The Project Gutenberg EBook of Egyptian Tales, Second Series, XVIIIth To
XIXth Dynasty, by W. M. Flinders Petrie
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever.  You may copy it, give it away or
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
Title: Egyptian Tales, Second Series, XVIIIth To XIXth Dynasty
       Translated From The Papyri, Second Edition
Author: W. M. Flinders Petrie
Editor: W. M. Flinders Petrie
Illustrator: Tristram Ellis
Release Date: February, 2005 [EBook #7413]
Last Updated: August 27, 2012
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EGYPTIAN TALES, SECOND ***
Produced by Eric Eldred and David Widger
    
       
    
      THE QUEEN'S TRIAL (p. 65)
    
      
    
      
    
      
    
      
    
      
 
    
      
 
    
      
 
    
      
    
      
    
PG Editor's Note: This early contribution to Project Gutenberg has been reproofed with many corrections of spelling, scannos and punctuation. The html file has received many hours of work to make the illustrations visible and the file conform to WCA standards. A great deal more work is needed to bring this file to prsent day PG standards. I have hopes another volunteer will find a print copy of this work which can be scanned and digitized to produce a file to replace this, as yet, unsatisfactory edition. DW
      
    
      PREFACE
    
      AS the scope of the first series of these Tales
      seems to have been somewhat overlooked, a few words of introduction may
      not be out of place before this second volume.
    
      It seems that any simple form of fiction is
      supposed to be a "fairy tale:" which implies that it has to do with an
      impossible world of imaginary beings. Now the Egyptian Tales are exactly
      the opposite of this, they relate the doings and the thoughts of men and
      women who are human—sometimes "very human," as Mr. Balfour said.
      Whatever there is of supernatural elements is a very part of the beliefs
      and motives of the
    
      VI
    
      people whose lives are here pictured. But most of
      what is here might happen in some corner of our own country to-day, where
      ancient beliefs may have a home. So far, then, from being fairy tales
      there is not a single being that could be termed a fairy in the whole of
      them.
    
      Another notion that seems to be about is that the
      only possible object of reading any form of fiction is for pure amusement,
      to fill an idle hour and be forgotten and if these tales are not as
      amusing as some jester of to-day, then the idler says, Away with them as a
      failure! For such a person, who only looks to have the tedium of a vacuous
      mind relieved, these tales are not in the least intended. But the real and
      genuine charm of all fiction is that of enabling the reader to place
      himself in the mental position of, another, to see with the eyes, to feel
      with the thoughts, to reason with the mind, of a wholly different being.
      All the greatest work has this charm. It may be to place the reader
    
      PREFACE vii
    
      in new mental positions, or in a different level
      of the society that he already knows, either higher or lower; or it may be
      to make alive to him a society of a different land or age. Whether he read
      "Treasure Island" or "Plain Tales from the Hills," "The Scarlet Letter,"
      "Old Mortality," or "Hypatia," it is the transplanting of the reader into
      a new life, the doubling of his mental experience, that is the very power
      of fiction. The same interest attaches to these tales. In place of
      regarding Egyptians only as the builders of pyramids and the makers of
      mummies, we here see the men and women as they lived, their passions,
      their foibles, their beliefs, and their follies. The old refugee Sanehat
      craving to be buried with his ancestors in the blessed land, the
      enterprise and success of the Doomed Prince, the sweetness of Bata, the
      misfortunes of Ahura, these all live before us, and we can for a brief
      half hour share the feelings and see with the eyes of those who ruled the
      world when it was young. This is the real
    
      via
    
      PREFACE
    
      value of these tales, and the power which still
      belongs to the oldest literature in the world.
    
      Erratum in First Edition, 1st Series. Page 31,
      line 6 from below, for no It read not I.
    
      PAGE
    
      THE TAKING OF JOPPA . . . 1
    
REMARKS .... 7
      THE DOOMED PRINCE . . 13
    
REMARKS . . . .28
      ANPU AND BATA . . . 36
    
REMARKS . . . -65
      SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK . . 87
    
REMARKS . . . .119
      INDEX ..... 143
    
      PAGE
    
      THE QUEEN'S TRIAL . . . Frontispiece
    
      SMITING THE FOE . . . . 4
    
      THE TWO HUNDRED SACKS . . -5
    
      THE PRINCE'S HOUSE . . . 14
    
      GOING INTO THE DESERT . . 16
    
      THE CLIMBING SUITORS . . 17
    
      REACHING THE WINDOW . . .21
    
      LOVE'S RESCUE . . . . 23
    
      THE BOWL OF MILK . . . .26
    
      THE RETURN AT EVEN . . '37
    
      GOING TO THE FIELDS . . 39
    
      WAITING FOR CORN . . . .40
    
      THE DARK RETURN . . . -43
    
      THE AMBUSH. . . . 44
    
      THE CANAL OF RA . . . 47
    
      XII
    
      LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
    
      THE HOUSE IN THE VALLEY . . . 50
    
      THE PROPHECY . . . -51
    
      THE RAVISHING SEA . . . -53
    
      THE CHIEF FULLER OF PHARAOH . . 54
    
      THE REUNION . . . . 58
    
      ANPU ON THE BULL . . . -59
    
      BATA'S PERSEA TREES . . .62
    
      AHURA'S APPEAL . . . .88
    
      READING THE INSCRIPTIONS . . . 92
    
      SENDING THE SILVER . . -94
    
      THE PRIESTS' WIVES . . . -97
    
      SLAYING THE SNAKE . . -99
    
      READING THE SPELL. . . . 104
    
      REMORSE ..... 105
    
      SETNA DEMANDING THE ROLL . . 108
    
      SETNA VANQUISHED . . . . 109
    
      APPLYING THE TALISMAN . . . 110
    
      SETNA VICTORIOUS . . . .111
    
      SETNA READING THE ROLL . . .113
    
      XVIIITH DYNASTY THE TAKING OF JOPPA
    
      THERE was once in the time of King Men-kheper-ra a
      revolt of the servants of his majesty who were in Joppa; and his majesty
      said, "Let Tahutia go with his footmen and destroy this wicked Foe in
      Joppa." And he called one of his followers, and said moreover, "Hide thou
      my great cane, which works wonders, in the baggage of Tahutia that my
      power may go with him."
    
      Now when Tahutia came near to Joppa, with all the
      footmen of Pharaoh, he sent unto the Foe in Joppa, and said, "Be
    
      2 THE TAKING OF JOPPA
    
      hold now his majesty, King Men-kheper-ra, has sent
      all this great army against thee; but what is that if my heart is as thy
      heart? Do thou come, and let us talk in the field, and see each other face
      to face." So Tahutia came with certain of his men; and the Foe in Joppa
      came likewise, but his charioteer that was with him was true of heart unto
      the king of Egypt. And they spoke with one another in his great tent,
      which Tahutia had placed far off from the soldiers. But Tahutia had made
      ready two hundred sacks, with cords and fetters, and had made a great sack
      of skins with bronze fetters, and many baskets: and they were in his tent,
      the sacks and the baskets, and he had placed them as the forage for the
      horses is put in baskets. For whilst the Foe in Joppa drank with Tahutia,
      the people who were with him drank with the footmen of Pharaoh, and made
      merry with them. And when their bout of drinking was past, Tahutia said to
      the Foe in Joppa, "If it please thee, while
    
      THE TAKING OF JOPFA 3
    
      I remain with the women and children of thy own
      city, let one bring of my people with their horses, that they may give
      them provender, or let one of the Apuro run to fetch them." So they came,
      and hobbled their horses, and gave them provender, and one found the great
      cane of Men-kheper-ra (Tahutmes III.), and came to tell of it to Tahutia.
      And thereupon the Foe in Joppa said to Tahutia, "My heart is set on
      examining the great cane of Men-kheper-ra, which is named '. . .
      tautnefer.' By the ka of the King Men-kheper-ra it will be in thy
      hands to-day; now do thou well and bring thou it to me." And Tahutia did
      thus, and he brought the cane of King Men-kheper-ra. And he laid hold on
      the Foe in Joppa by his garment, and he arose and stood up, and said,
      "Look on me, O Foe in Joppa; here is the great cane of King Men-kheper-ra,
      the terrible lion, the son of Sekhet, to whom Amen his father gives power
      and strength." And he raised his hand and struck the fore-
    
      4 THE TAKING OF JOPPA
    
      head of the Foe in Joppa, and he fell helpless
      before him. He put him in the sack of skins and he bound with gyves the
      hands of the Foe in Joppa, and put on his feet the fetters
    
       
    
      SMITING THE FOE
    
      with four rings. And he made them bring the two
      hundred sacks which he had cleaned, and made to enter into them two
      hundred soldiers, and filled the hollows with cords and fetters of wood,
      he sealed them with a seal,
    
      THE TAKING OF JOPPA 5
    
      and added to them their rope-nets and the poles to
      bear them. And he put every strong footman to bear them, in all six
      hundred men, and said to them, "When you come
    
       
    
      into the town you shall open your burdens, you
      shall seize on all the inhabitants of the town, and you shall quickly put
      fetters upon them."
    
      6 THE TAKING OF JOPPA
    
      Then one went out and said unto the charioteer of
      the Foe in Joppa, "Thy master is fallen; go, say to thy mistress, 'A
      pleasant message! For Sutekh has given Tahutia to us, with his wife and
      his children; behold the beginning of their tribute,' that she may
      comprehend the two hundred sacks, which are full of men and cords and
      fetters." So he went before them to please the heart of his mistress,
      saying, "We have laid hands on Tahutia." Then the gates of the city were
      opened before the footmen: they entered the city, they opened their
      burdens, they laid hands on them of the city, both small and great, they
      put on them the cords and fetters quickly; the power of Pharaoh seized
      upon that city. After he had rested Tahutia sent a message to Egypt to the
      King Men-kheper-ra his lord, saying, "Be pleased, for Amen thy good father
      has given to thee the Foe in Joppa, together with all his people, likewise
      also his city. Send, therefore, people to take them as captives that thou
      mayest fill
    
      REMARKS 7
    
      the house of thy father Amen Ra, king of the
      gods, with men-servants and maid-servants, and that they may be overthrown
      beneath thy feet for ever and ever."
    
      REMARKS
    
      This tale of the taking of Joppa appears to be
      probably on an historical basis. Tahutia was a well-known officer of
      Tahutmes III.; and the splendid embossed dish of weighty gold which the
      king presented to him is one of the principal treasures of the Louvre
      museum. It is ornamented with groups of fish in the flat bottom, and a
      long inscription around the side.
    
      Unfortunately the earlier part of this tale has
      been lost; but in order to render it intelligible I have restored an
      opening to it, without introducing any details but what are alluded to, or
      necessitated, by the existing story. The original text begins at the star.
    
      It is evident that the basis of the tale is
    
      8 THE TAKING OF JOPPA
    
      the stratagem of the Egyptian general, offering to
      make friends with the rebel of Joppa, while he sought to trap him. To a
      Western soldier such an unblushing offer of being treacherous to his
      master the king would be enough to make the good faith of his proposals to
      the enemy very doubtful. But in the East offers of wholesale desertion are
      not rare. In Greek history it was quite an open question whether Athens or
      Persia would retain a general's service; in Byzantine history a commander
      might be in favour with the Khalif one year and with the Autokrator the
      next; and in the present century the entire transfer of the Turkish fleet
      to Mohammed Ali in 1840 is a grand instance of such a case.
    
      The scheme of taking a fortress by means of
      smuggling in soldiers hidden in packages has often recurred in history;
      but this taking of Joppa is the oldest tale of the kind yet known.
      Following this we have the wooden horse of Troy. Then comes in mediaeval
    
      REMARKS 9
    
      times the Arab scheme for taking Edessa, in 1038
      A.D., by a train of five hundred camels bearing presents for the
      Autokrator at Constantinople. The governor of Edessa declined to admit
      such travellers, and a bystander, hearing some talking in the baskets
      slung on the camels, soon gave the alarm, which led to the destruction of
      the whole party; the chief alone, less hands, ears, and nose, being left
      to take the tale back to Bagdad. And in fiction there are the stories of a
      lady avenging her husband by introducing men hidden in skins, and the best
      known version of all in the "Arabian Nights," of Ali Baba and the thieves.
    
      It appears from the tale that the conference of
      Tahutia with the rebel took place between the town and the Egyptian army,
      but near the town. Then Tahutia proposes to go into the town as a pledge
      of his sincerity, while the men of the town were to supply his troops with
      fodder. But he appears to have remained talking with the
    
      10 THE TAKING OF JOPPA
    
      rebel in the tent, until the lucky chance of the
      stick turned up. This cleared the way for a neater management of his plan,
      by enabling him to quietly make away with the chief, without exciting his
      suspicions beforehand.
    
      The name of the cane of the king is partly
      illegible; but we know how many actual sticks and personal objects have
      their own names inscribed on them. Nothing had a real entity to the
      Egyptian mind without an individual name belonging to it.
    
      The message sent by the charioteer presupposes
      that he was in the secret; and he must therefore have been an Egyptian who
      had not heartily joined in the rebellion. From the conclusion we see that
      the captives taken as slaves to Egypt were by no means only prisoners of
      war, but were the ordinary civil inhabitants of the conquered cities,
      "them of the city, both small and great."
    
      The gold dish which the king gave to the tomb of
      Tahuti is so splendid that it deserves some notice, especially as it has
    
      REMARKS ii
    
      never been published in England. It is circular,
      about seven inches across, with vertical sides an inch high. The inside of
      the bottom bears a boss and rosette in the centre, a line of swimming fish
      around that, and beyond all a chain of lotus flowers. On the upright edge
      is an incised inscription, "Given in praise by the king of Upper and Lower
      Egypt, Ra-men-kheper, to the hereditary chief, the divine father,
      the beloved by God, filling the heart of the king in all foreign lands and
      in the isles in the midst of the great sea, filling stores with lazuli,
      electrum, and gold, keeper of all foreign lands, keeper of the troops,
      praised by the good gold lord of both lands and his ka,—the
      royal scribe Tahuti deceased." This splendid piece of gold work was
      therefore given in honour of Tahuti at his funeral, to be placed in his
      tomb for the use of his ka. The weight of it is very nearly a troy
      pound, being 5,729 grains or four utens. The allusion on it to the
      Mediter-
    
      12 THE TAKING OF JOPPA
    
      ranean wars of Tahuti, "satisfying the king in all
      foreign lands and in the isles in the midst of the great sea," is just in
      accord with this tale of the conquest of Joppa.
    
      Beside this golden bowl there are many other
      objects from Tahuti's tomb which must have been very rich, and have
      escaped plundering until this century. A silver dish, broken, and a
      canopic jar of alabaster, are in Paris; another canopic jar, a palette, a
      kohl vase, and a heart scarab set in gold, are in Leyden; while in
      Darmstadt is the dagger of this great general. This piece of a popular
      tale founded on an incident of his Syrian wars has curiously survived,
      while the more solid official records of his conquests has perished in the
      wreck of history. His tomb even is unknown, although it has been
      plundered; perhaps his active life of foreign service did not give him
      that leisure to carve and decorate it, which was so laboriously spent by
      the home-living dignitaries of Thebes.
    
