In article <
dalton-6033AA....@mx05.eternal-september.org>,
David Dalton <
dal...@nfld.com> wrote:
> In article <
dalton-EDD0CF....@mx05.eternal-september.org>,
> David Dalton <
dal...@nfld.com> wrote:
>
> > After listening to the new Katy Perry song Dark Horse
> > I gave her the shakti association of Horse. But
> > since then I have watched the official video and
> > I didn't see a horse in the video.
> >
> > Also I would like to send her some
> > Newfoundland-brewed Black Horse beer, or buy
> > her some if she ever tours to here in Newfoundland.
> > (I have previously facilitated a soul alignment
> > between the Black Horse beer brand and Horse,
> > the species someone of the horse species.)
> >
> > There is a long Wikipedia article on the song at
> >
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_Horse_(Katy_Perry_song)
>
> It says `Perry, in interviews, said she wanted the song to
> have a "witchy, spell-y kind of black magic-y idea", so she
> wrote it from the perspective of a witch warning a man not
> to fall in love with her because if he does, she will be his last.'
>
> So the original song concept might not have been Egyptian
> but the video certainly is.
In his SF novel Creatures of Light and Darkness, which
was heavily influenced by Egyptian mythology, Roger
Zelazny has a character named Typhon who in the novel
is the brother of Set. From
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creatures_of_Light_and_Darkness :
"Typhon appears as a black horse-shadow, without a horse to
cast it. He contains within himself something called Skagganauk
Abyss, which resembles a black hole, not a term in common use
at the time." (of the writing of the novel)
But this character Typhon does not appear to have been strongly
based on the mythological Greek monster Typhon, who from
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typhon
"was traditionally identified with the Egyptian Set"
and was not in horse form.
In both cases Typhon is male, and Katy Perry is
certainly female.
Also, as Zayton noted on alt.religion.wicca ,
the term dark horse means:
Z> Not the main favored candidate. Someone somewhat unkown
Z> who exceeds expectations of all others in an event.
Z> This saying is said to go back to the Victorian politician
Z> Benjamin Disraeli who, apart from finding time to regularly
Z> become Prime Minister, also found time to write a novel
Z> called "The Young Duke". In the book there is a description
Z> of a horse race in which the two favourites cannot make the
Z> running. In the meanwhile "a dark horse...rushed past the
Z> grandstand in a sweeping triumph".