Hieroglyphics of Horapollo, tr. Alexander Turner Cory, [1840], at sacred-texts.com
'To denote Hephæstus [Phthah], they delineate a SCARABÆUS and a VULTURE, and to denote Athena [Neith], 2 a VULTURE and a SCARABÆUS; for to them the world appears to consist both of male and female, (for Athena [Neith] however they also depict a vulture) and; according to them, these are the only Gods who are both male and female. 3
II. Phthah Tore, the deformed pigmy God of Memphis, has a scarabæus on his head, and sometimes stands upon a crocodile.
III. Phthah Socari.
29:2 To denote Phthah, they delineate a SCARABÆUS i and a VULTURE, to denote Neith?
29:3 See c. 10 and 11.