
  again into the sea of Christ."
  Primitive peoples believed the 
  sea and land were inhabited by strange creatures, and early books on zoology 
  contain curious illustrations of composite beasts, reptiles, and fishes, which 
  did not exist at the time the mediæval authors compiled these voluminous 
  books. In the ancient initiatory rituals of the Persian, Greek, and Egyptian 
  Mysteries the priests disguised themselves as composite creatures, thereby 
  symbolizing different aspects of human consciousness. They used birds and 
  reptiles as emblems of their various deities, often creating forms of 
  grotesque appearance and assigning to them imaginary traits, habits, and 
  places of domicile, all of which were symbolic of certain spiritual and 
  transcendental truths thus concealed from the profane. The phnix made 
  its nest of incense and flames. The unicorn had the body of a horse, 
  the feet of an elephant, and the tail of a wild boar. The upper half of the 
  centaur's body was human and the lower half equine. The pelican of 
  the Hermetists fed its young from its own breast, and to this bird were 
  assigned other mysterious attributes which could have been true only 
  allegorically.
  Though regarded by many writers 
  of the Middle Ages as actual living creatures, none of these--the pelican 
  excepted--ever existed outside the symbolism of the Mysteries. Possibly they 
  originated in rumors of animals then little known. In the temple, however, 
  they became a reality, for there they signified the manifold characteristics 
  of man's nature. The mantichora had certain points in common with the 
  hyena; the unicorn may have been the single-horned rhinoceros. To the 
  student of the secret wisdom these composite animals. and birds simply 
  represent various forces working in the invisible worlds. This is a point 
  which nearly all writers on the subject of mediæval monsters seem to have 
  overlooked. (See Vlyssis Aldrovandi's Monstrorum Historia, 1642, and 
  Physica Curiosa, by P. Gaspare Schotto, 1697.)
  There are also legends to the 
  effect that long before the appearance of human beings there existed a race or 
  species of composite creatures which was destroyed by the gods. The temples of 
  antiquity preserved their own historical records and possessed information 
  concerning the prehistoric world that has never been revealed to the 
  uninitiated. According to these records, the human race evolved from a species 
  of creature that partook somewhat of the nature of an amphibian, for at that 
  time primitive man had the gills of a fish and was partly covered with scales. 
  To a limited degree, the human embryo demonstrates the possibility of such a 
  condition. As a result of the theory of man's origin in water, the fish was 
  looked upon as the progenitor of the human family. This gave rise to the 
  ichthyolatry of the Chaldeans, Phnicians, and Brahmins. The American Indians 
  believe that the waters of lakes, rivers, and oceans are inhabited by a 
  mysterious people, the "Water Indians."
  The fish has been used as an 
  emblem of damnation; but among the Chinese it typified contentment and good 
  fortune, and fishes appear on many of their coins. When Typhon, or Set, the 
  Egyptian evil genius, had divided the body of the god Osiris into fourteen 
  parts, he cast one part into the river Nile, where, according to Plutarch, it 
  was devoured by three fishes--the lepidotus (probably the 
  lepidosiren), the phagrus, and the oxyrynchus (a form of 
  pike). For this reason the Egyptians would not eat the flesh of these fishes, 
  believing that to do so would be to devour the body of their god. When used as 
  a symbol of evil, the fish represented the earth (man's lower nature) and the 
  tomb (the sepulcher of the Mysteries). Thus was Jonah three days in the belly 
  of the "great fish," as Christ was three days in the tomb.
  Several early church fathers 
  believed that the "whale" which swallowed Jonah was the symbol of God the 
  Father, who, when the hapless prophet was thrown overboard, accepted Jonah 
  into His own nature until a place of safety was reached. The story of Jonah is 
  really a legend of initiation into the Mysteries, and the "great fish" 
  represents the darkness of ignorance which engulfs man when he is thrown over 
  the side of the ship (is born) into the sea (life). The custom of building 
  ships in the form of fishes or birds, common in ancient times, could give rise 
  to the story, and mayhap Jonah was merely picked up by
  
  
  THE FIRST INCARNATION, OR MATSYA AVATAR, OF VISHNU.
 
