And this must be said of other ancient nations also. The Egyptians made careful observations, especially of the heliacal risings of different stars, by means of which they determined the length of the year, as we have already mentioned, and oriented their temples and pyramids. They worshipped the sun in all his aspects, and their astrology so much resembles the Babylonian that it is believed to have been derived from it. The Babylonians seem to have been more interested in the planets than any other nation of antiquity, but they were known also in other countries. The Chinese recorded comets, and all races were greatly interested in eclipses, which they were able to predict with some accuracy, having discovered that they occur in cycles. Yet we find no more rational attempt to explain these phenomena than the Hindu legend of a great dragon that attacks the sun, or the Egyptian story of a sow that swallows the moon; and their cosmogonies can only be regarded as poetical descriptions or survivals of early childlike notions of the universe.
The Hindu world resting on the back of an elephant, and that on a tortoise, is no doubt but an allegory. The Egyptians pictured the earth as a great parallelogram, long from north to south but narrow from east to west, like their own land, with the sky over it, upheld by huge pillars or lofty mountains. The stars were set in this domed lid of the world, but sun, moon, and planets were floating each in its own boat on a great celestial river which ran just below the summits of the mountains, and whose course was hidden towards the north. The bark of the sun came nearer to Egypt in the summer, because at that time the celestial river overflowed its usual bank, like the Nile. The red Doshiri was said to sail backwards, referring no doubt to the retrograde movement of Mars.
In Eridu, one of the oldest cities of southern Babylonia, on the Persian Gulf, the great abyss of the ocean was looked upon as the origin of all things, and it was believed that it encircled the earth like a great river. Later on, we find the world described as a great mountain, resting on the watery deep, and under the mountain is the abode of the dead. It is entered from the west, which surely was suggested by the setting of the heavenly bodies in the west. The vaulted sky above the earth has divisions: the rim of the lowest part rests upon the supporting watery deep; above it are the upper waters (the source of rain); and above this again is the dwelling-place of the celestials. The sun issues forth each morning from a door in the upper heaven, or from the mount of sunrise, and enters another heavenly door, or the sunset mountain, at night.
The similarity to these Babylonian ideas of the Hebrew “firmament,” the “waters above the firmament,” and the “of the great deep,” in the book of Genesis,[23] and Ezekiel’s “Sheol” in “the nether parts of the earth,”[24] has often been noted.
[To face p. 46.
The Boat of the Sun travelling over the sky.
From an ancient Egyptian papyrus.
The recumbent figure covered with leaves symbolizes the earth; the figure leaning over Earth, covered with stars, is the sky; the boat of the rising sun and of the setting sun floats over it. The central figure represents Maon, the Divine Intelligence which preserves the order of the universe.
(Reproduced from Flammarion’s ‘Astronomical Myths,’ by permission of Messrs. Macmillan & Co.)