      CLOSE OF THE XVIIIth DYNASTY
    
      THE DOOMED PRINCE
    
      THERE once was a king to whom no son was born; and
      his heart was grieved, and he prayed for himself unto the gods around him
      for a child. They decreed that one should be born to him. And his wife,
      after her time was fulfilled, brought forth a son. Then came the Hathors
      to decree for him a destiny; they said, "His death is to be by the
      crocodile, or by the serpent, or by the dog." Then the people who stood by
      heard this, and they went to tell it to his majesty. Then his majesty's
      heart sickened
    
      14 THE DOOMED PRINCE
    
      very greatly. And his majesty caused a house to be
      built upon the desert; it was furnished with people and with all good
      things of the royal house, that the child
    
       
    
      THE PRINCE'S HOUSE
    
      should not go abroad. And when the child was
      grown, he went up upon the roof, and he saw a dog; it was following a man
      who was walking on the road. He spoke to his
    
      THE DOOMED PRINCE 15
    
      page, who was with him, "What is this that walks
      behind the man who is coming along the road?" He answered him, "This is a
      dog." The child said to him, "Let there be brought to me one like it." The
      page went to repeat it to his majesty. And his majesty said, "Let there be
      brought to him a little pet dog, lest his heart be sad." And behold they
      brought to him the dog.
    
      Then when the days increased after this, and when
      the child became grown in all his limbs, he sent a message to his father
      saying, "Come, wherefore am I kept here? Inasmuch as I am fated to three
      evil fates, let me follow my desire. Let God do what is in His heart."
      They agreed to all he said, and gave him all sorts of arms, and also his
      dog to follow him, and they took him to the east country, and said to him,
      "Behold, go thou whither thou wilt." His dog was with him, and he went
      northward, following his heart in the desert, while he
    
      i6
    
      THE DOOMED PRINCE
    
      lived on all the best of the game of the desert.
      He went to the chief of Naha-raina.
    
      And behold there had not been any born
    
       
    
      GOING INTO THE DESERT
    
      to the chief of Naharaina, except one daughter.
      Behold, there had been built for her a house; its seventy windows were
      seventy cubits from the ground. And the chief caused to be brought all the
      sons
    
       
    
      THE CLIMBING SUITORS
    
      THE DOOMED PRINCE 19
    
      of the chiefs of the land of Khalu, and said to
      them, "He who reaches the window of my daughter, she shall be to him for a
      wife."
    
      And many days after these things, as they were in
      their daily task, the youth rode by the place where they were. They took
      the youth to their house, they bathed him, they gave provender to his
      horses, they brought all kinds of things for the youth, they perfumed him,
      they anointed his feet, they gave him portions of their own food; and they
      spake to him, "Whence comest thou, goodly youth?" He said to them, "I am
      son of an officer of the land of Egypt; my mother is dead, and my father
      has taken another wife. And when she bore children, she grew to hate me,
      and I have come as a fugitive from before her." And they embraced him, and
      kissed him.
    
      And after many days were passed, he said to the
      youths, "What is it that ye do here?" And they said to him, "We spend our
      time
    
      20 THE DOOMED PRINCE
    
      in this: we climb up, and he who shall reach the
      window of the daughter of the chief of Naharaina, to him will he given her
      to wife." He said to them, "If it please you, let me behold the matter,
      that I may come to climb with you." They went to climb, as was their daily
      wont: and the youth stood afar off to behold; and the face of the daughter
      of the chief of Naharaina was turned to them. And another day the sons
      came to climb, and the youth came to climb with the sons of the chiefs. He
      climbed, and he reached the window of the daughter of the chief of
      Naharaina. She kissed him, she embraced him in all his limbs.
    
      And one went to rejoice the heart of her father,
      and said to him, "One of the people has reached the window of thy
      daughter." And the prince inquired of the messenger, saying, "The son of
      which of the princes is it?" And he replied to him, "It is the son of an
      officer, who has come as a fugitive from the land of Egypt, fleeing from
      before his
    
       
    
      REACHING THE WINDOW
    
      THE DOOMED PRINCE 23
    
      stepmother when she had children." Then the chief
      of Naharaina was exceeding angry; and he said, "Shall I indeed give my
      daughter to the Egyptian fugitive? Let him go back
    
       
    
      LOVE'S RESCUE
    
      whence he came." And one came to tell the youth,
      "Go back to the place thou earnest from." But the maiden seized his hand;
      she swore an oath by God, saying, "By the
    
      24 THE DOOMED PRINCE
    
      being of Ra Harakhti, if one takes him from me, I
      will not eat, I will not drink, I shall die in that same hour." The
      messenger went to tell unto her father all that she said. Then the prince
      sent men to slay the youth, while he was in his house. But the maiden
      said, "By the being of Ra, if one slay him I shall be dead ere the sun
      goeth down. I will not pass an hour of life if I am parted from him." And
      one went to tell her father. Then the prince made them bring the youth
      with the maiden. The youth was seized with fear when he came before the
      prince. But he embraced him, he kissed him all over, and said, "Oh! tell
      me who thou art; behold, thou art to me as a son." He said to him, "I am a
      son of an officer of the land of Egypt; my mother died, my father took to
      him a second wife; she came to hate me, and I fled a fugitive from before
      her." He then gave to him his daughter to wife; he gave also to him a
      house, and serfs, and fields, also cattle and all manner of good things.
    
      THE DOOMED PRINCE 25
    
      But after the days of these things were passed,
      the youth said to his wife, "I am doomed to three fates—a crocodile,
      a serpent, and a dog." She said to him, "Let one kill the dog which
      belongs to thee." He replied to her, "I am not going to kill my dog, which
      I have brought up from when it was small." And she feared greatly for her
      husband, and would not let him go alone abroad.
    
      And one went with the youth toward the land of
      Egypt, to travel in that country. Behold the crocodile of the river, he
      came out by the town in which the youth was. And in that town was a mighty
      man. And the mighty man would not suffer the crocodile to escape. And when
      the crocodile was bound, the mighty man went out and walked abroad. And
      when the sun rose the mighty man went back to the house; and he did so
      every day, during two months of days.
    
      Now when the days passed after this, the youth sat
      making a good day in his house.
    
      26
    
      THE DOOMED PRINCE
    
      And when the evening came he lay down on his bed,
      sleep seized upon his limbs; and his wife filled a bowl of milk, and
      placed it by his side. Then came out a serpent from his hole, to bite the
      youth; behold his wife
    
       
    
      T.£.
    
      THE BOWL OF MILK
    
      was sitting by him, she lay not down. Thereupon
      the servants gave milk to the serpent, and he drank, and was drunk, and
      lay upside down. Then his wife made it to perish with the blows of her
      dagger. And
    
      THE DOOMED PRINCE 27
    
      they woke her husband, who was astonished; and she
      said unto him, "Behold thy God has given one of thy dooms into thy hand;
      He will also give thee the others." And he sacrificed to God, adoring Him,
      and praising His spirits from day to day.
    
      And when the days were passed after these things,
      the youth went to walk in the fields of his domain. He went not alone,
      behold his dog was following him. And his dog ran aside after the wild
      game, and he followed the dog. He came to the river, and entered the river
      behind his dog. Then came out the crocodile, and took him to the place
      where the mighty man was. And the crocodile said to the youth, "I am thy
      doom, following after thee. ..."
    
      [Here the papyrus breaks off.]
    
      28 THE DOOMED PRINCE
    
      REMARKS
    
      This tale is preserved in one of the Harris papyri
      (No. 500) in the British Museum. It has been translated by Goodwin,
      Chabas, Maspero, and Ebers. The present version is adapted from that of
      Maspero, with frequent reference by Mr. Griffith to the original.
    
      The marvellous parentage of a fated or gifted hero
      is familiar in Eastern tales, and he is often described as a divine reward
      to a long-childless king. This element of fate or destiny is, however, not
      seen before this age in Egyptian ideas; nor, indeed, would it seem at all
      in place with the simple, easygoing, joyous life of the early days. It
      belongs to an age when ideals possess the mind, when man struggles against
      his circumstances, when he wills to be different from what he is. Dedi or
      the shipwrecked sailor think nothing about fate, but live day by day as
      life comes to them. There is here, then,
    
      REMARKS 29
    
      a new element, that of striving and of unrest,
      quite foreign to the old Egyptian mind. The age of this tale is shown
      plainly in the incidents. The prince goes to the chief of Naharaina, a
      land probably unknown to the Egyptians until the Asiatic conquests of the
      XVIIIth Dynasty had led them to the upper waters of the Euphrates. In
      earlier days Sanehat fled to the frontier at the Wady Tumilat, and was
      quite lost to Egypt when he settled in the south of Palestine. But when
      the Doomed Prince goes out of Egypt he goes to the chief of Naharaina, as
      the frontier State. This stamps the tale as subsequent to the wars of the
      Tahutimes family, and reflects rather the peaceful intercourse of the
      great monarch Amenhotep the Third. If it belonged to the Ramessides we
      should not hear of Naharaina, which was quite lost to them, but rather of
      Dapur (Tabor) and Kadesh, and of the Hittites as the familiar frontier
      power.
    
      The Hathors here appear as the Fates,
    
      3°
    
      THE DOOMED PRINCE
    
      instead of the goddesses Isis, Nebhat, Mes-khent,
      and Hakt, of the old tale in the IVth Dynasty (see first series, p. 33);
      and we find in the next tale of Anpu and Bata, in the XlXth Dynasty, that
      the seven Hathors decree the fate of the wife of Bata. That Hathor should
      be a name given to seven deities is not strange when we see that Hathor
      was a generic name for a goddess. There was the Hathor of foreign lands,
      such as Punt or Sinai; there was the Hathor of home towns, as Dendera or
      Atfih; and Hathor was as widely known, and yet as local, as the Madonna.
      In short, to one of the races which composed the Egyptian people Hathor
      was the term for any goddess, or for a universal goddess to whom all
      others were assimilated. Why and how this title "house of Horus " should
      be so general is not obvious.
    
      The variety of fate here predicted is like the
      vagueness of the fate of Bata's wife, by "a sharp death." It points to the
      Hathors
    
      REMARKS 31
    
      predicting as seers, rather than to their having
      the control of the future. It bears the stamp of the oracle of Delphi,
      rather than that of a divine decree. In this these goddesses differ
      greatly from the Parcae, whose ordinances not even Zeus could withstand,
      as Lucian lets us know in one of the most audacious and philosophical of
      the dialogues. The Hathors seem rather to deal with what we should call
      luck than with fate: they see the nature of the close of life from its
      beginning, without either knowing or controlling its details.
    
      In this tale we meet for the first time the idea
      of inaccessible and mysterious buildings; and from the resort to this
      element or curiosity in describing both the prince and the princess, it
      appears as if it were then a new motive in story-telling, and had not lost
      its power. To modern ears it is, of course, done to death since the
      "Castle of Otranto"; though as a minor element it can still be gently used
      by the poet and novelist in a
    
      32 THE DOOMED PRINCE
    
      moated grange, a house in a marsh or a maze.
      Another point of wonder, so well known in later times, is the large and
      mystic number of windows, like the 365 windows attributed to great
      buildings of the present age. It would not be difficult from these papyrus
      tales to start an historical dictionary of the elements of fiction: a kind
      of analysis that should be the death of much of the venerable
      stock-in-trade.
    
      We see coming in here, more strongly than before,
      the use of emotions and the force of character. The generous friendship of
      the sons of the Syrian chiefs; then the burst of passionate love from the
      chiefs daughter, which saves the prince's life twice over from her father,
      and guards him afterwards from his fates; again, the devotion of the
      prince to his favourite dog, in spite of all warnings—these show a
      reliance on personal emotion and feeling in creating the interest of the
      tale, quite different from the mere interest of incident which was
      employed
    
      REMARKS 33
    
      earlier. The reason which the prince alleges for
      his leaving Egypt is also a touch of nature, the wish of a mother to oust
      her stepson in order to make way for her own children, one of the deepest
      and most elemental feelings of feminine nature.
    
      The mighty man and the crocodile are difficult to
      understand, the more so as the tale breaks off in the midst of that part.
      It appears also as if there had been some inversion of the paragraphs;
      for, first, we read that the wife would not let the prince go alone, and
      one goes with him toward Egypt, and the crocodile of the Nile (apparently)
      is mentioned; then he is said to be sitting in his house with his wife;
      then he goes in the fields of his domain and meets the crocodile. It may
      be that a passage has dropped out, describing his wife's accompanying him
      to settle in Egypt. But the mighty man—that is another puzzle. He
      binds a crocodile, and goes out while he is bound, but by night. The point
      of this is not clear. It may have 4-
    
      34 THE DOOMED PRINCE
    
      been, however, that the mighty man went back to
      the house when the sun was high, that he might not lose his shadow. In
      Arabia there was a belief that a hyena could deprive a man of speech and
      motion by stepping on his shadow—analogous to the belief in many
      other lands of the importance of preserving the shadow, and avoiding the
      shadowless hour of high noon (Frazer, "Golden Bough," p. 143). Hence the
      strength of the mighty man, and his magic power over the crocodile, would
      perhaps depend on his not allowing his shadow to disappear. And though
      Egypt is not quite tropical, yet shadows do practically vanish in the
      summer, the shadow of the thin branches of a tall palm appearing to
      radiate round its root without the stem casting any shade.
    
      The use of milk to entice serpents is still well
      known in Egypt; and when a serpent appeared in some of my excavations in a
      pit, the men proposed to me to let down a saucer of milk to entice it out,
      that they might kill it.
    
      REMARKS 35
    
      The close of the tale would have explained much
      that is now lost to us. The crocodile boasts of being the fate of the
      prince; but his dog is with him, and one can hardly doubt that the dog
      attacks the crocodile. There is also the mighty man to come in and manage
      the crocodile. Then the dog is left to bring about the catastrophe. Or
      does the faithful wife rescue him from all the fates? Hardly so, as the
      prediction of the Hathors comes strictly to pass in the tale of Anpu and
      Bata. Let us hope that another copy may be found to give us the clue to
      the working of the Egyptian mind in this situation.
    
      XIXTH DYNASTY ANPU AND BATA.
    
      ONCE there were two brethren, of one mother and
      one father; Anpu was the name of the elder, and Bata was the name of the
      younger. Now, as for Anpu he had a house, and he had a wife. But his
      little brother was to him as it were a son; he it was who made for him his
      clothes; he it was who followed behind his oxen to the fields; he it was
      who did the ploughing; he it was who harvested the corn; he it was who did
      for him all the matters that were in the field. Behold, his
    
      younger brother grew to be an excellent 36
    
      ANPU AND BATA
    
      37
    
      worker, there was not his equal in the whole land;
      behold, the spirit of a god was in him.
    
      Now after this the younger brother fol-
    
       
    
      THE RETURN AT EVEN
    
      lowed his oxen in his daily manner; and every
      evening he turned again to the house, laden with all the herbs of the
      field, with milk and with wood, and with all things of
    
      38 ANPU AND BATA
    
      the field. And he put them down before his elder
      brother, who was sitting with his wife; and he drank and ate, and he lay
      down in his stable with the cattle. And at the dawn of day he took bread
      which he had baked, and laid it before his elder brother; and he took with
      him his bread to the field, and he drave his cattle to pasture in the
      fields. And as he walked behind his cattle, they said to him, "Good is the
      herbage which is in that place; " and he listened to all that they said,
      and he took them to the good place which they desired. And the cattle
      which were before him became exceeding excellent, and they multiplied
      greatly.
    
