Vs. 1:28-29 Vs. 2:1-2 Vs. 2:19 Vs. 6:10 Vs. 6:28 Rs. 1:5 Rs. 1:28 Rs. 3:1 Rs. 3:25 Vs. 9:4
d NINLAMA ... d NIN- ... -LAMA d NINTIL ... d NIN- ... -TIL d nin-ENS^U' ... d EN- ... -S^U' d GAN ... d GAN ... d GIS^-BIL-PAP ... d ... BIL-GIS^-PAP
Vs. 9:29 d ME ... Rs. 2:1 d ME ... Rs. 2:31 d TUD ... Rs. 4:1 d TUD ... Rs. 4:26 d SUG ... Vs. 8:2 d SUG ... Vs. 8:26 d NU-NUNUZ ... Vs. 10:1 d NU-NUNUZ ... Vs. 10:22 d BAN ... Vs. 7:14 d ... BAN ... Vs. 7:29 d MU- ... -DU Rs. 10:14 d MU- ... -DU Rs. 10:17 d AMA ... Rs. 8:1 d AMA ... Rs. 8:10 d AN Vs. 4:1 AN-AN ... Vs. 4:7 d NIN- ... -ZID Vs. 5:10 d NINZID Vs. 5:20 d nin- ... -GIR Rs. 9:2 d GIR ... A replicate series may appear in:-Rs. 2:---------------------------------------------------------------Rs. 10:, 7: :7 d IM 10:4 d IM ... :14 d AB ... 10:12 d AB :15 d ... AB 10:13 d AB ...
:18 d ... A' :22 d NUN (?) ... :23 d KI ... :28 d SANGU :31 d TUD
7:15 d A' ... 7:25 d ... NUN ... 7:28 d KI ... 7:29 d SANGU-TUD
WISSENSCHAFTLICHE VERO:FFENTLICHUNG DER DEUTSCHEN ORIENTGESELLSCHAFT 43. AUSGRABUNGEN DER DEUTSCHEN ORIENTGESELLSCHAFT IN FARA UND ABU-HATAB 2. Anton Deimel: Die Inschriften von Fara, II. Otto Zeller, Osnabru:ck, 1969. pp. 1 to 4
Dennis Tedlock (tr.): Popol Vuh
Codex Borgia
p. 71 "Maker of the Blue-Green Bowl" p. 71 "enlightened beings" p. 71 "The Light That Came from Across the Sea" p. 71 "Our Place in the Shades" p. 73 "Hurricane" = hun raqan "one foot" p. 73 "Newborn Thunderbolt" {cf. Newborn, Ga & Thunderbolt, GA} p. 73 "Raw Thunderbolt" p. 73 "like a cloud" p. 73 "like a mist" p. 73 "mountains came forth" p. 75 "Heart of Sky, Heart of Earth ... in the midst of the waters" p. 77 deer [deer-pelt diguises on p. 185] p. 78 "birds: your nests" p. 78 "please talk, serpent." p. 78 "mason and sculpture" p. 79 "Its face was just lopsided, ... quickly dissolving in the water." prostrate in the water p. 85 "They want to get inside caves" p. 81 "the counting of days" p. 96 Zipacna [= Cipactli, on p. 372] p. 97 counterfeit crab p. 98 [dwelling in crevice] p. 101 "delicious aroma" [of food]
p. 29 blue bowl-shaped deity p. 30 beings within rayed disk p. 31 seeing due to outpourings of water p. 32 places of darkness p. 33 round dark swirl,whence emergence via one foot p. 33 white-strand deity
p. 34 six-headed white-strand deity p. 33 black winding p. 34 red winding pp. 33, 34 flint-topped temples p. 34 two hearts with faces, interconnected by [water-]tube p. 35 costumed in animal-pelt p. 36 birds from bundle p. 37 speech scrolls from mouth of serpent p. 37 foundation of aedifice p. 38 monstrous-faced skeletal being
p. 39 women entering mouth of earth pp. 39, 40 the day-signs, viz.:-1. Cipactli 2. Ehecatl, with eyes-on-stalks [crab ?] 3. Calli, a dwelling 4. Kan, ripe [food]
p. 111 [variously colored roads] p. 113 beheading of Hunahpu p. 114 hand of the maiden Xquic p. 119 Hun C^UEN p. 125 wood chips p. 125 jaguar p. 131 "Tamazul, the toad"
p. 134 "Blood River" pp. 146, 147 ball-game p. 158 gods of Xibalba as "users of owls" p. 173 "Tohil ... pivoted inside his sandal." "On his forehead he wears an obsidian mirror with a burning torch emerging from it." p. 180 "Net Weave Tribe is the name of the place where dawn came for the Iloc-s." p. 205 "one citadel" on "four mountains"
5. C^icc^an, rainbow 6. Miquiztli, death's-head 7. Manik [glyph: a hand] 11. C^UEN 13. Acatl, reed 14. Ocelotl, ocelot; etc. etc. p. 40 god with curve in rear of face, like God P (Maya toad-god], and wearing gloves (like God P) of toad-skin (semi-circle "warts") p. 41 two streams of blood p. 42 ball-game p. 42 underworld-god, with owl p. 45 churning of sea of milk by gods each lacking a foot: on their forehead they each wear an obsidian mirror with smoke emerging from it p. 45 net adorned with heads of nine Tlahuizcalpan-tecuhtli-s ("Lords of the House of Dawn") [for the nine rivers of the underworld] p. 46 walled enclosure composed of four dragons Herbert V. Guenther (tr.): The Life and Teaching of Naropa. Oxford U. Press, 1963.
p. 114 one not to disappear at death p. 117 owls are sent up through hole in earth; then guides returned p. 117 the light to show itself p. 125 whole mountains p. 125 wood chips p. 128 grabbed p. 137 fireflies
Hopi world-ages = Huisi Tacu
9. resurrection of dead 8(i). feather is inserted through fontanel to guide return of soul 7(i-iii). Radiant light 5(iii). Mt. Meru 5. split and sharpened reeds 4(B)(j)(2). holder 4(B)(i)(1). a glow-worm
The first section (of Codex Vindobonensis) is to be read from right-to-left (direction faced by characters):page BH page & HT (Codex Vindobonensis) column 3 "first ..., there was only Taiowa" [p. 1:1 (52:2) corpse-god (for stench?) 344 "the Sun God"; p. 94 "The skunk himself symbolizes the sun, for his strong scent"] 3 "nine universal kingdoms" 1:1 (52:2) 9 regions (6 walls & 3 crenelations) 3 "half solid and half water" [viz., 3:4 (50:1) swamp (with tree growing in it) mud, as in the Zun~i scheme of the primaeval universe] 3 "to put the forces of air into peaceful 4:3 (49:1) wind-god ("9 Ehecatl") is in gestation movement" (flint as his placenta) 3 "the airs, made into great forces" 5:3 (48:1) same wind-god ("9 Ehecatl") is made to dominate the world 4 "Ko`kyangwu`ti, Spider Woman ... 6:1 (47:2) aged (fanged) goddess awoke to life" 4 "traveling throughout the earth" 7:2 (46:3) footprints on sphaere (of the earth?) 4 "the universe quivered in tune. Thus 7:3 (46:2) inward-curling [sound-]wave, he made the whole universe an surrounded by cord [of musical instrument of sound" instument?] 5 "indicating how they should spread 7:3 (46:2) surrounding of 4 starry sets to all four corners of the earth" 7 "First People ... have movement" 7:3 (46:2) human leg is introduced (into [gene?]pool) 7 the goddess "Mother Earth" = Aztec 7:3 (46:2) snakey-haired goddess [Cf. snakey+Tonantzin [this Aztec +Teteo-innan haired +Medousa, who was slain] ("Mother of the Gods") as having her likeness slain, G, p. 16] 8 "the four walls and ceiling": 7:4 (46:1) house 8 "the hair of both the child and 7:4 (46:1) eyes with eyebrows, in water mother was washed" 9 "The town crier announced" 8:1 (45:4) mound-god holding rattle 9 "For several years the child was 8:2 (45:3) wave [of sound?] rolling inward called by the different names that were given him." 10 "the thinking organ called the 8:3 (45:2) human head as temple brain." 11 "a bellyache" 8:3 (45:2) stone-belly (legged) 11 "a cold in the head" 8:3 (45:2) human head, tied (to hill) 11 "a small crystal" 8:4 (45:1) jewel-mountain 11 "objectified the vision of the center 8:4 (45:1) goggle-eyed head of Tlaloc which controlled his eyes" 12 "began to divide" 9:1 (44:4) seeds (?), beginning to be divided 12 "Ka`to>ya, in the form of a snake 9:2 (44:3) snake stretched over (as though with a big head. He led the people guiding?) man 12 still farther away from ... pristine 9:3 (44:2) head on buttocks wisdom." 13 "the sound as of a mighty wind" 9:3 (44:2) conch-shell (for being blown) 13 "following the cloud by day 9:4 (44:1) circle of clouds (?)
and the star by night" "a big mound where the Ant People lived" "opened up the volcanoes. Fire came ..."
10:1 (43:4) 10:1 (43:4)
layer of stars upon mountain hill with insect upon it
10:2 (43:3)
"they could see and talk to each other from the center on top of the head." "sashes and blankets" "Some of them made a pa`tuwvota [shield made of hide] and with their creative power made it fly through the air." "to a big city, attacked it"
10:2 (43:3)
lava (?) pouring over netted mound {in Hellas, a netted stone mound is conventional emblem of "earth's navel", a fitting elocution for "volcano"} elongated-headed mountain-god, pointing
10:4 (43:1)
19
"took them by the tops of their heads, and pulled them out. ... they were on a little piece of land that had been the top of one of their highest mountains." "brought out their huru`suki [white maize-meal dough]." "They sent out many kinds of birds, ... But they all came back tired" "they ... came to another rocky island." "they found growing some ... plants like reeds" "Directed by Spider Woman, they ... tied them all together" "began to hear the low rumbling noise and saw land." "You must go on alone"
20
"they set out, ... paddling"
11:2 (42:3)
20 20
"a steep wall" the island which they had visited are destroyed by So`tuknang "Ma`saw ..., becoming a little selfimportant, he had lost his humility"
11:2 (42:3) 11:3 (42:2)
"this new land was pushed up in the middle to become the backbone of the earth." on the reverse side of the [stone]
11:3 (42:2)
hero having an upper insert in his nose [like "turning on's nose up", a sign of haughty disdain?] multi-bladed land-ridge
11:4 (42:1)
headless man as [stone] mountain-
13 14
15
16 17
17 18
18 18 19 19 19 19
21
21
31
10:2 (43:3) 10:2 (43:3)
sash around mountain shield carried on flying bird
10:3 (43:2)
crenelated wall (of fort), assaulted by spear temple atop lower-part-of-headmountain
10:4 (43:1)
vessel foaming over
11:1 (42:4)
dead bird
11:1 (42:4) 11:2 (42:3)
rocky precinct enclosed in crenelated wall upward-pointed cone atop mountain
11:2 (42:3)
spider-web
11:2 (42:3)
temple of the clouds (thunder-clouds, with rumbling?) year 7 Tecpatl, day 7 Tecpatl [identicality of year & day indicative of lack of companionship?] enclosed object [indicative of hold of boat or the like?] wall rock mountain is sundered by hero
11:2 (42:3)
11:3 (42:2)
32
32 32 33 34
tablet of the fire-clan is "the figure of a man without a head." 1st bear-clan tablet, obverse: "the land pattern ..., showing the land holdings" "On the other side of the tablet were marked two bear tracks" 2nd bear-clan tablet, obverse: "The two ... boundaries" "men, arms folded across belly"
peak 12:1 (41:4)
land, striped
12:1 (41:4)
mountain, 2-legged (wearing kneeguards) 2 star-bedecked curvatures (repraesenting boundaries?) headless man with cloud in his belly {Cf. Zulu "rumbling belly"} maize-plants in water
12:2 (41:3) 12:3 (41:2)
"at the water's edge, ... draw a line with cornmeal" "magic water jar" "center, Tu`wanasavi [Center of the Universe]" "your eyes. If you do not close them" "The eagle ... then gave the people permission to occupy the land, saying, "... you may use my feather ..."" Ko`kopilau the flautist (depicted with long straight flute protruding from his mouth) "to plant and harvest" "the rock writings they made" "it became a spring which gushed forth" "the Back Door of the Fourth World" "along the world's axis" "The melted mountain of snow and ice would have flooded this new Fourth World" Spider Woman is doomed to become "an ugly old woman." Her clan is required to travel on unaccompanied by the other clans.
12:4 (41:1)
13:4 (40:1) 14:1 (39:4) 14:1 (39:4) 14:1 (39:4) 14:1 (39:4)
spiky tree
54
Villages named for birds. "Honani, the Badger" "joined by the Butterfly Clan" "he had gone up to the spring below the village and transformed himself into a spruce tree." "Yumuteaota, Mother People"
aged (fanged) long-haired mountainhead year 2 Acatl, day 2 Acatl [identicality of year & day indicative of lack of companionship?] bird mountain tailed mammal at mountain smoky butterfly on mountain reptile-mouth as a spring
14:2 (39:3)
55
"Choso`vi [Blue Bird Hill]"
14:2 (39:3)
wall of scorpion [mother scorpion will carry her babies on her back] quetzal-bird as hill (a variety of
34 35 37 37
38
39 39 39 39 40 40
40 40
46 47 48 49
12:4 (41:1) 12:4 (41:1) 13:1 (40:4)
circular beveled gear place with 2 pins (as markers of site?) inserted man with back of his hand to his eye
13:1 (40:4)
feathered bent moutain
13:1 (40:4)
long, straight-beaked bird as mountain (thus, as though hunchbacked?) hill with a plant stone tablet (for writing upon?) overflowing pot
13:1 (40:4) 13:1 (40:4) 13:2 (40:3) 13:2 (40:3) 13:3 (40:2) 13:3 (40:2)
13:3 (40:2) 13:4 (40:1)
2-human-faced mountain-peak [Cf. Latin Janus, god of doors] cone atop mountain-peak pond of water, overflowing
55-56
abandoned,
14:2 (39:3)
14:3 (39:2)
56
as as human sacrifice, are boy & girl. "the Forehead" [Clan]
56 56
"the Eagle Clan deity, Kwa`toko" [spiritual] "power"
14:3 (39:2) 14:4 (39:1)
56
"the two clans could no longer live together"
14:4 (39:1)
56
clan-chiefs become resigned to be injured if defeated
14:4 (39:1)
57
"Po:so:vi [Sharp Corner]"
14:4 (39:1)
57
"Savu`tuika [Chopped Rock Point]", whence to observe approach of killers (so as to be able to run away, by foot) "We will not claw out the eyes ... But ..."
14:4 (39:1)
"The Short Well (or Cistern)" "Panaiyoikyasi means "Short Rainbow." ... with vertical stripes of ... Tu`tukwi [Volcanic Butte]" "plants and flowers" "three waves of water, ... on the third "round"" [p. 60, the 3 waves are depicted breaking] "his image was laid face down" "the Ti`pkyavi [Womb]" "the oldest member of the clan ... being called a wu>ya."
14:4 (39:1) 15:1 (38:3)
"the Zun~is ... of the Koyemski [sic: should be "Koyems^i"] or Mudheads." "These kachina people ... were not people. They were spirits come to ... give guidance to the clans, taking the forms of ordinary people" "the first section was reserved for ceremonial purposes" "the second section ... contained ...
16:3 (37:1)
58
59 59
59 61
62 62 63
65
67
67 67
14:3 (39:2)
14:4 (39:1)
15:1 (38:3) 15:2 (38:2)
16:2 (37:2) 16:2 (37:2) 16:3 (37:1)
quetzal is blue) year 7 Acatl, day 7 Acatl [identicality of year & day indicative of lack of companionship?] god Tlaloc (to whom were made human sacrifices of young children) on platform, a disk (foreheadornament?) temple of eagle rope leading to the starry heaven [Cf. !Kun "ropes to God"] year 5 Tecpatl, day 5 Tecpatl [identicality of year & day indicative of lack of companionship?] man with arms folded (gesture of resignation?), standing with back to rock embedded in rock, an ocelot [cf. Codex Borgia ocelot with sharp flints protruding from its body] staircase, footed
wall of rabbit [unharmed, despite Codex Borgia rabbit who eyes are gouged out] water between hillocks "smoky" (i.e., misty? -- if so, suitable environment for rainbow) hill, vertically striped double water-plant inward-curling water-wave
human head, facing down nude woman pelican-like-headed god [Cf. pelican as emblem of human longevity among the Osage] god having his head 3-lobed
16:3 (37:1)
man & woman (god & goddess in disguise?), each pointing upward (to heaven whence they had come?)
16:3 (37:1)
2 gods striped (as though for a ceremony) 2 monkey-headed gods [monkeys
17:1 (36:4)
food" 67
"the third section comprised the living quarters for the people"
17:1-2 (36:4-3)
being known as thieves of food, as in the myth of Vr.s.a-kapi in the Veda] men & a woman
The next section (of Codex Vindobonensis) is to be read from left-to-right (direction faced by characters):page 68
BH "how the one great spirit worked within man."
page & column (27:2) 26:1
68
"sickness ... illnesses"
(27:2-1) 26:1-2
68
"initiates of great conscience"
(27:1) 26:2
69
"to raise corn of all four colors -the red, black, yellow, and white -- to insure the coming of all races to live in brotherhoodin this new world." "enabling them to cross great rivers and lakes." "in the barricaded city ... to plan the escape of the clans." "keep the doors on top of your heads open."
(27:1) 26:2 (26:2) 27:1
71
"spirits from other planets and stars"
(25:3) 28:2
72 73
"planting the stick a little farther" "awakened our people"
(25:3) 28:2 (25:2) 28:3
73
"Next morning one of his fingers was sticking up out of thegrave, and every morning still another finger stuck up." "hands imprinted" "Tepnyam [Thorny Stick] ... ceremonial awl from hard wood." "Kelnyam [Red Hawk] ... uses this standard only during the Wu`wuchim ceremony" [p. 140 the Wu`wuchim involveth a "ball"] "Parrot, Eagle ... in front of a cloudterrace" "Qaletaqa ... wears a deerskin." "The seven dots near the swallow's beak"
(25:2) 28:3
69-70 70 71
75 76 79
80 81 83
(26:2) 27:1 (26:2) 27:1 (26:1) 27:2
HT (Codex Vindobonensis) trumpets: 14 horizontal & 8 vertical. [Cf. the 8 "extraordinary meridians" of Chinese occult anatomy] darts are being hurled by the 8 Tlaloc-s mask (to indicate conscience?) fasten to vertical rod-bundle surmounted by butterfly (to indicate emotions which move persons, as in Californian Indian myth of woman who followed butterflies away?) maize-spiral living stone-people (including limbless ones) water springing out of ground and flowing over bather in crenelated area, a line of footprints starry-split-headed man, weeping {Cf. weeping by infant as source of deluge in Papago myth} starry sky; planet-symbol (?, on triangle) crossed boards human head reclining, with pollen (sleepiness?) in eye hand protruding out of starry skycorner
(25:2) 28:3 (25:1) 28:4
pollen-hand spear (as perch)
(24:4) 29:1
eagle-suited god in ball-court
(24:3) 29:2
god pointing at "smoky" (misty?) bird god 1 Mazatl bird-suited god wearing cloak covered with obsidian fragments
(24:3) 29:2 (24:3) 29:2
84 85 87 88
(24:2) 29:3 (23:2) 30:1 (23:2) 30:1 (23:1) 30:2
91 92
"the Water Clan" "a sacred well" "the Snake Clan" "Sa`viki ... is always pictured with a snake in his mouth" "Sunava [Sound of the Waterfall]" "group caves" "establishing a village at each place ... The first was Pamo:si" [p. 90 Pamo:si "Water Vapor or Fog"] "wait there four days for a sign" [to be seen] "a tall cloud that built up" "the Bow Clan remained"
92 94 97
"The mongko" (=rod of authority) "The skunk ... for ... strong scent" "a beautiful girl ... of Siyatki"
97
"at the south end ..., sticking into the ground a long knife of obsidian. Another long obsidian knife was stuck into the ground at the north end" "they ... to the ... River"
(21:3) 32:2 (20:3) 33:2 33:2 (20:3) [& 33:4 (20:1)] (20:1) 33:4
89 90 91
91
98 98 98 101 101 103 101 108 108 108 109
109
109
110 110 111
"the mystic air waves" "with V-shaped lines ... the swallow with its head cut off" "the coyote." "the record of the people's wanderings" "a circle and three dots" [within it] "Two Horn" "the mo`ngwikoro [chief's water jar]" "the Ti`kyavi [Womb]" "older brother, Yahoya, was carrying on an affair [chunta, cheating] with his [brother's] wife." "the younger of the two brothers, Machito [Crowded Fingers] ... to Pava`tuwi [Spring in the Cliff]" "A friendly hawk always perched near him, ... often bringing him back rabbits for food." "Yahoya ... fled with his sister" "assigned farming" "Yanga`chaivi [Place Where
(23:1) 30:2 (23:1) 30:2 (22:2) 31:1
god in water circular object god wearing snake-suit god 4 Coatl, with snake emergent from his mouth plaited weir (?) checkered-triangle crenelated temple temples, one of them being "smoky" (i.e., foggy?)
(21:4) 32:1
4 temples, including one with an eye
(21:4) 32:1 (21:4) 32:1
cloud-platforms two men applying tension to cord (cf. bow-string?) rod corpse-goddess (for stench?) woman 1 Quauhtli god with 3 knife-blades in mouth and on back
(20:1) 33:4
god with 2 knife-blade in hat
(20:1-19:4) 33:4-34:1 (19:4) 34:1 (19:4) 34:1
water containing people
(19:4) 34:1 (19:3) 34:2
a mammal man lying in roadway-with-footprints
(19:2) 34:3 (19:2) 34:3 (19:1) 34:4 (19:1) 34:4 (18:2) 35:1
[faced] circle containing dots deer (horned) plant within container nude woman god & goddess are seated together on mat (the usual place for sexual intercourse) human hand reacheth upward out of pool
(18:2) 35:1
(18:1) 35:2
(17:4) 36:1 (17:3) 36:2 (17:3) 36:2 (17:2) 36:3
wind-god angular object; beheaded bird
man wearing eagle-suit; with 20 dots (to indicate generosity?) -- year 13 Tochtli god 5 Ehecatl ?goddess 13 Xochitl pollen-headed women gods lacking flesh on their jawbone
Chipmunks Run], and
111
Munya`>ovi [Cliff of the Porcupine]."
(17:2) 36:3
"Nuva`tuky>ovi [Snowtop Mountains] ... Nuva`kweotaqa [Snowbelt]"
(17:1) 36:4
[Cf. Huichol myth of flesh being stripped off back of chipmunk] wind-god lacking flesh on his jawbone monkeys [Cf., in Codex Borgia, a white monkey (with hair "white as snow")]
BH = Frank Waters: Book of the Hopi. 1963. HT = CENTRO DE ESTUDIOS Y DOCUMENTACIO`N LATINOAMERICANOS, Incidentele Publicaties 24. Maarten E. R. G. N. Jansen: Huisi Tacu. Amsterdam, 1982. G = THE SCHOOL OF AMERICAN RESEARCH, UNIVERSITY OF UTAH, Monograph 14, Part II. Bernardino de Sahagu`n (translated by Anderson & Dibble): Book 1 -- The Gods. 1970.
1st section of Kumu-lipo (Kumu-uli-po); Maori ante-diluvians; Lakota Hawai>ian -Kumu-lipo (cited by line #) 15 ko>ako>a (= *TOKATO KA)
20 >INa "stone octopussinker"
33 WI
Maori "Priests and Chiefs before the Flood" -- AHM, Vol. I
La-kota AKAN "deity" -- LM {cf. >AKAN, burier in earth of treasure (YHWS^< 7:10-22)}
4th TaKA-ro (p. 166)
TOKA (p. 206)
Hou-mea [cf. Marquesan Haumei, devourer of eyen (HM, p. 289) -- eyen fastened to +Roi-MATAGOTAGO (HM, p. 247): cf. Maori MAtuku-TANOTANO with tree maku>u-kao (HM, p. 287)] 5th Tu-tawake holding HANi (p. 166) battle of Tai-paripari "flowing tide"
+Maka-akan "earth-goddess" (p. 207) {cf . Skt. earth-goddess BHUMi with Tuamotuan goddess Faumea (HM, p. 289) < *BaUMea}
6th Rua-tai-ao spake (pp. 166-7), and raised his left hand {cf. Huitzil-opochtli} 7th Marohi preached doctrines (p. 167) 8th WHeNa "like as" (p. 167) 9th Nga-tahua "the mounds" (p. 167) the filial [filial devotion at parents' burial mounds ?] 10th Tu-rangi, who strictly fulfilled all laws of Tane the god of illumination (p. 167) 11th WI (p. 167) WA "crease" (p. 167)
Inyan with HAN (p. 206) INyan "stone" gave his blue blood (p. 207) {cf. INyal-t.hinyal (NShOT, p. 572) of the "white stone" (ibid., p. 573} S^kan spake (p. 207) "decree" (p. 208) HaN remained like as already, and was banished to the regions under the world (p. 208) Anp = illumination (p. 208) WI-akan (p. 209) WAkinyan, seeing of whom maketh one clownish [of creased mind ?] (p.
126 -MILU-
MIRU "solid" (p. 167) 12th Hua "egg" (p. 168)
149 AO
153 EHu
13th AO-riri "calm after strife" (p. 168) 14th Puta, whose child died with big-toe amputated [cf. pirouetting on big-toe of Norse north-star god] Mata-EHo the wicked (despiser of temples) (p. 168) 15th Te-morina, thank-offerings for food (p. 169) 16th Ranga-werewere "collect parts", whose appearance never changed (p. 169) 17th Tu-te-raki-paoa "stand in the smoky heaven" (p. 169) 18th Hui-aua "confluence of water" (p. 169) 19th Rua-tupua, perplexed (p. 169) 20th Te-whai-po -- "His skin was ... all white and leprous." (p. 169) 21st Kae-ho "pouting" (p. 169) [pouting = extending the lips --as, to give advice ?] 22nd Ngaru-ai-papa "rippling on the earth" (p. 169) 23rd Tu-ake "stand authentic" (p. 169)
24th Tukituki-papa -- "He who worshipped at the loins of God." (p. 169){cf. hermai = ithyphallic idols} {cf. Hermes as conductor of soul into into realm of Hades}
25th Taketake "who knew how to build a beautiful house for himself" (p. 169) 26th Rongo-nui "far-famed" (p. 169) 27th Tu-rangi "fierce ... to wage war" (p. 170) 28th Tu-te-hou-nuku "who burrows into the earth" (p. 170) 29th Pu-mate-aio "origin of calms" (p. 170) 30th Tu-hoto-ariki "sobbing lord as he stands" (p. 170) 31st Waiho-nuku "leave the world" (p. 170)
213) Heyoka "restorer" who restoreth sound [solid ?] mind (p. 214) egg of Wakinyan "thunderbird" (p. 214) Ksa, who was "very amiable" (p. 215) the babe Ibom (p. 216), who is the cyclone (p. 396, n. 16) Gnas the wicked (p. 217) feast (pp. 220-1) "decreed that ... the Gods should be as they then were" (p. 222) "toasting ... odor filled the lodge" (p. 222) "waterfalls" (p. 223) "plots and schemes" (p. 224) "of the white fruits" were created the first mortal human (p. 225) "nagi, which is a spirit that advises the conduct of each being" (p. 225) "warmth" (p. 226) [cf. heat-ripples in the air, visible over long distances in scenery] "niya, which is a ghost that is the breath of life and is a witness to the advice" (p. 226) [a witness authenticating, like the Holy Ghost in Epistle to the Romans 9:1] "impart to each a sicun, which is that which gives power to produce offspring" (p. 226) "sicun ... is given to him at birth to guard him against the evil spirits and at death is conducts himto the land of the spirits, bur it does not go there itself." (p. 397, n. 23) Pte -- "each family had a lodge with walls" (p. 226) "boasted" (p. 227) "to cause discord among the Gods" (p. 227) retirement "to the caverns" (p. 228) "consoled" (p. 228) Iya "suffered pains" (p. 230) "lonely in my domain" (p. 230)
32nd Rupe-tu "shake violently while standing" (p. 170) 33rd Raki-nuia "heaven made great" (p.170) 34th Tahau-ri "front of thigh screened" (p. 170) 35th Tau-tini for "the world" (p. 170) 36th Tari who "discovered and taught the art of making fish-hooks from wood." (p. 170) 285-94 insects 296-322 birds 399-401 turtles 669 HAPOPO "partially blind"
"tossed the water in great waves" (p. 231) upper-atmosphaere-god conquered lower-atmosphaere-god (p. 231) "robes" (p. 232) "All exist for the world" (p. 234) "he caused to be ... nuts" (p.235) {cf. Irish myth of nut-eating salmon} insects (p. 236) birds (pp. 237-239) Keya "turtle" (p. 243)
HAPOPO, who "folded up the sun" (p. 181)
further such parallelism:-HM, p. 284 Kani-ka-WI & Kani-waWA, two blossoms which sing
Maori
S^into
11th WI & WA
"song of A & WA", commemorating the sequence to the syllabary (HL, pp. 37, 40-41, 56)
NShOT = Gregory Maskarinec: Nepalese Shaman Oral Texts. Harvard U. Pr, 1998.
AHM = John White: The Ancient History of the Maori. Vol. I. Wellington, 1887. LM = James R. Walker (edited by Elaine A. Jahner): Lakota Myth. U. of Nebraska Pr, 1983. HM = Martha Beckwith: Hawaiian Mythology. Yale U. Pr, 1940. HL = Yoshinosuke Matsumoto (transl. by Andrew Driver): The Hotsuma Legends. Japan Translation Centre, Tokyo, 1999.
line
male
meaning
female
meaning
720 722 726 728 729 730 731 732 734 735
kalawe na>u PONO kule ... pou pou-lua pa>e paeheu-nui hewa[hewa] wala
to hold a pail to hold the breath property inactive, listless canoe for baggage post double to peel tree-bark large bundle a great many fall backward
kamau kale[a] PONO>i kune[wa] kalai kukulu ... ha>a ... ki>e[ke] ... kulu[kulu] kunewa
to drink a toast to choke one's own weariness, fatigue to shape a canoe post, horizon trees for dye bag, satchel numerous totter
736 737
PIHA mu
739 740 741 742 744 745 746 749 752 753 754 755
wawa kuai LU>U MA>I lana lanalana pulu pulu-makau naka ... kuleha >ike mala
756 757 758 762
malama >eho >eho-aka ponia
763 766 767 768 769 770
meua ho>oMEHA pula kuamu[amu] KO>U me-i>a
771
ka wala
772 773 775 776 779
huli[-alo-pali] loa>a makuma manomano pua pu>a wela HILAHILA ke-lau KEALA pi>ao [ho>o]niau launie lau-nie
781 785 786 789 790 791 792
fullness crowds, konane game distant voices polish, scour to immerse genitals oracle-floor outrigger-float fern-wool soak fishhook to crack open glance about knowledge aching, banana-bunch a hold red-hot stone ulcerous sore transparent inaugurated
PIHAPIHA kuku kuku hanehane ... >anai LU>U-lea MA>I->a kilo paepae lepea ... mau napo>o maka a>oa>o hu>i hui pu>iki pulama pula[pula]-na>i luka = Tua. ruta kissed mamau cause loneliness meMEHA mote in the eye kua revile, blaspheme ... awa to cluck KO>UKO>U with Milky-Way pe-kau the throw backward wind at Lahaina gain, profit thick, dense 4000 ^ 2 emerge (of wind) a whistle heat ashamed toss in volcano pathway to fold leaves copying bare of leaves dragnet quiz
mahuli >imi[-hau] >oli>oli manoa lau ... >ena[koi] ahi ho>oHILA lu-kau KEALA->ula naia ke kumu ... luhe hulu-he
full crowded contest, game ghostly voices polish, scour
omen-reader outrigger-float fringed snagged fishhook cavity, hollow eye stratagem aching banana-bunch embrace, hug torch annoyance understanding launching-song long kisses loneliness beam [in the eye?] to talk loudly to cluck perfumed MilkyWay to overturn wind at Lahaina happiness thick, solid 400 to break wind shrilly fire to make ashamed sow to hills insecurely tied the model, pattern droop (of leaves) precious snapper-
793 797 798 802 803 804 806 808 810 815 816 820 821
a district quite to grumble bunch, cluster skull successful buttercup flower
822
mo-no helu pa>i ... kaIWI kule>a makou IA-ka hea ... pu>ili pi->ala ki>amo ke >OMO huli-makani ... kala
824 826
[keala-ka>a] >opala
(name of a star) trash, rubbish
827 828 832 842
HALI HALI-luna naka ... [ma>ukele]
to carry
846 847 850 852 853 854 855 856 859 861 864
... ma>u >ohi ikamu lipo pili[>aiku] pili-MAU kaha-le[lele-po] ... >ai lawai>a WANAWANA ... melu HANEHANE
damp, moist bundle fish gathering dim, dark cramped, stiff
869 870 871 872 876 878 880
>EWA oMALI huelo niolo halu ... >ehi[a] ... amo
unjust
river-bank to embrace sprinkle adze insert nozzle the lid taro-top breeze prayer to release
shaky, unsteady rain-forest
wartime-famine to eat fisherman thorny to pull out ghostly voices
tail upright flabby what price burden
pa>a [namunamu] opu ... IWI-a kulia kou-lu me-IA lo>u apo ... ... ua komo >OMO>OMO nanai haipule hoku wene, cf. Mao. wenewene HALIma HALI-lalo leleio[na] ... pu
net earth-stratum to grumble clump, cluster jawbone fortunate, lucky cup poppy cliff put arm around rain to enter mould empty taro patch; course of a kite prayers to consecrate star unimportant
fidgety, restless cluster of several stalks; to blow out water laulau wrapping, bundle namu fish name nao dark dye >a>iku neck-cramp MAUMAUa to repeat mua men's refectory nu>u eat with relish ka>io fish-taboo WANA-kau[ila] dark spines hul[e]i-[>a>ili]li to pull out haHANE ghostly calling voices >EWA>EWA biased, unjust MALIMALI kaka>i follow in line ... ku upright, standing ka>olo jowl emi ... cheap ko>iko>i weight
882 887 888 892 893 896 897 900
HELE-mai oMANA ... >io na-KINO ... lua MELE lana ... moana
901 901 902
hulu[huluweo] hulu = Mao., Tua. huru he
904
naua
905 906 907 908 911 912 913 914 920 923 926 929 930 931
932 934 943 944 945 946 947
hawk for body 2 yellow buoyant ocean glowing to contract, draw in welcome! {interjection} aloof
HELE-aku MANAMANA hulu-heu KINOhi >ewalu MELEMELE po>i hilo, cf. Mao. whirowhiro makali makali[o] ... eue
>upa = Mao. kupa ua = Tua. ua stomach hama = Mao. hama peleu broad, wide hama[na]-huna maHINA HINA ... le = Tua. re.hia to be terrified ulukua mahele division, share pu>unaue KAOHI restrain, withhold KAOHIOHI KONA hard KONAKONA iho to go down pelu helehele with ruts ... ha hulu-au precious time pulama >amoi Ainu KAMUI akua (*KAMOI) "god" napo ... glutinous ka>a ... kulana[lana] tottering nawa, cf. Tua. navarivari kakau, cf. Tua. tongue po>ipo>i, cf. Tatau-i-matani: Tua. poki Tua. matani breeze, wind Mao. pokipoki holewa nibble at food ... pehu lewa wanderer, ... mio, cf. Tua. vagabond miomio kapehi to throw at, to ka-lu-ku>u pelt HIWA entirely black kaHIWA ... pano (of high chiefs) liholiho >ope ... feeble maha[ha] mahilu to beautify kaena (ACW, p. 40)
finger feather downy 2^3 yellow crest of wave eddy glowing taut {chant interjection} to soar to be consumed forked branching nervous, perturbed to divide, share strong, hard to turn under trough, ditch to cherish god[dess] resin to totter gums (of mouth) eddy-wind longing to eat maeandering to fling scatter release pupil of eye (name for king) weak to glorify
951 952
haole makua
foreigner parent
956 958
kuku ... helua
962 966 969 970 971 972 974 977 979 983 984
mama[ki] ... lima[lima] ... ho>olohe ... mau[w]a ko>iko>i mau->awa muka ... kana-wai >api ... ... pau makohi
contest scratched; grumbled tree-bark for tapa to massage (army-command) fallen tree harsh, severe always bitter to urge animal extremely fluid temples-spot finished, ended to dig
995 997 998 1001 1003 1004 1009 1011
... kulu-ma>u ... >olu pohina ... ... weu ma>ilu pole ... ... pu ... MELia
1012 1013 1017 1019 1020
humuhumu uki ... ... nahi ... na hio-[he]le mukiki
1023 1025 1026 1027
... WA ... mu ha>i-lau ho>omau-ke>a
1028 1029 1031 1037
pulu ... kuaua ... ala >ea-pu
kuwah[o] ... ka lua ke kane
... [kah]ulu[i] [kuolo] [kolo] papa-kapa mahinu ... nawa-i-kaua kulu ... hau kolokolo mahi>opu hapele ... lo ... make-au ... k[au>]el[i>]e[li] leak moist ma kani polite, courteous honi ... misty, foggy ... hea grass lau ... a trifle, a pittance ... >ane[>ane] garment-lining ke >ahu wind-instrument ... kona plumeria (a MELeMELe flower, sometimes yellow) to sew ... [>o]mau anger, resentment [neku>e] thin, frail nilea the inclined paths ke ala-pi>i sipping by birds makino, cf. of honey Mao. matini ... WA crab unauna to sway leaves pamakani snagged cross muli, cf. Maori Muri-ranawhenua wet kahe shower wai-luhi to waken ka-wele[wele] {vocative particle} [>ulu]>ulu-oha together
foreign the mate [of] the man athletic contest to scratch to grumble flat tapa rubbed babble in army timber unpleasant to scold rude soggy, swampy skull-front death time to dig up the past because of drink greeting misty, clouded leaf scarcely, hardly the cloak, shirt leeward (downwind) yellow
to pin, to sew angry weak the path climb bird-rite
hermit-crab wind-blown; violets (goddess whose mandible snagged) to trickle water cared-for dim memory gathering, assembly greeting
1038 1040 1046 1049 1050 1051 1053 1056 1059 1063 1064 1069 1073 1074 1075 1076 1078 1079 1080 1081 1082 1083 1084 1085 1086 1087 1088 1092 1093 1094
1095
1096 1097
i-alo heiau-mana [ke >owa] ho>oPI>OPI>O ho>oPI>O-aka ho>olahalaha nane-wa kumeheu ... paio ha>i-ola ... mauli-aka ke ala-kike>e pana panakai pai ... kalua
in face temple-power the retch
maka ... ho>ohiwa[hiwa] pua-meli PI>O-nu>u PI>O-anuenue outspread wings pu-lau[oho] riddle to talk ... >uwao path, trail lele-awa debate holio preach living laulaha ghost reflection mi-loha the path zigzag mai->au[>i] to snap fingers koli ... to flip saltwater alia->o>e funnel sinkhole; pili ... to pamper double piliwale pu>uto pout lips helei-kolulolu to investigate ->ama ... paLIMA-kahana he-LIMA-ia (ACW, p. 46) waia-kea disgraced at court hepa-huno ka>e>a-mauli hero life >ele-i-ku kokoi->ele spurt waterhole ma>uma>u kaholo[holo] ... to exercise ... oioi ... hinalea wrasse ... aku panabeat in music helu->akahia[kahi] ... inexperienced -le pana>i ... to reciprocate pa>ina ... pu>u ... pebble-guessing no>a ... game napu>u-ibunched-up in pilia-kaha swooping (bird) -moa palima ... booth manu[he>u] ... >akilolo for head-diseases mailo ... >akilolo wrasse: toothy & niho-hoe "whistling" ... ke ewe the egg-albumen; [hua] pal[a]i ... ; the placenta pali>i[li>i] ... (saucer-shaped) ... ke ewe the egg-albumen; [hua] pal[a]i ...; the placenta pali>i[li>i] ... (saucer-shaped) pa>u[hia] ... overcome with maka>imo>imo sleep pu>u[a] ... suffocated ... kena[kena]
face to honor flower-honey
case moth arbitrator jump channel constantly in mind publicized dream spiritless from to digress to pare fingernails salty jab narrow pass friend unneeded stretched lips prattling
idiot in-law embryo in gestation moist to squirm skipjack to count to do no work dinner-party stone-guessing game clung chicken damaged building emaciated tooth whistlingbreathed egg fried; saucer
egg fried; saucer
eye blinking suffocation
1098 1099 1100 1108 1109 1111 1114 1119 1120 1121 1123
... ka>e ... waia ... [ho>o]ka-mauli ... we[lewe]le ...
to smudge disgraced to shatter fontanel to strip human flesh ... aka ... shadow koi ... "relation of pilo" papio a fish [poku, instead of] night-scream kupo ... [poku, instead of] night-scream kupo kanaha forty ... ne>e to hitch ... ko poi, in container,
1125 kupou 1128 ... lili 1129 ... naka .... 1130 ... [hulili, instead of] hilili 1132 ... he-le-ma>i 1133 ... [ho>o]lalau 1134 ... laha-uma 1135 ... li>ili>i 1136 ... na>ana>a
1137 ... ma>ikau 1138 ... helele>i 1139 KUPOLoPA>IU MA 1141 ... [ho>o]kele ... 1143 ... ahi ... 1144 ... maka-nui 1145 ... ma-iana 1146 ... kahu-li 1147 ... lili 1148 ... lililili 1149 ... lalala 1151 ... lua[ho]ana 1152 ... [ho>o]la>i ... 1153 ... >olo[a]
[pa>u] nahi[li] ... kameha>i ko[la o]nu
soot, smudge blundering portion of corpse sexually excited
uli pilo ... lo>ilo>i mi-li>o
dark
ha munu [pahulu] naia he-
a fish dream-frightened
to break to walk downhill shudder [up spine] to shake with cold to shiver
mo ... [ka-, ku]kele kuamo>o
four goatfish (nightmare-causing) insecurely tied poi, containermixing to break to slide backbone, spine
mu>u[lulu] ... ... nawe
chilled to tremble
poi listless sick to digress, divert published to pry here-and-there pot-bellied; confused, bewildered recurrent sickness scattered grain
poi-wa [ho>o]nana nakulu eia ... ... hewa ... hewa[hewa]
poi to retch amusement to circulate rumour here satiety crazy, demented
kimo-pu holi KUPOLuPA>I UMA navigation-star ... >amo[>amo] fire [ho>o]lua sight great hulili eye owl manu esteemed seaweed hulu jealousy na maka[>aiau] jealousy pulupu[lu]-li to sun naku solar rainbow hoaka to poise aloft lele ... gift at birth hanau
up-and-down lot to sprout
twinkling (of star) to bake dazzling bird esteemed, seaweed the eyes envious coi:tion-chills to wallow crescent to fly childbirth
1154 ... lai[na]-MA>I 1155 ... la>i->aku 1156 ... h[a]ili[-o-Pua] ...
1157 ... mali ... 1158 ... >ale 1159 ... >i-mo 1160 1161 1163 1164
... kalili ... mene[hune] ... huli-lau ... huli ... ... hulimai[>a] 1165 ... kama-nao 1167 ... ku[>i]-lu[>i] 1168 ... nehe ... 1169 haliu 1171 ... >olo ... 1176 POLO ... 1182 ... nu>ai[hea]
1187 1202 1203 1204 1205 1206 1208
>eku ... ... HEWA ... >ula>a ... >aHIWA ... >ULA ... WENA ... kakahi
1209 ... >I
1210 ... >i>i 1211 polohi-PA
urticaria ti-leaf cabbagetree a fern:
>ili-MA>I ho>oilo
Makanalau[a>e] "memory of Pua" ... [ho>o]lau[a>e] to cajole huli ... gust of wind lele-i-luna supreme holo>oko>a succession pale-blue flower uliuli (worked at night) hiwa-uli to turn leaf maki->ao to curl over maki-oareddish-brown ->ea cavern fissure >Ewa thunderclap sound groping-search to hearken water-container; sagging skin caterpillar [huge caterpillar on roadway of dead: HM, P. 157] to root (of pig) error, mistake to pierce dark, sombre
unique, outstanding to say; interjection of scorn lost knowledge smooth (of skin)
skin disease to cause sprouting fragrant-fern to cherish a memory
>ea-pa>ipa>i
change an opinion wind-blown on high paramount, supreme blue entirely-black dark to roll up leaf roll up fine mat reddish-brown [place of caves] (HM, p. 343) noisy to clap
hulihele maliu ki>o->i>o
search everywhere to heed cistern flesh
POLO >Ewa
[= Maori Kewa,
pua>a ... HEWA makolu HIWA >ULA WENA ... [o]kana
ruler of the dead: HM, p. 149] pig wide mesh entirely black red blood-relative perfectly
>I>I
guttural quality; to frown, scowl
hipa pe-PA
imbecilic flattened dish
1212 ... pake[o]ke[o] 1214 ... helehele ... 1216 ... lele
people who eat with chief divided to dry up
1224 ... MAUMAU 1228 ... kukulu 1231 ... kahiau
horizon to polish a bowl
1233 ... [kiko] 1236 ... >oaiku 1238 ... koko ... 1241 ... kina>u 1242 ... ki>i 1243 1244 1245 1247
... [la>i] ... wai-kaua li[hau]->ili ... kamau
1253 ... ha 1256 ... >aolo 1257 1263 1266 1271 1272 1273 1273 1276 1277 1278 1279 1280 1282 1283
... pihapiha ... [pilu] ... mele ... ... holo-mau ... ka ... ... kaili ... ka>ili ... hana ... >ana[hua] ... wahi-pali ... noho ... ... noho>ana ... PULEPULE ... lala
me[a][m]a>o[na] kahiki ha[kaka]u[la>i] ... MAU ... ... [kahiki]moe ... ko
person who eat one's fill divided sky rack for drying
mark gasping for breath lacings flaw, defect seek for sexual ends calm, quiet water battle moist-fresh skin to drink a toast
kaha mauli[>awa]
horizon to break up in container to mark gasp in dying
>i>i-wa >o[wa-]li>i [ho>o]mano
tight interval split little love sorcery
halula [pomano] >au>au holi ...
ditch, sluice obstruction, hindrance full to shake to sing to run always to swing the arms a string of fish to snatch, grab valley disfigured to split cliff deportment staying, dwelling
iwi ... >olo>olo
calm, at ease dam to bathe to open a conversation long line of surf to loiter, lag
1284 ... hou 1286 ... kahuli
member of a society sweat to capsize
1288 ... pukaua 1289 ... lilolilo 1290 ... lana ...
champion generous cheerful
nu>u ... ... luli polo[lei] ... ... nanai ... nanana nana-ue kula-i-moku pihi pili ... ... >ele>ele[u] kauhale PULE halawai
to eat with relish to shake singing in mountain to strut to flutter wings a fish to jerk field in district scar narrow pass vivacious hamlet
... paoa kulana
odoriferous wobbly, unsteady
luna ka[ihia]u ... lilo
foreman, boss to give generously busy
meeting
1291 [ho>o]lanaKILA overbearing, impudent 1293 ... malana to stretch fingers 1297 ... maemae damp 1298 ... >oki>oki to cut into pieces 1301 ... MAMA 1302 ... mamaka carrying-stick 1303 ... paepae elevated mound ... pae[humu] ... taboo enclosure 1308 ... ka[pa]u>u ... fluttering, flapping 1309 ... aupa[ka] white-flowered shrub 1312 ... homali emaciated, thin 1316 ... >omaka to leaf out, of taro 1317 ... [ho>o]pau[>ai] to waste food
... >iwa
1324 ... po>i 1325 ... kono 1327 ... >ume 1330 1331 1332 1334 1335 1336 1337
... nahu[maka] ... ka>e[>e] ... ... HONU ... ... LEHELEHE ... KOLU ... UKA ... hani[ni]
1339 ... wala-AU 1342 ... aku 1343 ... newa 1344 ... kuhikuhi 1345 ... kilo 1349 ... kolo 1350 ... helu 1351 ... helu-one[one-i-honua] 1352 ... one 1355 ... pauku 1356 ... nana
KILA
bold
mana[mana] pakapaka li>ili>i MAMA paepae umu
finger raindrops piecemeal
>upa[>i]
support, prop heap; surrounded to flap wings
Li>a-wa[hine]
white blossoms
pu[e]la ... >olu>a
wispy, thin unexpanded leaf of taro forcer to disgorge food clasp, clamp
to catch between mi>i hands to entice a bird pahu braided thatching hala fattened hand-net
uplands to pour out, overflow to tilt to say dizziness, vertigo to give orders stargazer respect to a chief to grumble to count death-bringing prayer sand to slice to observe
kaekae ... ... pu>u ... HONU LEHELEHE ... KOLU maUKA haui
bird-cage leaves plaited for thatching plump knot in net lips to scatter uplands to surge
kukele-AU >ikuwa mania lahui loa [le]lepau ... >ake ... mu
to slip, slide
naha-kea kalakala[i] huli
broken white to whittle to search
voices of the gods dizziness to proclaim a law distant to trust completely to find fault crowds; public executioner
1357 ... kilokilo 1359 ... lono 1360 1361 1366 1367 1368
enchantment, magic news
carrying-pole greeting to grow rapidly breeze branching brown seaweed 1369 ... hoku[a] nape, shoulder 1370 ... lama ebony 1372 ... kau[kau] chant addressing the dead 1373 ... ho>oilo rainy 1374 ... ka>ana[ni]>au ahu-pua>a "cairn-pig" 1375 ... malama light 1377 ... mo>o narrow strip of land 1378 ... k[a]ua[heahe] to gaze 1379 ... >alo to dodge 1384 ... haka open space, vacancy 1386 ... kaukeha[keha] {song} 1394 ... po>ipo>i to cover up the truth 1395 ... kamalu ... to warn in secret 1396 ... helei pulled-down eyelid 1397 ... kohukohu resemblance, likeness 1398 ... kahu[a] foundation, site 1399 ... >oma oven 1400 ... nalu to ponder, mull over 1401 ... NALU-haki to break (of billows) 1402 ... poPO>I 1403 ... kalohe comic 1404 1407 1411 1412
... >au[amo] ... ho[ni] ... ... ahu[ahu] ... makani ... >[aka]la
... kakala ... pu[nihe]le ... ala[puka] ... ... kawa>a
surgeonfish-knife fond of travel dry rot to cast overboard
kelea
ritual cleansing
kala ...
kea mo>olio
public crier, announcer support for >auamo greeting tall and straight sea-breeze much-branching brown seaweed tall and stout forest, grove chants with garbled words rainy, showery {father of hogs} (HM, p. 211) white narrow path
kilohi >anap[a]u kula ...
to glance, gaze to frolic, frisky open country
kana ... heana ... oheohe malu[a] ... lipoa kanu[nu] ... nahele kake ... [pa]hulu[lu] Lono[-aohi]
... [nu>u]anu ... {song} [ho>o]hele ... to pretend kaukahi [makalole]
solitary, alone eyelid turned back
mo>olelo
history, record
kapili kahu >ano ...
to build to tend an oven meaning
NALU
wave, surf
... POki>I nanaku moku mahoa lena >auhuhu
>aka>akai: cf. >aka>aka laughter to amputate to travel together stretch out to dry {for poisoning fish}
1413 ... >io ... 1415 ... pali[li] 1416 ... ho>opo 1417 1417 1418 1419 1420
... >unu ... unu[hia] ... ha>i ... lupe[a] ... [>a]kala
a fishing-net herald (fig.) weakling to behave ignorantly to jerk to translate another pleasing plant pink tapa
1420 ... k[u]ala[pa] 1421 ... wekea
ridge mid-day, zenith
1423 ... kahu
owner of pet
1425 ... >ama>ama
(fig.) be satisfied with what you have! dry, parched wave, ripple wounded suppressed resentment bottom, cause holding on precariously contagious (as, disease) ebb threadfish to break swimming
1427 1428 1428 1430
... >anoa ... >ale ... ... aleale ... ... hupu
1432 ... kumu ... 1433 ... kaunuku[nuku] 1434 ...lele 1436 1440 1441 1442
... hanu>u ... moi ... ha>i ... oma
1443 1444 1448 1449 1450 1451
... kahai ... >oliko ... pu ... >umeke ... [pua>i] ... huliau
1452 ... papio
protective cloth sparkling wind-instrument a bowl to gurgle, utter to think of the past pressed down
la>au-mele
persistently chant
... hin[aw]e kika[ha] ...
feeble, puny to walk ignoring everyone squeezed, wrung; expressed to change to dig often tapa made from other pieces of tapa; mountain ridge zenith
>u[w]ia kahuli >eli>eli mo>omo>o
[Kahiki]kapu[i-Holanike-ku>ina] >e->iwa peculiar frigatebird {useth other birds as if pets so to forage} kaomi to suppress a thought or emotion >ol[in]o ... kai-ma>i niniha
parched, dry sea sick sullen
... mole [maka>u] ...
bottom, cause precarious
>opilo ...
relapse (of sickness)
... ha>aha>a holi[li] haehae mano
minimum spindly to tear to bits shark {always swimming} protected spray (of sea) wind-instrument a bowl proper to gurgle to admire
>opele ... ehu >ohe pu[niu] ... pono->uli lehiwa ... uma
to press, force hand down
1453 1453 1454 1457
... loiloi ... lo[p]i[>o] ... loi[loi] ... loiloi
1458 ... kalakala 1459 ... loloi[ahili] 1462 ... lo>i[lo>i] 1463 ... kaka
to criticize to bend over to criticize to find fault, to criticize (fig.) rough in language, rude to wander in speech pools of water to fish for parrot fish peacefully throbbing to neglect
1465 ... [niau] 1468 ... [kapalili] 1469 ... [ho>o]hemahema 1474 ... kolo[a] ... to make a prolonged sound 1475 ... [palua] double, dual 1477 ... kinikini game of marbles
1478 ... manomano 1481 ... [ku>ululu] 1482 ... [nihi] 1483 ... [palupalu] 1484 ... ahuahu 1489 ... [pu]halu ... 1490 ... lele 1491 ... pa 1492 ... pa-keke 1494 ... pololo[i] 1494 ... polo ... 1501 ... [mauhili] (instead of hilimau) 1503 ... [nipo]lo 1504 ... koikoi 1505 ... >i>i 1506 ... ilo
pohopoho
kanai[e] ...
show contempt in bending over to criticize acrid sarcastic remark overbearing
naio[>aikae]
slanderer
... no kalani[>a] ...
seepage a kind of fish
uhua[o] ... haikala naku[li] ...
peacemaker severe cramps apathetic
hano
humming sound
mahoe pokipoki
twin sowbug {rolling self into marble-like ball} 4000 timid, shy standing tiptoe; rim, edge supple, limber plant-sap
... nio manu-koha
4000^2 shy, abashed creeping tiptoe; rim, edge limber, flexible to grow rapidly (of plants) to sag banana taboo to women house-lot, yard
kini ... >ahe ... niao
enclosure scolding upright pandanus entangled
wai-keha hina ... hinalo pi>opi>o
depository to brag, boast to fall from upright pandanus-blossom sorcery of touching self
to drum & chant at same time to demand, claim tight rainy
... olioli
chant not danced to
pu>apu>a ... apo kulu-kau
to beseige band, girdle, ring to drip summer
wali wale ... kahio ... lukama[ea] kahikahi
to lean to one side religious ceremony for women place
1510 ... naka 1512 ... kopea 1513 ... ma>u>a 1523 ... hi>ialo
1547 1548 1549 1552 1553 1554 1555
1579
opu>u-PE ... mauna >opu>u ... hamahamau ... uli OPU>U-kala-kea OPU>U-kalahiwa ... ne>e ... papapa ... HA>AHA>A ... hiolo kani>o KE KI-hei ... I-KA-WAO ... KA-LOLOmauna KA-LOLO-piko
1581 1582 1583 1584 1586 1588
kauwila PALIPALI PUNA-LA-uka PI-HE>E-luna ... PI-HAE oli ...
