Tales Of The Magicians

Tales Of The MagiciansOne day, when King Khufu reigned over all the land, he said to his chancellor, who stood before him,“Go call me my sons and my councillors, that I may ask of them a thing.”And his sons and his councillors came and stood before him, and he said to them,“Know ye a man who can tell me tales of the deeds of the magicians?”Then the royal son Khafra stood forth and said,“I will tell thy Majesty a tale of the days of thy forefather Nebka, the blessed; of what came to pass when he went into the temple of Ptah of Ankhtaui.”[pg 160]Khafra's Tale“His Majesty was walking unto the temple of Ptah, and went unto the house of the chief reciter Uba-aner, with his train. Now when the wife of Uba-aner saw a page, among those who stood behind the King, her heart longed after him; and she sent her servant unto him, with a present of a box full of garments.“And he came then with the servant. Now there was a lodge in the garden of Uba-aner; and one day the page said to the wife of Uba-aner,‘In the garden of Uba-aner there is now a lodge; behold, let us therein take our pleasure.’So the wife of Uba-aner sent to the steward who had charge over the garden, saying,‘Let the lodge which is in the garden be made ready.’And she remained there, and rested and drank with the page until the sun went down.“And when the even was now come the page went forth to bathe. And the steward said,‘I must go and tell Uba-aner of this matter.’Now when this day was past, and another day came, then went the steward to Uba-aner, and told him of all these things.“Then said Uba-aner,‘Bring me my casket of ebony and electrum.’And they brought it; and he fashioned a crocodile of wax, seven fingers long: and he enchanted it, and said,‘When the page comes and bathes in my lake, seize on him.’And he gave it to the steward, and said to him,‘When the page shall go down into the lake to bathe, as he is daily wont to do, then throw in this crocodile behind him.’And the steward went forth bearing the crocodile.“And the wife of Uba-aner sent to the steward who had charge over the garden, saying,‘Let the lodge which is in the garden be made ready, for I come to tarry there.’“And the lodge was prepared with all good things; and she came and made merry therein with the page. And when the even was now come, the page went forth to bathe as he was wont to do. And the steward cast in the wax crocodile after him into the water; and, behold! it became a great crocodile seven cubits in length, and it seized on the page.“And Uba-aner abode yet seven days with the King of[pg 161]Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, the blessed, while the page was stifled in the crocodile. And after the seven days were passed, the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, the blessed, went forth, and Uba-aner went before him.“And Uba-aner said unto his Majesty,‘Will your Majesty come and see this wonder that has come to pass in your days unto a page?’And the King went with Uba-aner. And Uba-aner called unto the crocodile and said,‘Bring forth the page.’And the crocodile came forth from the lake with the page. Uba-aner said unto the King,‘Behold, whatever I command this crocodile he will do it.’And his Majesty said,‘I pray you send back this crocodile.’And Uba-aner stooped and took up the crocodile, and it became in his hand a crocodile of wax. And then Uba-aner told the King that which had passed in his house with the page and his wife. And his Majesty said unto the crocodile,‘Take to thee thy prey.’And the crocodile plunged into the lake with his prey, and no man knew whither he went.“And his Majesty the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, the blessed, commanded, and they brought forth the wife of Uba-aner to the north side of the harem, and burned her with fire, and cast her ashes in the river.“This is a wonder that came to pass in the days of thy forefather the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, of the acts of the chief reciter Uba-aner.”His Majesty the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, then said,“Let there be presented to the King Nebka, the blessed, 1,000 loaves, 100 draughts of beer, an ox, two jars of incense; and let there be presented a loaf, a jar of beer, a jar of incense and a piece of meat to the chief reciter Uba-aner; for I have seen the token of his learning.”And they did all things as his Majesty commanded.Bau-F-Ra's TaleThe royal son Bau-f-ra then stood forth and spake. He said,“I will tell thy Majesty of a wonder which came to pass in the days of thy father Seneferu, the blessed, of the deeds of the chief reciter Zazamankh. One day King Seneferu, being weary, went throughout his palace seeking for a pleasure[pg 162]to lighten his heart, but he found none. And he said,‘Haste, and bring before me the chief reciter and scribe of the rolls Zazamankh;’and they straightway brought him. And the King said,‘I have sought in my palace for some delight, but I have found none.’Then said Zazamankh to him,‘Let thy Majesty go upon the lake of the palace, and let there be made ready a boat, with all the fair maidens of the harem of thy palace; and the heart of thy Majesty shall be refreshed with the sight, in seeing their rowing up and down the water, and seeing the goodly pools of the birds upon the lake, and beholding its sweet fields and grassy shores; thus will thy heart be lightened. And I also will go with thee. Bring me twenty oars of ebony inlaid with gold, with blades of light wood inlaid with electrum; and bring me twenty maidens, fair in their limbs, their bosoms, and their hair, all virgins; and bring me twenty nets, and give these nets unto the maidens for their garments.’And they did according to all the commands of his Majesty.“And they rowed down the stream and up the stream, and the heart of his Majesty was glad with the sight of their rowing. But one of them at the steering struck her hair, and her jewel of new malachite fell into the water. And she ceased her song, and rowed not; and her companions ceased, and rowed not. And his Majesty said,‘Row you not further?’And they replied,‘Our little steerer here stays and rows not.’His Majesty then said to her,‘Wherefore rowest thou not?’She replied,‘It is for my jewel of new malachite which is fallen in the water.’And he said to her,‘Row on, for behold I will replace it.’And she answered,‘But I want my own piece back in its setting.’And his Majesty said,‘Haste, bring me the chief reciter Zazamankh,’and they brought him. And his Majesty said,‘Zazamankh, my brother, I have done as thou sayedst, and the heart of his Majesty is refreshed with the sight of their rowing. But now a jewel of new malachite of one of the little ones is fallen in the water, and she ceases and rows not, and she has spoiled the rowing of her side. And I said to her,“Wherefore rowest thou not?”and she answered to me,“It is for my jewel of new malachite which is fallen in the water.”I replied to her,“Row on, for behold[pg 163]I will replace it;”and she answered to me,“But I want my own piece again back in its setting.”’Then the chief reciter Zazamankh spake his magic speech. And he placed one part of the waters of the lake upon the other, and discovered the jewel lying upon a shard; and he took it up and gave it unto its mistress. And the water, which was twelve cubits deep in the middle, reached now to twenty-four cubits after he turned it. And he spake, and used his magic speech; and he brought again the water of the lake to its place. And his Majesty spent a joyful day with the whole of the royal house. Then rewarded he the chief reciter Zazamankh with all good things. Behold, this is a wonder that came to pass in the days of thy father, the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Seneferu, of the deeds of the chief reciter, the scribe of the rolls, Zazamankh.”Then said the majesty of the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, the blessed,“Let there be presented an offering of 1,000 cakes, 100 draughts of beer, an ox, and two jars of incense to the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Seneferu, the blessed; and let there be given a loaf, a jar of beer, and a jar of incense to the chief reciter, the scribe of the rolls, Zazamankh; for I have seen the token of his learning.”And they did all things as his Majesty commanded.Hordedef's TaleThe royal son Hordedef then stood forth and spake. He said:“Hitherto hast thou only heard tokens of those who have gone before, and of which no man knoweth their truth. But I will show thy Majesty a man of thine own days.”And his Majesty said,“Who is he, Hordedef?”And the royal son Hordedef answered,“It is a certain man named Dedi, who dwells at Dedsneferu. He is a man of 110 years old; and he eats 500 loaves of bread and a side of beef, and drinks 100 draughts of beer, unto this day. He knows how to restore the head that is smitten off; he knows how to cause the lion to follow him trailing his halter on the ground; he knows the designs of the dwelling of Tahuti. The majesty of the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, the blessed, has long sought for the designs of the dwelling of Tahuti, that he may make the like of them in his pyramid.”[pg 164]And his Majesty said,“Thou, thyself, Hordedef, my son, bring him to me.”Then were the ships made ready for the King's son Hordedef, and he went up the stream to Dedsneferu. And when the ships had moored at the haven, he landed, and sat him in a litter of ebony, the poles of which were of cedar wood overlaid with gold. Now when he drew near to Dedi, they set down the litter. And he arose to greet Dedi, and found him lying on a palmstick couch at the door of his house; one servant held his head and rubbed him, and another rubbed his feet.And the King's son Hordedef said,“Thy state is that of one who lives to good old age; for old age is the end of our voyage, the time of embalming, the time of burial. Lie, then, in the sun, free of infirmities, without the babble of dotage: this is the salutation to worthy age. I come from far to call thee, with a message from my father Khufu, the blessed, for thou shalt eat of the best which the King gives, and of the food which those have who follow after him; that he may bring thee in good estate to thy fathers who are in the tomb.”And Dedi replied to him:“Peace to thee! Peace to thee! Hordedef, son of the King, beloved of his father. May thy father Khufu, the blessed, praise thee, may he advance thee among the elders, may thykaprevail against the enemy, may thy soul know the right road to the gate of him who clothes the afflicted; this is the salutation to the King's son.”Then the King's son, Hordedef, stretched forth his hands to him, and raised him up, and went with him to the haven, giving unto him his arm. Then said Dedi,“Let there be given me a boat, to bring me my youths and my books.”And they made ready for him two boats with their rowers. And Dedi went down the river in the barge in which was the King's son, Hordedef. And when he had reached the palace, the King's son, Hordedef, entered in to give account unto his Majesty the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, the blessed. Then said the King's son Hordedef,“O King, life, wealth, and health! My lord, I have brought Dedi.”His Majesty replied,“Bring him to me speedily.”And his Majesty went into the hall of columns of Pharaoh (life, wealth, and health), and Dedi was led before him. And his Majesty said,“Wherefore[pg 165]is it, Dedi, that I have not yet seen thee?”And Dedi answered:“He who is called it is that comes; the King (life, wealth, and health) calls me, and behold I come.”And his Majesty said,“Is it true, that which men say, that thou canst restore the head which is smitten off?”And Dedi replied,“Truly, I know that, O King (life, wealth, and health), my lord.”And his Majesty said,“Let one bring me a prisoner who is in prison, that his punishment may be fulfilled.”And Dedi said:“Let it not be a man, O King, my lord; behold we do not even thus to our cattle.”And a duck was brought unto him, and its head was cut off. And the duck was laid on the west side of the hall, and its head on the east side of the hall. And Dedi spake his magic speech. And the duck fluttered along the ground, and its head came likewise; and when it had come part to part the duck stood and quacked. And they brought likewise a goose before him, and he did even so unto it. His Majesty caused an ox to be brought, and its head cast on the ground. And Dedi spake his magic speech. And the ox stood upright behind him, and followed him with his halter trailing on the ground.And King Khufu said,“And is it true what is said, that thou knowest the number of the designs of the dwelling of Tahuti?”And Dedi replied,“Pardon me, I know not their number, O King (life, wealth, and health), but I know where they are.”And his Majesty said,“Where is that?”And Dedi replied:“There is a chest of whetstone in a chamber named the plan-room, in Heliopolis; they are in this chest.”And Dedi said further unto him,“O King (life, wealth, and health), my lord, it is not I that is to bring them to thee.”And his Majesty said,“Who, then, is it that shall bring them to me?”And Dedi answered to him,“It is the eldest of the three children who are in the body of Rud-didet who shall bring them to thee.”And his Majesty said:“Would that it may be as thou sayest! And who is this Rud-didet?”And Dedi replied:“She is the wife of a priest of Ra, lord of Sakhebu. And she has conceived these three sons by Ra, lord of Sakhebu, and the god has promised her that they shall fulfil this noble office (of reigning) over all this land, and that the eldest of them shall be high-priest in Heliopolis.”And his Majesty's heart became[pg 166]troubled for this; but Dedi spake unto him:“What is this that thou thinkest, O King (life, wealth, health), my lord? Is it because of these three children? I tell thee thy son shall