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" Many species of birds and animals were served in
my time," answered Athothis ; " for instance, the hawk,
heron, lapwing, swallow, crane, etc. Yet we Nile dwell-
ers were passionately fond of eggs; and the first
artificial incubators were the sun-heated hatching-ovens of
Egypt. We learned this wisdom from the ostrich, which
deposits its eggs in the warm sand. As articles of diet we
avoided, like modern Hindoos and Jews, the flesh of all
carnivorous and insectivorous birds. You have probably
noted the similarity in the hygienic precepts, formulated
in the book of Leviticus and the Code of Menu. Moses
declared that the eagle, osprey, vulture, kite, raven, owl,
nighthawk, swan, pelican, stork, heron, lapwing, bat, etc.,
were entirely unfit for human food ; and you must admit
that even the Christian masses share in this belief and
prejudice at the present day. As for animals, my people
avoided eating the canidce andfelidce. With us the dog
was typical of Sirius, the barker, whose appearance in
the heavens was an unfailing omen that the annual over-
flow of the Nile had commenced. The cat was sacred to
the moon, and during the first dynasty, as now, repeated
its midnight prayers to the lunar deities. The weasel
was also affected by moonlight, and its liver was said to
contract and expand at certain lunar periods. As for
rats, they were a pest in Egypt, and were hated by every
good Nile dweller, for they were enemies of the Sun-
god Ra. The prejudices derived by Moses from the
Egyptians are the same as those noted among the Hin-
doos, for the ' rules of Menu' assert: 'Let any twice born
man avoid carnivorous birds, and such as live in towns,
and animals with uncloven hoofs, except those allowed
by the Yedas. The sparrow and the plover, the Brah-
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