  From Picart's Religious 
  Ceremonials.
  The fish has often been 
  associated with the World Saviors. Vishnu, the Hindu Redeemer, who takes upon 
  himself ten forms for the redemption of the universe, was expelled from the 
  mouth of a fish in his first incarnation. Isis, while nursing the infant Horus, 
  is often shown with a fish on her headdress. Oannes, the Chaldean Savior 
  (borrowed from the Brahmins), is depicted with the head and body of a fish, 
  from which his human form protrudes at various points. Jesus was often 
  symbolized by a fish. He told His disciples that they should became "fishers 
  of men." The sign of the fish was also the first monogram of the Christians. 
  The mysterious Greek name of Jesus, ΙΧΘΥΣ, means "a fish." The fish was 
  accepted as a symbol of the Christ by a number of early canonized church 
  fathers. St. Augustine likened the Christ to a fish that had been broiled, and 
  it was also pointed out that the flesh of that Fish was the food of righteous 
  and holy men.
  
  p. 86
  another vessel and carried into 
  port, the pattern of the ship causing it to be called a "great fish." ("Veritatis 
  simplex oratio est!") More probably the "whale" of Jonah is based upon the 
  pagan mythological creature, hippocampus, part horse and part dolphin, 
  for the early Christian statues and carvings show the composite creature and 
  not a true whale.
  It is reasonable to suppose 
  that the mysterious sea serpents, which, according to the Mayan and Toltec 
  legends, brought the gods to Mexico were Viking or Chaldean ships, built in 
  the shape of composite sea monsters or dragons. H. P. Blavatsky advances the 
  theory that the word cetus, the great whale, is derived from keto, 
  a name for the fish god, Dagon, and that Jonah was actually confined in a cell 
  hollowed out in the body of a gigantic statue of Dagon after he had been 
  captured by Phnician sailors and carried to one of their cities. There is no 
  doubt a great mystery in the gigantic form of cetus, which is still 
  preserved as a constellation.
  According to many scattered 
  fragments extant, man's lower nature was symbolized by a tremendous, awkward 
  creature resembling a great sea serpent, or dragon, called leviathan. 
  All symbols having serpentine form or motion signify the solar energy in one 
  of its many forms. This great creature of the sea therefore represents the 
  solar life force imprisoned in water and also the divine energy coursing 
  through the body of man, where, until transmuted, it manifests itself as a 
  writhing, twisting monster---man's greeds, passions, and lusts. Among the 
  symbols of Christ as the Savior of men are a number relating to the mystery of 
  His divine nature concealed within the personality of the lowly Jesus.
  The Gnostics divided the nature 
  of the Christian Redeemer into two parts--the one Jesus, a mortal man; the 
  other, Christos, a personification of Nous, the principle of Cosmic 
  Mind. Nous, the greater, was for the period of three years (from 
  baptism to crucifixion) using the fleshly garment of the mortal man (Jesus). 
  In order to illustrate this point and still conceal it from the ignorant, many 
  strange, and often repulsive, creatures were used whose rough exteriors 
  concealed magnificent organisms. Kenealy, in his notes on the Book of Enoch, 
  observes: "Why the caterpillar was a symbol of the Messiah is evident; 
  because, under a lowly, creeping, and wholly terrestrial aspect, he conceals 
  the beautiful butterfly-form, with its radiant wings, emulating in its varied 
  colors the Rainbow, the Serpent, the Salmon, the Scarab, the Peacock, and the 
  dying Dolphin * * *.
  INSECTS
  In 1609 Henry Khunrath's 
  Amphitheatrum Sapientiæ Æternæ was published. Eliphas Levi declared that 
  within its pages are concealed all the great secrets of magical philosophy. A 
  remarkable plate in this work shows the Hermetic sciences being attacked by 
  the bigoted and ignorant pedagogues of the seventeenth century. In order to 
  express his complete contempt for his slanderers, Khunrath made out of each a 
  composite beast, adding donkey ears to one and a false tail to another. He 
  reserved the upper part of the picture for certain petty backbiters whom he 
  gave appropriate forms. The air was filled with strange creatures--great 
  dragon flies, winged frogs, birds with human heads, and other weird forms 
  which defy description--heaping venom, gossip, spite, slander, and other forms 
  of persecution upon the secret arcanum of the wise. The drawing indicated that 
  their attacks were ineffectual. Poisonous insects were often used to symbolize 
  the deadly power of the human tongue.
  Insects of all kinds were also 
  considered emblematic of the Nature spirits and dæmons, for both were believed 
  to inhabit the atmosphere. Mediæval drawings showing magicians in the act of 
  invoking spirits, often portray the mysterious powers of the other world, 
  which the conjurer has exorcised, as appearing to him in composite part-insect 
  forms. The early philosophers apparently held the opinion that the disease 
  which swept through communities in the form of plagues were actually living 