reign, and thy son's son, and then one of them.”His Majesty said,“And when shall Rud-didet bear these?”And he replied,“She shall bear them on the twenty-fifth of the month Tybi.”And his Majesty said,“When the banks of the canal of Letopolis are cut, I will walk there that I may see the temple of Ra, lord of Sakhebu.”And Dedi replied,“Then I will cause that there be four cubits of water by the banks of the canal of Letopolis.”When his Majesty returned to his palace, his Majesty said:“Let them place Dedi in the house of the royal son Hordedef, that he may dwell with him, and let them give him a daily portion of 1,000 loaves, 100 draughts of beer, an ox, and 100 bunches of onions.”And they did everything as his Majesty commanded.And one day it came to pass that Rud-didet felt the pains of birth. And the majesty of Ra, Lord of Sakhebu, said unto Isis, to Nebhat, to Meskhent, to Hakt, and to Khnumu:“Go ye, and deliver Rud-didet of these three children that she shall bear, who are to fulfil this noble office over all this land; that they may build up your temples, furnish your altars with offerings, supply your tables of libation, and increase your endowments.”Then went these deities; their fashion they made as that of dancing-girls, and Khnumu was with them as a porter. They drew near unto the house of Ra-user, and found him standing, with his girdle fallen. And they played before him with their instruments of music. But he said unto them,“My ladies, behold, here is a woman who feels the pains of birth.”They said to him,“Let us see her, for we know how to help her.”And he replied,“Come, then.”And they entered in straightway to Rud-didet, and they closed the door on her and on themselves. Then Isis stood before her, and Nebhat stood behind her, and Hakt helped her. And Isis said,“O child, by thy name of User-ref, do not do violence.”And the child came upon her hands, as a child of a cubit; its bones were strong, the beauty of its limbs was like gold, and its hair was like true lapis-lazuli. They washed him, and prepared him, and placed him on a carpet on the brickwork. Then[pg 167]Meskhent approached him and said,“This is a king who shall reign over all the land.”And Khnumu gave strength to his limbs. Then Isis stood before her, and Nebhat stood behind her, and Hakt helped her. And Isis said,“O child, by thy name of Sah-ra, stay not in her.”Then the child came upon her hands, a child of a cubit; its bones were strong, the beauty of its limbs was like gold, and its hair was like true lapis-lazuli. They washed him, and prepared him, and laid him on a carpet on the brickwork. Then Meskhent approached him and said,“This is a king who shall reign over all the land.”And Khnumu gave strength to his limbs. Then Isis stood before her, and Nebhat stood behind her, and Hakt helped her. And Isis said,“O child, by thy name of Kaku, remain not in darkness in her.”And the child came upon her hands, a child of a cubit; its bones were strong, the beauty of its limbs was like gold, and its hair was like true lapis-lazuli. And Meskhent approached him and said,“This is a king who shall reign over all the land.”And Khnumu gave strength to his limbs. And they washed him, and prepared him, and laid him on a carpet on the brickwork.And the deities went out, having delivered Rud-didet of the three children. And they said,“Rejoice! O Ra-user, for behold three children are born unto thee.”And he said unto them,“My ladies, and what shall I give unto ye? Behold, give this bushel of barley here unto your porter, that ye may take it as your reward to the brew-house.”And Khnumu loaded himself with the bushel of barley. And they went away toward the place from which they came. And Isis spake unto these goddesses, and said,“Wherefore have we come without doing a marvel for these children, that we may tell it to their father who has sent us?”Then made they the divine diadems of the King (life, wealth, and health), and laid them in the bushel of barley. And they caused the clouds to come with wind and rain; and they turned back again unto the house. And they said,“Let us put this barley in a closed chamber, sealed up, until we return northward, dancing.”And they placed the barley in a close chamber.And Rud-didet purified herself, with a purification of fourteen days. And she said to her handmaid,“Is the house made[pg 168]ready?”And she replied,“All things are made ready, but the brewing barley is not yet brought.”And Rud-didet said,“Wherefore is the brewing barley not yet brought?”And the servant answered,“It would all of it long since be ready if the barley had not been given to the dancing-girls, and lay in the chamber under their seal.”Rud-didet said,“Go down, and bring of it, and Ra-user shall give them in its stead when he shall come.”And the handmaid went, and opened the chamber. And she heard talking and singing, music and dancing, quavering, and all things which are performed for a king in his chamber. And she returned and told to Rud-didet all that she had heard. And she went through the chamber, but she found not the place where the sound was. And she laid her temple to the sack, and found that the sounds were in it. She placed it in a chest, and put that in another locker, and tied it fast with leather, and laid it in the storeroom, where the things were, and sealed it. And Ra-user came returning from the field; and Rud-didet repeated unto him these things; and his heart was glad above all things; and they sat down and made a joyful day.And after these days it came to pass that Rud-didet was wroth with her servant, and beat her with stripes. And the servant said unto those that were in the house:“Shall it be done thus unto me? She has borne three kings, and I will go and tell this to his Majesty King Khufu the blessed.”And she went, and found the eldest brother of her mother, who was binding his flax on the floor. And he said to her,“Whither goest thou, my little maid?”And she told him of all these things. And her brother said to her:“Wherefore comest thou thus to me? Shall I agree to treachery?”And he took a bunch of the flax to her, and laid on her a violent blow. And the servant went to fetch a handful of water, and a crocodile carried her away.Her uncle went therefore to tell of this to Rud-didet; and he found Rud-didet sitting, her head on her knees, and her heart beyond measure sad. And he said to her,“My lady, why makest thou thy heart thus?”And she answered,“It is because of this little wretch that was in the house; behold she went out saying,‘I will go and tell it.’”And he[pg 169]bowed his head unto the ground, and said,“My lady, she came and told me of these things, and made her complaint unto me; and I laid on her a violent blow. And she went forth to draw water, and a crocodile carried her away.”(The rest of the tale is lost.)The Peasant And The WorkmanThere dwelt in the Sekhet Hemat—or Salt Country—a peasant called the Sekhti, with his wife and children, his asses and his dogs; and he trafficked in all good things of the Sekhet Hemat to Henenseten. Behold now he went with rushes, natron, and salt, with wood and pods, with stones and seeds, and all good products of the Sekhet Hemat. And this Sekhti journeyed to the south unto Henenseten; and when he came to the lands of the house of Fefa, north of Denat, he found a man there standing on the bank, a man called Hemti—the workman—son of a man called Asri, who was a serf of the high-steward Meruitensa. Now said this Hemti, when he saw the asses of Sekhti, that were pleasing in his eyes,“Oh that some good god would grant me to steal away the goods of Sekhti from him!”Now the Hemti's house was by the dike of the tow-path, which was straightened, and not wide, as much as the width of a waistcloth: on the one side of it was the water, and on the other side of it grew his corn. Hemti said then to his servant,“Hasten! bring me a shawl from the house,”and it was brought instantly. Then spread he out this shawl on the face of the dike, and it lay with its fastening on the water and its fringe on the corn.Now Sekhti approached along the path used by all men. Said Hemti:“Have a care, Sekhti! you are not going to trample on my clothes!”Said Sekhti,“I will do as you like, I will pass carefully.”Then went he up on the higher side. But Hemti said,“Go you over my corn, instead of the path?”Said Sekhti:“I am going carefully; this high field of corn is not my choice, but you have stopped your path with your clothes, and will you then not let us pass by the side of the path?”And one of the asses filled its[pg 170]mouth with a cluster of corn. Said Hemti:“Look you, I shall take away your ass, Sekhti, for eating my corn; behold it will have to pay according to the amount of the injury.”Said Sekhti:“I am going carefully; the one way is stopped, therefore took I my ass by the inclosed ground; and do you seize it for filling its mouth with a cluster of corn? Moreover, I know unto whom this domain belongs, even unto the lord steward Meruitensa. He it is who smites every robber in this whole land; and shall I then be robbed in his domain?”Said Hemti,“This is the proverb which men speak:‘A poor man's name is only his own matter.’I am he of whom you spake, even the lord steward of whom you think.”Thereon he took to him branches of green tamarisk and scourged all his limbs, took his asses, and drave them into the pasture. And Sekhti wept very greatly, by reason of the pain of what he had suffered. Said Hemti,“Lift not up your voice, Sekhti, or you shall go to the demon of silence.”Sekhti answered:“You beat me, you steal my goods, and now would take away even my voice, O demon of silence! If you will restore my goods, then will I cease to cry out at your violence.”Sekhti stayed the whole day petitioning Hemti, but he would not give ear unto him. And Sekhti went his way to Khenensuten to complain to the lord steward Meruitensa. He found him coming out from the door of his house to embark on his boat, that he might go to the judgment-hall. Sekhti said:“Ho! turn, that I may please thy heart with this discourse. Now at this time let one of thy followers, whom thou wilt, come to me that I may send him to thee concerning it.”The lord steward Meruitensa made his follower, whom he chose, go straight unto him, and Sekhti sent him back with an account of all these matters. Then the lord steward Meruitensa accused Hemti unto the nobles who sat with him; and they said unto him:“By your leave: As to this Sekhti of yours, let him bring a witness. Behold thou it is our custom with our Sekhtis; witnesses come with them; behold, that is our custom. Then it will be fitting to beat this Hemti for a trifle of natron and a trifle of salt; if he is commanded to pay for it, he will pay for it.”But the high steward Meruitensa held his[pg 171]peace; for he would not reply unto these nobles, but would reply unto the Sekhti.Now Sekhti came to appeal to the lord steward Meruitensa, and said,“O my lord steward, greatest of the great, guide of the needy:When thou embarkest on the lake of truth—Mayest thou sail upon it with a fair wind;May thy mainsail not fly loose.May there not be lamentation in thy cabin;May not misfortune come after thee.May not thy mainstays be snapped;Mayest thou not run aground.May not the wave seize thee;Mayest thou not taste the impurities of the river;Mayest thou not see the face of fear.May the fish come to thee without escape;Mayest thou reach unto plump water-fowl.For thou art the orphan's father, the widow's husband,The desolate woman's brother, the garment of the motherless.Let me celebrate thy name in this land for every virtue,A guide without greediness of heart;A great one without any meanness.Destroying deceit, encouraging justice;Coming to the cry, and allowing utterance.Let me speak, do thou hear and do justice;O praised! whom the praised ones praise.Abolish oppression, behold me, I am overladen,Reckon with me, behold me defrauded.”Now the Sekhti made this speech in the time of the majesty of the King Neb-ka-n-ra, blessed. The lord steward Meruitensa went away straight to the King and said:“My lord, I have found one of these Sekhti, excellent of speech, in very truth; stolen are his goods, and he has come to complain to me of the matter.”His Majesty said:“As thou wishest that I may see health! lengthen out his complaint, without replying to any of his speeches. He who desireth him to continue speaking should be silent; behold, bring us his words in writing, that we may listen to them. But provide for his wife and his children, and[pg 172]let the Sekhti himself also have a living. Thou must cause one to give him his portion without letting him know that thou art he who is giving it to him.”There were given to him four loaves and two draughts of beer each day; which the lord steward Meruitensa provided for him, giving it to a friend of his, who furnished it unto him. Then the lord steward Meruitensa sent the governor of the Sekhet Hemat to make provision for the wife of the Sekhti, three rations of corn each day.Then came the Sekhti a second time, and even a third time, unto the lord steward Meruitensa; but he told two of his followers to go unto the Sekhti, and seize on him, and beat him with staves. But he came again unto him, even unto six times, and said:“My Lord Steward—Destroying deceit, and encouraging justice;Raising up every good thing, and crushing every evil;As plenty comes removing famine,As clothing covers nakedness,As clear sky after storm warms the shivering;As fire cooks that which is raw,As water quenches the thirst;Look with thy face upon my lot; do not covet, but content me without fail; do the right and do not evil,”But yet Meruitensa would not hearken unto his complaint; and the Sekhti came yet, and yet again, even unto the ninth time. Then the lord steward told two of his followers to go unto the Sekhti; and the Sekhti feared that he should be beaten as at the third request. But the lord steward Meruitensa then said unto him:“Fear not, Sekhti, for what thou hast done. The Sekhti has made many speeches, delightful to the heart of his Majesty, and I take an oath—as I eat bread, and as I drink water—that thou shalt be remembered to eternity.”Said the lord steward,“Moreover, thou shalt be satisfied when thou shalt hear of thy complaints.”He caused to be written on a clean roll of papyrus each petition to the end, and the lord steward Meruitensa sent it to the majesty of the King Neb-ka-n-ra, blessed, and it was good to him more than anything that is in the whole land: but his Majesty said to Meruitensa:“Judge it thyself; I do not desire it.”