      Now at the time of ploughing his elder brother
      said unto him, "Let us make ready for ourselves a goodly yoke of oxen for
      ploughing, for the land has come out from the water, it is fit for
      ploughing. Moreover, do thou come to the field with corn, for we will
      begin the ploughing in the morrow morning." Thus said he to him; and
    
      ANPU AND BATA 39
    
      his younger brother did all things as his elder
      brother had spoken unto him to do them.
    
      And when the morn was come, they went to the
      fields with their things; and their hearts were pleased exceedingly with
      their task in the beginning of their work. And
    
       
    
      GOING TO THE FIELDS
    
      it came to pass after this that as they were in
      the field they stopped for corn, and he sent his younger brother, saying,
      "Haste thou, bring to us corn from the farm." And the younger brother
      found the wife of his elder brother, as she was sitting tiring her hair.
      He said to her, "Get up, and give to me
    
      40 ANPU AND BATA
    
      corn, that I may run to the field, for my elder
      brother hastened me; do not delay." She said to him, "Go, open the bin,
      and thou shalt take to thyself according to thy will, that I may not drop
      my locks of hair while I dress them."
    
       
    
      WAITING FOR CORN
    
      The youth went into the stable; he took a large
      measure, for he desired to take much corn; he loaded it with wheat and
      barley; and he went out carrying it. She said to
    
      ANPU AND BATA 41
    
      him, "How much of the corn that is wanted, is that
      which is on thy shoulder?" He said to her, "Three bushels of barley, and
      two of wheat, in all five; these are what are upon my shoulder: " thus
      said he to her. And she conversed with him, saying, "There is great
      strength in thee, for I see thy might every day." And her heart knew him
      with the knowledge of youth. And she arose and came to him, and conversed
      with him, saying, "Come, stay with me, and it shall be well for thee, and
      I will make for thee beautiful garments." Then the youth became like a
      panther of the south with fury at the evil speech which she had made to
      him; and she feared greatly. And he spake unto her, saying, "Behold thou
      art to me as a mother, thy husband is to me as a father, for he who is
      elder than I has brought me up. What is this wickedness that thou hast
      said to me? Say it not to me again. For I will not tell it to any man, for
      I will not let it be uttered by the mouth of any man." He lifted up
    
      42 ANPU AND BATA
    
      his burden, and he went to the field and came to
      his elder brother; and they took up their work, to labour at their task.
    
      Now afterward, at eventime, his elder brother was
      returning to his house; and the younger brother was following after his
      oxen, and he loaded himself with all the things of the field; and he
      brought his oxen before him, to make them lie down in their stable which
      was in the farm. And behold the wife of the elder brother was afraid for
      the words which she had said. She took a parcel of fat, she became like
      one who is evilly beaten, desiring to say to her husband, "It is thy
      younger brother who has done this wrong." Her husband returned in the
      even, as was his wont of every day; he came unto his house; he found his
      wife ill of violence; she did not give him water upon his hands as he used
      to have, she did not make a light before him, his house was in darkness,
      and she was lying very sick. Her husband said to her, "Who has spoken with
      thee?"
    
      ANPU AND BATA
    
      43
    
      Behold she said, "No one has spoken with me except
      thy younger brother. When he came to take for thee corn he found me
      sitting alone; he said to me, 'Come, let us
    
       
    
      THE DARK RETURN
    
      stay together, tie up thy hair:' thus spake he to
      me. I did not listen to him, but thus spake I to him: 'Behold, am I not
      thy mother, is not thy elder brother to thee as a father?' And he feared,
      and he beat me to stop me from making report to thee, and if thou lettest
      him live I shall die. Now
    
      44
    
      ANPU AND BATA
    
      behold he is coming in the evening; and I complain
      of these wicked words, for he would have done this even in daylight."
    
      And the elder brother became as a panther of the
      south; he sharpened his knife; he
    
       
    
      THE AMBUSH
    
      took it in his hand; he stood behind the door of
      his stable to slay his younger brother as he came in the evening to bring
      his cattle into the stable.
    
      Now the sun went down, and he loaded
    
      ANPU AND BATA 45
    
      himself with herbs in his daily manner. He came,
      and his foremost cow entered the stable, and she said to her keeper,
      "Behold thou thy elder brother standing before thee with his knife to slay
      thee; flee from before him." He heard what his first cow had said; and the
      next entering, she also said likewise. He looked beneath the door of the
      stable; he saw the feet of his elder brother; he was standing behind the
      door, and his knife was in his hand. He cast down his load to the ground,
      and betook himself to flee swiftly; and his elder brother pursued after
      him with his knife. Then the younger brother cried out unto Ra Harakhti,
      saying, "My good Lord! Thou art he who divides the evil from the good."
      And Ra stood and heard all his cry; and Ra made a wide water between him
      and his elder brother, and it was full of crocodiles; and the one brother
      was on one bank, and the other on the other bank; and the elder brother
      smote twice on his hands at not
    
      46 ANPU AND BATA
    
      slaying him. Thus did he. And the younger brother
      called to the elder on the bank, saying, "Stand still until the dawn of
      day; and when Ra ariseth, I shall judge with thee before Him, and He
      discerneth between the good and the evil. For I shall not be with thee any
      more for ever; I shall not be in the place in which thou art; I shall go
      to the valley of the acacia."
    
      Now when the land was lightened, and the next day
      appeared, Ra Harakhti arose, and one looked unto the other. And the youth
      spake with his elder brother, saying, "Wherefore earnest thou after me to
      slay me in craftiness, when thou didst not hear the words of my mouth? For
      I am thy brother in truth, and thou art to me as a father, and thy wife
      even as a mother: is it not so? Verily, when I was sent to bring for us
      corn, thy wife said to me, 'Come, stay with me;' for behold this has been
      turned over unto thee into another wise." And he caused him to understand
      of all that happened with him and his
    
      ANPU AND BATA
    
      47
    
      wife. And he swore an oath by Ra Har-akhti,
      saying, "Thy coming to slay me by deceit with thy knife was an
      abomination." Then the youth took a knife, and cut off of his flesh, and
      cast it into the water, and the fish swallowed it. He failed; he became
    
       
    
      THE CANAL OF RA
    
      faint; and his elder brother cursed his own heart
      greatly; he stood weeping for him afar off; he knew not how to pass over
      to where his younger brother was, because of the crocodiles. And the
      younger brother called unto him, saying, "Whereas thou hast devised
    
      48 ANPU AND BATA
    
      an evil thing, wilt thou not also devise a good
      thing, even like that which I would do unto thee? When thou goest to thy
      house thou must look to thy cattle, for I shall not stay in the place
      where thou art; I am going to the valley of the acacia. And now as to what
      thou shalt do for me; it is even that thou shalt come to seek after me, if
      thou perceivest a matter, namely, that there are things happening unto me.
      And this is what shall come to pass, that I shall draw out my soul, and I
      shall put it upon the top of the flowers of the acacia, and when the
      acacia is cut down, and it falls to the ground, and thou comest to seek
      for it, if thou searchest for it seven years do not let thy heart be
      wearied. For thou wilt find it, and thou must put it in a cup of cold
      water, and expect that I shall live again, that I may make answer to what
      has been done wrong.. And thou shalt know of this, that is to say, that
      things are happening to me, when one shall give to thee a cup of beer in
      thy hand,
    
      ANPU AND BATA 49
    
      and it shall be troubled; stay not then, for
      verily it shall come to pass with thee."
    
      And the youth went to the valley of the acacia;
      and his elder brother went unto his house; his hand was laid on his head,
      and he cast dust on his head; he came to his house, and he slew his wife,
      he cast her to the dogs, and he sat in mourning for his younger brother.
    
      Now many days after these things, the younger
      brother was in the valley of the acacia; there was none with him; he spent
      his time in hunting the beasts of the desert, and he came back in the even
      to lie down under the acacia, which bore his soul upon the topmost flower.
      And after this he built himself a tower with his own hands, in the valley
      of the acacia; it was full of all good things, that he might provide for
      himself a home.
    
      And he went out from his tower, and he 5
    
      50 ANPU AND BATA
    
      met the Nine Gods, who were walking forth to look
      upon the whole land. The Nine Gods talked one with another, and they said
      unto him, "Ho! Bata, bull of the Nine Gods, art thou remaining alone? Thou
    
       
    
      THE HOUSE IN THE VALLEY
    
      hast left thy village for the wife of Anpu, thy
      elder brother. Behold his wife is slain. Thou hast given him an answer to
      all that was transgressed against thee." And their hearts were vexed for
      him exceedingly. And Ra Harakhti said to Khnumu, "Behold,
    
      ANPU AND BATA 51
    
      frame thou a woman for Bata, that he may not
      remain alive alone." And Khnumu made for him a mate to dwell with him.
    
       
    
      THE PROPHECY
    
      She was more beautiful in her limbs than any woman
      who is in the whole land. The essence of every god was in her. The seven
      Hathors came to see her: they said
    
      52 ANPU AND BATA
    
      with one mouth, "She will die a sharp death."
    
      And Bata loved her very exceedingly, and she dwelt
      in his house; he passed his time in hunting the beasts of the desert, and
      brought and laid them before her. He said, "Go not outside, lest the sea
      seize thee; for I cannot rescue thee from it, for I am a woman like thee;
      my soul is placed on the head of the flower of the acacia; and if another
      find it, I must fight with him." And he opened unto her his heart in all
      its nature.
    
      Now after these things Bata went to hunt in his
      daily manner. And the young girl went to walk under the acacia which was
      by the side of her house. Then the sea saw her, and cast its waves up
      after her. She betook herself to flee from before it. She entered her
      house. And the sea called unto the acacia, saying, "Oh, would that I could
      seize her!" And the acacia brought a lock from her hair, and the sea
      carried it to Egypt, and
    
      ANPU AND BATA
    
      53
    
      dropped it in the place of the fullers of
      Pharaoh's linen. The smell of the lock of hair entered into the clothes of
      Pharaoh; and they were wroth with the fullers of Pharaoh, saying, "The
      smell of ointment is in the clothes of Pharaoh." And the people were
      rebuked every day, they knew not what they
    
       
    
      THE RAVISHING SEA
    
      should do. And the chief fuller of Pharaoh walked
      by the bank, and his heart was very evil within him after the daily
      quarrel with him. He stood still, he stood upon the sand opposite to the
      lock of hair, which was in the water, and he made one enter into the water
      and bring it to him; and there was
    
      54
    
      ANPU AND BATA
    
      found in it a smell, exceeding sweet. He
      took it to Pharaoh; and they brought the scribes and the wise men, and
      they said unto Pharaoh, "This lock of hair belongs to a
    
       
    
      THE CHIEF FULLER OF PHARAOH
    
      daughter of Ra Harakhti: the essence of every god
      is in her, and it is a tribute to thee from another land. Let messengers
      go to every strange land to seek her: and as for
    
      ANPU AND BATA 55
    
      the messenger who shall go to the valley of the
      acacia, let many men go with him to bring her." Then said his majesty,
      "Excellent exceedingly is what has been said to us;" and they sent them.
      And many days after these things the people who were sent to strange lands
      came to give report unto the king: but there came not those who went to
      the valley of the acacia, for Bata had slain them, but let one of them
      return to give a report to the king. His majesty sent many men and
      soldiers, as well as horsemen, to bring her back. And there was a woman
      amongst them, and to her had been given in her hand beautiful ornaments of
      a woman. And the girl came back with her, and they rejoiced over her in
      the whole land.
    
      And his majesty loved her exceedingly, and raised
      her to high estate; and he spake unto her that she should tell him
      concerning her husband. And she said, "Let the acacia
    
      56 ANPU AND BATA
    
      be cut down, and let one chop it up." And they
      sent men and soldiers with their weapons to cut down the acacia; and they
      came to the acacia, and they cut the flower upon which was the soul of
      Bata, and he fell dead suddenly.
    
      And when the next day came, and the earth was
      lightened, the acacia was cut down. And Anpu, the elder brother of Bata,
      entered his house, and washed his hands; and one gave him a cup of beer,
      and it became troubled; and one gave him another of wine, and the smell of
      it was evil. Then he took his staff, and his sandals, and likewise his
      clothes, with his weapons of war; and he betook himself forth to the
      valley of the acacia. He entered the tower of his younger brother, and he
      found him lying upon his mat; he was dead. And he wept when he saw his
      younger brother verily lying dead. And he went out to seek the soul of his
      younger brother under the acacia tree, under which his younger brother lay
      in the evening.
    
      ANPU AND BATA 57
    
      He spent three years in seeking for it, but found
      it not. And when he began the fourth year, he desired in his heart to
      return into Egypt; he said "I will go to-morrow morn: " thus spake he in
      his heart.
    
      Now when the land lightened, and the next day
      appeared, he was walking under the acacia; he was spending his time in
      seeking it. And he returned in the evening, and laboured at seeking it
      again. He found a seed. He returned with it. Behold this was the soul of
      his younger brother. He brought a cup of cold water, and he cast the seed
      into it: and he sat down, as he was wont. Now when the night came his soul
      sucked up the water; Bata shuddered in all his limbs, and he looked on his
      elder brother; his soul was in the cup. Then Anpu took the cup of cold
      water, in which the soul of his younger brother was; Bata drank it, his
      soul stood again in its place, and he became as he had been. They embraced
      each other, and they conversed together.
    
      58 ANPU AND BATA
    
      And Bata said to his elder brother, "Behold I am
      to become as a great bull, which bears every good mark; no one knoweth its
      history, and thou must sit upon my back. When the sun arises I shall be in
      the place where my wife is, that I may return answer to her; and
    
       
    
      THE REUNION
    
      thou must take me to the place where the king is.
      For all good things shall be done for thee; for one shall lade thee with
      silver and gold, because thou bringest me to Pharaoh, for I become a great
      marvel, and they shall rejoice for me in all the land. And thou shalt go
      to thy village."
    
      ANPU AND BATA
    
      59
    
      And when the land was lightened, and the next day
      appeared, Bata became in the form which he had told to his elder brother.
      And Anpu sat upon his back until the dawn. He
    
       
    
      
    
      ANPU ON THE BULL
    
      came to the place where the king was, and they
      made his majesty to know of him; he saw him, and he was exceeding joyful
      with him. He made for him great offerings, saying,
    
      60 ANPU AND BATA
    
      "This is a great wonder which has come to pass."
      There were rejoicings over him in the whole land. They presented unto him
      silver and gold for his elder brother, who went and stayed in his village.
      They gave to the bull many men and many things, and Pharaoh loved him
      exceedingly above all that is in this land.
    
      And after many days after these things, the bull
      entered the purified place; he stood in the place where the princess was;
      he began to speak with her, saying, "Behold, I am alive indeed." And she
      said to him, "And, pray, who art thou?" He said to her, "I am Bata. I
      perceived when thou causedst that they should destroy the acacia of
      Pharaoh, which was my abode, that I might not be suffered to live. Behold,
      I am alive indeed, I am as an ox." Then the princess feared exceedingly
      for the words that her husband had spoken to her. And he went out from the
      purified place.
    