  creatures, but instead of considering a number of tiny germs they viewed the 
  entire plague as one individuality and gave it a hideous shape to symbolize 
  its destructiveness. The fact that plagues came in the air caused an insect or 
  a bird to be used as their symbol.
  Beautiful symmetrical forms 
  were assigned to all natural benevolent conditions or powers, but to unnatural 
  or malevolent powers were assigned contorted and abnormal figures. The Evil 
  One was either hideously deformed or else of the nature of certain despised 
  animals. A popular superstition during the Middle Ages held that the Devil had 
  the feet of a rooster, while the Egyptians assigned to Typhon (Devil) the body 
  of a hog.
  The habits of the insects were 
  carefully studied. Therefore the ant was looked upon as emblematic of industry 
  and foresight, as it stored up supplies for the winter and also had strength 
  to move objects many times its own weight. The locusts which swept down in 
  clouds, and in some parts of Africa and Asia obscured the sun and destroyed 
  every green thing, were considered fit emblems of passion, disease, hate, and 
  strife; for these emotions destroy all that is good in the soul of man and 
  leave a barren desert behind them. In the folklore of various nations, certain 
  insects are given special significance, but the ones which have received 
  world-wide veneration and consideration ate the scarab, the king of the insect 
  kingdom; the scorpion, the great betrayer; the butterfly, the emblem of 
  metamorphosis; and the bee, the symbol of industry.
  The Egyptian scarab is one of 
  the most remarkable symbolic figures ever conceived by the mind of man. It was 
  evolved by the erudition of the priestcraft from a simple insect which, 
  because of its peculiar habits and appearance, properly symbolized the 
  strength of the body, the resurrection of the soul, and the Eternal and 
  Incomprehensible Creator in His aspect as Lord of the Sun. E. A. Wallis Budge 
  says, in effect, of the worship of the scarab by the Egyptians:
  "Yet another view held in 
  primitive times was that the sky was a vast meadow over which a huge beetle 
  crawled, pushing the disk of the sun before him. This beetle was the Sky-god, 
  and, arguing from the example of the beetle (Scarabæus sacer), which 
  was observed to roll along with its hind legs a ball that was believed to 
  contain its eggs, the early Egyptians thought that the ball of the Sky-god 
  contained his egg and that the sun was his offspring. Thanks, however, to the 
  investigations of the eminent entomologist, Monsieur J. H. Fabre, we now know 
  that the ball which the Scarabæus sacer rolls along contains not its 
  eggs, but dung that is to serve as food for its egg, which it lays in a 
  carefully prepared place."
  Initiates of the Egyptian 
  Mysteries were sometimes called scarabs; again, lions and panthers. The scarab 
  was the emissary of the sun, symbolizing light, truth, and regeneration. Stone 
  scarabs, called heart scarabs, about three inches long, were placed in the 
  heart cavity of the dead when that organ was removed to be embalmed separately 
  as part of the process of mummifying. Some maintain that the stone beetles 
  were merely wrapped in the winding cloths at the time of preparing the body 
  for eternal preservation. The following passage concerning this appears in the 
  great Egyptian book of initiation, The Book of the Dead: "And behold, 
  thou shalt make a scarab of green stone, which shalt be placed in the breast 
  of a man, and it shall perform for him, 'the opening of the mouth.'" The 
  funeral rites of many nations bear a striking resemblance to the initiatory 
  ceremonies of their Mysteries.
  Ra, the god of the sun, 
  had three important aspects. As the Creator of the universe he was symbolized 
  by the head of a scarab and was called Khepera, which signified the 
  resurrection of the soul and a new life at the end of the mortal span. The 
  mummy cases of the Egyptian dead were nearly always ornamented with scarabs. 
  Usually one of these beetles, with outspread wings, was painted on the mummy 
  case directly over the breast of the dead. The finding of such great numbers 
  of small stone scarabs indicates that they were a favorite article of 
  adornment among the Egyptians. Because of its relationship to the sun, the 
  scarab symbolized the divine part of man's nature. The fact that its beautiful 
  wings were concealed under its glossy shell typified the winged soul of man 
  hidden within its earthly sheath. The Egyptian soldiers were given the scarab 
  as their special symbol because the ancients believed that these creatures 
  were all of the male sex and consequently appropriate emblems of virility, 
  strength, and courage.
  Plutarch noted the fact that 
  the scarab rolled its peculiar ball of dung backwards, while the insect itself 
  faced the opposite direction. This made it an especially fitting symbol for 
  the sun, because this orb (according to Egyptian astronomy) was rolling from 
  west to east, although apparently moving in the opposite direction. An 
  Egyptian allegory states that the sunrise is caused by the scarab unfolding
  