[pg 173]The lord steward Meruitensa made two of his followers to go to the Sekhet Hemat, and bring a list of the household of the Sekhti; and its amount was six persons, beside his oxen and his goats, his wheat and his barley, his asses and his dogs; and moreover he gave all that which belonged unto the Hemti to the Sekhti, even all his property and his officers, and the Sekhti was beloved of the King more than all his overseers, and ate of all the good things of the King, with all his household.The Shipwrecked SailorThe wise servant said:“Let thy heart be satisfied, O my lord, for that we have come back to the country; after we have long been on board, and rowed much, the prow has at last touched land. All the people rejoice, and embrace us one after another. Moreover, we have come back in good health, and not a man is lacking; although we have been to the ends of Wawat, and gone through the land of Senmut, we have returned in peace, and our land—behold, we have come back to it. Hear me, my lord; I have no other refuge. Wash thee, and turn the water over thy fingers; then go and tell the tale to the Majesty.”His lord replied:“Thy heart continues still its wandering words! but although the mouth of a man may save him, his words may also cover his face with confusion. Wilt thou do then as thy heart moves thee? This that thou wilt say, tell quietly.”The sailor then answered:“Now I shall tell that which has happened to me, to my very self. I was going to the mines of Pharaoh, and I went down on the sea on a ship of 150 cubits long and forty cubits wide, with 150 sailors of the best of Egypt, who had seen heaven and earth, and whose hearts were stronger than lions. They had said that the wind would not be contrary, or that there would be none. But as we approached the land the wind arose, and threw up waves eight cubits high. As for me, I seized a piece of wood; but those who were in the vessel perished, without one remaining. A wave threw me on an island, after that I had been three[pg 174]days alone, without a companion beside my own heart. I laid me in a thicket, and the shadow covered me. Then stretched I my limbs to try to find something for my mouth. I found there figs and grapes, all manner of good herbs, berries and grain, melons of all kinds, fishes and birds. Nothing was lacking. And I satisfied myself; and left on the ground that which was over, of what my arms had been filled withal. I dug a pit, I lighted a fire, and I made a burnt-offering unto the gods.“Suddenly I heard a noise as of thunder, which I thought to be that of a wave of the sea. The trees shook, and the earth was moved. I uncovered my face, and I saw that a serpent drew near. He was thirty cubits long, and his beard greater than two cubits; his body was as overlaid with gold, and his color as that of true lazuli. He coiled himself before me.“Then he opened his mouth, while that I lay on my face before him, and he said to me:‘What has brought thee, what has brought thee, little one, what has brought thee? If thou sayest not speedily what has brought thee to this isle, I will make thee know thyself; as a flame thou shalt vanish, if thou tellest me not something I had not heard, or which I knew not, before thee.’“Then he took me in his mouth and carried me to his resting-place, and laid me down without any hurt. I was whole and sound, and nothing was gone from me. Then he opened his mouth against me, while that I lay on my face before him, and he said,‘What has brought thee, what has brought thee, little one, what has brought thee to this isle which is in the sea, and of which the shores are in the midst of the waves?’“Then I replied to him, and holding my arms low before him, I said to him:‘I was embarked for the mines by the order of the majesty, in a ship; 150 cubits was its length, and the width of it forty cubits. It had 150 sailors of the best of Egypt, who had seen heaven and earth, and the hearts of whom were stronger than lions. They said that the wind would not be contrary, or that there would be none. Each of them exceeded his companion in the prudence of his heart and the strength of his arm, and I was not beneath any of them. A storm came upon us while we were on the sea. Hardly could we reach to the shore when the wind waxed yet greater,[pg 175]and the waves rose even eight cubits. As for me, I seized a piece of wood, while those who were in the boat perished without one being left with me for three days. Behold me now before thee, for I was brought to this isle by a wave of the sea.’“Then said he to me:‘Fear not, fear not, little one, and make not thy face sad. If thou hast come to me, it is God who has let thee live. For it is he who has brought thee to this isle of the blest, where nothing is lacking, and which is filled with all good things. See now, thou shalt pass one month after another, until thou shalt be four months in this isle. Then a ship shall come from thy land with sailors, and thou shalt leave with them and go to thy country, and thou shalt die in thy town.’“‘Converse is pleasing, and he who tastes of it passes over his misery. I will therefore tell thee of that which is in this isle. I am here with my brethren and my children around me; we are seventy-five serpents, children and kindred; without naming a young girl who was brought unto me by chance, and on whom the fire of heaven fell, and burnt her to ashes.“‘As for thee if thou art strong, and if thy heart waits patiently, thou shalt press thy infants to thy bosom and embrace thy wife. Thou shalt return to thy house, which is full of all good things; thou shalt see thy land, where thou shalt dwell in the midst of thy kindred.’“Then I bowed, in my obeisance, and I touched the ground before him.‘Behold now that which I have told thee before. I shall tell of thy presence unto Pharaoh, I shall make him to know of thy greatness, and I will bring to thee of the sacred oils and perfumes, and of incense of the temples with which all gods are honored. I shall tell, moreover, of that which I do now see (thanks to him), and there shall be rendered to thee praises before the fulness of all the land. I shall slay asses for thee in sacrifice, I shall pluck for thee the birds, and I shall bring for thee ships full of all kinds of the treasures of Egypt, as is comely to do unto a god, a friend of men in a far country, of which men know not.’“Then he smiled at my speech, because of that which was in his heart, for he said to me:‘Thou art not rich in perfumes, for all that thou hast is but common incense. As for me I am Prince of the land of Punt, and I have perfumes.[pg 176]Only the oil which thou sayest thou wouldst bring is not common in this isle. But, when thou shalt depart from this place, thou shalt never more see this isle; it shall be changed into waves.’“And, behold, when the ship drew near, according to all that he had told me before, I got me up into an high tree, to strive to see those who were within it. Then I came and told to him this matter; but it was already known unto him before. Then he said to me:‘Farewell, farewell; go to thy house, little one, see again thy children, and let thy name be good in thy town; these are my wishes for thee.’“Then I bowed myself before him, and held my arms low before him, and he, he gave me gifts of precious perfumes, of cassia, of sweet woods, of kohl, of cypress, an abundance of incense, of ivory tusks, of baboons, of apes, and all kinds of precious things. I embarked all in the ship which was come, and, bowing myself, I prayed God for him.“Then he said to me,‘Behold thou shalt come to thy country in two months, thou shalt press to thy bosom thy children, and thou shalt rest in thy tomb.’After this I went down to the shore unto the ship, and I called to the sailors who were there. Then on the shore I rendered adoration to the master of this isle and to those who dwelt therein.“When we shall come, in our return, to the house of Pharaoh, in the second month, according to all that the serpent has said, we shall approach unto the palace. And I shall go in before Pharaoh, I shall bring the gifts which I have brought from this isle into the country. Then he shall thank me before the fulness of all the land. Grant them unto me a follower, and lead me to the courtiers of the King. Cast thy eye upon me, after that I am come to land again, after that I have both seen and proved this. Hear my prayer, for it is good to listen to people. It was said unto me,‘Become a wise man, and thou shalt come to honor,’and behold I have become such.”This is finished from its beginning unto its end, even as it was found in a writing. It is written by the scribe of cunning fingers Ameni-amen-aa; may he live in life, wealth, and health![pg 177]

Tales Of The MagiciansOne day, when King Khufu reigned over all the land, he said to his chancellor, who stood before him,“Go call me my sons and my councillors, that I may ask of them a thing.”And his sons and his councillors came and stood before him, and he said to them,“Know ye a man who can tell me tales of the deeds of the magicians?”Then the royal son Khafra stood forth and said,“I will tell thy Majesty a tale of the days of thy forefather Nebka, the blessed; of what came to pass when he went into the temple of Ptah of Ankhtaui.”[pg 160]Khafra's Tale“His Majesty was walking unto the temple of Ptah, and went unto the house of the chief reciter Uba-aner, with his train. Now when the wife of Uba-aner saw a page, among those who stood behind the King, her heart longed after him; and she sent her servant unto him, with a present of a box full of garments.“And he came then with the servant. Now there was a lodge in the garden of Uba-aner; and one day the page said to the wife of Uba-aner,‘In the garden of Uba-aner there is now a lodge; behold, let us therein take our pleasure.’So the wife of Uba-aner sent to the steward who had charge over the garden, saying,‘Let the lodge which is in the garden be made ready.’And she remained there, and rested and drank with the page until the sun went down.“And when the even was now come the page went forth to bathe. And the steward said,‘I must go and tell Uba-aner of this matter.’Now when this day was past, and another day came, then went the steward to Uba-aner, and told him of all these things.“Then said Uba-aner,‘Bring me my casket of ebony and electrum.’And they brought it; and he fashioned a crocodile of wax, seven fingers long: and he enchanted it, and said,‘When the page comes and bathes in my lake, seize on him.’And he gave it to the steward, and said to him,‘When the page shall go down into the lake to bathe, as he is daily wont to do, then throw in this crocodile behind him.’And the steward went forth bearing the crocodile.“And the wife of Uba-aner sent to the steward who had charge over the garden, saying,‘Let the lodge which is in the garden be made ready, for I come to tarry there.’“And the lodge was prepared with all good things; and she came and made merry therein with the page. And when the even was now come, the page went forth to bathe as he was wont to do. And the steward cast in the wax crocodile after him into the water; and, behold! it became a great crocodile seven cubits in length, and it seized on the page.“And Uba-aner abode yet seven days with the King of[pg 161]Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, the blessed, while the page was stifled in the crocodile. And after the seven days were passed, the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, the blessed, went forth, and Uba-aner went before him.“And Uba-aner said unto his Majesty,‘Will your Majesty come and see this wonder that has come to pass in your days unto a page?’And the King went with Uba-aner. And Uba-aner called unto the crocodile and said,‘Bring forth the page.’And the crocodile came forth from the lake with the page. Uba-aner said unto the King,‘Behold, whatever I command this crocodile he will do it.’And his Majesty said,‘I pray you send back this crocodile.’And Uba-aner stooped and took up the crocodile, and it became in his hand a crocodile of wax. And then Uba-aner told the King that which had passed in his house with the page and his wife. And his Majesty said unto the crocodile,‘Take to thee thy prey.’And the crocodile plunged into the lake with his prey, and no man knew whither he went.“And his Majesty the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, the blessed, commanded, and they brought forth the wife of Uba-aner to the north side of the harem, and burned her with fire, and cast her ashes in the river.