      And his majesty was sitting, making a
    
      ANPU AND BATA 61
    
      good day with her: she was at the table of his
      majesty, and the king was exceeding pleased with her. And she said to his
      majesty, "Swear to me by God, saying, 'What thou shalt say, I will obey it
      for thy sake.'" He hearkened unto all that she said, even this. "Let me
      eat of the liver of the ox, because he is fit for nought:" thus spake she
      to him. And the king was exceeding sad at her words, the heart of Pharaoh
      grieved him greatly. And after the land was lightened, and the next day
      appeared, they proclaimed a great feast with offerings to the ox. And the
      king sent one of the chief butchers of his majesty, to cause the ox to be
      sacrificed. And when he was sacrificed, as he was upon the shoulders of
      the people, he shook his neck, and he threw two drops of blood over
      against the two doors of his majesty. The one fell upon the one side, on
      the great door of Pharaoh, and the other upon the other door. They grew as
      two great Persea trees, and each of them was excellent.
    
      62
    
      ANPU AND BATA
    
      And one went to tell unto his majesty, "Two great
      Persea trees have grown, as a great marvel of his majesty, in the night by
      the side of the great gate of his majesty." And
    
       
    
      BATA'S PERSEA TREES
    
      there was rejoicing for them in all the land, and
      there were offerings made to them.
    
      And when the days were multiplied after these
      things, his majesty was adorned with the blue crown, with garlands of
      flowers on
    
      ANPU AND BATA 63
    
      his neck, and he was upon the chariot of pale
      gold, and he went out from the palace to behold the Persea trees: the
      princess also was going out with horses behind his majesty. And his
      majesty sat beneath one of the Persea trees, and it spake thus with his
      wife: "Oh thou deceitful one, I am Bata, I am alive, though I have been
      evilly entreated. I knew who caused the acacia to be cut down by Pharaoh
      at my dwelling. I then became an ox, and thou causedst that I should be
      killed."
    
      And many days after these things the princess
      stood at the table of Pharaoh, and the king was pleased with her. And she
      said to his majesty, "Swear to me by God, saying, 'That which the princess
      shall say to me I will obey it for her.'" And he hearkened unto all she
      said. And he commanded, "Let these two Persea trees be cut down, and let
      them be made into goodly planks." And he hearkened unto all she said. And
      after this his majesty sent skilful craftsmen, and they
    
      64 ANPU AND BATA
    
      cut down the Persea trees of Pharaoh; and the
      princess, the royal wife, was standing looking on, and they did all that
      was in her heart unto the trees. But a chip flew up, and it entered into
      the mouth of the princess; she swallowed it, and after many days she bore
      a son. And one went to tell his majesty, "There is born to thee a son."
      And they brought him, and gave to him a nurse and servants; and there were
      rejoicings in the whole land. And the king sat making a merry day, as they
      were about the naming of him, and his majesty loved him exceedingly at
      that moment, and the king raised him to be the royal son of Kush.
    
      Now after the days had multiplied after these
      things, his majesty made him heir of all the land. And many days after
      that, when he had fulfilled many years as heir, his majesty flew up to
      heaven. And the heir said, "Let my great nobles of his majesty be brought
      before me, that I may make them to know all that has happened to me." And
      they brought
    
      REMARKS 65
    
      also before him his wife, and he judged with her
      before him, and they agreed with him. They brought to him his elder
      brother; he made him hereditary prince in all his land. He was thirty
      years king of Egypt, and he died, and his elder brother stood in his place
      on the day of burial.
    
      Excellently finished in peace, for the ka
      of the scribe of the treasury Kagabu, of the treasury of Pharaoh, and
      for the scribe Hora, and the scribe Meremapt. Written by the scribe Anena,
      the owner of this roll. He who speaks against this roll, may Tahuti smite
      him.
    
      REMARKS
    
      This tale, which is perhaps, of all this
    
      series, the best known in modern times, has
    
      often been published. It exists only in one
    
      papyrus, that of Madame d'Orbiney, pur-
    
      6
    
      66 ANPU AND BATA
    
      chased by the British Museum in 1857. The papyrus
      had belonged to Sety II. when crown prince, and hence is of the XlXth
      Dynasty. Most of the great scholars of this age have worked at it: De
      Rouge, Goodwin, Renouf, Chabas, Brugsch, Ebers, Maspero, and Groff have
      all made original studies on it. The present translation is, however, a
      fresh one made by Mr. Griffith word for word, and shaped as little as
      possible by myself in editing it. The copy followed is the publication by
      Birch in "Select Papyri," part ii. pls. ix. to xix. Before considering the
      details of the story, we should notice an important question about its age
      and composition. That it is as old as the XlXth Dynasty in its present
      form is certain from the papyrus; but probably parts of it are older. The
      idyllic beauty of the opening of it, with the simplicity and directness of
      the ideas, and the absence of any impossible or marvellous feature, is in
      the strongest opposition to the latter part, where marvel is piled on
      marvel in
    
      REMARKS 67
    
      pointless profusion. In the first few pages there
      is not a word superfluous or an idea out of place in drawing the picture.
      That we have to do with an older story lengthened out by some inartistic
      compiler, seems only too probable. And this is borne out by the colophon.
      In the tales of the Shipwrecked Sailor, and of Sanehat, the colophon runs—"This
      is finished from beginning to end, even as it was found in the writing,"
      and the earlier of these two tales follows this with a blessing on the
      transcriber. But, apparently conscious of his meddling, the author of Anpu
      and Bata ends with a curse: "Written by the scribe Anena, the owner of
      this roll. He who speaks against this roll, may Tahuti smite him." This
      points to a part of it at least being newly composed in Ramesside times;
      while the delicate beauty of the opening is not only far better than the
      latter part, but is out of harmony with the forced and artificial taste of
      the XlXth Dynasty. At the same time, the careful drawing of character is
      hardly akin to the simple, matter-
    
      68 ANPU AND BATA
    
      of-fact style of Sanehat, and seems more in
      keeping with the emotional style of the Doomed Prince. If we attribute the
      earlier part to the opening of the XVIIIth Dynasty—the age of the
      pastoral scenes of the tombs of El Kab, which are the latest instances of
      such sculptures in Egypt—we shall probably be nearest to the truth.
    
      The description of Bata is one of the most
      beautiful character-drawings in the past. The self-denial and sweet
      innocence of the lad, his sympathy with his cattle, "listening to all that
      they said," and allowing them their natural wishes and ways, is touchingly
      expressed. And those who know Egypt will know that Bata still lives there—several
      Batas I have known myself. His sweetness of manner, his devotion, his
      untiringly earnest work, his modesty, his quietness, makes Bata to be one
      of the most charming friends. Bata I have met in many places, Bata I have
      loved as one of the flowers of human nature, and Bata I hope often to meet
      again in divers
    
      REMARKS 69
    
      forms and varied incarnations among the fellah
      lads of Egypt.
    
      The touches of description of Bata are slight, and
      yet so pointed. His growing to be an excellent worker; his return at
      evening laden with all the produce, just as may be seen now any evening as
      the lads come in bearing on their backs large bundles of vegetables for
      the house, and of fodder for the home-driven cattle; his sleeping with his
      cattle in the stable; his zeal in rising before dawn to make the daily
      bread for his brother, ready to give him when he arose; and then his
      driving out the cattle to pasture—all contrasts with his elder
      brother's life of ease. The making of the bread was rightly the duty of
      Anpu's wife; she ought to have risen to grind the corn long before dawn,
      as the millstones may now be heard grinding in the dark, morning by
      morning; she ought to have baked the bread ready for the toiler who spent
      his whole day in the field. But it was the ever-willing Bata who did the
      work of the house as well as
    
      yo ANPU AND BATA
    
      the work of the farm. "Behold the spirit of a god
      was in him."
    
      The driving in of the cattle at night is still a
      particular feature of Egyptian life. About an hour before sunset the
      tether ropes are drawn in the fields, and the cattle file off, with a
      little child for a leader—if any; the master gathers up the produce
      that is required, some buffalo is laden with a heap of clover, or a lad
      carries it on his back, for the evening feed of the cattle, and all troop
      along the path through the fields and by the canal. For two or three miles
      the road becomes more and more crowded with the flocks driven into it from
      every field, a long haze of dust lies glowing in the crimson glory of
      sunset over the stream of cows and buffaloes, sheep and goats, that pour
      into the village. Each beast well knows his master and his crib, and turns
      in at the familiar gate to the stable under the house, or by the side of
      the hut; and there all spend the night. Not a hoof is left out in the
      field; the last belated stragglers come in
    
      REMARKS 71
    
      while the gleam of amber still edges the
      night-blue sky behind the black horizon. Then the silent fields lie under
      the brightening moon, glittering with dew, untrodden and deserted. It is
      not cold or climate that leads men to this custom, but the unsafety of a
      country bordered by unseen deserts, whence untold men may suddenly appear
      and ravage all the plain.
    
      The ploughing scene next follows, on "the land
      coming out from the water"; as the inundation goes down the well-known
      banks and ridges appear, "the back-bones of the land," as they were so
      naturally called; and when the surface is firm enough to walk on—with
      many a pool and ditch still full—the ploughing begins on the soft
      dark clay
    
      The catastrophe of the story—the black gulf
      of deceit that suddenly opens under Bata's feet—has always been seen
      to be strikingly like the story of Joseph. And—as we have noticed—there
      is good reason for the early part of this tale belonging to about the
      beginning of the XVIIIth Dynasty, so it
    
      72 ANPU AND BATA
    
      is very closely allied in time as well as
      character to the account of Joseph. In this part again is one of those
      pointed touches, which show the power of the poet—for a poem in
      prose this is—"her heart knew him with the knowledge of youth."
    
      On reaching the mistaken revenge of Anpu, we see
      the sympathy of Bata with his cattle, and his way of reading their
      feelings, returned to him most fittingly by the cows perceiving the
      presence of the treachery. "He heard what his first cow had said; and the
      next entering she also said likewise."
    
      After this we find a change; instead of the simple
      and natural narrative, full of human feeling, and without a touch of
      impossibility, every subsequent episode involves the supernatural; Ra
      creating a wide water, the extraction of the soul of Bata, his miraculous
      wife, and all the transformations—these have nothing in common with
      the style or ideas of the earlier tale.
    
      Whence this later tangle came, and how
    
      REMARKS 73
    
      much of it is drawn from other sources, we can
      hardly hope to explain from the fragments of literature that we have. But
      strangely there is a parallel which is close enough to suggest that the
      patchwork is due to popular mythology. In the myths of Phrygia we meet
      with Atys or Attis, of whom varying legends are told. Among these we glean
      that he was a shepherd, beautiful and chaste; that he fled from
      corruption; that he mutilated himself; lastly he died under a tree, and
      afterwards was revived. All this is a duplicate of the story of Bata. And
      looking further, we see parallels to the three subsequent transformations.
      Drops of blood were shed from the Atys-priest; and Bata, in his first
      transformation as a bull, sprinkles two drops of blood by the doors of the
      palace. Again, Atys is identified with a tree, which was cut down and
      taken into a sanctuary; and Bata in his second transformation is a Persea
      tree which is cut down and used in building. Lastly, the mother of Atys is
      said to have been a
    
      74 ANPU AND BATA
    
      virgin, who bore him from placing in her bosom a
      ripe almond or pomegranate; and in his third transformation Bata is born
      from a chip of a tree being swallowed by the princess. These resemblances
      in nearly all the main points are too close and continuous to be a mere
      chance, especially as such incidents are not found in any other Egyptian
      tale, nor in few—if any—other classical myths. It is not
      impossible that the names even may have been the same; for Bata, as we
      write it, was pronounced Vata (or Vatiu or Vitiou, as others would
      vocalise it), and the digamma would disappear in the later Greek form in
      which we have Atys.
    
      The most likely course seems to have been that,
      starting with a simple Egyptian tale, the resemblance to the shepherd of
      the Asiatic myth, led to a Ramesside author improving the story by tacking
      on the branches of the myth one after another, and borrowing the name. If
      this be granted, we have here in Bata the earliest indications of the
      elements
    
      REMARKS 75
    
      of the Atys mysteries, a thousand years before the
      Greek versions.
    
      Returning now from the general structure to the
      separate incidents, we note the expression of annoyance where the elder
      brother "smote twice on his hands." This gesture is very common in Egypt
      now, the two hands being rapidly slid one past the other, palm to palm,
      vertically, grating the fingers of one hand over the other; the right hand
      moving downwards, and the left a little up. This implies that there is
      nothing, that a thing is worthless, that a desired result has not been
      attained, or annoyance at want of success; but the latter meanings are now
      rare, and more latent than otherwise, and this tale points to the gesture
      being originally one of positive anger, though it has been transferred
      gradually to express mere negative results.
    
      The valley of the acacia would appear from the
      indications to have been by the sea, and probably in Syria; perhaps one of
      the half-desert wadis toward Gaza was in the writer's
    
      76 ANPU AND BATA
    
      mind. The idea of Bata taking out his heart, and
      placing it on the flower of a tree, has seemed hopelessly unintelligible.
      But it depends on what we are to understand by the heart in Egyptian. Two
      words are well known for it, hati and ah; and as it is
      unlikely that these should be mere synonyms, we have a presumption that
      one of them does not mean the physical heart, but rather the mental heart.
      We are accustomed to the same mixture of thought; and far the more common
      usage in English is not to employ the name to express the physical heart,
      but for the will, as when we say "good-hearted";—for the spring of
      action, "broken-hearted ";—for the feelings, "hard-hearted";—for
      the passions, "an affair of the heart";—or for the vigour, as when a
      man in nature or in act is "hearty" The Egyptian, with his metaphysical
      mind, took two different words where we only use one; and when we read of
      placing the heart (hati) out of a man, we are led at once by the
      analogy of beliefs in
    
      REMARKS 77
    
      other races to understand this as the vitality or
      soul. In the "Golden Bough" Mr. Frazer has explained this part of natural
      metaphysics; and in this, and the following points, I freely quote from
      that work as a convenient text-book. The soul or vitality of a man is
      thought of as separable from the body at will, and therefore communicable
      to other objects or positions. In those positions it cannot be harmed by
      what happens to the body, which is therefore deathless for the time. But
      if the external seat of the soul be attacked or destroyed, the man
      immediately dies. This is illustrated from the Norse, Saxons, Celts,
      Italians, Greeks, Kabyles, Arabs, Hindus, Malays, Mongolians, Tartars,
      Magyars, and Slavonians. It may well, then, be considered as a piece of
      inherent psychology: and following this interpretation, I have rendered
      "heart" in this sense "soul" in the translation.
    
      The Nine Gods who meet Bata are one of the great
      cycles of divinities, which were dif-
    
      78 ANPU AND BATA
    
      ferently reckoned in various places. Khnumu is
      always the formative god, who makes man upon the potter's wheel, as in the
      scene in the temple of Luqsor. And even in natural birth it was Khnumu who
      "gave strength to the limbs," as in the earlier "Tales of the Magicians."
      The character of the wife of Bata is a very curious study. The total
      absence of the affections in her was probably designed as in accord with
      her non-natural formation, as she could not inherit aught from human
      parents. Ambition appears as the only emotion of this being; her attacks
      on the transformations of Bata are not due to dislike, but only to fear
      that he should claim her removal from her high station; she "feared
      exceedingly for the words that her husband had spoken to her." Her Lilith
      nature is incapable of any craving but that for power.
    