  
  
  THE MANTICHORA.
   
  From Redgrove's Bygone 
  Beliefs.
  The most remarkable of 
  allegorical creatures was the mantichora, which Ctesias describes as 
  having aflame-colored body, lionlike in shape, three rows of teeth, a human 
  head and ears, blue eyes, a tail ending in a series of spikes and stings, 
  thorny and scorpionlike, and a voice which sounded like the blare of trumpets. 
  This synthetic quadruped ambled into mediæval works on natural history, but, 
  though seriously considered, had never been seen, because it inhabited 
  inaccessible regions and consequently was difficult to locate.
  
  
  
  ROYAL EGYPTIAN SCARAB.
   
  From Hall's Catalogue of 
  Egyptian Scarabs, Etc., in the British Museum.
  The flat under side of a scarab 
  usually bears an inscription relating to the dynasty during which it was cut. 
  These scarabs were sometimes used as seals. Some were cut from ordinary or 
  precious stones; others were made of clay, baked and glazed. Occasionally the 
  stone scarabs were also glazed. The majority of the small scarabs are pierced 
  as though originally used as beads. Some are so hard that they will cut glass. 
  In the picture above, A shows top and side views of the scarab, and B and B 
  the under surface with the name of Men-ka-Ra within the central cartouche.
  