“This is a wonder that came to pass in the days of thy forefather the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, of the acts of the chief reciter Uba-aner.”His Majesty the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, then said,“Let there be presented to the King Nebka, the blessed, 1,000 loaves, 100 draughts of beer, an ox, two jars of incense; and let there be presented a loaf, a jar of beer, a jar of incense and a piece of meat to the chief reciter Uba-aner; for I have seen the token of his learning.”And they did all things as his Majesty commanded.Bau-F-Ra's TaleThe royal son Bau-f-ra then stood forth and spake. He said,“I will tell thy Majesty of a wonder which came to pass in the days of thy father Seneferu, the blessed, of the deeds of the chief reciter Zazamankh. One day King Seneferu, being weary, went throughout his palace seeking for a pleasure[pg 162]to lighten his heart, but he found none. And he said,‘Haste, and bring before me the chief reciter and scribe of the rolls Zazamankh;’and they straightway brought him. And the King said,‘I have sought in my palace for some delight, but I have found none.’Then said Zazamankh to him,‘Let thy Majesty go upon the lake of the palace, and let there be made ready a boat, with all the fair maidens of the harem of thy palace; and the heart of thy Majesty shall be refreshed with the sight, in seeing their rowing up and down the water, and seeing the goodly pools of the birds upon the lake, and beholding its sweet fields and grassy shores; thus will thy heart be lightened. And I also will go with thee. Bring me twenty oars of ebony inlaid with gold, with blades of light wood inlaid with electrum; and bring me twenty maidens, fair in their limbs, their bosoms, and their hair, all virgins; and bring me twenty nets, and give these nets unto the maidens for their garments.’And they did according to all the commands of his Majesty.“And they rowed down the stream and up the stream, and the heart of his Majesty was glad with the sight of their rowing. But one of them at the steering struck her hair, and her jewel of new malachite fell into the water. And she ceased her song, and rowed not; and her companions ceased, and rowed not. And his Majesty said,‘Row you not further?’And they replied,‘Our little steerer here stays and rows not.’His Majesty then said to her,‘Wherefore rowest thou not?’She replied,‘It is for my jewel of new malachite which is fallen in the water.’And he said to her,‘Row on, for behold I will replace it.’And she answered,‘But I want my own piece back in its setting.’And his Majesty said,‘Haste, bring me the chief reciter Zazamankh,’and they brought him. And his Majesty said,‘Zazamankh, my brother, I have done as thou sayedst, and the heart of his Majesty is refreshed with the sight of their rowing. But now a jewel of new malachite of one of the little ones is fallen in the water, and she ceases and rows not, and she has spoiled the rowing of her side. And I said to her,“Wherefore rowest thou not?”and she answered to me,“It is for my jewel of new malachite which is fallen in the water.”I replied to her,“Row on, for behold[pg 163]I will replace it;”and she answered to me,“But I want my own piece again back in its setting.”’Then the chief reciter Zazamankh spake his magic speech. And he placed one part of the waters of the lake upon the other, and discovered the jewel lying upon a shard; and he took it up and gave it unto its mistress. And the water, which was twelve cubits deep in the middle, reached now to twenty-four cubits after he turned it. And he spake, and used his magic speech; and he brought again the water of the lake to its place. And his Majesty spent a joyful day with the whole of the royal house. Then rewarded he the chief reciter Zazamankh with all good things. Behold, this is a wonder that came to pass in the days of thy father, the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Seneferu, of the deeds of the chief reciter, the scribe of the rolls, Zazamankh.”Then said the majesty of the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, the blessed,“Let there be presented an offering of 1,000 cakes, 100 draughts of beer, an ox, and two jars of incense to the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Seneferu, the blessed; and let there be given a loaf, a jar of beer, and a jar of incense to the chief reciter, the scribe of the rolls, Zazamankh; for I have seen the token of his learning.”And they did all things as his Majesty commanded.Hordedef's TaleThe royal son Hordedef then stood forth and spake. He said:“Hitherto hast thou only heard tokens of those who have gone before, and of which no man knoweth their truth. But I will show thy Majesty a man of thine own days.”And his Majesty said,“Who is he, Hordedef?”And the royal son Hordedef answered,“It is a certain man named Dedi, who dwells at Dedsneferu. He is a man of 110 years old; and he eats 500 loaves of bread and a side of beef, and drinks 100 draughts of beer, unto this day. He knows how to restore the head that is smitten off; he knows how to cause the lion to follow him trailing his halter on the ground; he knows the designs of the dwelling of Tahuti. The majesty of the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, the blessed, has long sought for the designs of the dwelling of Tahuti, that he may make the like of them in his pyramid.”[pg 164]And his Majesty said,“Thou, thyself, Hordedef, my son, bring him to me.”Then were the ships made ready for the King's son Hordedef, and he went up the stream to Dedsneferu. And when the ships had moored at the haven, he landed, and sat him in a litter of ebony, the poles of which were of cedar wood overlaid with gold. Now when he drew near to Dedi, they set down the litter. And he arose to greet Dedi, and found him lying on a palmstick couch at the door of his house; one servant held his head and rubbed him, and another rubbed his feet.And the King's son Hordedef said,“Thy state is that of one who lives to good old age; for old age is the end of our voyage, the time of embalming, the time of burial. Lie, then, in the sun, free of infirmities, without the babble of dotage: this is the salutation to worthy age. I come from far to call thee, with a message from my father Khufu, the blessed, for thou shalt eat of the best which the King gives, and of the food which those have who follow after him; that he may bring thee in good estate to thy fathers who are in the tomb.”And Dedi replied to him:“Peace to thee! Peace to thee! Hordedef, son of the King, beloved of his father. May thy father Khufu, the blessed, praise thee, may he advance thee among the elders, may thykaprevail against the enemy, may thy soul know the right road to the gate of him who clothes the afflicted; this is the salutation to the King's son.”Then the King's son, Hordedef, stretched forth his hands to him, and raised him up, and went with him to the haven, giving unto him his arm. Then said Dedi,“Let there be given me a boat, to bring me my youths and my books.”And they made ready for him two boats with their rowers. And Dedi went down the river in the barge in which was the King's son, Hordedef. And when he had reached the palace, the King's son, Hordedef, entered in to give account unto his Majesty the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, the blessed. Then said the King's son Hordedef,“O King, life, wealth, and health! My lord, I have brought Dedi.”His Majesty replied,“Bring him to me speedily.”And his Majesty went into the hall of columns of Pharaoh (life, wealth, and health), and Dedi was led before him. And his Majesty said,“Wherefore[pg 165]is it, Dedi, that I have not yet seen thee?”And Dedi answered:“He who is called it is that comes; the King (life, wealth, and health) calls me, and behold I come.”And his Majesty said,“Is it true, that which men say, that thou canst restore the head which is smitten off?”And Dedi replied,“Truly, I know that, O King (life, wealth, and health), my lord.”And his Majesty said,“Let one bring me a prisoner who is in prison, that his punishment may be fulfilled.”And Dedi said:“Let it not be a man, O King, my lord; behold we do not even thus to our cattle.”And a duck was brought unto him, and its head was cut off. And the duck was laid on the west side of the hall, and its head on the east side of the hall. And Dedi spake his magic speech. And the duck fluttered along the ground, and its head came likewise; and when it had come part to part the duck stood and quacked. And they brought likewise a goose before him, and he did even so unto it. His Majesty caused an ox to be brought, and its head cast on the ground. And Dedi spake his magic speech. And the ox stood upright behind him, and followed him with his halter trailing on the ground.And King Khufu said,“And is it true what is said, that thou knowest the number of the designs of the dwelling of Tahuti?”And Dedi replied,“Pardon me, I know not their number, O King (life, wealth, and health), but I know where they are.”And his Majesty said,“Where is that?”And Dedi replied:“There is a chest of whetstone in a chamber named the plan-room, in Heliopolis; they are in this chest.”And Dedi said further unto him,“O King (life, wealth, and health), my lord, it is not I that is to bring them to thee.”And his Majesty said,“Who, then, is it that shall bring them to me?”And Dedi answered to him,“It is the eldest of the three children who are in the body of Rud-didet who shall bring them to thee.”And his Majesty said:“Would that it may be as thou sayest! And who is this Rud-didet?”And Dedi replied:“She is the wife of a priest of Ra, lord of Sakhebu. And she has conceived these three sons by Ra, lord of Sakhebu, and the god has promised her that they shall fulfil this noble office (of reigning) over all this land, and that the eldest of them shall be high-priest in Heliopolis.”And his Majesty's heart became[pg 166]troubled for this; but Dedi spake unto him:“What is this that thou thinkest, O King (life, wealth, health), my lord? Is it because of these three children? I tell thee thy son shall reign, and thy son's son, and then one of them.”His Majesty said,“And when shall Rud-didet bear these?”And he replied,“She shall bear them on the twenty-fifth of the month Tybi.”And his Majesty said,“When the banks of the canal of Letopolis are cut, I will walk there that I may see the temple of Ra, lord of Sakhebu.”And Dedi replied,“Then I will cause that there be four cubits of water by the banks of the canal of Letopolis.”When his Majesty returned to his palace, his Majesty said:“Let them place Dedi in the house of the royal son Hordedef, that he may dwell with him, and let them give him a daily portion of 1,000 loaves, 100 draughts of beer, an ox, and 100 bunches of onions.”And they did everything as his Majesty commanded.And one day it came to pass that Rud-didet felt the pains of birth. And the majesty of Ra, Lord of Sakhebu, said unto Isis, to Nebhat, to Meskhent, to Hakt, and to Khnumu:“Go ye, and deliver Rud-didet of these three children that she shall bear, who are to fulfil this noble office over all this land; that they may build up your temples, furnish your altars with offerings, supply your tables of libation, and increase your endowments.”Then went these deities; their fashion they made as that of dancing-girls, and Khnumu was with them as a porter. They drew near unto the house of Ra-user, and found him standing, with his girdle fallen. And they played before him with their instruments of music. But he said unto them,“My ladies, behold, here is a woman who feels the pains of birth.”They said to him,“Let us see her, for we know how to help her.”And he replied,“Come, then.”And they entered in straightway to Rud-didet, and they closed the door on her and on themselves. Then Isis stood before her, and Nebhat stood behind her, and Hakt helped her. And Isis said,“O child, by thy name of User-ref, do not do violence.”And the child came upon her hands, as a child of a cubit; its bones were strong, the beauty of its limbs was like gold, and its hair was like true lapis-lazuli. They washed him, and prepared him, and placed him on a carpet on the brickwork. Then[pg 167]Meskhent approached him and said,“This is a king who shall reign over all the land.”And Khnumu gave strength to his limbs. Then Isis stood before her, and Nebhat stood behind her, and Hakt helped her. And Isis said,“O child, by thy name of Sah-ra, stay not in her.”Then the child came upon her hands, a child of a cubit; its bones were strong, the beauty of its limbs was like gold, and its hair was like true lapis-lazuli. They washed him, and prepared him, and laid him on a carpet on the brickwork. Then Meskhent approached him and said,“This is a king who shall reign over all the land.”And Khnumu gave strength to his limbs. Then Isis stood before her, and Nebhat stood behind her, and Hakt helped her. And Isis said,“O child, by thy name of Kaku, remain not in darkness in her.”And the child came upon her hands, a child of a cubit; its bones were strong, the beauty of its limbs was like gold, and its hair was like true lapis-lazuli. And Meskhent approached him and said,“This is a king who shall reign over all the land.”And Khnumu gave strength to his limbs. And they washed him, and prepared him, and laid him on a carpet on the brickwork.And the deities went out, having delivered Rud-didet of the three children. And they said,“Rejoice! O Ra-user, for behold three children are born unto thee.”And he said unto them,“My ladies, and what shall I give unto ye? Behold, give this bushel of barley here unto your porter, that ye may take it as your reward to the brew-house.”And Khnumu loaded himself with the bushel of barley. And they went away toward the place from which they came. And Isis spake unto these goddesses, and said,“Wherefore have we come without doing a marvel for these children, that we may tell it to their father who has sent us?”Then made they the divine diadems of the King (life, wealth, and health), and laid them in the bushel of barley. And they caused the clouds to come with wind and rain; and they turned back again unto the house. And they said,“Let us put this barley in a closed chamber, sealed up, until we return northward, dancing.”And they placed the barley in a close chamber.And Rud-didet purified herself, with a purification of fourteen days. And she said to her handmaid,“Is the house made[pg 168]ready?”And she replied,“All things are made ready, but the brewing barley is not yet brought.”And Rud-didet said,“Wherefore is the brewing barley not yet brought?”And the servant answered,“It would all of it long since be ready if the barley had not been given to the dancing-girls, and lay in