Animals also serve as astronomical or astrological symbols in the system of hieroglyphic writing as interpreted by Horapollo. Not only does a palm tree represent the year because it puts forth a new branch every new moon,[1501] but the phoenix denotes the magnus annus in the course of which the heavenly bodies complete their revolutions.[1502] The scarab rolls his ball of dung from east to west and gives it the shape of the universe.[1503] He buries it for twenty-eight days conformably to the course of the moon through the zodiac, but he has thirty toes to correspond to the days of the month. As there is no female scarab, so there is no male vulture. The female vulture symbolizes the Egyptian year by spending five days in conceiving by the wind, one hundred and twenty in pregnancy, the same period in rearing its young, and the remaining one hundred and twenty days in preparing itself to repeat the process.[1504] The vulture also visits battlefields seven days in advance and by the direction of its glance indicates which army will be defeated.
The cynocephalus.
The cynocephalus, dog-headed ape, or baboon, was mentioned several times by Pliny, but Horapollo gives more specific information concerning it, chiefly of an astrological character. It is born circumcised and is reared in temples in order to learn from it the exact hour of lunar eclipses, at which times it neither sees nor eats, while the female ex genitalibus sanguinem emittit. The cynocephalus represents the inhabitable world which has seventy-two primitive parts, because the animal dies and is buried piecemeal by the priests during a period of as many days, until at the end of the seventy-second day life has entirely departed from the last remnant of its carcass.[1505] The cynocephalus not only marks the time of eclipses but at the equinoxes makes water twelve times by day and by night, marking off the hours; hence a figure of it is carved by the Egyptians on their water-clocks.[1506] Horapollo associates together the god of the universe and fate and the stars which are five in number, for he believes that five planets carry out the economy of the universe and that they are subject to God’s government.[1507]
Horapollo the cosmopolitan.
Horapollo cannot be given high rank either as a zoologist and astronomer, or a philologer and archaeologist; but at least he was no narrow nationalist and had some respect for history. The Egyptians, he says, “denote a man who has never left his own country by a human figure with the head of an ass, because he neither hears any history nor knows of what is going on abroad.”[1508]
BOOK II. EARLY CHRISTIAN THOUGHT
| Foreword. | |
| Chapter 13. | The Book of Enoch. |
| Chapter 14. | Philo Judaeus. |
| Chapter 15. | The Gnostics. |
| Chapter 16. | The Christian Apocrypha. |
| Chapter 17. | The Recognitions of Clement and Simon Magus. |
| Chapter 18. | The Confession of Cyprian and some similar stories. |
| Chapter 19. | Origen and Celsus. |
| Chapter 20. | Other Christian Discussion of Magic before Augustine. |
| Chapter 21. | Christianity and Natural Science; Basil, Epiphanius, and the Physiologus. |
| Chapter 22. | Augustine on Magic and Astrology. |
| Chapter 23. | The Fusion of Pagan and Christian Thought in the Fourth and Fifth Centuries. |
BOOK II. EARLY CHRISTIAN THOUGHT
FOREWORD
We now turn back chronologically to the point from which we started in our survey of classical science and magic in order to trace the development of Christian thought in regard to the same subjects. How far did Christianity break with ancient science and superstition? To what extent did it borrow from them?