  p. 87
  its wings, which stretch out as 
  glorious colors on each side of its body--the solar globe--and that when it 
  folds its wings under its dark shell at sunset, night follows. Khepera, 
  the scarab-headed aspect of Ra, is often symbolized riding through the 
  sea of the sky in a wonderful ship called the Boat of the Sun.
  The scorpion is the symbol of 
  both wisdom and self-destruction. It was called by the Egyptians the creature 
  accursed; the time of year when the sun entered the sign of Scorpio marked the 
  beginning of the rulership of Typhon. When the twelve signs of the zodiac were 
  used to represent the twelve Apostles (although the reverse is true), the 
  scorpion was assigned to Judas Iscariot--the betrayer.
  The scorpion stings with its 
  tail, and for this reason it has been called a backbiter, a false and 
  deceitful thing. Calmet, in his Dictionary of the Bible, declares the 
  scorpion to be a fit emblem of the wicked and the symbol of persecution. The 
  dry winds of Egypt are said to be produced by Typhon, who imparts to the sand 
  the blistering heat of the infernal world and the sting of the scorpion. This 
  insect was also the symbol of the spinal fire which, according to the Egyptian 
  Mysteries, destroyed man when it was permitted to gather at the base of his 
  spine (the tail of the scorpion).The red star Antares in the back of 
  the celestial scorpion was considered the worst light in the heavens. Kalb 
  al Akrab, or the heart of the scorpion, was called by the ancients the 
  lieutenant or deputy of Mars. (See footnote to Ptolemy's Tetrabiblos.)
  Antares was believed to impair the eyesight, often causing blindness if 
  it rose over the horizon when a child was born. This may refer again to the 
  sand storm, which was capable of blinding unwary travelers.
  The scorpion was also the 
  symbol of wisdom, for the fire which it controlled was capable of illuminating 
  as well as consuming. Initiation into the Greater Mysteries among the pagans 
  was said to take place only in the sign of the scorpion. In the papyrus of 
  Ani (The Book of the Dead), the deceased likens his soul to a 
  scorpion, saying: "I am a swallow, I am that scorpion, the daughter of Ra!" 
  Elizabeth Goldsmith, in her treatise on Sex Symbolism, states that the 
  scorpions were a "symbol of Selk, the Egyptian goddess of writing, and also 
  [were] revered by the Babylonians and Assyrians as guardians of the gateway of 
  the sun. Seven scorpions were said to have accompanied Isis when she searched 
  for the remains of Osiris scattered by Set" (Typhon).
  In his Chaldean Account of 
  the Genesis, George Smith, copying from the cuneiform cylinders, in 
  describing the wanderings of the hero Izdubar (Nimrod), throws some 
  light on the scorpion god who guards the sun. The tablet which he translated 
  is not perfect, but the meaning is fairly clear: "* * * who each day guard the 
  rising sun. Their crown was at the lattice of heaven, under hell their feet 
  were placed [the spinal column]. The scorpion man guarded the gate, burning 
  with terribleness, their appearance was like death, the might of his fear 
  shook the forest. At the rising of the sun and the setting of the sun, they 
  guarded the sun; Izdubar saw them and fear and terror came into his face." 
  Among the early Latins there was a machine of war called the scorpion. It was 
  used for firing arrows and probably obtained its name from a long beam, 
  resembling a scorpion's tail, which flew up to hurl the arrows. The missiles 
  discharged by this machine were also called scorpions.
  The butterfly (under the name 
  of Psyche, a beautiful maiden with wings of opalescent light) 
  symbolizes the human soul because of the stages it passes through in order to 
  unfold its power of flight. The three divisions through which the butterfly 
  passes in its unfoldment resemble closely the three degrees of the Mystery 
  School, which degrees are regarded as consummating the unfoldment of man by 
  giving him emblematic wings by which he may soar to the skies. Unregenerate 
  man, ignorant and helpless, is symbolized by the stage between ovum and larva; 
  the disciple, seeking truth and dwelling in medication, by the second stage, 
  from larva to pupa, at which time the insect enters its chrysalis (the tomb of 
  the Mysteries); the third stage, from pupa to imago (wherein the perfect 
  butterfly comes forth), typifies the unfolded enlightened soul of the initiate 
  rising from the tomb of his baser nature.
  Night moths typify the secret 
  wisdom, because they are hard to discover and are concealed by the darkness 
  (ignorance). Some are emblems of death, as Acherontia atropos, the 
  death's-head moth, which has a marking on its body somewhat like a human 
  skull. The death-watch beetle, which was believed to give warning of 