the chamber under their seal.”Rud-didet said,“Go down, and bring of it, and Ra-user shall give them in its stead when he shall come.”And the handmaid went, and opened the chamber. And she heard talking and singing, music and dancing, quavering, and all things which are performed for a king in his chamber. And she returned and told to Rud-didet all that she had heard. And she went through the chamber, but she found not the place where the sound was. And she laid her temple to the sack, and found that the sounds were in it. She placed it in a chest, and put that in another locker, and tied it fast with leather, and laid it in the storeroom, where the things were, and sealed it. And Ra-user came returning from the field; and Rud-didet repeated unto him these things; and his heart was glad above all things; and they sat down and made a joyful day.And after these days it came to pass that Rud-didet was wroth with her servant, and beat her with stripes. And the servant said unto those that were in the house:“Shall it be done thus unto me? She has borne three kings, and I will go and tell this to his Majesty King Khufu the blessed.”And she went, and found the eldest brother of her mother, who was binding his flax on the floor. And he said to her,“Whither goest thou, my little maid?”And she told him of all these things. And her brother said to her:“Wherefore comest thou thus to me? Shall I agree to treachery?”And he took a bunch of the flax to her, and laid on her a violent blow. And the servant went to fetch a handful of water, and a crocodile carried her away.Her uncle went therefore to tell of this to Rud-didet; and he found Rud-didet sitting, her head on her knees, and her heart beyond measure sad. And he said to her,“My lady, why makest thou thy heart thus?”And she answered,“It is because of this little wretch that was in the house; behold she went out saying,‘I will go and tell it.’”And he[pg 169]bowed his head unto the ground, and said,“My lady, she came and told me of these things, and made her complaint unto me; and I laid on her a violent blow. And she went forth to draw water, and a crocodile carried her away.”(The rest of the tale is lost.)The Peasant And The WorkmanThere dwelt in the Sekhet Hemat—or Salt Country—a peasant called the Sekhti, with his wife and children, his asses and his dogs; and he trafficked in all good things of the Sekhet Hemat to Henenseten. Behold now he went with rushes, natron, and salt, with wood and pods, with stones and seeds, and all good products of the Sekhet Hemat. And this Sekhti journeyed to the south unto Henenseten; and when he came to the lands of the house of Fefa, north of Denat, he found a man there standing on the bank, a man called Hemti—the workman—son of a man called Asri, who was a serf of the high-steward Meruitensa. Now said this Hemti, when he saw the asses of Sekhti, that were pleasing in his eyes,“Oh that some good god would grant me to steal away the goods of Sekhti from him!”Now the Hemti's house was by the dike of the tow-path, which was straightened, and not wide, as much as the width of a waistcloth: on the one side of it was the water, and on the other side of it grew his corn. Hemti said then to his servant,“Hasten! bring me a shawl from the house,”and it was brought instantly. Then spread he out this shawl on the face of the dike, and it lay with its fastening on the water and its fringe on the corn.Now Sekhti approached along the path used by all men. Said Hemti:“Have a care, Sekhti! you are not going to trample on my clothes!”Said Sekhti,“I will do as you like, I will pass carefully.”Then went he up on the higher side. But Hemti said,“Go you over my corn, instead of the path?”Said Sekhti:“I am going carefully; this high field of corn is not my choice, but you have stopped your path with your clothes, and will you then not let us pass by the side of the path?”And one of the asses filled its[pg 170]mouth with a cluster of corn. Said Hemti:“Look you, I shall take away your ass, Sekhti, for eating my corn; behold it will have to pay according to the amount of the injury.”Said Sekhti:“I am going carefully; the one way is stopped, therefore took I my ass by the inclosed ground; and do you seize it for filling its mouth with a cluster of corn? Moreover, I know unto whom this domain belongs, even unto the lord steward Meruitensa. He it is who smites every robber in this whole land; and shall I then be robbed in his domain?”Said Hemti,“This is the proverb which men speak:‘A poor man's name is only his own matter.’I am he of whom you spake, even the lord steward of whom you think.”Thereon he took to him branches of green tamarisk and scourged all his limbs, took his asses, and drave them into the pasture. And Sekhti wept very greatly, by reason of the pain of what he had suffered. Said Hemti,“Lift not up your voice, Sekhti, or you shall go to the demon of silence.”Sekhti answered:“You beat me, you steal my goods, and now would take away even my voice, O demon of silence! If you will restore my goods, then will I cease to cry out at your violence.”Sekhti stayed the whole day petitioning Hemti, but he would not give ear unto him. And Sekhti went his way to Khenensuten to complain to the lord steward Meruitensa. He found him coming out from the door of his house to embark on his boat, that he might go to the judgment-hall. Sekhti said:“Ho! turn, that I may please thy heart with this discourse. Now at this time let one of thy followers, whom thou wilt, come to me that I may send him to thee concerning it.”The lord steward Meruitensa made his follower, whom he chose, go straight unto him, and Sekhti sent him back with an account of all these matters. Then the lord steward Meruitensa accused Hemti unto the nobles who sat with him; and they said unto him:“By your leave: As to this Sekhti of yours, let him bring a witness. Behold thou it is our custom with our Sekhtis; witnesses come with them; behold, that is our custom. Then it will be fitting to beat this Hemti for a trifle of natron and a trifle of salt; if he is commanded to pay for it, he will pay for it.”But the high steward Meruitensa held his[pg 171]peace; for he would not reply unto these nobles, but would reply unto the Sekhti.Now Sekhti came to appeal to the lord steward Meruitensa, and said,“O my lord steward, greatest of the great, guide of the needy:When thou embarkest on the lake of truth—Mayest thou sail upon it with a fair wind;May thy mainsail not fly loose.May there not be lamentation in thy cabin;May not misfortune come after thee.May not thy mainstays be snapped;Mayest thou not run aground.May not the wave seize thee;Mayest thou not taste the impurities of the river;Mayest thou not see the face of fear.May the fish come to thee without escape;Mayest thou reach unto plump water-fowl.For thou art the orphan's father, the widow's husband,The desolate woman's brother, the garment of the motherless.Let me celebrate thy name in this land for every virtue,A guide without greediness of heart;A great one without any meanness.Destroying deceit, encouraging justice;Coming to the cry, and allowing utterance.Let me speak, do thou hear and do justice;O praised! whom the praised ones praise.Abolish oppression, behold me, I am overladen,Reckon with me, behold me defrauded.”Now the Sekhti made this speech in the time of the majesty of the King Neb-ka-n-ra, blessed. The lord steward Meruitensa went away straight to the King and said:“My lord, I have found one of these Sekhti, excellent of speech, in very truth; stolen are his goods, and he has come to complain to me of the matter.”His Majesty said:“As thou wishest that I may see health! lengthen out his complaint, without replying to any of his speeches. He who desireth him to continue speaking should be silent; behold, bring us his words in writing, that we may listen to them. But provide for his wife and his children, and[pg 172]let the Sekhti himself also have a living. Thou must cause one to give him his portion without letting him know that thou art he who is giving it to him.”There were given to him four loaves and two draughts of beer each day; which the lord steward Meruitensa provided for him, giving it to a friend of his, who furnished it unto him. Then the lord steward Meruitensa sent the governor of the Sekhet Hemat to make provision for the wife of the Sekhti, three rations of corn each day.Then came the Sekhti a second time, and even a third time, unto the lord steward Meruitensa; but he told two of his followers to go unto the Sekhti, and seize on him, and beat him with staves. But he came again unto him, even unto six times, and said:“My Lord Steward—Destroying deceit, and encouraging justice;Raising up every good thing, and crushing every evil;As plenty comes removing famine,As clothing covers nakedness,As clear sky after storm warms the shivering;As fire cooks that which is raw,As water quenches the thirst;Look with thy face upon my lot; do not covet, but content me without fail; do the right and do not evil,”But yet Meruitensa would not hearken unto his complaint; and the Sekhti came yet, and yet again, even unto the ninth time. Then the lord steward told two of his followers to go unto the Sekhti; and the Sekhti feared that he should be beaten as at the third request. But the lord steward Meruitensa then said unto him:“Fear not, Sekhti, for what thou hast done. The Sekhti has made many speeches, delightful to the heart of his Majesty, and I take an oath—as I eat bread, and as I drink water—that thou shalt be remembered to eternity.”Said the lord steward,“Moreover, thou shalt be satisfied when thou shalt hear of thy complaints.”He caused to be written on a clean roll of papyrus each petition to the end, and the lord steward Meruitensa sent it to the majesty of the King Neb-ka-n-ra, blessed, and it was good to him more than anything that is in the whole land: but his Majesty said to Meruitensa:“Judge it thyself; I do not desire it.”[pg 173]The lord steward Meruitensa made two of his followers to go to the Sekhet Hemat, and bring a list of the household of the Sekhti; and its amount was six persons, beside his oxen and his goats, his wheat and his barley, his asses and his dogs; and moreover he gave all that which belonged unto the Hemti to the Sekhti, even all his property and his officers, and the Sekhti was beloved of the King more than all his overseers, and ate of all the good things of the King, with all his household.The Shipwrecked SailorThe wise servant said:“Let thy heart be satisfied, O my lord, for that we have come back to the country; after we have long been on board, and rowed much, the prow has at last touched land. All the people rejoice, and embrace us one after another. Moreover, we have come back in good health, and not a man is lacking; although we have been to the ends of Wawat, and gone through the land of Senmut, we have returned in peace, and our land—behold, we have come back to it. Hear me, my lord; I have no other refuge. Wash thee, and turn the water over thy fingers; then go and tell the tale to the Majesty.”His lord replied:“Thy heart continues still its wandering words! but although the mouth of a man may save him, his words may also cover his face with confusion. Wilt thou do then as thy heart moves thee? This that thou wilt say, tell quietly.”The sailor then answered:“Now I shall tell that which has happened to me, to my very self. I was going to the mines of Pharaoh, and I went down on the sea on a ship of 150 cubits long and forty cubits wide, with 150 sailors of the best of Egypt, who had seen heaven and earth, and whose hearts were stronger than lions. They had said that the wind would not be contrary, or that there would be none. But as we approached the land the wind arose, and threw up waves eight cubits high. As for me, I seized a piece of wood; but those who were in the vessel perished, without one remaining. A wave threw me on an island, after that I had been three[pg 174]days alone, without a companion beside my own heart. I laid me in a thicket, and the shadow covered me. Then stretched I my limbs to try to find something for my mouth. I found there figs and grapes, all manner of good herbs, berries and grain, melons of all kinds, fishes and birds. Nothing was lacking. And I satisfied myself; and left on the ground that which was over, of what my arms had been filled withal. I dug a pit, I lighted a fire, and I made a burnt-offering unto the gods.“Suddenly I heard a noise as of thunder, which I thought to be that of a wave of the sea. The trees shook, and the earth was moved. I uncovered my face, and I saw that a serpent drew near. He was thirty cubits long, and his beard greater than two cubits; his body was as overlaid with gold, and his color as that of true lazuli. He coiled himself before me.“Then he opened his mouth, while that I lay on my face before him, and he said to me:‘What has brought thee, what has brought thee, little one, what has brought thee? If thou sayest not speedily what has brought thee to this isle, I will make thee know thyself; as a flame thou shalt vanish, if thou tellest me not something I had not heard, or which I knew not, before thee.’“Then he took me in his mouth and carried me to his resting-place, and laid me down without any hurt. I was whole and sound, and nothing was gone from me. Then he opened his mouth against me, while that I lay on my face before him, and he said,‘What has brought thee, what has brought thee, little one, what has brought thee to this isle which is in the sea, and of which the shores are in the midst of the waves?’