1589 1590 1591 1593 1594 1595 1596
kiko ... ... pulupulu ho>olehu ho>ouka ka nalu poi ... malama
1558 1559 1560 1561 1565 1575 1576 1578
1597 KAULAna 1598 PA-la>au
land-shell {for being blown} raked careless of clothing child who stays close to parent
mountain budding breasts silence steersman
to squirm low-and-flat to collapse striped crosswise the toga
wood for spears
chant not danced to to peck up food tinder, kindling to reduce to ashes to load the wave gruel month
medicine
pulelehu[a]
blown in the air
apoapo ... pola
to hill-up plants flap of clothing
kahei ...
container for keeping close-by the remains of chief
PEPE ka pu>u lele-i->ao halala>i ... kele OPU>U->ele OPU>Umakaua huli pu kana->u>a HA>A ... hane>ene>e ... ila KE KI-la>au I-KA-WAO ... KA-LOLO-amoana KA-LOLO>a>a uhiuhi PALI-moe PUNA-LA-kai PI-HE>E-lalo PI-HAEHAE kau ... ... mai >auna[ki] [ho>o]lapa ... >aluka ... [ho>o]hua lena-wale kau-ma>i KAULA-lo PA-weo
the hill weaning in bud tranquility steersman
to overturn horizontal; mat collapse dark birthmark the skirt-leaves in the forest
wood for spears
sacred chant to chew stick to obtain fire to blister, to blaze heap to swell (of wave) yellow sap periodmenstruation
blush (from niacin?)
1604 KU>I->au 1605 ka pawa ... 1606 mana ... 1607 >auku>u 1609 KaPoli
1617 ... peku 1618 ... >ope>ope 1620 ko>ele
prosthesis limb-bone the praedawn limbed foetus night-heron "the bosom" (bosom-warmed goddess) to massage appendicitis to come into view to disqualify interlocking stones to kick fold up clothes couvee labor
1621 huaka-lani 1622 ... >ula
clear sky red
1623 ka>i ... 1624 kala-loma->iao 1625 hakala-o>a 1626 keko-ha[>a] 1628 kaula-ma>o ... 1629 ... kele-moana 1631 ... kohakoha 1634 ... kumulani 1638
seine long ago slow flightless gable rafter monkey dwarf cord green swampy campground sarcastic remark horizon bamboo, reed
1640 ... mahinu ... 1644 ... ha>i ... ha>i[ha>i] 1645 kiamanu 1646 ho>opa->ili ...
rubbed coquettish brittle birdcatcher to touch skin
1648 ... >ihi ...
hoop on head with apo ... food through its ... akea width battle puhili ...
1613 1614 1615 1616
kapa>i ... kakai >o>ili kapae-niho
1649 ... kaua
KU>I-a>eo-naka kai[ao]-ni>o ... kaha koha ho>opumehana
stilts unsteady dawn threshhold limbed foetus (heron's) squawk to warm
ho>olawa-kua manawahua mohala >oke>a
make a strong back organ-discomfort shining forth to block, by cross sticks
kapua[>i] kuka>a ... lohe-lau[aki]
sole of foot roll up tapa to obey work together cloudless height stained red {pandanus goddess} basket-trap a long time, slow house-timber ridgepole, roof to ape, mimic liana to irrigate
kau[la>ela>e]-nu>u ... ... he>a-[Hi>i-a]ka ... heau ... li>u kulukau[poku] mah[u>]i ... ka ... ho>oma>u ... lili ... ... i-kai-akea kau-hoaka pali[hi] ... holi ... holili ... pu>u ... ho>opi>i ...
sensitive to criticism towards sea breadth longitudinal pole brandish spear to touch lightly to ask indirectly spindly catching plover to cause sexual intercourse hoop width thwarted
1650 ... ma>o ... 1652 kuka->uha[nehe]le ... 1653 ... imu ... 1654 ... moki[hanakukae-mo]a 1656 ... mo>i 1657 ... lua-kini 1658 ho>opili-moe ... 1660 lohaloha ... 1661 kele ... 1667 ho>ohiolo ... 1670 mihi ... 1671 ... ku 1676 nanue 1678 ho>ohewahewa 1679 MILIMILI-PO 1681 po>opo>o-LANI 1684 kunikuni ... 1685 ... KAU ... 1686 polo ... 1687 ... hiua 1689 ... [le]lepau 1691 LANI-pahiolo 1693 ho>onewa
green to consult travelling spirit oven bruised lemony leaves to remain long in one place fighting multitude united to marry drooping (branch) swampy to overthrow repentance stand, support nauseating twill plaiting sunken-eyed to scorch, sear to poke, stab board-game to trust
to thrive to gossip witty, entertaining lining of oven bruise
ho>oahu
to lay away goods
pu>epu>e [ho>o]kahi->olo[mua] lau-hohola moku-moka ... ho>opalaha ... pe ... kalele ... kuhi-makani ... pale MILI-ho>oPO heana-LANI mali>i ... ... KAU ... nakao heihei ... holoa ... mukumu-LANI ... >ala
to attack to unite foreskin leaf spread out district offal to cause to fall modest support, railing gesture ghost apron corpse blighted "the darts" to race agreed-upon
1694 lana[a]u-kua ... 1695 ho>opili ...
unsociable ... meha[m]e anvil to copy, to imitate [ho>o]niau ...
rock for making adzes unapproachable; wood for anvil copying, imitating
1700 PI>O-a-lani 1701 mia-HULU 1702 ... LANI 1704 ho>oPILIPILIkane 1706 ... la>a
arch of sky dreamed
PI>O-a-lewa pahulu -HULU ... LANI PILI-kana
arch of sky nightmare
sacred, holy
... komokomo
evil possession from sorcery
to saw; oval
PALI-aliku PALI-mau>ua PALI-omahilo OLOLO-nu>u
1707 1708 1709 1712
PALI-moe PALI-ho>olapa PALIPALIhia OLOLO
to make cudgel
ahuahu ... wa-ka>au ... ... pale hauli
1716 kapili 1717 kawa ... 1719 ... lupa[lupa] 1722 1723 1724 1725 1727 1728 1729 1730 1731 1735 1736 1739 1740 1741 1742 1743 1744 1745
1746
1747
1748
1751 1752
... HONUA ... KOAKOA ... KUPO nahae-i-ke-kaua
to mend leaping-place prayer for the dead
... [pi]na>i ... ... >a>e ... luka[luka] ...
to patch to step over prayer for the dead
... HONUA ... ia-KOA ... lani-KUPO hane>e-i-luna
collapse on high
fishingnet schism in the army ANA-HINA-KI>I measure gray idol ANA-HINAKI>I ANA-HINA-KI>I ANA-HINAKI>I ANA-HINA-KI>I ANA-HINAKI>I ANA-HINA-KI>I ANA-HINAKI>I ANA-HINA-KI>I ANA-HINAKI>I PALI-ku cliff vertical PALIha>i[ui>iu] PALI-ka>a cliff sloping PALI-[hiona] ... KEA white ... KEA KAPAPA-ku KAPAPA-moe KAPAPA-luna KAPAPA-i-lalo >ole ... without ... pa>a KAPAPA-nui-aKAPAPA-hana-leka slimy ->u>ua KAPAPA-nuiKAPAPAkahuli ... mutant -i>a-napa KAPAPA-nuiKAPAPAaka-laula[ha] spread far hola ... KAPAPA-ki>iKAPAPA-i-laula broad, wide, -akea public KAPAPA-i>aKAPAPA-o>a timbers in ship; -pougill (of fish) -kahi KAPAPAKAPAPA->uli to gurgle -poha ... he>e ... squid, octopus ... >ina ka ho>okoko ... the bloodshed ... koko ... >iao bait [kona-nui-aniho]
cliff high cliff slanting
to withhold slimy meat warped
to spread broad, wide, public
post, broad canoe comb, to scrape bursting of bubbles octopus sinker blood biting-teeth
1755 1756 1760 1814 1815
... ili kehau-kea ... naha li>a ... LAKA
1817 1818 1819 1821
... >apo ... mano[hi>uka] halo ... maka ...
1822 ke oho ... 1823 [kalekale-]>io ... 1823 ... lali>i 1824 ... kupua 1825 mala ... 1826 hau[ho]le 1827 na mea nanea LALO-kona 1829 HONUA-po-iluna 1831 PO-kinikini 1831 PO-manomano 1832 KUPUKUPU ... 1834 ka mole-
aground dew white loss of virginity yearning tame
honua ... ... >ale ... >ipo->i ke [ake] ... kapa-paiaLAKA acceptance lawea ... thresher >upa ... rubbing, to rub ... walu unripe fruit; face; ... hua ... eye ... hua[hua] ... the hair ka ma>o ... gossip herald ... [>ohikihiki] attend to details ... ao ...
land, ground billow, snow sweetheart supreme the yearning
animal demi-gods garden foreign the ones who do relaxed, at leisure
animal family-gods garden distant to incite an acquired skill; relaxing, at ease
LALO-ho>o ... HONUA-i-lalo
fern the taproot; the bag in net -O-KA-HONUA of the ground 1835 pa>ito slap, to clap ->a>a ... to brave 1839 ho>okumu ... to originate 1949 ... HULI-HONUA 1970 manaku humble commoner 1977 nana snarling 1978 nanaweaving ->ie woven 2050 ... maoa sore from rubbing 2059 Kaha>i = Mao. {breadfruitTawhaki bringer: MPCD} 2064 ... ina to pry with a lever 2066 ... anaina 2067 ... hua ...
... >ao>ao ... [ka>ao>ao] ... loa->a walea
be accepted to open and shut to rub fruit; emotion eyelid-gesture the hairy abutilon pry into past be careful
congregation egg
PO-lele-hu PO-hako>iko>i KUPUKUPU ... ke a>ake >a>a-O-KA-HONUA kanike-koa ho>a>o HULI-HONUA hiko[ni] ...
the small root the bag, caul tolling (of bell) brave to do a little brand on outcaste
[ma]kapu ... [kamola]
to frown to weave
... kapa>i ... ... >ulu->ohia
slap in massaging breadfruit gathered
hua .... = Mao. hua mano ... ka poea
lever many the sphaere, globe
2068 2077 2078 2079 2080 2081 2082
paunui ... ... lana >alo ... heka mapu-leo pau ... lu->akoakoa 2083 kuhi-mau
to have all floating to dodge sore, enflamed emotive voice entirely to throw to assemble gesture stopped
... kia to concentrate on ka wai the water pu>i[wa>iw]a to shy ma>i-lou sick pain-stitch kama>e ... feign friendliness ... le>a thoroughly hinato throw down >apo[epo>e] ... to assemble ka>u[ka>u]delay finger mana[mana] 2084 ka malu ... the taboo kapu taboo 2085 [lalawe] to itch ... kuna[kuna] itch Martha Warren Beckwith: The Kumulipo. U. of Chicago Press, 1951. M. K. Pukui & S. H. Elbert: Hawaiian Dictionary. U. Press of HI, Honolulu, 1971. Frank Stimson (ed. by Donald Stanley Marshall): A Dictionary of Some Tuamotuan Dialects of the Polynesian Language. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1964. Herbert W. Williams: A Dictionary of the Maori Language. Wellington. ACW = Liliuokalani (ex-queen): An Account of the Creation of the World. Boston: Lee and Shepard, 1897. HM = Martha Beckwith: Hawaiian Mythology. Yale U. Press, New Haven, 1940. MPCD = Edward Tregear: Maori-Polynesian Comparative Dictionary. Wellington, 1891.
Kumu-lipo (Kumu-uli-po) = Codex Borgia Kumul ipo line
Code x Borgi a page
130
straddles
1
262
"sputtering sleep" (Pimoe)
275
a female in the time of groping "darkness" (panopano)
3, uppe r right 3
387388 438
462
"sea-urchin; sun-rays" (wana[: cf. te wana -AHM 6:202) sea-spider
AHM
pot-being straddling twisted-being 2 skulls spitting-out streams
blind goddess
4
realms of darknesses
5
white deer as rayed sun
6
8-appendaged heads [?=
481 497498
"nocturnal male-erection (of penis)" po-kanokano pig
7 8 9
502 539
peaked-heads "rough skin, of shark" (kuaka)-"shark" (mano)
541
"soak-claw" (kuwaluwalu) the "adhaesive" (linalina) it sprouts dwell in holes
542 546 561
spiders] man piercing own penis sacred bundle [cf. pigskin wrap] snakes in attic offered drink by pantalooned woman
9
bird's head protruding from mouth of god
9 10, uppe r cente r 10
peaked-headed gods jagged-backed openmouthed dragon
11-12
in pool is clawed deity stuck to: a sprouting log. abiding within earthmonster: god having red curve on his face. pathway to radiant (rayed) disk
"red birthmark" (>ohi>a) on the way to "light" (malama)
12
590591 606
"cross" (pe>ape>a)
14
ruddy forehead of god
628
dim-sighted (hapopo) god
14, god having red lower forehead left 15 dangling-eyed god [cf. Maya (in Chilam Balam) god "squint"]
629
goddess "Clothed-inleaves" =
630 637
goddess "Naked". medicinal-juices (kapopo) 15
583
13
15
2:4 Ru-wai-moko ("the water trembling with the lizard") who resided in his mother {cf. Naraka remaining in gestation} 2:4 Manu-ongaonga "the bird who came when called"
2:4 Mata-ora whose face was tattooed 2:53 way to Hua-tu ("lever-pillar": cf. liahona of Choctaw)
crucified god
goddess having maize growing from her body: otherwise she is naked. sucking-up of juices
Hapopo [cf. (on pp. 59-61) Pioio, i.e. Haw. pioioi "squint"] 2:52 +Niuareka (coconut-tree ...) daughter of H-
651 662 685
ruddy tint god Kane (the tree) "whitish" (pakea) god
16 16 17
692
god "coarse, of lace)" (pe>e = pe>ekue = pepe>ekue) "leaves placed under the sick" (>ape) he shouted aloud
17
695
red stream variegately-striped tree white-headed (viz.skullheaded) god god under net
flowery bleeding haemerrhoid 700 18 2 men shouting (with voice-scrolls) at burning fortress 18 fire is drilled in god who is crossed-faced AHM = John White: Ancient History of the Maori.
2:53 tent
17
2:54 2 leaders assault fortresses 2:55 fire of Paowa who is unrecognized
B-R>S^YT----------------------------------------------Kumu-lipo (Kumu-uli-po) verse name meaning line name meaning 1:1
in the beginning ... breath
721
+hali-au
to carry time
722
na>u
1:28
multiply
733
+kulu[kulu]
2:2 2:10 2:21
he rested to water ribs
735 747 754
2:24
and they shall be one flesh fig leaves together coats of skins
756
+kunewa puluka +[iwi]>ao>a o +pu>iki
to hold the breath to become numerous weariness soaked rib
767
pula
768
kuamu
which turned keeper of sheep [cf. "counting sheep"] "Am I my brother's keeper?"
772 777
huli kini
778
+maua
1:2
3:7 3:21 3:24 4:2
4:9
ru^h. ("Spirit")
= puliki to hug (embrace) leafy branch tapa used in sorcery to turn fortythousand
ungrateful
4:14 4:15
vagabond 779 set a mark on 780
+>ena pua>ena
4:16
out from the presence ... in the land of No^d a city ... H.no^k harp and panpipe "Hear my voice ..." corrupt ... corrupted [the ark of No_h.] [the ark became crowded] all flesh died fowl face a wind ... the waters assuaged the ark rested [sailing, became grounded] "Be ye fruitful, and multiply" a tower, whose top may reach unto heaven not understand one another's speech princess trained servants stars
782
+kulewa
783
+Kuakahi
787
haluku
789
... >ula
826
>opala
ringing in the ears garbage
827
hali[hali]
ferry
831
nunu>a
crowded
838 839 840 842
kaiwi manu +makini +... pu
skull bird gourd-mask to blow water
842
kele-mau
sailing grounded
853
pili-mau
mating-game mated
861
+hulili
ladder
864
hanehane
879 888
+alakai ... >io
ghostly indistinctsounding voices directrix herald
896
+melemele
male (!) twin
4:17 4:21 4:23 6:12 6:14:22 7:13:14 7:21 7:21 7:23 8:1
8:4
9:7
11:4
11:7
11:29 14:14 15:5
+S`aray
shy to glow brightly far away beyond sight
far mythical land to rattle
15:12
15:17 16:14
18:2
18:10
18:11
18:15
18:23
18:25 -:32 19:9
19:19
an horror of great darkness fell upon him between those pieces B>e_ra well lah.ay-ro_>i^ freshness gazing [angels were not admitted through the door] [S`a^ra^h maintained silence, though she had overheard secretly] it ceased to be with S`a^ra^h after the manner of women (menopause) was afraid ... didst laugh [nervous laughter?] the righteous with the wicked [>abra^ha^ m restraineth YHWH] came near to break the door thy mercy ... in saving my life
star Rauwolfia {used in India as cure for agantha "insanity"} scattered
898
hao
899
+puehu
903
makilo
904
+>upa
906
+hama[u]huna
silence secret
907
mahina
moon
908
+ulukua
= uluku "nervous"
911
+pu>unaue
to share
912
kaohi
to restrain
917
+halulu
loud noise
918
+luluka
peace
to eye wistfully (look at longingly) to slam (as, a door)
19:25 19:26 19:33 -:35 22:3 22:10 23:19
24:1
24:9
24:30
24:32 25:25
25:34
26:11
27:1 27:14 27:15
overthrew those cities salt [stupor induced] clave the wood [sought to slay own son] buried ... his wife in the cave [thereby apotheosizing her?] was old, and well stricken in age under the thigh
919
+... hiolo
collapse
921 922
>aukai moe-kau
924
+milo-kua
926
+akua
seafaring sleep to impose milo-tree to hew: milo "abortion" goddess
927
kunewa
to age
928
pahilo
earring and bracelets upon ... hands provender
931
kakau
= puahilo "to chap (of skin)" tattooing
932
holewa
[<e_s`aw was born] red, all over ... hairy [lentils are eaten, cooked]
937
kaki>o
938
+miko
939
mokiweo
charged all his people ... shall surely be dim
942
wikani
945
pano
savory (with herbs) [Ya
946
>ope-lau
947
mahilu
to nibble at food mange (impetigo) to kink = >aweoweo seeds = >aheahea seeds [eaten cooked?] inflexible
obscure (dark) to bundle leaves to beautify
27:39
dew (cf. "dew of lights" reviving the dead) Now, therefore, ... obey my voice a stranger heaven [seen as mythical place]
948
+waiau
950
+kukala
951 954
haole >opikana
29:8
the stone on
957
pohaku ...
30:20
960
+ho>olu>a
965 970
+ka pou ... kumaua
972
+kolokolo
to investigate
974
muka ...
976
kukona
clicking sound to urge animal unfriendly
978
lohilohi
tardy
32:19 32:25
I have borne him six sons set the posts "I cannot rise up before thee" thou hast searched all my stuff I served ... for they cattle lest he come and smite me he is behind us appease out of joint
foreigner heavenly atmosphaere [mythical place] weighted with rocks to bear many children the post inactive
979 981
>apiki ... >olepe
32:26 33:13
let thee go all ... will die
982 983
peaceable ass; shoulder
985 987
kala +huli-makeau +na ... >ohao
trickery to turn on hinges to release to seek death time calmed hound's neck
27:43
28:4 28:12
30:38 31:35
31:37
31:41
32:12 32:18
33:18 33:19
S^a^le_m H.mo^r; S^ekem
34:2:12
[marriage by 989 forcible rape]
+palemo
34:30
made me (my 990 reputation)
>ahi>ahi
swirling water {cf. Daoist "swirling elixir"} to proclaim
sexually promiscuous way of living to defame
35:4
35:6 35:8 35:11
Lu^z
S^adday
to stink hid them ("gods", i.e. idols) under an oak tree coccyx (or nut) oak s^e_d "ghost (evil spirit)"
992
+wanak[a]u[ila]
993
+kikala
994 995
+hapu>u +makani
kauila a kind of tree; or, re-adorning of idols coccyx tree-fern ghost (possessingspirit) genealogical succession: dark succession to carry on (as, a familyname)
36:1
Now these are the generations
999
mo-ulika>ina
36:40
And these are the names of ... their families my sheaf rose, and also stood upright: your sheaves ... made obeisance his coat, the coat of many colors
1000
ho>oku
1001
mana-weulani
power grass sky
1001
+lau-kunu
leaf cough
1004
+ke >ahu
1006
hamo-hulu
the cloak [royal ones being made of feathers, and therefore each of many colors] to besmear feathers
37:7
37:23
37:31
dipped the coat in the blood {cf. South American Indian myth of birds having acquired the color of their feathers by being dipped in blood}
39:12
40:21 40:22
41:2
41:9:13 41:4:16 41:18 41:39 -:44
42:25
44:5
44:12
44:15
she caught him ... [but]
he fled, and got him out restored [to office] But he hanged [a man]
there came up ... in the reed-grass [a resentment by par
last sack (of youngest brother) teasing [by
1007
i>a-
-mama
fish (ika, in Maori "a human caught as sacrificial victim") nimble
1009
holo ...
approved
1009
+hina-kona
1010
+hele-pu>au
to throw down south [south being the Hindu direction of inauspicious death] to come blossom-stem
1013
uki ...
1014
... nala
1015 1016
+ke>o-hoko ... lelewa
1021
kiola[ola]
thrown stone which returned
1022 1025
+... lu una ...
1027
+muli
to squander turtle-shell {cf. S^andynasty divination by tortoiseshell} last
1028
pulu-ne
wet teasing
= ukiuki "resentment " = ulana "prophecy" white fat hangers-on about a chief
-:17
Yo^se_p, through drinkingvessel, of his brethren] fainted the spirit ... revived clandestine fornication until S^i^lo_h come his eyen shall be red he saw [experienced] ... that it was pleasant he bowed his shoulder [to render honor?] shall judge [cf. wigs of judges of power] upon their heel
45:26 45:27 49:4 49:10
49:12 49:15
49:15
49:16
49:19
49:20
oily bread
>a^s^e_r
49:22 49:26
<arabic
1029 1031
+wa rel="nofollow">i-luhi manu-ala
1034
malu-ipo
1037
+ulu-oha
1038
+maka-lewa
break weary bird to waken clandestinely sweetheart spiritpossessed greeting eye dangling
1039
+pi>i ...
to experience
1040
+ho>ohiwa[ hiwa]
to honor
1041
+malu-olua
1042
+hi>ilei ...
1043
+pu>ai-
-[>i]nea
shade hatfern: olua = mana "power"] to carry in arms a child {cf. Maya carrying in arms a smoky-footed infant} to take potluck (to share food) hardship
1044
kalele
railing
1049
ho>opi>opi> sorcery by o touching one's own body
the head "ye shall carry up my bones from hence."
50:25
50:26
he was put in a coffin in Mis.rayim
1050
+pi>oanuenue
1051
+pulau[oho]
arch rainbow {Tibetan "rainbowbody" (>jalus) involving vanishing of corpse, including bones} "case"caterpillar [encased in coffin-like "case"]
S^MWT-----------------------------------------KUMU-LIPO (KUMU-ULI-PO) verse name meaning line name meaning 1:15 1:15 2:3 2:14 2:16 2:24 3:2
3:10 4:2-:3
4:5
+S^ipra^ h +Pu^
beautifying
1052
ho rel="nofollow">omahilu
to beatifying
cf. pa^
1053
... wa
to talk much
the bush burned with fire, and the bush was not consumed send to preach rod, which became a snake [able to curl] their fathers ... unto thee
nana[ku]wa rel="nofollow">a 1055 ho>okilo
great-bullrush canoe to cause to spy
1056
+... awa[wa]
gulch
1059
+holio
1061
+mali>i
constantly in mind = malili "blighted"
1063 1063
ha>i-ola +milo ...
to preach life "curl" (name of a tree)
1067
hale->imiloea
1054
4:15 4:24
4:28
5:4
5:8 5:12
8:20 9:9 10:22 12:9
12:22
>ezo^b "hyssop"
dynasty" & expert to embroider a tale the path zigzag
put the words in his mouth "And it came to pass on the way, that YHWH met him [Mo_s^eh], and sought to kill him." {What a zigzag career!} told ... all the words of YHWH wherewith he had sent him cause the people to break loose idle So the people were scattered about throughout all the land [guessing at where to find stubble to make bricks] swarms
1067
+hilohilo
1069
ke ala-kike>e
1070
>oia-ku
truth to pray for
1077
ho>okonoko no
to incite
1084 +... le 1086 +no>a ...
to do no work guessing game about where stone is hidden
1087
napu>u ...
blains upon man thick darkness
1092
+mailo
1096
its head with its legs [of dead "lamb", representing Jesus] cf. <arabic >izb "pudgy small man"
1100
+maka>imo> imo +kameha>i
= lapu>u "bunched-up" wasting away of the body eye blinking
1101 , 1102
... aka-ewe
portion of corpse
embryo placenta
12:29 13:3
14:22 , :29 15:19
15:23
Ma^ra^h
15:27
>e^li^ma ^h
15:27
TMA^Ri ^m "palmtrees"
16:3, :13
16:13
ma^n "manna"
16:35 17:12
18:2
18:2 18:5
+S.ippo_r a^h
sudden sickness came ... out of the house of bondage a wall
1101
+ulupo
sudden sickness
1103
+puhemo
set free
1109
pa ...
wall
brought back the waters of the sea bitter
1111
koiele ...
surge (of the sea)
1111
+pilo-moku
<arabic >ali^m "sad, grievous" +Ta^MA^R was raped (S^MW>L B 13:14); and was afterwards hated (ibid., B 13:15) about to be killed, but saved by arrival of quails = S^ki^na^h [according to commentators] forty years his hands [cf. Latin MaNUs] were steady until the going down of the sun Mo_s^eh had sent his wife away claw
1112
+nahae
bad-odor district torn (fig., of emotions)
1113
+welawela
lust; cf. makawelawela "hated"
1115
manu>akele[kele]
bird to escape from danger
1115
+ke alo
the Presence
Mo_s^eh's father-in-law came with Mo_s^eh's
1120 ... kanaha 1120 +... MuNU
1121
+naia
forty = weke "goatfish", enchanted by Pahulu of Lana>i "sunconquerer" insecurely tied
1122
... haha
to grope
1123
... ko
to tow
19:10 19:12 19:13 19:14 19:14 -:15 19:16 19:18
20:7 20:9 20:10
20:13
20:15 21:5
21:18
21:26 21:33 23:11
sons and wife [in tow] their garments
1124
kupoe[poe]
ye go not up into the mount soundeth long sanctified the people garments ... near a woman all the people ... trembled the whole mount quaked greatly
1125
kupou
taketh his name in vain six days thou shalt not do any manner of work bear false witness against thy neighbor they trembled shall plainly say: ... I will not (refuse to) go out free smite the other ... with his fist smite the eye dig a pit lie fallow
bundled with clothes walk downhill
1127 +na ... 1128 ... lili
snore shuddery
1129
+mu>umu>u
1129
... nakanaka
1130
+mo>o-nawe
1131
+helua
woman's chemise to shake with fear =mo>o-naue "mountainridge earthquake" grumbled
1132 1133
+po-iwa +[ho>o]nana
nights nine for amusement
1134
+nakulu
circulate as a rumor
1136 ... na>ana>a 1136 + ...hewa[hewa ]
bewildered crazy
1139
chest-slapping
... pa>iuma[um a] 1142 +>imo 1143 +lua 1149 +naku
to wink pit to wallow
W-YQR>--------------------------------------KUMU-LIPO (KUMU-ULI-PO) verse name meaning line name meaning 1:16 2:2
feathers smoke ... for
1162 1162
... hulu +kinopu
feather strong scent
5:1 6:19 8:23
a sweet savour heareth shall eat it upon the thumb of his right hand swine fowls scar of the boil black
1169 1177 1180
... haliu +hamu +hei
1186 1189 1192
+pua>a +... manu +halu
1204
+hiwa
reddish it shall be burnt in the fire unclean place without the city cedar-wood kill ... in an earthenware vessel without having rinsed his hands lie carnally
1205 1218
+>ula +ahi-luna
1221
+ika ...
sides of a garden
1225 1231
+la>au +luahi-ko
1235
... >ihi-ima
wood victim to break up in container majestic hand
1237
+koiele
1240
+nahunahu
15:27 16:1
if a woman have an issue of blood bathe himself spake unto
1245 1247
+>au>au +holi ...
16:4
put on tunic
1248
+nana->ahu
16:22
1249
+halula
1251
+pili-mau
17:8 19:12
let go (release) statute forever sojourn swear falsely
1252 1252
... hakahaka +ho>ohene
19:28
imprint any
1255
+>ili-uli
11:7 11:13 12:23 13:31 13:42 13:52
14:40
14:49 14:50
15:11
15:18 15:19
17:7
to hearken to eat scraps motion of hands and fingers pig bird = puhalu "to deflate" entirely black red fire above
move to and fro pangs of childbirth to bathe seek to open conversation to observe cloak (cape) slack to adhaere always vacancy = ho>ohenehe ne to tease skin dark
21:18 21:19 26:37
marks upon you lame brokenhanded they shall stumble
1256
+>olo>olo
1258
+hele-lima
1265
+nahili
B-MDBR--------------------------------------KUMU-LIPO verse name meaning line name 3:4
3:8 3:15
3:26 3:31
4:8 4:22
4:28, :30, :33, :37, :39, :43 5:2
5:13
to loiter (or lag) to cut apart hand blundering
meaning
offered strange {on account of this unwonted act, the descendants of Mo_s^eh lost office to those of Qha^t ("numb")} furniture from a month old and upward thou shalt number court[yard] candlestick
1279
+ma>ele
= ma>e>ele "numb (as, with shock)"
1279 1280
... noho ... ... noho>ana
bench term of office
1280 1281
+kauhale +palia[lia]
dyed cloths by their fathers' houses, by their families meeting
1282 1283
... pulepule ... la[la]
home = alialia "sticks of year-god" speckled member of a society
1283
+halawai
meeting
1284
...hou
perspiration
1285
+milia-mau
fondled always
every one that hath an issue (efflux) a man lie with
her carnally thy thigh to fall away he hath shaven his consecrated head and the priest shall wave them give them his service lay their hands upon
5:21, :22 6:19
6:20
7:5 8:10, :12 8:19 9:22
plague the cloud tarried 2 trumpets I pray thee fire of YHWH in the uttermost part of the camp the leeks, and the onions, and the garlic until it (food) come out at your nostrils, and it be loathsome unto you they prophesied, but they did no more But there remained YHWH would put His spirit withdrew
10:2 10:31 11:1
11:5
11:20
11:25
11:26 11:29 11:30 11:32 11:33
11:34
Qibro^t-
gathered the quails while as yet the flesh was between their teeth burial of the
1286
+kulana
wobbly
1287
... mole
bald
1287
+>iwa ...
drawing attention
1289 1290 1293
... lilolilo +lilo ... malana
1294 1294
... ahula[u] +lana
1295 1311 1312 1313
... pu ... +mali +pulama +palama
generous busy = manana "to stretch fingers" pestilence moored; to lie at anchor trumpet to cajole torch enclosure for women
1316
+>olu>a
1317
+kane[a]->iwa
1318
o-a
to answer jabber (fig.)
1319
+la>a
also (besides)
1320
+aka
1321
+mau
1325
... kono
1329 1330
... poni +kaekae ...
reflection (or likeness) grounded (stopped) to entice a bird suddenly tasty
1331
... kaea
cessation of
= >aolu>au "unexpanded leaf of taro" loss of appetite, forcer to disgorge food
12:3
hatTa>va^h
12:8 13:17 13:20 13:23
14:2 15:10, :13 15:30
15:41 16:3 16:32
19:21
21:18
21:21
Si^h.o^n
21:33
rel="nofollow">edre
22:3
22:5
Pto^r
longing (to eat) "meek"; cf. <arabic ma
appetite 1331
+hohonu-pu rel="nofollow">u
profound guesssing the number
1334
+lehelehe
lips
1336
+mauka
uplands
1337
+haui
1338
+lo-pi>ana
= {ho>o-}ui "to activate" obtain clustering (of fruit)
1339 1340
... wala>au +mana->a>ala
to shout arid fragrant
1341
... komokomo
evil possession by spirit
1342
+>ikuwa
1342 1343
... aku ... newa
voices of the gods to say vertigo
1344
+... lahu[i]
to proclaim a law
1347
+anana
fathom
1348
+>ami>ami
springy jerking motion
1349
+[le]lepau
1349
... kolo
1350
+lepe>a-ke
to trust completely to walk bent over in respect to a chief to twist criticism
22:2324
22:28
22:31
23:14 22:6 to 24:24 23:21
So_pi^m
his sword drawn in his hand ... her ... vineyards she said ... thou hast smitten me his sword drawn in his hand watchers oracle
1351
+mala-mu
garden, public executioner
1352
+naha ...
cracked
1355
... pauku
to slice
1356 1357 to 1381 1359
... nana kilo-
to observe oracle
+kala-ha>i
1361
+heana ...
public crier to confess corpse of one slain in battle to entice; alluring to ponder, speculate to chatter, gabble straight & tall
23:24
shouting for the king the slain
24:1
enchantments
1363
+>ume
24:2
hallucination
1364
... nalu
24:4
saying
1364
+>ohi
24:6
as cedars ("tall cedars of Lebanon") branches
1366
+oheohe
1368
+lipoa
star supplanter parable
1369 1369 1372
... hoku +kanu ... +kake ...
1373
+[pa]hulu[lu] "rainy" ... ka>ana[ni]>au
24:22
la^qaq "to lick" set in the rock (as sign of land-division) nevertheless
24:24
coast
1377
+lono {= Maori +rona} ... mo>o
step cf. <arabic g_a_bir "bygone, past" swallowingly
1379 1380
... >alo ... hope
1382
+wa-naku
24:7
24:17 24:17 24:20
Ya
24:20
<ma^-le_q
24:21
24:24 24:24
>as^s^u_r <e_ber
24:25
Bil
1374
1374
muchbranching seaweed star to plant chants with garbled words cf. palu "to lick" altar for landdivision lona "useless, vain" narrow strip of land to dodge praeviously, beforehand
epoch to suffer gas pains
24:25 24:25 25:1
Balaq
waster his place acacias (wattle-seed as coffee) cf. sela^h "musical pause" musical
1383 1384 1387
+haina +kula ... +la rel="nofollow">a-pilo
cruel open country sacred coffeeshrub
25:14
Sallu^
1389
+na>u->ia
1390
+ipu
28:24
fire,
1408
+>ahia
1408
... hanu ...
30:4 31:8
Reqem
of a sweet savour woman embroidery
hold the breath imperatively bottle-gourd (a musical instrument) tinder from fire-plough sniff
25:14
Zimri^
1415 1420
+wahine +mo>omo>o
31:8
S.u^r
to besiege
1421
31:8 31:8 34:13 35:25
H.u^r Reba<
... [weke]wekea ... hilo +lau +>eiwa ... hupu
S^it.t.i^m
1433
... kaunuku[nuk u]-kanaka
holding on praecariously human
36:11
linen four, square nine suppressed resentment of avenger of blood against manslayer must remain in his city of refuge to evade avenger +Mah.la^h sickness
1434
+>opilo ...
36:11
+Tirs.a^h
1435
+mehe-ia
36:11
1436
36:11
+H.a^gla^ h +Milka^h
cf. ra^s.o^n "as would" partridge
relapse (of sickness) as though she
cf. <arabic malaka "to have one's self under control, keep one's temper"
1437
+ka manuha>aha>a +... amio
36:11
+No_
motion
1438
+au ...
35:28
1422 1422 1423 1430
woman tapas made from pieces of other tapa pried open to spin thread many; dragnet nine suppressed resentment
the bird humble to move through a narrow channel [cf. "strait is the gate and narrow is the way ..."] motion
DBRYM (2nd law) = Kumu-lipo (Kumu-uli-po) lines 1454 to 1529 Loi- (for Loina- "law") verse
name
1:3 1:6
1:8
1:9 1:12 2:10 4:1
4:11 4:25 4:28 5:4
5:10 5:11
5:14 9:1 9:10 10:1 10:11 16:9 22:5
22:21 22:28 23:2
rel="nofollow">e_mi^m
meaning
line
name
meaning
first stayed long enough (: go elsewhither!) take possession (of duplicate land) I am not able to bear you you and your strife terrors give heed to what I teach you burned beget
1454 1455
... mua ... kahi [>e]
first elsewhere
1456
... lua
duplicate
1457
... loi[loi]
to criticize
1458
... kalakala
(fig.) rude
1459 1460
... lolo>i ... lolohi
paralyzed slow at learning
1460 1461
+puhi ... +kali-no
to burn vagina ooze
graven
1464
... io[io]
grooves
not see God spoke with you faceto-face (in dream?) steadfast love not take the name of God in vain not do work fortified
1466 1467
... pouli ... mia
darkness dreamed
1471 1472
+hi>ipoi ... hamahamau (= hamau)
to cherish silence
1473 1473
... >olo>olo +papa>a
to hang loose walled stronghold
2 tablets wooden box glory seen standing clothing forbidden to women in house fornicators maimed in privy parts
1475 1476 1479 1482 1490
+mahoe +kaloa +holi>oli>o +niao ... lele
twin wooden platter dazzled tiptoe fruit forbidden to women
1491 1495 1498
... pa ... ipo ... ... manuwa
house-yard sweetheart bruised
23:6 24:6 24:13 28:12 32:11 32:15 32:16 32:22 32:24 33:27
34:7
turned curse into blessing millstone enable to sleep give rain mother-eagle rock of salvation provoke netherworld destruction carried in everlasting arms sepulchre
1499
... kalokalo
1500 1502 1506
+kaheka ... moemoe ... ilo
conversational prayer rock basin to put to sleep rainy
1509 1514
+kinana ... iku-ki>i
mother-hen officer idol
1515 1517 1518 1523
... i-manini ... milu +naha ... ... hi>ialo
in anger netherworld smashed to carry in the arms
1523
+kahei ...
= ka>ai sennet container for remains of chiefs
Jataka
incarnation
TNaK
event
1, 2 11-16 24 26-27, 31
in desert, throwing out food deer, antelope chariot-horses elephants [elephants excavate for mineral-water] quail mosquito
S^ 12:39 S^ 13:13 S^ 14:28
in desert, without food firstling of ass chariots & horsemen
S^ 15:23 S^ 16:13 S^ 16:15 S^ 17:12 S^ 18:6 S^ 31:18 S^ 32:1-4
bitter waters quail man-hu [suckings by aphids] hands wife commandments resisting idols
S^ 32:6
eat & drink
S^ 32:25
the people naked together
WY 15:18 BM 21:33 BM 24:6 BM 24:21 DB 14:8 YH 10:16 YH 10:26
copulation tortoise-shell aloes, cedars nest swine kings are defeated hung on trees
33, 35 44-45 57-58 61-65 99, 101 125, 127 128-129 157 157 178, 205-6 248-9, 272 274-275 283, 285-6 301-3 306
monkey women spiritual formula slave despising master jackal [known for its voracious appetite] she-jackal [known for her lesbianism] lion & lioness [known for copulating once per hour] tortoise tree crow swine king is defeated fruiterer
381, 399 429-430 434, 451 446-7, 449 465, 475 497-8 525, 541 532
vulture [known for eating carrion] fig-tree ruddy goose son tree is to be cut down can.d.ala grey hair aged parents
S^ 1:7 S^ 1:22, :26 S^ 3:15 S^ 3:31 S^ 6:26 S^ 7:10-11 S^ 8:32
eating discarded food Lu^z "almond"
son wood is cut down servant lived to old age, was buried in father's tomb 543, 545 Naga-woman ["naga" is S^ 9:53 woman in tower: tower = cognate with "neck"] neck (S^i^r 4:4) E. B. Cowell (transl.): The Jataka. Cambridge U. Press, 1895. 6 vols.
S^[e]mo^t]; BM[idbar]; S^p[at.i^m] = MesoAmerican day-regents rulers of Yis`ra^>el 20 day-regents (Codex Borgia 22 to 24) cognate with Liwyatan the crocodile: 1. crocodile producing a waterfall [cf. Lewi^ the first high-priest waterfall-site of Michael Harner's initiation as shaman] Qhat [= Ugaritic >qht, who was 2. god [same as that on p. 49, being killed killed by a flying god] by a winged vampire-bat] Yis.har [cf. s.o_har "noon" (time of 3. god looking upward toward zenith sun at zenith)]
er S^eba< "seven wells" of 7. 8 round wells (?) of naked man >ahro^n, a nudist: >ahro^n was survived by Mos^eh, 8. wearing human skin, and holding who "put a veil on his face" (S^m liahona 34:33); he had held a rod to direct migration 9. Atl "water" YHo^s^u< directed crossing of Yarden river Kaleb (S^p 1:12) "hound" 10. Itzcuintli "hound" >eh.ud "blew a horn" (S^p 3:27) 11. blowing conch-shell S^amgar (S^p 3:31) = s^amayim 12. multi-layered sky; disk as collar around "two skies" + ga^ro^n "neck" god's neck
Sisra> with "two dyed garments of broidery for the neck" (S^p 5:30) Gid (S^p 9:20) "fullness" punished by woman (S^p 9:53) Yae^lo^n (S^p 12:11) "oak-grove"
13. god with two cords around neck 14. death-god (who cannot die) 15. god as taster 16. full, overflowing pot 17. goddess Tlazolteotl (to whom sinners confessed) 18. wooden-staff-holding white-haired man
19. owl-headed god speaking with goddess 20. maize-plant, enwreathed with snake (like oak-tree with mistletoe ?)
Tehuacan 20---------------------------25 Maha-Is`vara-s-------------------Tattavasamgraha 16 1. 2. bodiless 1. bodiless (p. 183) 2. red death-god 3. noose; Kala "time" as 2. drawing with rope (p. death-god 189) 3. 4. marriage 3. affectionate (p. 191) 4. rays from arms 5. 4. -hars.a erection of hair 5. man in water 6. moon in water 5. 6. 7. 6. 7. 8. 7. 8. wearing face of another 9. smile 8. smile (p. 205) 9. water 10. water-lifter 10. collapsing tree (cf. log9. boat (p. 208) boat of Cipactonal & Oxomoco) 11. speckled clothing 11. elephant-skin (for clothing) 12. sword 10. sword (p. 211) 13. 12. multi-layered sky 14. man.t.apa "roof" for 11. -man.d.a (p. 215) kalas`a "vase" "scum (as layer) on boiled rice" 13. 15. 14. skeletal god 16. Kankala the skeletal god 15. own finger in mouth 17. 12. muttering (p. 216) 18. Cakra-prada "wheel13. Vis`va-karman (p. giver" 218), maker of vimana-s (flying machines) for Asura-s
16. liquor-god 17. spindle 18. white bird-suit 19. colloquy of birdheaded god with woman
19. Soma-skanda (soma being a narcotic-god) 20. Eka-pada "one-foot" (i.e., axis ?) 21. 22. guru; peacock feather 23. hala poison
20. Codex Borgia, pp. 22 to 24
24. pillar 25. http://siddhanta.shaivam.org/maa hesh.html
Dbry-h-Ymym = naks.atra-s 1. -Ya_ri^b "debateth" 2. Yda<- [cf. da_
4. S`
5. Malki6. Mi[n]ya_min [cf. mne_, mne_ rel="nofollow"> as handwriting on wall] 7. ha-Qo^s. "the thorn" (cf. "thorn in the flesh") 8. >b- [cf. />o^b/ "waterbottle": water of baptism, by sprinkling, for the dead was
14. armor (p. 221)
15. fang (p. 223) (for injecting poison) 16. Mus.t.i (p.226) "hilt"
Dale Allen Todaro: An Annotated Translation of the "Tattavasamgraha" (Part 1). PhD Diss., Columbia U., 1985.
