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  • Aug. 1, 1875
  • Page 29
  • ASSYRIAN DISCOVERIES.
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The Masonic Magazine, Aug. 1, 1875: Page 29

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Page 29

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Assyrian Discoveries.

ASSYRIAN DISCOVERIES .

( Continued from page 15 . ) WHAT interests us most is the vast literature they produced and the religious forms they bequeathed to posterity . To illustrate this , I will only dwell upon the famous series of twelve tabletsof Avhich

, the flood legend forms a part . TAvelve adventures are related there , most probably in connection Avith the passage of the sun through the twelve signs of the Zodiac , of a hero , Avhose name is read in the Chaldean from Izdulbar , meaning " the

fire-brand , " another word for the sun . His deeds remind altogether of the twelve labours of Hercules and of Samson , the JoAvish Hercules . He is represented as a mighty giant and a conqueror of many cities , killing lions and monsters . Having

triumphed over all his enemies , he falls a victim to a woman , Avhose love turns , like that of Delilah or Deianira , into hatred ancl curse . But Firebrand ' s love is the goddess of love herself , named Isbtar , the HebreAV Astarte . Having offered to marry him but to meet his refusal , she heaps misfortune upon misfortune on him . His wise counsel ancl interpreter of dreams ,

Heabani , whom he had taken , like Joseph , from a dark , perilous cave to his court , Avas taken from his side , and at last a disease befell him , too , from Avhich nobody could cure him , except the Avise Hasisadra , AVIIO had escaped the flood , and lived on

the isle of the blessed . To him he then journeyed along , passing a country enwrapped in dark clouds , Avhere giants stood , like Atlas , guarding the rising sun , "their crown at the lattice of Heaven , their feet under hell . " Traversing thishe

, arrived at a garden , like tbe Western Land of the Hercules legend , full of trees glittering with gold and jeAvels , there to meet Hasisadra , the man * vho had survived the flood . From him he learns the story of the flood , told much in the same Avay as

in the Bible . Hasisadra , too , offered a sacrifice to the gods , who had made him build a shi p to save his life therein . Plaving told the story of the flood , and how he Avas carried up into the company of the gods , ^ Hasisadra reveals him the secret of the life-giving waterand made him bathe

, in the lake , when "his disease in the Avater to beaut y turned . " Having reached

his home again , he laments the loss of his friend Heabani , Avho finds no rest in the grave , and is finally , like Henoch , of the Bible , transferred into Heaven by tbe aid of Ilea , the god of the ocean and infernal regions , after having offered the folloAving prayer :

Return me , he says to his OAvn ghost , from hell the land of doom , From the house of the departed , the seat of the god of Hell , From the house within Avhich there is no

exit , From the place Avherein they long for light , But light is never seen , in darkness tbey chvell , The place Avhere dust is their nourishment , ancl their food mud .

To the place of seers I will enter , Where they are Avearing croAvns , who from clays of old , ruled the earth , To whom the gods Ann ( of Heaven ) , and Bel ( of earth ) have given renowned names .

A place Avhere water is abundant draAvn from perennial springs . To the place of seers I Avill enter , To the place of bards and great men , To the place of interpreters of the Avisdom of the great gods .

Thus ends these remarkable legends . But their value lies not in the direction of confirming , but of throwing neAV light

on , the Biblical legends . Both "Firebrand ' s" and " Hasisadra ' s ark " are often mentioned on the inscriptions , ancl seem to point to tbe same arks , on which Osiris , the Egyptian god ( Hesiri ) , rides Avhile descending into the nether Avorld , Avhere hell ancl Heaven meet . But while the ark

of Noah is still a mere chest , the ark of the Chaldean legend is a regular ship , launched into the sea and navigated by boatmen . The god who told Hasisadra to build a ship , is Ilea , the god of the ocean , the same who calmed the anger of Bel , the

prince of the gods , ancl prevailed upon him not to destroy men any more by a deluge , there having been during six clays and seven nights ram which swept away all life from earth . The Avhole flood legend , however , is merely an episode , inserted

into the grand epopee of "Firebrand . " But Firebrand , the ruler of Babylon , with her four cities united into one , turns out

