A Comparison of Egyptian Symbols With Those of the Hebrews

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■TiM GRE, tke bean.
f^is GRIM, wandering shepherds.
The name of the bean niJ gre signifies rumination, and indicates that the vegetable was used in feeding the flocks.
As an expression of contempt, the wandering shep- herds were called bean-eaters, because their existence depended on that of their flocks.
The bean gave its name to the wandering tribes, re- ceiving from them the signification of impurity and abomination ; which is again proved by the Hebrew, since fiia gre, the bean, signifies,
...also, to become furious, to make war.
But how could the Hebrews, who were themselves a nomadic people, give a name characteristic of hatred and contempt to the wandering tribes? The difficulty can only be removed by supposing that the Hebrew tongue received its primitive form from a people who were not nomadic. The struggle between civilized peo- ple and the barbarous hordes is more strongly marked in the Irenian traditions than in those of Egypt.
FIG-TKEE.
Horapollo says that the Egyptians represented a man cured of incontinence by a bull tied to a wild fig-tree, because the lascivious fury of the bull is appeased when be is tied to that tree (II.


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