วันเสาร์ที่ 10 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2554

Mystical Unicorn Quotations


Mystical Unicorn Quotations


Literary and other references about unicorns collected from various sources. I'm always on the lookout for more quotations about unicorns, so if you find any references not already included here, feel free to send them to me and I'll add them to these pages.
Have been amazed by the far-ranging variety of sources which make reference to this mythical and mystical being. Although there is no verifiable evidence that unicorns have ever existed, they've managed to find an unshakeable place in human art, thoughts and writings throughout the ages.

Athena - Guardian Of All Fantasy Creatures
Athena - Guardian Of All Fantasy Creatures
Adopted From Amanda's Castle
 
 
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There are in India certain wild asses which are so large as horses, and larger. Their bodies are white, their heads dark red, and their eyes dark blue. They have a horn on the forehead which is about a foot and a half in length. The dust filed from this horn is administered in a potion as a protection against deadly drugs. The base of this horn, for some two hands'-breadth above the brow, is pure white, the upper part is sharp and of a vivid crimson, and the remainder or middle portion, is black. The animal is exceedingly swift and powerful, so that no creature, neither the horse nor any other, can overtake it.
 --- Ctesias. Greek physician and historian, Indica (c. 400 BC)
 
Like a lion, without fear of the howling pack,
Like a gust of wind, ne'er trapped in a snare,
Like a lotus blossom, ne'er sprinkled by water;
Let me, like a unicorn, in solitude roam.
 --- Hymn of Buddha
 
Moonlight - By Marilyn Alice Boyle
In the midnight forest the dark oak trees are still under the stars. The pale wildflowers in the clearing have furled their petals for the night. Suddenly, he appears, a milk-white creature with the proud form of a horse. You may not notice his cloven hoofs or curling beard, but you see the curved neck, the silver mane, the graceful tail. Then he moves his head, and the moonlight runs like sea water along the pearly spiral of his horn. There is no sound, but at the next heart-beat the clearing is once again empty of all but the night.
--- Georgess McHargue, The Beasts of Never (1968)
 
Should the last of the gentle unicorns also perish, they will continue to haunt our dreams and those of our children, who will not forgive us for letting such beauty disappear from the earth.
--- Paul and Karin Johnsgard, Dragons and Unicorns: A Natural History
 
Medieval Majesty - By Unknown Artist
The unicorn holds many secrets:  the secrets of jungles and moonlight, the secrets which lie hidden at the roots of trees and conceal themselves in coral labyrinths beneath the ocean. I look deep into its amber eyes and see my own reflection, but altered in line and light, as if in a dream.
--- Josephine Bradley, In Pursuit of the Unicorn (1980)
 
...I can o'ersway him; for he loves to hear
That unicorns may be betray'd with trees,
And bears with glasses, elephants with holes,
Lions with toils and men with flatterers;...
--- William Shakespeare, Julius Caesar

Unicorn On Cliff - By Michael Hague
Toward noon we spotted an animal gazing down at us from a sterile mountain peak of red and black rocks... Our guide stated that the animal must certainly be a unicorn, and he pointed out to us the single horn which jutted from its forehead. With great caution we gazed back at this most noble creature, regretting it was no closer for us to examine still more minutely.
 --- Friar Faber, 1438
 
In the Province of Argaus, has been seen the Unicorn, that Beast so much talk'd of, and so little known.
 
--- Samuel Johnson (Translator); A Voyage to Abyssinia, Father Lobo (1735)
 
Now I will believe that there are unicorns, . . .
 --- William Shakespeare, The Tempest (1612)
 
Unicorn Of The Fields - By Unknown Artist
Water flowers curve back their nighttime petals, owls spread dream wings in the starlight, flamingos arch their gentle necks and dip their heads to meet silver reflections in the stream. The moon is spilled out of the sky in waterfalls of light; a mist of scented jasmine hangs heavy in the air. This is the night garden of the unicorn. Here he pastures among drowsy ferns and humming insects, caressed by spider web dreams, brushed by the wings of midnight butterflies.
--- Josephine Bradley, A Small Book of Unicorns
 