20.S`ata-BHIsaJ [cf. PHIG-, SPHInG, posing riddles] 21. [figure: quay (ghat.) {i.e. for extinguished cremations (ghat.)}] 22. Revati, who, expecting snubbed by potential suitors, lingered, unwed, at the concert of the Carana-s 23. As`va-yujau "horses joined" [cf. mare-guise, for sexual union, by Demeter, at whose mystery by Demeter, at whose mystery was the communion of barley] 24. Bharani [cognate: /Feronia/ introducing alphabet to Italy]] 1. Kr.ttika-s "skins" for writing [as if for tattooing by needle] 2. Rohini "heifer"
potentized by ashes of the red heifer (BM 19)] 9. Ye_s^u^< [Jesus: head of Church] 10. S^kan- [cf. /s^kem/ "shoulder"] 11. -Ya_s^i^b "returneth" [scil., property] 12. Ya_qi^m "raiseth, resurrecteth" 13. H.uppa_h "closet, chamber" 14. Yes^eb- "sitteth, seat" 15. Bilga_h "desistance" 16. >imme_r "talkative" 17. H.e_zi^r "SWInish" 18. ha-Pis.s.e_s. [cf. pes.a< "wound"] 19. Ptah.- [Aegyptian Pth., potter (pots from clay)] 20-22. 23. Dla_-y- [cf. dli^ "bucket"] 24. Ma
3. Mr.ga-s`iras "beast-head" 4. Bahu "arm" 5. Punar-Vasu "again property" 6. Tis.ya [name of a Buddha: each rose from the dead bodily, while being transported for cremation] 8. [figure: outer wall, house] 9. [figure: bed] 10. Hasta "hand" [figure: hand upraised (sign to desist ?)] 11. Citra [cf. /chatter/] 12. SWatI 13. Vis`akha [wounded god] 15. Jyes.t.ha [cognates: Persian Jeh, Hellenic Gaia "earth {viz. clay}"] 16-17. [18. figure: yoke with buckets] 19. S`ravis.t.ha "most famous" [one becoming so, according to the Iliad, by dying "gloriously" in battle]
S^in-gon 16--------------Tibetan 78-------------Jupiter-stations---Tehuacan sequence 1. Vajra-pan.i = 46. wearing magic p. 38 dragon in ring mirror mirror (cf. dragon-guardian http://www.buddhanature. [in Daoist fashion] of treasure-ring of com/ (Pan.i-s are Nibelung-s) treasure-guardians.) 2. akars.a "drawing 47-48. snare p. 38 hooded god (cf. along with rope; hanging down Grimnir, leader of dice (for from rope Gremlins of happenstance)" happenstance) 3. five arrows of 54. "five arrows p. 39, upper. arch Mara and a bow" (bow ?) http://www.khandro.net/a interconnecting sky
cts_ch13_Mara.htm
; dhanu "a bow" 4. dance (p. 195); sadhu "straight"
4. hars.a "horripilation" (goosepimples) 5. garbha "embryo": human embryo is believed to lose its memory at birth 6. sun 7. banner
59. "clad in red" 61. "The white genius"
p. 39. clad in red p. 39 females (two of them white) dancing; straightening walkway p. 40 god whose body is covered with semicircles (pimples) p. 40 red deathgoddess giving birth (abortion ?)
4. "The skin of a man" 6. "every track be lost of ... the king of eloquence"
7-8. peacock and lion-throne: cf. peacock-throne symbolized by lion with sun on flag of Iran 8. smile (represented 10. "symbolizing by open mouth -- p. human skulls" 205 fn. 1) 9. water-lily 11. water-vase with flowers put into it 10. buddhi 12. golden rdo-rje "conjecture, "thunderbolt" [cf. origin of vis`vanotion"; Man~ju`sri [-ghosa "roar of vajra ("crossed animals"] thunderbolts") from bones of Dadhi-an~c] as flower opening itself in sky ("skyflower" symbolizing delusions) 11. man.d.a "scum of bolied rice" 12. muttering 13. "bad speech"
15. "fire"; "chessboard"
p. 41 [solar?] disk
p. 42 pair of jaws; red human skulls p. 42 pool
p. 42 origination of beasts from human bones
11. Great Fire
p. 42 man being boiled (harmlessly ?) p. 43 god with holes drilled through his tongue p. 44 great enclosure containing squares
13. Vis`va-karman (artificer, i.e. instrument-maker, for the Asura-s)
16. phur-bu "wedge (used to split wood)" (with entwined serpents) 17. circle for divination [of future history] 19. "palm of the hand" (p. 324, fn. 3), i.e. hollow of the hand 23. two astrological instruments
12. Split Wood
p. 44 dragon-suits
1. Star Chronicle
p. 44 circle of pebbles (Dakota stone circle) on goddess Chantico
2. Murky Hollow
24. trident (used to 3. spear fishes) Loggerhead Turtle (catching fishes) 25. "magistrate" 4. (sentencing Descending convicts) Harvester (cf. Death as Grim Reaper) 26. "bridge" 5. Great Plank-bridge
14. armor
27. bending of the magic wand: cf. bending of pinetree by SINIs (= TINIa, mirror-god of the Etruscans) 28. "The walls of a religious building" 29-30. a bla-ma (mendicant)
6. "deity in Orion"
31. "fire-place" 32. "shield" 39. "divine astrology"
8. Quail-Fire
7. QuailHead:
p. 45 man in water is attacked by eagleman (albatross ?)
p. 45 death-god at tree
p. 45 backbone-deity [cf. Welsh Bran's back as bridge] p. 45 wands (in butter vessels); mirror-wearing Tezcatlipoca-s
p. 46 dragon-walled building cf. beheading of quail by porcupine (p. 71). S`alaka "porcupine" is credential for mendicants. cf. shield etc. (p. 17) (cf. pp. 58 to 60)
15. dam.stra "fang"
16. mus.t.i "hilt, handle"
41. two fishes (some fishes have hollow teeth, "fangs") 42. "a bird sitting" 44. "the handle" 45. "lodgings": cf. lodgings with Rah.ab, whose inn remained intact, after the wall on which it was set was destroyed (suspended as star in sky, by red thread?) Yhos^u
Dale Allen Todaro: An Annotated Translation of The "Tattavasamgraha" (Part 1). PhD diss., Columbia U., 1985. pp. 180 to 227
"Tibetan Divination Tables", pp. 322 to 325
9. Quail-Tail
10. Longevity Star
Edward H. Schafer: Pacing the Void. U. of http://essenes.crosswind Calif. Press, s.net/libdiv.html 1977. table: "Important Starry Chronogram s"
Codex Borgia
Astika--------------------------Dge-lugs----------------------Shin-gon----------------------Tara 5. ankus`a "hook" 1. hook 2:3 ... ankus`a 11. hook 2:7 ... kars.a ... akars.an.a 6. pas`a "noose" 2. lasso 7. naraca "arrow" 3:3 ... van.a 13. arrow &
8. pinaka-m "bow' 9. a-bhaya "unfearing" 10. vara-da "boonconferring" 11. ghan.t.a "bell": "A reference to the clitoris" (KT&VT, p. 341, fn.108)
13. dan.d.a "staff" 16. mudgara: cf. Maudgalya-ayana, who had (by his mother's adulteries) acquired various step-fathers 1. kapala-m "skull"
4. bell
"arrow" 3:7 ... capa "bow' 4:1 ... sadhu "bravo!" 4:2 ... tus.t.i "satisfying" 4:4 ... rati "erotic desire in women" (wife of god of sexual desire) 5:7 ... garbha "embryo" 7:7 ... yas.t.i "staff" 8:1-2 ... hasa: cf. At.t.a-hasa ("stepfather laughter"), name of the primordial god (according to the Linga Puran.a)
8:3 ... smita "smile" 9:3 ... padma "red water lily" 2. khat.va-anga "wood from funeral pyre" 3. khadga "sword" 4. sphara "shield"
ST, p. 363
bow
14. [riding on] human corpse
... bhr.kuti "frowning" 15. Kalyan.a-da "greeting-giving" 16. "red" 19. ... dahana "consuming", holding brazier
10:4 ... yodha "weapon" 14:1 ... raks.a "protection"
SVFDL, STTS, pp. 259-260 DTB, articles 275p. 168 299 (pp. 316-319) KT&VT = Louise M. Finn: The Kulacud.aman.i Tantra and the Vamakes`vara Tantra with the Jayaratha Commentary. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz, 1986. ST = William James Arraj: The Svacchandatantram. PhD diss, U. of Chicago, 1988. SVFDL = Samten Gyaltsen Karmay: Secret Visions of the Fifth Dalai Lama. Serindia, London, 1988. STTS = Dale Allen Todaro: An Annotated Translation of the "Tattvasamgraha" (Part 1). PhD diss, Columbia U., 1985. Martin Willson (transl.): Deities of Tibetan Buddhism. Boston: Wisdom, 2000.
Jaina Yaks.a attribute--------------------------Maha-bodhi-sattva 17., 19. lotus 9. lotus 20., 21. sword 10. sword 24., 1. dharma-cakra "law-wheel" 11. dharma-cakra "law-wheel" 2. four-faced [cf. Brahma] 12. muttering [cf. that by Brahma] 3. peacock (a promenador) 13. nr.tya "dancing" (p. 316) 4. KARMuka 13. vis`va-KARMan 5. upa-vita "sacred thread" 14. armor; Mitra (cognate with "miter") 6. a-bhaya "fearless" 15. fearlessness (p. 224) 7. pas`a "bond" 16. bond 8. vajra "thunderbolt" 1. thunderbolt 9. s`akti "spear" 2. a-mogha (name of a spear in MBh.) 10. arrow 3. arrow 11., 13. dan.d.a "rod" 4. sadhu "straight" 14. mongoose (producer of gems) 5. ratna "gem" 15. vara-da "propitiatory fire" 6. flame (p. 355) 15. gada "bludgeon" 7. yas.t.i "cudgel" 16. face of boar (tusks protruding) 8. teeth showing (p. 205, fn. 1) Shantilal Nagar: Iconography of Jaina Deities. B.R. Publishing Corp., Delhi, 1999. Appendix-II (pp. 443 to 445)
Dale Allen Todaro: An Annotated Translation of the "Tattvasamgraha" (Part 1). PhD diss., Columbia U., 1985. pp. 180 to 227 That this Shin-gon text is of Jaina source is indicated in its origination from Indra-bhuti (Todaro, p. 28), founder of the Jaina system.
#------sage----------------meaning of name------------Codex Borgia, p. 57 1. Ks.itiks.iti "destruction of monkey & wind-god: as one of the 5 garbha the universe; one of 5 destructions of the universe, the races of mankind". monkey-world was destroyed by wind. garbha "embryo". child from vase (as Daoist alchemic embryo). 2. YamaYama, whose sister god brandishing ax against simlarantaka Yami invitation to appearing (kin ?) goddess. incest he refused. antaka "ender" skull. 3. Soma-datta soma a narcotic plant grasping & bending (mind-bending, addictive ?) a plant 4. Jambaka jamba "mud": cf. child emerging from vase, along with Chinese myth of gold threads, one each gold thread being origins of mankind held by a god and a goddess from muddied string (Chalchihuitlicue) held by the goddess
5.
Manaka
6.
Khagarbha
Nu: Kwa arum indicum: arum berries, though eaten by birds, are poisonous to humans kha {cf. RV. ii , 28 , 5 kha-mr.tasya "a well of death"}
food being eaten by bird, while humans turn themselves away
descending by person into subterranean skull's mouth
OWhT, p. 304 #------Kalkin--------------meaning of name-------------Codex Borgia, 58 to 60 death-god swallowing a man headfirst 1. Man~jus`ri cf. Kirti-mukha the -kirti devouring mouth 2. Pun.d.arika cf. Karun.acouple both weeping; tears (?) falling Pun.d.arika Sutra below karun.a "compassion" 3. Bhadra water-wagtail quetzal bird 4. Vi-jaya s`ami plant an herb 5. Su-mitra well-befriending uxorious man, being led around with a leash by his wife 6. Rakta-pan.i rakta "reddened" red-bird-headed god 7. Vis.n.uVis.n.u was beheaded woman wearing man's head gupta (acc. to Veda) 8. Arka-kirti arka "roaring" leopard-skin wearer 9. Su-bhadra {cf. Bhadra} quetzal bird sam-udra "sea" 10. Samudraoverflowing vessel vijaya 11. Aja instigator couple both fleshless-jawboned (i.e., speaking at peril to themselves) 12. Surya cf. sura "beer" liquid food being fed to bird 13. Vis`vaa god having extra, couple, each having an extra, animalian, rupa animalian, heads head 14. Sasicf. sasa "poppy" couple, each with a flower on cheek prabha 15. An-anta Asclepias asthmatica woman exuding breath (asthmatic ?) 16. S`ripala pala "spittoon" bowl containing white foam 17. S`ri-pala Pala the serpentsnake having head at each end of its daemon body 18. Hari [son kampana goddess holding smoking-pipe (for of Anu"trembling, shaking, narcotic, resulting in trembling state ?) kampana] quivering" 19. Vi-krama courage, taking man holding knife matters "in stride" 20. Maha-bala exceedingly strong arm 21. Aniruddha man who levitated, bird-headed couple
22. 23. 24. 25.
Narasim.ha Maha-is`vara Anantavijaya Raudracakrin
thus obtaining wife god who tore out heart from king great owner of choice endess victory rude-wheeled (referring to wheelchairs for the aged?)
couple, each holding a human heart man chosen by one wife in place of another (changing wives, as a choice) victory of death over the living (person dying young) couple in extreme old age
MCShS, p. 65 22. Nara-sim.ha was converted (according to the Buddha-Vam.s`a) by the Buddha; similarly as Narasim.ha was (according to the Puran.a) by the S`arabha. Perhaps it was the initial S`- in S`arabha that occasioned the change of intial S- in Sambhala (= Sumble in the Danish History of Saxo Grammaticus) to S`-; along with a change of the S- in the name Sumbha to S`-. 26 as the # of dots in the final scene in CB p. 60 is praesumably obtained by reversing the digits 62 as the total persons in 31 couples. OWhT = John Ronald Newman: The Outer Wheel of Time. PhD diss., U. of WI, 1987. MCShS = "Mipham's commentary to the Shambhala sections". www.mountaindev.com
Sumerian king-list 1. a2-lu-lim "stag antler" 2. a2-lal3-QAR: qar "remove and set elsewhere" 3. 4. 5. dumu-zid, who was dominated by his wife 6. en-siPAD-zid-anna: cf. Sif, name of Tor's wife 7. 8. UBaRa-tu3-tu3 cf. ubur "udder" [8 1/2. zi-USUD-ra, who poled through the waters of death] 9. qus^ur:
naks.atra-s 3. mr.ga-s`iras "stag horn" 2. rohin.i, from whose whose womb Kr.s.n.a was removed and set elsewhere 1. 26. 25. revati, who was much taller than her husband 24-23. pros.t.ha-PAD "footstool": cf. stool of Tor 22-21. 20. [aditi cow of udder] 19-18. AS.AD.Ha "rod, pole"
17. vicr.tau "entwiners"
112 yuga-regents
5. Dundubhi "kettledrum" 6. S`ata-rupa "hundred forms"
16. jyes.t.ha "eldest" 15. anu-radha, capital of Sim.hala "leonine": cf. Mithraic leonine time-god 14. 13. Svati "sword", viz. of Thuestes = Tvas.t.r. who owned nestle-set of cups 12. ciTRA[-leKHa] 11. hasta: cognate with "gust" 10-9. PhALGuNi: PeLaGon of the
water-spring of Ares
7. as`les.a "embracer" (of man other than her husband ?) 6. [vis.n.u riding garutman aloft] 5. punar-VASU: Vasu-s include pratyus.a "dawn", & prabhasa: prabhas.a "declaration"
100 koan-s 1. p. 23 "wash … feet" 2. p. 27 "feet in mud" p. 28 "skull's consciousness … dragonmoan" 3. p. 30 "pass along … roads" 5. p. 39 "millet seed … pail. Beat the drum"
104 years 1. walking on water 2. footprints on paths; skull;
6. p. 42 "The herbs" p. 44, n. 2 "the Ten Thousand" 7. p. 45 "the Pre-Voice
5. maize-plant
dragon-breaths 3. traveller 4. maize-seeds in bowl
6. throat
… 7. Hr.s.ika, cf. hars.a "erection" 8. Ketumant, cf. banner (ketu) of lecturer
13. Su-mukha "a mythical bird; impression or scratch by a fingernail" 14. Dus-mukha "foul-mouthed"
Verticals"
8. p. 50 "lectured … a burglar" 9. p. 54 "four gates" 10. p. 56 "sheer cliffs" 11. p. 57 "Yellow Oak … temple" 12. p. 60 "grabbed … reflection" 13. p. 63 "into the well" 14. p. 67 "the wedge": kilaya, bird (Garutman)'s Somaabducting talon
7. man, broken house 8. four offerings 9. waterfall 10. yellow ropeenclosure 11. grabbed snake 12 above a well (?)
13. macaw carrying off human forearm
15. p. 71, n. 2 flower14. flowery discourse discourse 16. p. 72 "lift up one 15. pulling rope-ends hand, or … press down one by hands hand"
16. Dus-ati-krama "evil-stepping-beyond" 17. p. 77 "Iron-HandMill" 18. p. 78 "mountainshaped pilgrim staff." 19. p. 82 "great universe … one cuts away" 20. p. 85 "the Great Void" "arm-rest" 21. p. 88 "your flag" p. 89 "the lotus
16. animal-paw; hand-mill (?)
17. cudgel 18. sky; knife-blade 19. sky; paw on rest 20. flag being held; lianas (?)
[stem] … under the water" 21. Su-dhaman, a class of deity in tenth Manu-antara (cf. ten fingers)
22. Vi-rajas "woman who
suspended
23. p. 95 "his hand" 24. p. 98 "the tail" p. 99 "Old Buffalo", name name for "old lady"
21. a hand 22. tail-feathers; horned animal
25. p. 102 "holding his pilgrimstaff" 26. p. 104 "strangulation" 27. p. 106 "tree withers" p. 107 "arrow is in the sky"
23. holding a walking-staff
has ceased to menstruate"
25. Sarasvata "staff"
26. Megha "cloud" [scil., "of witnesses"] 27. Megha-vaha "cloud-carried" (cf. world-destroying cloud)
29. Kapila, name of a mountain
(cf. Kapilavastu, town of S`akya-muni, who there
24. strangulation
25. meteors in sky
28.p. 110 "saints and scholars"
29. p. 112 "(Universe) … perishes in … the kalpa fire" 30. p. 114 "very large radishes noses … twisted"
31. p. 116 "native mountain" p. 117 "road, wide as space" p. 118 "sutras"
26. house on fire 27. large maize-plant; nose-ornament of rain-goddess
28. at crossroads, a conversation betwixt
abandoned his wife) 32. p. 120, n. 3 "hand" 33. p. 121 "a circle" 34. p. 124 "he cut off two of his fingers" 31. S`alvala (cf. s`alva, name of a fruit)
… herbs p. 125 "The hermit
man and woman 29. paw; sphere 30. cut-off hand and foot;
smoky man on
… forgot" 32. Pan~ca-s`ikha = pan~ca "five" + s`ikha, name of serpent
35. p. 127 "five hundred … Dragons and snakes are mixed." 36. p. 129 "scent of herbs" 37. p. 131 "search deeply into … depths" p. 132 "divination thinking" 38. p. 135 "seal … impressed" "mysterious helmet"
36. Giri-s`a "mountaininhabitant"
31. yellow snake and red snake are tied together 32. flowered funnels 33. snake entering into depths of a ….divination (?)-vase 34. sigil (?); forehead-ray
39. p. 139 "mountain"
p. 140 "Lion" 37. Bhr.nga "bumble bee" (drones, during sexual intercourse, die)
bone-heap (of the forgotten?)
35. sky; head of Tezcatlipoca, who in sky became a leopard
40. p. 142 "He kept ten concubines and died" "Seven Verticals or 36. vertical blade; Eight Horizontals … horizontals; will not escape" rope 37. two snakes,
41. p. 145 "lengthwise and crosswise" 42. p. 149 "snowflakes … not -… separate" 41. Lamba-udara [= Loptr, tied, exposed to
dripping venom]
tied crossing 38. white object, tied
39. a man, tied, 43. p. 151 "suffer from exposed extreme cold or extreme heat" 44. p. 154 "Hearing" 40. from man's ear 45. p. 155 "roaring fire" 41. fire under cauldron 46. p. 158 "the current" 42. currents of blood
42. Lamba-aks.a "suspended eye" 47. p. 161 "his death" 48. p. 163 "human beings often have accidents" 44. Pra-lambaka "a fragrant grass"
47. Sadhya-siddhi: sadhya "having to be summoned" 49. Su-dhaman "good inmate"
lengthwise and
49. p. 164 "the Net" 50. p. 169 "Inside the bowl is the rice … stars" p. 170, n. 2 children
43. stalks of eyen; skull & crossbones 44. owl [foreboding accidents ?]
45. maize-plant on netted mound 46. inside the basket is the herb; black snake (night?)
having to be summoned
51. p. 172 "one tiny crack which might open out" 52. p. 175 "the stone bridge
47. man as inmate of conch-shell, from its crack emerging 49. bridge
50. Kas`yapa "deer" (cf. kas`yapa "tortoise")
51. Vars.is.t.ha "most experienced, wise, learned"
53. Atri [cf. Latin atrium "hall for family portraits"] 54. Deva-sada "god-seat" 55. S`ravan.a "ear"
… donkeys and horses" p. 176 "giant turtles" 53. p. 177 "graduation"
50 falling into stepped (graduated) region
p. 178, n. 1 "Passing the Examination" 54. p. 179 "iron nail …
51. black knife-blade;
useless emotions" 55. p. 181 "sitting on … high" 56. p. 184 "telepathy … p. 186 "breaking through" 58. p. 190 "birds whose
56. S`ravis.kat.a (cf. kat.a "twisted straw")
mask 52. throne;
53. holding awl 54. quetzal
nests are underground" 59. p. 192 "yes and no …
58. Kun.i-bahu "withered arm"
descending 55. platform, split
like army of
by arm-held
spears"
spear
… 62. US`ANAS [= OUKAlegoN, father of Sphinx (winged lioness)]
63.Cyavana, whom
63. p. 202 "cut the kitten in two" 64. p. 203 "took off his straw sandals, put them on his head … truly the kitten might have
58. double anther (of flower)
the gods rescued
been saved" [allusion to Rama-ayana: sandals were revered for the hovering-vimana
59. hovering man, with
journey to domain of cat-headed people by RAMa {= ra<mah, "thunder" in
strand (of thunder ?) from mouth
65. p. 206 "the shadow of the whip" {cf. "whips of scorpions"} 65. Utathya, chastiserof rapist
66. p. 209 "a precious sword had fallen into the hands" 67. p. 211 "wife's name was 'Wondrous Light' and … had two sons." "Two scriptures …" 68. p. 214 "the axis of the earth …
60. scorpion [cf. Aztec myth of man chastized for fornication by being tranformed into a scorpion] 62. hilted knife, held in hand 63. jeweled blood (menstrual ?) from sun upon
two objects 64. striped (like barber's pole)
"giving [to
pointer, held by god clad in
the name
the skin
self]
of his questioner" 68. Maha-bala "greatly strong" [stong as an ox]
69. p. 217 "the Iron Ox as a protecting deity to prevent the river from flooding." {cf. hindrance of the Lerna from flooding by
Maha-nila "greatly blue" 69. Vacas-s`ravas "renown of [the goddess] Vac"
of another
searing of Hudra dragon} 70. p. 221 "the words … like the flowers
65. igniting a blue dragon 66. speech of a woman as flowery
… forest of coral" 72. p. 223 "mouth and lips 70. Su-vira "sour rice gruel" … in danger" 71. S`yava-asya "brown face"
72. Yati-is`vara yati "stopping, ceasing" 73. Hiran.ya-naman "golden name"
string of jewels 68. mouth and lips
sip beverage; holding knife
73. p. 226 "'White Head' … 'Black Head'" p. 227, n. 3 deceitful, 69. smoky purloining woman warrioress 70. earth-skull 74. p. 228 "'hidden (emblem of plot ?) plots' swallowing human … true peace" 75. p. 230 "honoured nobility" p. 232 "blowing the gourd-flute" 76. p. 233 "to burn this image"
71. out of mouth, extension 72. burning split temple;
p. 235 "a man who held down his dead ox's head 74. Kaus`alya cf. kus`a "grass"
to make him eat grass" 77. p. 237 "to hide its body under a hard shell" 78. p. 238 "the temple bath (a large square tank)"
76. Pra-ghima cf. pra-hima "having severe winters"
77. Su-mantu "adviser"
an arm which held a dead man's head
p. 239 "the feel of water on their naked bodies" 79. p. 240 "a blow … persisted in mocking"
78. Varvari "stammering"
73. man hiding his body in a conch-shell 74. in a temple, a woman drinking
75. spear 76. vomitting speech (stammering ?) and
81. p. 243 "carry out this dead fellow to burial" 82. p. 244 "the pillow" "The flowers like a beautiful brocade. … blue." 79. Kabandha "barrel" 80. Kuks.ikan-dhara = kuks.ika "little belly"
riding on bones 77. fluff-covered mat; flowers being pressed into a blue vase 78. man with arms crossed (across belly ?)
+ dhara "support"
81. PLAKS.A "sidedoor" [= Latin PLEXUS
83. p. 247 "exposed pillar" 84. p. 249 "utterly naked" p. 250 "the Temple Gate
79. naked god & naked man 80. opening into aedifice
"complicated"]
… complication" 85. p. 252 "From his forehead beams of light" beams of light; p. 253 "stole a bell" 86. p. 256 "the flower … the tree throws no shade"
82. Darbha-ayan.i = darbha "grass-blades, tied in a bunch" +
ayana "travel"
"… riding their oxen" 87. p. 258 "a medicine and
83. Ketumant "providing banners"
a poison in it"
84. Gautama, one of the.three Kevalin-s (isolates);
81. from his forehead,
nestled flowers 82. flowery spears,
tied in a bunch 83. death-goddess with footprint on her skirt 84. grain, with
red banners as scarecrows (to scare off birds from eating it) 85. blood falling from the sun ["of righteousness, with healing"]
88. p. 259 "the Three Kinds of Disability" for a head [of rel="nofollow">a^da^m, father of three (Qayin, Hebel, S^e^t)]
father of three (Ekata, Dwita, Trita) 85. Bhallava "a bear": cf. bear-pawed sorcerer of Trois Fre`res
86. paw
89. p. 261 "Hand and Eye"
87. arm; sky with stars or eyen 88. pecking, by bird,
p. 263 "Garud.a bird … in Indra's palace" 86. Madhu, accompanier of KaiT.Bha {cf. QuT.B "[star of celestial] pole"}
p. 264 "eyes at the ends of the staffs" 90. p. 265 "utterly naked"
87. Pinga "yellow"
89. Us`i-ja "wished-generated"
91. p. 267 conicalshaped "rhinoceros … horns" as fan 92. p. 269 "falconer" as keeper of (perched) "falcon" p. 270 "World Revered One at once came down" p. 271, n. 3 sindava, retainer aware of master's wish 93. p. 271 "grace before meals … The monk acted with making making a mimiming gesture.
… Fox -Bogey … first arrow … second" 92. Kavi "poet" {poet Homeros suffered death by hanging
p. 272 "suffered drowning on dry
on god's head {cf. pecking, by bird, for lice by bird on head of king of gods Rehua, in palace}
89. naked yellow death-god 90. conical funnels
in fan-like array 91. perched macaw 92. the sun-god descending
93. food in bowl;
a gesture 94. over wrapped body (of animal ?): spears
land" 94. p. 273 "The White Ox 93. S`ali-hotra s`ali "civet, pole-cat (which became lion)" S`ali-hotra was a
veterinary
94. Agni-ves`a = agni " fire" +
ves`a "tent"
96. S`arad-vasu "autumn goods" 97. Chagala "goat": cf. chaga "limping"
95. white death-god holding
… lion" p. 274 "elephant … ox … suffering from the malady" p. 275 hermit Kapila was "'goldenhaired' (or redhaired)" 95. p. 275 "horns {qarin "horn" is also "light-ray"} may grow on your head" thinkingcap; p. 276 "What language, then …?" 96. p. 278 "pass through fire" p. 279 transmission (by Bodhidharma) of doctrine to first native Chinese Zen patriarch p. 280 "heritage … smashed the oven" 97. p. 280 "sharp" 98. p. 282 "Summer Retreats … took three 'rainy', i.e. discontented, steps"
captive having
on head yellow spots speckled with red 96. rays out of god's
written scroll (?), rolled-up
97. pig-tail (hair) of levitator over sundered fire-chamber 98. spears; knife
100. footprint
99. p. 285 "bell-like" 99. Kumbha-an.d.a = kumbha "a jar" + an.d.a "an egg" S`iva Puran.a: S`ata-Rudra Sam.hita 4;
102. capped with (bell-like) nestled flowers 104. toward bowl, quetzal
R. D. M. Shaw (transl.): The Blue Cliff Records.
Codex Borgia, pp. 1 to 8
London, 1961. Vayaviya Sam.hita 1:9
36
24 guru-s
1. spider 2. earth 3. sun 4. moon 7. butterfly 15. deer 17. sturgeon
23. spider 1. earth 6. sun 7. moon 12. moth 16. deer 17. fish
20. snake 21. elk Sun Bear: The Medicine Wheel
19. osprey 22. snake
20 mountains
7. moth
2. osprey 1. antelope
Uddhava Gita 2:33 to 35
Bhagavata Puran.a 6:16:26
15 kinds of siddha
meaning
1. jina
2. a-jina 3. tirtha
[unenlightened] ford (waded)
4. a-tirtha
unforded
5. gr[a]ha 6. anya 7. sva[pna ?] 8. pul 9. stri 10. na ... 11. bohi[ttha ?]
seized another sleep ? bunch woman not boat ?
12.Prati-ekabuddha
[scriptureless saint]
13. svayam[bhu ?] 14. eka 15. an-eka
Mrs. Sinclair Stevenson:
(a place of worship] one not one
15 "Psalms of Ascent" 119. [Zi^na^> = Zi^za^>: with zi^z bird of s^amir ("diamond") = Skt.vajra; cf. thunderbird with 13 lighting-arrows (Bon)] 120:4 arrows 121:5 darkness 122:2 feet shall stand 123:1 viewing the enthoned [cf. viewing glory (Acts 7:55) by the Holy Spirit (Acts 7:51) over the water (BR>s^i^t 1:2)] 124:7 snare 125:6 turn aside 126:1 dream 127:5 a quiver 128:3 wife 129:8 Neither 130:1 depths 131:2 weaned [weaned = scriptureless: milk = scripture (1Peter 2:2) 132:7 worship 133:1 unity ["righteous ... not one" (Romans 3:10)] righteousness =s.edeq: Melki^-s.edeq of "my hand" (BR>s^yt 14:22)] 134:2 your hands
The Heart of Jainism. Oxford U. Pr., 1915. p. 309
Iban---------------------------------------Ron--------------------------------------ra^rat. at deluge with square ark (Br>s^yt 8:4) p. 87 couple were seen No_h.a was seen naked copulating and the gods and his sons were were informed of this informed of this (Br>s^yt 9:22) 4. climbing house p. 88 building tower tower of Ba^bel -7. fool confusion of languages: confusion of languages "lacking intelligence" (Br>s^yt 11:9) p. 89 serpent blocked par
10. paddy
causing deluge
11. climb mountain 12. travellers take a respite 15. cool 16. women regain physical health after giving birth to babies 17. magic plant 18. cock to 2nd heaven 20. [? miscegenation] women & their birdhusbands
p. 90 partridge to sky p. 91 wooden phallos attracteth woman to copulate
24. double-arrowed warrior p. 94 cockroach went to fetch sweets:
Mis.rayim = land of MELAN-podes par
25.Tuton sitteth all day
p. 95 ashes were falsely mixed into them p. 96 suns remain in sky
bitter foods (Dbrym 32:32) sun & moon simultaneously in sky (Yhs^w< 10:12) http://bible.crosswalk.com/Online StudyBible/bible.cgi?word=jos+1 0:12&version=kjv&st=1&sd=1& new=1&showtools=1
p. 98 thumbs were cut off green frog; 29. moon 32. maker of mankind;
moon p. 100 giving of intelligence & wisdom to humans p. 102 tail p. 103 burial under upside-down basket
thumbs were cut off >do_ni^-Bezeq (S^pt.ym 1:6)
Lu^z "coccyx, tailbone" (S^pt.ym 1:26) burial at Timnat-H.eres (S^pt.ym 2:9) -- timnat "portion" (i.e., potsherd) + h.eres "itch" (i.e., for scraping) http://bible.crosswalk.com/Lexico ns/Hebrew/heb.cgi?search=2777 &version=kjv&type=eng&submit =Find
valley of rocky shelters 37. change to best clothing; take a bath; produce foods from own bodies
Clayton H. Chu: Three Worlds of Iban Shamanism. PhD diss., Columbia U., 1978. pp. 120 to 124
pp. 104-5 gold clothing was awarded, but not retained p. 108 bathing
A.R. Foning: Lepcha. New Delhi: Sterling Publishers, 1987
-- cf. residing, Diogeneslike, under upside-down urn, during "scraping on the urn with a piece of brick" from the outside (ODG, p. 34) quarries (S^pt.ym 3:26) despoiled of gold earrings (S^pt.ym 8:26) river-fords (S^pt.ym 12:5) produce honey from corpse of lion (S^pt.ym 14:8) ODG = Chen Kaiguo & Zheng Shunchao (tr. by Thomas Cleary): Opening the Dragon Gate. Charles E. Tuttle Co., 1996
Planets
Astika gods of 9 planets
Aztec 9 lords of night
Maya glyphic series of 9
1. Agni "fire"
1. Xiuh-tecuhtli "fire" with burning incense 2. ITZtli "flint": underworld knives as winds
G2 glyph of burning incense G3 ITZ-glyph
2. Vyana, (bodily) wind 3. Kalmas.a "dyed"
4. Vis.n.u, from whose navel a flower bearing god of guna rajas "pollen" 5. S`ukra, author of law-code 6.Gauri "Yellow", cf. Daoist "Yellow Springs" 7. Praja-pati, god of procreation 8. Gan.a-pati, known to Bauddhas as Hr.daya "heart" 9. Vis`va-karman = Tvas.t.r., whose
3. Piltzin-tecuhtli, his hair red (dyed?); streak on cheek 4. Cin-teotl with a flowering tree;
G4 glyph of face with dots on cheek G5 glyph of plant-shoot ?
maize (for pollen ?) 5. Mictlan-tecuhtli, judge of the dead; directional roads G6 "North" 6. Chalchihuitl-icue, of water-sources; G7 glyph of face with 2 stripes on jaw stripe on jaw 7. Tlazolteotl, goddess of prostitution, G8 glyph of lifting snake snake-segment 8. Tepe-yollotl G9 sun-god "mountainunderground heart" 9. Tlaloc, four-fold, of
(heart of earth)
four cups became one
four buckets; fish leaping
G1 glyph "fish-in-hand"
9 Vasu-deva-s {9 Prati ...}------------------9 regents of the night 1. {Prati-Vasu-deva As`va-griva 1. Xiuh-tecuhtli the fire-god "horse-throat": cf. the narrowthroated fire-mare +Vad.ava} 2. Dvi-pr.s.t.ha: his father Brahma 2. Itztli the primaeval god (from the primaeval god whom originated all the other deities, according to the account in Hartley Burr Alexander) 3. {Prati-Vasu-deva Naraka, who 3. Piltzin-tecuhtli the god of youth remained unborn, an embryo} 4. Purus.a-uttama: his father Soma 4. Cin-teotl the maize-god (king of the plants) 5. Purus.a-simha: his father S`iva 5. Mictlan-tecuhtli the skeletal god (whose skull was shattered, in (personifying human corpses) commemoration whereof the skulls of human corpses are shattered before their cremation) 6. Purus.a-pun.d.arika " ... white 6. +Chalchihuitlicue, with pond water-lily" 7. Datta: his mother S`es`avati (cf. 7. nude +Tlazol-teotl, with snake S`es.a, the water-snake). [Datta was draped over her originator of the Tantra, the texts advocating nudism.] 8. {Prati-Vasu-deva Ravana, who 8. Tepe-yollotl "mountain-heart" lifted a mountain} 9. Kr.s.n.a "black" 9. black-headed Tlaloc Ratna Prabha Vijaya: S`raman.a Bhagavan Mahavira. Vol. 1, Part II. Sri Jaina Siddhanta Society, Ahmedabad, 1948. p. 120: "Prati-Vasude`va". p. 121: "Vasude`vas".
Codex Borgia, p. 14.
Ainu----------------------------------Welsh--------------Tehuacan Gwydion the cobbler 2. Itztli the knife-footed adopted the boy Llew Llaw Gyffes. "kesorap, "a fabulous Llew Llaw Gyffes shot a wren. bird with speckled feathers" (p. 137 -spotted eagle?) "is shot down by a human man who used to be wealthy but now is poor" (p. 138; cf. pp. 139-141). The kesorap "enables The 9 Vasu-deva-s the poor man to take correlate with the back all his possessions" naks.atra Punar-vasu (ibid., p. 138). Punar-vasu "restoring goods". Llew Llaw Gyffes, for 3. Piltzin-tecuhtli whose whom as wife there was wife was +Xochicreated, out of flowers, quetzal "flowera woman. precious" the Owl-god Kotan-kor- The flower-wife of 5. the skull-headed owl kamui (ibid., p. 137) Llew Llaw Gyffes was transformed in an owl. the serpent-form (p. 7. +Tlazol-teotl's snake 147, fn. 6) of the Ainu fence-goddess +Nusakor-huchi Goronwy of the pierced 8. Tepe-yollotl the stone. cavern-god. Govannion, who killed 9. Tlaloc, with a fish. [Llew Llaw Gyffes' twin-brother,] the boy Dylan who swam like a fish. Donald L. Philippi: Mabinogion Songs of Gods, Songs of
Codex Borgia
Humans. U. of Tokyo Pr, 1979.
regent
characteristic
naks.atra
characteristic
22. inDRA / varun.a
water-god
5. punarVASU 4. arDRA
"moist"
23. aja ekapad
goat one-footed [cf. one-footed god who becometh drumhead in Classic of Mountains & Seas] snake [in] deep [water], i.e. anaconda
3. mr.ga-s`iras "deer-head"
boater according to veda
1. kr.ttika
21. VASU
24. aHI budhNYa
25. pus.an
26. AS`VIn 1. agni
time-god in veda
2. PRajaPAti 3. soma
drug
4. rudra
"howler"
2. roHIN.I
26. AS`VaYujau 25. revati
23-24. PRos.t.haPAd 22. s`atabhis.aj 21. *s`lavis.t.ha
girl experiencing her 1st menstruation "leather"
time-goddess in mahabharata
"100 physicians" "loudest"
dra is variant of danu "river" (danuvius, etc.) elk-skull as den of mice = Smintheus Apollon the music-god anaconda is attracted to girl's 1st menstruation (coracles being made of leather)
5. aditi (cow) slain by LUNkeus] [=adite
20. *s`LONa
6. BRAHMAN AS-pati 7. sarpa
19-18. as.ad.ha serpent
8. pitr.
"father" (i.e., elder) 16. jyes.t.ha
9. ARYaman [ARI^ "lion"]
17. vicr.tau
15. anu-radha
10. bhaga
[cognate: "boggle"] 14. vis`akhe
11. *SaViTL.
[cognate with SVaDIL-fari the stallion-god]
12. TVAS.T.r.
[= ThUESTes, who raped own daughter in darkness, but he was later identified]
13. SVaTI
"lame", as the bovine personificatio n of the yuga is (viz., onelegged in the Kali yuga) BRAHMIN'S staff "2 entwiners" "eldest"
[capital of Sim.hala "leonine"] "forked" (dilemma) "sword" [but cognate with "swathe"]
serpents entwine staff of Hermes Persian +jeh = Hellenic gai[h]a, wife of ouranos
Swat in the Kabul valley was known in Hellenic as Soustene -- cf. swastika, the scytheharvester
[+Us.a was raped while asleep, but her rapist was identified by
12. CITRA 13. vayu
"wind"
14. indraagni
[could not have 10-9. originally been two PhALGuNI gods, both of whom appear elsewhere in this list: instead, there may be suggested *PALJaNYa, raingod] god of PErsian 8. MAGHa MAG[H]ians
15. Mitra
19. vis`vedeva
"common to all", i.e. deities of promiscuity
11. HASTa
7. AS`--LeS.a
[/ phalgu for lustration in the holaka]
cf. [A]Mogha[siddhi] "embracer" (whore)
20. vIS.n.u
+CITRAlekha] [cognate: "GUST" of wind] [= PeLaGoN, practioner of lustration]
[cognate: +ACCa-*LaSentia, the whore]
archer (inept: own 6. tIS.ya archer bow decapitated him) [## 4 & 2 are guaranteed by the R.c-Jyotis.a as DRA and HIh., respectively]
Codex Borgia, pp. 22 to 24
day-signs
1. gushing spring-source 2. most precious blood, most Sacred Heart 3. (depicted speckled) upward-viewing emperor's invisible clothing 4. white-beaked god
13. reed: cf. Zun~i reed-spring 14. ocelot: cf. lion-hearted
5. drowning 6. flint blades 7. eight wells
15. eagle: its nest ascended by "naked man" 16. vulture, white-beaked 17. CABan: cf. CAB "honey": "honeylore" supplied by the As`vinau, rescuers of the drowning 18. flint blade 19. rain
8. split-tipped staff is held 9. SIBilant aviform flute (?) 10. jack-in-the-beanstalk (beans produce flatulence) 11. musician mouse-god (Smintheus) 12. multicolored sky 13. rope around neck 14. death-god 15. whistling god 16. rabbit
17. spinstress (Moira) with feather 18. the Ancient of Days 19. marriage negociation (?)
20. maize-plant, into which entered the lethal tooth of death (African myth)
20. Hun-ahpu "blowgunner" 1. CIPactli
2. wind 3. AKBAL =
12. tooth (Maya)
Maya day
saint
2. Ik life 3. Akbal = house
Francis, patron of animals Augustine, author of City of God Michael, patron of cemeteries
6. Cimi death 8. Lamat = rabbit (Chinese, burned alive) 10. Oc = hound 11.Chuen monkey (depicted writing) 12. Eb tooth 13. Ben reed 16 Cib = vulture 17. Caban = earthquake
Lawrence, burned alive Christopher, hound-headed Jerome, patron of libraries Simon, symbol a saw Boniface, who chopped a tree Benedict, with a black bird Matthew, author of gospel chronicling earthquake
18. Edznab knife 19 Cauac (glyph a dynastic dragon) 20. Ahau (glyph a human)
(27:51-54) Martin, with sword Luke, author of gospel detailing genealogy (3:23-38) Andrew, his name meaning "human"
Eugene Craine & Reginald C. Reindorp (transls.): The Codex Pe`rez and the Book of Chilam Balam of Mani`. U. of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1979. p. 90
13-day-cycle deities:
day-signs
15. fierce goddess wearing flint-hemmed skirt (p. 18. Edznab; Tecpatl 66) "flint" 17. man is cooked (p. 10) 17. turkey (p. 64) 18. falling water (p. 10) 19. Cauac; Quiahuitl "rain" 18. man plummeting in 20. Hunahpu: entered tunnel (p. 63) 19a. Cipactli-helmet of tattooed goddess (p. 19) 19b. plumes 20a. fire-god {= Agni, rider on goat: cf Norse drinking of goat-piss} 20. narcotic vine (?) 20b. banners (p. 61) 20. breaking of pestle
blowgun 1. Cipactli
Macurap
Campa (Apurimac + Ene)
tobacco leaves (p. 19) wicked sister-in-law's
A. 19. tobacco
blades (leaves) (p. 19) son is cooked (p. 20) 22. anhinga bird 24. fish upsidedown men (p. 21) trail in forest (p.22) hidden women (p. 22) 25. egret
drinking of piss (p. 23) E. 6. vine chewed 2. Ik; Ehecatl "wind"
3. Akbal "night" 1. Tonaca-tecuhtli, "lord 4. Kan "ripe", of
violent wind (p. 23) shattering pestle (p. 24) bamboo-thorn (p. 24) closed eyen (p. 25)
sustenance", i.e. of food 2. entwined snakes (p. 62); bird along back 3. pot (p. 63)
scil. food; 5. C^ic-c^an "twisted snakes" 6. skull
mother-in-law = pot (p. 25)
5. bird with hands (p. 11) 6. rabbit; man holding flute (?) (p. 66)
7. Manik (handgesture) 8. Tochtli "rabbit"
fingernail (p. 25)
7. flow of water from man 8. century-plant 9a. 9b. Tlahuizcalpantecuhtli = planet Venus 10. pole (p. 70) 11. leopard (p. 70) 12. god of cold 13. vulture (p. 68)
eat gongo (p. 25)
12. feathered back
13. fig-leaves [cf. fig hand-gesture]
man playing flute, and wearing penis-sheath (p.26) 9. Atl "water" old man bathing (p. 26) 10. "Tree Man" (p. 26) 11. Ozomatli "monkey" monkey (p. 27) 12. Malinalli, including eye [=star] 13. Ben; Acatl "reed" 14. Ix "leopard" 15. 16. Cozcaquauhtli "vulture = "necklace eagle" 17. Ollin "motion (swaying?)"
14. brazier (p. 14)
"Frost" (p. 27) pet birds (p.28)
18. fish-net house 19. fish-house
25. monkey
33. cold 53. vulture 63. necklace
hammock, with glede (p. 29) Betty Mindlin (tr. by Donald Slatoff): Barbecued Husbands. Verso, London, 2002.
Codex Borgia pp. 9-13; 61-70
Gerald Weiss:
Campa Cosmology. N.Y., 1975. pp. 550-552
Daoist world-ages = Huisi Tacu DE, pp. 36-42 1.Hun-Yuan "Vast Prime"
GD, p. 208
page:colu mn
Codex Vindobonensis
2. Hon-Yuan "Coagulated Prime" 3. Tai-C^u "Grand Antecedence" 4. Tai-S^i "Grand Initiation" 5. Tai-Su "Grand Immaculate" 6. Hun-Dun 7. Jiu-Gon "Nine Palaces" 8. Yuan-Huan "Primordial Sovereign" 9. Tai-S^an-Huan "Great Highest Sovereign"
10. Di-Huan "Earth Sovereign" (earth for interrment within?) 11. Ren-Huan "Human Sovereign" [the Dao De Jin admonisheth to "discard humanity", indicating thus that "humane" signifieth "foul, harsh usage"] 12. Zun-Lu: "Venerable ..." 13. Gou-Lou "Crooked ..." 14. He-Xu "Glorious ... "
15. Tai-Lian [Fu-Xi's assistant is "Ch rel="nofollow">ung (the Multiple and Regeneracy)" (CSCh, p. 27)] 16. Fu-Xi "Hidden Vapor" [tailed god, CSCh, p. 12] 17. +Nu:-Gwa "snake woman" 18. S^en-Non "Divine Farmer" 19. Sui-Ren "Fire Drill"
35:2
[5. "Heavenly King of Primordial Beginning", p. 124] 4. S^an-Huan "Highest Sovereign" [= "Highest Sovereign of Emptiness,the Great Dao of Jade Dawn", p. 126] 3. Kai-Huan "Opening Sovereign" (opening of a grave?)
35:2 35:2
[striped] living upperbody-of-stone day 9 Cipactli hero 1 Xochitl (= Quiche` Hunahpu)
35:1
Tlaloc in the sky (Tlaloc usually being clad in jade)
(20:3) 33:4
god with conical hat [such a had being worn by Mictlan-tecutli, god of interrments & graves] god with flint blades as mouth [indicating harsh, foul language?]
(20:3) 33:4
(20:3) 33:3 (20:3) 33:3 (20:3) 33:3
(20:3) 33:2 (20:3) 33:2 (20:4) 33:1 (20:4) 33:1 (21:1) 32:4 (21:4) 32:1
bearded god [beard making for venerability] god wearing jagged headdress on seat, god having as his headdress a bird (some male birds making courtship-displays, i.e. glorying, before females)
2-headed god
tailed god snaky-haired goddess 11 Coatl god on seat fire-drill
20. Z^u-Ron "Blessed Smelter"
(26:2) 27:1
21. Gao-Yuan "High Source" [the term for "source" having a sexual connotation in Samskr.ta]
16:6 (37:1)
22. Gao-Yan "High Male"
16:2 (37:2) 16:2 (37:2) 15:2 (38:1) 12:4 (41:1)
23. Gao-Xin "High Toil" 24. Can-Jie "Dark Knot" 25. Huan-Di "Yellow Emperor" [who is said to have invented acupuncture] 26. S^ao-Hao "Lesser Brillliance" [S^ao Hao "has a falcon's body ... He also dwells on top of Mt. Ch>ang Liu" (CSCh, p. 28)] [S^ao Hao's "sacred animal is a white tiger" (loc. cit.)] 27. Z^uan-Xu [C^uan Hsu: (Z^uan-Xu) "is the mighty god who once executed the Estrangement of Earth from Heaven" (CSCh, p. 29)] [C^uan Hsu: (Z^uan-Xu) "has a bird's body with green snakes hanging down from each ear" (loc. cit.)] = "Master of the Red Essence" 28. Di-Ku
3."knotting of cords"
2. C^i-Min "Red Radiance" 1. Lon-Han "Dragon Country"
man holding flaming torches, igniting sky & earth-monster 3-lobed-headed god [=3lobed-headed Zu~ni god god Koyems^i, HK, Plate XLV; "performing certain obscene acts", ibid., p. 32] from opened tree emergeth a man (naked) 2 gods [toil at] opening tree knotted cords pins stuck into site
9:4 (44:1)
eagle under overhanging mountain
8:3 (45:2)
ocelot on hill
7:2 (47:1)
Quetzal-coatl elevating sky from earth
5:3 (48:1)
Quetzal-coatl (Whose name-sign is "quetzalbird-snake")
2:2-4 (51:1-3)
dragon (feathered serpent)-suited gods Perhaps the subdivisons (of these 2 Daoist lists), repraesenting reversely read sequences in the Codex Vindobonensis, can be reconciled by assuming a [Jaina-style] Kala-cakra of ascending & descending stages. And (in view of the similarity between the 28 of one list and now being the 28th maha-yuga of the current Manu-antara) an appropriate way to reconcile the 2 Daoist lists (each as a whole) with each other would be to correlate the idea (in the literature of the Theosophical Society -taken from some upa-puran.a ?) of pairs of Manu-antara-s as the ascending & descending stages.
TE = Livia Kohn: The Taoist Experience. Albany (NY): State U. of NY Pr, 1993. [citing the TaiS^an Lao-Jun Kai-Tian Jin] DG = Livia Kohn: God of the Dao. Center for Chinese Studies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, 1998. [citing the Numinous Treasure text Z^i-Hui Zui-Gen Pin] HT = CENTRO DE ESTUDIOS Y DOCUMENTACIO`N LATINOAMERICANOS, Incidentele Publicaties 24. Maarten E. R. G. N. Jansen: Huisi Tacu. Amsterdam, 1982.
HK = TWENTY-FIRST ANNUAL REPORT OF THE BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY. Jesse Walter Fewkes: Hopi Katchinas. Washington, 1903. CSCh = ASIAN THOUGHT AND CULTURE, Vol. VIII. Robert Shanmu Chen: A Comparative Study of Chinese and Western Cyclic Myths. Peter Lang, 1992.