      The action here of the seven Hathors we have
      noticed in the remarks on the previous tale of the Doomed Prince. The
      episode of the sea is very strange; and if we need find
    
      REMARKS 79
    
      some rationalising account of it, we might suppose
      it to be a mythical form of a raid of pirates, who, not catching the
      woman, carried off something of hers, which proved an object of contention
      in Egypt. But such renderings are unlikely, and we may the rather expect
      to find some explanation in a mythological parallel.
    
      The carrying of the lock of hair to Pharaoh, and
      his proclaiming a search for the owner, is plainly an early form of the
      story of the little slipper, whose owner is sought by the king. The point
      that she could not be caught except by setting another woman to tempt her
      with ornaments, anticipates the modern novelist's saying, "Set a woman to
      catch a woman."
    
      The sudden death of Bata, so soon as the
      depository of his soul was destroyed, is a usual feature in such tales
      about souls. But it is only in the Indian forms quoted by Mr. Frazer that
      there is any revival of the dead; and in no case is there any
      transformation like that of Bata. Perhaps none but
    
      80 ANPU AND BATA
    
      an Egyptian or a Chinese would have credited Anpu
      with wandering up and down for four years seeking the lost soul. But the
      idea of returning the soul in water to the man is found as a magic process
      in North America ("Golden Bough," i. 141).
    
      The first transformation of Bata, into a bull, is
      clearly drawn from the Apis bull of Memphis. The rejoicings at discovering
      a real successor of Apis are here, the rejoicings over Bata, who is the
      Apis bull, distinguished as he says by "bearing every good mark." These
      marks on the back and other parts were the tokens of the true Apis, who
      was sought for anxiously through the country on the death of the sacred
      animal who had lived in the sanctuary. The man who, like Anpu, brought up
      a true Apis to the temple would receive great rewards and honours.
    
      The scene where the princess demands the grant of
      a favour is repeated over again by Esther at her banquet, and by the
      daughter of Herodias. It is the Oriental way of doing
    
      REMARKS 81
    
      business. But the curious incongruity of making a
      great feast with offerings to the ox before sacrificing it, appears
      inexplicable until we note the habits of other peoples in slaying their
      sacred animals at certain intervals. This tale shows us what is stated by
      Greek authors, that the Egyptians slew the sacred Apis at stated times, or
      when a new one was discovered with the right marks. The annual sacrifice
      of a sacred ram at Thebes shows that the Egyptians were familiar with such
      an idea. And though it was considered by the writer of this tale as a
      monstrous act, yet the offerings and festivity which accompanied it are in
      accordance with the strange fact found by Mariette, that in the three
      undisturbed Apis burials which he discovered there were only fragments of
      bone, and in one case a head, carefully embalmed with bitumen and
      magnificent offerings of jewellery. The divine Apis was eaten as a sacred
      feast.
    
      The reason that the princess desires the liver is
      strangely explained by a present belief 7
    
      82 ANPU AND BATA
    
      on the Upper Nile. The Darfuris think that the
      liver is the seat of the soul ("Golden Bough," ii. 88); and hence if she
      ate the liver she would destroy the soul of Bata, or prevent it entering
      any other incarnation.
    
      The next detail is also curiously significant. If
      a bull was being sacrificed we should naturally suppose the blood would
      flow, and that a few drops would not be noticed. Here, however, two drops
      are said to fall, and this was when the bull "was upon the shoulders of
      the people." Now it is a very general idea that blood must not be allowed
      to fall upon the ground; the eastern and southern Africans will not shed
      the blood of cattle ("Golden Bough," i. 182); and strangely the
      Australians avoid the falling of blood to the ground by placing the
      bleeding persons upon the shoulders of other men. This parallel is so
      close to the Egyptian tale that it seems as if the bull was borne "on the
      shoulders of the people," that his blood should not fall to the ground;
      yet in spite of
    
      REMARKS 83
    
      this precaution "he shook his neck, and he threw
      two drops of blood over against the doors of his majesty." In these drops
      of blood was the soul of Bata, in spite of the princess having eaten his
      liver; and we know how among Jews, Arabs, and other peoples, the blood is
      regarded as the vehicle of the soul or life.
    
      The evidence of tree worship is plainer here than
      perhaps in any other passage of Egyptian literature. The people rejoice
      for the two Persea trees, "and there were offerings made to them."
    
      The blue crown worn by the king was the war cap of
      leather covered with scales of copper: it is often found made in dark blue
      glaze for statuettes, and it seems probable that the copper was
      superficially sulphurised to tint it. Such head-dress was usually worn by
      kings when riding in their chariots. The pale gold or electrum here
      mentioned was the general material for decorating the royal chariot.
    
      84 ANPU AND BATA
    
      The miraculous birth of Bata in his third
      transformation is, as we have noticed, closely paralleled by the birth of
      Atys from the almond. The idea at the root of this is that of
      self-creation or self-existence, as in the usual Egyptian phrase, "bull of
      his mother."
    
      The king flying up to heaven is a regular
      expression for his death: "the hawk has soared," "the follower of the god
      has met his maker," so Sanehat describes it (see ist series, pp. 97, 98).
    
      This hawk-form of the king may be connected with
      the hawk bearing the double crown which is perched on the top of the ka
      name of each king. That hawk is not Horus, nor even the king deified as
      Horus, because the emblem of life is given to it by other gods (as by Set
      on a lintel of XVIIIth Dynasty from Nubt), and therefore the hawk is the
      human king who could perish, and not an immortal divinity. Further, this
      hawk-king is always perched on the top of the drawing of the doorway to
      the sepulchre
    
      REMARKS 85
    
      which bears the ka name of the king; and
      when we see the drawings of the ba bird or soul flying down the
      well to the sepulchre, it appears as if the hawk were the royal ba
      bird (ordinary men having a ba bird with a human head); and that
      the well-known first title of each king represents the royal soul or ba
      bird perched on the door of the sepulchre, resting on his way to and from
      the visit to the corpse below. The soul or ba of the king at his
      death thus flew away as a hawk to meet the sun.
    
      The veil drawn over the fate of the inhuman
      princess is well conceived. That she should die a sharp death has been
      foretold; but how Bata should slay the divine creation—his wife—his
      mother—is a matter that the scribe reserves in silence; we only read
      that "he judged with her before him, and the great nobles agreed with
      him." That judgment is best left among the things unwritten.
    
      86 ANPU AND BATA
    
      The strange manner in which we can see incident
      after incident in the latter part of the tale, each to refer to some
      ceremony or belief, even imperfect as our knowledge of such must be, and
      the evidence that the whole being of Bata is a transference of the myth of
      Atys, must lead us to look on this, the marvellous portion, as woven out
      of a group of myths, ceremonies, and beliefs which were joined and
      explained by the formation of such a tale. How far it is due to purely
      Egyptian ideas, indicated by the Apis bull and the analogies in present
      African beliefs, and how far it is Asiatic and belonging to Atys, it would
      be premature to decide. But from the weird confusion and mystery of these
      transformations, we turn back with renewed pleasure to the simple and
      sweet picture of peasant life, and the beauty of Bata, and we see how true
      a poet the Egyptian was in feeling and in expression.
    
      XIXth DYNASTY, PTOLEMAIC WRITING
    
      SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      THE mighty King User-maat-ra (Ra-meses the Great)
      had a son named Setna Kha-em-uast who was a great scribe, and very learned
      in all the ancient writings. And he heard that the magic book of Thoth, by
      which a man may enchant heaven and earth, and know the language of all
      birds and beasts, was buried in the cemetery of Memphis. And he went to
      search for it with his brother An-he-hor-eru; and when they found the tomb
      of the king's son, Na-nefer-ka-ptah, son of the king of Upper
    
      88 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      and Lower Egypt, Mer-neb-ptah, Setna opened it and
      went in.
    
      Now in the tomb was Na-nefer-ka-ptah, and with him
      was the ka of his wife Ahura;
    
       
    
      AHURA'S APPEAL.
    
      for though she was buried at Koptos, her ka
      dwelt at Memphis with her husband, whom she loved. And Setna saw them
      seated before their offerings, and the book lay
    
      AHURA'S TALE 89
    
      between them. And Na-nefer-ka-ptah said to Setna,
      "Who are you that break into my tomb in this way?" He said, "I am Setna,
      son of the great King User-maat-ra, living for ever, and I come for that
      book which I see between you." And Na-nefer-ka-ptah said, "It cannot be
      given to you." Then said Setna, "But I will carry it away by force."
    
      Then Ahura said to Setna, "Do not take this book;
      for it will bring trouble on you, as it has upon us. Listen to what we
      have suffered for it."
    
      AHURA'S TALE
    
      "We were the two children of the King
      Mer-neb-ptah, and he loved us very much, for he had no others; and
      Na-nefer-ka-ptah was in his palace as heir over all the land. And when we
      were grown, the king said to the queen, 'I will marry Na-nefer-ka-ptah
    
      90 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      to the daughter of a general, and Ahura to the son
      of another general.' And the queen said, 'No, he is the heir, let him
      marry his sister, like the heir of a king, none other is fit for him.' And
      the king said, 'That is not fair; they had better be married to the
      children of the general.'
    
      "And the queen said, 'It is you who are not
      dealing rightly with me.' And the king answered, 'If I have no more than
      these two children, is it right that they should marry one another? I will
      marry Na-nefer-ka-ptah to the daughter of an officer, and Ahura to the son
      of another officer. It has often been done so in our family.'
    
      "And at a time when there was a great feast before
      the king, they came to fetch me to the feast. And I was very troubled, and
      did not behave as I used to do. And the king said to me, 'Ahura, have you
      sent some one to me about this sorry matter, saying, "Let me be married to
      my elder brother"? 'I said to him, 'Well, let me marry the son
    
      AHURA'S TALE 91
    
      of an officer, and he marry the daughter of
      another officer, as it often happens so in our family.' I laughed, and the
      king laughed. And the king told the steward of the palace, 'Let them take
      Ahura to the house of Na-nefer-ka-ptah to-night, and all kinds of good
      things with her.' So they brought me as a wife to the house of
      Na-nefer-ka-ptah; and the king ordered them to give me presents of silver
      and gold, and things from the palace.
    
      "And Na-nefer-ka-ptah passed a happy time with me,
      and received all the presents from the palace; and we loved one another.
      And when I expected a child, they told the king, and he was most heartily
      glad; and he sent me many things, and a present of the best silver and
      gold and linen. And when the time came, I bore this little child that is
      before you. And they gave him the name of Mer-ab, and registered him in
      the book of the 'House of life.'
    
      "And when my brother Na-nefer-ka-ptah
    
      92 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      went to the cemetery of Memphis, he did nothing on
      earth but read the writings that are in the catacombs of the kings, and
      the tablets of the 'House of life,' and the
    
       
    
      READING THE INSCRIPTION.
    
      inscriptions that are seen on the monuments, and
      he worked hard on the writings. And there was a priest there called
      Nesi-ptah; and as Na-nefer-ka-ptah went into a
    
      AHURA'S TALE 93
    
      temple to pray, it happened that he went behind
      this priest, and was reading the inscriptions that were on the chapels of
      the gods. And the priest mocked him and laughed. So Na-nefer-ka-ptah said
      to him, 'Why are you laughing at me?' And he replied, 'I was not laughing
      at you, or if I happened to do so, it was at your reading writings that
      are worthless. If you wish so much to read writings, come to me, and I
      will bring you to the place where the book is which Thoth himself wrote
      with his own hand, and which will bring you to the gods. When you read but
      two pages in this you will enchant the heaven, the earth, the abyss, the
      mountains, and the sea; you shall know what the birds of the sky and the
      crawling things are saying; you shall see the fishes of the deep, for a
      divine power is there to bring them up out of the depth. And when you read
      the second page, if you are in the world of ghosts, you will become again
      in the shape you were in on earth. You will
    
      94 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      see the sun shining in the sky, with all the gods,
      and the full moon.'
    
      "And Na-nefer-ka-ptah said, 'By the life of the
      king! Tell me of anything you want
    
       
    
      SENDING THE SILVER.
    
      done and I'll do it for you, if you will only send
      me where this book is.' And the priest answered Na-nefer-ka-ptah, 'If you
      want to go to the place where the book is, you must
    
      AHURA'S TALE 95
    
      give me a hundred pieces of silver for my funeral,
      and provide that they shall bury me as a rich priest.' So Na-nefer-ka-ptah
      called his lad and told him to give the priest a hundred pieces of silver;
      and he made them do as he wished, even everything that he asked for. Then
      the priest said to Na-nefer-ka-ptah, 'This book is in the middle of the
      river at Koptos, in an iron box; in the iron box is a bronze box; in the
      bronze box is a sycamore box; in the sycamore box is an ivory and ebony
      box; in the ivory and ebony box is a silver box; in the silver box is a
      golden box, and in that is the book. It is twisted all round with snakes
      and scorpions and all the other crawling things around the box in which
      the book is; and there is a deathless snake by the box.' And when the
      priest told Na-nefer-ka-ptah, he did not know where on earth he was, he
      was so much delighted.
    
      "And when he came from the temple he told me all
      that had happened to him. And
    
      96 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      he said, 'I shall go to Koptos, for I must fetch
      this book; I will not stay any longer in the north.' And I said, 'Let me
      dissuade you, for you prepare sorrow and you will bring me into trouble in
      the Thebaid.' And I laid my hand on Na-nefer-ka-ptah, to keep him from
      going to Koptos, but he would not listen to me; and he went to the king,
      and told the king all that the priest had said. The king asked him, 'What
      is it that you want?' and he replied, 'Let them give me the royal boat
      with its belongings, for I will go to the south with Ahura and her little
      boy Mer-ab, and fetch this book without delay.' So they gave him the royal
      boat with its belongings, and we went with him to the haven, and sailed
      from there up to Koptos.
    
      "Then the priests of Isis of Koptos, and the high
      priest of Isis, came down to us without waiting, to meet Na-nefer-ka-ptah,
      and their wives also came to me. We went into the temple of Isis and
      Harpokrates; and
    
      AHURA'S TALE
    
      97
    
      Na-nefer-ka-ptah brought an ox, a goose, and some
      wine, and made a burnt-offering and a drink-offering before Isis of Koptos
      and Harpokrates. They brought us to a very
    
       
    
      
    
      THE PRIESTS' WIVES.
    
      fine house, with all good things; and
      Na-nefer-ka-ptah spent four days there and feasted with the priests of
      Isis of Koptos, and the wives of the priests of Isis also made holiday
      with me.
    
      8
    
      98 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      "And the morning of the fifth day came; and
      Na-nefer-ka-ptah called a priest to him, and made a magic cabin that was
      full of men and tackle. He put the spell upon it, and put life in it, and
      gave them breath, and sank it in the water. He filled the royal boat with
      sand, and took leave of me, and sailed from the haven: and I sat by the
      river at Koptos that I might see what would become of him. And he said,
      'Workmen, work for me, even at the place where the book is.' And they
      toiled by night and by day; and when they had reached it in three days, he
      threw the sand out, and made a shoal in the river. And then he found on it
      entwined serpents and scorpions and all kinds of crawling things around
      the box in which the book was; and by it he found a deathless snake around
      the box. And he laid the spell upon the entwined serpents and scorpions
      and all kinds of crawling things which were around the box, that they
      should not come out. And he went to the deathless snake, and fought with
    
      AHURA'S TALE 99
    
      him, and killed him; but he came to life again,
      and took a new form. He then fought again with him a second time; but he
      came to life again, and took a third form. He then cut him in two parts,
      and put sand
    
       
    
      SLAYING THE SNAKE.
    
      between the parts, that he should not appear
      again.
    
