To the ancient Egyptian, who daily gazed upon the Nile with reverence and read the language of the lotus and the whisper of the reeds as one might read a holy script, there was no creature too small to be sacred, no motion too humble to be meaningful. And of all the creeping, crawling, bustling inhabitants of sunlit Egypt, none stirred the soul so deeply, nor tickled the intellect so acutely, as the unassuming scarab. Ah yes, the scarab! That dark, diligent beetle—less a beast and more a parable in a shell. They watched him toil and tumble, pushing his precious burden—a ball of earth and life—over sand and stone with an earnestness that put idle men to shame. He did not falter, he did not flinch, but rolled on with a resolve both comic and cosmic. And in that humble roll, the Egyptian saw revelation. For was it not a mirror of the sun itself, that mighty sphere flung across the sky each morn by divine decree? And was not the scarab, in his tireless endeavor, a miniature mimic of ...
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