[backwards] 27-yogapati cycle, mediaeval [viz., with the naks.atra-s already assigned to their modern regents] derivative from Iranian, but "not used by the Achaemenids" (ZC, p. 204) and imported "by the Parthians from Central Asia":-yoga-pati---------------------------------------------------------Zarathustrian day-regent 1. Yama, "judge of the dead" (CDHM, 18. Ras^nu, weigher of deeds of the dead p. 374) [substituted for Dharma-raja] (D&TZ, p. 303) 2. Vis.n.u [substituted for S`RAVana 17. SRAOs^a, "hearing, listening" "ear"] (D&TZ, p. 94) 3. Candra, an epithet of (VM, p. 127) 16-15. MITRA MITRA 4. Brahma 14. Geus^ 5. Br.has-pati [substitute for TIS.YA -13. TIS^trYA B&T] 6. Candra [as indistinct from #3, 12. Maonha (*MAM.SA] praesumable intended name : CandraMas, where Mas is variant of MAM.SA] 7. Indra, rider on "white horse" (HP, p. 11. Hvare-h^s^aetem, praesiding over 109) white horse (HZ, p. 212) 8. +Ap-s "waters", "Varuna's wives" 10. +Apo "waters", "the wives (D&TZ, p. 67) (ahuranis) of Ahura [Mazdah]" (D&TZ, p. 65) 9. Sarpa "serpent" {cf. Aztec xiuh-coa 9. ATAR "fire" {cf. AThARva Veda, "fire-snakes";
truthfulness (D&TZ, pp. 67-68) 16. Gan.a-is`a: "all manifestation is contained in his belly, ...Many vast universes" (HP, p. 297) 17. S`iva, whose epithet (TT, p. 103) is MANTRA 18. KUveRa, praesiding over the Uttara ("northern") KURu [cf. Sumerian KUR "mountain" -- to their north, the Caucasus] Kuvera had praeviously ruled (HP, p. 135) in the southern [direction of emerald linga, according to the S`iva Pura.na] island
19. Vis`va-karman, who "disclosed the sky" (VM, p. 314) 20. MITRA 21. Kartikeya "the power of chastity" (HP, p. 299) 22. +Savitri, the required prayer (said daily) 23. +Kamala "With a golden complexion, bathed ... from golden vessels" (HP, p. 284)
24. Gauri "white mustard' 25. As`vinau "divine physicians ... who heal diseases" (VM, p. 51): As`vinau are Vad.aveyau, sons (CDHM, p. 30) of the "submarine fire" +Vad.ava {cf. "baptism with fire"} 26. Pitar-s, who resemble (ERPP, p. 143) Fravas^i-s 27. RCRC, p. 166 bibliography:--
truthfulness 30. An-aghra "Space" (D&TZ, p. 249): "in fact the whole material creation contained within" (D&TZ, p. 224) 29. Matra Spenta -- MANTRA Spenta "formula holy" (HZ, p. 199) 28. Zem -- Zamyat, whose Yas^t is "a description of the mountains of the world" (HZ, p. 231): this Yas^t "describes the origin of all mountains out of the heart of the central and primeval mountain" (ESL, p. 216), reminiscent of "the great emerald which is a root and a pivot for the mountain of [Qaf]" (WC, p. 309) 27. Asman "sky" 26. +Ars^tat: "She co-operates with Mithra" (HZ, p. 193) 25. +As^i [Vanuhi], who is offended at adultresses (HZ, p. 209) 24. Daena, religion 22. Vata": "He wears a holden helm and a golden crown, a golden necklace, and a golden garment; he has golden shoes and a golden girdle ..." (HZ, p. 220) = Norse Od, who wife +Freyja wept, for him, tears of gold 21. Rama "savouriness of food" (HZ, p. 196) 20. Veretra-ghna "the most healing in health-giving" (HZ, p. 194): Veretragna > Varhran > Bahram > Bihram: "Bihram ... is so closely associated with the rite of baptism" (SA, p. 65) 19. Farvas^i-s -- Fravas^i-s
UA&M, p. 45
ZC = ARCHIV ORIENTA`LNI` C^ESKOSLOVENSKA` AKADEMIE VE^D ORIENTA`LNI` U`STAV, 35. Praha, 1967. pp. 197-207 Elias J. Bickerman: "The "Zoroastrian" Calendar." CDHM = TRUBNER'S ORIENTAL SERIES. John Dowson: A Classical Dictionary of Hindu Mythology. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. D&TZ = R. C. Zaehner: The Dawn and Twilight of Zoroastrianism. NY: Putnam's Sons, 1961. VM = GRUNDRISS DER INDO-ARISCHEN PHILOLOGIE UND ALTERTUMSKUNDE. III. Band, I. Heft A. A. A. MacDonell: Vedic Mythology. Strassburg: Trubner, 1897. B&T = J. OF THE ROYAL ASIATIC SOCIETY OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND. London, 1911. pp. 1119-1122 John Faithful Fleet: "Br.ihaspati and Tishya." HP = BOLLINGEN SERIES, LXXIII. Alain Danielou: Hindu Polytheism. NY: Pantheon Books, 1964. HZ = Maneckji Nusservanji Dhalla: History of Zoroastrianism. Oxford U. Press, 1938. TT = Agehananda Bharati: The Tantric Tradition. London: Rider & Co., 1965. ESL = TRUBNER'S ORIENTAL SERIES. Martin Haug: Essays on the Sacred Language, Writings, and Religion of the Parsis. 3rd edn., enlarged by E. W. West. London: Trubner & Co., 1884. WC = Gerard de Nerval: The Women of Cairo. London: Routledge & Sons, 1929. Vol II. ERPP = James Hope Moulton: Early Religious Poetry of Persia. Cambridge U. Press, 1911. RCRC = M. N. Saha: Report of the Calendar Reform Committee, Government of India. New Delhi, Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, 1951. UA&M = Eduard Stucken: Der Ursprung des Alphabets und die Mondstationen. Leipzig: Hinrichs'sche Buchhandlung, 1913.
28 naks.atra-s-----------32 asana-s---------------24 Tirthankara-symbols 2. go-mukha "cow-face" 1. ox 3. simha "lion" 24. lion 7. kurma "tortoise" 20. tortoise 9. svastika 7. svastika 23. holder of 11. padma "red waterlily" 6. red waterlily waterlily 13. vira {cf. Vira-bhadra 5. as name for Skanda, the KRAUN~CA traveller around the continent KRAUN~CA } 16. "stretch" {Chinese 4. monkey Monkey} 24. DHANis.t.ha 17. DHANura 19. S`AlABHA {cf. 3. horse S`ArABHA, the mythical "6-legged horse"} 25. rider on dolphin 20. makara "dolphin"
28. camel-headed 4. serpent-headed 5. rider on vulture 6. wearer of green 7. 4-handed
21. us.t.ra "camel" 22. bhujanga "cobra" 23. ud-KAT.a {cf. sa`KAT.ara "vulture (?)"} 24. vr.ks.a "tree" 26. -karan.i {cf. the astrological karan.a-s, one of which is named Catus.pada "4-footed"} 28. vajra-un.i "thunderbolt-vessel"
16. holder of thunderbolt & of vessel 18. rider on elephant 19. stander on 32. mr.ta "corpse" corpse
S`iva-priyananda: Astrology and Religion in Indian Art. Shakti Malik, New Delhi.
http://www.yrec.info/contentid-61.html
2. elephant
[backwards]
related may be the Chinese gymnastic exercises:-15. 1. 14. tiger 2. tiger 1. tiger 13. deer 2. deer 10. bear 3. bear 3. bear 9. peafowl 5. swallow 8 & 7. snake 6. snake 1. monkey 4. monkey 22. owl 7. bird 5. bird (owl) Joe David Stewart, PhD diss., Table 43. Mong_ulian 28 animals
Catherine Despeux: "Gymnastics." In:-Livia Kohn & Yoshinobu Sakade: Taoist Longevity and
Ibid., p. 242 (Sanguo z^i 29.2a)
Meditation Techniques. Ann Arbor: Center For Chinese Studies, U. of MI, 1989. p. 240 (Baopuzi 15) related also may be the Chinese 15-ingredient compound for sexual intercourse, in dreams, with daemons:-1. stag 7. hind 9. lightningflash [cf. lightning slaying the Aloadai while between them dashed the hind] 6. bear 10. star [cf. bearconstellati on Kallisto] 1. fox2. fox 4. vixen 9. fox muzzle 2. 11. lioness 7. leopardleopard muzzle 3. fox 12. she-wolf skull 4. realgar 13. sieve (SuNDiattao (SaNDara ke in "to sieve") Hellenic) 5. beaver14. fleshfollicles morsel 6. 7. beehive 15. coral-piece [having indentations,
8.
like honeycomb] 16. turtledoveblood
1. birds
9. tiger skullbone 10. 11. 12. 13. 2. hounds houndhair 14. camel- 3. camels hair
4. black
3. 3. tigress varicolore d tiger
3. 4. red 2. camel camel camel 4. ass [cf. asshoofed Lamia] 5. goat [cf. goatgod Pan] 5. spotted mouse [cf. "mouse" (smintheu s) sacred to Apollon]
7. sheep
6. wildcat
17. camel-hoof 18. virgin cow's hair
19. Pan's seed
20. sunbeam2. fire [i.e., mouse kindled by focusing sunbeams in apparatus as of telescope: cf. telescope, according to Diodoros Sikelos, of Huperborean worshippers of Apollon]
sheep 8. horse 6. blue horse 9. yak
15. cowhair
5. black yak
Michel Strickma nn (ed. by Bernard Faure): Chinese Magical Medicine. Stanford U. Press, 2002. p. 249
Rene' de ibid., p. Nebesky- 387 Wojkowit z: Oracles and Demons of Tibet. Mouton & Co., 's Gravenha ge, 1956. pp. 383384
ibid., p. 391
1. horse
21. colt's foot
ibid., pp. 184-185 [backwar ds]
Han Dieter Betz: The Greek Magical Papyri in Translation. U. of Chicago Press, 1986. IV:2241-2358
Joe David Stewart , PhD diss., Table 40. Japane se 36 animals
28 naksatra-vehicles-------------28 brain-sections---------------27 lunar animals (backwards) 12. yak 1. yak 1. ox 14. serpent 2. serpent 15. lightning 23. lightning 18. dragon 21. dragon 3. leopard 18. leopard 20. lion 17. lion 4. monkey 15. baboon 22. brown bear 6. bear 13. bear 25. goat 11. nanny goat ANMVVN TBD, p. 146 JDS, Table 37 ANMVVN = "As.t.avim.s`ati-Naks.atrabhis.eka-Man.d.ala-Vidhi-Vajravarmin.i-Nama." In:-Encyclopaedia of Buddhism, ed. by G. P. Malalasekera. Gvnmt. of Ceylon, 1967. Vol 2, p. 267. TBD = Kazi Dawa-Samdup (transl.): The Tibetan Book of the Dead. Oxford U. Press. JDS = Joe D. Stewart, PhD diss. 28 naks.atra-vehicles-----------------------------------------------------------Yogini-s 2. fish 19. fish
3. ass 4. ox 5. Garud.a
21. donkey 22. buffalo 24. Garud.a
ANMVVN YC&T, p. 206 YC&T = Vidya Dehejia: Yogini Cult and Temples. National Museum, New Delhi, 1986.
Maha-Vairocana Sutra-------------------------Tehuacan 3. (p. 252) "year" 1. Xiuh-tecuhtli god of the year 1. (p. 249) "to walk on water" 2. Tezcatli-poca stepping onto water 10. (p. 268) shadow 3. Piltzin-tecuhtli 10. (p. 267) "all sorts of [geometric] 4. Cin-teotl: jagged stripe on face forms" 9. (p. 266) "hell"; (p. 385 n. 660) 4 colors 5. Mictlan-tecuhtli god of hell; 4 in the directions colors of roads 8. (p. 263) "floating bubble" 6. Chalchiuhtl-icue with pool containing bubbles (?) 7. (p. 261) "The moon travels" 7. Tlazol-teotl; roads 6. (p. 260) "echo" 8. Tepe-yollotl the echo-god 5. (p. 259) Gandharva: a soul about to be 9. Tlaloc: rain god who is re-incarnated (acc. to Upanis.ad, the soul re-incarnateth from rain). 4. (p. 254) "see immeasurable realms" goggle (?)-eyed Wilhelm Kuno Mu:ller: ShingonMysticism. PhD diss., U. of CA at L.A., 1976.
Codex Borgia, p. 14.
28 Yoga-acara-s----------63 Dwergar-----------------87 initiations 4. SU-hotra 39. SViur 5. KANKA 38. Hannar < *HANHA 6. Vi-rajas < *VI37. VIL Lajas [: Makedonian Lagos] 9. KAPIla 36. HEFJa 11. Ugra < *uGLa 33. KiLi 13. Su-PaLaka 32. FiLi
15. VEDa-s`iras 22. Madhu "honey"
26. VIT 18. Mjo,d ("mead")vitnir 13. Bumba "drum" 11. Bi ("lullaby") 8.-5. (directional deities) 1. Mot ("moot")sognir 63. Ginnar [: Latin hinc "here"] 61. Frosti ("frosty") 57. Alfur (an elf, distinguished as "black elves" and "white elves") 55. Ska ("askew")fidur ("feathered")
52. Gloi "glowing"
24. S`uLIn / S`aLIhotra 28. Lakuli-is`VARA
85. dreams 84. sleep 81.-79. (directional winds) 78. +Themis the divine advisor 76. +Mnemosune "memory (praesence of mind)" 73. +Leuko ("white")thea 70. +Melinoe, whose limbs are partly black and partly white (Hymn 70) 66. Asklepios [: Norse Askr, husband of Embla "elm", "The elm with cuckoo" (Sh&E, p. 98), the cuckoo (Thornaks) having bedraggled feathers (GM)] 59. +Kharites, incl. Aglaia bright (Hymn 59)
50. HLE-vangur 46. Jara "battle" < *WARA ["war"]
HIPh, Vol. V, p. 70, fn. DT (translation from HO I-ED) 2: Vayaviya Samhita 2:9:2-5. HIPh = Surendranath Dasgupta: A History of Indian Philosophy. Cambridge U. Pr. DT = Dwerga-Tal http://www.skergard.org/skdverg.htm
I-ED = Cleasby Vigfusson Craigie: Icelandic-English Dictionary. Oxford. HO = Hymns of Orpheus http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/hoo/ Hymn 70 http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/hoo/hoo75.htm Hymn 59 http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/hoo/hoo64.htm Sh&E = Caroline Humphrey: Shamans and Elders. Clarendon Pr, Oxford, 1996. GM = Robert Graves: The Greek Myths. Penguin Books.
Hellenistic---KJN-----------KCMT 4:5-15-----SK, Kas`i Kh.-----Bon-------Bardo 2. vulture 2. vulture 1. vulture 3. 3. vulture vulture 8. wolf 11. she2. female jackal 2. jackal jackal 16. cat 15. she-cat 6. black cat 17. lion 2. lion 1. lion 19. weasel 16. shemongoose 18. cow13. elephant 1. elephant elephant 21. horse 14. horse 20. wine-vessel 24. fond of wine 7. sow 7. pig 24. sow 6. tiger 13. tiger 25. wolf5. fox 12. fox bitch 4. crow 4. crow 25. crow Joe D. Stewart. PhD diss. Table 37
David Gordon White: Kiss of the Yogini. U. of Chicago Press, 2003. p. 189
Louise M. Finn: The Kulacud.aman.i Tantra and the Vamakes`vara Tantra with the Jayaratha Commentary. Wiesbaden: Otto
Vidya Dehejia: Yogini Cult and Temples. National Museum , New Delhi, 1986. p.
Namkh ai Norbu: Drung, Deu and Bo:n. Dharam sala, 1995. pp. 100
Joe D. Stewart. PhD diss. Table 44
Harrassowitz, 215 1986. pp. 102 to 103
to 101
KJN = Kaula-jn~ana-nirnaya KCMT = Kula-cud.aman.i Tantra SK = Skanda Puran.a Bundahis^n 14:14-19---Ibid., 15:31------Hemadri 8. lion-headed 52. lion people rd 3 camel9. camel-headed 55. camel varieties people th 4 ox-varieties 57. buffalo th 5 horse-varieties 58. mule th 6 hound10. hound-headed 59. hound varieties people SACRED BOOKS Op. cit. OF THE EAST, Vol. 5. E. W. West (transl.): Pahlavi Texts. Oxford U. Press, 1880.
Vidya Dehejia: Yogini Cult and Temples. National Museum, New Delhi, 1986. p. 208
Daoist 12 apostles------------------------------Christian 12 apostles 9. Jade Tripod 3. James son of Zebedee in "a stone boat" http://www.csj.org.uk/apostle.htm His legend, involving being required to yoke "untamed and savage bulls" http://www.humnet.ucla.edu/santiago/leyenda1.html
resembleth that of Iason, who at lake Tritonis was given, by Triton, tripods.
8. Heavenly Master of Divine Virtue
4. John his brother most virtuous of the apostles, and surnamed "the Divine". 7. Virtue of the Pure Void restored, to 5. Philip commanded another to "see" another, eyesight (CoG, p. 355) (John 1:46) 6. Merciful Navigation "tossed his glazed 6. Bartholomew -- Devil said :"I took a vial vase in the air and ... Dong Quan was in mine hand" (Quaestions of Bartholomew 59): "Then Bartholomew commanded him to go sucked inside." (CoG, p. 923) into hell." (QoB 60) http://www.gnosis.org/library/gosbart.htm
5. Universal Virtue "fingers" (CoG, p. 925) 4. Heavenly Master of Outstanding Culture reconciled an uncle-and-nephew (CoG, p. 287) 3. Master Grand Completion slew (CoG, p. 1483) goddess "Fiery Spirit", who had "mounted her golden-eyed camel" (CoG, p. 1479) 2. Master Pure Essence
7. Thomas "finger" (John 20:27) 8. Matthew treated with a father-andson, both named Fulvanus -- Acts of Matthew http://www.gnosis.org/library/actmat.htm 9. James son of Alphaeus: "the skin of his knees and forehead was hardened like to camels' hoofs." (according to Hegesippus)
(LoF, Vol. V) http://www.ewtn.com/library/MARY/JAMES.htm
10. Lebaeus Thaddaeus: cf. <arabic lubb "essence" 11. Simon the Canaanite at a city called
1. Burning Lamp "on Mount Divine Hawk" (CoG, p. 293)
Suanir, possibly in the country of the Suani, a people in Colchis (LoF, Vol. III). http://www.ewtn.com/library/MARY/SIMON.htm [The name Colchian capital Aia is similar the name of the island Aiaia of Kirke "falcon".]
12. Yellow Dragon Immortal = ? serpent coiled in bowl (in Laotian myth)
11. Krakuchanda ("who later became a Buddha" -- CoG, p. 891) founder of religion 10. Fairy Primordial left his "footprints over all the four seas" (CoG, p. 267)
12. Judas Iscariot whose 30 pieces of silver were used to buy potter's field (Matthew 27:3-7): cf. "Plain of Jars" in Laos 1. Simon Peter "on this ... I will build my church" (Matthew 16:18) 2. Andrew his brother at "the sea" (Acts of Andrew 24) http://www.gnosis.org/library/actandy.htm
CoG, pp. 1101-1015
other ordinal enumerations:-... Cave on ... Mountain
Matthew 10:2-4; Mark 3:16-19; Luke 6:14-16 [; Acts 1:13]
#
#
Jiang Ziya
12. Jiang Ziya
# "in pairs"
Peach Spring Exalted Cloud
Nine Immortal Taihua
Fairy Maid Flying Cloud
Two Caelestial Dragon Squeezing
Golden Light
Qianyuan
Original Yang
Kongtong
High Cloud White Crane Perfumed Wood Golden Haze Jade House
Five Dragon Nine palace Putuo Jade Spring Golden Courtyard Green Peak
Purple Sun
Nangong Kuo Wu Ji 3. 2.
3. 2.
2. & 3. 10. & Master Spiritual Treasure 7. &
12. 11.
11.
11.
4. Immortal Universal Virtue
4. & Universal Virtue
10.
Master Spiritual Treasure 4. 5. 6. 9. 8.
6. 9. Master of the Clouds 10. 7. 8. Master Spiritual Treasure
loc. cit.
8.
7. Lu Ya 1.
p. 891
Master of the Clouds & 6. 9. &
loc. cit.
pp. 1589 &
12. & Lu Ya 1. & Jiang Ziya Jinzha & Muzha Wei Hu & Thunderbolt p. 1599
1591 CoG = Xu Zhonglin (translated by Gu Zhizhong): Creation of the Gods. New World Press; Foreign Languages Press; Hunan People's Publishing House. Beijing, 2000. LoF = "The Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs and Other Principal Saints" by the Rev. Alban Butler, the 1864 edition published by D. & J. Sadlier, & Company
household articles: Snake-omens -------------Lizard-omen----------------ditto ---------------------------Eclectic-omens 23(?): 30: 30: [D.T. 10] 94: (p. 156) 1:1 bed; chair.
(p. 263) :20 person sitting
:22-:24 bed
(p. 290) :21-:24 chair (pp. 290-1) :25-:28 table (p. 291) :29-:33 bed
:25-:26 mattress 1:2 coming out of house 1:3 throwing something out of house (p. 157) 1:7 its head in hole
1:8 potter's kiln
1:9 beer-pot; keg;
(p. 264) :34 beer
(p. 291) :35-:36 fire :37 lamp (pp. 291-2) :38-:40 oven (p. 292) :43 winebottle :44 beer-bottle :45 wort-pot :46 bowl :47-:48 storage-bin (p. 230) :26 storage-bin :49 leather bag :21 leather bag
table. 1:10 bread-basket; wool-basket. (p. 293) :57
:38 into furniture 4:2 door-sill 4:4 window
measure :58 millstone :59 woman's kettle :61 in furniture
:15 millstone (p. 229) :5-:14 stools etc.
:64 door-sill
social classes: Lizard-omens------------ditto-----------------------------Ass-omens------------------Royal-omens (p. 287-8) (pp. 291-2) (p. 180) [apodosis] (p. 216) [apodosis] [apodosis] 30: [K.3886+ 41: 79: apodosis] 30: (p. 293) :58 saved :11 the king will :44 revolt by by king's house betray his country prince (p. 287) :37 eclipse :51-:62 eclipses of moon & sun (p. 288) :44 the :55 an uprising :15 a change in the :54, :56 revolt by throne will change will approach throne nobles (pp. 291, 293) :38, :17 the land will :64 revolt by :52 uprising of go mad slaves slave and slavegirl (p. 292) :46 news :75-:76 ambassador (p. 291) :36 a noble will die :34-:35 go out of prison (p. 290) :21 eclipse in daytime :20 unknown news :57 evil foot :19 twitching of foot Sally M. Moren: The Omen Series S^umma Alu. PhD diss., U. of PA, 1978.
Evocation by Interrogation------------------------------Run (Anglo-Saxon) 1. Rites of Purification and Procedural 24. Dag ("Day") Order "the specific birth date" (p.85) 2. Ensnared in Cosmic Nets "the 23. Etel inheritance [this is, as it were, a Celestial Net" (p. 90) safety-net of insurance] 2. "Terrestrial Maze"(p.90) 22. Ing (Norse Yngvi): "followed by his
2. "a clap of thunder" (p. 90)
3. Exposed by their own Reflections "the possessing spirit is the mystery person, appearing on stage" (p. 91)
3. "to send forth a special convoy on a search mission" (p. 93) "the spectres themselves can be made to shine in the dark" (p. 100) "those who Suffer from Distressful Sleep and Cannot be Awakened ... for nightmarish experiences" (p. 102) "sticking needles under the nails of the patient's big toes." (p. 103) [do the needles here repraesent nails in horseshoes?] 4. "Under Siege" (p. 103)
chariot, he departed eastward over the waves" [cf. the crossing of the sea over floating stones in the Rama-ayana, followed by the finding of, according to Al-Be^ru^ni^'s India, of a maze-citadel] 21. Lagu ("Lake") where on the rollijng barque "the waves of the sea terrify them" [due to storm, as on lake ("sea") of Galilee] 20. Man "is doomed to fail his fellow, since the Lord will by his decree commit the vile carrion to the earth" [similar to Shakespeare's "strut his hour on stage ... then is no more"] 19. Eh ("Horse") of "rich men on horseback" [nightmare ?]
18. Beorc ("Birch") [Zaratustrian AlBurz ("Mt. Birch") is the mountain surrounding the world, like a city-wall surrounding a city to protect it when under siege] 5. Forcible Seizure "the victim trembles 17. Tir "a guiding star ... of night" [a ... A visible tremor" (p. 110) "into a dark twinkling star, twinkling as if with tremor] corner" (p. 112) 6. Bound by Rope "mouthfuls of ... water 16. Sigel ("Sail") [a sail is tied in place ... spits out at the face" (p. 113) by rope; the spray of the sea is felt on one's face] 7. Yoked in Cangues "the God of ... 15. Eolh-secg ("Elk-sedge") "grows in Moats" (p. 115) "delivers this blow ...of water and makes a ghastly wound" the Double-edged Sword" (p. 116) 8. Flogged "the Exemplary Matriarch ... 14. Peort ("Chesspiece") [a chesspiece Great Faceless ... flogging ... force it to would normally be faceless] reveal its name" (p. 119) 9. Pummeled by Fists "... hold him 13. Eoh ("Yew") held "fast ... by its down!" (p. 122) roots" 10. "Roasted under the Cosmic Fire12. Ger ("Year") Wheel" (p. 122) [the year is the wheel of the gods, according to the Veda]
11. Frozen in Ice "river gods ... to freeze the hun-souls" (p.124) 12. Crushed under the Weight of Mountains "press down! ... sharp pressure" (p. 126) 13. Restrained with Heads Enswathed "embodiment of ursa Major ... gowned in white" (p. 127) 14. Transferred to Surrogates ("cannot" be "ordeal of investigation" for the accused -- p. 130) [15.] A Full Ritual Sequence for Treating Acute Cases "the Arbiter of Destinty ..., i.e., kitchen god" (p. 135) [15.] "pacing out the pattern of the Constellation of the Three Terraces" (p. 135) [15.] "in this region ... in ... the Great Killer Pattern" (p. 137) [15.] "the Lock" (p.137)
11. Is ("Ice") "a floor" [on river ?] 10. Nyd ("Need") "is oppressive"
9. Hagal ("Hail") "the whitest ... from the vault of heaven" 8. Wynn ("Bliss") "not suffering, sorrow nor anxiety" 7. Gyfu ("Gift"): "it furnishes ... subsistence" of food (from the kitchen) 6. Ken ("Torch") [cf. Dionysiac torchprocessions] 5. Rad ("Riding") = judicial circuit (region of jurisdiction) 4. Os ("God") "is the source of all language, a pillar of wisdom" 3. Torn ("Thorn"): cf. name of thurs ("giant") Bo,l-Torn 2. Ur ("Early")
[15.] "Vitalized by a possessing spirit ten times his usual strength" (p.138) [15.] "... with utmost speed! ... immediately!" (p. 139) [15.] "the Officer also extracts a 1. Feoh ("Fee") payment" (p. 144) Judith Magee Boltz: Taoist Rites of Exorcism. PhD diss., U. of CA,1985.
Chinese route of the dead-------------------------------Judges of Yis`ra^>e_l 43 (2). Serpent of bronze brazen serpent 43 (1). Hound Ka^le_b (S^ 1:12) "hound" 42. statues (made of metal ?) +
MEMOIRES DE L'INSTITUTE DES HAUTES ETUDES CHINOISES, Vol. 1. Hou ChingLang: Monnaies d'Offrande. College de France. p. 77
S^pt.ym
activity for each day of the month Zarathustrian----------Manda
horsemanship 14. ox-ploughing
3. catch horses 4. oxen
18. transactions in cattle
21. guard one's self against everything
20. letting and drawing out blood 21. keep from everything
18. gaiety
20. war-making 21. legal suits
5. homicide
6. gay 23. going forth to the chase 24. war 25. hard for him that claims a debt; but favorable for lending 26. commerce
23. hunt
29. teaching
29. receiving counsel
26. good for lending
27. trafficking
22. confine one's self to words 23. clothe 24. kill noxious beasts
26. deliver over mares and cows to their males
30. sexual intercourse
http://www.avesta.org/p ahlavi/adarbad1.htm#da yduties
BZ, p. 88-92
7. fishing 9. make war 10. laws
11. travel the world seeking gain; "confute" (jugulationem) 13. "to clothe" (tegere); make mouse-traps or snares; eloquent 14. man and woman connect
BM, pp. 560-656
L&ZL, pp. 30-41
TM, pp. 107-109 bibliography:-TM = R. C. Zaehner: The Teachings of the Magi. London, 1956. BZ = ORIENTAL TRANSLATION FUND, Vol. XXXVI. E. S. Drower (transl.): The Book of the Zodiac (Sfar Malwas^ia) D.C. 31. London: Royal Asiatic Soc., 1949. BM = ROYAL SOC. OF LITERATURE OF THE UNITED KINGDOM. E. A. Wallis Budge (transl.): Syriac Anatomy, Pathology and Therapeutics; or "The Book of Medicines". Vol. II. Oxford U. Press, 1913. L&ZL = STUDIA GRAECA ET LATINA GOTHOBURGENSIA, XVI. Emanuel Svenberg: Lunaria et Zodiologia Latin. Go:teborg, 1963.
Kemetian days of month---------Bodish lunar-mansions------------Tehuacan days 1. Psd_tyw [cf. psd "back 1 (p. 9). woman and man (of body)"] engaged in (surreptitious ?) sexual intercourse {cf. that between +Demeter and Iasion, disclosed by the soil on their backs} 2. 3bd "month" 26. nam ... "night; when?" 4. ... sm "phallic sheath" 2 (p. 9). shooting of red snake (symbolizing sexual desire ?) 5. h^3w_t, cf. h^3y 0. dbyug-gu "rod" "measuring cord" 6. sn_t "sister": 1. ... n~e "kinsman" cf. sin "smell" 3. ... rzi "smell" 3 (p. 10). human faeces ascendeth to moon ("smell to high heaven"?) 8. tp "head; beginning" 4. mgo "head; beginning" 9. k3p lion's paw: 5. lag "fore-paw" 4 (p. 10). gold chain held in paw of: "put on cover; nursery 6. nabs-so "put on tooth" (place of tooth-cutting for babies?)" 10. sif "phallos" 8. wa "fox" coyote {cf. S^os^onean myth of amputation of Coyote's penis} 12. road 9. rta-pa "rider" 14. si3w fringed cloth 11. dbo "belly-side of fur" 15. temple personnel 12. me ... "fire" 5 (p. 11). bird gathering (arrangers for burnt firewood offerings ?) 16. spr "rib" {cf. Norse 12. bya-ma "brood-hen" 6 (p. 11). quetzal-bird "cuttting blood-eagle" = perched on: removing of ribs from living human} 18. i
add, augment"]
22. ph. spd_t {cf. ph.ww "marshlands"; Spdw "plumed god"} 24. knh.w "darkness"
18. snrubs [snub-pa "to cause to perish"] 19. c^hu "water"
25. st_t arrow-pierced oxskin 20. phul "handful" 21. byi-bz`in "mouse-[isin-its]mouth" 26. pr_t "going-forth;
plant-seed" 27. ws^b "answer" {cf. "Christ is the answer" -cf. the answer by the talking ass of Bil
STUDIES IN ANCIENT ORIENTAL CIVILIZATION, No. 26. Richard A. Parker: The Calendars of Ancient Egypt. U. of Chicago, 1950. Table 2 (pp. 11-12).
egg-
22. ... gre "peas" 23. ... dre "mule" {cf. ass ridden by Christ}
23. sgrog "rope" 23. ... gru "boat, ship" 24-25. khrums ...: cf. khrum-khrum "to pound in a mortar" H. A. Ja:schke: A TibetanEnglish Dictionary. London, 1881. s.v. "rgyuskar" (p. 111).
lunar animals
(sweat-lodge): invented, acc. to 1001 Nights by rel="nofollow">abu^ Si^r (whose story is similar to that of Yo^sep "add") 10 (p. 13). dying man 11 (p. 13). in swamp, a plumed man 12 (p. 13). dark interior of cavern 13 (p. 12). tomahawk on leopard-skin 13 (p. 12). man comesting handful of ordure 14 (p. 12). owl 15 (p. 11). going-forth of hare from mouth of feathered-snake 16 (p. 11). broken plant 17 (p. 10). man being cooked {cf. Christ as halfbaked Eucharist-wafer} 18 (p. 10). descending water 19 (p. 9). rope-enclosure 20 (p. 9). old woman breaketh pestle while pounding grain in mortar Codex Borgia, pp. 9 to 13.
goddesses 1. thunderdragon 2. windsnake 5. brown bear 6. wolf 7. firecloudtiger 14. leopard 18. pig NebeskyWoykowitz: Oracles and Demons of Tibet. Mouton & Co., 1956. pp. 312 to 313
1. flooddragon 2. dragon 3. raccoon 5. fox 6. tiger 7. leopard 13. pig statio.english/ abstracts/n7.k gw.tu berlin.de/Che nJ.html
36 substances 21. iron 31. iron ore 23. turquoise 24. turquoise 24. quartz 22. quartz
25. copper
20. copper
ibid., p. 314
Sun Bear: The Medicine Wheel
Chinese h.iu (lunar mansions)
Codex Borgia, pp. 22 to 24
16. tether 20. beak 21. three 22. well
2. tethered heart 4. beak-mouthed god 5. three beings at pool 6. knife-blade-pierced leopard [leopards said in South America to be transmuted ghosts of evil
23. ghost (of evil person) 24. willow 25. star 2. neck 5. heart 7. sieve 8. dipper 10. woman 12. danger
14. wall 15. stride
shamans] 10. tree 12. starry sky 13. cord around neck of god 14. three hearts 16. pierced pot containing liquid [dipperful offered to Tlazolteotl on p. 76] 17. goddess Tlazolteotl 19. colloquy with owl-headed god [owls often being omens of danger] 20. snake around maize-plant [cf. garden of the Hesperides, guarded by dragon Ladon and surrounded by a wall. It was walked to by the wide-striding Atlas, ruler of Atlantis the flooded.] 1. flood gushing out of Cipactli [cf.
water gushing out of cayman’s mouth in Michael Harner: The Way of the Shaman]
28 yogini-s
naks.atra-s
5. KUMARi 6. Indran.i (Indra became covered with vulvas) 7. Vajra, holding razor 8. S`anti, daughter of Daks.a, a PRAJA-PATI 9. Amr.ta
1. As`vini KUMARau
10. Candra "moon" 11. Dan.d.a (Dan.d.a was archer) 14. Rati, holding a corpse's torso 17. Kama (Kama having five arrows) 18. Vasu-ks.a, holding vase 19. VAYU-devi 22. Vajra, crow-headed 23. Maha-hastini, elephant-headed 24. VARUN.A-devi 26. Vajra, goat-headed 28. Vajra, serpent-headed
2. figure: a vulva 3. figure: a razor 4. regent: PRAJA-PATI 5. regent: Soma 6. Rudra = S`iva, with moon on head 7. figure: a bow 10. regents: Pitr.-s, the deceased 13. Hasta "hand" (having five fingers) 14. Tvas.t.r. of the bowl 15. regent: VAYU 18. regent: Jyes.t.ha, whose emblem is crow 21. figure: elephant-tusk 24. regent: VARUN.A 25. regent: Aja Eka-pad "goat one-foot" 26. regent: Ahi Budhnya "ophidian depth"
Fremantle & Trungpa (transls.): The Tibetan Book of the Dead. pp. 66 to 67
Daoist--------------------------------------------------------------Astika page Creation of the Gods # naks.atra-regent in Brahmana
609 625 647 669 687 701
"toward the southeast" "elixir" "divine ox" "pouncing silver dragon" "parents" "tiger cub"
1 3 5 7 8 9
715
11
715
Z^an Gui-fan's arm was broken Ne-z^a "had no soul"
715
Jian Zi-ya "took a bath"
14
723
S^en Gon-bao decapitated own self Bai Jian was confined to the sea Dragon Beard Tiger, having "one foot" Wang Mo is slain by Heavenly Master of Outstanding Culture "granaries"
20
Agni, god of the southeast Soma +Aditi the cow-goddess Sarpa-s = "serpents ... rushing" Pitr.-s "fathers" ARYaman: cf. ARI^/ "lion" Savitr., whose arm was amputated Tvas.t.r., who owneth a set of nestling cups; as did S`akyamuni, who denied existence of the atman Indra-Agni: cf. PARJANya = PELAGON, hero of lustration Vis.n.u was decapitated
22 23
Varun.a, god of the sea Aja Eka-pad "one foot"
24
"jade unicorn" of Virtue of the Pure Void "emerald"
26
Ahi BUDHNya = PUTHON, slain by culture-god Apollon PUS.AN = PUAN-epsion, festival of stored food A`svinau, twins whose chariot is pulled by asses Yama, worshipper of emerald linga BRAHMa = MORPHeus, a winged god, one of 1,000 brethren -- a brahma-hatya (involuntary slayer of a Brahmana) must remain garbed in yellow
727 749 755 793 803 817 821
12
25
27
Xin Huan, a winged god: one of 28 10,000 (p. 823) brethren (p. 825) -- he was captured by (p. 823) "a yellow-scarved genie"
LIBRARY OF CHINESE CLASSICS. Xu Zhonglin (translated by Gu Zhizhong): Creation of the Gods. New World Press; Foreign Languages Press; Hunan People's Publishing House. 2000.
24 guru-s of Ava-dhuta
deities of 13-day periods
3. sky
1. sky-god
5. fire 6. sun 9. python 10. ocean 11. river 12. moth 13. honey-bee [they describe route to flowers] 15. honey-gatherer, smoking out bees 16. deer [doe in time of deluge, according to Markan.d.eya Puran.a] 17. fish 18. courtezan Pingala [nerve-channel in physiology, for breath-control] 19. osprey 20. maiden 21. arrow-smith 22. snake 23. spider [many-eyed] p. 10, # 18. man extracting own eye; constructing cobweb
1. smoke-house 2. half-sun 3. snake 4. sea-shell necklaces 5. irrigation-channel 6. red butterfly 7. path from plants 9. fire-god with smoke 10. drowning p. 13, # 11 fishing 11 (=p. 13, # 12). goddess of medicine, with breathing beast] p. 12, # 13. bird (on back) p. 12, # 14. goddess Tlazolteotl 14 (= p. 11, # 15). holding spears 16 (= p. 10, # 17). cut-up snake
within ropeenclosure 19 (= p. 9, # 20). black god [= black Heraklees, who married Hebe (*Waba, cognate with "weapon")]; goddess wearing lantenaria-insect helmet
24. wasp (Baluchi wapsa)
[insect-eater] Uddhava Gita 2:33 to 35
Codex Borgia, pp. 61 to 70
22 Vetala-s
Tehuacan 21
8. "Pinnacle", a city;
p. 9, # 1 pinnacle from
layers of quilts 7. "Black-wheel"; submersion of king of "Copper City" 6. "White" as laundryman 5. "Smoke-tail"; man in flying chariot 4. hail-storm of goddess 3. dead lover biting 1. three-pronged fork is heated in fire 22. at "the city of Death" king is murdered, his widow fleeing to lotus-pond 21. Pradyumna [who was found within a caught fish] 20. mechanical lion is built 19. intention for adultery 18. Kanwa [according to Veda, deity of abortion]
17. forgot own lifeexperiences 16. woman is misdescribed as having bad qualities, but actually beautiful 15. mountain formed of bones of dead serpents 14. elephant [for spraying
blanket # 2 black Topiltzin p. 64, # 3 in pool, man eating faeces (= gold of gods) p. 64, # 4 white banner p. 11, # 5 feather-tail; human (arms) in bird p. 11, # 6 storm-breath of goddess # 7 sharp-toothed Tlaloc p. 12, # 8 spear p. 13, # 9 fire-god p. 70, # 10 death-god; murder of man by his being thrust under water
p. 13, # 11 a fish being caught p. 13, # 12 mountain-lion p. 12, # 13 Ixquimilli [punisher of adultery]
p. 12, # 14 goddess of prostitution p. 11, # 15 being swallowed [emblematic of forgetfulness ?] p. 11, # 16 goddess appearing to be monstrous, but actually a butterfly p. 65, # 16 [17] geologic strata (?); dismembered snake p. 64, # 17 [18] water-tubes;
water, in Ajivika scheme] from wearing of pendant which (as hero is rescuer badge of merit ?) 13. woman named p. 63, # 18 [19] goddess wearing "Pearl" shawl of white spheres (pearls ?) 12. "the blazing sun" for p. 9, # 19 sun-god Hari-swamin [hari is "day" in Iban] 11. "seed of fate ... p. 62, # 19 [20] seeds beneath 'tis strange" twisted frame 10. the sound of pestles p. 9, # 20 pestle being broken 9. suits of clothing were p. 61, # 20 [21] peculiar clothing made, one suit being given to is worn by god Xipe Totec god Arthur W. Ryder (transl.): Twenty-Two Goblins. J. M. Dent & Sons, 1917
Kemetian^ days of month
Codex Borgia
As^s^urian days of month
1. Dh.wty, apegod as record-keeper 22. day of reckoning 2. H.r, his eye sacred 3. arrival
Maya 11. monkey as scribe 12. eye (Aztec) 13. reed {for arrival: Pueblo}
4. priests go forth (procession) 5. H.
25. procession
15. MEN "shaman"
26. river-goddess 16. vulture (Aztec)
29. ravishment of moon 1. En-lil, kings of 16. wax [for gods name seal] 11. Sh^m.t, 2. Is^tar-s, became lioness standing on lion 12. love-making 3. take a woman 17. honey 13. R<, imparter 4. Nabu, of divine vison imparter of insight 14. BL, human- 5. BE^L headed bird 18. flint [for 15. 1/2 month 6. 1/2 day lucky cutting in 1/2] day 18. moon {moon 19. drop is drop in sky,
according to Veda} 19. his mother 20. Wp-wl.wt "opener of ways" 21. 23. N -WR
(Zapotec) 10. son of E-mah 1. (1st
12. wind-god & wind-goddess 14. Nergal (for NE-URu-gal )
24. darkness
3. night 5. C^icc^an = rainbow 6. death 7. deer [used to
27. appearances 27. funeral 28. jubilee (averting divine wrath) 29. WT30. his advocate (i.e., attorney in court-house)
of days) 2. wind
19. day of wrath 20. S^amas^ = UTu 21.Nin-e-gal "house great"
members.aol.com/ S. Langdon: tokapu/calendarint Babylonian
kill people: Huarochiri`] 9. WATer 10. coyote (whose house is mentioned in Uto-Aztecan myths)
ro01.htm
Menologies and the Semitic Calendars. pp. 73 to 82
SELENDROMIA (PLV, pp. 263 to 264)
SHAPES OF MENE (GMPT 7:756 to 794)
1. Hermes [mutable]
21. multiform
2. Phos-phoros ("torchbearer")
23. torch
3. Anemos ("wind")
24. lightning
4. Ares
25.
5. Hermeneia ("explanation" [of Hermes the herald])
26. herald's wand
6. Artemis [her retinue consisting of girlchildren] 7. Apollon [builder of enterable fortification at Ilion]
27. child
28. key
8. Poseidon [sender from sea of bull for Pasiphae]
1. ox
9. Kharita
2.
10. Ploutos
3.
11. Mnemosune
4.
12. Dikaiosune
5.
13. Dionusos [visitor to Lerne, where was the "Crab"]
6. crab
14. Elpis 14. Ennoia
7. 8.
15. Hephaistos [father of Erikhthonios the serpent]
9. serpent
16. Dioskoros [a horserider]
10. horse
GMPT 4:2241 to 2358 24. Aris ("bow-drill")
25. Huper-ephaneia ("contempt")
26. Nuphe {for /numphai/
24. bow-drill 25. grey-eyed woman's body with legs outspread [Athene showing contempt for Teiresias by first first displaying herself nude to him, then blinding him for noticing her] 26. black sphinx's
"labia minora of vulva"}
pierced vagina
NAKS.ATRAREGENTS (Atharva Veda, etc.) 11. Mnemosune [mother of nine Mousai]
22. Vasu-s [nine, acc. to Jains]
12. Dikaiosune ("righteousness")
23. Varun.a [punisher of dead]
13. Dionusos [visitor of Lerna, place of Hydra]
25. Ahi Budhnya
14. Elpis [("hope") retained in subterranean coffer]
26. Pus.an [treader on
("ophidian of the deep")
subterranean wolf, acc. to Veda]
15. Hephaistos 16. Dioskoros [twin horserider]
27. As`vinau [twin horsemen]
17. Hupnos ("sleep") & Thanatos ("death") [twins]
28. Yama [death-god, twin]
18. Aletheia ["truth", found by using Occam's razor] 19. Moses
1. Agni [acc. to Veda, razor-edged]
20. Demeter [who had 2. Praja-pati [who had sexual intercourse while sexual intercourse while in shape of a mare] in shape of a buck] 21. Krianos [in Aiolis, river: /krios/ ram]
26. Nuphe [for /numphai/ "labia minora of vulva]
3. Soma [a plant-sap: on the sheep-filter, acc. to Veda]
9. Bhaga ("vulva")
27. Zeus [whose sister (Hera) and son (Heraklees) together produced the Milky Way]
10. Aryaman [ruler
28. Hemera ("day")
11. Savitr. [impeller of sun]
(acc. to Devata Tattva) of the Milky Way]
L' Antiquite` Classique. Tome 2, 1933. pp. 259 to 266. Franz Cumont: "Les Pre`sages Lunaires de Virgile et les Selendromia." Hans Dieter Betz: The Greek Magical Papyri in Translation. University of Chicago Press, 1986.
lunar mansion--naks.atra-vahana--face---------holding-----naksa.tra-emblem 1. goat goat-faced 12. goat 2. goose 2. goose 13. goose 3. vulture 3. vulture 4. bull 4. bull 11. nanny6. goat goat (Khimaira) 12. snake7. double
goddess Thermouthis 15. baboon
snake 8.
ghoul
18. leopard
10.
cow
23. lightning
15.
horse
24. wreath 25. wolf-bitch 27. sharks
16. 17. 18.
deer corpse shark
19.
monkeyfaced tiger-faced
sun and moon thunderbo lt rosary
wolf-faced water-lily "beautiful "
18.
man
20.
bullock; holdeth star horse
26. 27. 28. 1. 2.
deer preta holdeth waterlily "beautiful"
M&EC, Table 37
A SDPT, pp. 54& 55, fn. 40 R M&EC = Joe D. Stewart: Mesoamerican and Eurasian Calendars. PhD diss, U. of Calgary, 1974. A&R = S`ivanandapriya: Astrology and Religion in Indian Art. Shakti Malik, New Delhi. SDPT = Tadeusz Skorupski: The Sarvadurgatiparis`odhana Tantra. Motilal Banarsidass, 1983.
The earlier Hellenic system, represented by Selendromia, would seem to have repraesented the Zarathustrian et al. system of praescription for the days, whereas the newer sequential arrangement in Works and Days, lines 765-828, would seem to repraesent the sequence of the naks.atra-s. Thus:-Hesiodos: Works and Days naks.atra 765-767 "slaves" "deal out supplies" 770-779 Apollon [the archer] "spider" 782-789 "lies, cunning words, and stealthy converse" 790-791 "geld" 792-799 "the touch of the hand" 800-801 "bring home your bride"
4. Bahu "forearm" ["farm-hand" is colloquial term for "slave"] 5. Punar-vasu "restoring goods" 6. Tis.ya [the archer] 7. A-s`les.a-s: s`res.a "clinging" (like spider's web?) 8. Magha-s: Magha was author of S`is`upala Vadha, about a liar 9.-10. Phal-guni: Phalguna was a name of Arjuna, who feigned being a eunuch 11. Hasta "hand" 12. Citra: Citra-lekha who arranged for a bride to locate her prospective bridegroom
802-804 Horkos "oath" "to trouble the forsworn" 805-809 "cut beams ... and ... timbers" 810-813 afterwards (late in day) "improves" {LINES LACKING: HIATUS IN TEXT ?} 814-818 "the twenty-seventh of the month is ... for ... putting yokes on the necks of ... horses" "hauling" "sparkling" 819-821 "open a jar" "morning"
http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/OMACL/Hesiod/works.h tml
13. Svati "sword" {the word "sword" is taken from "swear"} 14. Vi-s`akhe "branched" 15. Anu ("afterwards")-radha-s ("prosperity") {16.-26.} 27. As`va-yujau (2 horses yokes)
28. Bharan.i: bharan.a "carrying" 1. Krttika-s "white spots" 2. Rohin.i "cow of plenty; girl in whom menstruation has just commenced" 3. Mr.ga {cf. German morgen "morning"}-s`irs.a A. A. MacDonell & A. B. Keith: Vedic Index of Names and Subjects, s.v. "Naks.atra". Monier-Williams: Sanskrit-English Dictionary.
sacrificial animals------------------Tirthankara symbols-----------------nights 1. Bull 2. cow 4. elephants 2. Elephant 6. elephant 6. horses 3. Horse 13. leopards 7. leopard 17. monkeys 4. Monkey 9. monkey 26. rhinos 11. Rhinoceros Rene` de NebeskyAgni Puran.a, ch. 299. Wojkowitz: Oracles and In:-Demons of Tibet. Mouton, Puran.ic 's Gravenhage, 1956. p. Encyclopedia, s.v. 142 "Grahapid.a"
28 naks.tra-regents------------sacrificial animals-------------Aztec/Maya day-signs 1. Agni "fire" :19 crow 10. Maya Oc "coyote",
2. Praja-pati :12 ape 5. A-diti [= Hellenic Adite, a Danai:d who slaughtered her own husband while having sexual intercourse, for the first time, with him -- a motif otherwise charcteristic of the toothed-vagina woman} 6. Br.has-pati :17 cat 7. Sarpa {"the raging serpent like the rushing wind" --- VM. The Kemetian windgod S^W is a post propping up the sky.} 8. Pitr. (the ancestral dead, repraesented particularly by their heads)
9. Bhaga
:13 sea-crow
10. Aryaman
:15 cuckoo [blue cuckoo of Tibet ?]
11. Savitr.
:18 yellow-haired
12. Tvas.t.r. {cognate
who in Shoshone myth stole fire; parakeet (A&ACS) 11. Ozomatli monkey 12. Maya Ee tooth; Mixe (NVSCM, p. 44) Tuuts tooth.
14. Ocelotl ocelot 16. Mixe Paa post, pole (CM)
17. Ollin [< *ORIn] earthquake {cf. sensation adhaering to the earth when one one's ORI-s,a (loa) mounteth to one's ORI ("head") according to the Yoruba} 18. Tecpatl flint [depicted carried in mouth by black eagle, in Codex Borgia, p. 18] 19. quetzal-bird (A&ACS, p. 156) [often blue] 20. Xochitl flower (depicted yellow) 1. Cipactli, depicted as
with Teutonic Tvisto, Norse Tjazzi the firebird}
13. Vayu "the wind" 14. [Indra]
15. Mitra 16. [S`akra] 17. Nir-r.ti 18. 19. Vis`ve-deva 20. 21. 22. Vasu
23. 24. 25. Ahi BUDHNYA: Cf. BUDDHA, who, during his incarnation as hare, cooked self to death 26. 27. 28. Yama {cf.
