236 TRANS. ST. LOUIS ACAD. SCIENCE. 



G. ^E. 73, 328), we get the word kcot, formare. G. brings out 

 "(thy majesty) spoke (to me)." 



234 is notorionsly f'^N (ish), c^uj, the man, and not " I," as G. 

 imagined. 



235. Remembering that the door-bar, cfic, expresses sb^ sp 

 {114), and Ihe feet, tootc, t (141 ; G..^^. pp. 56, 207), the word 

 c6.nT, eligere, is easily made out, which with the preposition e 

 (ad) gives ad electionem, especially. G. elicits " go," and he 

 alone knows in what dictionary asi^ as Ch. spells it, signifies "go." 



236. As the crying mouth, ;65wpiv, expressed kl^ kr (PI. ii. i ; 

 Q.M. 48, 143), the word -^-^ (yalak), a. -|i?j (galak), the Coptic 

 <3'A.'\o2t, thigh, leg, from the root ii?J (galak), a'i\<V.OR, ire, comes 

 out. G. invents the word "thou," expressed by the letters rk. 



237. In consequence of the pullet being called ^atioti (S3), 

 the word ItzI (ad, secundum) naturally results. G. had to spell 

 " to." The same group very often signifies i-rA on the Tanis St. 



238. kr^ y-uptoz^ as we have seen (142), and not at all the ab- 

 breviated word suten, as Ch. and G. fancied. 



239. 240. The child being called v.Qpoz, i^j (gur), ^ij (gul), 

 G. yE. 38, 44, it is natural that it frequently stands instead oi kr, 

 and expresses the same letters in different words. See PI. xxxii. 

 442, b. For example, the child signifies kr in Tivac^po, T.S. xxiii.; 

 in 2fiLip, T.S. ix.; ^e.peo, T.S. ix.; in 2s.epe, T.S. xvii.; ^p<v, Nnp (kara). 

 T.S. xxxiv. ; *e.pc., T.S. xxxiv. xxxiii. ; Dieppe, T. B. iv. 34, xii. 45, viii. 

 54; asLHp, T. S. xviii. ; rx.epe, xxxvi. ; -mtpoz, P.D. i. ; *pe, T.S. v.. 

 -ipj?. T.S. viii., etc. etc. Hence the child followed by nfi expresses 

 krrm, i.e. the Doric xoipavoz^ the corrupted rupavvoq, originally 

 "dominus, princeps," and in later times " a tyrant." The Greek 

 xbpwjvoc, obviously originated from the Egyptian iio-rpo. king, 

 and nHiui, elatus ; many Greek words, as Herodotus witnesses, 

 having originated in Egypt. Moreover, even the Scholiast ad 

 Soph. (Ed. Tyr. reports that xupavvoz was first introduced in 

 the age of Archilochus. See Schneider's Greek Lex. s. v. The 

 following map of a city, or tellus^ furnishes accordingly the words 

 "the king autocrat of the world." Poor G., like Brugsch and all 

 other blind followers of Ch., imagining the map of a city to sig- 

 nify ideologically a city, and the child to express s, translates, 

 the city of " Suten-Senen," a place mentioned by no ancient or 

 modern author. Since G., however, has seen with his own eyes 

 that " Suten-Senen" was ancient " Heracleopolis," we have to 