  approaching death by a peculiar ticking sound, is another instance of insects 
  involved in human affairs.
  Opinions differ concerning the 
  spider. Its shape makes it an appropriate emblem of the nerve plexus and 
  ganglia of the human body. Some Europeans consider it extremely bad luck to 
  kill a spider--possibly because it is looked upon as an emissary of the Evil 
  One, whom no person desires to offend. There is a mystery concerning all 
  poisonous creatures, especially insects. Paracelsus taught that the spider was 
  the medium for a powerful but evil force which the Black Magicians used in 
  their nefarious undertakings.
  Certain plants, minerals, and 
  animals have been sacred among all the nations of the earth because of their 
  peculiar sensitiveness to the astral fire--a mysterious agency in Nature which 
  the scientific world has contacted through its manifestations as electricity 
  and magnetism. Lodestone and radium in the mineral world and various parasitic 
  growths in the plant kingdom are strangely susceptible to this cosmic electric 
  fire, or universal life force. The magicians of the Middle Ages surrounded 
  themselves with such creatures as bats, spiders, cats, snakes, and monkeys, 
  because they were able to appropriate the life forces of these species and use 
  them to the attainment of their own ends. Some ancient schools of wisdom 
  taught that all poisonous insects and reptiles are germinated out of the evil 
  nature of man, and that when intelligent human beings no longer breed hate in 
  their own souls there will be no more ferocious animals, loathsome diseases, 
  or poisonous plants and insects.
  Among the American Indians is 
  the legend of a "Spider Man," whose web connected the heaven worlds with the 
  earth. The secret schools of India symbolize certain of the gods who labored 
  with the universe during its making as connecting the realms of light with 
  those of darkness by means of webs. Therefore the builders of the cosmic 
  system who held the embryonic universe together with threads of invisible 
  force were sometimes referred to as the Spider Gods and their ruler was 
  designated The Great Spider.
  The beehive is found in Masonry 
  as a reminder that in diligence and labor for a common good true happiness and 
  prosperity are found. The bee is a symbol of wisdom, for as this tiny insect 
  collects pollen from the flowers, so men may extract wisdom from the 
  experiences of daily life. The bee is sacred to the goddess Venus and, 
  according to mystics, it is one of several forms of life which came to the 
  earth from the planet Venus millions of years ago. Wheat and bananas are said 
  to be of similar origin. This is the reason why the origin of these three 
  forms of life cannot be traced. The fact that bees are ruled by queens is one 
  reason why this insect is considered a sacred feminine symbol.
  In India the god Prana--the 
  personification of the universal life force--is sometimes shown surrounded by 
  a circle of bees. Because of its importance in pollenizing flowers, the bee is 
  the accepted symbol of the generative power. At one time the bee was the 
  emblem of the French kings. The rulers of France wore robes embroidered with 
  bees, and the canopies of their thrones were decorated with gigantic figures 
  of these insects.
  The fly symbolizes the 
  tormentor, because of the annoyance it causes to animals. The Chaldean god 
  Baal was often called Baal-Zebul, or the god of the dwelling place. The word
  zebub, or zabab, means a fly, and Baal-Zebul became Baalzebub, 
  or Beelzebub, a word which was loosely translated to mean Jupiter's fly. The 
  fly was looked upon as a form of the divine power, because of its ability to 
  destroy decaying substances and thus promote health. The fly may have obtained 
  its name Zebub from its peculiar buzzing or humming. Inman believes that 
  Baalzebub, which the Jews ridiculed as My Lord of Flies, really means My Lord 
  Who Hums or Murmurs.
  Inman recalls the singing 
  Memnon on the Egyptian desert, a tremendous figure with an Æolian harp on the 
  top of its head. When the wind blows strongly this great Statue sighs, or 
  hums. The Jews changed Baalzebub into Beelzebub, and made him their prince of 
  devils by interpreting dæmon as "demon." Naudæus, in defending Virgil 
  from accusations of sorcery, attempted a wholesale denial of the miracles 
  supposedly performed by Virgil and produced enough evidence to convict the 
  poet on all counts. Among other strange fears, Virgil fashioned a fly out of 
  brass, and after certain mysterious ceremonies, placed it over one of the 
  gates of Naples. As a result, no flies entered the city for more than eight 
  years.
  REPTILES
  The serpent was chosen as the 
  head of the reptilian family. Serpent worship in some form has permeated 
  nearly all parts of the
  