“Then I replied to him, and holding my arms low before him, I said to him:‘I was embarked for the mines by the order of the majesty, in a ship; 150 cubits was its length, and the width of it forty cubits. It had 150 sailors of the best of Egypt, who had seen heaven and earth, and the hearts of whom were stronger than lions. They said that the wind would not be contrary, or that there would be none. Each of them exceeded his companion in the prudence of his heart and the strength of his arm, and I was not beneath any of them. A storm came upon us while we were on the sea. Hardly could we reach to the shore when the wind waxed yet greater,[pg 175]and the waves rose even eight cubits. As for me, I seized a piece of wood, while those who were in the boat perished without one being left with me for three days. Behold me now before thee, for I was brought to this isle by a wave of the sea.’“Then said he to me:‘Fear not, fear not, little one, and make not thy face sad. If thou hast come to me, it is God who has let thee live. For it is he who has brought thee to this isle of the blest, where nothing is lacking, and which is filled with all good things. See now, thou shalt pass one month after another, until thou shalt be four months in this isle. Then a ship shall come from thy land with sailors, and thou shalt leave with them and go to thy country, and thou shalt die in thy town.’“‘Converse is pleasing, and he who tastes of it passes over his misery. I will therefore tell thee of that which is in this isle. I am here with my brethren and my children around me; we are seventy-five serpents, children and kindred; without naming a young girl who was brought unto me by chance, and on whom the fire of heaven fell, and burnt her to ashes.“‘As for thee if thou art strong, and if thy heart waits patiently, thou shalt press thy infants to thy bosom and embrace thy wife. Thou shalt return to thy house, which is full of all good things; thou shalt see thy land, where thou shalt dwell in the midst of thy kindred.’“Then I bowed, in my obeisance, and I touched the ground before him.‘Behold now that which I have told thee before. I shall tell of thy presence unto Pharaoh, I shall make him to know of thy greatness, and I will bring to thee of the sacred oils and perfumes, and of incense of the temples with which all gods are honored. I shall tell, moreover, of that which I do now see (thanks to him), and there shall be rendered to thee praises before the fulness of all the land. I shall slay asses for thee in sacrifice, I shall pluck for thee the birds, and I shall bring for thee ships full of all kinds of the treasures of Egypt, as is comely to do unto a god, a friend of men in a far country, of which men know not.’“Then he smiled at my speech, because of that which was in his heart, for he said to me:‘Thou art not rich in perfumes, for all that thou hast is but common incense. As for me I am Prince of the land of Punt, and I have perfumes.[pg 176]Only the oil which thou sayest thou wouldst bring is not common in this isle. But, when thou shalt depart from this place, thou shalt never more see this isle; it shall be changed into waves.’“And, behold, when the ship drew near, according to all that he had told me before, I got me up into an high tree, to strive to see those who were within it. Then I came and told to him this matter; but it was already known unto him before. Then he said to me:‘Farewell, farewell; go to thy house, little one, see again thy children, and let thy name be good in thy town; these are my wishes for thee.’“Then I bowed myself before him, and held my arms low before him, and he, he gave me gifts of precious perfumes, of cassia, of sweet woods, of kohl, of cypress, an abundance of incense, of ivory tusks, of baboons, of apes, and all kinds of precious things. I embarked all in the ship which was come, and, bowing myself, I prayed God for him.“Then he said to me,‘Behold thou shalt come to thy country in two months, thou shalt press to thy bosom thy children, and thou shalt rest in thy tomb.’After this I went down to the shore unto the ship, and I called to the sailors who were there. Then on the shore I rendered adoration to the master of this isle and to those who dwelt therein.“When we shall come, in our return, to the house of Pharaoh, in the second month, according to all that the serpent has said, we shall approach unto the palace. And I shall go in before Pharaoh, I shall bring the gifts which I have brought from this isle into the country. Then he shall thank me before the fulness of all the land. Grant them unto me a follower, and lead me to the courtiers of the King. Cast thy eye upon me, after that I am come to land again, after that I have both seen and proved this. Hear my prayer, for it is good to listen to people. It was said unto me,‘Become a wise man, and thou shalt come to honor,’and behold I have become such.”This is finished from its beginning unto its end, even as it was found in a writing. It is written by the scribe of cunning fingers Ameni-amen-aa; may he live in life, wealth, and health![pg 177]

Tales Of The MagiciansOne day, when King Khufu reigned over all the land, he said to his chancellor, who stood before him,“Go call me my sons and my councillors, that I may ask of them a thing.”And his sons and his councillors came and stood before him, and he said to them,“Know ye a man who can tell me tales of the deeds of the magicians?”Then the royal son Khafra stood forth and said,“I will tell thy Majesty a tale of the days of thy forefather Nebka, the blessed; of what came to pass when he went into the temple of Ptah of Ankhtaui.”[pg 160]Khafra's Tale“His Majesty was walking unto the temple of Ptah, and went unto the house of the chief reciter Uba-aner, with his train. Now when the wife of Uba-aner saw a page, among those who stood behind the King, her heart longed after him; and she sent her servant unto him, with a present of a box full of garments.“And he came then with the servant. Now there was a lodge in the garden of Uba-aner; and one day the page said to the wife of Uba-aner,‘In the garden of Uba-aner there is now a lodge; behold, let us therein take our pleasure.’So the wife of Uba-aner sent to the steward who had charge over the garden, saying,‘Let the lodge which is in the garden be made ready.’And she remained there, and rested and drank with the page until the sun went down.“And when the even was now come the page went forth to bathe. And the steward said,‘I must go and tell Uba-aner of this matter.’Now when this day was past, and another day came, then went the steward to Uba-aner, and told him of all these things.“Then said Uba-aner,‘Bring me my casket of ebony and electrum.’And they brought it; and he fashioned a crocodile of wax, seven fingers long: and he enchanted it, and said,‘When the page comes and bathes in my lake, seize on him.’And he gave it to the steward, and said to him,‘When the page shall go down into the lake to bathe, as he is daily wont to do, then throw in this crocodile behind him.’And the steward went forth bearing the crocodile.“And the wife of Uba-aner sent to the steward who had charge over the garden, saying,‘Let the lodge which is in the garden be made ready, for I come to tarry there.’“And the lodge was prepared with all good things; and she came and made merry therein with the page. And when the even was now come, the page went forth to bathe as he was wont to do. And the steward cast in the wax crocodile after him into the water; and, behold! it became a great crocodile seven cubits in length, and it seized on the page.“And Uba-aner abode yet seven days with the King of[pg 161]Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, the blessed, while the page was stifled in the crocodile. And after the seven days were passed, the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, the blessed, went forth, and Uba-aner went before him.“And Uba-aner said unto his Majesty,‘Will your Majesty come and see this wonder that has come to pass in your days unto a page?’And the King went with Uba-aner. And Uba-aner called unto the crocodile and said,‘Bring forth the page.’And the crocodile came forth from the lake with the page. Uba-aner said unto the King,‘Behold, whatever I command this crocodile he will do it.’And his Majesty said,‘I pray you send back this crocodile.’And Uba-aner stooped and took up the crocodile, and it became in his hand a crocodile of wax. And then Uba-aner told the King that which had passed in his house with the page and his wife. And his Majesty said unto the crocodile,‘Take to thee thy prey.’And the crocodile plunged into the lake with his prey, and no man knew whither he went.“And his Majesty the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, the blessed, commanded, and they brought forth the wife of Uba-aner to the north side of the harem, and burned her with fire, and cast her ashes in the river.“This is a wonder that came to pass in the days of thy forefather the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, of the acts of the chief reciter Uba-aner.”His Majesty the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, then said,“Let there be presented to the King Nebka, the blessed, 1,000 loaves, 100 draughts of beer, an ox, two jars of incense; and let there be presented a loaf, a jar of beer, a jar of incense and a piece of meat to the chief reciter Uba-aner; for I have seen the token of his learning.”And they did all things as his Majesty commanded.Bau-F-Ra's TaleThe royal son Bau-f-ra then stood forth and spake. He said,“I will tell thy Majesty of a wonder which came to pass in the days of thy father Seneferu, the blessed, of the deeds of the chief reciter Zazamankh. One day King Seneferu, being weary, went throughout his palace seeking for a pleasure[pg 162]to lighten his heart, but he found none. And he said,‘Haste, and bring before me the chief reciter and scribe of the rolls Zazamankh;’and they straightway brought him. And the King said,‘I have sought in my palace for some delight, but I have found none.’Then said Zazamankh to him,‘Let thy Majesty go upon the lake of the palace, and let there be made ready a boat, with all the fair maidens of the harem of thy palace; and the heart of thy Majesty shall be refreshed with the sight, in seeing their rowing up and down the water, and seeing the goodly pools of the birds upon the lake, and beholding its sweet fields and grassy shores; thus will thy heart be lightened. And I also will go with thee. Bring me twenty oars of ebony inlaid with gold, with blades of light wood inlaid with electrum; and bring me twenty maidens, fair in their limbs, their bosoms, and their hair, all virgins; and bring me twenty nets, and give these nets unto the maidens for their garments.’And they did according to all the commands of his Majesty.“And they rowed down the stream and up the stream, and the heart of his Majesty was glad with the sight of their rowing. But one of them at the steering struck her hair, and her jewel of new malachite fell into the water. And she ceased her song, and rowed not; and her companions ceased, and rowed not. And his Majesty said,‘Row you not further?’And they replied,‘Our little steerer here stays and rows not.’His Majesty then said to her,‘Wherefore rowest thou not?’She replied,‘It is for my jewel of new malachite which is fallen in the water.’And he said to her,‘Row on, for behold I will replace it.’And she answered,‘But I want my own piece back in its setting.’And his Majesty said,‘Haste, bring me the chief reciter Zazamankh,’and they brought him. And his Majesty said,‘Zazamankh, my brother, I have done as thou sayedst, and the heart of his Majesty is refreshed with the sight of their rowing. But now a jewel of new malachite of one of the little ones is fallen in the water, and she ceases and rows not, and she has spoiled the rowing of her side. And I said to her,“Wherefore rowest thou not?”and she answered to me,“It is for my jewel of new malachite which is fallen in the water.”I replied to her,“Row on, for behold[pg 163]I will replace it;”and she answered to me,“But I want my own piece again back in its setting.”’Then the chief reciter Zazamankh spake his magic speech. And he placed one part of the waters of the lake upon the other, and discovered the jewel lying upon a shard; and he took it up and gave it unto its mistress. And the water, which was twelve cubits deep in the middle, reached now to twenty-four cubits after he turned it. And he spake, and used his magic speech; and he brought again the water of the lake to its place. And his Majesty spent a joyful day with the whole of the royal house. Then rewarded he the chief reciter Zazamankh with all good things. Behold, this is a wonder that came to pass in the days of thy father, the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Seneferu, of the deeds of the chief reciter, the scribe of the rolls, Zazamankh.”Then said the majesty of the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, the blessed,“Let there be presented an offering of 1,000 cakes, 100 draughts of beer, an ox, and two jars of incense to the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Seneferu, the blessed; and let there be given a loaf, a jar of beer, and a jar of incense to the chief reciter, the scribe of the rolls, Zazamankh; for I have seen the token of his learning.”And they did all things as his Majesty commanded.Hordedef's TaleThe royal son Hordedef then stood forth and spake. He said:“Hitherto hast thou only heard tokens of those who have gone before, and of which no man knoweth their truth. But I will show thy Majesty a man of thine own days.”And his Majesty said,“Who is he, Hordedef?”And the royal son Hordedef answered,“It is a certain man named Dedi, who dwells at Dedsneferu. He is a man of 110 years old; and he eats 500 loaves of bread and a side of beef, and drinks 100 draughts of beer, unto this day. He knows how to restore the head that is smitten off; he knows how to cause the lion to follow him trailing his halter on the ground; he knows the designs of the dwelling of Tahuti. The majesty of the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, the blessed, has long sought for the designs of the dwelling of Tahuti, that he may make the like of them in his pyramid.”