Monday, October 7, 2024

The Book of Tooth

In my September 26 post "You'll find them in a lion's mouth," I mentioned that I had been reading The Tooth Book again and again to a child who kept requesting it. The post title is a line from the book, in which them refers to teeth, but I reinterpreted it as referring to books, and specifically to sacred texts.

My next post after that, "The eyeing d'Epstein -- plus Bonifacio Bembo and Optimus Prime," included this short video from the Morgan Library and Museum about the Visconti-Sforza Tarot cards:

My reason for watching the video was to see the 14th-century French casket in which the cards are stored. However, the talking head in the video mentions that Antoine Court de Gébelin "traced the imagery on the Tarot deck back to, of all places, ancient Egypt, specifically to the Book of Thoth."

I don't know how you pronounce Thoth, but the most common pronunciation I've heard rhymes with both, with the initial th pronounced the same as the final one. (One exception would be former Internet atheist Martin Willett, who in his SmiteCam project -- calling down the wrath of various gods in the hope of being smitten live on video -- shook his fist at the sky and shouted, "Thoth! Thquath me like a moth!") Those with more Continental influence may pronounce it as tote or taught, with hard t sounds. What I've never heard, except in this video from the Morgan, is the pronunciation "tawth," with a hard t and the beginning and a fricative th at the end. This anomalous pronunciation obviously brings it very close to the English word tooth.

So I began thinking of The Tooth Book and the Book of Thoth together.

This connection was reinforced when, on September 30, I was at the same school where I'd been reading The Tooth Book and saw that they'd put the phases of the moon up on the wall. This one caught my eye:

The Chinese, which is the same for both the waxing and the waning crescent, is 牙月 -- literally "tooth moon." Thoth is of course a moon god, and is specifically associated with the crescent moon. Most Egyptologists believe that the reason Thoth is depicted with the head of an ibis is that the ibis's beak resembles a crescent moon.

I've also been finding some syncs connecting The Tooth Book with The Nephilim Looked Like Clowns. The very first page of The Tooth Book asks, "Who has teeth?" and answers that "red-headed uncles do." In the rest of the book, the majority of the people in the illustrations are redheads. Throughout The Nephilim Looked Like Clowns, Paul Stobbs emphasizes how bright red hair is associated with the Nephilim. At one point, he discusses the discovery in the Great Serpent Mound of

a six-foot skeleton with two rows of teeth (a genetic marker standard in Nephilim), but it was missing its wisdom teeth. The archaeologists and biologists who examined the strange skull concluded this was an adolescent who had not yet lost their first set of baby teeth.

The Tooth Book talks about how you will grow "two sets [of teeth]: set one, set two." (This gives each person a lifetime total of 52 teeth, the same as the number of ivories on a piano. The skeleton lacked wisdom teeth, though, so it would have had only 48.)

The other day one of the bookcases at my school caught my eye. Lettering on the side of the case, put there by one of my employees of her own initiative some seven years ago, reads, "Grab a bite to read!" This can't really be considered a sync, since it's been there all along, but still, referring to a book as "a bite" fits right in with the Book of Tooth theme.

Another idea that came to mind is that a "tooth book" might be a book that requires "teeth" to eat, that is, a "hard" book. This could be related to the well-known "milk vs. meat" metaphor from the Epistle to the Hebrews.

1 comment:

Ra1119bee said...

William,
And speaking of the Great Serpent Mound...
Recall my comments about The Serpent Mound
here in Ohio in Adams County.

Marshall and I live about 40 miles from The Great Serpent Mound
and we've been there several times after we moved to Wilmington.
Before we lived here, I did not know about the Serpent Mound.
We also live about 15 miles to Fort Ancient.

Of course I knew about the Miamisburg Mound
because growing up, we lived right across the Miamisburg river
from the Miamisburg Mound.

One day ( Aug 2003) Marshall and I went to the Serpent Mound
and lo and behold it just happened to be the same day
that a crop circle was found in a
farmer's field right across the road from the Mound.
The crop circle featured a Vesica Piscis. ( links below)

Marshall and I just happen to be there ( it wasn't planned,
nor did we know when we left for the Mound
that a crop circle was made the night before).
Like I say we've only been to the Serpent Mound like 5
or so times since 1993 when we moved to Wilmington.

The road leading to the entrance to the Mound was full of cars
pulled off the side of the road.
We saw several Sheriff cars and people standing out in the
middle of the field.
The Sheriffs were blocking the people from walking in the field.

The Serpent Mound is also on the powerful Ley Line,
the 40 degree parallel north.

I think I shared information about the Serpent Mound on your blog
last year?

According to some reports about the Serpent Mound and information
found at the visitors center at the Mound itself, copper
was found inside the 'snake', which was puzzling because
the nearest copper source to Adams County Ohio was near the Great
Lakes.

Recall my many comments where I wrote that
I personally think that copper is a conduit to
Time Travel.

I also think that the Mound Builders were a pre-historic race
( perhaps Alien, perhaps the Nephilim? )
not necessarily the Native Americans who have been credited
with the building of the Mounds, which may explain why
a culture would build an effigy to a snake.

Perhaps the snake and its hisssssing sound reminded
the Alien(Neplhilim)(aka the eels ) of El-ectric.

What's that quote?:
“If you want to find the secrets of the universe,
think in terms of energy, frequency and vibration.”
― Nikola Tesla

I also found this info interesting on wiki:
copy and paste:
"The myth of the Mound Builders
Based on the idea that the origins of the mound builders lay with a mysterious ancient people,
various other suggestions were belonging to the more
general genre of Pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contact theories,
specifically involving Vikings, Atlantis, and the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel,
summarized by Feder (2006) under the heading of
"The Myth of a Vanished Race".[26]

Benjamin Smith Barton in his Observations on Some Parts
of Natural History (1787) proposed the theory that the
Mound Builders were associated with "Danes", i.e. with the Norse colonization of North America. In 1797,
Barton reconsidered his position and correctly identified
the mounds as part of indigenous prehistory.

Notable for the association with the Ten Lost Tribes
is the Book of Mormon (1830)."
~~~~

Everything is connected, no?

http://www.cropcircleconnector.com/research/time2008a.html

https://www.artsbma.org/exhibition/lost-realms-of-the-moundbuilders-ancient-native-americans-of-the-south-and-midwest

https://www.earthfiles.com/2005/05/09/mysterious-lights-and-2003-serpent-mound-soybean-formation/

https://archive.org/search?query=subject%3A%22Mound-builders%22

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mound_Builders

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