Tea-Cup Reading and Fortune-Telling by Tea Leaves, by a Highland Seer by Unknown
page 43 of 50 (86%)
page 43 of 50 (86%)
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eclipses, meteors, shooting stars, the direction of winds, the form of
clouds, thunder and lightning and other weather incidents, they were able to forecast happenings. A number of tablets are devoted to these prophecies. It is conceivable that many of these omens should have found their way into Greece, and it is not unreasonable to believe that India may have derived her knowledge of omens from Babylonia; or it may have been the other way about. The greatest of scholars are divided in their opinions as to which really is the earlier civilization. The point to be made here is that in all parts of the world--in quarters where we may be certain that no trace of Grecian, Indian, or Babylonian science or civilization has appeared--there are to be found systems of prophecies by omens. It may be accounted for in two ways. One that in all races as they grow up, so to speak, there is the same course of evolution of ideas and superstition which to many appears childish. The other explanation seems to be the more reasonable one, if we believe, as we are forced to do, that omens do foretell--that all peoples, all races, accumulate a record, oral or otherwise, of things which have happened more or less connected with things which seemed to indicate them. In course of time this knowledge appears to consolidate. It gets generally accepted as true. And then it is handed on from generation to generation. Often with the passage of years it gets twisted and a new meaning taken out of it altogether different from the original. It would be difficult to attempt to classify omens. Many books have been written on the subject and more yet to be written of the beliefs of the |
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