822 
2 The dancer of Egyptian theology was not in its innate 
• if® w its extremely speculative character, its endless 
bolists eventually do, obscured the antitypes rney 
tfpify and overloaded their i-Pe^ c %yg^ Ca "LsferrLs ' 
SS- 
faith was reserved for th e hier first associated as 
3. Foremost among all the natural ob J ec “ “ e t fi e 
representatives, and then as hypostases of the De ty, 
sun and the heavenly bodies j the sun “Chefer- and m 
(fig. 1), the moon as Isis, the heavens as Neith, and upo 
Fig. 1, Horus-Ra, wearing the solar disk and ur*us. (Arundale 
a , -a mm« ^^^ssaas: 
I.™ .m«, ilKLe f« E to.tr. 
of beasts, birds, and repti e . , j on wa y to 
others for their utility; then a spirit of fear! led 
- -■» *• 