:11 boar [cf. reputed ability of swine to see in the dark] :14 lizard :14 boa-constrictor :18 owl
alligator lack lower jaw: evidently the Lantenaria phosphorea, a phosphorescentbodied night-flier 2. Ehecatl "the wind" 3. Akbal night
4. Cuetzpallin lizard 5. Coatl snake 6. owl (A&ACS, p. 153)
:17 dappled deer
7. Mazatl deer"
:16 francolin partridge
[mazatl is cognate with Uto-Nahuan word for "feather]
8. Tochtli rabbit
9. shark (A&ACS, p. 153)
HDh, Vol. 5, Pt. 1, Sec. TS 5:5: A&ACS II, Ch. XV. pp. 501 to 504 references:-A&ACS = Hugh A. Moran & David H. Kelley: The Alphabet and the Ancient Calendar Signs. 2nd edn. 1969.
HDh = GOVERNMENT ORIENTAL SERIES -- Class B, No. 6. Pandurang Vaman Kane: History of Dharmas`astra. Poona: Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute, 1958. TS = Taittiriya Samhita of the Kr.s.n.a Yajus-Veda. Arthur Berriedale Keith (transl.): The Veda of the Black Yajus School. Cambridge (MA), 1914. VM = A. A. MacDonnell: Vedic Mythology. Strassburg, 1897. NVSCM = SOCIEDAD MEXICANA DE ANTROPOLOGIA, REVISTA MEXICANA DE ESTUDIOS ANTROPOLOGICAS, Tomo Decimonoveno. Mexico, 1963. pp.41-53 Irmgard Weilander John & Robert J. Weitlander: "Nuevas Versiones sobre Calendarios Mijes." CM = SOCIEDAD MEXICANA DE ANTROPOLOGIA, REVISTA MEXICANA DE ESTUDIOS ANTROPOLOGICAS, Tomo Decimonoveno. Mexico, 1963. pp.63-74 Alfonso Caso: "El Calendario Mixe."
Wen C^an = Meso-American day-signs Wen C^an 25, p. 142 "praises of a white colt." loc. cit. "bundles of silk ... and flags" 28, p. 151 "development of the embryo during praegnancy" 29, p. 153 "exhausting loyalty" (like Fido the hound?) 30, p. 156 "went on a long excursion ... to the far west" (As in the book Monkey = Journey to the West) 31, p. 159 "that your eyes flash, and that the sound of your cough rumbles" 31, p. 161 "Plucking out a long bamboo ... I found ... shaped like a fallen star ... a 'tiger's potency'." 32, p. 164 the god of a mountain, on the day of a maiden's marriage, "took delight in this maiden, seized her soul and despoiled her." Afterwards, he "returned the soul of the girl, who regained consciousness." 33, p. 166 "reached the vault of heaven" [p. 167 "The god of the Metal Heaven"]
Meso-American day-sign 7. Mazatl "deer" {deer are ridden by Daoist deities} 8. Tochtli "rabbit" {cf. the nursery rhyme "rabbit-skin to wrap his baby bunting in"} 9. Atl "water" (amniotic?) 10. Itzcuintli "hound" 11. Ozomatli "monkey"
12. Malinalli, depicted as eyeballs attached to a jawbone [signifying a cough?] 13. Acatl "reed" 14. Ocelotl "ocelot" 15. Quauhtli "eagle" {cf. KambhojanVietnamese myth of eagle-god who carried off the woman Soma to the moon}
16. Cozca-quauhtli "necklace(metallic?)eagle = vulture" [vultures are said to ascend into heaven in South American Indian
33, p. 167 "The three streams all trembled, mountains toppled, and rivers ran dry" 34, p. 170 "the mad whirlwind” 35, p. 174 bandit "chopped off" own wife's head 36, p. 176 "cutting down orchids" 37, p. 179 "The city parapets swayed and toppled ... of White Horse"
mythologies] 17. Ollin "movement", described as the earthquake which shall end the world 18. Quiahuitl "rain" 19. Tecpatl "flint (knife-blade)" 20. Xochitl "flower" 1. Cipactli, depicted as crocodile, lacking lower jaw, and spiny (prickly): the prickle = light-rays of Lagenaria phosphorea, which is in appearance like a crocodile, lacking lower jaw. White Horse of AI 6:2 & 19:11 flieth (like L. ph.), and the Babylon of AI 1618 is the tower of Babel which toppled according to the midras^i^m on BR 11:1-9 2. Ehecatl "wind"
38, p. 182 "Master of the Winds ... in the swirling winds" 40, p. 187 "The tutelary spirit of her house" 3. Calli "house" loc. cit. "to climb over the wall ... died 4. Cuetzpallin "lizard" swallowing all ten fingers." 41, p. 189 "will bear fruit" 4. [Maya Kan "ripe"] 47, p. 208 "a large snake entering a cave" 5. Coatl "snake" 50, p. 218 "he lit incense on the top of his head" 6. Miquiztli "death" (depicted as a skull) 51, p. 222 "pointing at a stone they took an 7. [Maya Manik, depicted as hand pointing oath" (in order to take oath?)] references: Terry F. Kleeman: A God's Own Tale. State U. of NY Pr, 1994 AI = Apokalupsis of Ioannes BR = B-R>s^yt
alignment of MesoAmerican day-signs with deity-sequence in Brahman.a #
MesoAmericanday-signs
#
deity-sequence in Brahman.a
20
Ahau [glyph depicted with prominent nose] Quiahuitl: in sun (world-age) nahui quiahuitl, the people became turkeys [so that commoners are compared with turkeys in the Florentine Codex 6:41] Edznab "flint": used to strike sparks for starting fire
27
As`vinau = Nasatyau < nasa "nose"
28
Yama, ancestor of commoners [as distinguished from Manu, ancestor of all nobility]
1
Agni "fire"
19
18
17
Caban "world"
2
16 15
deer-god [in Chilam Balam] Quauhtli eagle
2 3
14
4
13
Ocelotl: bloody mouth, bloody claws [in Chilam Balam] Acatl [codex-form a spear]
5
12 12 11
Eb [glyph a jaw] Malinalli "twisted" Ozomatli "monkey"
6 7 8
10 9
9 10
8
Itzcuintli "hound" shark [in Chilam Balam]: cf. Maori shark as milky-way/galaxy inebriated [in Chilam Balam]
7
Mazatl "deer"
11
6
owl [in Chilam Balam]
12
5
13
4
Chic-chan [glyph is depicted wearing hair-net] rattlesnake[codex-form; also in Chilam Balam], fire his spirit [in Chilam Balam] Cuetzpallin "lizard"
3
Calli "house"
17
2 1
Ehecatl "wind" Cipactli [whose name is cognate with that of Kemetian crocodilegod SBK]: cf. South American Indian mythic crocodile who bit off foot of man, in river ventured into by boat
22 26
5
10
Praja-pati, sometimes aequated with Purus.a, who body became the world Prajapati was stag-god Soma, [in Kambhoja and Viet-nam was] goddess carried off to the moon by eagle Rudra, fierce slaughterer-god Aditi the cow: cattle-horns often being likened to spears Br.has-pati, orator for the gods Sarpa-s "serpents" Pitr.-s "[fore]fathers" [alluding to S.ufi doctrine of evolution of humans from monkeys] Bhaga [cognate with "bitch"] Aryaman, god praesiding over the milkyway/galaxy Aryaman [is cognate with "Orion", who became inebriated in Khios] Savitr. [is cognate with Norse "Svadil-fari", the stallion] Tvas.t.r. [is cognate with "Tvisto" (In Tacitus), Norse "Tjazzi", who became a praedatory bird] Vayu, cf. vayas "web"
14
"Indra-agni": Indra the fiery, i.e. having "fiery" (poisonous) venom (Vanas-pati ?)
15
Mitra, whose sacrificial animal is the lizard (Tattiriya Samhita 5:5:14) Nir-r.ti "decay" [alluding to decay of corpses of family-members buried under one's house as per antient custom] Vasu-s, [including] Anala "wind" Pus.an the boat-god
tarantula-divination of the Kaka----------------------------------------------Aztec day-signs 48-48. NUM "sun" 50-51. LUMGAN "year"
52-53. "maize" (a plant not familiar to African tradition)
132-134. NUM "sun" 135-136. LUMGO,N 2 years 146-149. pitfall as man-trap 150-153. 154-157. "crossroads" 158-161. "tears of weeping"
201-202. "gallows" 203. 204-205. 3 "crossroads" 1. CiPaCtli = [etymologically, acc. to Kelley] Kemetian SBK of the crocodilian tears 1. Quiche` Imox "scarab" [cf. Kemetian stone scarabs as sigilla: Chinese sigilla are guarded by "jade maidens"]
162. "unfamiliar girls as omens"
163-164. 165-168. "knocking stone against another stone" 169-172. 2 "fingers inside mouth"
173-176. "seeing through walls"
177-178. 179-182. "arms behind head"
206-207. "circle of stones"
208-209. "blowing one's breath over the right index finger"
2. ehecatl "breath"
213-214. bunch of sacred grass, for sprinkling [cf. hyssop used in Exodos 12:22 for sprinkling posts of house-doors]
3. calli "house"
215-216. sacrificial animal with its limbs held down
4. cuetzpallin "lizard" [when caught, an
iguana's limbs are tied behind it] 5. coatl "snake / twin"
183-184. "twins" 185. "spade"
54-55. "sorghum"
186. "theft out of storage-bin for sorghum"
187-188. "closed lips"
56-57. "permanent fire for ripening"
234-237. "dry"
59-60. "raffia"
61.
190. "slander"
62-63. "palmwine" (inducing foolish talk) 64-65. "red palmkernel oil" 66-67. "calabash"
191. "foolish talk, babbling"
238. old human being 239-242. "rope tied around body of the infirm" 243-246. "mouth of witch"
11. ozomatli "monkey" 12. malinalli "herb"
247-250. "a dart"
13. (codex-form) "spear"
12. Maya euob "jaw"
192-195. thrice "licking" 196-197. "fruit of sacred tree"
68-69. "spearhead" 70-71.
217-218. "burial in swamp of superannuated cult-objects" 219. 220-223. "ordeal 6. miquiztli by poison" "death" 7. mazatl = Maya manik "handgesture" 225-228. "a cut" 8. tochtli = Zapotec lapa "cut up" 9. atl [aequated by Kelley with Polynesian funa "secret"] 229-230. 10. itzcuintli "hydrophobic "hound" hound"
198-199. "a charm"
251-254. "bewitched baskets"
72-73.
74-75. "horns"
76-77. "leopardspots"
256-258. 260-261. 262. 263-266. "trumpet"
88-89. "chickenfeather"
267-268. "LeopardSociety" 269-270. "Society of Red Feather"
92.
271-274. "god"
97-98. 3-legged "stand-drum"
275-276. "rattles" 277-278. 279-282. "burialshaft" 285-286. "new moon"
99-100. 2 "blocks of wood on which meat is divided"
17. ollin "earthquake" 18. tecpatl "flint" [cf. Nus.e^ri^ scimitar as moon]
287-288. split woman [cf. splitting of goddess Ti>amat in Enuma Elis^]
107. "cup"
19. quiahuitl "rain" 20. Quiche` Hunahpu, who stuck to seat (in the Popol Vuh)
110-111. logs whereon councilmembers sit
116-119. "news from the dead" 128-131. "sacrificial obligations"
13. acatl "reed" [cf. Tibetan initiation by whispering through tube] 14. ocelotl "leopard" of "Leopard Society" 15. quauhtli "eagle" of "Eagle Society" 16. cozca-quauhtli = Pipil teotl "god"
289. "daughter" [cf. Guarayu human sacrifice of daughter of deceased father] 290. "mock hunt performed at
funerals" MILWAUKEE PUBLIC MUSEUM, PUBLICATIONS IN ANTHROPOLOGY, 10. Paul Gebauer: Spider divination in the Cameroons. The North American Press, 1964.
custodians of idol at Dumat >al-Jandal, in >al-Qura #
name of custodian (BI, p. 55)
meaning of name
#
MesoAme rican daysign
meaning of day-sign (A&ACS, figure 19)
0 1
Rabi< Qud.a<
rab< region, territory gripe (colic)
17 18
Caban Edznab
2
>al-H.af
h.afiya to go barefooted, to have sore feet
19
Quiahuitl
mah.fuf surrounded [scil., by dangers]
20
Hunahpu
h.afiy welcoming
1
2
Mox lefthanded (Quiche) Ik (Iq, Igh) Calli
the earth, the world bleeder of fevers (Chilam Balam) nahui quiahuitl was the sun (world-age) when the people became turkeys: cf. turkeyfoot on CB, p. 64 he was surrounded by dangers in Xibalba (Popol Vuh) [cf. Euopean leftists as those welcoming the era of good will] life
galabiya majority (greater portion) tagallub overcoming wabariy made of toweling
5
Kan (Qanan, Ghanan) Coatl
6 7
Cimi Mazatl
wabr daman, hyrax (coney)
8
Tochtli
snake [its length symbolizing the plurality of a majority] death deer [in Markan.d.eya Puran.a, doe-deer rescueth Manu from deluge -- as if she were absorbing water like a towel ?] rabbit
9 10
Mul-uc Itzcuintli
tick (louse) hound
3
4
H.ulwan
5
Taglib
6
7
Wabar
Kalb hound
3 4
house ripe [of maize: cf. maize-sap as corn-syrup]
8
Tawr
9
Rufayd
10
Zayd->alLa>t
11
12
tawra eruption (of 11 volcano): [Latin] Volcanus cognate with [Vaidik] Valakilya-s the spider-gods (cf. spider-vehicle in A&S, p. 399) 12 rifada bandage (over wound)
Chuen
spider-monkey
Eb
rel="nofollow">al-La>t cube for praeparation of sawiq (BI, p. 16): cf. sawayq stem, stalk (of plants)
13
Ben
[gyphic form] jawbone: cf. Vucub Cakix's jaw bandaged (Popol Vuh) reed
14
Ocelotl
[Ge-khod, who became lion & tiger (A&S, p. 397), put sun & moon each cheeks (ibid., p. 398)] eagle [earliest form of Gekhod was eagle (A&S, p. 397), vulture: vulture, according to Horapollon, is hieroglyph for motherhood
ibn->al-Kalbi: The Book of Idols: Kitab >al->As.nam, translated by Nabih Amin Faris. Princeton U. Pr, 1952. A&ACS = Hugh A. Moran & David H. Kelley: The Alphabet and the Ancient Calendar Signs. 2nd edn., 1970 (translating from Libro de los Libros de Chilam Balam) CB = Codex Borgia A&S = Samten G. Karmay (ed.): The Arrow & the Spindle. Mandala Book Point, Kathmandu, 1998. J. Milton Cowan: The Hans Wehr Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic.
Mana^zil 1. "two signs" 2. But.e^n
3. Turayya^ "many" 4. Dabara^n 5. "white spot" 6. Han
13. "barking" 14. Sima^k 15. Gafr "covering" 16. Zuba^ne^n 17. rel="nofollow">Iklil 18. Qalb 19. "stinger" 20. "ostriches" 21. "city" 22. "luck of sacrificers" 23. "swallower" 24. "luck of the lucky 25. "luck of the tents" (made of camel-hair)
"two wombs" cf. bo_t.en "pistachio"
Waroc^iri` 1. birth by twos 11. woman impregnated by lu`cuma fruit 14. all [the gods]
cf. do_bra^h "raft"
"rend in pieces"
25. went to sea 33. tail was watermarked 35. grinding-stones 39. wings 43. grain of popcorn 51. sick 53. dismantled 54. two-headed 60. skunk (striped black-and-white)
cf. S.a^rpat: inexhaustible supply from vessel "to lean" cf.
62. inexhaustible supply from vessel 87. fox yelped 88. ledge 103. impounded by fallen mountain 124. bargaining with buyer 131. finish one's term 153. despised 160. tails of aniumals 207. toucan 213. convocation 221. praesage from the sacrificed 273. drinking [by idol] 293. [god] foretold victory for the Inca 374. plucking out of llama-wool
26, 27. bucket (at a well)
414. jar ….producing a spring 476: n. 879 bezoar (from animal's body)
28. belly
Malay rejan-s
meanings
17 scenes
3. harimau 5.
(striped) tiger ape
7.
mouse
8. lembu 12. mayan
ox palm-blossom
14. sina 15. ikan 16. babi: cf. ba^b "pupil of eye" 17. 18-19. [ha-]lipan 20-21. hantu 25. 27. jampok 29. pontianak 30. sani 31. ampat sudara
lion fish
1. striped-faced goddess 1. naked man 1. nude woman: cf. women displaying theselves nude in shrine of mouse (Akan) 2. blue goddess: cf. nil-gau ("blue ox") 3. pollen 4. pierced heart: cf. "lion-hearted" 5. white (silvery ?) cayman
Joe David Stewart: Mesoamerican and Eurasian Calendars. Ph.D. diss., U. of Calgary, 1974. Table 42
centipede ghost night-owl werewolf little snake four siblings
6. blind woman 7. [7th prime is 17] 8. centipede 9. living skeleton 10. 11. owl 12. wolf (?) in darkness 12. snakes 13-17. five Macuil-Xochitl-s
Codex Borgia,
loc. cit.
pp. 47 to 48
Vaidik sacrificial animals-------rejan-s----------Chinese deities--Maya deity animal animal Mah-Meri / Nei P'ien Jah-He^t
day-name
5. Vyaghra "tiger" 6. "men" 7. "falcon" 10. "ocean"
monkey quail crocodile
12. Praja-pati 13. Dhatr.
ape lion & cat
15. Pus.an [who trampled 2headed hound in pit] 17. Apam Napat "grandson of waters" 21. Vayu
wild goat
3. harima tiger
fish
lovebird (cakravaka) viper
29. "moon" 30. Vr.ks.a-s "trees" 32. +Ratri "night" 34. [? Vi]Dhatr. 39. Apsaras-es
human
46. Br.haspati 48. Pitr.-s "ghosts of the dead" 51. +Nirr.ti
10. crocodile 15. monkey 4. kuc^in cat 11. kambin goat
15. ikan fish
14. leopard 23. doubleheaded
24. fish
3:2. fish
17. woodpecker 18. momotebird 28. (who "bites with poisoned teeth") 20. boys 2. plumeria tree 3. night
30. night crab house-lizard (kun.d.r.n.a ci) tortoise
3:3. crab 4. [lizard]
19. banin turtle
cat
4:2. tortoise 32. cat
24. jin ghost owl
9. leopard 11. monkey 12. thrush
woodpecker
22. "the quarters" 26. Krodha "wrath"
44. "months"
1:1. tiger
27. jampok
5:2. "genie" 33.
6. owl
night-owl 53. Rudra
deer
54. "arrowshot" {cf. arrow in sea at Taj} 56. Anyatara-s hound of 4 "others" eyen
57. "others" 59. Antariks.a "atmosphaere " 60. Ap-s "waters" 63. Dyau "sky" 66. Indra 67. Ap-s "waters" Yajus Veda 5:5:11-21
6:3. fallowdeer
7. [deer]
9:1. hound
8. deformed hound
34. sea
31. 4 siblings ampat sudara
hyaena
36. laughing 41. wind
44. vulture
47.
wolf
52. wolf 56. lake
loc. cit.
Skeat, 1900 (quoted in:- Joe D. Stewart, PhD diss., Table 42)
Roland Werner: BomohPoyang. Kuala Lumpur, 1986. pp. 147-148
Ko Hung: Libro de los Nei P'ien. Libros de Chapter 17. Chilam Balam (transl. in:Kelley & Moran, Fig. 19)
14 Yoni Kuta
Daoist mountain-spirit
Yogini
1. Horse 2. Elephant 3. Sheep
12. horse 13. 14. ram 17. ape
6. horse 16. elephant [8 &] 17. lamb 18. pis`aca 19. fish
4. Serpent
5. Dog
20. dog
6. 7. Rat 8. Cow 9. Buffalo 10. Tiger 11. Hare 12. Monkey
23. jackal or wolf
24. rat 26. ox
34. ox 39. ox 40. cat 42. 44. monkey 45. deer 49. chariot
1. tiger 4. hare 6. deer 7. dragon 8. fish
13. Lion 14.
52. lion
B. V. Raman: Muhurta or Electional Astrology. IBH Prakashana, Bangalore, 1979. pp. 126 to 127
Ko Hung: Nei P'ien, cap. 17.
Delhi, 1986. p. 288
Maha-vidya-s
Khmer names
1. vase 4. elephant 7. buffalo 9. lizard 11. cat 13. lion 16. crocodile
10. vase 13. elephants
Shantilal
Vidya Dehejia: Yogini.
pp. 205 to 208
Khmer animals
Joe David
Aiguptian horary land-animals
10. vase 13. elephant 16. buffalo
18. lizard 20. lion
Khmer diagrams
18. lizard 19. cat 20. lion
9. chameleon 7. cat
20. lion 24. crocodile
5. crocodile
25. ox
4. bull Hans Dieter Betz:
Nagar: Iconography of Jaina Deities. Delhi, 1999. Appendix-IV
Stewart: Mesoamerican and Eurasian Calendars. Ph.D. diss., U. of Calgary, 1974. Table 14
Ibid.,
Ibid.,
Table 15
30 Javanese 3. PURU-s`ankara 15. pan~ca ras`mi "five rays" 16. tantra "loom" 17. Wisnu [who took three steps] 19. S`iwa [diademed with moon-fragment] 20. Gana-pati [elephant-headed] 21. s`akri "lightning" 22. Kubera [giver of riches] 23. CITRA-GUPTA 24. Wayu [god of fan] 25. Durga [riding lion; cf. KUBEBE riding lion with (Sum.) KUgBABA the barmaid] 26. sinha jalma"lion despised" 28. DHARMA-raja 30. anta-BHAG naga-gIRi 1. YAma XXXV CONGRESO INTERNACIONAL DE SACRED BOOKS OF "Diffusion of a Religious System Saroddhara to the
Table 16
The Greek Magical Papyri in Translation. U. of Chicago Press, 1986. 3:494-611
Saroddhara 14:44 PURU 12:74 "fifth day" 13:55 a thread 13:82 "foot-donation" 13:108 "elephant-shadow" 13:100 intercalary month 13:118 "arrow island" [cf. arrows as lightnings] 13:124 "giver of riches" 14:6 CITRA-GUPTA 14:33 fans 14:36 soma-drinkers 14:38 ARYaman [cf. (ARI^ "lion"] 14:41 DHARMA-s`astra 14:43 BHAGIRatha 14:44 YAyati AMERICANISTAS. Kirchoff: THE HINDUS, Vol. 9. from India to Mexico." Garud.a Puran.a
Javanese
Chinese
30 wuku
meanings
125
19. tan-bir
without sex
4. descendants
20. madan-
tiger
9. wind-tigers
21. mak-tal
mother tree
11. fruit ill form
22. wuye
jostle
12. appointment
23. mahahil
pale
13. fright
24. pran-bakat
war-trail
17. praecedeth soldiers
25. bolo
penetrated
18. licentious
26. wugu
threat
20. confusion of tongues
27. wayan
shadow play
24. autumnal colors
28. kulawu
bathbasin
27. spews water
29. dukut
vinegar
29. melon vines
30. watu-gunun
limit-mountain
33. top of terrace
1. sinto
touch
87. toad
2. landep
pan
89. "Southern Dipper"
3. wukir
engraved
92. document-seals
4. kurantil
turtle
94. turtles
5. tolu
tulah "calamity"
95. misfortune, damage
6. grumbreg
assemble
96. remain outside house
7. warigo
banyan
97. mulberry
8. ...-gung
gong
99. stones
9. julun-wani
unlucky fragrant
105. unlucky to find fragrant
10. sunsan
upsidedown
110. overturned
11. galunan
groove
111. the crooked
12. kuninan
firefly
113. fire in wood
13. lankir
scarce, rare
114. from "one" to "two"
14. mondo-
snout
115. snake's head
15. ...-pujat
massage
120. the Body: voluptuousness
16. pahan
daycount
123. counting of fingers
17. kuru-
era
124. the end
19. marakeh
glow
125. lantern
30 nights------progeny-----36 parents-------progeny-----------day-names----hsiu 10. huna 19. Ronosweet-potato 1. [Mixe root 3. root "hidden maTANE - NVSCM, p. (land of 44] TANE)" 11. Ari {cf. 2. Ehecatl 7. "the eight whakari "the wind": winds" (ACh, p. 98) "northwes t wind"} 12. ma9. "living 20. Tiki man (depicted as 10. girl wharu men" anthropoid) "pale earthworm " [in Norse myth of Ymir, from worms originated the first people] 8. 11. emptiness "ordure" (to be
evacuated ?) 13. Hua, god of evil
14. Atua whakahaehae {cf. haere "rainbowspirit"}
15. HOTU
21. Tute-nanahau 7. 22. Tahu "beneficial "HUSband" influence 23. Taw[h]irimatea {Haw. kahili "segment of rainbow"} 6. Rua-ai- 24. MOKOMOKO [h]iku-waru
evil
5.
flax
16. MARANI
4. TANEMAHUTA 17. tuRU "drip, leak"
24-26. Tana-roa
1. Whatu "stone"
25. [H]OTUnair ana 27. ToMAiRANI "tomb at sky"
1. TANE MAHUTA 2. RU
all good
3. [Maya Akbal night] 3. Calli HOUSE
12. peril 13. house
14. "differ in color" (ACh, p. 100)
lizard
4. Cuetzpallin lizard
dew (cf. "dew of lights": dew of resurrection for bones of the dead) birds
5. Miquiztli death (depicted as skull)
lakes & rivers
9. Atl water
3. Rupe [= Haw. lupe "sting-ray": cf. "stingoperation" by state detectives] 4. Tana-roa
fish
5. Ira-waru
hound
6. Na ranihore
stones
18. "death" (ACh. p. 101)
20. egret feather 22. well of water
23. "detection of cabals and plots" (ACh, p. 103)
10. Itzcuintli hound 11. C^uen 24. "carpentry" "Woodworke (ACh, p. 103); r" (A&ACS, p. 153)
7. +Ma[h]uike
fire
8. Maui
land (fished up by him by means of the jawbone of his grandmother ) totara-tree
9. Mumuhano [11.] "extinctio n of mankind"
29. maURI
10. Par[a]URI 11. +Papa "earth" 13. Pahiko
30. motu "district"
10. PUNA 3. hoATA
7-9. Tamateakai-ariki [? = TamaTEA -pokaiwhenua, whose slave was TUMUaki]
black bird kiwi-bird kaka "hillridge"
14. PUNA "coral" 15. Huri-mai- kahikatoate-ATA tree
17. TU-wairore
riMU (& kahikaTEA
12. Malinalli "grass of the charcoalburners" (Thompson, p. 81) 12. (Maya Eb, depicted as jawbone)
13. Acatl reed 14. Ocelotl ocelot [exterminate d mankind in the Ocelotanatiuh] 15. Quauhtli eagle 16. [Pipil Tecolotl owl] 16. [Mam mountain] 18. Tecpatl flint 20. Xochitl flower; Maya Hun-ahpu the blowgunblower
"cooking" (ACh, p. 104)
1. horn (to be blown)
CA&D, Table 4
MC, pp. 116-117
TIM, pp. 135 to 136
loc. cit.
A&ACS, Fig. 1(pp. 152 to 157)
S&CCh, Vol. 3, Table 24 (pp. 235 to 236)
bibliography:-CA&D = SWJA 16 (1960). David H. Kelley: "Calendar Animals and Deities." MC = JOURNAL OF THE POLYNESIAN SOCIETY, Vol. XVI (1907). pp. 113-119 Hare Hongi: "A Maori Cosmogony." TIM = Richard Taylor: Te Ika a Maui. 2nd edn. London: William MacIntosh, MDCCCLXX. A&ACS = Hugh A. Moran & David H. Kelley: The Alphabet and the Ancient Calendar Signs. 2nd edn. 1969. S&CCh = Joseph Needham: Science and Civilisation in China. Cambridge, at the U. Press. NVSCM = SOCIEDAD MEXICANA DE ANTROPOLOGIA, REVISTA MEXICANA DE ESTUDIOS ANTROPOLOGICOS, Tomo Decinoveno. Mexico, 1963. pp. 41-53 Irmgard Weitlander Johnson & Robert H. Weilander: "Nuevas Versiones sobre Calendarios Mijes." ACh = E'COLE PRATIQUE DES HAUTES E'TUDES, Sixie`me Section -- SCIENCES E'CONOMIQUES ET SOCIALES. LE MONDE D'OUTRE-MER PASSE' ET PRE'SENT, Deuxie`me Se'rie, Documents IX. Ho Peng Yoke: The Astronomical Chapters of the Chin Shu. Paris: Mouton & Co., MCMLXVI. Edward Tregear: The Maori-Polynesian Comparative Dictionary. Herbert W. Williams: A Dictionary of the Maori Language. Eric Thompson: Maya Hieroglyphic Writing. This "somewhat strange coincidence" between the list in Te Ika a Maui and the Aztec is noticed in Cyrus Thomas: The Maya Year. Washington: Gvmnt. Printing Office, 1894. p. 62
Gilbertese-------------------------Javanese--------------------------Carolinian etc. 1. bWATaraWa-mean 30. WATU-gunun 3. nani-ni-BWEBWE 12. yolo`-PWUWEY (Pulawat), olo-PUE (Mortlock) 4. bike-n-te-aITaO 1. sInTO 5. bike-n-URUaKI 3. wUKIr 15. UR (Lamotrek); 14. U`U`R (Saipan) 6. ... bo-ra "to collect 17. "to pick fruit" leaves" (Saipan) 7. bo-ra ruru " to [18.=] oue nuku "flaxcollect leaves shaking" shaking" (Maori) 10. aba-TEI 4. kuranTIl
14. bike-ni-BaRaitoa 16. bike-n-WARI
6. grumBReg 7. WARIgo; 8. WARIga
17. bike-raROA
[24.=] ARI (Maori) 26. ROmAn-fel (Mortlock)
19. bike-ni-KAneNEIaN 23. aba-neneAKI 27. MANImaERE 28. bike-ni-KAITara 29. bike-ni-kaRiAKAI 30. bike-MAUna
12. KUNINan
33. te nana-niMATAni 34. bike-n-RianaUa 35. ba-ni-KARAWA
21. MAkTAl
13. lAnKIr 14. MONdIoso 17. KUruwEluT 18. maRAKEh 20. MAdan-kUna
28. KULAWU
30. yERA`f (Pulawat)
4. MEs-O`O`N (Pulawat), MEs-OaN (Mortlok) 8. yeMETAl (Pulawat) 9. yeRU`W (Puluwat) [10.=] KOREKORE (Maori)
bibliography:-THE JOURNAL OF THE POLYNESIAN SOCIETY, Vol. 40 (1931). pp. 197-224 Arthur Grimble: "Gilbertese Astronomy and Astronomical Observances." ENCYCLOPAEDIA OF RELIGION AND ETHICS. Louis H. Gray: "Calendar (Polynesian)."
Quechua months
H.arna^ni^ months
Aztec months
1. Qhapac Raymi
3. H.azi^ra^n arrows; piece of cloth 4. Tammu^z
14. Quecholli arrows
breechclouts 2. Kamay mock battle; grinding of bones; peanuts 3. Haton~ Poqoy firewood 4. Pawqar Waray
15. Panquetzaliztli sham battles
grinding of bones; walnuts 5. A^b bake 6. Aylu^l
16. Atemoztli pumpkin seeds 17. Tititl box of torches 18. Oauhquiltamalqualiztli
bathe in heated water;
5. Ayriwa llama; chicha was spilled 6. Aymoray toasted maize 7. Inti Raymi warrior 8. C^awawarkis irrigation
9. Yapakis Sun 10. Sitowa new moon;
porridge is smeared on face; beast is sacrificed and is examined 11. K'antaray 12. Ayamarka resinous trees (p. 473)
Handbook of South American Indians. Vol. 2, pp. 308-311.
fastened chicken wingbone on necks of boys 7. Tis^ri^n al-Awwal thigh of camel; wine was spilled 8. Tis^ri^n al-Ta^ni^ bread 9. Ka^nu^n al-Awwal sovereignty; plants of the water 10. Ka^nu^n al-Ta^ni^ burn pine 11. S^uba^t. Sun 12. A^da^r moon; salt; kohl is applied to eyelids; zabruh^ is slain and its
bathed in hot water 1. Quavitleloa put wings on children's shoulders 2. Tlacaxipeoaliztli thigh 4. Veytocoztli toasted maize 5. Toxcatl captains and warriors 6. Etzalcualiztli lagoon or spring; incense
7. Tecuilhuitontli salt 10. Xocohuetzi faces are powdered; captives are tortured,
convulsions observed 1. Ni^sa^n Lord of the Hours 2. Ayya^r smell the rose
they twist and turn 12. Teotleco gods as hours 13. Tepeilhuitl
al-Nadi^m: Fihrist. chapter 9, section 1.
Bernardino de Sahagun: A History of Ancient Mexico. Fisk U. Press, 1932.
[Abu^ Sa
New Zealand nights of moon
Sandwich Islands meanings
Yucatan 13 20-year periods
1. Whiro
hilo "a running sore"
-uac "a blister, a boil"
2. Tireo 3. Hoata 5. Kou 6. Nana 7. Kani "back and forth" 9. Pa 10. Huna "in-law"; Hune
kileo "palate" hoaka "become daylight" 'oua "unripe" nana "to observe"
maulele "flotsam"
Na- "palate" Kin "day" -aa "unripe" Can "to learn" Pac- "to fold" Cab- "honey" Na- "mother" -pot Xiu, cf. puut-xiiw "cruciferous herb" Zoon "scowling" Cum "to overfill" Tu "stench" Cuc^ "sticky" Cit- "leaves for food" C^umayel = cuumuk "middle" + aayil "alligator"
Mary Kawena Pukui & Samuel H. Elbert: Hawaiian Dictionary.
CARNEGIE INST. OF WASHINGTON, Publ. No. 219. 1920. S. G. Morley: The Inscriptions
U. of Hawaii Press, 1971.
at Copan. p. 482
pa "to taste"
huna, hune "branching seaweed" 11. Ari "display" 12. Mawharu 13. Hua "buttocks; egg" 15. Hotu 16. Maurea "sedge for belts"
THE JOURNAL OF THE POLYNESIAN SOCIETY, Vol. 37, 1928. pp. 338-356. H. W. Williams: "The Nights of the Moon." ## 29, 31, etc.
mohalu "slack"
-hoku "fruit"
Siroza-s
Mo
Tarocchi
11. Sun 12. Moon 13. Star 14. Ahura Mazda 16. Mithra of
2. Sun 3. Moon 4. Star 6. intelligence 7. Bhradrakalpika Sutra of 1000 Buddha-s
20. Sole "Sun" 19. Luna "Moon" 18. Stella "Star"
1000 ears 18. Rashn
10. lions as strength 11. Wheels 21. Time 22. Wind 25. chariot
15. Morte "Death" 12. Lion as Force 11. Ruota "Wheel" 10. Tempo "Time"
19. breath 7. Carro "Chariot"
28. Earth 30. cursing 2. to destroy 4. metals 6. seasons & years
25. Ks.iti-garbha 26. wrong views 28. dwindling into dust 29. Gold 31. Kala-cakra (12 months)
Khorda Avesta: 21. Vanand Yasht Snow Lion, Ithaca, 1990.
Mi-pham (translated by Jay Goldberg): Mo. www.tarothermit.com
Tarocchi----------------------------------Maori nights of the moon--------hsiu 10. Wheel of Fortune 1.Whiro "to twist 6. "robing" (spinning-wheel ?) threads" 2. Takataka-putea: 7. Basket putea "basket for clothes" 3. 8. 4. ouenuku 9. "bridges" "rainbow" [cf. rainbow bridge: Hawaiian Mythology, p. 573] 12. Hanged man 5. Koro "noose"; Kou 10. hsu: (suspended by noose) "clitoris" "concubine" 13. horse-rider 7. ... whanana "party 11. Emptiness of travellers"; anana "cave" 14. Temperance 8. ... aio "peace" 15. Devil (who carried 12. Rooftop Jesus onto temple's roof -- Luke 4:9) 16. Tower 9. Pa "fort, stockade" 13. Encampment 17. Star 10. Hune "tiny"; 14. "the secret Huna "secret" library" 18. Moon with pond 12. Mawharu "bog, 15. "canals and quagmire" waterways" 19. Sun with sun13. Hua "to bloom, as
flowers 20. Day of Judgement, with corpses rising up
21. World: woman within wreath 0. Fool {the court-fool, Taliesin, was found in an eel-weir}
1. Juggler
2. High Priestess "the virgin and sterile" (The Black Arts, p. 113) 4. Emperor 5. Pope 6. 7. Chariot
a flower" 14. Atuawhakahaehae "supernatural terrifying" 16. +Maurea "sedge used in making ornamental belts" 17. Turu "to build an eel-weir" 18. Rakau "tree, medicine" 19. kind of dance performed by men only 23. Korekore "infantile, sterile"
19. Net
20. "edible wild plants"
25-27. Tanga-roa 28. Tane 29. Rono-nui 5. Heart 30. Rono-mauri [cf. Rono-i-amo: amo "litter, bier"]: mauri "heart" 8. Justice with sword 31. Mutu "to cut short, cut off" E'COLE PRATIQUE DES HAUTES E'TUDES, Sixie`me Section -- SCIENCES E'CONOMIQUES ET SOCIALES. LE MONDE D'OUTRE-MER PASSE' ET PRE'SENT, Deuxie`me Se'rie, Documents IX. Ho Peng Yoke: The Astronomical Chapters of the Chin Shu. Paris: Mouton & Co., MCMLXVI. pp. 94 to 105 THE JOURNAL OF THE POLYNESIAN SOCIETY, Vol 37 (1928). New Plymouth, N.Z. pp. 338 to 356 H. W. Williams: "The Nights of the Moon." Edward Tregear: The Maori-Polynesian Comparative Dictionary. Herbert W. Williams: A Dictionary of the Maori language. Martha Beckwith: Hawaiian Mythology. Yale U. Pr, 1940.
Astika-------------Bon-----------------Daoist--------------Iban----------------Maori NorthWest -"... he enters a NorthWest -NorthWest -NorthWest -Vayu the actual mountain mountain to be (LWhW, p. wind-god direction of through a cave traversed 112, fn. 19) as (personifying the direction
the ruler of the underworld
SouthEast -Agni the firegod, praesiding over cremations: cf. "the circles of Yoginis that rise into the air at the conclusion of their cremationground rites" (KY, p. 231)
NorthWest (sic!: catasteric?) (H&E, p. 197) -- "Twentyeight gods link their arms" (ibid., p. 196): i.e., in circle. [These must be something other than the lunar mansions, who had been enumerated ibid., p. 127. Perhaps they are personified whirlwinds.]
Taheke-roa(?) long descent into Rarohena = volcano of Whakaruai-moko SouthEast? -Te Ara-tiatia "the way [via] steps", ascended taiapo ("armin-arm") (LWhW, p. 128) into the sky upon titi (whirlwinds)
East -- Indra "ruler"
"rulers .... East -dissolving "suspended back up the rope" for dmu thag ascension at ["sky rope"] Ara-toiat death and so huarewa "way leaving no dangling" corpses" (FBTB, p . 21) Of these, the Daoist, Iban, and Maori accounts are specifically asserted to be descriptions of alternative paths taken by souls of the dead. A&S = Samten G. Karmay (ed.): The Arrow and the Spindle. Mandala Book Point, Kathmandu, 1998. FBTB = Todd Allen Gibson: From Btsanpo to Btsan. PhD diss., Indiana U., 1991. H&E = John S. Major: Heaven and Earth in Early Han Thought. State U. of NY Pr, 1993. HD = Pukui & Elbert: Hawaiian Dictionary. U. Pr of HI, 1971. KY = David Gordon White: Kiss of the Yogini. U. of Chicago Pr, 2003. LWhW = S. Percy Smith (transl.): The Lore of the Whare-wananga. Part I. -- Te Kauwae-runga. New Plymouth (N.Z.): The Polynesian Society, 1913.
OWhT = John Ronald Newman: The Outer Wheel of Time. PhD diss., U. of WI at Madison, 1987. RRWD = F. K. Litsas: "Rousalia: the Ritual Worship of the Dead." In:-- Agehananda Bharati: The Realm of the Extra-Human: Agents and Audiences. Mouton, The Hague. pp. 447-466 TB = Kristofer Schipper: The Taoist Body. Transl. from the French by Karen C. Duval. U. of CA Pr, 1993. ThWISh = Clayton H. Chu: The Three Worlds of Iban Shamanism. PhD diss., Columbia U., 1978.
Mah-meri / Jah-he^t-----------------------------------------Tehuacan 151. Thorny-backed p. 27. thorny-backed 155. rice-fields p. 27. watery field 156. Spider-gnome p. 29. torsoless: limbs attached directly to head 160. Horned earth p. 30. huge rayed [cf.
250. Feet-eating 251. Protruding-teeth 262. Folded-face 264. Bee 266. Pregnancy 274. Four-eyed 283. Four-handed
285. Dew
291. Blood 292. Sitting 294. Hill-path 296. Jungle-track 297. Pain-in-chest
298. Foot-disease 305. Mouth-diseases 311. Penis-sucking
312. Jellyfish [whose body is in constant pulsating motion, like hear of vertebrates, and whose tentacles are plant-like] 317. sour-faced 318. Deafness 319. breast-sucking 320. tin-mine {cf. the diamond-mine in the story of Sindbad, with Ruh^-bird, transporting Sindbad, flying down into it} 325. Four-faces-of-madness 340. Navel 342. Blowing
p. 37. foot, with maize (denoting the foot is to be eaten ?) p. 38. protruding teeth (of Tlaloc) p. 38. mug (effigy-face)-jar p. 38, below on left. 4 insects (bees ?) p. 39. women p. 40. god having multiple eyen on his body: having curve behind eye, like Maya God P the tree-toad who hath gloves [a pair of gloves being like extra hands] p. 41, above. skeletal deity emerging from darkness {cf. "dew of the resurrection"} p. 41. blood, being quaffed by sitting deities (a male & a female) p. 41. path p. 42. another path p. 42. [speckled] god having heart cut out, and later giving birth from own heart p. 42. floppy-footed gods p. 43. pierced-tongue man, amidst scene of maize-beverage-drinking with maizegoddess below[similar to the Tibetan beverage-drinking scene with a god's having his penis sucked by a monkeyheaded woman below him] p. 44. heart as root of striped tree, growing out of
tattooed-faced goddess p. 45, above. darkness-deity having knife-blades at ears p. 45, on right. man sucking up white liquid (milk?) p. 45, on left. stony pit, with eagle-suited god flying down into it
p. 45. decapitated heads of the Tlahuizcalpantecuhtli-s p. 46. rumpled-naveled (?) gods, with vapor (breath) emerging from their
349. White-emmet (termite) Roland Werner: Bomoh-Poyang. Dept. of Publication, U. of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, 1986. pp. 152 to 157
nostrils p. 46. white god Codex Borgia
migration myths Choctaw
Tehuacan
Tucano
Arrernte & Loritja
p. 185 "The skeleton [of the bora`ro] was ... revived ... The bora`ro rose and ... gave him a stick rattle and told him to plant it firmly in the ground at a certain place in the forest, whenever he wanted meat." p. 143 "A pole (tnatanja) ... is constructed of spears ... by the "hidden people" ... who live in the earth. They emerge at night and implant their songs in the sleeping ..." p. 173 "Waninga is a wooden framework ... in the form of a cross or double cross and covered with hair string, on which totemic pattern designs rendered in bird down." [used by the Loritja] {Cf. the Maori wananga; and Bon / Huichol "threadcross"}
p. 138 people whose "body parts appeared to be grown together." [p. 139 god "cut slits for their eyes, opened their ears, mouths, noses ...
p. 35 man piercing his own penis
The people traveled for a long time, guided by a magical pole. Each night, when the people stopped to camp, the pole was placed in the ground and in the morning the people would travel in the direction in which the pole leaned. After traveling for an extremely long time, they finally came to a place where the pole remained upright. {explained as magnetic compass,
he also circumcised and subincised them."] p. 138 "struck the waters with a stick and commanded it to "go away". The sea retreated to the north ..."
p. 156 "the Sun Father ... thrust his stick in the ground, in the riverbank, wherever he stopped at a rapid. But the stick did not stand erect; it stood inclined. So he went on and tried again. But once more it stood inclined. He went on and on, and at last it stood straight, it stood upright; this was the spot. This happened at the Ipanore` Falls, and at the Rock of Nyi`."
p. 141 explained: "It is on the equator that the
p. 104 the 2 Malpunga men, in the Numbakulla myth p. 187 "a pole, the kauaua or nurtunja, is erected at every camp. ... The length of these poles appears to be important; longer seems better; short poles may be cause for embarrassment."
Mis.rayim [, where in funereal ceremonies, "opening of the eyen" and "opening of the mouth" are performed for the dead, so that the dead can see & eat.]
14:16 Rod of Mos^eh caused the sea to withdraw: so, the people travelled over the dried-up sea-bed. >ahro^n & H.u^r, assistants of Mos^eh Rod of Mos^eh is used to draw water from the rock, after his embarrassment.
in Book of Mormon}
p. 29 foam p. 30 rayed disk [Cf. buttocks-print in rock left by Quetzalcoatl]
p. 31 goddess yielding blood from her bodily "jewel"
p. 32 god whose 2 heads are doubleblade [cf. blade-inthe-moon] p. 33 child
p. 37 woman wearing mottled pantaloons p. 37 red "jewel" platform stood on p. 38 living floating tree in water [deluge?]: banded living tree-log, floating {Cf. interpretation in Book of Mormon of liahona as magnetic compass: the simplest magnetic compass being a magnetized iron needle floating (by surfacetension) on water}
sun's rays fall vertically upon the earth, that is, that the ... stick rattle stands upright." p. 140 "yaje` foam" (gahpi` soporo) p. 140 rattle of "the Sun Father" p. 137 "two hollow depressions made by the girl ["bright star" (planet Venus?) goddess]'s buttocks, a chain of small holes or "drops" where she urinated". p. 137 "bright star" (planet Venus?) goddess was asked for her favors while she was menstruating" by: her uncle the moongod
p. 135 "all the men turned upon the child and tore it to pieces."
p. 188, #4 "cut man to pieces" p. 188, #11 "Magpie women" p. 188, #13 "Stone on end to mark dancing place" p. 189, #14 "Akakia trees shed plums like flood"
15:27 palm-trees
pp. 39-40 women enter Tlaltecuhtli (frog-god) containing white day-signs p. 40 two skullheaded goddesses
p. 189, #17 "Frog, White Bat"
p. 189, #19 "Initiate two women" p. 189, # 20 "Seen by Witchetty Grub man" p. 189, #23 "Witchetty Grub people" [witchetty grubs are eaten by humans] p. 190, #28 "Initiate woman": "Tjilpa" (marsupial "wildcat") p. 190, #36 "Bandicoot men & women" p. 191, #39 "Carpet-snake man" p. 191, #42 "Place where sound [of bullroarers] had come from" [p. 140 reincarnating souls appear as bullroarers] p. 191, # 45 "Pigeon men & women"; "Tjurunga represents head"
p. 42 floppy-limbed man emerging from conch p. 42 floppy-limbed man being cooked in cauldron
p. 43 skull-headed goddess, under snake-mouthed leopard god p. 44 tattooed-faced goddess p. 44 angular serpent men p. 44 amputated human limbs {Cf. separate reincarnation of each limb of deceased human, according to Z^uan Z^ou} p. 45 white-spottedheaded god assaulted by bird; torsoless whitespotted deity-heads [on net]
In this place, they laid to rest the bones of their ancestors, which they had carried in buffalo sacks
p. 45 churns; human skulls
p. 85 "he knocks three times with his stick rattle. Now the door opens before him and he enters the hill."
p. 192, #59 "Hole where kauaua stood" p. 193, #74 "hill for place of death"
16:11 murmurings
from the original land in the west. The mound grew out of that great burial. p. 95 "Masters of Fish"
Codex Borgia
C. Reichel-Dolmatoff: The Shaman and the Jaguar. Temple U. Pr, Philadelphia, 1975.
p. 193, #85 "Fish man" p. 194, # 86 "Quail women" Sam D. Gill: Storytracking: Texts, Stories, & Histories in Central Australia. Oxford U. Pr, 1998.
16:13 quails
S^MWT
http://www.pantheon.org/areas/folklore/folktales/articles/choctaw_creation.html
In the foregoing, the Australian may be unrelated to the Choctaw; for the Choctaw migration of the living was towards the southwest, whereas "the happy hunting grounds" [for those prae-destined to salvation] were "located in the southwestern horizon, and spirits ... sped their last journey ... in the direction of the southwest horizon." (Swanton, p. 219) This Australian sequence (containing, #17, Frog) is apparently aequivalent to a Choctaw "travel after death to the west" [for those prae-destined to damnation], at the end of which route "The wicked ... fall ... to ... where the trees are all dead, and the waters are all full of toads ...". (Swanton, p. 218) Origin in state of Washington subdivisions of the Choctaw PUSHmataha MOSHolatubbE
in Washington La PUSH MOSEs Lake
possible numeric connections Away from the Na-hon-lo (p. 32) / NEHuLLa, the Choctaw travelled south-eastward (p. 12), until "their forty-third green corn dance in the wilderness" (p. 14) at
Nunih Waya, the emergence-place of the 4 tribes who successively came forth "very wet and moist" [1st Muscogee, 2nd Cherokee, 3rd Chickasaw, 4th Choctaw] (pp. 35-36) -there only at Nanih Waya would the post remain standing upright.
SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, BUREAU OF
[NEHaLem Tillamook of Oregon]
Among the S^ibo of Manc^uria, the hiyatun (divineress) "throws forty-three small pebbles to the ground and divines out of the configuration which they make. ... Sometimes four chopsticks are immersed into water, and
then the hiyatun tries to make them stand while calling the spirits by name. It is believed that if the chopsticks remain standing it means that the spirit in question is responsible for the malady." (p. 266) Shi Kun: "Shamanistic Practices among the
AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY, Bulletin 103. John R. Swanton: Source Material for the Social and Ceremonial Life of the Choctaw Indians. Washington (DC), 1931.
Minorities of South-West China." In:- ISTOR Books, 2. Miha`ly Hoppa`l & Otto von Sadovszky: Shamanism: Past and Present. Budapest: Ethnographic Institute, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 1989.
