I just have to ask: If these are the original Jews, why are they mimicking African hairstyles? SMH…look at the hats these guards are wearing! This is as OBVIOUS as fvck’ whose traditions they stole!

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I just have to ask: If these are the original Jews, why are they mimicking African hairstyles? SMH…look at the hats these guards are wearing! This is as OBVIOUS as fvck’ whose traditions they stole!
i forgot i drew horis in this
horis v. 2.0.1 patch notes
- increased beef
- figured out how to draw his legs
Horis is a past golden guard of my au
rieol is the current GG, but there were pleeenty before him
altho, unlike belos who throws 'defective' guards off a bridge, Mirros sends them through the portal to a corsinth lab where they were criostasised for study. cuz they believe that everything can have a use
sooo they aren't dead per say, but they might as well be if they stay there indefinately
Horis is very loyal type, but what did him in was when he managed to grow a connection with someone outside from mirros, and thus he was torn between his loyalties of who to trust. Ultimately, he found the courage and to question mirros. It deteriorated from there essentially
Covid blues
Οι τοίχοι στενεύουν πολύ. Ήταν πάντα έτσι; Ήταν πάντα έτσι.
Μα τώρα, είναι σαν να με κοιτάνε. Είναι σαν, να μη με χωρούν.
Νιώθω πως περισσεύω μέσα στο σπίτι. Είμαι περιττή, είμαι βάρος για τους τοίχους.
Κάποιες μέρες, αλήθεια, πιστεύω πως η απόσταση στα ντουβάρια μικραίνει.
Κάθε που τους γυρνάω την πλάτη, εκείνα έρχονται ένα βήμα πιο κοντά μου. Ήταν πάντα έτσι; Ήταν πάντα έτσι.
Είναι μια Τετάρτη, ακόμα μια Τετάρτη γεμάτη τοίχους.
Θέλω να βγω έξω, κι ας φοβάμαι πως σαν γυρίσω σπίτι, οι τοίχοι θα ‘χουν πλησιάσει τόσο , που δεν θα χωράω ανάμεσά τους.
Πρέπει να ζητήσω άδεια για να βγω έξω. Πρέπει να ζητήσω άδεια για να πάρω μιαν ανάσα, για να περπατήσω, για να υπάρξω στον δρόμο, για να υπάρξω στο γρασίδι, για να δω τον ουρανό , χωρίς προστατευτικά κάγκελα, για να νιώσω τον κρύο αέρα, ή για να με ζεστάνει ο ήλιος.
Πρέπει να ζητήσω άδεια για να υπάρχω έξω από τους τοίχους.
Και πρέπει να βγω, γιατί όσο είμαι εδώ, πονάει το σώμα μου. Και πονάει το δέρμα μου, πονάνε τα πνευμόνια μου , πονάνε τα κόκαλά μου.
Ο λαιμός μου πονάει, πονάνε τα μάτια μου, τα χείλη μου, τα δόντια μου, η γλώσσα μου
πονάνε.
Όλα πονάνε, κι εγώ μαζί τους.
‘Ενα σύνολο πόνου κι αγωνίας.
Ήταν πάντα έτσι;
Πονάνε τα χέρια μου , τα δάχτυλά μου, και τα πόδια μου, πονάνε.
Ό,τι δε με φέρνει κοντά σου πονάει.
Πονάει το κεφάλι μου , και το μυαλό μου.
Η καρδιά μου πονάει, η καρδιά μου πονάει
η καρδιά μου π
ο
ν
ά
ε
ι
Η ύπαρξη πονάει. Ήταν πάντα έτσι. Μα πριν, ήταν επιτρεπτό να πονάς και να υπάρχεις.
Τώρα, χρειάζομαι άδεια για να πάρω μιαν ανάσα, για να περπατήσω, για να υπάρξω στον δρόμο, για να υπάρξω στο γρασίδι, για να δω τον ουρανό , χωρίς προστατευτικά κάγκελα, για να νιώσω τον κρύο αέρα, ή για να με ζεστάνει ο ήλιος.
Και πιο πολύ απ’όλα πονάει που δεν σ’έχω εδώ τα πρωινά, τα μεσημέρια και τα βράδια.
Να βάζεις πλάτη, να στηρίζεις τα ντουβάρια, να κρατάς τους τοίχους μακριά.
Πονάει το εδώ χωρίς εσένα.
Και το μόνο καλό, είναι πως η πάνινη μάσκα , απορροφά , -κάπως- τα δάκρυα.
Godess Isisl.p.