GREAT account and much profit is made of Unicorns horn, at least of that which beareth the name thereof; wherein notwithstanding, many I perceive suspect an Imposture, and some conceive there is no such Animal extant. Herein therefore to draw up our determinations; beside the severall places of Scripture mentioning this Animal (which some may well contend to be only meant of the Rhinoceros) we are so far from denying there is any Unicorn at all, that we affirm there are many kinds thereof. In the number of Quadrupedes, we will concede no less then five; that is, the Indian Ox, the Indian Ass, the Rhinoceros, the Oryx, and that which is more eminently termed Monoceros, or Unicornis. Some in the list of fishes; as that described by Olaus, Albertus and others: and some Unicorns we will allow even among Insects; as those four kinds of nasicornous Beetles described by Muffetus.

Secondly, Although we concede there be many Unicorns, yet are we still to seek; for whereunto to affix this Horn in question...
--- Sir Thomas Browne,  Pseudodoxia Epidemica: or, enquiries into very many received tenets and commonly presumed truths (1646; 6th ed., 1672)
 
She's The Last Unicorn - By Unknown Artist
Then what is magic for?  What use is wizardry if it cannot save a unicorn?
--- Peter S. Beagle, The Last Unicorn (1968)
 
Penetrating so many secrets, we cease to believe in the unknowable.
But there it sits nevertheless, calmly licking its chops.
 --- H L. Mencken, American essayist
 
The Unicorn's Fury - By Unknown Artist
They say that it is impossible to capture this animal alive.
 --- Pliny the Elder, philosopher (1st Century)
 
God himself must needs be traduced, if there is no unicorn in the world.
 --- Edward Topell,  Historie of Four-Footed Beasties (17th Century)
 
The New Arrival - By Unknown Artist
In the heart of the forest a unicorn is born. The trees hold gentle branches around it, the forest pools guard its secret; only the stars can see. Among the silent spaces of the trees it grows protected, nurtured . . .
--- Josephine Bradley, In Pursuit of the Unicorn (1980)

The Unycorn is so stronge that he is not taken with myghte of hunter. But men that wryte of kynde of thinges meane that a mayde is sette there he shall come: And she openyth her lappe and the Unycorn layeth thereon his heed, and levyth all his fyerinesse & slepyth in that wyse. . .
--- John of Trevisa, trans. Bartholomaeus Anglicus, De Proprietatibus Rerum
 
The hunter stood beside me
     Who blew the mighty horn;
I saw that he was hunting
     The gentle unicorn
But the unicorn is noble,
     He knows his gentle birth
He knows that God has chosen him
     Above all beasts on earth.
Therese and the Unicorn - By Linda Garland
The unicorn is noble;
     He keeps him safe and high
Upon a narrow path and steep
     Climbing to the sky;
And there no man can take him
     He scorns the hunter's dart
And only a virgin's magic power
     Shall tame his haughty heart.
What would be now the state of us
But for his Unicorn,
And what would be the fate of us,
Poor sinners, lost, forlorn?
Oh, may He lead us on and up,
Unworthy though we be,
Into His Father's kingdom,
To dwell eternally!
--- Volksleid (Popular German Folk Song)
 
The unicorn and I are one;
He also pauses in amaze
Before some maiden's magic gaze,
And, while he wonders, is undone.
--- Thibaut IV, Count of Champagne (1201-1253)
 
By his artless trust betrayed,
In the trap her bosom made,
Such is the Unicorn's arrest!
 --- From an ancient missal at Neuhaussen, Germany
 
The Maiden's Call - By Unknown Artist
Hunters can catch the unicorn only by placing a young virgin in his haunts. No sooner does he see the damsel than he runs towards her, and lies down at her feet, and so suffers himself to be captured by the hunters.
 --- Clerc de Normandie,  Le Bestiaire Divin de Guillame (13th Century)
 