  
  
  THE FLEUR-DE-LIS.
   
  The bee was used as, a symbol 
  of royalty by the immortal Charlemagne, and it is probable that the 
  fleur-de-lis, or lily of France, is merely a conventionalized bee and not a 
  flower. There is an ancient Greek legend to the effect that the nine Muses 
  occasionally assumed the form of bees.
  
  
  THE SCORPION TALISMAN.
   
  From Paracelsus' Archidoxes 
  Magica.
  The scorpion often appears upon 
  the talismans and charms of the Middle Ages. This hieroglyphic Arachnida 
  was supposed to have the power of curing disease. The scorpion shown above was 
  composed of several metals, and was made under certain planetary 
  configurations. Paracelsus advised that it be worn by those suffering from any 
  derangement of the reproductive system.
  
  p. 88
  earth. The serpent mounds of 
  the American Indian; the carved-stone snakes of Central and South America; the 
  hooded cobras of India; Python, the great snake o the Greeks; the sacred 
  serpents of the Druids; the Midgard snake of Scandinavia; the Nagas of Burma, 
  Siam, and Cambodia; the brazen serpent of the Jews; the mystic serpent of 
  Orpheus; the snakes at the oracle; of Delphi twining themselves around the 
  tripod upon which the Pythian priestess sat, the tripod itself being in the 
  form of twisted serpents; the sacred serpents preserved in the Egyptian 
  temples; the Uræus coiled upon the foreheads of the Pharaohs and priests;--all 
  these bear witness to the universal veneration in which the snake was held. In 
  the ancient Mysteries the serpent entwining a staff was the symbol of the 
  physician. The serpent-wound staff of Hermes remains the emblem of the medical 
  profession. Among nearly all these ancient peoples the serpent was accepted as 
  the symbol of wisdom or salvation. The antipathy which Christendom feels 
  towards the snake is based upon the little-understood allegory of the Garden 
  of Eden.
  The serpent is true to the 
  principle of wisdom, for it tempts man to the knowledge of himself. Therefore 
  the knowledge of self resulted from man's disobedience to the Demiurgus, 
  Jehovah. How the serpent came to be in the garden of the Lord after God had 
  declared that all creatures which He had made during the six days of creation 
  were good has not been satisfactorily answered by the interpreters of 
  Scripture. The tree that grows in the midst of the garden is the spinal fire; 
  the knowledge of the use of that spinal fire is the gift of the great serpent. 
  Notwithstanding statements to the contrary, the serpent is the symbol and 
  prototype of the Universal Savior, who redeems the worlds by giving creation 
  the knowledge of itself and the realization of good and evil. If this be not 
  so, why did Moses raise a brazen serpent upon a cross in the wilderness that 
  all who looked upon it might be saved from the sting of the lesser snakes? Was 
  not the brazen serpent a prophecy of the crucified Man to come? If the serpent 
  be only a thing of evil, why did Christ instruct His disciples to be as wise 
  as serpents?
  The accepted theory that the 
  serpent is evil cannot be substantiated. It has long been viewed as the emblem 
  of immortality. It is the symbol of reincarnation, or metempsychosis, because 
  it annually sheds its skin, reappearing, as it were, in a new body. There is 
  an ancient superstition to the effect that snakes never die except by violence 
  and that, if uninjured, they would live forever. It was also believed that 
  snakes swallowed themselves, and this resulted in their being considered 
  emblematic of the Supreme Creator, who periodically reabsorbed His universe 
  back into Himself.
  In Isis Unveiled, H. P. 
  Blavatsky makes this significant statement concerning the origin of serpent 
  worship: "Before our globe had become egg-shaped or round it was a long trail 
  of cosmic dust or fire-mist, moving and writhing like a serpent. This, say the 
  explanations, was the Spirit of God moving on the chaos until its breath had 
  incubated cosmic matter and made it assume the annular shape of a serpent with 
  its tail in its month--emblem of eternity in its spiritual and of our world in 
  its physical sense."
  The seven-headed snake 
  represents the Supreme Deity manifesting through His Elohim, or Seven Spirits, 
  by whose aid He established His universe. The coils of the snake have been 
  used by the pagans to symbolize the motion and also the orbits of the 
  celestial bodies, and it is probable that the symbol of the serpent twisted 
  around the egg--which was common to many of the ancient Mystery 
  schools--represented both the apparent motion of the sun around the earth, and 
  the bands of astral light, or the great magical agent, which move about the 
  planet incessantly.
  Electricity was commonly 
  symbolized by the serpent because of its motion. Electricity passing between 
  the poles of a spark gap is serpentine in its motion. Force projected through 
  atmosphere was called The Great Snake. Being symbolic of universal force, the 
  serpent was emblematic of both good and evil. Force can tear down as rapidly 
  as it can build up. The serpent with its tail in its mouth is the symbol of 
  eternity, for in this position the body of the reptile has neither beginning 
  nor end. The head and tail represent the positive and negative poles of the 
  cosmic life circuit. The initiates of the Mysteries were often referred to as 
  serpents, and their wisdom was considered analogous to the divinely inspired 