Distinction between Choctaw & Chickasaw migration-myths:-Choctaw: leaning pole, afterwards upright p. 35 for Lono-makua the "long god", "the pole was let down ... but after[wards] the pole was set strainght again" Chickasaw: Hole (pit) containing Panti the p. 343 the pit of the hairless hound -- "Hole-of-thehound olohe" (ka-lua-olohe) http://www.lindasloveables.com/Introduction_Origin_Le gends.htm
beasts eating own tails (Sh&J, p. 134)
p. 348 Ku-ilio-loa (erect hound-long) "loses both ears and tail"
Sh&J = C. Reichel-Dolmatoff: The Shaman and the Jaguar. Temple U. Pr, Philadelphia, 1975.
Martha Beckwith: Hawaiian Mythology. Yale U. Pr, 1940
another possible comparison:-p. 31 blind goddess p. 32 scissors-headed god p. 33 god in form of white rope p. 34 god in the form of multipleheaded white rope p. 43 tree with white rope p. 44 birds tear out eyen p. 44 amputated human limbs
Codex Borgia
p. 257 goddess Uli as blind p. 465 while Kana's head on on his grandmother Uli's lap, he is cut with axe by Niheu "Kana, born in the shape of a rope" Kana: "His brothers bind him, but ... he breaks the bonds." p. 466 tree of Kana p. 467 "the plovers tear out his [Mo-i's] eyes" p. 467 "cutting the flippers of a turtle" [cf. Chinese: cut-off limbs of tortoise become sky-props] p. 468 Tahitian Marere-nui-maru-to'a [= Maori Marere-tonga] Martha Beckwith: Hawaiian Mythology. Yale U. Pr, 1940
Ch'an--------------------------------Iban------------------------Burma--------------------Dani^>e_l 17 (p. 70) tree fungus: 1:9 banyan tree invisible into heavens 18 (p. 76) Golden 3. golden cheeks 2:31 gold head 19 (p. 82) climb 1:11 climb mountain mountain (p. 84) oceans 4. sea 20 (p. 88) knowing the 2:45 know what will future happen in the future 22 (p. 93) raining flowers 8. jasmine
26 (p. 108) S`ita "cool" 27 (p. 111) sickly (p. 112) robe in fire: unburned 29 (p. 120) cinnamon trees & grain 30 (p. 126) cut off own arm with sword 32 (p. 133) looked out door of mausoleum
1:15 feel cool 11. fever
1:18 palm tree 1:23 paddy farm
12. rice field 17. sword-bearer
1:26 exit gate of heaven 2:3 grass 2:4 owls
34 (p. 140) wrote on wall 35 (p. 149) bird 37 (p. 155) mosquito 40 (p. 171) crossing a river, not wet
3:21 clothed into fire: unburned 4:10 tree
26. writing on wall
4:32 forced out of palace 4:33 ate grass; bird talons 5:5 handwriting on wall
2:5 robbins 2:6 mosquitoes 2:9 bridge 2:13 hunters etc. 2:17 women died of childbirth
30. huntsman 33. woman died of childbirth
Keizan (translated by Thomas Cleary): Transmission of Light [Denkoroku]. North Point Press, San Francisco, 1990. Clayton H. Chu: The Three Worlds of Iban Shamanism. PhD diss., Columbia U., 1978. pp. 121 to 122; 269 to 273 R. C. Temple: The Thirty-Seven Nats. London: W. Griggs, 1906. pp. 34 etc.
Bon
Korean
1. sphere 2. five causes 3. sounds 4. names 5. veil 6. cannot be divided into parts 7. numbers 8. yoga 9. walk in the sky 10. she-wolf into stretches the void 12. no need to observe
12, p. 44 "large stone" 17, p. 51 "Five Mausoleums" 20, p. 54 birds' song 21, p. 57 "formally named" 22, p. 58 "fine silk cloth" 24, p. 63 regained ear and eye 26, p. 66 two or one 29, p. 71 "to stand" 30, p. 72 "flew back to heaven" 31, p. 74. queen on Wolf Mountain 34, p. 80 woman Po-hu^i
cleanliness 13. piece of wood 14. secrecy 15. quality 16. advice 18. seeking, quest 20. trunk of tree 21. twelve links 22. Great Garud.a in Flight 24. subject and object 25. words 26. lamp [=sun] 27. gold 28. unchanging time 29. continue relaxation Namkhai Norbu (transl. by Andrew Lukianowicz): The Supreme Source. Snow Lion, Ithaca, 1999.
"urinated" 36, p. 99 ships 36, p. 101 "disguised" 37, p. 104 "invaluable" 40, p. 109 "suggested" 42, p. 113 "ask him to give" 43, p. 115 "pear tree" 44, p. 116 "harp of twelve strings" 46, p. 121 "pair of parrots" 47, p. 122 "subject" 48, p. 125 "three words" 50, p. 130 "the sun appeared" 50, p. 131 "gold" 52, p. 132 "stopped ... after a time" 53, p. 132 "Hundred Seat" Ilyo^n (transl. by Tae-Hung Ha): Samguk Yusa. Yonsei U. Press, Seoul, 1972
BuGanda clan-------------------------------------------------Tehuacan deities 5. butiko mushroom 2 (p. 19). mushrooms (?) 6. kikere frog 2. Tlal-tecuhtli = frog 10. kinyomo black emmet 4 (p. 21). black god 11. kiwere red plant-dye (L-ED) 5 (p. 21). red plant-sap 12. kkobe chestnut (L-ED) 6 (p. 20). maize-plants 13. lugave pangolin 6 (p. 20). pangolin (?) (white) 19. mpindi small bean (L-ED) 7 (p.19). "eyen" (= beans?) on plant 22. mutima heart 7 (p. 19). heart being cut out of man (?) Codex Borgia, pp. 18 to 21
24. ndiga sheep 25.
Daoist deities 14. ram
26. ngabi bushbuck 27. 28. ngeye colobus monkey 29. ngo leopard 30. 31. njaza reed buck 32. njobe marsh antelope 33. 34. nkejje sprat
36. nkima monkey 36. byenda intestines 37. nkula rhinoceros 38. nnamungoona sow 39. nnyonyi-nnyange egret 40. 41. nsuma fish 42. 43. 44. nte cow 45. nvubu hippo-potamus (riverhorse) 46. nvuma waterplant-seed http://www.buganda.com/ebika.htm
15. fallow deer 16. monkey 1. tiger 5. elk 6. deer 8. fish Nei P'ien of Ko Hung, cap. 17 Jaina Tirthankara-s 4. monkey 10. s`ri-vatsa (type of knot) 11. rhinoceros 13. boar 14. kite (a bird) 18. fish 23. 1. bull 3. horse 6. water-lily (its seeds are eaten) Shantilal Nagar: Iconography of Jaina Deities. Delhi, 1999. Appendix-I (pp. 441 to 442)
R. A. Snoxall: Luganda-English Dictionary. Oxford, 1967.
Daoist--------------------------------------------------Mixtec page Creation of the Gods page: Codex Vindobonensis column 1103
speaking to Yang Jian
1105
"Yang Jian ... shifted ... from his right hand to his left" "a water spout rose thirty feet high from the swamp, and at its mouth ... a queer creature"
1113
1:1 (52:2) 1:1 (52:2) 1:1 (52:2)
speaking man man holding blood in his hand man covered with eyen {cf. reptile-eye = waterspout}
1115
1121
"Dragon Squeezing Mountain" "The ground ... became harder ..., making it impossible for the dwarf to descend." "destined by fate"
1121 1143 1143
man is redeemed from death by forcibly marrying daughter of enemy "At daybreak, they washed"
1183
"Li Qi in the west, used his "Hot Temper Pennant;"
1183
Zhu Tianlin in the south, used "the Sword of Unconsciousness..."..." "Lu Yue ... scattering the plague pills" "The one in the middle had two horns on his head. The one on the left had ... tiger skins around his waist." "Ma Yuan ... pushed his hands through her belly ... to pull her heart out." "Yin Hong ... in the magic map ... turned to ashes."
1117
1189 1193
1249
1255
1263
Zheng Lun changed his mind
1275
1289
"a strange-looking Taoist with a mouth like the beak of an eagle": Winged Celestial from Penglai Island "Within the cave lived an immortal" "Yin Jiao ... eating the beans"
1291
"a driving-the-clouds helmet"
1281
1:1 (52:2) 1:1 (52:2)
20 tiny [squeezed into tininess ?] creatures out of the ground, a midget emerging
1:1 (52:2)
cactus emerging out of the ground {cf. "manifest destiny" of future foundation of Tenochtitlan as indicated by cactus (with eagle on it)} living corpse
1:1 (52:2) 1:1 (52:2) 1:1-2 (52:21) 1:1-2 (52:21) 1:2 (52:1) 2:1 (51:4)
man in water
2:2 (51:3)
god having claws as fingers (and as toes)
2:2 (51:3) 2:2 (51:3) 2:2-3 (51:32)
face with cross on it [crossroads on map ?], burning double-man, looking in both directions double knife-blade-lipped god, wearing skin of plumed serpent
2:3 (51:2) 2:4 (51:1) 3:1
within a cave, a snake-suitwearing god man with tree arising from his head 2 tree-men, with trees
shield-pennants on platform knifeblades on platform
sky-of-rays "1 Deer" [as name of windleopard god, according to commentators]
(50:4) 3:1 (50:4)
1299
"Yin Jiao ... shook the bell"
1301
"to behead Ma Shan three times, but as the blade passed through, the cut closed up immediately." {also in Liehtzu} "Ma Shan ... a lamp wick trembling within." "Yin Jiao...can't kowtow as ... in armor" "Luo Xuan ... With steam, smoke, and fire covering his body, he presented a truly terrifying sight." "vegetables ... in a cloudfanning helmet ... Li Jing" {cf. p. 1291} "Yin Jiao hastily rung his Soul Dropping Bell" {cf. p. 1299} "Yin Jiao ... rose up from the crevice, ... emerged above the surface of the mountain"
3:2 (50:3)
1353
"King Wu lit incense sticks"
1355
"a violent wind ... uprooting trees" "a belt inlaid with white jade."
3:4 (50:1) 3:4 (50:1) 4:1 (49:4)
1305 1311 1321
1327 , 1329 1343
1349
1389
1407
"the sky were falling,
1407
the earth splitting"
1419
"when he dipped his pen in the ink slab,the nib dripped off." "Kong Xuan made a quick prediction with his fingers"
1425
growing from heads 2 men holding tasselled bags [tassells = bellclappers ?] man with rays emanating from his neck
3:2 (50:3) 3:2 (50:3) 3:3 (50:2)
man wearing necklace of wicks (?) man in single-piece torsoarmor 2 striped stone-bodied gods
3:3 (50:2)
2 tree-men, with trees growing from heads
3:3-4 (50:12) 3:4 (50:1)
2 men holding tasselled bags [tassells = bellclappers ?] a striped "motion" (earthquake) god holding smoking-pipe [cf. smoky crater-crevice of volcano] burning copal, at:
4:1 (49:4) 4:1-2 (49:43) 4:1-2 (49:43) 4:2 (49:3)
tree snake with a head at each end, amid compositeflowers {cf. Peruvian god's belt with snake-head at each end} sky earth-monster with its tongue split god with bipartite [nib ?] on his forehead man with blood coming out of this hand
1427
"bagful"
1429
"Mount Flying Phoenix" ["Flying Phoenix" being the instrument for "automatic writing"] "Golden Chicken Range"
1433 1437
1441
1443 1447 1459
"Gao Jineng ... jerked his bag wide open, releasing swarms of wasps" "something in variegated colors, like a piece of agate, rolling to and fro." "Princess Long Ji" "Lu Ya turned himself into a rainbow" Kong Xuan became a peacock
1461
"Huang Feihu ... was chosen by lot"
1463
"Hu Sheng, commander of the Good Dream Pass"
1463
"Ji Kang ... black smoke rose from the top of his head" "ordered that Hu Lei's hair be parted down the middle" "ordered the flags of the Shang Dynasty be taken down" "soldiers ... to wear their hair loose over the neck and shoulders." "Mother Fiery Spirit ... for my disciple, Hu Lei." "Mother Spiritual Tortoise"
1467 1469
1471
1471 1493
4:2 (49:3) 4:2 (49:3)
bundle leaking rays
4:3 (49:2) 4:3 (49:2)
bird having shell on back (to denote flightlessness ?) on bag, wasp (skullheaded)
4:4 (49:1)
jewels (?) around oval
4:4 (49:1) 4:4 (49:1) 5:1 (48:3)
skull-headed, claw goddess
5:1-2 (48:32) 5:1-2 (48:32) 5:2 (48:2) 5:3 (48:1) 5:3 (48:1)
man cutting open a parcel [cf. opening of discovered buried texts]
man originated from banded blade god holding amputated human leg {with Hawa>ian goddess Lono-muku, whose leg was amputated, cf. Maori goddess Rona whose foot tripped, and who was carried off to the moon by MaTUKu-tanotano: cf.
6:1 (47:2)
hound-headed men with capes
6:1 (47:2) 6:1
goddess with serpenthelmeted man goddess at earth-monster
(47:2)
1503
generals Wang Xin & Hu Sheng changed sides (parties) in war, as turncoats "Qiu Yin's hair glaring through his silver helmet." [cf. p. 1467] "Qiu Yin released his red pearl ... on the shoulder"
6:1-2 (47:21) 6:L1-2 (47:21) 6:1-2 (47:21)
1527
"broke the mirror of his armor to pieces"
6:2 (47:1)
1531
"with hooks and ropes ready"
1535
"the occupation of Green Dragon Pass" "His blood was like thick ink." "Yu Hua attacked with his Blood Converting Dagger" "to Penglai Island"
6:2 (47:1) 6:2 (47:1) 6:2 (47:1) 6:2 (47:1) 7:1 (46:4) 7:2 (46:3) 7:2-3 (46:32)
1509 1510 1525
1547 1547 1549 1559 1559
"five-cloud camel tied ... its four hooves" "burn him to death"
1561
"Krakucchanda ... invoked a violent whirlwind"
7:2-3 (46:32)
1563
"Krakucchanda ... captured Yu Yuan with his Immortal Binding Rope" "iron box ... Yu [Yuan] inside, locked it tight, ... to the North Sea." "Yu Yuan ... used the combination ... to free himself from the box." "Lu Ya ... took a gourd from
7:2-3 (46:32) 7:4 (46:1)
1565
1565
1569
7:4 (46:1) 8:1
{the earth = tortoise according to North American Indians} 2 men wearing snake-skins
addressing featherbonnetted men, wind-god wearing speckled helmet heaven of shellfish (including oyster ?), carried on shoulder of wind-god stone person within fluffy circle of 4 skies [reflection in mirror ?] knotted rope man occupying mouth of green earth-monster bleeding man in jar [inkjar ?] marine monster holding 2 knife-blades island tied circle of footprints day "4 Rabbit" of year "4 Rabbit" {cf. Buddha as rabbit, cooking self to death, in Jataka} man holding by its tail a feathered serpent [feathered serpent = windgod] rope spiralled around curling wave prison (with triangular door) amidst falling water eyen [seeing way to escape ?] in sea, beside anglemountain speaking mountain-man
1587
his flower basket" "a dagger ... It had eyes and wings." "Han Rong appeared on the wall" "his [Nezha's] ... shoulder"
1591
"a huge red cloud"
1597
"the Green Touring Palace"
1601
"the Fairy Slaying Gate"
1601
"a golden lotus flower over"
1605
"unrolled the Map of the Eight Diagrams and turned it into a golden bridge." "... it's been five thousand years."
1569 1585
1609
1609
"My body is immortal ... I'm the Taoist of Jade Purity."
1611
1617
"I never count the years since time began, I've lived the ages through. ... I'm the Taoist of Extreme Purity." "people come happily"
1619
"the two Buddhas"
1621
"the Grand Master of Heaven"
1623
"nailing the sword to the wall"
1623
"lotus flowers. of various colors" "Heavenly Primogenitor then charged in with his jade Sshaped weapon" "Purple Mushroom Cliff"
1623
1625
(45:4) 8:1 (45:4) 8:1 (45:4) 8:1 (45:4) 8:1-2 (45:43) 8:1-2 (45:43) 8:2 (45:3) 8:2 (45:3) 8:2 (45:3)
holding gourd [winged, and having eyen] bird-mountain wall or platform
8:2-3 (45:32) 8:2-3 (45:32) 8:3 (45:2)
date "1 Cipactli" = the beginning of the tonalamatl
8:3 (45:2) 8:3 (45:2) 8:3-4 (45:21) 8:2-4 (45:21) 8:3-4 (45) 8:4 (45:1) 9:1
man buried up to his shoulders smoke of burning copal, at:
green feather-carpet trod on sea-breaker (curling wave) flowering trees leopard-skin laid over islet in pond
skull-as-temple-hill
river (= flow of time ?) issuing from mouth of skull (= since beginning of time ?) mask (? expressing mood) tied to hill hill of 2 foaming star-jars leopard-hill
hill of knifeblades
flowery hill Tlaloc
halved fungi (?)
1633
"Lotus Trap"
1635
"opponent had two wings"
1637 1641
"his body was made from lotus flowers" "took out a pill"
1643
"The dwarf"
1651
"Ma Zhong ... black smoke"
1655
"the "Paralyzing Rings," ... played over in the air"
1659
"Long Anji ... stabbed ... with his lance."
1667
"twenty-one Pestilence Umbrellas in the pattern of the eight diagrams." "Master of the Clouds"
1671 1673 1675
Yang Jian's Sky Barking Hound" "the cloud-haze beast"
1683
"the Eight Diagram Terrace"
1685
"Nezha flew up wall."
1687
"splash it on the ground ... on a handkerchief"
1703
"Saint Emperor Shen Nong"
1703
""This herb ... called sheng ma or cimicifuga foetida L."..." "use willow branches to spread the solution" "The smallpox was
1703 1703
(44:4) 9:1 (44:4) 9:2 (44:3) 9:2 (44:3) 9:2 (44:3) 9:2-3 (44:32)
9:3 (44:2) 9:3-4 (44:21) 9:3-4 (44:21) 9:4 (44:1)
ball-courts winged (?) serpent on mountain flowering triple plant on mountain tray with handles, on hillock head upon buttocks of another {cf. BS, the Kemetian pygmy with decapitated head at his feet} cloudy temple of saddlemountain shield upheld on pole
double-lance stabbed into hill feathered garment, boxed, within hill; jewel
9:4 (44:1) 10:1 (43:4) 10:1 (43:4) 10:1 (43:4) 10:1 (43:4) 10:1-2 (43:43) 10:2 (43:3) 10:2 (43:3)
ring of clouds
10:2 (43:3) 10:2
grass reaching to sky;
temple of hound, with: pipe-smoke beast as skypeak staircase as peak of mountain-range, with: wall as peak of same mountain-range blood pouring out of platform upon netted bundle person as bent hill herb (?) in crenellated region, with:
in crenellated pool
exterminated" "the hoop [around] ... his head ... was so tight" "to deliver a letter"
(43:3) 10:4 (43:1) 11:1 (42:4)
1721
"went over to his trap and set another trap inside"
1721
"two polarities in a diagram of the cosmos."
11:1-2 (42:43) 11:1-2 (42:43)
1721
"Pure Essence"
11:2 (42:3)
1723
"Black Cloud struck out with Universe Muddling Hammer" {cf. hammer of Tor, used to slay rock-giant whose draught-stallion was distracted by mare in oestrus, according to the Grimnis Mal} "a green lotus flower"
11:2 (42:3)
1713 1717
1723 1723
1729
1729
1731
1731
1733
11:2 (42:3) "the scent of pineapples" 11:2-3 (42:32) "Water Fire Lad stood ... with 11:3 his bamboo fishing rod." (42:2) "Black Cloud turned into a great turtle with a golden beard." "Dragon Head ... enclosing the trap with iron walls and brass partitions." "Dragon Head shook his head twice. He ... changed into a lion with a green mane." "Spiritual Teeth ... rode on lotus flowers."
11:3 (42:2)
temple fitted around headas-mountain-peak dead quetzal-bird {cf. bird which became an epistle in the Hymn of the Soul of the Acts of Thomas} temple within mountain
caelestial mountain-pass (between 2 mountains); stylus-mountain [for engraving diagram of cosmos ?] valley of spider-web {cf. spider-web ridden to heaven by Stod-pa Gs`enrabs Mi-bo} Gadfly (?) on bent hill at cavern-temple {cf. gadfly as female oestrus in myth of Io}
spider-web fluff-plant
standing man; at crenellation, straight plants (bamboos ?) bearded man
11:3-4 (42:21) 11:4 (42:1)
platform walled with flint
11:4 (42:1)
mountain-peak as lower part of body, seated on potted plant
upon platform, leopardskin bundle
1737
1737
1739
1739 1739 1739 1741 1743
1747
"Golden Light rolled on the ground and turned into a jaguar with golden fur." "Mother Spiritual Tortoise"
12:1 (41:4)
12:1-2 (41:43) "her Sun-and-Moon 12:2-3 (41:32) Pearl" 12:3 (41:2) "hair done up in double coils" 12:4 (41:1) "bead roll" 13:1 (40:4) "blood-sucking mosquitoes" 13:1 (40:4) "Fishing Drum" 13:1-2 (40:43) "Pagodas of Four Bearings" 13:2 (40:3)
1749
"to be the Gods of the stars Golden Ox ..."
13:2-3 (40:32)
1753
"the future Gods of the twenty-eight constellations, in position"
13:3 (40:2)
1757
"Mother Golden Spirit ... her hair flew about wildly." "Burning Lamp suddenly threw up his Sea Conquering Pearls" "Everyone whose name was recorded on the List of Creations was slaughered"
13:3 (40:2) 13:3 (40:2)
"the Grand Master of Heaven ... threw up his Purple Lightning Hammer." "Heavenly Primogenitor's Sshaped weapon." [cf. p. 1623] "a tree branch"
13:4 (40:1)
1757
1759
1759
1761 1761
13:3-4 (40:21)
14:3 (39:2) 14:3
as part of the striped land, a leopard walking (with greaved legs) hill temple of sun;
object in crenellated wave braid (?) in pool pebbles in pool long, straight-beaked bird (as hill) tablet (as hill)
Janus-headed mountainpeak {Janus being originally 4-faced} within crenellation, the gut {cf. Bon doctrine of passage of souls of the dead through yak's gut} stylus-peak [for inscribing of constellation signs in surface of sky ? -- as per Qabbalah] wild-haired-head of the aged as mountain sea containing seashell and round inscribed-ended object (pearl ?) mummy-bundle; mouthed flower-hill {cf. Huichol flower-world of the deceased} fang-mouthed hill; doubleoutward-pointed object on mouthed hill Tlaloc temple of the grass
1761
"tinkling of jade pieces."
1761
"Fairy Light with Long Ears inside the pavilion."
1763
"a pagoda floated above Lao Zi"
1763 1765
"a mountain with 200 fairies." "a bamboo walking stick."
1765
"the Ninth Heaven"
1765
"the root of all ... suffering."
1769
"this pill will ... lead to immediate death." ""... take him [Shen Gongbao] captive with my Sshaped weapon and lock him up at the Unicorn Cliff," Heavenly Primogenitor ordered." " the hole of the North Sea!"
1771
1771
1779
1783
"spells and charms incinnabar stamped on each of the. white bones?" "willow trees"
1789
"the penant. passing underneath, he immediately lost consciousness. ... cut his head off"
1789
"Ouyang Chun ... sent for Bian Ji", whose men "pulled their [fainted] guards safely out of the way." "a sheet with a spell written on it. Put it ... under your hair."
1811
(39:2) 14:3 (39:2) 14:3-4 (39:21) 14:3-4 (39:21) 14:4 (39:1) 15:1 (38:3) 15:1 (38:3) 15:1-2 (38:23) 15:2 (38:2) 15:2 (38:2)
platform with sphere god with ear-ornaments, inside temple a temple attatched.by a rope to the sky waterspring-mountain a plant lying on its side flaming peak rooted double-stemmed herb skull-place man falling at bent hill, a peak of that range whereof the other peak is the head of Tlaloc
15:2-3 (38:21) 15:3 (38:1)
ocean-breaker (spiralling wave)
16:1 (37:3) 16:2 (37:2)
human-trees
16:2 (37:2)
17:2 (36:3)
amulets (?), including legged ones
a tree (baobab ?): underneath it, with protruding tongue (= unconscious ?), a cut-off human head: 2 gods with elaborated eyeareas opening the tree
god with flints in his hair
1815 1817
1819
1821
"the four captives" = "The four generals" "two vanguard generals, Wang Zuo and Zheng Chun."
17:2 (36:3) 17:2-3 (36:32) "Ji Shuming and Ji Shusheng, 17:2-3 two younger brothers of King (36:3Wu." 2) "the Black Smoke Single17:3 Horned Beast" (36:2)
1823
"Chong Heihu let out a roar"
1825 1825
"Duke Chong [Heihu] meant to release his hawk" "a peach-colored pony"
1825
"blinded by the bright light"
1829
"Zhang Kui ... stamped his feet" "Zhang Kui's Black Smoke Beast and his [Zhang Kui's] mother" "his horse"
1831
1833 1835
1837
1839
1841
17:4 (36:1) 17:4 (36:1) 17:4 (36:1) 18:1 (35:2) 18:1 (35:2) 19:1 (34:4)
19:2 (34:3) blind man: but "The two eyes 19:2-3 held by the hands in his eye(34:3sockets could see everything" 2) "released his Sky Barking 19:3-4 Hound" as dog of war (34:21) woman "Gao Lanying...'s lips 20:2-3 and nose puffed up." (33:32) "Zhang Kui ... disappeared 20:3-4 into the ground ... could travel (33:21,500 li a day ... 1) underground"
1841
"wrote the letter"
1841
"took the letter"
1843
"a turbulent wind blew
21:3-4 (32:21) 21:4 (32:1) 22:1
4 dishevelled-haired gods 2 crocodile-helmetted gods
2 men
women, each with single anther growing out of her head goggled-eyed god with upper-lip-extension bird-beak within mouth of eaglesuit-wearing man deer-headed leopard god & goddess, each with helmet covering eyen standing in dotted square smoke (?) from hands of god & of goddess deer sightless (faceless) man, carrying on discussion as if sighted beast with human
goddess having her jaw fleshless (pumaskin-wearing) man having as his mouth that of a leopard [cf. leopard Tepeyollotl, owner of caverns] men stretching rope {cf. early Chinese use of knotted cords as writing} man tying block with rope wind-god
1843
wildly" "rocks and sand blew through the air" "a banner pole"
1843
"divination with gold coins"
1843
"the Fierce Beast Cliff."
1843
"slicing his head off"
1845
"Earth Traveler Sun died"
1845 1845
"the forty-nine golden Sun Needles at the city gate."
1845
"Deng Chanyu could hear
1845
the approach of the horse, but
1843
1845
1845
1845 1847 1849 1861
1863
(31:2) 22:2 (31:1) 23:1 (30:2) 23:1 (30:2) 23:1-2 (30:21) 23:1-2 (30:21) 23:1-2 (30:21) 23:2 (30:1) 24:2 (29:3) 24:2-3 (29:32)
24:3 (29:2) she was blinded by the needles 25:2-3 ... sliced off her head" (28:32) "scaling ladders and 25:2-3 (28:32) cannons" 25:3 (28:2) "at the government hostel for 25:3-4 the night." (28:2) "Chang Hao was a long snake 26:1 sprite." (27:2) "underground, Zhang Kui 26:1-2 could see" (27:21) "Krakucchanda's spells" (he 26:2 being eponym of a world-age) (27:1)
temple of gem-fragments rod-bundle, leaning against: round bundle plumed hound-snake
slicing off head of gods
flowery crocodile as sun
ray from jewel mat-door is entered (by eagle & leopard) blades-cloaked eaglesuitwearer {cf. din-ruckus heard by knives-fledged Stumphalian birds, migrating to isle of Areas (in Argonautike of Apollonios Rhodios)} "1 Deer" [cf. 2:1] goddess of sky-corner , with plant poking (?) eye of separated head double-cross
jewel-lance constellation-triangle legged feathered snake eye (seeing) in hill
Wind-of-Sun (name of world-age) uttering speech
1863 1863
"real samadhi fire ... turned the earth to steel" "waves" in river
1865
food from river
1869
"Xia Dynasty ... was ... expelled to Nanchao" "led out his whole army, ... generals and soldiers rush to the front" "Chang Hao ... transformed himself back into his original being, a snake" "Wu Long turned into a beam of green light" "Chao Hao then turned himself into a beam of red light" "cross the canal barefooted."
1871
1875
1877 1877
1883 1885 1891
1891 1891 1897 1897 1897 1899 1899
1901
"two innocent citizens ... Cut off their legs" "Wei Zi ... sadly ... to take the spirit tablets of all twenty generations" "Saint Confucius ... honored"
26:2 (27:1) 26:2 (27:1) 27:1 (26:2) 27:1 (26) 27:1-2 (26:21) 27:2 (26:1)
man torching the earthmonster water-spring for washing
27:2 (26:1) 27:2 (26:1)
trombone (?) with megaphone trombone (?), plain
28:1 (25:2) 28:1 (25:2) 29:1 (24:2)
arm reaching out of pool
29:1 (24:2) "three pregnant women" 29:2 (24:1) "patrolman's report" 29:2 (24:1) "golden light which radiated 30:1 all over the ground." (23:2) "the nine dragons burned 30:1 wildly." (23:2) "the sprite-like air around the 30:1 two Gaos." (23:2) "Gao Ming turned himself 30:2 into a beam of black light ... (23:1) Li Jing threw up his black pagoda, but Gao Jue also forced his way out." "Sky Barking Hound"
31:1 (22)
maize arranged in spiral (as if from a wave) emblems on crenellation soldiers with atlatl
shaggy snake
two legless persons teary-eyed god holding commemorative plaques (?) Quetzalcoatl singing women partrol-beat (footprints in circle) water which flowed (out of mouth) all over the valley burning staircase ring of clouds (?) Column of light (?) through sun-disk (containing god) onto staircase; likewise into mountain, but forced its way out (?) [as indicated by footprints]. beast holding bowls
1901
two become smoke
1901
"set up peach tree log pillars"
1901
"blood of black chickens"
1903 1905
"Gao Ming and Gao Jue" Mt. "Chessboard", having on it "the peach sprite and willow sprite"
1905
"in Emperor Xuan Yuan's Temple, these are ... made of clay; ... to Emperor Xuan's Temple to destroy the ... clay" "thousands of red flags"
1907 1907
1909
"a pot in the center stamped with charms and spells on all sides" "hang invisible nets from the sky to the earth."
1911
"cannon fire"
1915
"fog"
1915
"the two Goas was [sic!] surrounded"
1917 1917
"Yang Ren was lifting his fan" "Jade Pillar Cave"
1917
"magic mirror" [for viewing]
1917
"at the doorway"
1919
"a giant winged centipede"
1919
"cut off its head"
1921
"a big cock"
31:1 (22:2) 31:1-2 (22:21) 31:2 (22:1) 32 (21) 32 (21)
32 (21)
33:1 (20:2) 33:1 (20:2) 33:1-2 (20:21) 33:2 (20:2) 33:2 (20:1) 33:2 (20:1) 33:2 (20:1) 33:2 (20:1) 34:1 (19:2) 34:1-2 (19:21) 34:2 (19:1) 34:2 (19:1) 34:2
smoke (?) from gameboard leaning bundle of rods
eagle is beheaded two men holding rope Mt. Checkerboard, 1st peak in mountain-range including as 6th (and last) peak a Mt. Maguey (Century-plant) Temple of pottery-forming (?) wheel, broken
bent banner (?) 4 bowls (2 spilled), with amulet (?) in center between them a net
fire-walking mist-wall & mist-staircase two men (holding rope) [cf. rope used to surround, as in cartouche, etc.] "13 Rabbit" holding fan (?) Pedestal-Cave (?) & Staircase-Cave (?) Temple of Eye (leopard-skin) door (of temple) scorpion-stinger (?) tree growing from decapitated head skull-headed birds
1927 1929
Wu Wenhua versus "Dragon Beard Tiger" "the food supply barn"
1929
"a mountainous giant"
1931
"Yuan Hong turned himself into a ray of white light"
1931
"pleasure with ... women"
1937
"logs to set the path on fire"
1939
Mt. "Plum"
1943
"heart and liver" of Zhu Zizhen the pig "Yuan Hong ... like the leg of a praying mantis" "Yang Jian discovered through the mirror that he [Yang Xian] was a goat sprite."
1947 1947
1949
1951 1953
1955 1959 1961 1961 1963
"Jin Dasheng was a buffalo sprite from Mount Plum." [cf. p. 1939] "Jin Dasheng spat out a bezoar" "the lady on the green phoenix ... none other than Nu Wa" buffalo was beheaded ""Topographical Diagram of the Kingdom"" "He thought of a river, and a river appeared before him ..." "fragrance drifted on the breeze" "chopped off the ape's head.
(19:1) 35:1 (18:2) 35:1 (18:2) 35:1-2 (18:21) 35:1-2 (18:21) 35:1-2 (18:21) 35:1-2 (18:21) 35:2 (18:1) 35:2 (18:1) 36:1 (17:2) 36:1 (17:2)
36:1 (17:2) 36:1 (17:2) 36:2 (17:1) 36:2 (17:1) 37:1 (16:2) 37:2 (16:1) 38:1 (15:2) 38:2
leopard-tail tied-up plant birdhead-belted god
god emitting ray of light (from wheel) smoking-pipe held by woman burning torch (held by hound-headed god) "tree"-species = 1st & 2nd peaks of mountain-range "heart" = 3rd peak of mountain-range "human leg" = 4th peak of mountain-range solar disk [cf. Quechua sun as mirror] upon "rope" = 5th peak of mountain-range [cf. tying to beard of nannygoat-goddess Heidrun] temples of trees (same species as 1st & 2nd peaks on 35:2) temple of jewel-in-theflower eagle-helmetted goddess at island human head on amulet (?) island (curling) waves temples of vapors human head on amulet (?);
1963 1963
There was no blood, but green smoke gushed forth and a white lotus flower grew where the head had been." "Something with eyes and eyebrows" "can turn around like a windmill"
(15:1)
liquid emerging from under; blossoms on fallen tree-trunk (?)
39:1 (14:2) 39:1-2 (14:21) 39:1-2 (14:21) 39:1-2 (14:21) 39:1-2 (14:21) 40:1 (13:2)
temple of eye-with-eyebrow (?) (rotatory) fire-drill
1971
"meditating on reed cushions"
1977
"grasped their arms"
1977
"not completely trust"
1979
"Jinzha suddenly cast up his Invisible Dragon Stake"
1983
"cut off Madam Dou's head"
1983
"the pass wall."
1985
"flag-worshipping ceremony"
1989
"lost the people's hearts."
2001
"through hell after I [Yin Pobai] die and turn into a wicked ghost." "to bury Yin Pobai with full 42:1 funeral rites." (11:2) "on the city walls, ... on roofs" 42:2 (11:1) "King Zhou, who was 43 (10) wearing a high phoenix-wing helmet" "(2) ... gouged out her eyes" 43 (10)
2003 2009 2013
2017
40:1 (13:2) 40:2 (13:1) 41:1 (12:2) 41:2 (12:1) 41:2 (12:1)
2017
"(4) ... the loyal high ministers"
44 (9)
2017
(5) blandishments of royal
44 (9)
"cushion" (?) = 2nd peak of mountain-range legged peak = 3rd, of mountain-range "mask" = 5th (last) peak of mountain-range 2 cipactli-helmetted men, each having calendar-name "cipactli" woman having her head cut off footed wall (?) man holding aloft an emblem heart of earth-monster Tlaltecuhtli tongue-tied living skull; tongue-tie within eyed (?) cavern dead (?) man within temple walled earth-monster; temple of earth-monster double-faced man wearing double-faced bird-helmet double-face -- each face 4 (?)-eyed = 2nd peak of mountain-range hound [loyal of pet hound is proverbial] = 4th peak of mountain-range eyelashes (?) of
concubine Daji 2017 , 2019 2019
"(7) ... building high towers"
44 (9)
"(10) ... drank soup"
44 (9)
2021 2021 2033
"in gold armor" "green-hair horse" "a smart bird knows how to choose a ... perch"
44 (9) 44 (9) 45:2-3 (8:3-2)
2033
"The Shang Dynasty has lasted ..." "I should run away"
45:3 (8:2) 45:3-4 (8:2-1) 46:1 (7:4)
2035 2035
2037 2039 2041 2047 2051
goddesses "Daji, Hu Ximei, and Concubine Wang donned armor in preparation for their surprise night raid." "the camp barricades were nearly all broken through." "King Zhou ... wept." "they flew ... back to their old nest" "Blue Cloud Lad"
2053
goddess "Daji ... like ripples of autumn water" "all paralyzed"
2053
"Completely paralyzed"
2055
"the mandarin duck quilt"
2057
"the Star Picking Mansion"
2057
"a freezing cold wind enveloped him" "the Nine Winding Rails"
2057 2063 2063
"King Wu ... covered his face with his hand" "the people from drowning in
46:1 (7:4) 46:1-2 (7:4-3) 46:2 (7:3) 46:2-3 (7:3-2) 46:2-3 (7:3-2) 46:3 (7:2) 46:3 (7:2) 46:4 (7:1) 47:1-2 (6:3-2) 47:1-2 (6:3-2) 47:2-3 (6:2-1) 47:3 (6:1) 47:3
leopard[ess?] = 5th peak of mountain-range vertical mound = 7th peak of mountain-range open jaws, swallowing that below (?) = 10th peak of mountain-range limbed leopard = 11th peak limbed macaw = 12th peak bird suspended by talons from overhanging mountain crowned, beast-headed man footprints snakey-haired goddess {cf. the Gorgones, 3 in number}
arrows thrust into hill weeping man feathered garment under overhanging mountain cloud-temple snakey-haired goddess in water dance-floor in valley dance-floor in temple bird-as-ballcourt head of Venus-god in constellation-glyph god with backing of jagged (icicles ?) hourglass temple of spiral plant men with their head-intheir-arms deluge
2065 2067
2067 2069 2071 2079
2079 2079
2083 2091
water" "They burnt incense" king Wu & Jiang Ziya spoke together in a self-restrained manner "they saw the serpent pit, full of snakes and white bones." "pavilions ... with ... pearls" "Wu Keng, the son of King Zhou" "depleted national resources by constucting big buildings. ... The tribal petty kings ... to buy fur coats" "King Wu gave up ... armor" "free the palace maids. ... The sky was full of auspicious clouds." "went into the mountains. They died of starvation" "golden-leafed booklet"
2097
"the Terrace of Creation. ... free from transmigation from birth to death."
2099
2103
"Bing Ling Gong, the God of the ... Mountains" "Huang Feihu, as the chief God of the five ..." "Mother Golden Light"
2103
"the Plague Gods"
2105 2113
"Mother Golden Spirit" [cf. p. 2103] "Heavenly Gallant Stars"
2115
"Earthly Evil Stars"
2117
"Water Virtue Stars"
2099
(6:1) 47:3 (6:1) 48 (5)
48 (5) 48 (5) 49:1 (4:20 49:1 (4:2)
burning copal-balls (?) 2 gods, each with restraint across his mouth, speaking together snake with man = middle peak of mountain-range temple of oysters (?) man wearing eagle-suit empty (depleted ?) temple; hound-headed god wearing leopard-helmet
49:2 (4:1) 50:1 (3:2)
feather-suit boxed within mountain goddess encircled by clouds
50:1 (3:2) 50:2 (3:1) 50:2 (3:1)
notched mountain of nooks
51:1 (2:2) 51:1-2 (2:2-1) 51:2 (2:1) 51:2 (2:1) 52:1 (1:2) 52:1-2 (1:2-1) 52:1-2 (1:2-1) 52:2 (1:1)
leopardskin-as-ballcout platform with torrent [= absolution from ?] flowing over trellis [= metempsychosis ?] Tlaloc at striped pillar year 5 Calli goddess wearing birdhelmet snakey-haired gods goddess wearing birdhelmet man wearing eagle-suit (as gallant ?) goddess having her jaw fleshless curling wave of water
LIBRARY OF CHINESE CLASSICS. Xu Zhonglin (translated by Gu Zhizhong): Creation of the Gods. New World Press; Foreign Languages Press; Hunan People's Publishing House. 2000. CEDLA INCIDENTELE PUBLICATIES, 24. Maarten E. R. G. N. Jansen: Huisi Tacu. Amsterdam, 1982.
Kula-cud.aman.i T.--------------1001 Nights-----------------------Cl. of the So. Mountains 0 (0th; fn. 3) Bulak edition: S`ahr- 1:1 Mt. Magpie báz (City-hawk) 0.a (0th) Shall the beautiful hue of the Basil fail * Tho' the beetle's foot o'er the Basil crawl? [basil being the tulasi, the prayer plant, in Vais.n.avism] he at once ate up all his meat and even licked the manger yon mulberry tree did away with his bride's maidenhead [de-floration] 1.a (1st) he brake his tether and ran to me 1.a (2nd) this gazelle [female] 1.b (2nd) I sat in my shop, behold, a beggar stood before me becoming an Ifritah, ... she bore me up and flew away with me 2 (3rd) a cucumber shaped jar of yellow copper Ummi Amir's neighbor [= the hyaena]
"There is a plant ..., but it has green flowers. Its name is the" pray-more. "If you eat it, you won't starve." "the paper mulberry" "Its blossoms light up everything around it." "... it runs like a human." "The River Sveltedeer" 1:2 Mt. Hall-court. "It has ... many white gibbons." 1:3 Mt. Monkey-wing
1:4 "There are quantities of scarlet gold". "an animal ... which ... has ... stripes ... It makes a noise like the crooning". "Nay! I will never believe it until "The River Weird"
1:6 Vasuki [the snakegod]Tantra
I see thee inside with my own eyes." 2 (4th) "I will throw thee back into the sea," he answered ... the Ifrit 2.a (4th) imbibed the medicine from the wood. Then ... he looked on his body and saw no trace of leprosy 2.a.i (5th) a brood of vipers, ... having struck off his falcon's wing ... the bird gasped and died he was mad-jealous a she parrot which he set in his house to act as duenna
"water turtles ... Their name is the" whirly-turtle. "They make a noise like wood being split. ... and it can be used for calluses." 1:5 "It has a snake's tail and wings ... It dies ..." 1:6 "... you won't get jealous." 1:7 "a chicken ... Its name is
2.a.iii (5th) the Sage Duban unclosed his eyes 2.b (8th) hound that thou art!
2.a.ii (5th) to sprinkle water [in consequence, the bird suffered from delusions]
2.b (8th) the citizens, who were
1:48 "Then again he should present (to each of them) ... perfume."
of four different faiths, Moslem, Nazarene, Jew and Magian, she transformed by her enchantments into fishes scourgeth me with an hundred stripes half stone and half man; ... the Moslems are the white 2.b (9th) his daughters wived with Kings 3 (9th) camomile ... willow flower a bottle for perfume spraying, a lump of male incense, aloe wood, ambergris and musk her navel would hold an ounce of benzoin ointment
fn. 119 "the women will eat if the hymn has been recited."
When the maidens heard his verse and its poetical application addressed to them ... Hearing this they said, "Sit thee down and welcome to thee," ...Then arose the provisioneress
1:56-58 Kama-rupa = "the external private parts" of a woman (p. 110, fn. 159); "the sacrificial ground" = "the inner private parts" of a woman (p. 110, fn. 163) [geographical terms for the vulva]
"The basil of the bridges;" ... "It is entitled the Khan of Abu Mansur;" [geographical names for the vulva]
3 (10th) the ladies sang so 3:9 "she's inside a hole in a wall sealed by an iron door ... where she stirs like a deity."
lustily that there was a great noise ... and the bitch howled 3.a (11th) a large iron plate, the size of a wicket door; and on raising it there appeared below it a staircase vaulted and winding. Then he turned to the lady and said to her, "Come now and take thy final choice!" She at once
esteem-add." "If you eat it, you won't keep falling asleep." 1:8 "a fox, but it has nine tails." "a pigeon ... Its name is the" pour-pour. "you won't suffer from delusions." "scarlet scholar-fish which look like a fish but they have a human face." 1:9 Mt. Winnow-tail "quantities of white jade." "the River Breed" 2:1 Mt. Tea-willow
Mt. All-navel
"It makes a noise like a dog barking."
4:5 [1st seen] vulture 4:6 [6th seen] black cat 4:14 [21st seen] fish
5:15 [to be buried:] iron nails;
sword; goad.
went down by the staircase and disappeared; then ... I replaced the iron plate and did all his bidding till the tomb became as it was before I shot at the bird ... I with both hands pinioned
"an owl, but it has human hands"
"Thou hast thy deserts, O thou hog!"
"There is an animal which looks like a suckling pig".
3.b (12th) heard of me and ...
2:2 "... it has four ears."
they saw that we were only four I cut fuel wood 3.b.i (13th; fn. 231) for our quills 3.b.i (14th) the Princess became a huge serpent [the Ifrit Jirjaris] changed to a vulture [the Ifrit Jirjaris] became a black tom cat [the Ifrit Jirjaris] became a fish over his daughter's ashes ... he had been converted by the mercy of Allah to al-Islam 3.c (14th;) every [iron] nail in plank will fly out ...all the iron in them sought the Magnet Mountain [fn. 257: Ptolemaios (vii. 2): Maniólai Islands] 3.c (15th) a man of brass with a tablet of lead on his breast inscribed with talismans and characts ... upon the sea 3.c (16th) chambers ... full of pearls and jacinths and beryls and emeralds and corals and carbuncles, and all manner precious gems and jewels the knife 3.c (16th, fn. 299) The ends of the bridle-reins forming the whip.
3.d (17th) "Words cannot undo the done; and the reed of Destiny hath run through what Allah decreed." gold and silver left lying in their places
3.d (18th) We ceased not spooning before a fair wind till we had exchanged the sea of
2:3 "wood being chopped." 2:4 Mt. Feather "giant snout-snakes."
2:5 Mt. Wary-father 2:6 Mt. Bend-more
2:7 Mt. Float-jade
Lake Store-hoard
"... in the River Reed."
2:8 "quantities of gold and jade" the River Roar-spoon
peril for the seas of safety made the two seas flow 3.e (18th) I ceased bandying verses he relented and said, "I pardon her ..." rubbish heaps rose where the building erst was 4 (19th) crate to carry small fish on his head 5 (20th) each of the brothers passed the night in a place far apart, wild with wrath against the other 5 (21st) The THIRD BEHEST is, Learn to be silent in society and let thine own faults distract thine attention from the faults of other men: for it is said:--In silence dwelleth safety ruin come and lay waste!
"... in the River Sluice." 2:9 ”... into the River Quiet." 2:10 Mt. Pacified into the River Range-mire 2:11 Mt. Helper-hook 2:12 Mt. Whole-shade
2:13 "it has no mouth and it can't be killed."
"It name is the wreckram." 5 (22nd) set him head downwards "Blockage Marsh"
5:39 "the secret mouth of the brahman ... where the primordial Mahis.amardini ["buffalo-slayeress"] is"
and feet upwards in the slit of the privy [so as to block it] 5 (23rd) he was crying so bitterly that his tears prevented his speech for a while. When she heard his sobs and saw his tears her heart burned as though with fire for him, and she said, “O my son, why dost thou weep? Allah keep the tears from thine eyes! Tell me what hath betided thee?” Hasan the Bassorite ladled into a saucer And the clouds set points to what breezes wrote. (fn. 468) musk [produced, e.g., by stags of the muskdeer (Moschos moschiferous)]; a gugglet of sherbet ... scented with musk 5 (23rd) he said, “Faugh; what be this wild-beast stuff?” 6 (24th) "... not give thee time to chew it." So he bolted it ... and, his hour being come, he died.
6 (25th) a babe 6.a (25th) stuccoed with Sultání
"... in the River Weep."
2:14 Mt. Roar-spoon "The River Rainburst" 2:15 "The River Stag"
2:16 Mt. Stag-cry 2:16 malign-force buzzard [devourer of human corpses, in Zarathustrianism] ... like a baby 2:17 Mt. Lacquer-cry
gypsum
6.d (29th) an astrolabe with
3:1 Mt. Sky-fret
seven parallel plates 6.e.vi (33rd) cut off my brother's lips
5:63 [1st (inmost) triangle] Kapalini "a cup"
Louise M. Finn (transl.): The Kulacud.aman.i Tantra and the Vamakes`vara Tantra. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz, 1986. pp. 75 to 122 Continued:--
5:63 [3rd triangle] Ugramukhi "horrible mouth"
3:2 There is a bird [birds being lipless] ... which ... has ... a human face.
a cup 6.f (34th) lop eared and proboscis-nosed
There are tiger-crocodiles:
the fid of fish with its bone
Their bodies look like a fish's, but they have a snake's tail
http://www.wollamshram.ca/100 1/Vol_1/vol1.htm
Anne Birrell (transl.): The Classic of Mountains and Seas. Penguin Classics, 1999. pp. 1 to 8
7 (34th) her face the seven-fold
3:3 Markings on its head spell ...
stars displays, * That guard her cheeks as satellites ... of the Zanj [fn. 13: negroes] and golden glint of hair; her tongue
3:4 white gibbons
7 (35th, fn. 38) "Alam"=a sign,
3:5 Mt. Tail-banner;
a flag.
7 (36th) a bird, with widely5:63 [3rd triangle] Pradipta "shrill cry of bird" 5:64 [4th triangle] Nila "dark-blue"
spreading wings ... and the wind to her was fairest nightingale shrilled with her varied shright lavender
7 (38th) any foul play 8 (40th) shone and showed her
"strange birds. The pleasing south wind comes from it."
3:6 Mt. Wrong 3:7 Mt. Sunny-tight
sheen
8 (41st) piece of Bhang ... drop it into her drink habited in black ... also garbed in black 8 (47th) her body hair stood on end like the bristles of a fretful hedgehog Father of Winds that droppeth before a puff of air
5:64 [4th triangle] Ghana "musical instrument"
8 (49th) [musical instruments] 8 (50th) a beautiful girl called
3:8 Mt. Pour-roil 3:9 the river Black; "have the bristles of a hog." 3:10 "the high northeast wind comes from it."