We caught the beast called Unicorn
That knows and loves a maiden best
And falls asleep upon her breast.
---- Wolfram Von Eschenbach (c. 1170-c. 1220), Parzifal (early 13th Century)
 
The Unicorn Leaps The Stream - Tapestry Detail
And always, at the rising of the sun,
About the wilds they hunt with spear and horn,
On spleenful unicorn.
--- John Keats (1795-1821), Endymion (1818)
 
Men lead a virgin maiden to the place where he most resorts and they leave her in the forest alone. As soon as the unicorn sees her, he springs into her lap and embraces her.
--- Physiologus (9th Century)
 
The wise man says these animals
Lust greatly after pretty girls.
This way to catch them is the best,
A youth in women's clothes is dressed
And then with dainty steps he flaunts
About the Unicorn's bright haunts.
For when this creature spies a maid
Straight in her lap he lays his head.
The huntsman, doffing his disguise,
Saws off the horn and wins the prize.
--- 16th Century German Verse
 
Rose Unicorn - By Unknown Artist
The maiden is sent to seek out the unicorn. Smooth and sudden as a flight of birds she enters the maze of dappled shadow and he comes to her, gentle as a rose, caught in her hair, woven into the web of her mind multiplying softly within her.
--- Josephine Bradley, In Pursuit of the Unicorn (1980)

                                           credit: http://www.unicornlady.net/quotes/quotes.html

History of behemoth


Behemoth: Largest And Strongest Land Animal In Man’s World!

