More Egyptian Proverbs
- Man, know yourself and you shalt know the gods.
- Judge by cause, not by effect.
- The only active force that arises out of possession is fear of losing the object of possession.
- Social good is what brings peace to family and society.
- We mustn’t confuse mastery with mimicry, knowledge with superstitious ignorance.
- Our senses serve to affirm, not to know.
- People bring about their own undoing through their tongues.
- The first thing necessary in teaching is a master; the second is a pupil capable of carrying on the tradition.
- For knowledge, you should know that peace is an indispensable condition of getting it.
- Man must learn to increase his sense of responsibility and of the fact that everything he does will have its consequences.
- Your body is the temple of knowledge.
- If you defy an enemy by doubting his courage you double it.
- If one tries to navigate unknown waters one runs the risk of shipwreck.
- The man who knows how to lead one of his brothers towards what he has known may one day be saved by that very brother.
- The first concerning the ‘secrets’: all cognition comes from inside; we are therefore initiated only by ourselves, but the Master gives the keys.
- Peace is the fruit of activity, not of sleep.
- A man’s heart is his own Neter.
- It is better not to know and to know that one does not know, than presumptuously to attribute some random meaning to symbols.
- If you search for the laws of harmony, you will find knowledge.
- For every joy there is a price to be paid.
- If the Master teaches what is error, the disciple’s submission is slavery ; if he teaches truth, this submission is ennoblement.
- The second concerning the ‘way’: the seeker has need of a Master to guide him and lift him up when he falls, to lead him back to the right way when he strays.
- No discussion can throw light if it wanders from the real point.
- The nut doesn’t reveal the tree it contains.
- Listen to your conviction, even if they seem absurd to your reason.
- Not the greatest Master can go even one step for his disciple; in himself he must experience each stage of developing consciousness. Therefore he will know nothing for which he is not ripe.
- A man can’t be judge of his neighbor’ intelligence. His own vital experience is never his neighbor’s.