"a bird which looks like an
Sophia "wisdom" [goddess of wisdom was Athene]
8 (53rd) thirty seven dirhams
5:64 [5th triangle] Matra "measure"
Louise M. Finn (transl.): The Kulacud.aman.i Tantra and the Vamakes`vara Tantra. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz, 1986. pp. 122 to 123
[there were 37 philosophers (thinkers) in the Daoist canon of the Han dynasty] 8 (54th) sherbet of sugar 8 (56th) hunger burned her, she ate a very little 8 (58th) discourse upon geometry
owl." [owl was emblem of Athene] 3:11 Mt. Thinker
"a sweetish taste." "you won't starve"
8 (69th) [brother-sister incest]
3:13 Mt. South-ape [south being the direction of Yama (the brother), who committed incest with Yami (his sister) in Zarathustrian mythology]
http://www.wollamshram.ca/100 1/Vol_2/vol2.htm
Anne Birrell (transl.): The Classic of Mountains and Seas. Penguin Classics, 1999. pp. 8 to 10
Intermediary between the Tantrik and Chinese (Ts'in dynasty ?) texts, the 1001 Nights, insamuch as it is sacred to one Iranian sect (the Kurdish >ahl i-H.aqq), may be derived from another Iranian sect (the Tajik Bon): the Bon possess a text in 1001 sections (slates). "Then the teachings ... wrote themselves on a thousand and one slates." ASIATISCHE FORSCHUNGEN, Band 124. Dan Martin: Mandala Cosmogony. Harrassowitz Verlag, Wiesbaden, 1994. p. 26
S^an Hai Jin 4:----------------------------------------------Gospel according to Matthew :1:1 "Bushgrub" 3:4 "locusts" :1:1 "Drieddark" 3:12 "burn up ... with unquenchable fire" :1:1 "Food" 4:4 "Man shall ... live by bread" :1:2 "a noise like a grunting" 5:4 "they shall be comforted" [referring to the Paraclete "comforter", which inspireth to speak in "unknown tongues"] :1:2 "gold" 5:26 "the uttermost farthing" :1:2 "tadpoles" [they lack hands-&-feet; 5:30 "thy right hand ... cut it off" in adults, their hands-&-feet regrow if amputated] :1:3 "hair" 5:36 "one hair"
:1:3 "from-from" :1:3 "jaws" :1:5 "yellow-cheek" :1:6 "silk" :1:8 "gold and jade" :1:9 "Jackal" {"jackal" is, in Skt., s`iva, name of the god who, praesiding over the third eye, is full of light} :1:9 "bristles" :1:10 "a flash" :1:11 "Great" :1:11 "a boar and it contains pearls" :1:11 "same-same" :1:12 "Bamboo" [bamboo shoots as the staple diet of the panda] :1:12 "green jasper and green jade" :1:14 "a fish" :2:1 "Hollowmulberry" :2:4 "Clothbean" :2:5 "Lapping" [typical drinking by canines] :2:6 "thorn ... trees" :2:6 "willow trees" :2:6 "Mixme"
:2:6 fainting, swooning: "When it sees human beings, it 'goes to sleep'." :2:8 "a great deal of rock crystal" :2:9 "Hutits ... has ... a great amount of sandy gravel" :2:10 "Motherinlawshoot"
:2:15 flying "fox" :2:16 "Duckbeauty" :2:16 "needle stones" {cf. the stone loom in the Cave of the Numphai": Odusseus slept nigh there acc. to the Odusseis} :2:17 "It makes a noise like a howling ..." :2:17 "far-far"
5:37 "cometh of" 5:38 "a tooth" 5:39 "thy right cheek" 6:19 "moth" 6:20 "treasures" 6:22 "if therefore thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of light" 6:29 "arrayed" 7:3 "in thine own eye" 7:5 "that which is holy" 7:6 "your pearls before swine" 7:7 "ask and it [i.e., the same] shall be given you" 7:9 "bread" 7:9 "a stone" 7:10 "fish" 7:14 "strait is the gate" 7:15 "clothing" 7:15 "wolves" 7:16 "thorns" 7:19 "tree that bringeth forth not ... fruit" 7:21 salvation is not by faith alone, but mixed with works, which "doeth the will of my ..." 7:22 "cast out devils" [which depart upon their falling unconscious at an hypnotic suggestion by the exorcist?] 7:24 "upon a rock" 7:26 "built his house upon the sand" 7:29 "as one having authority" [unless defying them, one would normally be subject to the authority of one's in-laws] 8:20 "the foxes" 8:20 "the birds of the air" 8:24 Jesus "was asleep"
8:29 "cried out" 8:30 "a good way off from them"
:2:17 "great numbers of fraudulent strangers" :2:17 "a rat's tail ... will have frequent epidemics." [rat is symbol of 1st year in 12-year cycle] :3:1 "Corpsehalberd" :3:1 "eyes" :3:2 "Forked" [cf. "speak with a forked tongue"?] :3:3 "Allhook" :3:7 "join-join"
:3:8 "Stridecorner" :3:8 "like a ram" :3:9 "there are frequent winds" [winds may raise dust] :3:11 "use a single male sheep" :4:1 "snubnose-dogwolf" :4:1 "a bird here which ... has a white head" :4:1 "rat's feet"
:4:2 "Bluebody" [bluebottle flies?] :4:3 "sap like blood" {mentioned in the Popol Vuh of the Maya, whose religious emblem is the cross} :4:3 "many fine cowrie shells" {used as monetary currency in West Africa} :4:3 "scent-herb ... of farting" :4:4 "Girlstew" :4:5 "Leader" :4:5 "the match-rest" :4:6 "Childpawlonia" :4:7 "the joinflaw" :4:7 "eats humans"
9:10 "many publicans and sinners" 9:20 "a woman, which was diseased with an issue of blood twelve years." 9:24 "dead" 9:29 "eyes" 9:33 "the dumb spake" 9:35 "all ... every ..." 9:38 "Pray ye therefore the Lord ... that he will send forth laborers into his harvest" [scil., of proselytes to join] 10:5 "Go ... into the way" (stride upon the roadway) 10:6 "the lost sheep" 10:14 "shake off the dust" 10:16 "sheep" 10:16 "in the midst of wolves" 10:16 "innocent as doves" 10:17 "But beware of men: for they will deliver you up to the councils" (will "rat on" you) 10:25 "Beelzebub" 10:38 "And he that taketh not up his cross and followeth after me, is not worthy of me." 10:41 "reward" 11:4 "A reed shaken with the wind?" 11:11 "born of women" 11:14 "this is Elias, which was for to come." 11:16 "liken this generation" 11:16 "children" 11:17 "We have piped for you, and ye have not danced ..." 11:19 "gluttonous and a winebibber" [viz., eater & drinker of the Eucharist, bread & wine transsubstantiated into human flesh & human blood] 11:20 "mighty works"
:4:8 "Toil" The Classic of the Eastern Mountains. In:-Anne Birrell (transl.): The Classic of Mountains and Seas. Penguin Classics, 1999. pp. 55 to 64
S^an Hai Jin 5:-------------------------------------------------Gospel According to Matthew :1:1 "sheath-plant" 11:25 "hid these things from the wise and prudent" ["these things" being secret scriptures, repraesented by the sword, their being hidden will have been within a sheath] :1:1 "It can cure bad eyesight." 11:26 "good in thy sight." :1:2 "Stagechild" 11:27 "the Son will reveal" [in drama?] :1:2 "forgetful" 11:29 "rest [repose] for your souls" {repose for the souls of the deceased is in the river Lethe "forgetfulness", according to the Pythagoreans} :1:3 "Drainhog" 12:28 "cast out devils" [into swine ?] :1:3 "Porcupine-fish" 12:40 "whale's belly" :1:4 "Oniondeaf" 13:15 "dull of hearing" :1:5 "Spume" 13:22 "choke" :1:6 "mental anguish " 13:42 "there shall be wailing and gnashing of teeth" :1:7 "Goldstar. It has numerous sky13:43 "the righeous shine forth as the pendants" sun in the kingdom of their Father." :1:8 "Greatterror" 13:49 "So it shall be at the end of the world" :1:8 "Owlvalley" {the Athenians, editors 13:57 "in his own country, and in his of the most sacred of Hellenic books, the own house." Ilias, assigned to their own city the owlgoddess; so that the owl is depicted as having its own house in Codex Borgia, p. 12} :1:8 "abundant iron" 14:3 "put him in prison" [in "irons" ?] :1:9 "Oakvale" 14:6 "danced" {cf. Orphic dance of the trees} :1:10 "Cryforest" 14:9 "was sorry" :1:11 "Oxhead" 14:11 "his head was brought" :1:11 "ghost herb" 14:12 "the [headless] body" {cf. Chinese headless specters} :1:13 "Fifty-two" 14:17 "five ... and two" :1:13 "Joinvale" 14:19 "commanded the multitude" :1:14 "Shade" 14:23 "the evening was come" :1:14 "grindstones and patterned 14:28 Peter (Petros) "a rock" stones" 1:14 "Young" 15:4 [intended as a commandment to the young:-] "Honour thy father and mother" 1:15 "Drumchalice" 15:17 "whatsoever entereth in at the mouth ... is cast out into the draught"
:1:15 "glory-herb"
:1:15 "lunacy" :2:2 "showlook" :2:3 "Porcupine" (cf. :1:3) :2:4 "Fresh" (unfermented, unleavened ?) :2:4 "humming snakes which ... have four wavy wings."
:2:4 "a stone chime" :2:5 "Sunny" :2:5 "change their shape" :2:5 "someone bawling with rage ... will have a major flood" :2:6 "Offspringmy" :2:7 "Rape"[-seed ?] :2:8 "Lonethyme" :2:9 "like a baby" :2:11 "lucky jade, which is then to be thrown" {as during the Muslim hajj, nigh >arafat.} :3:1 "man-all" :3:2 "the Secret City of the Great Deity" :3:2 "has a small waist" :3:2 "cormorant" :3:2 "have a baby" :3:2 "make them goodlooking" :3:3 "Uprightturn" :3:3 "it will ward off weapons" :3:4 "Helpthyme" :3:4 "Hustlebustle"
:3:5 "the 'nine cities'" :3:5 "Great Meet"
{having been drafted, can be "drummed out of service" ?} 15:19 "blasphemies" [use of profanity and foul language is the very glory of the military] 15:19 "grievously vexed with a devil." 16:1 "shew them a sign" 16:4 "the sign of the prophet Jonas" (cf. 12:40) 16:6 "beware the leaven" 16:16 "the Son of the living God." (alias dictus "the Son of Man", elsewhere identified with the "serpent" s`rap having 6 wings) 16:18 "this rock" 17:2 "his face did shine as the sun" 17:11 "restore all things" 17:15 "he is a lunatick, and sore vexed: for ofttimes he falleth ... into the water" 17:17 "O faithless and perverse generation ..." 17:20 "a grain of mustard seed" 17:21 "prayer and fasting" [viz., while in solitude ?] 17:25 "their own children" 17:27 [by sheer luck] "thou shalt find a piece of money: that take and give" 18:1 "Who is the greatest" 18:4 "the kingdom of heaven." 18:6 "hanged about his neck" 18:6 "drowned in the depth of the sea." 18:10 "these little ones" 18:10 "behold the face of my Father" 18:12 "seek that which is gone astray?" 18:14 "it is not ... that one ... should perish" 18:15 "thou hast gained thy brother" 18:17 "let him be unto thee as an heathen man and a publican" [hustled out of the Church] 18:20 "where two or three are gathered together in my name" 18:20 "there am I in the midst of them"
:3:5 "Cucumber" {<arabic law explicitly requireth the forgiveness of the debt in cucumbers owed by a wayfarer who may pick them to assuage hunger} :4:1 "the River Sweet" {at the river Medu "sweet" in Sikelia, women remarried (GM)} :4:2 "Clawmark" :4:3 "Govern" :4:5 "Handle" :4:6 "Whiteedge"
:4:7 "Bearsear" :4:7 "Floatmoat ... and there are many human-fish" :4:8 "Male" {the (
:4:8 "flatter-bamboos"
:4:9 "Cheerlift"
:4:9 "Clear" :4:11 "dress the sacrificial victim in a colored cloth" :5:1 "Lewdbed" :5:1 "curious" :5:2 "Head"
18:27 "forgave him the debt"
19:9 "whoso marrieth her which is put away" 19:12 "made eunuchs of men" 19:12 "He that is able to receive it, let him receive it." [i.e., be governed by it] 19:15 "he laid his hands on them" 19:17 "there is none good but one, that is, God" [by ascribing purity (whiteness) only to God, humans are edged out] 19:18 "bear false witness" 19:21 "go sell that thou hast, and give to the poor" [i.e., "float a loan" to the Church of Ebion ("pauper")] 19:24 "camel"
19:25 "Who then can be saved?" [Jesus seemed to have "shot down the claims" of the rich to their own being salvageable.] 19:26 "with God all things are possible." [This unexpected restoration of salvageability to the rich is evidently intended as a piece of catering flattery.] 19:28 "the Son of man shall sit in the throne of his glory" [i.e., "shall be elevated (lifted) to the throne", praesumably amid raucous cheers] 20:12 "equal" payments [thereby "clearing" accounting-records] 20:18 "they shall condemn him to death" [in trial "colored with praejudice"] 20:20 "Then came to him the mother ... desiring a certain thing of him." 20:21 "What wilt thou?" 20:28 "came ... to minister" [viz., as head of it, to the Church (his bride), by "giving head" to her]
:5:2 "they have three eyes" :5:2 "and are eared" :5:2 "the rasping of metal" :5:3 "Hangaxe"
:5:5 "Twigvale" :5:6 "wells ... which ... are dry in summer" :5:7 "Successbutt" :5:10 "Stage" :5:11 "bright blue jade" :5:11 "Corpse"
:5:12 "Goodmore"
:5:12 "More" :5:12 "Nipple" :5:13 "Malignforcetail" :5:13 "Dragonmore" [the Dragon being the emblem of the emperor] :5:14 "Ascension" :5:14 "Yellowsour" :5:15 "Darkstop"
:6:1 "Whitesilkram" :6:1 "Highhorse Reptile" :6:1 "Stinging Insects" :6:1 "a single male chicken" :6:3 "Gable" {Cf. "House of Many Gables"} :6:3 "Heron" {in Skt., kanka "heron" is used figuratively to mean "praetended Brahmana"} :6:3 "Crossgoblet"
20:34 "their eyes received sight" 21:2 "an ass" [asses are noted for their ears] 21:12 "overthrew ... the moneychangers" 21:13 "a den of thieves" {Odusseus found himself in a den of thieves where axes were hanging from rings} 21:19 "he saw a fig tree ... and found ... leaves only" 21:20 "How soon ... withered away!" 21:22 "And all things, whatsoever ye ask ... ye shall receive" 21:33 "a tower" 21:42 "The stone which the builders rejected ... it is marvellous" 21:44 "on whomsoever it will fall, it will grind him to powder." {cf. West African myth of "Death" itself having been grinded} 22:3 "to call them that were bidden" [to "make good on" their promise to be more guests] 22:10 "as many as they found, both good and bad" 22:12 "was speechless" [as unable to speak as though sucking a nipple ?] 22:13 "cast him into outer darkness" 22:21 "render unto Caesar" [more] 22:30 "the resurrection" 23:4 "grievous" 23:13 "ye neither go in yourselves, neither suffer ye them that are entering to go in" 23:27 "ye ... whited ..." 23:33 "ye generation of vipers" 23:34 "scourge" 23:37 "a hen" 24:7 "nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom" 24:11 "false prophets"
24:24 "false Christs" [each of them
:6:4 "Seeall" :6:4 "Ebb" :6:4 "Young" :6:4 "Grain" :6:5 "Dragdrip" :6:5 "See" :6:5 "purple stones" :6:6 "Whitestone" :6:6 "Kindness" :6:6 "Runnel" :6:6 "kohl-stones" :6:7 "Papermulberry" :6:8 "Secret" :6:8 "Porcupine" [in :2:3, "Porcupine" = Yonah, who expected to be able to destroy, singlehandedly, the city of Nineveh] :6:8 "wood being split" :6:9 "Common Valley" :6:9 "Bamboo" :6:9 "Common" :6:9 "chiming stones" :6:10 "Assist"
:6:10 "Satedip"
:6:10 "many human-fish" :6:10 "the Graveheap" :6:10 "numerous coloured jade gemstones" :6:11 "frog-fish"
touting a rosary Holy Cross and a goblet Holy Grail ?] 24:30 "then shall all ... see" 24:35 "Heaven and earth shall pass away" 24:36 "day and hour" [younger than the day is the hour] 24:38 "eating and drinking" [viz., bread and beer ?] 24:40 "one shall be taken, and the other left." 24:42 "Watch therefore ..." 24:49 "with the drunken" 25:34 "the foundation of the world" 25:36 "I was a stranger, and ye took me in" 26:7 "poured it" 26:12 "did it for my burial" 26:13 "be told for a memorial of her" 26:48 "gave them a sign" 26:61 "This fellow said, I am able to destroy the temple of God"
26:65 "rent his clothes" 27:7 "the potter's field, to bury strangers in" 27:29 "a reed" 27:29 [as commoners,] "they bowed the knee before him" 27:29 ["chiming in",] "they mocked him" 27:32 "they found a man: ... him they compelled to carry the cross" [so assisting Jesus] 27:34 "They gave him ... to drink ... gall" [intending to besot him with a sponge dipped in gall, an anodyne] 27:37 "THE JEWS" 27:52 "And the graves were opened ..." 27:60 "a great stone" 27:61 "Mary Magdalene" [she was reputed to have been a prostitute, a slang Greek term for which was phrune
"female frog"; in Egyptian, a female frog is praesent at the scene of sexual intercourse between Isis and Osiris] The Classic of the Central Mountains. In:-Anne Birrell (transl.): The Classic of Mountains and Seas. Penguin Classics, 1999. pp. 67 to 102
S^an Hai Jin
Codex Borgia
4:1 Mt. "Jackal" 4:1 Eel 4:2 Bell chiming 4:3 Ram-horned man 4:4 River "Food" 5:1 Wildcat 5:2 Bird-winged serpent 5:3 Warrioress "Net"
p. 54, # 3 hound-headed god p. 54, # 5 beheaded eel (?) p. 55 bird-shaped instruments p. 59, # 5 white man p. 61, # 1 food-god p. 63, # 3 leopard p. 67, # 14 feathered serpent p. 62, # 19 goddess; netted sphaere p. 61, # 20 wearing conical helmet p. 71, # 10 skull-headed owl p. 71, # 14 porcupine p. 72 naked goddess p. 73 masked blue god
5:4 Rhinoceros 5:5 three-eyed Owls 5:6 River "Porcupine" 5:7 "Corpse" woman 5:9 dragon-headed Blue Horse 5:10 Blue Horse 5:11 human-headed Swine [cf. plant-forms of Hawai'ian swine-god; Kiwai deathgod Sido as swine = Trobriand tree-god Saido]
p. 74 blue god p. 75, # 7 plant-form of death-god
S^an Hai Jin 5:-----------------------------------[vahana of] Yogini :4:5 copper 1 golden red :4:6 Mt. White ... 2. white--bear:
:4:7 Mt. Bear's Ear :4:8 Mt. Male :4:9 horse-gut :5:1 Mt. Lewd-bed
:5:2 owls :5:3 Mt. Hang ... :5:4 Mt. Onion ... :5:6 dried-out wells :5:8 Mt. ... Song :5:8 clay :5:9 Mt. Carob :5:10 Mt. Stage
:5:11 small black deer :5:11 river Corpse :5:13 river Dragon ... :5:15 gold :6:1 two-headed, where bees swarm :6:2 Mt. White ... :6:3 scarlet :6:6 Mt. White ... :6:7 green :6:8 river Porcupine :6:10 noise like a kite :6:12 river Dwindle :6:13 golden pheasants :6:13 buffaloes :6:13 wild horses :6:13 arrow-bamboos
R.ks.a-karn.i "bear-ear" 4. hunchback male 6. horse 11. mouse {in Brahmana, woman's sexual propensity is referred to as "mice"} 11. owl 12. Lola "dangling, swinging" 13. Lanka {etymologically related to "leek" ?} 17. Huta ... "poured out" 21. Ha-ha-rava "exclamation of exclmations yelling" 26. grey 27. parrot (connoisseur of sweet foods) 28. lotus [often used to stand upon -- like a stage -- by Bauddha deities] 29. black; Haya-anana "horsemouth" 30. corpse 38. crocodile 42. gold throne 45. deer {cf. Aztec 2-headed doe deer; Maya bees'-nest between deer-antlers} 46. white 48. blue/red 49. yellow/white 50. green 51. porcupine 54. vulture, eagle 55. Vikr.ta "maimed" 56. golden garud.a-bird (pheasant ?) 57. buffalo 59. horse, mule 60. bow
:7:3 Girl Corpse :7:5 Sky Dolt :7:7 ox-wound
62. skull, corpse 63. blue dwarf 64. ox
Anne Birrell (transl.): The Classic of Mountains and Seas. Penguin Classics, 1999. pp. 74 to 81
Vidya Dehejia: Yogini Cult and Temples. National Museum, New Delhi, 1986. pp. 205 to 209
S^an Hai Jing (cited by book[, chapter] & paragraph)
Charada China (Chifa`) (cited by number)
5:11:21. "happy-horse" 5:11:22. "horse-indigo" [= dragon-horse, scaly-bodied] 5:11:22. human-fish 5:11:24. "tiger-head" 5:11:28. jaws 5:11:29. "she-whale" 5:12:3. "turtle" 6:6. single foot 6:17. dead 6:19. "round-ample" 6:20. fish 6:21. tigers 6:21. look-flesh (supply of meat -- p. 237) 6:21. roar-cross (bullfrog ?) 6:22. "pray steam" 7:1. ruin-cover-bird
1. horse 2. butterfly (scaly-winged)
7:3. jade half-disk 7:8. eel 7:18. shrimp 7:19 horns on back {like
3. sailor 4. cat; mouth 5. nun 6. turtle 7. snail 8. corpse 9. elephant 10. big fish 14. tiger 17. moon {Skt. candra-mas "glowing meat"} 22. toad 23. steam 24. dove {over world-ruin, deluge} 25. gem 26. eel 30. shrimp 31. deer
Khimaira} 7:21 long-leg (daddy-longleg spider ?) Anne Birrell (transl.): The Classic of Mountains and Seas. Penguin Books, 1999.
35. spider
http://w3.iac.net/~moonweb/Santeria/Cha pter11.html
Codex Manuel (Vindobonensis)---------------The Classic of Regions Within the Seas p. 14a (39d) [frontal view of] displayed 10:1 "the mountains of Serpent country serpent-head emitting water (sea ?) lie in the sea." p. 14d (39a) sky with rope 10:2 Mt. 3 Sky-sons Block p. 15a (38c) trees 10:3 the land of Cinnamon Forrest eighttrees p. 15b (38b) herb in ravine 10:4 River Sweet-herb p. 15c (38a) pointed-lipped god Ehecatl 10:5 "long lips ... they laugh and laugh" with speech-scroll p. 15c (38a) knots 10:5 trap p. 16a (37c) stony-skinned gods 10:6 Rhinoceros (a pachyderm) p. 16b (37b) elaborate tree 10:7 Mt. Blue-plane-tree p. 17a (36d) 2 monkey-headed gods, each 10:8 "The live-lively apes know the having "Monkey" as own name names of humans." p. 18a (35b) dotted semi-square 10:10 "an officer called Chief Track" p. 18b (35a) crocodile-helmeted goddess 10:11 "has a dragon's head and lives in beside pool the River Weak." p. 19a (34d) 2 trees having human-head 10:12 "a tree ... that looks like an trunks official's capstring" p. 19d (34a) decapitated bird at pool 10:13 "a fish's body" p. 20a (33d) snake-haired god with snake 10:14 the Big Snake emerging from his mouth p. 21a (32d) goddesses having feather10:15 the land of Banner-tail horse tail p. 22a (31b) god with his thorax within a 10:16 the land of Chest-slave temple-roof p. 22a (31b) notched floors 11:1 Notch Flaw p. 22a (31b) apparelled arm 11:1 "fettered their right foot and bound their hands" p. 22b (31a) granaries (?) 11:3 "the burial place of the deity Sovereign Millet" p. 23a (30b) wickerwork 11:3 High-willow p. 24a (29d) bird-suited god 11:7 Swallow kingdom p. 24a (29d) another bird-suited god 11:8 the land of Chief-bird p. 24b (29c) 2 doorways (?) 11:9 9 gates p. 24d (29a) trench (?) 11:11 "where Yu: dredged" p. 25a (28d) god wearing eagle-suit and 11:13 the land of End-square-bird
catching another eagle p. 25a (28d) god wearing skin of leopardconstellation p. 25b (28d) goddess wearing snakes on her head p. 26a (27b) 2 birds (the 2nd with starry crest) p. 26b (27a) mummy, with a plant p. 27a (26b) fruit (?) with tree; fruit (?) head p. 27a (26b) gods, from out of the mouth of one of whom emergeth a snake, each holding an atlatl p. 28a (25b) straight-beaked bird; foodbowl holding fleshless-jawed goddess p. 29a (24b) Ehecatl holding a saw (?) and a death's head
p. 29b (24a) various deities holding ingots of gold p. 29b (24a) person being swallowed up headfirst at pool of dance-floor; houndheaded god upon pool of dance-floor p. 30a (23b) leopard-mouthed leopardsuited god p. 30b (23a) temple-platform of the 2 sun-gods 31b (22a) butterfly (sipping from flower) p. 32 (21) temple blocked by checkerboard p[p. 31a,] 33a[, 40a] (p[p. 22b,] 20b[, 13b]) goddess whose neck is broken[, and whose hair is disheveled on p. 33] p. 35b (18a) hound-headed gods p. 36b (17a) gods holding sheet (of armor?) p. 37b (16a) flood-waves p. 38b (15a) trailpole (?) (upholding star) p. 39b (14a) mountain whose peaks are human body-parts: jawbone, legs, & face p. 41b (12a) two goddesses facing one another p. 42b (11a) enveloped (shadowed ?)
11:14 "an animal's body that is as huge as a tiger's" 11:15 "wear snakes on their heads" 11:16 "the Divine Wind Bird and the Wonderbird" 11:17 "on each side of the corpse ..." the never-die drug "to ward off decay." 11:18 "fruit tree -- on its crown there is a three-headed person" 12:1 Mt. Snake-shaman "-- on its summit there is someone who is holding a club" 12:2 "there are the three green birds which gather food for the Queen Mother of the West." 12:3 "There is a person called Lord Big Walk who is holding a dagger-axe. ... The land of the Corpse of Twain Load lies east of the land of Lord Big Walk." 12:4 "like yellow gold." 12:6 the emmet-hound "is like a hound, ... and it eats humans, starting with their head." 12:7 "The exhaust-rare is like a tiger" 12:8 the terraces of various gods 12:9 "The Crimson Moth -- it looks like a moth." 12:11 window-not 12:12 "the people have a broken neck and wear their hair loose" 12:13 land of Ring-hound, who have animal (hound)-head, and human body 12:15 the Armor 12:17 Flood Forest 12:18 Trailpole Gulf 12:20 "The Corpse of Prince Night -- his two hands, two thighs, his chest, head, and teeth were all chopped off and put in different places." 12:21 "two daughters" 12:22 Canopy Country
temple p. 43 (10) mountain range having as one of its peaks the head of Tlaloc -- who became the sun in A-tonatiuh p. 44 (9) (mound (island) in midst of water p. 44 (9) person on chair in water p. 45d (8a) betwixt mountains, temple of the eye (espying by mother-in-law?) p. 46b (7c) [feather-garment suspended betwixt] inward-turned mountains p. 47c (6a) 3 crabs (?) p. 48 (5) 2 men holding stretching a cord p. 48 (5) peak of flowering plant p. 49a (4b) man wearing eagle-suit p. 49b (4a) striated region p. 50a (3b) clouded area p. 50a (3b) eagle on cave p. 50b (3a) god wearing eagle-helmet p. 50b (3a) river issuing out of templeplatform p. 51a (2b) mountain-cave p. 51a (2b) blades as mouth of god p. 51b (2a) fac,aded passageway through mountain p. 52a (1b) god & goddess upon mountain which is being opened by a man p. 52a (1b) cave under man dressed in eagle-suit p. 52b (1a) herb beside flesh-jawed goddess p. 52b (1a) tied (to apply strain to?) vase p. 52b (1a) mountain with billow of water & a plant
CEDLA INCIDENTELE PUBLICATIES 24. Maarten E. R. G. N. Jansen: Huisi Tacu. Amsterdam, 1982. appendix
12:23 Range-sunny
12:24 "an island in the sea" 12:25 "The Country ... lies in the sea." 12:25 mountain-range Mother-in-lawshoot 12:25 "The southwest part of it is ringed by mountains." 12:26 the land of Big-crab 12:29 the city of Bright-cord 12:30 Mt. Bushy-herb 13:1 the land of Giant-swallow 13:2 "the Flowing Sands" 13:4 Thunder Marsh 13:7 the land of Fence-goose 13:8 Start-dove 13:13 Gush-court lake 13:14 mountain-burial 13:17 Choir-clan 13:18 "the district of Bridge" 13:18 Long-for-love
13:20 Birdrat-share-cave 13:25 the river Sweet-herb from Elephant commandery 13:26 "The River Strain" 13:27 "The River Pool rises from a mountain northwest of" Cinnamonsunny Anne Birrell (transl.): The Classic of Mountains and Seas. Penguin Classics, 1999. pp. 133 to 153
Codex Manuel (Vindobonensis)---------------The Classic of the Great Wilderness p. 1a (52b) corner of constellationed sky 14:2 "At the southeastern corner ..." p. 1a (52b) man with speech-scroll 14:3 Big-speech issuing from his mouth p. 1a (52b) small person arising out of 14:5 There is the Country of Smallthe earth people. "Their name is the Little
p. 1a (52b) living corpse-god p. 1a (52b) water issuing p. 1a (52b) man on hill; a drooping plant p. 1a (52b) row of knife-blades p. 1b (52a) god & goddess upon starry sky p. 1b (52a) god & goddess, each having a protruding tooth p. 2a (51d) wind-helmeted god & goddess, identified as Mixtec leoparddeities p. 2a (51d) 4 naked gods, each named "Wind" p. 2b-d (51a-c) gods, each having a snake hooked around his body p. 3a (50d) god, with earthquake-glyph on back, seated on earthquake-glyph p. 3d (50a) silk-cotton tree p. 4d (49a) jade (?) p. 5a (48c) contortionist man p. 5c (48a) descending of dragonhelmeted god from the sky p. 5b (48b) painting of codex by scribe p. 6b (47a) god Ehecatl beneath and upholding the caelestial sea; in [same ?] water is an animal p. 7b (46c) double-headed serpent p. 7b (46c) footprints p. 7c (46b) water amidst 4 segments of starry sky p. 7c (46b) wave-coil p. 7c (46b) leopard (toting water-basin) p. 7d (46a) bent mountain, holding back water p. 8d (45a) jade mountain p. 9b (44c) on mountain, a flowering tree p. 9b (44c) on same mountain, 2 snakes p. 10a (43d) little person in pool p. 10b (43c) a plant (?) growing on mountaintop; person in squared pool p. 11c (42b) insect
People." 14:6 The name of the deity is the Corpse of Tiller Rain-ghost. 14:7 There is Mt. Stream. 14:8 "They eat millet." 14:10 "a sword" 14:13 Mt. Bright-star 14:17 Black-tooth country 14:19 "There is a god-human here, with ... a tiger's body". 14:20 "he causes the coming and going of the winds." 14:23 "Hook as their family name." 14:28 Mt. Shake 14:30 sweet-bloom trees 14:30 "the legacy jade" 14:31"a person called Supple." 14:32 "Responding Dragon could not go back up to the sky." 14:32 "... people make an image of Responding Dragon." 14:33 In the East Sea there is Mt. Flowwave. "It is submerged in the sea ... On its summit there is an animal." 15:1 "an animal with a left head and a right head." 15:1 "Its name is the pawprint-kick." 15:2 Mt. Flood-sky 15:2 "twist-coil" 15:2 leopards 15:5 Mt. Not-straight. "The River Glory comes to an end in it." 15:7 "there is jade." 15:9 "At the South Pole" the rid-chill tree 15:10 "On an island in the South Sea ... two scarlet snakes" 15:15 the Country of the Water-bogy Folk 15:16 "There is a tree growing on the mountaintop. ... There is someone with square teeth". 16:14 Mt. Horsefly
p. 11d (42a) overflowing pool p. 12a (41d) diagonally banded (diagonally striped ?) leopard p. 12c (41b) headless living god
16:22 "There is a pool here." 16:24 "a tiger's body which is striped"
p. 13a (40d) tray on floor p. 13a (40d) rock upon rock p. 13b (40c) feather-garment p. 13b (40c) gut (?) p. 13c (40b) pinnacled mountain p. 13c (40b) water with shield (guarded, hoarded ?) p. 13d (40a) bird in mountain
16:28 "Plough remained standing up headless." 16:33 fish-wife 17:1 Fief Gulf 17:1 "Deep Gulf ... is where the great god Fond Care bathes." 17:5 the Tray Tree 17:8 "Where Yu: Piled Up The Rocks" 17:11 Adorn Jerkin 17:15 No-gut 17:18 Mt. Peak 17:20 "... hoarded up all the water." {cf. Vr.tra} 17:30 "people who have wings."
CEDLA INCIDENTELE PUBLICATIES 24. Maarten E. R. G. N. Jansen: Huisi Tacu. Amsterdam, 1982. appendix
Anne Birrell (transl.): The Classic of Mountains and Seas. Penguin Classics, 1999. pp. 157 to 188
p. 12d (41a) water p. 12d (41a) more water p. 13a (40d) water with man beside it
S^an Hai Jin (book & paragraph) 15:23 cat's-head owls 15:26 tree of "triply-grey" 15:27 Mushroom People 16:1 two beasts guarding; River Cold-hot; 16:3 Girl Kua ("to cut meat away from the bones" -- p. 223) 16:7 Wife clan; Mount Pair 16:8 Mount Square; square-rule 16:9 Long-ago Folk; great god Yellow; North-menial (Manchu);
Mount Bearded-grain; reptile like a hare 16:10 Shaman Bird-net; 100 drugs are found
Codex Borgia, pp. 18 to 21 18, # 1. leopard, skull, & owl 19, # 2. tree of grey death-god; red mushrooms 20, # 3. two pairs of watchful eyen; steaming pool; goddess Chalchihuitlicue holding an extracted heart; dead-man & wife as couple 21, # 4. ball-court, shaped like square-rule (T-square ends); human bones; yellow-striped gods 21, # 5. badger-path [badger menialdigger of exit from underworld, according to Navaho] 20, # 6. maize, with maize-silk 19, # 7. rattlesnake swallowing rabbit; dawn-god baiting a bird, and harvesting an eyed (drug) plant
16:11 Mount Queen-mother; jade; eggs of bird are eaten
18, # 8. bare-breasted goddess; flint-stone carried by black bird [African vulture will carry aloft a stone to be dropped on egg of other bird, to crack open that egg in order to eat it]
Anne Birrell (transl.): The Classic of Mountains and Seas. 1999
Iban Gawai Sakit = itinerary of Dio-nusos stanza
citation (BW&RM, pp. 101-115)
7.c 10.c 11.c
"betel-nut" "He who smokes the enemy skulls." "the kusing bat, ... the entawai bat"
16.a 17.c
"the spider " "a seesaw bridge, Joined by a bridge made of midang wood" "boat" "Grandmother Manang Jaban, Throws to the sky
LB, p. 137 GM 27.c
an image made from a fig tree.
IP
She is the possessor of ... a charm made of petrified fat ...
LB, p. 137
17.c 19.c
section or page GM 27.b GM 27.f GM 27.g
GM 27.h LB, p. 137
She is possessor of a petrified rotan vine". GD, p. 101
20.c
"And who also possesses a lump of gold."
"Masters of the Heavenly Heart ... used lightning-struck wood" (GD, p. 101).
GM 30.b
citation "staff tipped with a pine-cone" "is was she who wrenched off his head." Dio-nusos transformed the daughters of Minuas into bats. "a spidery symbol" "built a bridge across the river with ivy and vine" Dio-nusos in ship. "used it to stun the mother goddess ... It rose up and up into the sky [and became Kgwedi, the moon-goddess]". "The statue of Priapus was generally chopped roughly out from the trunk of a standing tree. It was usually shaped from fig-tree wood" "the moon [is devoured monthly by] ... the hyena-of-darkness, ... a little of her with each passing day, leaving always a small piece". {Cf. Zagreus' being devoured.} Dio-nusos is god of the grape-vine. "themselves enveloped by a perfected energy with shines as brightly as the moon. In the middle of this radiance they then see the golden towers on the Mountain of Mystery Metropolis [Xuandu], among which is a hall of white jade". {Cf. the white gypsum enclosing the heart of Zagreus, GM 30.b} For the sake of Zagreus his slayers were struck "with thunderbolts."
21.c
"Gunyi's weaving loom, Which stands upright to pierce the heart of the sky" {"Pole Star (the "heart of the sky")", GD, p. 101, would be naturally pierced by the caelestial axis of rotation} "a hill with a hole blown by the wind" {This is Bon.}
GM 30.b
22.c
"who can make the dead live again."
GM 27.k
30.c
"crystal"
LB, p. 143
30.c
"honey from the kepayang nut."
GM 27.b
22.c
LB, p. 138 DCM, p. 373
Dio-nusos originated from the resuscitated heart of the boy Zagreus. {"heart of the sky" being a Quiche` Maya expression; while Piltzin-tecutli carrieth a transfixed heart} "a deep cavern" As son of Dio-nusos, the infant Priapos "was endowed with enormous genitals." {Cf. the Inuit male infant wind-god Sila, endowed with enormous genitals} Dio-nusos [like Maudgalyayana] resurrected his own dead mother +Semele. "Someone, it seems, in prehistoric times wanted diamonds very badly." "fed him on honey"
BW&RM = SARAWAK MUSEUM JOURNAL, Vol XIII No. 27 (Borneo Writing and Related Matters = "Special Monograph, No. 1"). Kuching, 1966. pp. 32 to 286 Tom Harrisson & Benedict Sandin: "Borneo Writing Boards." LB = Lyall Watson: Lightning Bird. Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1982. GD = Livia Kohn: God of the Dao. U. of MI, Ann Arbor, 1998. GM = Robert Graves: The Greek Myths. 1955.
DCM = Pierre Grimal (transl. by Maxwell-Hyslop): Concise Dictionary of Classical Mythology. IP = "Introduction" to The Priapeia. http://www.public-domaincontent.com/books/classic_greece_rome/priap/prpc.shtml "Tales of Dionysus" http://www.geocities.com/medea19777/dionysus.html
Iban Gawai Tajau = itinerary of Theseus stanza 1.c 3.c
citation (BW&RM, pp. 146-167) "the nearly dry lagoon" "climb a notched ladder"
section 95.d 96.b
3.c
"in "barking deer" style"
96.c
3.c
"he who is the great tortoise [accurately, "turtle"] chief, Able to swim against the great current" "mother of Engkechong Burong Ruai"
96.f
"rawai jar" "they pass the lamps, Which light the darkness" "divorced wife" "Who cuts out the shape of shields, And
97.c 97.e 97.f 97.g
can walk over the edge of the sky?"
97.g
5.c 5.c 6.c 8.c 11.c
97.c
citation (GM) "waded across" "As the tree sprang upright again, they were hurled high" {cf. Solomon Is. catapulting of souls of the dead into sky} birth of Melan-[h]ippos "black horse" "the sea, where a giant turtle swam about" +Medeia was mother of Medeios (DCM, p. 260) "a cup" "He lighted lamps" wife separated (divorced) Pallas [cf. the Palladion, the shield made by +Athene] "sprang the ambush"
12.g 13.c 13.c
"Sabang Api who stands on a tiny ladder" "Kaling Alu ridge" "a lying bachelor, Who walks in a funny way"
98.k 98.m 98.m
17.c 17.c
"made of long red beads" "a deer's antler still upon the skull"
98.o 98.u
20.a
"Ansang Rengaya, king of the sea"
98.v
25.c 26.c
99.e 100.b
28.c 29.c
"has extremely clever quick hands" "She [Ini Andan] is the guardian of whetstones so full of luck, Looking for their owners" "Suddenly the flat earth door is open" "full of thorny palm[--tree]s
32.c 33.c 33.c
'the forest of luxuriant trees" "a single hut" "guarded by a striped python, victorious."
101.l 103.c 103.c
35.c
"where the travellers spread their awning mats. It is occupied by God ..."
104.b
100.h 101.c
Mino-tauros in the labyrinth "the harbour" "the two effeminate-looking youths" [98.e these two had practised "how to ... walk like women."] "made ... of ... red Indian gems" "the closely compacted horns of countless she-goats" Aigeus "deliberatlely cast himself into the sea, which was thenceforth named the Aegean." Demi-ourgoi "artificers" +Anti-ope had as her suitor Soloo:n ("egg-shaped weight", GM, Vol. 2, p.408) "bursting in ... the doors" "would jab at its leaves with a ... pin" "dark oak-woods" "palace" of Hades "Coiled serpents hissed all about them" "where philosophers meet and express ... views on the nature of the gods."
BW&RM = SARAWAK MUSEUM JOURNAL, Vol XIII No. 27 (Borneo Writing and Related Matters = "Special Monograph, No. 1"). Kuching, 1966. pp. 32 to 286 Tom Harrisson & Benedict Sandin: "Borneo Writing Boards." GM = Robert Graves: The Greek Myths. 1955.
Iban Gawai Umai = voyage of the Argo stanza 1.c
citation (BW&RMp pp. 198 to 221) "Reaching a dry sand beach," "scooping up"
section 4th PO, line 89
2.c
"brushed by growing mango branches
loc. cit.
3.c
"ringka baskets, Which hang down from the moon"
4th PO, line 90
citation (GM) Otos & Ephialtes [, whose mother "used to crouch on the seashore, scooping up" (GM 37.a)]: they "died" [and were afterward pilloried, GM 37.d] Tituos, who attempted to rape +Leto [much as was attempted on +Pistis in the Hypostasis of the Arkhones -- with the Manikhaian result of buckets of semen of her would-be rapists being raised by roped buckets to the moon]
4th PO, line 138 4th PO, line 183 4th PO, line 189
4.c
"fragments of whitened stone"
4.c
6.c
"Reaching the corner of a spinning stone" "the swirling water" {cf. "swirling elixir", in, e.g., the "Purple Texts" -EDS, pp. 290, 337} "a cup"
7.c
"the wheel on a chair's legs."
8.c 9.c
"Lau Limbi with the iron coat" "lifting the tepayan jar upside down."
154.h 154.i vol. 2, p. 248, n. 13
10.c
"does not move"
4th PO, line 211
12.c
"Laut Ulop Mentali Dani, Who warns that the day is breaking" "thousands of river-mouths, ... occupied by Laja, Who has big eyes"
151.b
15.c
"maiden Sunta Kantok Raba"
151.d
15.c
"maiden Lenjai Tampok Binjai, Who 151.e spreads a mat to welcome the Malays."
16.c
grandfather (? uncles' father) "Whose raised platform is made from a huge boulder." "Come to the foot of the Pauh Jenggi tree, And to the trunk of the Sibau Bali tree" "love charms" "Reaching the petrified corpse"
5.c
14.c
17.c
22.c 22.c
4th PO, line 193 154.g
151.c
151.f
"Cleaver of the Rock" Zetes & Kalai:s [, who praesided over "logan-stone", GM 150.c] "the finest elixir"
"a golden goblet" "tripods" [cf. 23.c "three-legged tables with golden wheels"] Talos "the bronze sentinel" "poured water libations" [N.B.: according to Herodotos, the foregoing events (of 154.g-i) praeceded the voyage to Kolkhis (of GM 151.a-154.f)] [So also according to Pindaros, 4th Pythian Ode, did these events praecede the voyage to Kolkhis (of GM 151.a-154.f)] the Sumplegad-es "Clashing Rocks" were "put an end to" [immobilized, GM 151.a] Apollon "of the Dawn" into "the reed-beds of the river" came [W]idmon (cf. Latin videre "to see") Asopos's daughter +Sinope "craftily chose virginity" the +Amazon-es [such as 153.f +Antiope, who 100.a rendered hospitality] "of their grandfather ... on a black stone in the temple of" Ares
151.g
+Philura "was metamorphosed into a linden-tree."
152.a 4th PO, line 214
love-charm: "the dappled wryneck from Olympus, bound to the four spokes" [iung- "wryneck-bird" < *ISUnJH: <arabi^ >ISAF, a hero who became petrified]
23.c
"violin"
23.c
"the sound of a clock striking
152.c
three"
152.d
"Ungkok, Who sits and bends in the dim moon light" "Manang Asee, Who makes a fibre from the temeran bark" "on a [mountain-]range covered with lukut" "a swift stream over a waterfall"
152.g
"Selampetoh the excellent blacksmith" goddess "Manang, Whose lower hair is entirely white" [her pubic hair being white would be a sign that she is deadly to men sexually attracted to her] "dew, Which drifts away and vanishes" {Moroni 9:8 LaMaNites "feed the women upon the flesh of their husbands"}
152.j 152.j
24.c 24.c 25.c 25.c
25.c 26.c
27.c
28.c
152.h
{inasmuch as the wryneck is a deemed snake-necked bird, cf. Maya (glyphic name) Kuk-c^an "bird-snake" whose emblem is the cross, with the Yaqui "threadcross" consisting of a spiralled string strung around a cross, as if of a musical string-instrument} +Khalki-ope [khalki- "brass", as in brass band or brass clock] Kutisoros [cf. kutisos "a kind of clover"] "of the tortured" Prometheus ..."at nightfall" "moored" [with hawser]
152.h
"sprigs of juniper"
152.i
Iphitos [son of Nau-bolos, DCM, p. 225. Nau-bolos is "boat-thrower"; and a waterfall can throw over it a boat] "fetters" among the Sauromatai (Zyrians ?) "every girl must have killed a man in battle"
153.a
Apsurtos [cf. surto- "drifted"]
vol. 2, p. 248, n. 12
[N.B.: according to Pindaros, 4th Pythian Ode, line 252, the episode at LeMNos occurred on the returnvoyage of the Argo.]
SUA [= HUA in Hawai'ian myth: a king in whose reign occurred a famine] {Moroni 9:16 "to wander whithersoever they can for food; and many old women do faint by the way and die."}
BW&RM = SARAWAK MUSEUM JOURNAL, Vol XIII No. 27 (Borneo Writing and Related Matters = "Special Monograph, No. 1"). Kuching, 1966. pp. 32 to 286 Tom Harrisson & Benedict Sandin: "Borneo Writing Boards." EDS = Stephen R. Bokenkamp: Early Daoist Scriptures. U. of CA Pr, Berkeley, 1997. GM = Robert Graves: The Greek Myths. 1955. PO = Pindaros: Pythian Ode.
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgibin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0162;query=poem%3D%2318;layout=;loc=P.%203.1
Iban Gawai Batu = Kojiki stan za 1.c 2.c 3.c 4.c
5.c
citation (BW&RM, pp. 224 to 241) "a jew's harp with long strings." "lashed by the Tawang trader's ropes." "Telu Aur, a single seed" "He who can slash the tidal bore as it rises, Patinggi Serit Ahmit has also come, He who can sail with a swiftlet patterned plate."
secti on 23 24 25 27
"Warning us to gather the deities' names." [Is this to be accomplished by spying on them?] "spurs as on enteliet birds. This is the country of Siasi whose legs are yellow, He is Nendak Nendai whose tail feathers are red."
31
"ensenga fish-traps, ... buba fish-traps" "at a cut hole in the rock ... Whence things come so easily ... The distributor" "like an eagle ... plunging in the water" [fish-eagle ?]
32 32
9.c
"Sigai's ears are quick to hear"
33
10.c
goddess "Silin Ilin, whose cloth will never decay" "sloping bridge planked with bamboo joints" "air bubbles of adulterous crocodiles" "a circle of rangki-shell ring." "fire-stones"
33
6.c
7.c 8.c 9.c
11.c 12.c 13.c 14.c
31
32
34 36 39 40
16.c 17.c
"overgrown with numerous rembai trees" Manang Bidu, guardian of the cemetery gate."
40 40
18.c
"crowded with with charcoals, ... Selampandai, Who forges" "come to the edge of a diamond"
40
19.c
42
citation (K) "the heavenly speaking-lute" "Without having yet untied even the cord" "a single eulalia" "there came riding on the crest of the waves in a boat of heavenly Kagami (Ampelopsis serinaefolia?) a Deity dressed in skins of geese" "Na-naki-me (Name-Crying-Female)" & "Ama-no-sagu-me (Heavenly-SpyingWoman)" "made the wild goose of the river the headhanging bearer, the heron the broombearer, the kingfisher the person of the august food, the sparrow the poundingwoman, the pheasant the weeping woman" "gone to Cape Miho to ... catch fish" "on the nethermost rock-bottom ... butler to offer up the heavenly august banquet" "turned into a cormorant, went down to the bottom of the sea, took in his mouth red earth from the bottom" {earth-diver myth of Siberia & North America} "His Augustness Truly-Conqueror-IConquer-Swift-Heavenly-Great-GreatEars" "Her Augustness Myriad-Looms-LuxuriantDragonfly-Island-Princess" "Floating Bridge of Heaven" Saruta = "Bubble-Bursting-August-Spirit" "fish-hook" [usually made of sea-shell] "the tide-flowing jewel and the tide-ebbing jewel" "a multitudinous[-ly branching] cassia-tree" "palace of the Deity, Ocean-Possessor. When thou reachest the august gate of that deity['s palace]" "His Augustness Fire-Subside" "Her Augustness Luxuriant-Jewel-Princess ..., straightway leaving"
20.c 23.c
23.c
24.c
"binyang beranyi palm[-tree], Cut off by the falling rain" "spinning tops"
42
"Semalendik (abortionist)" {Aztec goddess Ayo-pec^tli "tortoise-rideress", goddess of childbirth (and abortionists ?)} "which glitters across one's face"
44
44
44
"His Augustness ...-Thatch-MeetingIncompletely" "a palace raised on one foot" [cf. palaces of +Men-glo,d & of Astika snake-burner each on single pillar as if axis, and Welsh Caer Sidi revolving] "a person riding towards them on the carapace of a tortoise" "to fight facing the sun"
BW&RM = SARAWAK MUSEUM JOURNAL, Vol XIII No. 27 (Borneo Writing and Related Matters = "Special Monograph, No. 1"). Kuching, 1966. pp. 32 to 286 Tom Harrisson & Benedict Sandin: "Borneo Writing Boards." K = Kojiki http://www2.plala.or.jp/wani-san/kojiki.html
Chinese route of the dead------------------------Iban route of the dead 23. Prairies (ts'a-pou) 3. "area of tall grass (lallang)" 25. where reigneth sadness 4. "sad" 26. trail of crowd of Kuei 10. "various races of people" 27. paved route 18. "crushed bones" [cf. human bones underlying elevated paved walkway of the Great Wall, of Ts'in dynasty] 28. where risk being frozen on 23. "Died from Drowning" drinking water 32. garden where receive very 25. "drinking ... holding cups of good tea tuba" 33. where men kill domesticated 26. domesticated "fighting cocks" beasts 36. mountain of the decapitated 27. "The Country of Headless Warriors" 39. place of the slaughter of 30. "fierce hunting dogs" hounds 40. Bridge 31. river "to be crossed by a borrowed boat." 41. Inn of peaches & plums 34. "Successful Paddy Farmers" 42. Palace T'ong-piao Kong for 35. country of smith-god [metalsstatues of divinities [made of worker] metals ?] MEMOIRES DE L'INSTITUTE
Clayton H. Chu: The Three Worlds
DES HAUTES ETUDES CHINOISES, Vol. 1. Hou ChingLang: Monnaies d'Offrande. College de France. pp. 76 to 77
of Iban Shamanism. PhD diss, Columbia U., 1978. pp. 269 to 277
1st. Green Lion & Red Tiger
Green Lion [& Red Lion] of European alchemy Aurochs as Norse Run; ox-head in Hymis-kvida; head of Haya-griva (Tantrik) Ka^le_b "hound"; brazen serpent Nh.us^-ta^n, uplifted by Mo_s^eh
2nd. Buffalo-head & Horse-face 3rd. Hound of iron & Serpent of bronze [= p. 77, # 43] 4th . a judge & a little demon 5th. a judge & a scribe
Kemetian BS the pygmy Citra-gupta the scribe
ibid., p. 78
"The Classic of the Central Mountains" (Book 5 of the S^an Hai Jin)
Sebayan
9:13 "Black Bear Cave" {cf. bear-skin of Kampe} 9:14 banana-plants 9:16 "mat-plants" 10:5 "an owl ... has only one leg" 11:9 bird "like pheasant" (viz., red), which "feeds on bugs." [robin ?] 11:11 Mt. Bulk-carve {in Daoist symbolism, carving = social organization, which subjects one to officialdom (as if to bloodsuckers)} 11:12 Mt. Agony-vein 11:18 Mt. "Trailer" 11:34 Mt. Woman-warm
1. "The site of the crumbling old longhouse" 2. banana-plants 3. "A vast area of tall grass" 4. "The country of the owls" 5. "The country of the robins."