eaudrey.com
What is the mysterious animal called “behemoth” in Job 40:15-24? Could this terrible beast be the hippopotamus we know today, as some commentators assume? Or some other creature?
You’ll be shocked when you see the scientific confirmation of what has been in God’s Word for over 3500 years!
In 1911 a British scientist was astounded when he found a few HUGE bones from what appeared to be an enormous type of rhinoceros. The bones were of such GIANT size they even dwarfed an elephant’s bones! He named the animal “Baluchitherium” (ba loo” chithee’ ri um).
Eleven years later, another scientist this time an American, was elated when he found three partial skeletons of “Baluchitherium”. The skeletal remains were hurried to New York where they were assembled. The results were nothing short of amazing!
The huge creature was confirmed to be an extinct, gigantic, apparently hornless rhinoceros! — a creature which fits the picture given of the Biblical “behemoth” mentioned in Job! Let us notice the startling comparison between the now-extinct “Baluchitherium” and the enigmatic creature of Job 40:15-24 which has perplexed Biblical scholars for ages.
Begin with Job 40:15: “Behold now behemoth, which I made with thee: he eateth grass like an ox.” What does this tell us?
First, God made a distinct creation of plants, including grass, and animals for the benefit and pleasure of man. The warm-blooded animals and the grasses and herbs were FIRST made when man was made — about 6000 years ago (Gen. 1:24-25). Evolutionists have always been puzzled at the fact that this kind of vegetation appeared so late in geological history.
Now notice again Job 40:15: “Behold now behemoth, which I made with thee ….” Here is an animal God made when man was made. Behemoth did not exist in the pre-Adamic world which was filled with giant dinosaurs and other types of strange creatures. Behemoth was an unique animal created with man — and for a purpose, as we shall see later!
Continuing in Job 40:15: “… he {behemoth} eateth grass as an ox.” Grass, remember, did NOT exist on the earth before the beginning of man’s world (Genesis 1:11-12).
The Bible therefore makes it clear from the very beginning of its description of behemoth that behemoth could be only an animal God created with man — an animal which ate grass! This rules out the possibility that behemoth could have been from the pre-Adamic world.
Now notice a most important part of the description of this exciting animal: “He is the chief of the ways of God: He {alone} that made him can make his sword to approach unto him” (Job 40:19).
This plain statement from the Bible rules out the guesses of men that behemoth is the hippopotamus, the elephant, or other creatures men have taken into captivity or killed. God Himself plainly tells us that only He Himself could conquer this animal!
Because behemoth was the “chief of the ways of God,” it is obvious that it was the largest and strongest land animal God made for man’s world. The scientific discovery of fossil “Baluchitherium” fits all these characteristics, as well as the other characteristics of this unique animal as described in Job 40:15-24.
Notice the amazing confirmation that the giant rhinoceros “Baluchitherium” was “the chief of the ways of God.” It’s described in a modern book on fossil animals: “In an age when a hippopotamus is big and the elephant a giant, “Baluchitherium” seems almost unreal. His head was about 5 feet long, yet it was absurdly small upon his gigantic body, which stood 18 feet high at the shoulder and was very deep” (“The Fossil Book”, Fenton, page 406).
Another author reveals the fact that “Baluchitherium” was “at least 25 feet long” (“Historical Geology”, Dunbar page 413).
“It was the largest of all land animals” (“Time, Life, and Man”, Stirton, page 325).
Not only was it the largest of all known land mammals, but “very probably, like the huge sauropod dinosaurs among the reptiles, it represents about the maximum size to which a land living mammal can develop” (“The Illustrated Library of the Natural Sciences”, article “Giants of the Past,” by Colbert, Vol. II, page 1192).
His great legs, longer than those of elephants and living rhinoceroses, also gave him the record for speed among both of these groups, living or extinct” (“The Wonder Books”, Janssen & Cole, page 324).
But, there is yet more proof!
Notice again the inspired Biblical account of “behemoth.” Job 40:18 informs us: “His bones are as strong pieces of brass; his bones are like bars of iron.” These facts are upheld by the findings of “Baluchitherium”: “‘Baluchitherium’, as it was called, had huge postlike limbs …” (“Time, Life, and Man”, Stirton, page 325).
www.answersingenesis.org
His truly large tail is aptly described “like a cedar” (Job 40:17). The Biblical description of a large tail would also disprove the erroneous ideas of some Bible scholars that behemoth is an elephant or a hippopotamus (as some modern Bible versions translate the original Hebrew word for “behemoth” in Job 40:15). The hippopotamus has only a short tail — about a foot long. The elephant has a weak, slender hog-like tail. Neither has a tail to fit the description of behemoth as given in the book of Job. “Baluchitherium”, with a thicker tail about eight feet long, is the only known giant animal that approaches the description.
Even the habitat of the rhinoceros family — determined by observing the modern rhinoceros — fits the description of behemoth’s surroundings. Compare the following description from “The Encyclopaedia Britannica” with the Bible’s account in Job 40:15-24.
“{Rhinoceroses} feed on herbage, shrubs and leaves of trees, and like so many large animals which inhabit hot countries, sleep the greater part of the day, and are most active in the cool of the evening or even during the night. Some are found in more or less open plains, while others inhabit swampy districts” (article “Rhinoceros,” Vol. 23, p. 243, 11th edition).
Check any encyclopaedia for more information about the habits and habitats of modern-day rhinoceroses and you will see how the now-extinct giant kind of rhinoceros known as “Baluchitherium” aptly fits all the characteristics mentioned in Job 40:15-24!
Why did God make this unique animal? Why did God use it as a specific lesson to learn! In his self-righteousness Job had to be brought low (Job 32:1). He had to be shown he was not so great after all!
God used this largest of all land mammals to hammer home the fact that Job really wasn’t so supreme after all! How do you think weak Job felt when he contemplated this animal? How would YOU feel if suddenly this 18-foot-high monster began to charge at you? Wouldn’t you feel might small? Of course you would!
God had created this monster to humble those like Job who let personal achievements swell their vanity. No wonder Job was forced to admit: “Wherefore I abhor myself, and repent in dust and ashes” (Job 42:6).
God put this account in the Bible for a reason! God wants you to realize your insignificance! That’s the real lesson for us today!


credit: http://appleofgodseye.wordpress.com/2011/02/22/behemoth-largest-and-strongest-land-animal-in-mans-world/