ISIS
EGYPTIAN GODDESS
WRITTEN BY: Joyce Tyldesley
Isis was initially an obscure goddess who lacked her own dedicated temples, but she grew in importance as the dynastic age progressed, until she became one of the most important deities of ancient Egypt. Her cult subsequently spread throughout the Roman Empire, and Isis was worshipped from England to Afghanistan. She is still revered by pagans today. As mourner, she was a principal deity in rites connected with the dead; as magical healer, she cured the sick and brought the deceased to life; and as mother, she was a role model for all women.
Isis had strong links with Egyptian kingship, and she was most often represented as a beautiful woman wearing a sheath dress and either the hieroglyphic sign of the throne or a solar disk and cow’s horns on her head. Occasionally she was represented as a scorpion, a bird, a sow, or a cow. There are no references to Isis before the 5th dynasty (2465–2325 BCE), but she is mentioned many times in the Pyramid Texts (c. 2350–c. 2100 BCE), in which she offers assistance to the dead king. Later, as ideas of the afterlife became more democratic, Isis was able to extend her help to all dead Egyptians.
The priests of Heliopolis, followers of the sun god Re, developed the myth of Isis. This told that Isis was the daughter of the earth god Geb and the sky goddess Nut and the sister of the deities Osiris, Seth, and Nephthys. Married to Osiris, king of Egypt, Isis was a good queen who supported her husband and taught the women of Egypt how to weave, bake, and brew beer. But Seth was jealous, and he hatched a plot to kill his brother. Seth trapped Osiris in a decorated wooden chest, which he coated in lead and threw into the Nile. The chest had become Osiris’s coffin. With his brother vanished, Seth became king of Egypt. But Isis could not forget her husband, and she searched everywhere for him until she eventually discovered Osiris, still trapped in his chest, in Byblos. She brought his body back to Egypt, where Seth discovered the chest and, furious, hacked his brother into pieces, which he scattered far and wide. Transforming into a bird, and helped by her sister, Nephthys, Isis was able to discover and reunite the parts of her dead husband’s body—only his penis was missing. Using her magical powers, she was able to make Osiris whole; bandaged, neither living nor dead, Osiris had become a mummy. Nine months later Isis bore him a son, Horus. Osiris was then forced to retreat to the underworld, where he became king of the dead.
Isis (right) and Osiris.Judie Anderson/Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
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Isis hid with Horus in the marshes of the Nile delta until her son was fully grown and could avenge his father and claim his throne. She defended the child against attacks from snakes and scorpions. But because Isis was also Seth’s sister, she wavered during the eventual battle between Horus and Seth. In one episode Isis took pity on Seth and was in consequence beheaded by Horus (the beheading was reversed by magic). Eventually she and Horus were reconciled, and Horus was able to take the throne of Egypt.
Isis was the perfect traditional Egyptian wife and mother—content to stay in the background while things went well, but able to use her wits to guard her husband and son should the need arise. The shelter she afforded her child gave her the character of a goddess of protection. But her chief aspect was that of a great magician, whose power transcended that of all other deities. Several narratives tell of her magical prowess, far stronger than the powers of Osiris and Re. She was frequently invoked on behalf of the sick, and, with the goddesses Nephthys, Neith, and Selket, she protected the dead. Isis became associated with various other goddesses, including Bastet, Nut, and Hathor, and thus her nature and her powers became increasingly diverse. Isis became known, like other fierce goddesses in the Egyptian pantheon, as the “Eye of Re” and was equated with the Dog Star, Sothis (Sirius).
Isis nursing HorusIsis nursing Horus, calcite and bronze sculpture from Egypt, c. 712–525 BCE; in the Brooklyn Museum, New York.Photograph by Lisa O'Hara. Brooklyn Museum, New York, Charles Edwin Wilbour Fund, 37.400E
The first major temple dedicated to Isis was built by the Late Period king Nectanebo II (360–343 BCE) at Behbeit el-Hagar, in the central Nile delta. Other important temples, including the island temple of Philae, were built during Greco-Roman times when Isis was dominant among Egyptian goddesses. Several temples were dedicated to her in Alexandria, where she became the patroness of seafarers. From Alexandria her cult spread to Greece and Rome. Images of Isis nursing the baby Horus may have influenced the early Christian artists who depicted the Virgin Mary with the baby Jesus.
OH YEA FREAKSHOWS STILL A THING BOYOS
Bill has a new design and us now h u m a n
Horis time B)
Horis is a side character in First Contact! He's the main crew's boss.