[pg 164]And his Majesty said,“Thou, thyself, Hordedef, my son, bring him to me.”Then were the ships made ready for the King's son Hordedef, and he went up the stream to Dedsneferu. And when the ships had moored at the haven, he landed, and sat him in a litter of ebony, the poles of which were of cedar wood overlaid with gold. Now when he drew near to Dedi, they set down the litter. And he arose to greet Dedi, and found him lying on a palmstick couch at the door of his house; one servant held his head and rubbed him, and another rubbed his feet.And the King's son Hordedef said,“Thy state is that of one who lives to good old age; for old age is the end of our voyage, the time of embalming, the time of burial. Lie, then, in the sun, free of infirmities, without the babble of dotage: this is the salutation to worthy age. I come from far to call thee, with a message from my father Khufu, the blessed, for thou shalt eat of the best which the King gives, and of the food which those have who follow after him; that he may bring thee in good estate to thy fathers who are in the tomb.”And Dedi replied to him:“Peace to thee! Peace to thee! Hordedef, son of the King, beloved of his father. May thy father Khufu, the blessed, praise thee, may he advance thee among the elders, may thykaprevail against the enemy, may thy soul know the right road to the gate of him who clothes the afflicted; this is the salutation to the King's son.”Then the King's son, Hordedef, stretched forth his hands to him, and raised him up, and went with him to the haven, giving unto him his arm. Then said Dedi,“Let there be given me a boat, to bring me my youths and my books.”And they made ready for him two boats with their rowers. And Dedi went down the river in the barge in which was the King's son, Hordedef. And when he had reached the palace, the King's son, Hordedef, entered in to give account unto his Majesty the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, the blessed. Then said the King's son Hordedef,“O King, life, wealth, and health! My lord, I have brought Dedi.”His Majesty replied,“Bring him to me speedily.”And his Majesty went into the hall of columns of Pharaoh (life, wealth, and health), and Dedi was led before him. And his Majesty said,“Wherefore[pg 165]is it, Dedi, that I have not yet seen thee?”And Dedi answered:“He who is called it is that comes; the King (life, wealth, and health) calls me, and behold I come.”And his Majesty said,“Is it true, that which men say, that thou canst restore the head which is smitten off?”And Dedi replied,“Truly, I know that, O King (life, wealth, and health), my lord.”And his Majesty said,“Let one bring me a prisoner who is in prison, that his punishment may be fulfilled.”And Dedi said:“Let it not be a man, O King, my lord; behold we do not even thus to our cattle.”And a duck was brought unto him, and its head was cut off. And the duck was laid on the west side of the hall, and its head on the east side of the hall. And Dedi spake his magic speech. And the duck fluttered along the ground, and its head came likewise; and when it had come part to part the duck stood and quacked. And they brought likewise a goose before him, and he did even so unto it. His Majesty caused an ox to be brought, and its head cast on the ground. And Dedi spake his magic speech. And the ox stood upright behind him, and followed him with his halter trailing on the ground.And King Khufu said,“And is it true what is said, that thou knowest the number of the designs of the dwelling of Tahuti?”And Dedi replied,“Pardon me, I know not their number, O King (life, wealth, and health), but I know where they are.”And his Majesty said,“Where is that?”And Dedi replied:“There is a chest of whetstone in a chamber named the plan-room, in Heliopolis; they are in this chest.”And Dedi said further unto him,“O King (life, wealth, and health), my lord, it is not I that is to bring them to thee.”And his Majesty said,“Who, then, is it that shall bring them to me?”And Dedi answered to him,“It is the eldest of the three children who are in the body of Rud-didet who shall bring them to thee.”And his Majesty said:“Would that it may be as thou sayest! And who is this Rud-didet?”And Dedi replied:“She is the wife of a priest of Ra, lord of Sakhebu. And she has conceived these three sons by Ra, lord of Sakhebu, and the god has promised her that they shall fulfil this noble office (of reigning) over all this land, and that the eldest of them shall be high-priest in Heliopolis.”And his Majesty's heart became[pg 166]troubled for this; but Dedi spake unto him:“What is this that thou thinkest, O King (life, wealth, health), my lord? Is it because of these three children? I tell thee thy son shall reign, and thy son's son, and then one of them.”His Majesty said,“And when shall Rud-didet bear these?”And he replied,“She shall bear them on the twenty-fifth of the month Tybi.”And his Majesty said,“When the banks of the canal of Letopolis are cut, I will walk there that I may see the temple of Ra, lord of Sakhebu.”And Dedi replied,“Then I will cause that there be four cubits of water by the banks of the canal of Letopolis.”When his Majesty returned to his palace, his Majesty said:“Let them place Dedi in the house of the royal son Hordedef, that he may dwell with him, and let them give him a daily portion of 1,000 loaves, 100 draughts of beer, an ox, and 100 bunches of onions.”And they did everything as his Majesty commanded.And one day it came to pass that Rud-didet felt the pains of birth. And the majesty of Ra, Lord of Sakhebu, said unto Isis, to Nebhat, to Meskhent, to Hakt, and to Khnumu:“Go ye, and deliver Rud-didet of these three children that she shall bear, who are to fulfil this noble office over all this land; that they may build up your temples, furnish your altars with offerings, supply your tables of libation, and increase your endowments.”Then went these deities; their fashion they made as that of dancing-girls, and Khnumu was with them as a porter. They drew near unto the house of Ra-user, and found him standing, with his girdle fallen. And they played before him with their instruments of music. But he said unto them,“My ladies, behold, here is a woman who feels the pains of birth.”They said to him,“Let us see her, for we know how to help her.”And he replied,“Come, then.”And they entered in straightway to Rud-didet, and they closed the door on her and on themselves. Then Isis stood before her, and Nebhat stood behind her, and Hakt helped her. And Isis said,“O child, by thy name of User-ref, do not do violence.”And the child came upon her hands, as a child of a cubit; its bones were strong, the beauty of its limbs was like gold, and its hair was like true lapis-lazuli. They washed him, and prepared him, and placed him on a carpet on the brickwork. Then[pg 167]Meskhent approached him and said,“This is a king who shall reign over all the land.”And Khnumu gave strength to his limbs. Then Isis stood before her, and Nebhat stood behind her, and Hakt helped her. And Isis said,“O child, by thy name of Sah-ra, stay not in her.”Then the child came upon her hands, a child of a cubit; its bones were strong, the beauty of its limbs was like gold, and its hair was like true lapis-lazuli. They washed him, and prepared him, and laid him on a carpet on the brickwork. Then Meskhent approached him and said,“This is a king who shall reign over all the land.”And Khnumu gave strength to his limbs. Then Isis stood before her, and Nebhat stood behind her, and Hakt helped her. And Isis said,“O child, by thy name of Kaku, remain not in darkness in her.”And the child came upon her hands, a child of a cubit; its bones were strong, the beauty of its limbs was like gold, and its hair was like true lapis-lazuli. And Meskhent approached him and said,“This is a king who shall reign over all the land.”And Khnumu gave strength to his limbs. And they washed him, and prepared him, and laid him on a carpet on the brickwork.And the deities went out, having delivered Rud-didet of the three children. And they said,“Rejoice! O Ra-user, for behold three children are born unto thee.”And he said unto them,“My ladies, and what shall I give unto ye? Behold, give this bushel of barley here unto your porter, that ye may take it as your reward to the brew-house.”And Khnumu loaded himself with the bushel of barley. And they went away toward the place from which they came. And Isis spake unto these goddesses, and said,“Wherefore have we come without doing a marvel for these children, that we may tell it to their father who has sent us?”Then made they the divine diadems of the King (life, wealth, and health), and laid them in the bushel of barley. And they caused the clouds to come with wind and rain; and they turned back again unto the house. And they said,“Let us put this barley in a closed chamber, sealed up, until we return northward, dancing.”And they placed the barley in a close chamber.And Rud-didet purified herself, with a purification of fourteen days. And she said to her handmaid,“Is the house made[pg 168]ready?”And she replied,“All things are made ready, but the brewing barley is not yet brought.”And Rud-didet said,“Wherefore is the brewing barley not yet brought?”And the servant answered,“It would all of it long since be ready if the barley had not been given to the dancing-girls, and lay in the chamber under their seal.”Rud-didet said,“Go down, and bring of it, and Ra-user shall give them in its stead when he shall come.”And the handmaid went, and opened the chamber. And she heard talking and singing, music and dancing, quavering, and all things which are performed for a king in his chamber. And she returned and told to Rud-didet all that she had heard. And she went through the chamber, but she found not the place where the sound was. And she laid her temple to the sack, and found that the sounds were in it. She placed it in a chest, and put that in another locker, and tied it fast with leather, and laid it in the storeroom, where the things were, and sealed it. And Ra-user came returning from the field; and Rud-didet repeated unto him these things; and his heart was glad above all things; and they sat down and made a joyful day.And after these days it came to pass that Rud-didet was wroth with her servant, and beat her with stripes. And the servant said unto those that were in the house:“Shall it be done thus unto me? She has borne three kings, and I will go and tell this to his Majesty King Khufu the blessed.”And she went, and found the eldest brother of her mother, who was binding his flax on the floor. And he said to her,“Whither goest thou, my little maid?”And she told him of all these things. And her brother said to her:“Wherefore comest thou thus to me? Shall I agree to treachery?”And he took a bunch of the flax to her, and laid on her a violent blow. And the servant went to fetch a handful of water, and a crocodile carried her away.Her uncle went therefore to tell of this to Rud-didet; and he found Rud-didet sitting, her head on her knees, and her heart beyond measure sad. And he said to her,“My lady, why makest thou thy heart thus?”And she answered,“It is because of this little wretch that was in the house; behold she went out saying,‘I will go and tell it.’”And he[pg 169]bowed his head unto the ground, and said,“My lady, she came and told me of these things, and made her complaint unto me; and I laid on her a violent blow. And she went forth to draw water, and a crocodile carried her away.”(The rest of the tale is lost.)The Peasant And The WorkmanThere dwelt in the Sekhet Hemat—or Salt Country—a peasant called the Sekhti, with his wife and children, his asses and his dogs; and he trafficked in all good things of the Sekhet Hemat to Henenseten. Behold now he went with rushes, natron, and salt, with wood and pods, with stones and seeds, and all good products of the Sekhet Hemat. And this Sekhti journeyed to the south unto Henenseten; and when he came to the lands of the house of Fefa, north of Denat, he found a man there standing on the bank, a man called Hemti—the workman—son of a man called Asri, who was a serf of the high-steward Meruitensa. Now said this Hemti, when he saw the asses of Sekhti, that were pleasing in his eyes,“Oh that some good god would grant me to steal away the goods of Sekhti from him!”Now the Hemti's house was by the dike of the tow-path, which was straightened, and not wide, as much as the width of a waistcloth: on the one side of it was the water, and on the other side of it grew his corn. Hemti said then to his servant,“Hasten! bring me a shawl from the house,”and it was brought instantly. Then spread he out this shawl on the face of the dike, and it lay with its fastening on the water and its fringe on the corn.Now Sekhti approached along the path used by all men. Said Hemti:“Have a care, Sekhti! you are not going to trample on my clothes!”Said Sekhti,“I will do as you like, I will pass carefully.”Then went he up on the higher side. But Hemti said,“Go you over my corn, instead of the path?”Said Sekhti:“I am going carefully; this high field of corn is not my choice, but you have stopped your path with your clothes, and will you then not let us pass by the side of the path?”And one of the asses filled its[pg 170]mouth with a cluster of corn. Said Hemti:“Look you, I shall take away your ass, Sekhti, for eating my corn; behold it will have to pay according to the amount of the injury.”Said Sekhti:“I am going carefully; the one way is stopped, therefore took I my ass by the inclosed ground; and do you seize it for filling its mouth with a cluster of corn? Moreover, I know unto whom this domain belongs, even unto the lord steward Meruitensa. He it is who smites every robber in this whole land; and shall I then be robbed in his domain?”Said Hemti,“This is the proverb which men speak:‘A poor man's name is only his own matter.’I am he of whom you spake, even the lord steward of whom you think.”Thereon he took to him branches