วันอังคารที่ 23 สิงหาคม พ.ศ. 2554

TUTANKHAMUN'S CURSE

TUTANKHAMUN'S CURSE
Tut's MaskWhen Lord Carnarvon died on 5 April 1923, seven weeks after the official opening of pharaoh Tutankhamun's burial chamber, rumours were rife about a curse.  News of Tutankhamun's tomb and its discoverers had sent the world's media into a frenzy and the death of Lord Carnarvon added another twist for eager journalists.
All sorts of links were found. The lights of Cairo were said to have gone out at the moment of his death (not an uncommon occurrence back then), while back at Carnarvon's English estate his dog, Susie, was supposed to have howled and died at the same time.
Carnarvon's death came just a couple of weeks after a public warning by novelist Mari Corelli that there would be dire consequences for anyone who entered the sealed tomb.  The media and public lapped it up.  Conan Doyle, the creator of Sherlock Holmes and a believer in the occult, announced that Carnarvon's death could have been the result of a "Pharaoh's curse".
One newspaper even printed a curse supposed to have been written in hieroglyphs at the entrance of the tomb, the translation being:
"They who enter this sacred tomb shall swift be visited by wings of death."
However, no inscribed curse was found.
One inscription, found on the Anubis shrine (a jackal on a pedestal shown here) in the tomb's so-called Treasury, did say:Anubis shrine
"It is I who hinder the sand from choking the secret chamber. I am for the protection of the deceased."
However, a reporter went on to add his own words to the reported inscription:
"and I will kill all those who cross this threshold into the sacred precincts of the Royal King who lives forever."
Reporting of the curse was further fuelled by more deaths, many with very stretched associations to Tutankhamun. Five months after Carnarvon died, his younger brother died suddenly.
Closer to the tomb, another "casualty" was the pet canary of the tomb's discoverer, Howard Carter. The bird was swallowed by a cobra on the day the tomb was opened.  This was interpreted as retribution for violation of the tomb, particularly as a cobra was depicted on the brow of the pharaoh from where it would spit fire at the king's enemies.
According to one list, of the 26 individuals present at the official opening of the tomb, six had died within a decade. In reality, many of the key individuals associated with the discovery and work on the tomb lived to a ripe old age.
Even when some of the treasures of Tutankhamun went on tour overseas in the 1970s, some people were still of the belief that the curse might be at work. One example was from San Francisco where a policeman guarding Tutankhamun's gold funerary mask tried to claim compensation for a mild stroke based on the effect of the curse. The judge dismissed the claim.
Here is a list of some of the major players involved with the tomb and their fates.
Lord Carnarvon:
Carnarvon had been in poor health for over 20 years following a motoring accident in Germany. Less than two weeks after the official opening of the burial chamber, Carnarvon received a mosquito bite which became infected after he cut it while shaving. Carnarvon fell ill and, with his resistance lowered, came down with pneumonia and eventually passed away at the age of 57.
Howard Carter:
As discoverer of the tomb, Carter should have been Number 1 on the curse's "hit list", but he survived until March 1939, just short of his 65th birthday and nearly 17 years after entering the tomb - about a decade of which was spent working in the tomb itself.
Lady Evelyn Herbert:
Lady Evelyn, Lord Carnarvon's daughter and one of the first into the tomb, died in 1980 at the age of about 79.
Harry Burton:
Burton was the photographer loaned to Carter by New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art to document the work done in Tutankhamun's tomb. Many of the magnificent black & white photographs of the time were taken by Burton who died in 1940.
Alan Gardiner:
Gardiner studied the tomb's inscriptions and was still very active working on Egyptian grammar for many decades until his death in 1963.
Dr D. E. Derry:
Derry carried out the original autopsy on Tutankhamun's mummy. If anyone should have been cursed along with Carter, it probably should have been Derry, but he didn't die until 1969.


credit: http://homepage.powerup.com.au/~ancient/curse.htm