377 
their return to the God of Shem and of Abraham and of Moses, 
and of the new covenant in Christ. For Jehovah shall be known 
to Egypt, and the Egyptians shall know Jehovah in that day : 
they shall return even to Jehovah, and He shall be entreated of 
them and shall heal them. In that day shall Israel be the 
third with Egypt and with Assyria, even a blessing in the midst 
of the earth, whom Jehovah of Hosts shall bless, saying, Blessed 
be Egypt, my people, and Assyria the work of my hands, and 
Israel mine inheritance ! 
Horus shall no longer boast of the multitude of his followers ; 
Osiris and Isis shall be remembered only as things of the past ; 
Amon shall relapse into mystery; and “he who blesseth him- 
self in the earth shall bless himself in the God of Truth.” “ For 
behold I create new heavens and a new earth ; and the former 
shall not be remembered, nor come into mind” (Is. lxv. 16, 17). 
APPENDICES. 
(A.) 
Mummy from Gournou, examined by A.B. Granville, M.D., F.R.S., &c. 
Read April 14, 1825, before the Royal Society. 
[Extract.] 
“ Now we find, on comparing the principal of these dimensions with those 
of the Venus de Medicis . . . that the difference between them is so slight as 
not to deserve notice. Our mummy is that of a person rather taller. The 
celebrated Medicean statue, which stands as the representative of a perfect 
beauty, is 5 feet in height, . . . and the relative admeasurements of the arm, 
fore-arm, and hand in each are precisely similar. 
“ But in a female skeleton it is the pelvis that presents the most striking 
difference in different races. Nothing, for instance, can be further removed 
from the symmetrical form, and from the dimensions of the pelvis in the 
Caucasian or European race, than the same part in the negro or Ethiopian 
race. . . . 
“ When subjected to this comparative test, the pelvis of our female mummy 
will be found to come nearer, to the beau ideal of the Caucasian structure 
than does that of women in general, and to equal in depth, amplitude, and 
rotundity of outline the Circassian form. . . . 
“What has just been observed of the skeleton generally, and of the pelvis 
in particular, applies with equal force to the form and dimensions of the 
head. So far from having any trait of Ethiopian character in it, this part of 
the mummy exhibits a formation in no way differing from the European. 
“On looking at Plate xxi., which represents with scrupulous accuracy the 
