The Adventures of Rex and Zendah In The Zodiac
by
Esme Swainson
The Rosicrucian Fellowship
P.O.Box 713
Oceanside, California, 92054-0112, U.S.A.
To the Stellar Powers
and to
"The Venusian"
With Grateful Thanks
Reprinted 1981
by
The Rosicrucian Fellowship
Introduction
Prologue
The Adventure
The Gate of the Fishes
The Land of the Man
with the Pitcher
The Land of the Sea-Goat
The Land of the Archer
The Land of the
Scorpion-Eagle
The Land of the Balance
The Land of the Virgin
The Land of the Lion
The Land of the Crab
The Land of the Twins
The Land of the Bull
The Land of the Ram
Epilogue
List of Illustrations
Printed Version Book Cover
Frontispiece
The Gate of the Fishes
The Land of the Man with the Pitcher
The Land of the Sea-Goat
The Land of the Archer
The Land of the Scorpion-Eagle
The Land of the Balance
The Land of the Virgin
The Land of the Lion
The Land of the Crab
The Land of the Twins
The Land of the Bull
The Land of the Ram
The Ram comes rushing in the spring,
His exit is a quieter thing,
Next comes the Bull with heavy tread;
The earth he tosses with his head.
The Heavenly Twins dance through the air,
Their Joy or sorrow makes one stare.
The Crab crawls out of ocean wide,
Behind his rock he'll often hide.
With dignity the Lion stands;
So just and true he rules his lands.
The Virgin holds a sheaf of corn;
Look to your work when she is born,
For next the Balance tried and true
Will weigh the things you ought to do.
What follows is a curious thing,
The Scorpion with his cruel sting.
The Archer next, so wise and wild,
He seems both old man and a child.
The Sea Goat climbs the mountain high,
His motto, "I attain or die."
The Man with Waterpot on high
Pours out his wisdom from the sky.
Lastly two Fishes swim the sea;
They should bring Peace and Unity.
You have all heard about the twelve signs of the Zodiac, those
groups of stars that form a band around the Earth, through which the sun seems
to pass during the year and the Moon on her journey every twenty-eight days.
Tales and legends about the Signs of the Zodiac have been told
for thousands or years, for they are very, very old, perhaps older than our
Earth. Children in China, Egypt, Babylon, Persia, and Arabia knew much about
them, and looked up and found them in the sky as you may do now.
The names the ancient peoples gave them were not always the same
as ours, but the stories they told about them were similar.
In Babylon, the sign we call the Lion was the Great Dog, and the
Twins had a shepherd to look after them, to see that they did not get into
mischief I suppose, as twins often do!
The Chinese picture the Zodiac much as we do, but they have two
Virgins sitting with their hands folded instead of one, and a Dragon instead of
a sea goat, and sometimes all the signs are nicely seated on little stands like
those you see in the shops on old Chinese vases.
You can recognize the same signs too in the Egyptian pictures,
where the Sea Goat is often depicted as a Crocodile while in ancient Arabia the
Ram, Bull, and Goat have a god riding on their backs, and the Fishes have a god
seated between them.
The zodiacal New Year does not begin when ours does and perhaps
you wonder why the Ram does not "rush in" on January first.
New Year does not start on January first for every nation, and
many hundreds of years ago it was the custom to celebrate this at the proper sun
Time--that is, March twenty-first, for the Sun always says that is the beginning
of the year, in spite of the laws that men make. The old Romans recognized this
for a long time until one of the Emperors decided he would alter the calendar.
The Sun, Moon, and Stars form a giant clock and calculate their
time just the same whatever we say, and it is not so very long ago that men in
England, counted their day, month, and year sums so badly that their time and
the Sun's did not agree, and when they tried to put it right they had to lose
eleven days to straighten things.
What happened to the children who had birthdays about that time
I do not know; it is bad enough you will say to have one on February
twenty-ninth in a Leap Year! However, just to show that the sun knows better
than grown-ups, he gives you a birthday just the same every year even if you are
born on the twenty-ninth, only it is not always on the same day.
The stars that make up the groups that are called the Signs of
the Zodiac can be observed if you will go out on a clear night; you will see
them best before the Moon has risen, and perhaps the easiest to find are the
Twins, for the two big stars that are supposed to be on their heads are easily
seen, one below the other. Not far off you will find a cluster of seven small
stars called the Pleiades and these are in the sign of the Bull. They are
sometimes termed the seven sisters and one was supposed to have done something
wrong and so was shy and hid behind the others. Unless your eyes are very keen
you cannot see her.
"Is any of the tale true?" you may ask. Well, some of
it is, but which part you must find out for yourself. If you have a birthday on
the same day as either Rex's or Zendah's you will find that some of their
adventures will happen to you either asleep or awake, or you will want to do
many of the things they loved to do.
Now we must start the adventure.
Rex and Zendah lived in the country, on the side of a hill with
great pine trees on the top, which Zendah always said sang the sun to sleep at
night.
Rex thought they were the poles that carried the fairies'
wireless messages to the star people.
Every morning from their bedroom they could see the sun rise
over the hill opposite, and at night they often watched the stars gradually
light their lamps--that is if they happened to be awake!
In the winter they sometimes crept out of bed to peep at the
sparkling Dog star that comes up over the side of the sky to keep watch over the
Earth after Orion has drawn his sword and lighted up his belt for every one to
see.
Rex's birthday was on March twenty-seventh, just when the sun
has come into the sign of the Ram. He was quick and merry with bright brown eyes
and curly hair, the colour of a ripe chestnut. Some of his boy friends said his
hair was as hot as his temper, but he was never angry for long.
Zendah's birthday was on November twenty-sixth, when the Sun is
in the Sign of the Archer. she was fair-haired, with big blue eyes, and thought
it a great shame that her hair was only wavy and not curly like Rex's! Her
greatest delight was to ride the little pony given to her by her father, on her
twelfth birthday.
They both disliked being kept indoors, and they would rather
spend all their time racing over the country in search of adventures of one kind
or another.
In the winter they liked sitting by the fire, when the wind was
howling in the pine trees on the hilltop, and listening to the stories about
birds and animals that mother told them, or looking through father's telescope
and trying to learn all the names of the stars. So that when the Great Adventure
came--but there--you must read it for yourselves.
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