11:39 "fief-stone" 11:42 "the bridge-drain" 11:44 "just-me"
6. "mosquitoes ... bite those who pass by and such their blood."
7. "bursts into tears" 8. "The house of the Cuckoo-goddess" {on Mt. Thornaks ("Cuckoo"), goddess Hera warmed a cuckoo in her bosom}, proffering a finger-ring (for pledge of fealty to her) 9. "the Bridge of Terror": "Just follow us ..."
11:46 Mt. "Yoke" 11:47 Mt. "Murk" 11:48 "the knowing-boar"
12:4 Mt. "Trey" {cf. Yoruba diviningtrey, for magic charms} 12:6 Mt. Manly-man 12:7 "The two daughters of the great god' 1:1 Mt. Sweet-jujube {jujube is emblematic of India (Jambu dvipa), the country of farmers} 2:7 "used for poisoning fish" 2:8 Mt. Lone-thyme {the thymus is asserted in the Iliad to be the source of murderous battle-rage} 3:1 Steep-bank of the deity "Incense Pool" (liquid incense for burning) 3:2 "it helps you to have a baby."
5:1 Mt. Lewd-bed 5:11 Mt. "Corpse"
6:1 High-horse Reptile. "This god is Lord of the Stinging Insects." 6:11 "iron ... frog-fish"
6:13 Mt. Boast-father [who boasted he could drink all lakes dry, but failed in (violated) this claim] 7:1 "quail eggs" 7:2 "can be used as a cure for poison." 7:3 Mt. Mother-in-law-merry 7:4 "you won't have a goitre."
10. "The Junction" 11."curiously ... demand to know" 12. "Bujang Sugi, also known as Keling, ... is in charge of information ... and knowledge" 13. "magic charms ... are given to brave men to make them more heroic, certain others to women with clever hands ..., while still others are for farmers,
fishermen ..." 14. "the soul of the war hero Muang"
15. "The Hill of Fire" 16. "The Country of Infants. ... Women ... are often beseiged by older children who beseech them to be their mothers." 17. "The Country of Women Died of Childbirth." (i.e., in childbed) 18. "Many crushed bones are strewn around. These are the bones of those travellers ..." 19. "The Country of People Died of Snakebite. ... open wounds on their legs and arms -- which can never be healed" 20. "the Country of Fish Doctors who wear coats with silver spots and ... perform healing ceremonies for sick fishes." 21. "the people who had violated the puni taboo" (requiring one to eat all food touched by oneself) 24. "The Country of People Died ... while collecting eggs in birds' nests" 25. "The Country of People Died of Tuba Poisoning." 26. "The Country of the Kingfisher Goddess." 27. "The Countries of Warriors Killed
7:8 "oozing pus"
7:19 "the wolfbane" {wolfbane was secured by Heraklees when he brought, from the realm of the giant demon Hades, the fierce hound Kerberos} 8:1 "patterned fish" 8:2 "the River Brocade" 8:3 "The deity Alligator Siege" 8:4 Mt. Girl-stool
8:5 Mt. Help-all 8:5 "the River Risk." 8:23 Mt. Lute-drum 9:8 Mt. Corner-sunny. "The River Dawdle" 9:11 Mt. Wind-rain
by Enemies ... but with their heads [necks] intact." 29. "The Country of People Died of Wounds. ... wounds, bandages around them, ... flies which always swarm about the wounds." 30. "The Country of Giant Demons ... with the help of a pack of fierce hunting dogs." 31. "The Fish River." 32. "tatooed" 36. "The Country of the Crocodile King." 37. goddess Indu Dara Jelini, whose "official task is to warn and prevent strangers from taking a bath in the Icy River" {cf. one daughter of Geirrod producing river wherein Tor bathed; while the other daughter of Geirrod crouched under a stool} 41. "if the soul is really homesick, he can come back later." 42. "the torrential [river] Limban ... is difficult and dangerous" to paddle in 43. festival 44. "the landing platform ... his destination ... forever." 45. "The return journey of the orang ti nyabak [shamaness-guide for soul of deceased]." "She sits securely on the shoulders of the Wind God who whirls around ..."
Anne Birrell (transl.): The Classic of Clayton H. Chu: The Three Worlds of Mountains and Seas. Penguin Books, Iban Shamanism. PhD diss., Columbia 1999. pp. 65 to 106 U., 1978. pp. 269 to 279 Note that whereas the chapters of this book number 12 (like the months), so the ending at 9:11 may be significant. Since 17 is the commonest subtotal for mountains (in a mountain-range), as in (by Book and Chapter):1:2 2:2 3:2 4:2 And inasmuch a close connection with ancient Coptic mythic geographic is indicated, there may be some allusion to 9/11 in the year 1717 of the Coptic era, namely
September 11th, 2001, showing that those who sow the wind shall reap the whirlwind.
Korean
Sebayan
10, pp. 42-43 "went one to each city"
10. "are directed to ... region or country" 12. "Bujang Sugi, ... old man of experience... is able to answer all inquiries" "regarding the direction of their destination" 13. "hunters to enhance their skills" 17. "mothers who had died of childbirth. ... the breadfruit tree" 19. "snakebite" 21. "crushed bones" 22. "killed ... by traps set by others for animals" 23. "were drowned" 24 "people died from falling off trees. ... lighting torches" 26. "Kingfisher Goddess ... fighting cocks" 27. "muddy area ... faraway" 29. "building a house ... come to the end" 30. Sera Ganti "Giant Demons": "Their size is enormous" "orang ti nyabak "flies away ... and disappears on the horizon" 31. "fish" 34. "the grains of the paddy several times larger" 37. "died of diseases" 38. taking a bath ... would freeze him to death" 42. "peaceful river" 44. "rush out to welcome ... and ... return to their respective homes" 45. "her magic charms"
12, p. 44 "Aranbul, the grand vizier told the king ... and the king accordingly moved east" 13, p. 46 "good marksmanship" 17, p. 50 "the she-dragon ... died" of child birth ... in the shape of the gourd" 19, p. 53 "had bitten marks" 20, p. 56 "broke his skeleton" 21, p. 57 golden box containing boy; underneath it was a cock 22, p. 58 "drifted" 24, p. 65 "hanged him on a tree on Kishima and burned him to death." 26, p. 66 "a crow ... a fight between two pigs" 27, p. 68 defaecation in forest; to the east 29, p. 71 "to build a bridge ... came to him no more" 30, p. 72 Paekjo^ng: "He was eleven feet tall." "the angel flew back to heaven" 31, p. 73 "frogs" 34, p. 82 "bushels of rice ... large bags of rice" 37, p. 105 "plagues" 38, p. 106 "take a bath ... causing him to freeze to death" 42, pp. 112-113 "Peaceful ... stream" 44, p. 118 "leaped for joy ... on returning to their homes." 44, pp. 119-120 "magic charm"
Ilyo^n (transl. by Tae-Hung Ha): Samguk Yusa. Yonsei U. Press, Seoul, 1972.
Clayton H. Chu: The Three Worlds of Iban Shamanism. PhD diss., Columbia U., 1978. pp. 272 to 279
Codex Borgia, pp. 15 to 17----------------------------- Sebayan 1. flower growing from flint (unfamiliar 2. fruit-trees peculiar to Indonesia: plant ?) rambutan, durian, mangosteen 2. copal with green insert (grass ?) 3. "tall grass" (lallang) 3. death & the deceased 4. funeral dirge 4. red-faced Ehecatl 5. robbins 5. god with swelling on nose 6. bitten by mosquitoes 6. +Xochi-quetzal "flower quetzal-bird" 8. "Cuckoo Goddess" (+Bunsu Bubut) 7. climbing water-stream 9. slippery "Bridge of Terror" (titi rawan) 8. skeletal person; 18. crushed bones of travellers; divided sky-mound opening apart, & closing, of two stones 9. Tlahuiz-calpan. with spotted face 20. doctors with silver spots on their coats 10. Mix-coatl with his skin striped 21. people with their skins torn 11. Xochi-pilli with his mouth contorted 24. people with their faces swollen 12. Tonatiuh [committed suicide] 25. committed suicide 13. impaled hearts 26. having spurs on 14. flayed off human skin 29. having serious cuts and wounds 15. hand-motif [tattooed] on mouth 32. tatooed hands 16. +Teteo-INAN "mother of the gods" 33. +Ini INAN "grandmother of the gods" 17. +Tlazolteotl 38. +Indu Dara Jelini 18. gods & goddess of death 40. coemetery 19. +Chalchiuhtlicue; 41. +Bunsu Bikku Petara water from jewel 42. tributary river: Sungai Dia 20. goddess with target (?) on cheek 43. hornbill, accurate at catching Clayton H. Chu: The Three Worlds of Iban Shamanism. PhD diss., Columbia U., 1978. pp. 269 to 279
SeBaYan
Im Dwl-t (SBI "star" world)
4. owls
1, # 1. feather-goddesses Ml<_t
6. mosquitoes 8. cuckoo-goddess 9.bridge of terror 11. gate to underworld; road 14. chairs 16. infants 17. women died in childbirth 18. climbing mountain 20. sick fishes 22. dead hunters 23. died from drowning 30. upside-down demons 31. borrowed boat 32. heroes of tattooed hands 33. recognize; goddess Ini Inan 34. crossing a river by boat 35. hammers 44. longhouse 45. wind-god
2, # 2. beetle 3 lower, ## 7-11. goose-headed gods 3 lower, ## 24-26. gods bowed to ground 4. doors in corridor Rs-tlw 5. crooked roadway 6 # 1. throne 6 lower, # 13. the children of H.r 7 ## 3-6. goddesses armed with knives 8. middle, # 2. backpacks (?) 8 upper, # 5:2. fish 10. holders of spears & bows 10 lower. died by drowning 11 lower, # 8. upside-down males 12. ## 2 & 4. looking backward at boat 12 upper, # 2. gods of raised hands 12 upper, text. eyes 12 lower, # 2. goddess Nw_t 12 lower, ## 5-13. gods of oars 12 lower, # 23. hammer (?) 12 lower, text. halls of the horizon; winds of R<
Clayton H. Chu: The Three Worlds of Iban Shamanism. PhD diss., Columbia U., 1978.
E. A. Wallis Budge: The Egyptian Heaven and Hell. Vol. 1. BOOKS ON EGYPT AND CHALDEA, Vol. XX. 1905.
pp. 269 to 279
Reikai Monogatari------------Mah-Meri & Jah-He^t-----Para-Brahman U. 60. Spider 2. "fly-destroyer" (spider) 64. Bird 3. falcon 158. Caterpillar 5. caterpillar p. 204 "hairy 206. Hairy caterpillar caterpillars" 212. Crab 7. crab p. 205 "to be bitten ..." 253. Long-caninetooth p. 205 "long hanging 255. Tongue tongue"
277. Palm-blossom p. 206 "horns sprouted 401. Horn from her forehead" p. 206 "her teeth 405. Tusk turned to tusks" p. 207 "turtles with 435-6. rainbow [cf. green fur" "green rainbow" in Rev. of St. John] Carmen Blacker: The Ronald Werner: Catalpa Bow. London: Bomoh-Poyang. Dept. George Allen & Unwin of Publications, U. of Ltd., 1975. Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, 1986. pp. 150 to 159
8. lotus flower
ADYAR LIBRARY SERIES, No. 20. T. R. Srinivasa Ayyangar (ed. by G. Srinivasa Murti): The Yoga Upanis.ads. 1938 & 1952.
Book of What Is In the Netherworld
Book of Gates
2:1 (Fig. 75) holding forked staff. 2:2 (p. 243) "The Grain Gods". 2:2 (p. 240) feather of truth
5.ur. (p. 173) 12 hold forked staffs. 6.ur. (p. 180) 12 carry bushels of grain. 12 have, each, feather of truth on head. 7.ur. (p. 187) 11 gods with stars. 7.me. (p. 188) gods with scepters. 8.ur. (p. 192) give bread and herbs. 8.lr. (p. 194) serpent "The Fiery One". 9.ur. (p. 197) human-headed legged cobra. 9.me. (p. 199) crocodile over serpent.
2:3 (p. 240) 3 gods with stars. god with 2 star-topped scepters. (p. 244) give the green plants to eat. 3:2 (p. 250) serpent "Fiery Face". 4:1 (p. 254) human-headed legged serpent. crocodile-headed god holding serpent. 4:2 ibis-headed god. 4:3 falcon-headed god. 5:2 (p. 265) "Mind". 6:1 (p. 269) crown-, cobra- surmounted; lion, with falcon-eyen above; hind part of lion & human head. 6:2 (p. 269) 5-headed serpent. 7:1 (p. 279) god "Flesh", under the serpent "The Enveloper". (p. 280) serpent "Life of Forms".
9.lr. (p. 201) 4 ibis-headed gods. 4 falcon-headed gods. 9.me. (p. 199) "Mind". 9.ur. (p. 197) crown-with-cobra-headed; falcon-headed lion, from whose hind part emergeth a human head. 10.ur. (p. 205) 4 4-serpent-headed gods. 10.me. (p. 207) god "The Flesh", under the serpent "The Enveloper". (p. 208) serpent "The Living
One". 10.lr. (p. 210) bull-headed "Bull of the West". 11.ur. (p. 215) 12 goddesses with stars. "Clever Mouth". Prologue.me. (p. 142) "The Neck" = scepter. 1.lr. (p. 147) Itm leaning on staff. 2.ur. (p. 151) 12 "The Holy Ones". 2.ur. (p. 152) at lake, "May there be air for your nostrils"! 3 (p. 157) "Earthquake". 3.ur (p. 159) 10 cobras, on banks of a lake. 4 me. (p. 168) 9 gods collectively carry serpent "The Moving One".
7:2 (p. 281) [human] god "The Bull of Truth". 7:3 (p. 278) 12 goddesses with stars. 8:2 (p.289) "The Witness". 9:3 (p. 298) "The One with the Neck". "The One with the Scepter". "Lord of the Staff". "Holy One of acts". 10:3 (p. 304) in the flood, "May there be air for your souls"! 11:1 (p. 307) "Earthquake". 4 goddesses on double cobras. (p. 308) "Fear of the two Banks". 11:2 (p. 305) 12 gods collectively carry a huge serpent. 12:1 (p. 313) goddess "The Beautiful Emergence of Light". 5 (p. 171) "She who lights". (p. 314) "Sweet of Heart". "True Heart". "Noble of Heart". "Mysterious Heart". BOLLINGEN SERIES XL.1. Alexandre Piankoff: The Tomb of Ramesses VI. Pantheon Books, NY, 1954.
Kemetian-------------------------------------------------Tehuacan Book of What Is in the Netherworld: Codex Borgia, pp. 1 to 3: lower register lower register 1:2:1-12 (p. 13). 12 light-giving cobras -in the place of the dead 2:18-20 (p. 33). 3 gods, each holding palm-branch staff 3:22 (p. 58). goddess, holding balls 4:9 (p. 81). 14 human heads 5 (p. 93). "river" 5 (p. 93). elongated ellipse 5, end (p. 115). serpent as planet Venus 6:9-12 (p. 132). 4 goddesses seated on invisible thrones 6, central register:1 (p. 117). baboonheaded god with ibis perched on his hand 7, central register:6 (p. 144). 4 pairs of men's heads over coffers of sand
2. two red snakes around skull 3. man, holding staff 4. woman, burning balls of copal 6. black man cutting own throat 9. water falling out of monster-mouth 10. elongated ellipse 11. red snake held by man 12. woman seated on invisible throne 13. human arm carried in beak of macaw 14. upper 1/2 of singing god's body, over enclosure of morass
9:2 (p. 203). 9 gods, each holding "a wriggling snake" 10:4 (p. 229). "legs" of 4 men at square lakes 11:3-7 (pp. 249-251). 4 fire-spitting goddesses, holding knives [:3 (p. 249) being lioness-headed, like the 4 lionessheaded goddesses on p. 219] 11:8 (p. 251). 5 men, all head-downward, in valley
15. self-strangling man holding red snake 16. leg of beast under square (?) container of liquid upper register, 17. fiery goddess,holding knife
Book of What Is in the Netherworld: upper register
Codex Borgia, pp. 1 to 3: upper register
1:4:5 (p. 11). crested bird 2:9 (p. 29). man with his arm upraised 3:6 (p. 51). woman, holding balls 4:6 (p. 73). scorpion 5:8 (p. 106). 2 hawks (p. 106) 5:11 (p. 106). god holding lasso in each hand 5:18 (p. 109). "the blood of the dead" 6:16 (p. 129). mummy holding crookscepter in one hand and knife in the other 6:19 (p. 130). serpent belching fire onto head of man 7:2 (p. 147). goddess 8, central register:2 (pp. 167-168). 9 men's head, each suspended 10, central register:5:1-4 (p. 210). 4 diskheaded gods holding obliquelydownward-pointing spear 12 (!):1:1-12 (pp. 265-266). 12 goddesses with, on the shoulders, fire-belching serpents
2. crested bird 3. arm 4. woman ... 8. scorpion 9. bird 10. god holding
11 , central register:3-4 (p. 238). 2 serpents carrying crowns, red (:3) &
upper register, 18. man, head downward, his head being swallowed by a skull {with the skull, cf. the 3 human heads in Kemetian 11, lower register:7 (p. 251)}
11. bleeding sun 12. humanskin-clad man holding harpoon in one hand and knife in the other 13. dragon being drilled for fire on its back, by man 14. singing woman in temple 15. captive man suspended 16. drinking man, holding obliquelydownward-pointing knife lower register, 17. fiery goddess wearing shawl on her shoulders [most of the females in this section being unclad above the waist], and holding cudgel (with the cudgel, cf. the scepters held by the 8 lioness-headed goddesses in Kemetian 10 (upper register):5 (p. 219)} lower register, 18. 2 snakes, red & yellow, descending from sky
white (:4) BOOKS ON EGYPT AND CHALDAEA, Vol. XX. E. A. Wallis Budge: The Egyptian Heaven and Hell. Vol. I: "The Book A^m-T.uat". Kegan Paul, Trench, Tru:bner & Co. Ltd., London, 1905.
Book of What Is In the Netherworld
Codex Borgia, pp. 9 to 13, & pp. 61 to 70
1:1 (p. 232) "The Heart of the Earth"
3A (p. 63) Tepe-yollotl "MountainHeart" 3B (p. 63) red-lipped +Tlazolteotl 4A (p. 64) Ueue-coyotl "Ancient Coyote" 4B (p. 64) The Speaker (with speechscroll) 4C (p. 64) +at ruin 5A (p. 65) +Chalchiuhtl-icue of the water 5 (p. 11) eagle with human hands at its shoulders 6A (p. 66) Tecciztecatl before (making grant of ?) square (field ?) 6[B] (p. 11) +(erudite) sibyl prophesieth cosmic doom (with starry speech-scrolls of darkness) 7 (p. 12) at conchy-water (the restless sea ?), Tlaloc the thunder-god{: cf. thundergod Tor, who swallowed the sea) 8A (p. 68) +Mayahuel = +Ayo-pechtli giving birth 9A (p. 69) Xiuh-tecuhtli, god of time and of the year
1:1 (p. 232) +"The Throat" 1:1 (p. 232) 3 jackal-headed gods 1:3 (p. 236) "The Speaker" 1:4 (p. 237) +"The One of the City" 1:4 (p. 238) +"She of the Water" 1, end (p. 239) "The Sealer of the Earth uncovers for thee his shoulder" 2:1 (p. 241) "This GREAT GOD makes grants of fields" 2:1 (p. 241) +"The Learned One"
2:1 (p. 242) +"The One who swallows without rest" 2:1 (p. 242) +"She who gives birth to herself" 2:3 (p. 244) "The Opener of Time"; "The Guardian of Time"; "The One of the Year" 2:3 (p. 245) "The Keeper of the Divine Abode" 2, end (p. 246) "evil odor of your decomposition". 3:1 (p. 247) a mummy 3:2 (Fig. 76) 3 boats being poled, by polesmen, through swamp 3:3 (p. 247) 5 ibis (fisher-bird)-headed gods 4 (p. 254) slanting passage through the earth. 4:2 (p. 257) the eye Skr
4:2 (p. 258) "Green Face" {cf. >alH^id.r "the Green" who punisheth the
9B (p. 69) Tlahuizcalpan-tecuhtli "Lord (High Keeper ?) of the House (of dawn)" 10[A] (p. 13) evil odor (of fart) entering nostrils of Mictlan-tecuhtli, god of decay 10B (p. 70) man being thrust, with pole by polesman, into swamp 11 (p. 13) fisherman 12 (p. 13) exiting from cavern, a badger (who in Navaho myth was first animalgod to emerge from underground) blindfolded 13[A] (p. 12) Ixquimilli, punisher of the living
living} 4:3 (p. 259) "The Walker" 5 (p. 262) +H^my[t] "theOverthrower" 5:3 (p. 261) a serpent from whose head emergeth a baboon's head 5:3 (p. 267) "He lives by the breath ... who opens his two wings, He of Dappled Plumage" 6:1 (p. 272) "the corridor which carries the fight" {cf. corridor in palace of Odusseus, through were were brought shields and spears, by warrior whose nose was therefor amputated} 6:2 (p. 269) a god is surrounded by the coil of a five-headed serpent 6:3 (Fig. 79) 4 +seated on invisible (transparent ?) thrones 7:2 (p. 278) a huge serpent whose body is transfixed with knives: (p. 281) "Evil Face", whose vetebrae are 443 cubit long 7:3 (p. 278 fn. 105) god human-headed with cat-ears 8:1 (p. 286) upon their clothing 8:2 (p. 289) "The Vase" 9:2 (p. 294) 12 holding paddles 9:3 (p. 298) +"Lady of the Fiery Glow" 10:1 (p. 300) +"The One who calls the God" 10:2 (p. 303) +"She who presides over the Shoulder" {i.e., Demeter, who disguised herself as an old-woman (wrinkled-faced), and sat on "joyless stone"} 11:1 (p. 307) "The One with paralyzed arms" 11:3 (p. 311) +"She who presides over her Slaughtering Block"; +"She who cooks" 12:2 (p. 315) "Power of Time" 12:2 (p. 315) "The Honorable One" {cf.
13(inaccurately 12)B (p. 69) smokyfooted god Tezcatli-poca 14[A] (p. 12) +Tlazol-teotl 14(inaccurately 13)B starry smoky-tailed snake 14[C] wind-blown curtain in temple of owl 15[A] (p. 11) shield and spears; red-andyellow-striped-faced god, his nose being pinched by an amputated arm
15(inaccurately 14)B (p. 67) man being swallowed by plumed serpent 16 (p. 11) +Itz-papalotl (insect) with bleeding plant (sap extracted by lacinsect? -- lac is transparent) 17 (inaccurately 16) (p. 65) cut-up snake
17 (inaccurately 16) (p. 65) croppedeared god Xolotl 17 (inaccurately 16) (p. 65) garment 18 (inaccurately 17) (p. 64) vertical water-tubes 19 (inaccurately 18) (p. 63) holding torch (?) 19 (inaccurately 18) (p. 63) +Chantico "Hearth" 19 (p. 9) conch-shell being blown 20(inaccurately 19)A (p. 62) +Xochiquetzal having facial tattooing; with tied black stone (?)
20(inaccurately 19)B (p. 62) black god wearing maniples 20[C] (p. 9) old woman preparing grain, by grinding it on a block, to be cooked 21(inaccurately 20)A (p. 61) Xiuhtecuhtli the god of time 21(inaccurately 20)B (p. 61) Xipe Totec
term of address to a judge: "The Honorable ..."} 12:2 (p. 315) "Life" 12:2 (p. 316) The image of S^w "the wind" 12:3 (p. 317) "Fire in his Eye"
wearing human skin {cf. English judge's wearing wig of human hair} 1 (p. 61) Tonaca-tecuhtli "Sustenance Lord" 2A (p. 62) Quetzal-coatl the wind-god 2B (p. 62) man rubbing own eye (enflamed eye ?)
BOLLINGEN SERIES XL.1. Alexandre Piankoff: The Tomb of Ramesses VI. Pantheon Books, NY, 1954.
Book of Caverns
description
Book of the Earth
1:4 (p. 48); 5:4 (p. 89) 2:1, :2 (p. 55)
"flesh". shrew-headed gods.
rear 5 rt. 2:1 (p. 333); lt. 3:1 (p. 370)
1:1 (p. 48 fn. 4); 1:2 (fn. 5); 3:1:2 (p. 66)
catfish-headed; or,
scarab-headed, gods. rt. 2:2 (p. 335) 3:2:3 (p. 66) double sphinx-bust. rt. 1:2 (p. 330) 4:1:1 (p. 77) figure of Wsir suspended lt. 2:3 (p. 364) curled in air between Ls[t] and Nbh.[t] 4:3:2 (p. 85) "destructress, you who come out of annihilated corpses"; or, H.r comes forth from the lt. 2:1 (p. 363) Western One. 5:1-3, lt. (p. 87) S^tli[t] with crocodile & lt. 1:3 (p. 361) human-headed serpents. 5:3:2 (p. 89) cauldron containing lt. 4:1 (p. 374) heads & hearts. 5:1-3, rt. (p. 87) standing ithyphallic god. rt. 2:4 (p. 339) BOLLINGEN SERIES XL.1. Alexandre Piankoff: The Tomb of Ramesses VI. Pantheon Books, NY, 1954.
Spell of the Twelve Caves
Book of Caverns
8:5 goddesses with high-pitched
2:2:2:2 (p. 58) the 5 (of) high [voice]
voices 8:6 4 Those who render homage 9:1 mummies, each with 3 snakes standing before, and 3 snakes standing behind, together in shrines 9:5 bull on head of god 9:11 crocodile-headed god, holding a scepter 9:20 Anubis holding 2 hawk-head staves 10:1 light in midst of darkness 10:2 goddesses; jackal-headed vases
2:3:3 (p. 55) 4 make gesture of adoration 3:1:5 (p. 66) mummy with a snake standing before, and a snake standing behind, together in shrine 4:1:3 (p. 77) bull-headed god 5, introd. (p. 87) crocodiles 5:2:1 scepter 6:1:1 (p. 117) Anubis between 2 birds 6:1:2 (p. 123) light; darkness afterwards 6:3:2 (p. 119) jackal-headed goddesses
Book of What Is In the Netherworld
11:17 9 kneeling gods 12:5 endowment in the Field 12:6 gods who are on the Shore 12:7 Mysterious Heads on the Shore, Heads above the Earth: They grant protection (?). 12:8 recumbent gods in the coils of sepents
1:1:3 (p. 232) 9 kneeling gods 2:1 (p. 241) makes grants of fields 3:1:1:1 (p. 248) He on his Sand 4:1:3 (p. 256) One who praises the head 5:3:7 (p. 267) The Burning Heads 6:1:4:1 (p. 271) Protector of the Gods 6:2:5 (p. 269) recumbent god in the coil of serpent
Alexandre Piankoff: Wandering of the Soul. BOLLINGEN SERIES XL.6. Princeton U. Press, 1974.
Alexandre Piankoff: The Tomb of Ramesses VI. BOLLINGEN SERIES XL.1. Pantheon Books, NY, 1954.
lunar mansions
14. ram 16. cat 17. lion 20. deer 22. virgin 23. lamp
Document to Brimo
Spell of the 12 Caves
Book of Caverns
3:2:1 ram-headed 4:3:1 cat-headed 4:3:2 lion-headed 5. mare 6. Kore (maiden), carried off by Hades 8. lamp
8:1 females carried by males
24. lightning 27. boy
9. lightning-flash 22. spindel-tree 23. boy-love
9:17 sycamore trees 9:19 possessor of phallus
26. black sphinx's vagina 28. key Hans Dieter Betz: The Greek Magical Papyri in Translation. U. of Chicago Pr, 1986. 7:756 to 794
11:5-bis sphinx in bed
29. key
ibid.
4:2241 to 2358
Alexandre Piankoff: The Tomb of Ramesses VI.
Alexandre Piankoff: The Wandering of the Soul.
BOLLINGEN SER. XL.6 Princeton U. Press, 1974.
BOLLINGEN. XL.1 Pantheon, 1954.
Book of Gates
Codex Borgia, pp. 22 to 24
Prologue middle (p. 142) "The Neck" as scepter. "He Who Lifts Up His members". young again. beer. 1 middle (p. 146 fn. 20) goddess H.t-h.r 1 lower (p. 147) Itm leaning on staff. 2 upper (p. 151) serpent stretched above ears of barley. 2 upper (p. 152) at lake. 3 middle (p. 160) "Thou hast been washed". 9 sarcophagi {cf. designation "living sepulchers" for vultures}. 12 goddesses at triangular water-lands. 3 lower (p. 162) "The Gods of the Diadem". 4 pits of fire. 5 upper (p. 173) hold forked staffs. 6 upper (p. 180) bushels. 7 middle (p. 188) gods holding scepters. 8 upper (p. 192) give herbs. 9 middle (p. 199) crocodile. 9 lower (p. 202) serpent's voice. 10 middle (p. 207) stars in god's hands. 10 lower (p. 210) "the One of the Neck". god with scepter.
13. god cutting own throat while holding spears. 14. god lifting up own heart. 15. tasting rejuvenation-ambrosia (?). 16. liquor fermenting. 17. goddessTlazolteotl 18. aged god leaning on staff. 20. snake wrapped round maize-plant. 1. at a spring (?). 3. ladle (for dipping bathwater?).
4. vulture(?)-beaked god. 5. goddess at pool. 6. leopard-growing flints. 7. 8 pitfalls (?) within cavern. 8. holding forked staff. 9. container; god holding scepter. 10. herb having as root a crocodile-head. 11.tortoise(?)-headed god blowing conch. 12. stars looked at by sun-god. 13. god cutting own throat while holding scepter.
Alexandre Piankoff: The Tomb of Ramesses VI. Pantheon Books, 1954.
Kemetian---------------------------------------------Tehuacan Book of Caverns, central register Codex Borgia, p. 8, lower register 1. Osiris in shrine 2. square coffer 3. sphinx 5:along goddess. persons descending head-downward 6, lower register. woman using knives to behead men 7. 2 falcon-headed gods in coffins
47. man in conch 48. square container for liquid 49. head on knee of leg, upon cavern (?) 50. man falling head-downward 51. knife-blade; mask; blood 52, upper register. quetzal-bird
Erik Hornung (transl. by David Lorton): The Ancient Egyptian Books of the Afterlife. Cornell U. Pr, Ithaca, 1999. pp. 91 to 95
Book of Day p. 391 1:1 God with two bird-heads. p. 393 a column. goddess (in double outline). p. 396 "Lord of the Interior who is not heard". god with torch "He who makes the red". p. 397 1:2 goddess "Magic" (the frog-goddess). p. 399 "In the center of his eye". p. 404 12:3 [1st r. of Corr., v. p. 395] "Flame". 12:5 "Gold of the Gods". p. 405 "Vine Press". "The Progenitor". p. 407 "The Engendering (?) Soul" of sun-god. Book of What Is In The Netherworld p. 232 1:1 Heart of the Earth". goddess "The Throat" [in Kun.d.alini yoga, to the throat is assigned the red water lily].
Codex Borgia p. 64, 17a +Chalchiuhtotolin "Jewel Bird". 17b vertical tubes. p. 63, 18a +Chantico, wearing pearls (?) (pearls are layered). 18b man descending mine-shaft (?); unblown conch: the man is holding plant (torch ?), and the mine-shaft is red. p. 62, 19a +Xochiquetzal, of tattooed face (as though warty, as of toad). 19b god having speckle-encircled eye. p. 61, 20a Xiuhtecuhtli the fire-god. 20b Xipe Totec as wearer of human skin (representing sheet of gold). p. 61, 1 Tonacatecutli seated in flat-bottomed container (press ?). p. 62, 2a Topiltzin, who committed incest. (as per Mixtec royal procreation). 2b half-sun. Codex Borgia p. 63, 3a Tepeyollotl "Heart of the Earth". 3b red-lipped goddess,
p. 234 goddess "Slaughterer of the rebels". p. 236 1:4 "The Dancing One". p. 237 "The Roarer". goddess "The One of the City". p. 244 2:3 "they who bring water". p. 246 "the plants". p. 250 3:2 "Knife Face". "Blazing Face". "The One who sees the limits". p. 252 3:3 god with the scepter. p. 257 4:2 Holy Way of "He Whose Mysteries are Hidden". "He of the Tassel". p. 259 4:3 three-headed serpent "Shaker". p. 268 5:3 "their water is like fire". p. 272 6:1 goddess "the Weaver". p. 274 6:3 "may your hearts breathe". p. 275 "supply the spirits with water". p. 282 7:3 sun god R< "He of the Horizon". p. 289 8:2 "they swallow their swords". p. 290 8:3 "the cry of male cats". "Knife of the Shoulder of the Earth". p. 295 9:1 :The Clothed One". p. 297 9:3 "She who scatters Stars". p. 300 10:1 goddesses "Crown ...". serpent "Double-Entwined One". p. 303 10:2 The four with spears. p. 304 10:3 four goddesses with serpents on their heads. p. 307 11:1 goddess as "her own body ... above the constellation" S^dw. "The One with paralyzed arms (?)". "Earthquake". p. 308 11:2 "Opener of the Ways" (jackal-god). twelve carriers of the serpent.
capturing enemy. p. 64, 4a Huehuecoyotl the dance-god. 4b speckled-lipped talking-god. 4c woman in despoiled temple. p. 65, 5a +Chalchihuitlicue, producing water (from her body). 5b woman cultivating. p. 66, 6a Tecciztecatl the moon-god (cf. knifeblade in moon): he threw himself into fiery furnace. 6b rabbit confined within square. 6c man holding bent stick. p. 67, 7a path of Tlaloc as holder of the tasselled bag. 7b two-headed serpent. p. 68, 8b liquor-fermentation. 8a +Mayahuel with (fiber-plant) maguey. 8c spitted heart. 8d man as drinker. p. 70, 10c sun-god Tonatiuh on platform. p. 70, 11b shield & sword. 11c leopard with knives stuck in its body. p. 69, 12a garb-swathed Ixquimilli. 12b stars in a cavern. p. 68 13a +Tlazolteotl wearing tiara. 13b snake. p. 67, 14a Xipe Totec holding spears. 14b plumed serpent swallowing man headfirst. p. 66, 15a +Itzpapalotl. 15b star in house. p. 65, 16c amputated deer-limb. 16b "4 Earthquake". 16a hound-god Xolotl. 16d cut-up serpent.
Alexandre Piankoff: The Tomb of Ramesses VI. BOLLINGEN SERIES XL.1. Pantheon Books, NY, 1954.
Chinese lunar animals
Bon animals
(h.iu “lunar mansions”)
5. fox
1:9 fox
4. rabbit 1. flood dragon 28. earthworm 27. snake 24. river deer 23. sheep 22. wild hound (tether) 20. monkey 19. crow 16. tame hound 14. pig 13. tapir 11. (empty) 10. (woman) 9. ox http://station7.kgw.tuberlin.de/english/abstracts/ChenJ.html
[Miao]
2:4 rabbits 2:9 bridge 3:2 mud holes 3:6 snake 5:1 stream 7:7 sheep 8:4 barking hound, tethered 10:5 monkey 10:10 crane 12:2 tame hounds 13:7 pig (north) 13:11 green horse (south) 14:1 do not know, grope 14:5 wife 14:11 yak Joseph Francis Rock (transl.): 2Zhi 3ma: Funeral Ceremony of the 1Na-2khi. pp. 200 to 205 “1Ndsher 2 ndzi 3mi”
YORU`BA'--------------------------------------------------------------------------------TEHUACAN binar written Ifa' -- 16 meaning #, lower Codex Borgia, pp. y# Odu` Ogbe` register 1 to 3
of 1:1 (p. 3 = 1:2) 1:1 (p. 5 = 1:4) 2:1 (p. 100 = 32:1) 3:1 (p. 121 = 42:1) 4:1 (p. 84 = 24:1) 5:1 (p. 117 = 40:1) 6:1 (p. 125 = 44:1)
7:1 (p. 82 = 22:1:2)
8:1 (p. 93 = 28:2) 9:1
1.1.1.1:1 Omifinte, .1.1.1
omi "water" + fite,` = fe,se,`te,` "treading on"
O`ku`nku`n Birimubirimu 1.1.1.2:1 the 2 (?) Eke .1.1.1
o`ku`nku`n = o`o`ku`n "darkness" + biribiri "pitch-dark" the 2 (?) named "The dishonest" travelled: "death ... of the dishonest" (p. 101)
1.1.2.1:1 Ate,`gbe` .1.1.1
a`te, = igba' a`te, "lidded basket wherein traveller packeth his goods" + gbe` "partisan"
1.1.2.2:1 Bioje,la .1.1.1 daughter of O,lo,'fin 1.2.1.1:1 A`gba`do .1.1.1
1.2.1.2:1 "it would be .1.1.1 wise to suffer in the beginning and prosper in the end" 1.2.2.1:1 "both death .1.1.1 (Iku') and disease (A`ru`n) threatened to visit his house" (22:1); Sa`ngo' (22:2) 1.2.2.2:1 Adifala .1.1.1 praedicted that O,s,in would "take a pot" 2.1.1.1:1 Atiba
a`gba`do = i`gba`do = o.ka` a`gba`do "maize"
S,o,`ng'o = god praesiding over lighting-struck house
1
water being walked on by: a black god.
2
the 2 red snakes at crossroads, around skull
3
traveller with white-lidded pack (?)
4
woman
5
maize-plant as man
6
black man cutting own throat
7
man in burning house
a`di' = a`din' = y.o'nko` 8 "palmnut kernel-oil" o,`s,i`n "vulturine fish-eagle": eater of palm-kernels
a pot with tube inserted (for draining out oil ?)
a`ti`'ba`ba` "booth having
flat-topped (i.e.,
9
(pp. 105 = 34:2) 9:1 (pp. 105-6 = 34:2) 10:1 (p. 75 = 20:1) 10:1 (p. 76 = 20:2)
.1.1.1
flat roof"
11:1 (p. 131 = 46:2) 12:1 (p. 110 = 36:2)
2.1.2.1:1 Ewele .1.1.1
13:1 (p. 89 = 26:2) 13:1 (p. 88 = 26:1)
2.2.1.1:1 "two .1.1.1 pigeons ... two hens"
roof-like:)
"had no time to eat it"
watering mouth
2.1.1.2:1 "a party .1.1.1 was held"
"A storm came, the e,gungun tree was uprooted ... The pot was one of the materials ... sacrificed." (by being smashed ?)
2.1.2.2:1 Adeiloye: .1.1.1 "She became very rich"
Erigidu`du`
10
e,gu'n = a`ra`ba` "silkcotton tree" The coffin-urns constituting the tower to heaven got smashed, collapsing tower [Sikkimese tale]. When tower of Babel collapsed, its builders became monkeys [Jewish fable]. In Eca-tonatiuh [Aztec world-age], a wind came, transforming the people into monkeys. (Monkeys climbing silkcotton trees become prey to eagles; so that they are safer when those trees are blown down.] ewe`le` "person of amazing skill"
ade' "crown" + i`lo'-y.u'n "praegnancy" (secret control of country, concealed like a praegnancy ?)
e`ri`gi` "molar tooth"
roped-in region,
containing pot.
11
man holding onto snake
12
woman seated on invisible throne [Kemetian motif]
13
macaw (= "7 Macaw") with amputated human arm: the teeth of "7 Macaw" were replaced (according to
14:1 (p. 114 = 38:1)
2.2.1.2:1 Oso,ro,- ... .1.1.1 so,ro,
Atakiti-gbae,gbe,`wa' = "famous acrobat"
15:1 (pp. 96 = 30:12) 16:1 (p. 72 = 18:2)
so,ro, speaking
14
ki`ti`ki`ti` = ki`ta`ki`ta` "pit-a-pat" ("pitter-patter" with sloshing sounds, as of rushing warer ?)
2.2.2.1:1 Pande,re,.1.1.1 folu-omilikiti
pa'-n'-do,`ro,` "sausage tree" [sausage fruit is reputed to cure cancer]
15
2.2.2.2:1 Arun-pos,e.1.1.1 ireke
i`re`ke` "sugarcane"
16
O,ro, the wife
o,ro, spirits for hunters at I`gbo`ho
Popol Vuh). flowery speech, spoken by:
god with his arms outstretched behind him (so as to balance himself ?), arising out of whirlpool (?). man holding snake and strangling self (= self-strangulation of tumor ?) white vessel containing white liquid (sugarcane juice ?); beast-limb, amputated (by hunters ?).
Afolabi A. Epega: The Sacred Ifa Oracle. Harper, San Francisco, 1995. R. C. Abraham: Dictionary of Modern Yoruba. University of London Press Ltd., 1958.
YORU`BA'---------------------------------------------------------------------TEHUACAN binary written Ifa' -- 16 Odu` meanings #, lower Codex Borgia, # O`gu'nda' register pp. 3 to 5 of 1:2 (p. 99 = 31:2) 2:2 (p. 36 = 9:1) 2:2 (p. 37 = 9:2) 3:2 (p. 445 = 210:1) 4:2 (p.
1.1.1.1:1. 1.1.2
Ibinu
1.1.1.2:1. 1.1.2
i`bi'nu'n = inu'n bi'bi' "anger"
17
fiery woman, toting cudgel
O`gu'n "took the cutlass ... and cut the fish in two" Agogo- ... agogo = aago "bell"
18
1.1.2.1:1. 1.1.2
Te,`te,`
19
2 snakes, the red one with knife-blade: under sky ["until the welkin rang" ?] pot containing food
1.1.2.2:1.
black soap [for
te,`te,` "amaranth (as pot-herb)"
20
arm with
292 = 131:1)
1.1.2
5:2 (p. 442 = 208:1)
1.2.1.1:1. 1.1.2
6:2 (p. 449 = 212:2)
1.2.1.2:1. 1.1.2
hand-washing ?]; osu`n (a yellow-flowering rosewood) black soap [for hand-washing ?] with iye,`i`rosu`, in calabash "a tail feather" of a`gbe for: awure
festoons of threaded yellow flowers 21
arm on trivet
22
tail-feathers (?);
a`wu're "soap for good luck"
7:2 (p. 256 = 109:1) 7:2 (p. 257 = 109:2)
1.2.2.1:1. 1.1.2
8:2 (p. 367 = 169:1)
1.2.2.2:1. 1.1.2
9:2 (p. 431 = 202:1) 10:2 (p. 208 = 85:1) 11:2 (p. 454 = 214)
2.1.1.1:1. 1.1.2
head as good as bottom (of sedentary ?) -house was abandoned [due to travelling of owner ?] "We look ahead and no one is seen; we look back and no one is seen" [cf. "go before them and seen no front, go after them and see no rear" in Dao De Jin, book of the Daoist suicides] Aijagogorogo gogoro "slender"
2.1.1.2:1. 1.1.2
O,te,` Ta'n; Aba ...
2.1.2.1:1. 1.1.2
harlot-woman ate
12:2
2.1.2.2;1.
Adetutu
ta'n = to,'n "came to an end" aba` "farm-shack"
ade` "comer"
23
4-color ball on rope (soap on rope ?) quetzal on (over ?) head of: traveller.
24
man strangling own self
25
waist-band (?)
26
burning house
27
woman reclining against maizeplant couple having
28
(p. 435 1.1.2 = 204:1) 13:3 2.2.1.1:1. (p. 330 1.1.2 = 151:1)
14:2 2.2.1.2:1. (p. 438 1.1.2 = 206:1)
come to crossroads "a monster"
29
"thief";
30
beast's limb, amputated [cf. arm of mother of monster Grendel (in Beowulf)] fiery man upon fiery bones [theft of human bones from Netherworld ?], and carrying on his shoulder a pot
"banana" [cf. "banana ... On the shoulders" -HM, p. 79] 15:2 2.2.2.1:1. "net" [cf. net of 31 tied-together, (p. 401 1.1.2 Indra; "Sky descending = Fret" (T'ien from sky 185:1) Yu:) in S^an Hai Jin] 32 mummy-bundle 16:2 2.2.2.2:1. "death was eeni = enini (?) (p. 156 1.1.2 predicted", but "early-morning = evaded. Eni dew" [cf. "dew 59:1) of light" (YS^
YORU`BA'------------------------------------------------------------------TEHUACAN binar written 0du` I`re,te,` meanings #, Codex Borgia, y# lowe pp. 6 to 8; r Codex Cospi regis
ter of 1:3 (p. 120 = 41:2)
1.1.1.1:1 Asa-nigboro .1.2.1 -Oburinburi n Bu-omi ...
a`sa`si' "using magic drugs against person" bu`rin "moisten" bu` "dip out"
33
snake entering (= poisonous ingredient ?) into herbs in:
Label1 1:3 (p. 119 = 41:1)
I`ge`de`
2:3 (p. 444 = 209:2 )
1.1.1.2:1 Iyalode (a .1.2.1 woman) devised rites which were contended for by deceitful men;
2:3 (p. 443 = 209:1 ) 3:3 (p. 55 = 14:1) 3:3 (p. 56 = 14:4) 4:3 (p.
source of the sea & the lagoon
1.1.2.1:1 Olu'-igbo' .1.2.1
i`ge,`de,`ge,de,` = ge,`de,`ge,de,` "sediment, dregs" [i.e., harmful substance eliminated out of solution by being praecipitated ?] i`ya'lo'o`de "head-woman of 34 each township in E,`gba' country"
white pricklycup (= instrument for neutralizing harmful substances ?) man shooting from his head a ray [cf. birth from head of Zeus of Goddess Athene, who contended with male deitiy over a sea-sourced well, in Athenai], over semicircle (= a well ?)
igbo' thicket
flowered chain (?) [emblem for thicket?]:
35
attempt to balance on head 1.1.2.2:1 O,`ru'n.1.2.1 mi`la`
on head of Tezcatli-poca
o,ru'n "period of 5 days" la` "split"
36
[5-clawed] leopard-paw
312-3 = 141:1 -:2) 5:3 (p. 523 = 245:2 ) 6:3 (p. 539 = 252:1 ) 7:3 (p. 275 = 119:2 ) 7:3 (p. 274 = 119:1 ) 8:3 (p. 389 = 179:3 ) 9:3 (pp. 468 = 221) 10:3 (p. 231 = 95:2) 11: 3 (p. 543 = 254:1 ) 12:3 (p.
with knifeblade inserted
1.2.1.1:1 Ado .1.2.1
do`-do`-do` "dangling"
37
snakes dangling from sky
1.2.1.2:1 O,`na`wo.1.2.1 funmirin
a`wo "dish" funfun = fifun "white"
38
over dish, a white vase
1.2.2.1:1 Ari-s,e,'.1.2.1 mas,e
s,e,' "welled out"
39
black man vomitting [= ? drinker of "black drink"], vomitting after: fasting, and so cleansing self
40
man letting own blood [cf. bloodletting from penis]
41
lone man with his eyen closed, in bad circumstance feather-apron (?)
Awe,rorogbo,la
1.2.2.2:1 Akinte,lu .1.2.1
a`a`we,` "fasting" roro = to'ni'to'ni' = ko,nga'ko,nga' = s,a'ka's,a'ka' = to'to' "clean" akin "manly"
2.1.1.1:1 "the one .1.2.1 who sleeps alone sleeps badly" 2.1.1.2:1 "apron of .1.2.1 Awo"
2.1.2.1:1 Olu's,e,so, .1.2.1 (254:2 -- p. 544 "will die prematurely ") 2.1.2.2:1 Awofusi .1.2.1
42
Olu`s,e,`so,n "God the Requiter" [<arabic "Master of the Day of the Requital" (day when the dead are resurrected)] awo secrets
43
skull & crossbones (awaiting resurrection ?)
44
owl -- in CC, owl bristling
493 =231: 1) 13:3 (p. 352 =161: 2) 14:3 (p. 510 =239: 1) 14:3 (p. 511 =239: 2)
2.2.1.1:1 can ... .1.2.1 drown
45
2.2.1.2:1 black .1.2.1
46
ram [the thunderandlightning beast (throughout Africa)] 2.2.2.1:1 "initiation" .1.2.1 of E,niayewu
with knifeblades [emblematic of secrets?] netted [cf. Diktus, who, when he netted, rescued from the sea] black -- in CC, # 47 black:
Tlaloc the thunder-andlightning-god
15:3 e,ni "person" 47 man emergent (pp. from conch [= 420 initiation?] =195: 1) 16:13 2.2.2.2:1 salt 48 white foam [of (p. .1.2.1 sea?] 176 =69:1 ) Afolabi A. Epega: The Sacred Ifa Oracle. Harper, San Francisco, 1995. R. C. Abraham: Dictionary of Modern Yoruba. University of London Press Ltd., 1958.