The Chronicles of Osiris: Set Down in the House of El Eros-El Erua, They Being Male-Female, Born According to the Laws Governing the Dhuman-Adamic Race, This Being Their Fourth Incarnation
The Chronicles of Osiris: Set Down in the House of El Eros-El Erua, They Being Male-Female, Born According to the Laws Governing the Dhuman-Adamic Race, This Being Their Fourth Incarnation
The Chronicles of Osiris: Set Down in the House of El Eros-El Erua, They Being Male-Female, Born According to the Laws Governing the Dhuman-Adamic Race, This Being Their Fourth Incarnation
The Chronicles of Osiris: Set Down in the House of El Eros-El Erua, They Being Male-Female, Born According to the Laws Governing the Dhuman-Adamic Race, This Being Their Fourth Incarnation
The Chronicles of Osiris: Set Down in the House of El Eros-El Erua, They Being Male-Female, Born According to the Laws Governing the Dhuman-Adamic Race, This Being Their Fourth Incarnation

The Chronicles of Osiris: Set Down in the House of El Eros-El Erua, They Being Male-Female, Born According to the Laws Governing the Dhuman-Adamic Race, This Being Their Fourth Incarnation

Regular price $ 200.00
xi, 116 pp. The Osiris myth is the most elaborate and influential story in ancient Egyptian mythology. It concerns the murder of the god Osiris, a primeval king of Egypt, and its consequences. Osiris's murderer, his brother Set, usurps his throne. Meanwhile, Osiris's wife Isis restores her husband's body, allowing him to posthumously conceive their son, Horus. The remainder of the story focuses on Horus, the product of the union of Isis and Osiris, who is at first a vulnerable child protected by his mother and then becomes Set's rival for the throne. Their often violent conflict ends with Horus's triumph, which restores maat (cosmic and social order) to Egypt after Set's unrighteous reign and completes the process of Osiris's resurrection.