  power of the snake. There is no doubt that the title "Winged Serpents" (the 
  Seraphim?) was given to one of the invisible hierarchies that labored with the 
  earth during its early formation.
  There is a legend that in the 
  beginning of the world winged serpents reigned upon the earth. These were 
  probably the demigods which antedate the historical civilization of every 
  nation. The symbolic relationship between the sun and the serpent found 
  literal witness in the fact that life remains in the snake until sunset, even 
  though it be cut into a dozen parts. The Hopi Indians consider the serpent to 
  be in close communication with the Earth Spirit. Therefore, at the time of 
  their annual snake dance they send their prayers to the Earth Spirit by first 
  specially sanctifying large numbers of these reptiles and then liberating them 
  to return to the earth with the prayers of the tribe.
  The great rapidity of motion 
  manifested by lizards has caused them to be associated with Mercury, the 
  Messenger of the Gods, whose winged feet traveled infinite distances almost 
  instantaneously. A point which must not be overlooked in connection with 
  reptiles in symbolism is clearly brought out by the eminent scholar, Dr. H. E. 
  Santee, in his Anatomy of the Brain and Spinal Cord: "In reptiles there 
  are two pineal bodies, an anterior and a posterior, of which the posterior 
  remains undeveloped but the anterior forms a rudimentary, cyclopean eye. In 
  the Hatteria, a New Zealand lizard, it projects through the parietal foramen 
  and presents an imperfect lens and retina and, in its long stalk, nerve 
  fibers."
  Crocodiles were regarded by the 
  Egyptians both as symbols of Typhon and emblems of the Supreme Deity, of the 
  latter because while under water the crocodile is capable of seeing--Plutarch 
  asserts--though its eyes are covered by a thin membrane. The Egyptians 
  declared that no matter how far away the crocodile laid its eggs, the Nile 
  would reach up to them in its next inundation, this reptile being endowed with 
  a mysterious sense capable of making known the extent of the flood months 
  before it took place. There were two kinds of crocodiles. The larger and more 
  ferocious was hated by the Egyptians, for they likened it to the nature of 
  Typhon, their destroying demon. Typhon waited to devour all who failed to pass 
  the judgment of the Dead, which rite took place in the Hall of Justice between 
  the earth and the Elysian Fields. Anthony Todd Thomson thus describes the good 
  treatment accorded the smaller and tamer crocodiles, which the Egyptians 
  accepted as personifications of good: "They were fed daily and occasionally 
  had mulled wine poured down their throats. Their ears were ornamented with 
  rings of gold and precious stones, and their forefeet adorned with bracelets."
  To the Chinese the turtle was a 
  symbol of longevity. At a temple in Singapore a number of sacred turtles are 
  kept, their age recorded by carvings on their shells. The American Indians use 
  the ridge down the back of the turtle shell as a symbol of the Great Divide 
  between life and death. The turtle is a symbol of wisdom because it retires 
  into itself and is its own protection. It is also a phallic symbol, as its 
  relation to long life would signify. The Hindus symbolized the universe as 
  being supported on the backs of four great elephants who, in turn, are 
  standing upon an immense turtle which is crawling continually through chaos.
  The Egyptian sphinx, the Greek 
  centaur, and the Assyrian man-bull have much in common. All are composite 
  creatures combining human and animal members; in the Mysteries all signify the 
  composite nature of man and subtly refer to the hierarchies of celestial 
  beings that have charge of the destiny of mankind. These hierarchies are the
  twelve holy animals now known as constellations--star groups which are 
  merely symbols of impersonal spiritual impulses. Chiron, the centaur, teaching 
  the sons of men, symbolizes the intelligences of the constellation of 
  Sagittarius, who were the custodians of the secret doctrine while 
  (geocentrically) the sun was passing through the sign of Gemini. The 
  five-footed Assyrian man-bull with the wings of an eagle and the head of a man 
  is a reminder that the invisible nature of man has the wings of a god, the 
  head of a man, and the body of a beast. The same concept was expressed through 
  the sphinx--that armed guardian of the Mysteries who, crouching at the gate of 
  the temple, denied entrance to the profane. Thus placed between man and his 
  divine possibilities, the sphinx also represented the secret doctrine itself. 
  Children's fairy stories abound with descriptions of symbolic monsters, for 
  nearly all such tales are based upon the ancient mystic folklore.
  
  
  
  THE URÆUS.
   
  From Kircher's dipus 
  Ægyptiacus.
  The spinal cord was symbolized 
  by a snake, and the serpent coiled upon the foreheads of the Egyptian 
  initiates represented the Divine Fire which had crawled serpentlike up the 
  Tree of Life.
  
  
  
  GOOD AND EVIL CONTENDING FOR THE UNIVERSAL EGG.
   
  From Maurice's Indian 
  Antiquities.
  Both Mithras, the Persian 
  Redeemer, and Serapis, the Egyptian God of the Earth, are symbolized by 
  serpents coiled about their bodies. This remarkable drawing shows the good and 
  evil principles of Persia--Ahura-Mazda and Ahriman--contending for the Egg of 
  the Earth, which each trying to wrench from the teeth of the other.
  
  Next: Fishes, 
  Insects, Animals, Reptiles and Birds (Part Two)
  