      "Na-nefer-ka-ptah then went to the place where he
      found the box. He uncovered a box of iron, and opened it; he found then a
      box of bronze, and opened that; then he found
    
      100 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      a box of sycamore wood, and opened that; again, he
      found a box of ivory and ebony, and opened that; yet, he found a box of
      silver, and opened that; and then he found a box of gold; he opened that,
      and found the book in it. He took the book from the golden box, and read a
      page of spells from it. He enchanted the heaven and the earth, the abyss,
      the mountains, and the sea; he knew what the birds of the sky, the fish of
      the deep, and the beasts of the hills all said. He read another page of
      the spells, and saw the sun shining in the sky, with all the gods, the
      full moon, and the stars in their shapes; he saw the fishes of the deep,
      for a divine power was present that brought them up from the water. He
      then read the spell upon the workmen that he had made, and taken from the
      haven, and said to them, 'Work for me, back to the place from which I
      came.' And they toiled night and day, and so he came back to the place
      where I sat by the river of Koptos; I had not drunk nor
    
      AHURA'S TALE 101
    
      eaten anything, and had done nothing on earth, but
      sat like one who is gone to the grave.
    
      "I then told Na-nefer-ka-ptah that I wished to see
      this book, for which we had taken so much trouble. He gave the book into
      my hands; and when I read a page of the spells in it I also enchanted
      heaven and earth, the abyss, the mountains, and the sea; I also knew what
      the birds of the sky, the fishes of the deep, and the beasts of the hills
      all said. I read another page of the spells, and I saw the sun shining in
      the sky with all the gods, the full moon, and the stars in their shapes; I
      saw the fishes of the deep, for a divine power was present that brought
      them up from the water. As I could not write, I asked Na-nefer-ka-ptah,
      who was a good writer, and a very learned one; he called for a new piece
      of papyrus, and wrote on it all that was in the book before him. He dipped
      it in beer, and washed it off in the liquid; for he knew that if it were
      washed off, and he
    
      102 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK .
    
      drank it, he would know all that there was in the
      writing.
    
      "We returned back to Koptos the same day, and made
      a feast before Isis of Koptos and Harpokrates. We then went to the haven
      and sailed, and went northward of Koptos. And as we went on Thoth
      discovered all that Na-nefer-ka-ptah had done with the book; and Thoth
      hastened to tell Ra, and said, 'Now know that my book and my revelation
      are with Na-nefer-ka-ptah, son of the King Mer-neb-ptah. He has forced
      himself into my place, and robbed it, and seized my box with the writings,
      and killed my guards who protected it.' And Ra replied to him, 'He is
      before you, take him and all his kin.'He sent a power from heaven with the
      command, 'Do not let Na-nefer-ka-ptah return safe to Memphis with all his
      kin.' And after this hour, the little boy Mer-ab, going out from the
      awning of the royal boat, fell into the river: he called on Ra, and
      everybody who was on the bank raised a cry. Na-nefer-ka.
    
      AHURA'S TALE 103
    
      ptah went out of the cabin, and read the spell
      over him; he brought his body up because a divine power brought him to the
      surface. He read another spell over him, and made him tell of all what
      happened to him, and of what Thoth had said before Ra.
    
      "We turned back with him to Koptos. We brought him
      to the Good House, we fetched the people to him, and made one embalm him;
      and we buried him in his coffin in the cemetery of Koptos like a great and
      noble person.
    
      "And Na-nefer-ka-ptah, my brother, said, 'Let us
      go down, let us not delay, for the king has not yet heard of what has
      happened to him, and his heart will be sad about it.' So we went to the
      haven, we sailed, and did not stay to the north of Koptos. When we were
      come to the place where the little boy Mer-ab had fallen in the water, I
      went out from the awning of the royal boat, and I fell into the river.
      They called Na-nefer-ka-ptah, and he came out from the cabin of the royal
    
      104 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      boat; he read a spell over me, and brought my body
      up, because a divine power brought me to the surface. He drew me out, and
      read the spell over me, and made me tell him
    
       
    
      READING THE SPELL.
    
      of all that had happened to me, and of what Thoth
      had said before Ra. Then he turned back with me to Koptos, he brought me
      to the Good House, he fetched the people to me, and made one embalm me, as
      great and noble people are buried, and laid me in the tomb where Mer-ab my
      young child was.
    
      AHURA'S TALE
    
      105
    
      "He turned to the haven, and sailed down, and
      delayed not in the north of Koptos. When he was come to the place where we
      fell
    
       
    
      re.
    
      REMORSE.
    
      into the river, he said to his heart, 'Shall I not
      better turn back again to Koptos, that I may lie by them? For, if not,
      when I go down to Memphis, and the king asks after
    
      106 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      his children, what shall I say to him? Can I tell
      him, "I have taken your children to the Thebaid, and killed them, while I
      remained alive, and I have come to Memphis still alive"?' Then he made
      them bring him a linen cloth of striped byssus; he made a band, and bound
      the book firmly, and tied it upon him. Na-nefer-ka-ptah then went out of
      the awning of the royal boat and fell into the river. He cried on Ra; and
      all those who were on the bank made an outcry, saying, 'Great woe! Sad
      woe! Is he lost, that good scribe and able man that has no equal?'
    
      "The royal boat went on, without any one on earth
      knowing where Na-nefer-ka-ptah was. It went on to Memphis, and they told
      all this to the king. Then the king went down to the royal boat in
      mourning, and all the soldiers and high priests and priests of Ptah were
      in mourning, and all the officials and courtiers. And when he saw
      Na-nefer-ka-ptah, who was in the inner cabin of the
    
      AHURA'S TALE 107
    
      royal boat—from his rank of high scribe—he
      lifted him up. And they saw the book by him; and the king said, 'Let one
      hide this book that is with him.' And the officers of the king, the
      priests of Ptah, and the high priest of Ptah, said to the king, 'Our Lord,
      may the king live as long as the sun! Na-nefer-ka-ptah was a good scribe,
      and a very skilful man.' And the king had him laid in his Good House to
      the sixteenth day, and then had him wrapped to the thirty-fifth day, and
      laid him out to the seventieth day, and then had him put in his grave in
      his resting-place.
    
      "I have now told you the sorrow which has come
      upon us because of this book for which you ask, saying, 'Let it be given
      to me.' You have no claim to it; and, indeed, for the sake of it, we have
      given up our life on earth."
    
      And Setna said to Ahura, "Give me the
    
      108 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      book which I see between you and Na-nefer-ka-ptah;
      for if you do not I will take it by force." Then Na-nefer-ka-ptah rose
      from his seat and said, "Are you Setna, to whom
    
       
    
      SETNA DEMANDING THE ROLL.
    
      my wife has told of all these blows of fate, which
      you have not suffered? Can you take this book by your skill as a good
      scribe? If, indeed, you can play games with
    
      SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK 109
    
      me, let us play a game, then, of 52 points." And
      Setna said, "I am ready," and the board and its pieces were put before
      him. And Na-nefer-ka-ptah won a game from Setna; and he put the spell upon
      him, and
    
       
    
      SETNA VANQUISHED.
    
      defended himself with the game board that was
      before him, and sunk him into the ground above his feet. He did the same
      at the second game, and won it from Setna, and sunk him into the ground to
      his waist.
    
      110 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      He did the same at the third game, and made him
      sink into the ground up to his ears. Then Setna struck Na-nefer-ka-ptah a
      great blow with his hand. And Setna called his brother An-he-hor-eru and
      said to him,
    
       
    
      APPLYING THE TALISMAN.
    
      "Make haste and go up upon earth, and tell the
      king all that has happened to me, and bring me the talisman of my father
      Ptah, and my magic books."
    
      And he hurried up upon earth, and told
    
      SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK 111
    
      the king all that had happened to Setna. The king
      said, "Bring him the talisman of his father Ptah, and his magic books."
      And An-he-hor-eru hurried down into the tomb;
    
       
    
      SETNA VICTORIOUS.
    
      he laid the talisman on Setna, and he sprang up
      again immediately. And then Setna reached out his hand for the book, and
      took it. Then—as Setna went out from the
    
      112 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      tomb—there went a Light before him, and
      Darkness behind him. And Ahura wept at him, and she said, "Glory to the
      King of Darkness! Hail to the King of Light! all power is gone from the
      tomb." But Na-nefer-ka-ptah said to Ahura, "Do not let your heart be sad;
      I will make him bring back this book, with a forked stick in his hand, and
      a fire-pan on his head." And Setna went out from the tomb, and it closed
      behind him as it was before.
    
      Then Setna went to the king, and told him
      everything that had happened to him with the book. And the king said to
      Setna, "Take back the book to the grave of Na-nefer-ka-ptah, like a
      prudent man, or else he will make you bring it with a forked stick in your
      hand, and a fire-pan on your head." But Setna would not listen to him; and
      when Setna had unrolled the book he did nothing on earth but read it to
      everybody.
    
      [Here follows a story of how Setna, walking in the
      court of the temple of Ptah, met
    
      SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK 113
    
      Tabubua, a fascinating girl, daughter of a priest
      of Bast, of Ankhtaui; how she repelled his advances, until she had
      beguiled him into giving up all his possessions, and
    
       
    
      SETNA READING THE ROLL.
    
      slaying his children. At the last she gives a
      fearful cry and vanishes, leaving Setna bereft of even his clothes. This
      would seem to be merely a dream, by the disappearance of Tabubua, and by
      Setna finding 9
    
      114 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      his children alive after it all; but on the other
      hand he comes to his senses in an unknown place, and is so terrified as to
      be quite ready to make restitution to Na-nefer-ka-ptah. The episode, which
      is not creditable to Egyptian society, seems to be intended for one of the
      vivid dreams which the credulous readily accept as half realities.]
    
      So Setna went to Memphis, and embraced his
      children for that they were alive. And the king said to him, "Were you not
      drunk to do so?" Then Setna told all things that had happened with Tabubua
      and Na-nefer. ka-ptah. And the king said, "Setna, I have already lifted up
      my hand against you before, and said, 'He will kill you if you do not take
      back the book to the place you took it from.' But you have never listened
      to me till this hour. Now, then, take the book to Na-nefer-ka-ptah, with a
      forked stick in your hand, and a fire-pan on your head."
    
      So Setna went out from before the king, with a
      forked stick in his hand, and a fire-
    
      SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK 115
    
      pan on his head. He went down to the tomb in which
      was Na-nefer-ka-ptah. And Ahura said to him, "It is Ptah, the great god,
      that has brought you back safe." Na-nefer-ka-ptah laughed, and he said,
      "This is the business that I told you before." And when Setna had praised
      Na-nefer-ka-ptah, he found it as the proverb says, "The sun was in the
      whole tomb." And Ahura and Na-nefer-ka-ptah besought Setna greatly. And
      Setna said, "Na-nefer-ka-ptah, is it aught disgraceful (that you lay on me
      to do)?" And Na-nefer-ka-ptah said, "Setna, you know this, that Ahura and
      Mer-ab, her child, behold! they are in Koptos; bring them here into this
      tomb, by the skill of a good scribe. Let it be impressed upon you to take
      pains, and to go to Koptos to bring them here." Setna then went out from
      the tomb to the king, and told the king all that Na-nefer-ka-ptah had told
      him.
    
      The king said, "Setna, go to Koptos and bring back
      Ahura and Mer-ab." He
    
      116 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      answered the king, "Let one give me the royal boat
      and its belongings." And they gave him the royal boat and its belongings,
      and he left the haven, and sailed without stopping till he came to Koptos.
    
      And they made this known to the priests of Isis at
      Koptos and to the high priest of Isis; and behold they came down to him,
      and gave him their hand to the shore. He went up with them and entered
      into the temple of Isis of Koptos and of Harpo-krates. He ordered one to
      offer for him an ox, a goose, and some wine, and he made a burnt-offering
      and a drink-offering before Isis of Koptos and Harpokrates. He went to the
      cemetery of Koptos with the priests of Isis and the high priest of Isis.
      They dug about for three days and three nights, for they searched even in
      all the catacombs which were in the cemetery of Koptos; they turned over
      the steles of the scribes of the "double house of life," and read the
      inscriptions that they found on them. But
    
      SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK 117
    
      they could not find the resting-place of Ahura and
      Mer-ab.
    
      Now Na-nefer-ka-ptah perceived that they could not
      find the resting-place of Ahura and her child Mer-ab. So he raised himself
      up as a venerable, very old, ancient, and came before Setna. And Setna saw
      him, and Setna said to the ancient, "You look like a very old man, do you
      know where is the resting-place of Ahura and her child Mer-ab?" The
      ancient said to Setna, "It was told by the father of the father of my
      father to the father of my father, and the father of my father has told it
      to my father; the resting-place of Ahura and of her child Mer-ab is in a
      mound south of the town of Pehemato (?)" And Setna said to the ancient,
      "Perhaps we may do damage to Pehemato, and you are ready to lead one to
      the town for the sake of that." The ancient replied to Setna, "If one
      listens to me, shall he therefore destroy the town of Pehemato! If they do
      not find Ahura and her child
    
      118 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      Mer-ab under the south corner of their town may I
      be disgraced." They attended to the ancient, and found the resting-place
      of Ahura and her child Mer-ab under the south corner of the town of
      Pehemato. Setna laid them in the royal boat to bring them as honoured
      persons, and restored the town of Pehemato as it originally was. And
      Na-nefer-ka-ptah made Setna to know that it was he who had come to Koptos,
      to enable them to find out where the resting-place was of Ahura and her
      child Mer-ab.
    
      So Setna left the haven in the royal boat, and
      sailed without stopping, and reached Memphis with all the soldiers who
      were with him. And when they told the king he came down to the royal boat.
      He took them as honoured persons escorted to the catacombs, in which
      Na-nefer-ka-ptah was, and smoothed down the ground over them.
    
      This is the completed writing of the tale of
      Setna Kha-em-uast, and Na-nefer-ka.-ptah, and
    
      REMARKS 119
    
      his wife Ahura, and their Mid Mer-ab. It was
      written in the 35th year, the month Tybi.
    
      REMARKS
    
      This tale of Setna only exists in one copy, a
      demotic papyrus in the Ghizeh Museum. The demotic was published in
      facsimile by Mariette in 1871, among "Les Papyrus du Musee de Boulaq; "
      and it has been translated by Brugsch, Revillout, Maspero, and Hess. The
      last version—"Der Demotische Roman von Stne Ha-m-us, von J. J. Hess"—being
      a full study of the text with discussion and glossary, has been followed
      here; while the interpretation of Maspero has also been kept in view in
      the rendering of obscure passages.
    
      Unhappily the opening of this tale is lost, and I
      have therefore restored it by a recital of the circumstances which are
      referred to in what remains. Nothing has been introduced
    
      120 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      which is not necessarily involved or stated in
      the existing text. The limit of this restoration is marked by ]; the
      papyrus beginning with the words, "It is you who are not dealing rightly
      with me."
    