“The Masonic Magazine: 1875-08-01, Page 29” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01081875/page/29/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
H.R.H. THE ' PRINCE OF WALES Article 1
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 2
THE "EDINBURGH REVIEW" AND FREEMASONRY. Article 3
HOMERIC TROY. Article 5
THE MASON'S DAUGHTER. Article 8
DRAGONI'S DAUGHTER. Article 9
Review. Article 11
THE PALACE OF THE QUEEN OF SHEBA. Article 13
MOZART AS A FREEMASON. Article 15
Untitled Ad 18
HUBERT AND IDA; A LEGEND OF S. SWITHIN'S EVE. Article 22
DR. DASSIGNY'S ENQUIRY. Article 24
MR. MUGGINS' LOVE STORY. Article 27
ASSYRIAN DISCOVERIES. Article 29
AN ORIGINAL DISSERTATION ON PUBLIC SPEAKING. Article 31
LEAVING SCHOOL. Article 34
THE MINUTE BOOK OF THE LODGE OF INDUSTRY, GATESHEAD. Article 34
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 38
A CLOSE, HARD MAN. Article 42
Chippings. Article 42
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Assyrian Discoveries.

ASSYRIAN DISCOVERIES .

( Continued from page 15 . ) WHAT interests us most is the vast literature they produced and the religious forms they bequeathed to posterity . To illustrate this , I will only dwell upon the famous series of twelve tabletsof Avhich

, the flood legend forms a part . TAvelve adventures are related there , most probably in connection Avith the passage of the sun through the twelve signs of the Zodiac , of a hero , Avhose name is read in the Chaldean from Izdulbar , meaning " the

fire-brand , " another word for the sun . His deeds remind altogether of the twelve labours of Hercules and of Samson , the JoAvish Hercules . He is represented as a mighty giant and a conqueror of many cities , killing lions and monsters . Having

triumphed over all his enemies , he falls a victim to a woman , Avhose love turns , like that of Delilah or Deianira , into hatred ancl curse . But Firebrand ' s love is the goddess of love herself , named Isbtar , the HebreAV Astarte . Having offered to marry him but to meet his refusal , she heaps misfortune upon misfortune on him . His wise counsel ancl interpreter of dreams ,

Heabani , whom he had taken , like Joseph , from a dark , perilous cave to his court , Avas taken from his side , and at last a disease befell him , too , from Avhich nobody could cure him , except the Avise Hasisadra , AVIIO had escaped the flood , and lived on

the isle of the blessed . To him he then journeyed along , passing a country enwrapped in dark clouds , Avhere giants stood , like Atlas , guarding the rising sun , "their crown at the lattice of Heaven , their feet under hell . " Traversing thishe

, arrived at a garden , like tbe Western Land of the Hercules legend , full of trees glittering with gold and jeAvels , there to meet Hasisadra , the man * vho had survived the flood . From him he learns the story of the flood , told much in the same Avay as

in the Bible . Hasisadra , too , offered a sacrifice to the gods , who had made him build a shi p to save his life therein . Plaving told the story of the flood , and how he Avas carried up into the company of the gods , ^ Hasisadra reveals him the secret of the life-giving waterand made him bathe

, in the lake , when "his disease in the Avater to beaut y turned . " Having reached

his home again , he laments the loss of his friend Heabani , Avho finds no rest in the grave , and is finally , like Henoch , of the Bible , transferred into Heaven by tbe aid of Ilea , the god of the ocean and infernal regions , after having offered the folloAving prayer :

Return me , he says to his OAvn ghost , from hell the land of doom , From the house of the departed , the seat of the god of Hell , From the house within Avhich there is no

exit , From the place Avherein they long for light , But light is never seen , in darkness tbey chvell , The place Avhere dust is their nourishment , ancl their food mud .

To the place of seers I will enter , Where they are Avearing croAvns , who from clays of old , ruled the earth , To whom the gods Ann ( of Heaven ) , and Bel ( of earth ) have given renowned names .

A place Avhere water is abundant draAvn from perennial springs . To the place of seers I Avill enter , To the place of bards and great men , To the place of interpreters of the Avisdom of the great gods .

Thus ends these remarkable legends . But their value lies not in the direction of confirming , but of throwing neAV light

on , the Biblical legends . Both "Firebrand ' s" and " Hasisadra ' s ark " are often mentioned on the inscriptions , ancl seem to point to tbe same arks , on which Osiris , the Egyptian god ( Hesiri ) , rides Avhile descending into the nether Avorld , Avhere hell ancl Heaven meet . But while the ark

of Noah is still a mere chest , the ark of the Chaldean legend is a regular ship , launched into the sea and navigated by boatmen . The god who told Hasisadra to build a ship , is Ilea , the god of the ocean , the same who calmed the anger of Bel , the

prince of the gods , ancl prevailed upon him not to destroy men any more by a deluge , there having been during six clays and seven nights ram which swept away all life from earth . The Avhole flood legend , however , is merely an episode , inserted

into the grand epopee of "Firebrand . " But Firebrand , the ruler of Babylon , with her four cities united into one , turns out

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