Читать книгу The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction. Volume 13, No. 352, January 17, 1829 - Various - Страница 4

SOME ACCOUNT OF THE COLOSSEUM, IN THE REGENT'S PARK
HIEROGLYPHICAL CHARACTERS

Оглавление

(For the Mirror.)

Hieroglyphics consist in certain symbols which are made to stand for invisible objects, on account of some analogy which such symbols were supposed to bear to the objects. Egypt was the country where this sort of writing was most studied, and brought into a regular science. In hieroglyphics was conveyed all the boasted knowledge of their priests. According to the properties which they ascribed to animals, they chose them to be the emblems of moral objects. Thus ingratitude was expressed by a viper; imprudence, by a fly; wisdom, by an ant; knowledge, by an eye; eternity, by a circle which has neither beginning nor end; a man universally shunned, by an eel, which they supposed to be found with no other fish. Sometimes they joined two or more of these characters together, as a serpent with a hawk's head, denoted nature, with God presiding over it.

INA

The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction. Volume 13, No. 352, January 17, 1829

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