      The construction is complicated by the mixture of
      times and persons; and we must remember that it was written in the
      Ptolemaic period concerning an age long past. It stood to the author much
      as Tennyson's "Harold" stands to us, referring to an historical age,
      without too strict a tie to facts and details. Five different acts, as we
      may call them, succeed one another. In the first act—which is
      entirely lost, and here only outlined—the circumstances which led
      Setna of the XlXth Dynasty to search for the magic book must have been
      related. In the second act Ahura recites the long history of herself and
      family, to deter Setna from his purpose. This act is a complete tale by
      itself, and belongs to a time some generations before Setna; it is here
      supposed to belong to the time of Amenhotep
    
      REMARKS 121
    
      III., in the details of costume adopted for
      illustration. The third act is Setna's struggle as a rival magician to
      Na-nefer-ka-ptah, from which he finally comes off victorious by his
      brother's use of a talisman, and so secures possession of the coveted
      magic book. The fourth act—which I have here only summarised—shows
      how Na-nefer-ka-ptah resorts to a bewitchment of Setna by a sprite, by
      subjection to whom he loses his magic power. The fifth act shows Setna as
      subjected to Na-nefer-ka-ptah, and ordered by him to bring the bodies of
      his wife and child to Memphis into his tomb.
    
      While, therefore, the sentimental climax of the
      tale—the restoration of the unity of the family in one tomb—belongs
      to persons of the XVIIIth Dynasty, the action of the tale is entirely of
      the XlXth Dynasty, for what happened in the XVIIIth Dynasty (second act)
      is all related in the XlXth. And the actual composition of it belongs to
      Ptolemaic times, not only on the evidence of the manuscript,
    
      122 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      but also of the language; this being certified by
      the importance of Isis and Horus at Koptos, which is essentially a late
      worship there.
    
      Turning now to the details, we may note that the
      statement that Setna Kha-em-uast was a son of User-maat-ra (or Ramessu
      II.) occurs in the fourth act which is here only summarised. Among the
      sons of Ramessu historically known, the Prince Kha-em-uast (or
      "Glory-in-Thebes ") was the most important; he appears to have been the
      eldest son, exercising the highest offices during his father's life. That
      the succession fell on the thirteenth son, Mer-en-ptah, was doubtless due
      to the elder sons having died during the preternaturally long reign of
      Ramessu.
    
      The other main personage here is Na-nefer-ka-ptah
      (or "Excellent is the ka of Ptah "), who is said to be the son of a
      King Mer-neb. ptah. No such name is known among historical kings; and it
      is probably a popular corruption or abbreviation. It was pro-
    
      REMARKS 123
    
      nounced Minibptah, the r being dropped in early
      times. It would seem most like Mine-ptah or Mer-en-ptah, the son and
      successor of Ramessu II.; but as the date of Mer-neb-ptah is supposed to
      be some generations before that, such a supposition would involve a great
      confusion on the scribes' part. Another possibility is that it represents
      Amenhotep III., Neb-maat-ra-mer-ptah, pronounced as Nimu-rimiptah, which
      might be shortened to Neb. mer-ptah or Mer-neb-ptah. Such a time would
      well suit the tale, and that reign has been adopted here in fixing the
      style of the dress of Ahura and her family.
    
      This tale shows how far the ka or double
      might wander from its body or tomb. Here Ahura and her child lie buried at
      Koptos, while her husband's tomb is at Memphis. But that does not separate
      them in death; her ka left her tomb and went down to Memphis to
      live with the ka of her husband in his tomb. Thus, when Setna
      forces the tomb of Na-nefer-ka-ptah, he finds Ahura seated by
    
      124 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      him with the precious magic roll between them and
      the child Mer-ab; and the voluble Ahura recounts all their history, and
      weeps when the roll is carried away by Setna. Yet all the time her body is
      at Koptos, and the penalty imposed on Setna is that of bringing her body
      to the tomb where her ka already was dwelling. If a ka could
      thus wander so many hundred miles from its body to gratify its affections,
      it would doubtless run some risks of starving, or having to put up with
      impure food; or might even lose its way, and rather than intrude on the
      wrong tomb, have to roam as a vagabond ka. It was to guard against
      these misfortunes that a supply of formulas were provided for it, by which
      it should obtain a guarantee against such misfortunes—a kind of
      spiritual directory or guide to the unprotected; and such formulas, when
      once accepted as valid, were copied, repeated, enlarged, and added to,
      until they became the complex and elaborate work—The Book of the
      Dead, Perhaps nothing else
    
      REMARKS 125
    
      gives such a view of the action of the ka
      as this tale of Setna.
    
      There is here also an insight into the
      arrangement of marriages in Egypt. It does not seem that anything was
      determined about a marriage during childhood; it is only when the children
      are full-grown that a dispute arises between the king and queen as to
      their disposal. But the parents decide the whole question. It is, of
      course, well known that the Egyptians had no laws against consanguinity in
      marriages; on the contrary, it was with them, as with the Persians,
      essential for a king to marry in the royal family, and also usual for
      private persons to marry in their family. Even to the present day in
      Egypt, although sister-marriage has disappeared, yet it is the duty of a
      man to marry his first cousin or some one in the family. The very idea of
      relationship being any possible impediment to marriage was un-thought of
      by the Egyptian; his favourite concrete expression for a self-existent or
      self-
    
      126 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      created being—"husband of his mother "—shows
      this unmistakably.
    
      The objection made by the king to the marriage of
      Na-nefer-ka-ptah and Ahura turns on the point that he has only these two
      children, and hence, if they marry the children of the generals, there
      will be two families instead of only one to ensure future posterity. The
      queen, however, talks the king over on the matter. The cause of Ahura's
      being troubled at the feast is not certain, but the king evidently
      supposes that she has been pleading to be allowed to marry her beloved
      brother, and when taxed with it she only expresses her willingness to give
      way to his exogamic views. The brief sentence, "I laughed and the king
      laughed," seems to mean that she pleased and amused her father so that he
      gave way, and immediately told the steward to arrange for her marriage as
      she desired. I have here abbreviated a few needlessly precise details. We
      also learn, by the way, that there was a regular registry of births, in
      which Mer-ab was entered.
    
      REMARKS 127
    
      It appears that the court was considered to be at
      Memphis, and not at Thebes. This would not have been so arranged had this
      been written in the Ramesside times, but under the Ptolemies Memphis was
      the seat of the court—when not at Alexandria. The name of the
      priest, Nesi-ptah, also shows another anachronism. Such a name was not
      usual till some time after the XlXth Dynasty. Another touch of late times
      is in the antiquarian curiosity of Na-nefer-ka-ptah about ancient
      writings, "He did nothing on earth but read the writings that are in the
      catacombs of the kings, and the tablets of the House of Life." In the
      XlXth Dynasty there is no sign of interest in such records, but in the
      Renascence ancient things came into fashion, all the old titles were
      revived, the old style was copied, and very long genealogies were worked
      up and carved in the inscriptions. In such an age many a dilettante
      rich young man would amuse himself, as in this tale, with reading
      inscriptions
    
      128 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      and hunting up his family genealogy from the
      tombstones and the registers.
    
      The firm belief in magic which underlies all this
      tale might perhaps be thought to be inappropriate to the enlightenment of
      Greek times. We have seen how in the earliest tales magic is a mainspring
      of the action, and it is at first sight surprising that its sway should
      last through so many thousands of years. But there may well have been a
      recrudescence of such beliefs, along with the revival of interest in the
      earlier history. The enormous spread and popularity of Gnosticism—the
      belief in the efficacy of words and formulas to control spirits and their
      actions—in the centuries immediately after this, shows how ingrained
      magic ideas were, and how ready to sprout up when the counterbalancing
      interests of the old mythology were gone, and their place taken by the
      intangible spirituality of Platonism and the early Christian atmosphere.
    
      A most Egyptian turn is given where the
    
      REMARKS 129
    
      priest bargains for a large payment for his
      funeral, and to be buried as a rich priest. The enclosing of the magic
      roll in a series of boxes has many parallels. In an Indian tale we read:
      "Round the tree are tigers and bears and scorpions and snakes; on the top
      of the tree is a very fat great snake; on his head is a little cage; in
      the cage is a bird; and my soul is in that bird" ("Golden Bough," ii.
      300). In Celtic tales the series-idea also occurs. The soul of a giant is
      in an egg, the egg is in a dove, the dove is in a hare, the hare is in a
      wolf, and the wolf is in an iron chest at the bottom of the sea ("Golden
      Bough," ii. 314). The Tartars have stories of a golden casket containing
      the soul, inside a copper or silver casket ("Golden Bough," ii. 324). And
      the Arabs tell of a soul put in the crop of a sparrow, and the sparrow in
      a little box, and this in another small box, and this put into seven other
      boxes, and these in seven chests, and the chest in a coffer of marble
      ("Golden 10
    
      130 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      Bough," ii. 318). The notion, therefore, of a
      series of boxes, one enclosing another, and the whole guarded by dangerous
      animals, is well known as an element in tales. The late date is here shown
      by the largest and least precious of the boxes being of iron, which was
      rarely, if ever, used in Ramesside times, and was not common till the
      Greek age.
    
      The magic engineering of Na-nefer-ka. ptah is very
      curious. The cabin or air-chamber of men in model, who are let down to
      work for him, suggests that Egyptians may have used the principle of a
      diving-bell or air-chamber for reaching parts under water. Certainly the
      device of raising things by dropping down sand to be put under them is
      still practised. An immense sarcophagus at Gizeh was raised from a deep
      well by natives who thrust sand under it rammed tight by a stick, and by
      this simple kind of hydraulic press raised it a hundred feet to the
      surface. In this way the magic men of Na-nefer-ka-ptah raised up the chest
      when
    
      REMARKS 131
    
      they had discovered it by means of the sand which
      he poured over from the boat.
    
      There is some picturesqueness in this tale, though
      it has not the charm of the earlier compositions. The scene of Ahura
      sitting for three days and nights, during the combat, watching by the side
      of the river, where she "had not drunk or eaten anything, and had done
      nothing on earth but sat like one who is gone to the grave," is a touching
      detail.
    
      The light on the education of women is curious.
      Ahura can read the roll, but she cannot write. We are so accustomed to
      regard reading and writing as all one subject that the distinction is
      rare; but with a writing comprising so many hundred signs as the Egyptian,
      the art of writing or draw-Ing all the forms, and knowing which to use, is
      far more complex than that of reading. There are now ten students who can
      read an inscription for one who could compose it correctly. Here a woman
      of the highest rank is supposed to be able to read, but not
    
      132 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      to write; that is reserved for the skill of "a
      good writer, and a very learned one."
    
      The writing of spells and then washing the ink off
      and drinking it is a familiar idea in the East. Modern Egyptian bowls have
      charms engraved on them to be imparted to the drink, and ancient
      Babylonian bowls are inscribed with the like purpose.
    
      An insight into the powers of the gods is here
      given us. The Egyptian did not attribute to them omniscience. Thoth only
      discovered what Na-nefer-ka-ptah had done as they were sailing away, some
      days after the seizure of the book. And even Ra is informed by the
      complaint of Thoth. If Ra were the physical sun it would be obvious that
      he would see all that was being done on earth; it would rather be he who
      would inform Thoth. The conception of the gods must therefore have been
      not pantheistic or materialist, but solely as spiritual powers who needed
      to obtain information, and who only could act through intermediaries.
      Further,
    
      REMARKS 133
    
      nothing can be done without the consent of Ra;
      Thoth is powerless over men, and can only ask Ra, as a sort of universal
      magistrate, to take notice of the offence. Neither god acts directly, but
      by means of a power or angel, who takes the commission to work on men. How
      far this police-court conception of the gods is due to Greek or foreign
      influence can hardly be estimated yet. It certainly does not seem in
      accord with the earlier appeals to Ra, and direct action of Ra, in "Anpu
      and Bata."
    
      The power of spells is limited, as we have just
      seen the abilities of the gods were limited. The most powerful of spells,
      the magic book of Thoth himself, cannot restore life to a person just
      drowned. All that Na. nefer-ka-ptah can do with the spell is to cause the
      body to float and to speak, but it remains so truly dead that it is buried
      as if no spell had been used. Now it was recognised that the ka
      could move about and speak to living persons, as Ahura does to
    
      134 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      Setna. Hence all that the spells do is not to
      alter the course of nature, but only to put the person into touch and
      communication with the ever-present supernatural, to enable him to know
      what the birds, the fishes, and the beasts all said, and to see the
      unseen.
    
      Modern conceptions of the spiritual are so bound
      up with the sense of omnipresence and omniscience that we are apt to read
      those ideas into the gods and the magic of the ancients. Here we have to
      deal with gods who have to obtain information, and who order powers to act
      for them, with spells which extend the senses to the unseen, but which do
      not affect natural results and changes.
    
      The inexorable fate in this tale which brings one
      after another of the family to die in the same spot is not due to Greek
      influence, though it seems akin to that. In the irrepressible
      transmigrations of Bata, and the successive risks of the Doomed Prince,
      the same ideas are seen working in the
    
      REMARKS 135
    
      Egyptian mind. The remorse of Na-nefer-ka-ptah is
      a stronger touch of conscience and of shame than is seen in early times.
    
      There is an unexplained point in the action as to
      how Na-nefer-ka-ptah, with the book upon him, comes up from the water,
      after he is drowned, into the cabin of the royal boat. The narrator had a
      difficulty to account for the recovery of the body without the use of the
      magic book, and so that stage is left unnoticed. The successive stages of
      embalming and mourning are detailed. The sixteen days in the Good House is
      probably the period of treatment of the body, the time up to the
      thirty-fifth day that of wrapping and decoration of the mummy cartonnage,
      and then the thirty-five days more of lying in state until the burial.
    
      We now reach the third act, of Setna's struggle
      to get the magic roll. Here the strange episode comes in of the rival
      magicians gambling; it recalls the old tale of Rampsinitus descending into
      Hades and play-
    
      136 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      ing at dice with Ceres, and the frequent presence
      of draught-boards in the tombs, shows how much the ka was supposed
      to relish such pleasures. The regular Egyptian game-board had three rows
      of ten squares, or thirty in all. Such are found from the XIIth Dynasty
      down to Greek times; but this form has now entirely disappeared, and the
      man-galah of two rows of six holes, or the tab of four rows
      of nine holes, have taken its place. Both of these are side games, where
      different sides belong to opposite players. The commoner siga is a
      square game, five rows of five, or seven rows of seven holes, and has no
      personal sides. The ancient game was played with two, or perhaps three,
      different kinds of men, and the squares were counted from one end along
      the outer edge; but what the rules were, or how a game of fifty-two points
      was managed, has not yet been explained.
    
      The strange scene of Setna being sunk into the
      ground portion by portion, as he loses
    
      REMARKS 137
    
      successive games, is parallel to a mysterious
      story among the dervishes in Palestine. They tell how the three holy
      shekhs of the Dervish orders, Bedawi, Erfa'i, and Desuki, went in
      succession to Baghdad to ask for a jar of water of Paradise from the
      Derwisha Bint Bari, who seems to be a sky-genius, controlling the meteors.
      The last applicant, Desuki, was refused like the others; so he said,
      "Earth! swallow her," and the earth swallowed her to her knees; still she
      gave not the water, so he commanded the earth, and she was swallowed to
      her waist; a third time she refused, and she was swallowed to her breasts;
      she then asked him to marry her, which he would not; a fourth time she
      refused the water and was swallowed to her neck. She then ordered a
      servant to bring the water ("Palestine Exploration Statement, 1894," p.
      32). The resemblance is most remarkable in two tales two thousand years
      apart; and the incident of Bint Bari asking the dervish to marry her has
      its connection with this tale. Had
    
      138 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      the dervish done so he would—according to
      Eastern beliefs—have lost his magic power over her, just as Setna
      loses his magic power by his alliance with Tabubua, to which he is tempted
      by Na-nefer-ka-ptah, in order to subdue him. The talisman here is a means
      of subduing magic powers, and is of more force than that of Thoth, as Ptah
      is greater than he.
    
