Difference between revisions of "Hhu'au"

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One of the two "lion-gods" whose images guard the entrance to the NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY main branch at 42nd Street and 5th Avenue in Manhattan.  As you face the main entrance, Hhu'au is the right-hand one, the lion that humans call "Fortitude".  "Hhu'au" is an [[Ailurin]] word for "today", "the present".  ([[TBONWM]])
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One of the two "lion-gods" whose images guard the entrance to the [[New York Public Library]] main branch at 42nd Street and 5th Avenue in Manhattan.  As you face the main entrance, Hhu'au is the right-hand one, the lion that humans call "Fortitude".  "Hhu'au" is an [[Ailurin]] word for "today", "the present".  ([[TBONWM]])
  
 
See also: [[Cosmology and cosmogony, feline]]: [[Reh-t]]:  [[Sef]].
 
See also: [[Cosmology and cosmogony, feline]]: [[Reh-t]]:  [[Sef]].

Revision as of 10:59, 16 May 2006

One of the two "lion-gods" whose images guard the entrance to the New York Public Library main branch at 42nd Street and 5th Avenue in Manhattan. As you face the main entrance, Hhu'au is the right-hand one, the lion that humans call "Fortitude". "Hhu'au" is an Ailurin word for "today", "the present". (TBONWM)

See also: Cosmology and cosmogony, feline: Reh-t: Sef.