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Osiris, the god of the dead, is an image of renewal, a seed waiting
to erupt into life. His death at the hands of his brother, Set, the god
of destruction---who hacked him into 14 pieces---and his regeneration through
the hands of his wife, the goddess Isis, illuminates the spiritual path
from unconsciousness to enlightenment. In psychological terms, Osiris represents
the recollection of the diverse aspects of oneself into a unified whole.
These issues are as pertinent today as they were when these texts were
compiled millennia ago from pyramid walls and coffin inscriptions. The
"Book of Coming Forth by Day," as it was called in ancient Egypt, is lovingly
rerendered here by Normandi Ellis in her celebrated 1988 translation of
a work that took over 4,000 years to evolve. This is a beautifully poetic
tome extrapolated from hieroglyphics--the translator attempts to revive
the sense of literature and song lost in literal translations and through
devolution to phonetic hieratics (simplified hieroglyphs that represent
sound units). Words such as these melt time, "Mine is a heart of carnelian,
crimson as murder on a holy day--I am I. I will what I will. Mine is a
heart of carnelian, blood red as the crest of a phoenix." --P. Randall
Cohan
Book Description
is one of the oldest and greatest classics of Western spirituality.
Until now the available translations have treated these writings as historical
curiosities with little relevance to our contemporary situation. This new
translation made from the hieroglyphs approaches this text as a profound
spiritual document capable of speaking to us today. |