      The fourth act recounts the overcoming of the
      power of Setna by Na-nefer-ka-ptah, who causes Tabubua to lead to the loss
      of his superior magic, and thus to subdue him to the magic of his rival.
      Ankhtaui, here named as the place of Tabubua, was a quarter of Memphis,
      which is also named as the place of the wife of Uba-aner in the first
      tale.
    
      The fifth act describes the victory of
      Na-nefer-ka-ptah, and his requiring Setna to reunite the family in his
      tomb at Memphis. The contrast between Ahura's pious ascription to Ptah,
      and her husband's chuckle at
    
      REMARKS 139
    
      seeing his magic successful, is remarkable. Setna
      at once takes the position of an inferior by addressing praises to
      Na-nefer-ka-ptah: after which the tomb became bright as it was before he
      took away the magic roll. Setna then having made restitution, is required
      to give some compensation as well.
    
      The search for the tomb of Ahura and Mer-ab is a
      most tantalising passage. The great cemetery of Koptos is the scene, and
      the search occupies three days and nights in the catacombs and on the
      steles. Further, the tomb was at the south corner of the town of Pehemato,
      as Maspero doubtfully reads it. Yet this cemetery is now quite unknown,
      and in spite of all the searching of the native dealers, and the
      examination which I have made on the desert of both sides of the Nile, it
      is a mystery where the cemetery can be. The statement that the tomb was at
      the south corner of a town pretty well excludes it from the desert, which
      runs north and
    
      140 SETNA AND THE MAGIC BOOK
    
      south there. And it seems as if it might have
      been in some raised land in the plain, like the spur or shoal on which the
      town of Koptos was built. If so it would have been covered by the ten to
      twenty feet rise of the Nile deposits since the time of its former use.
    
      The appearance of the ancient to guide Setna
      gives some idea of the time that elapsed between then and the death of
      Ahura. The ancient, who must be allowed to represent two or three
      generations, says that his great-grandfather knew of the burial, which
      would take it back to five or six generations. This would place the death
      of Ahura about 150 years before the latter part of the reign of Ramessu
      II., say 1225 B.C.: thus, being taken back to about 1375 B.C., would make
      her belong to the generation after Amenhotep III., agreeing well with
      Mer-neb. ptah, being a corruption of the name of that king. No argument
      could be founded on so slight a basis; but at least there is no contra-
    
      REMARKS 141
    
      diction in the slight indications which we can
      glean.
    
      The fear of Setna is that this apparition may
      have come to bring him into trouble by leading him to attack some property
      in this town; and Setna is particularly said to have restored the ground
      as it was before, after removing the bodies.
    
      The colophon at the end is unhappily rather
      illegible. But the thirty-fifth year precludes its belonging to the reign
      of any Ptolemy, except the IInd or the VIIIth; and by the writing Maspero
      attributes it to the earlier of these reigns.
    
      INDEX
    
      ACACIA, 48-57
    
      Ahura tells her history, 89; before the king, 90;
      marriage of, 91; waiting at Koptos, 100; read, but wrote not, 101, 131;
      death of, 103; tomb of, 117; re-buried, 118; wanderings of, 124
    
      Amenhotep III., 123
    
      Angels, use of, 133
    
      Anhehoreru, 87; raises Setna, no
    
      Anpu and Bata, 36, &c.; tale composite, 66,
      72, 74> 86
    
      Anpu, wife of, 40; ambush of, 44, 72; seeks the
      soul, 56-7; rides the bull, 59
    
      Apis bull, 60, 80; killed, 61, 81; eaten, 61-81;
      burials, 81
    
      Atys, myth of, 73-5, 86
    
      BA-BIRD, royal, 84 Bast, priest of, 113
    
      Bata character of, 36, 68-9, 73; a type now seen,
      68; temptation of, 41, 73; mutilation of, 47, 73; death of, 56, 79;
      transformed as a bull, 58, 80; killed, 61, 82; transformed as a tree, 61,
      73; killed, 63; trahsiormed as a child, 64, 74, 84; dies, 65; wife of,
      created, 51, 78; taken away, 55; at the king's table, 61, 63, 80; rides
      with the king, 63; vengeance on Bata, 61, 63; condemned, 65, 85; nature
      of, 78
    
      Beer frothing, a portent, 48, 56
    
      Blood, drops of, 61, 73, 82; not to fall on
      ground, 82; seat of life, 83
    
      Blue crown, 62, 83
    
      Book of the Dead, 124
    
      Boxes nested, 95, 129
    
      Bread-making, 38, 69
    
      Brothers, tale of two, 36
    
      144
    
      INDEX
    
      Bull of Bata, 58
    
      Burial customs, 107, 135
    
      CABIN submerged, 98, 130 Cane of Tahutmes III., 3
      Captives made of civilians, 6, 10 Cattle, attention to, 38, 45, 72;
    
      driven in at night, 70 Cemetery, search in, 116,
      139 Chip, swallowed by princess, 64 Colophons, 65, 67, 118, 141
      Concealment of soldiers, 4, 8 Crocodile, fate of prince, 25, 27,
    
      33-5
    
      DAILY tasks of the fellah, 69 Daughter of
      chief, 16-23 Dervish shekhs, 137 Desertion, wholesale, 8 Dog of doomed
      prince, 15, 25,
    
      27
    
      Dogs eat the dead, 49 Doomed prince, 13-27; date
      of,
    
      29 d'Orbiney papyrus, 65
    
      EDESSA, scheme for taking, 9
    
      Education, 131
    
      Embalming, periods of, 107,
    
      '35
    
      Emotional element, 32, 68, 72,
    
      131
    
      Enchantment by reading, 93, 100, 133
    
      FATE inevitable, 15, 103, 106, 134; predicted,
      13, 25; nature of, 30
    
      Favours, asking of, 61, 63, So Firepan on
      head, 112, 114 Forked stick, 112, 114 Fortresses taken by stratagem, 8
      Frazer, Mr., "Golden Bough,"
    
      77
    
      Frontiers of Egypt, 29 Fullers of Pharaoh, 53
    
      GAME of 52 points, 108, 135 Gesture with hands, 75
      Gnosticism, 128 Gods, nine, 50; powers of, 132 "Golden Bough " quoted, 77,
    
      &c. Golden dish of Tahutia, 11
    
      HAIR, lock of, 52-4, 79; tiring,
    
      39.40
    
      Hathor, generic name, 30 Hathor's decree a fate,
      13, 29,
    
      51 Hawk, royal ba, 84; on ka
    
      name, 84 Heart, or soul, removed, 76!
    
      two words for, 76 Hero, parentage of, 28
      Hospitality of Syrians, 19 House, mysterious, 16, 31
    
      INSCRIPTIONS, reading, 92, 116,
    
      127
    
      Inundation, end of, 38, 71 Iron box, 95, 130 Isis
      of Koptos, 96, 116, 122
    
      JOPPA, taking of, 1-7
    
      INDEX
    
      Joseph, story of, 71 Judgment of Bata's wife, 65
    
      KA, name of kings, 84; of
    
      Ahura at Memphis, 88, 123;
    
      wandering, 123 Khaemuast, 87, 122 Khalu, sons of
      chiefs of, 19 Khnumu frames a woman, 51,
    
      78
    
      King flying to heaven, 84 King's ba as a
      hawk, 84 Koptos, book in river at, 95;
    
      sailing to, 96; priests at, 96;
    
      tombs in, 115, 139 Kush, royal son of, 64
    
      LIGHT in the tomb, 112, 115,
    
      139
    
      Liver eaten, 61, 81 Lock of hair, 52-54 Luck, 31
    
      MAGIC book, 87, 93, 100;
    
      cabin, 98, 130; belief in, 128
    
      Marriage destroys magic power,
    
      US, 137-8 Marriages, consanguineous, 90,
    
      125
    
      Memphis a court-city, 127 Menkheperra, 1-3, 6
      Merab born, 91; death of, 102;
    
      reveals the gods, 103; burial
    
      of, 103; reburial of, 118 Merneb ptah, king, 88,
      89, 122 Mighty man and crocodile, 25,
    
      33
    
      Milk for serpent, 26, 34 Mourning, 49, 106
    
      NAHARAINA, 16, 29 Naming-day of child, 64
      Naneferkaptah, 87; married, 91; reads inscriptions, 92; gets the book,
      100; beats Setna, 109; appears to Setna, 117, 140; name of, 122 Nesi ptah,
      priest, 92, 127
    
      OFFERINGS to Isis, 97, 116 Omnipresence unknown,
      134
    
      PARCAE irresistible, 31 Pehematu, 117 Persea
      trees, 61-3, 73, 83 Ploughing, preparation for, 38,
    
      71 Ptah, talisman of, no
    
      RA, appeal to, 45; swearing by, 24, 47; decrees
      vengeance, 102; makes a wide canal, 45, 72; the supreme god, 102, 133; not
      the sun, 132
    
      Ramessu II., 87, 122
    
      Reading and writing, 101, 131
    
      Registry of births, 126
    
      Remorse, 105-6, 135
    
      SACK of skins, 4
    
      Sacks borne on poles, 5
    
      Sand for raising objects, 98,
    
      130 Sea personified, 52, 79
    
      It
    
      146
    
      INDEX
    
      Serpent, fate of prince, 13, 26; enticed by milk,
      26, 34; guardians, 98, 129; division of, 99
    
      Setna Khaemuast, 122; tale in five acts, 120;
      enters tomb, 88; demands the roll, 89, 107; sunk in ground, 109, 137;
      seizes the roll, in; reads the roll, 112; his power undone, 113, 121, 138;
      restores the roll, 114; reparation by, 115; goes to Koptos, 116; finds the
      tombs, 118; reburies Ahura, 118 Sety II., 66
    
      Shadow may not be lost, 34 Silver, hundred pieces
      of, 95;
    
      box, 95 Sinking of vanquished person,
    
      109, 137
    
      Sister-marriage, 90, 125 Smiting on the hands, 45
      Snakes protect box, 95, 98 Soul, extraction of, 48, 76, 77; placing of,
      48-9, 52, 77; falls with acacia, 56, 79; in a seed, 57; in water, 57, So;
      restored to Bata, 57
    
      Spells washed into drink, lot, 132; read over
      dead, 103, 104; power limited, 133
    
      Succubus, 113
    
      Sutekh, god of Joppa, 6
    
      TABUBUA, 113, 138
    
      Tahutia, 1-12; dish of, 10;
    
      funeral furniture, 12 Tahutmes III., 3 Talisman
      applied, no, 138 Thoth, magic book of, 87, 93,
    
      100; discovers robbery, 102,
    
      132
    
      Tower of Bata, 49 Treachery of Tahutia, 8
      Tree-worship, 62, 73, 83 Two brothers, tale of, 36
    
      WATER, vehicle for soul, 57,
    
      80 Windows, mystic, number of,
    
      16, 32
    
      Woman tempts woman, 55> 79 Writing rarer than
      reading,
    
      101, 131; washed into drink,
    
      101
    
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Egyptian Tales, Second Series, XVIIIth
To XIXth Dynasty, by W. M. Flinders Petrie
*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EGYPTIAN TALES, SECOND ***
***** This file should be named 7413-h.htm or 7413-h.zip *****
This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
        http://www.gutenberg.org/7/4/1/7413/
Produced by Eric Eldred and David Widger
Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
will be renamed.
Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
permission and without paying copyright royalties.  Special rules,
set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark.  Project
Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission.  If you
do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
rules is very easy.  You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
research.  They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks.  Redistribution is
subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
redistribution.
*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
  www.gutenberg.org/license.
Section 1.  General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic works
1.A.  By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
(trademark/copyright) agreement.  If you do not agree to abide by all
the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
1.B.  "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark.  It may only be
used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement.  There are a few
things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
even without complying with the full terms of this agreement.  See
paragraph 1.C below.  There are a lot of things you can do with Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works.  See paragraph 1.E below.
1.C.  The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic works.  Nearly all the individual works in the
collection are in the public domain in the United States.  If an
individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
are removed.  Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
the work.  You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
1.D.  The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
what you can do with this work.  Copyright laws in most countries are in
a constant state of change.  If you are outside the United States, check
the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
Gutenberg-tm work.  The Foundation makes no representations concerning
the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
States.
1.E.  Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
1.E.1.  The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
copied or distributed:
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever.  You may copy it, give it away or
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
1.E.2.  If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
or charges.  If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
1.E.9.
1.E.3.  If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
terms imposed by the copyright holder.  Additional terms will be linked
to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
1.E.4.  Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
1.E.5.  Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
Gutenberg-tm License.
1.E.6.  You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
word processing or hypertext form.  However, if you provide access to or
distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
form.  Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
1.E.7.  Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
1.E.8.  You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
that
- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
     the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
     you already use to calculate your applicable taxes.  The fee is
     owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
     has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
     Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation.  Royalty payments
     must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
     prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
     returns.  Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
     sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
     address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
     the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
     you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
     does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
     License.  You must require such a user to return or
     destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
     and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
     Project Gutenberg-tm works.
- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
     money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
     electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
     of receipt of the work.
- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
     distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
1.E.9.  If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark.  Contact the
Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
1.F.
1.F.1.  Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
collection.  Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
your equipment.
1.F.2.  LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
fees.  YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3.  YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
DAMAGE.
1.F.3.  LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
written explanation to the person you received the work from.  If you
received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
your written explanation.  The person or entity that provided you with
the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
refund.  If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund.  If the second copy
is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
opportunities to fix the problem.
1.F.4.  Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
1.F.5.  Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
the applicable state law.  The invalidity or unenforceability of any
provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
1.F.6.  INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
Section  2.  Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers.  It exists
because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
people in all walks of life.
Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
remain freely available for generations to come.  In 2001, the Project
Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org
Section 3.  Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
Foundation
The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
Revenue Service.  The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
number is 64-6221541.  Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
throughout numerous locations.  Its business office is located at 809
North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887.  Email
contact links and up to date contact information can be found at the
Foundation's web site and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
For additional contact information:
     Dr. Gregory B. Newby
     Chief Executive and Director
     gbnewby@pglaf.org
Section 4.  Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
Literary Archive Foundation
Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
array of equipment including outdated equipment.  Many small donations
($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
status with the IRS.
The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
States.  Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
with these requirements.  We do not solicit donations in locations
where we have not received written confirmation of compliance.  To
SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
particular state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
approach us with offers to donate.
International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
outside the United States.  U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
methods and addresses.  Donations are accepted in a number of other
ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
To donate, please visit:  www.gutenberg.org/donate
Section 5.  General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works.
Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
with anyone.  For forty years, he produced and distributed Project
Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
unless a copyright notice is included.  Thus, we do not necessarily
keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
     www.gutenberg.org
This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.