of green tamarisk and scourged all his limbs, took his asses, and drave them into the pasture. And Sekhti wept very greatly, by reason of the pain of what he had suffered. Said Hemti,“Lift not up your voice, Sekhti, or you shall go to the demon of silence.”Sekhti answered:“You beat me, you steal my goods, and now would take away even my voice, O demon of silence! If you will restore my goods, then will I cease to cry out at your violence.”Sekhti stayed the whole day petitioning Hemti, but he would not give ear unto him. And Sekhti went his way to Khenensuten to complain to the lord steward Meruitensa. He found him coming out from the door of his house to embark on his boat, that he might go to the judgment-hall. Sekhti said:“Ho! turn, that I may please thy heart with this discourse. Now at this time let one of thy followers, whom thou wilt, come to me that I may send him to thee concerning it.”The lord steward Meruitensa made his follower, whom he chose, go straight unto him, and Sekhti sent him back with an account of all these matters. Then the lord steward Meruitensa accused Hemti unto the nobles who sat with him; and they said unto him:“By your leave: As to this Sekhti of yours, let him bring a witness. Behold thou it is our custom with our Sekhtis; witnesses come with them; behold, that is our custom. Then it will be fitting to beat this Hemti for a trifle of natron and a trifle of salt; if he is commanded to pay for it, he will pay for it.”But the high steward Meruitensa held his[pg 171]peace; for he would not reply unto these nobles, but would reply unto the Sekhti.Now Sekhti came to appeal to the lord steward Meruitensa, and said,“O my lord steward, greatest of the great, guide of the needy:When thou embarkest on the lake of truth—Mayest thou sail upon it with a fair wind;May thy mainsail not fly loose.May there not be lamentation in thy cabin;May not misfortune come after thee.May not thy mainstays be snapped;Mayest thou not run aground.May not the wave seize thee;Mayest thou not taste the impurities of the river;Mayest thou not see the face of fear.May the fish come to thee without escape;Mayest thou reach unto plump water-fowl.For thou art the orphan's father, the widow's husband,The desolate woman's brother, the garment of the motherless.Let me celebrate thy name in this land for every virtue,A guide without greediness of heart;A great one without any meanness.Destroying deceit, encouraging justice;Coming to the cry, and allowing utterance.Let me speak, do thou hear and do justice;O praised! whom the praised ones praise.Abolish oppression, behold me, I am overladen,Reckon with me, behold me defrauded.”Now the Sekhti made this speech in the time of the majesty of the King Neb-ka-n-ra, blessed. The lord steward Meruitensa went away straight to the King and said:“My lord, I have found one of these Sekhti, excellent of speech, in very truth; stolen are his goods, and he has come to complain to me of the matter.”His Majesty said:“As thou wishest that I may see health! lengthen out his complaint, without replying to any of his speeches. He who desireth him to continue speaking should be silent; behold, bring us his words in writing, that we may listen to them. But provide for his wife and his children, and[pg 172]let the Sekhti himself also have a living. Thou must cause one to give him his portion without letting him know that thou art he who is giving it to him.”There were given to him four loaves and two draughts of beer each day; which the lord steward Meruitensa provided for him, giving it to a friend of his, who furnished it unto him. Then the lord steward Meruitensa sent the governor of the Sekhet Hemat to make provision for the wife of the Sekhti, three rations of corn each day.Then came the Sekhti a second time, and even a third time, unto the lord steward Meruitensa; but he told two of his followers to go unto the Sekhti, and seize on him, and beat him with staves. But he came again unto him, even unto six times, and said:“My Lord Steward—Destroying deceit, and encouraging justice;Raising up every good thing, and crushing every evil;As plenty comes removing famine,As clothing covers nakedness,As clear sky after storm warms the shivering;As fire cooks that which is raw,As water quenches the thirst;Look with thy face upon my lot; do not covet, but content me without fail; do the right and do not evil,”But yet Meruitensa would not hearken unto his complaint; and the Sekhti came yet, and yet again, even unto the ninth time. Then the lord steward told two of his followers to go unto the Sekhti; and the Sekhti feared that he should be beaten as at the third request. But the lord steward Meruitensa then said unto him:“Fear not, Sekhti, for what thou hast done. The Sekhti has made many speeches, delightful to the heart of his Majesty, and I take an oath—as I eat bread, and as I drink water—that thou shalt be remembered to eternity.”Said the lord steward,“Moreover, thou shalt be satisfied when thou shalt hear of thy complaints.”He caused to be written on a clean roll of papyrus each petition to the end, and the lord steward Meruitensa sent it to the majesty of the King Neb-ka-n-ra, blessed, and it was good to him more than anything that is in the whole land: but his Majesty said to Meruitensa:“Judge it thyself; I do not desire it.”[pg 173]The lord steward Meruitensa made two of his followers to go to the Sekhet Hemat, and bring a list of the household of the Sekhti; and its amount was six persons, beside his oxen and his goats, his wheat and his barley, his asses and his dogs; and moreover he gave all that which belonged unto the Hemti to the Sekhti, even all his property and his officers, and the Sekhti was beloved of the King more than all his overseers, and ate of all the good things of the King, with all his household.The Shipwrecked SailorThe wise servant said:“Let thy heart be satisfied, O my lord, for that we have come back to the country; after we have long been on board, and rowed much, the prow has at last touched land. All the people rejoice, and embrace us one after another. Moreover, we have come back in good health, and not a man is lacking; although we have been to the ends of Wawat, and gone through the land of Senmut, we have returned in peace, and our land—behold, we have come back to it. Hear me, my lord; I have no other refuge. Wash thee, and turn the water over thy fingers; then go and tell the tale to the Majesty.”His lord replied:“Thy heart continues still its wandering words! but although the mouth of a man may save him, his words may also cover his face with confusion. Wilt thou do then as thy heart moves thee? This that thou wilt say, tell quietly.”The sailor then answered:“Now I shall tell that which has happened to me, to my very self. I was going to the mines of Pharaoh, and I went down on the sea on a ship of 150 cubits long and forty cubits wide, with 150 sailors of the best of Egypt, who had seen heaven and earth, and whose hearts were stronger than lions. They had said that the wind would not be contrary, or that there would be none. But as we approached the land the wind arose, and threw up waves eight cubits high. As for me, I seized a piece of wood; but those who were in the vessel perished, without one remaining. A wave threw me on an island, after that I had been three[pg 174]days alone, without a companion beside my own heart. I laid me in a thicket, and the shadow covered me. Then stretched I my limbs to try to find something for my mouth. I found there figs and grapes, all manner of good herbs, berries and grain, melons of all kinds, fishes and birds. Nothing was lacking. And I satisfied myself; and left on the ground that which was over, of what my arms had been filled withal. I dug a pit, I lighted a fire, and I made a burnt-offering unto the gods.“Suddenly I heard a noise as of thunder, which I thought to be that of a wave of the sea. The trees shook, and the earth was moved. I uncovered my face, and I saw that a serpent drew near. He was thirty cubits long, and his beard greater than two cubits; his body was as overlaid with gold, and his color as that of true lazuli. He coiled himself before me.“Then he opened his mouth, while that I lay on my face before him, and he said to me:‘What has brought thee, what has brought thee, little one, what has brought thee? If thou sayest not speedily what has brought thee to this isle, I will make thee know thyself; as a flame thou shalt vanish, if thou tellest me not something I had not heard, or which I knew not, before thee.’“Then he took me in his mouth and carried me to his resting-place, and laid me down without any hurt. I was whole and sound, and nothing was gone from me. Then he opened his mouth against me, while that I lay on my face before him, and he said,‘What has brought thee, what has brought thee, little one, what has brought thee to this isle which is in the sea, and of which the shores are in the midst of the waves?’“Then I replied to him, and holding my arms low before him, I said to him:‘I was embarked for the mines by the order of the majesty, in a ship; 150 cubits was its length, and the width of it forty cubits. It had 150 sailors of the best of Egypt, who had seen heaven and earth, and the hearts of whom were stronger than lions. They said that the wind would not be contrary, or that there would be none. Each of them exceeded his companion in the prudence of his heart and the strength of his arm, and I was not beneath any of them. A storm came upon us while we were on the sea. Hardly could we reach to the shore when the wind waxed yet greater,[pg 175]and the waves rose even eight cubits. As for me, I seized a piece of wood, while those who were in the boat perished without one being left with me for three days. Behold me now before thee, for I was brought to this isle by a wave of the sea.’“Then said he to me:‘Fear not, fear not, little one, and make not thy face sad. If thou hast come to me, it is God who has let thee live. For it is he who has brought thee to this isle of the blest, where nothing is lacking, and which is filled with all good things. See now, thou shalt pass one month after another, until thou shalt be four months in this isle. Then a ship shall come from thy land with sailors, and thou shalt leave with them and go to thy country, and thou shalt die in thy town.’“‘Converse is pleasing, and he who tastes of it passes over his misery. I will therefore tell thee of that which is in this isle. I am here with my brethren and my children around me; we are seventy-five serpents, children and kindred; without naming a young girl who was brought unto me by chance, and on whom the fire of heaven fell, and burnt her to ashes.“‘As for thee if thou art strong, and if thy heart waits patiently, thou shalt press thy infants to thy bosom and embrace thy wife. Thou shalt return to thy house, which is full of all good things; thou shalt see thy land, where thou shalt dwell in the midst of thy kindred.’“Then I bowed, in my obeisance, and I touched the ground before him.‘Behold now that which I have told thee before. I shall tell of thy presence unto Pharaoh, I shall make him to know of thy greatness, and I will bring to thee of the sacred oils and perfumes, and of incense of the temples with which all gods are honored. I shall tell, moreover, of that which I do now see (thanks to him), and there shall be rendered to thee praises before the fulness of all the land. I shall slay asses for thee in sacrifice, I shall pluck for thee the birds, and I shall bring for thee ships full of all kinds of the treasures of Egypt, as is comely to do unto a god, a friend of men in a far country, of which men know not.’“Then he smiled at my speech, because of that which was in his heart, for he said to me:‘Thou art not rich in perfumes, for all that thou hast is but common incense. As for me I am Prince of the land of Punt, and I have perfumes.[pg 176]Only the oil which thou sayest thou wouldst bring is not common in this isle. But, when thou shalt depart from this place, thou shalt never more see this isle; it shall be changed into waves.’“And, behold, when the ship drew near, according to all that he had told me before, I got me up into an high tree, to strive to see those who were within it. Then I came and told to him this matter; but it was already known unto him before. Then he said to me:‘Farewell, farewell; go to thy house, little one, see again thy children, and let thy name be good in thy town; these are my wishes for thee.’“Then I bowed myself before him, and held my arms low before him, and he, he gave me gifts of precious perfumes, of cassia, of sweet woods, of kohl, of cypress, an abundance of incense, of ivory tusks, of baboons, of apes, and all kinds of precious things. I embarked all in the ship which was come, and, bowing myself, I prayed God for him.“Then he said to me,‘Behold thou shalt come to thy country in two months, thou shalt press to thy bosom thy children, and thou shalt rest in thy tomb.’After this I went down to the shore unto the ship, and I called to the sailors who were there. Then on the shore I rendered adoration to the master of this isle and to those who dwelt therein.“When we shall come, in our return, to the house of Pharaoh, in the second month, according to all that the serpent has said, we shall approach unto the palace. And I shall go in before Pharaoh, I shall bring the gifts which I have brought from this isle into the country. Then he shall thank me before the fulness of all the land. Grant them unto me a follower, and lead me to the courtiers of the King. Cast thy eye upon me, after that I am come to land again, after that I have both seen and proved this. Hear my prayer, for it is good to listen to people. It was said unto me,‘Become a wise man, and thou shalt come to honor,’and behold I have become such.”This is finished from its beginning unto its end, even as it was found in a writing. It is written by the scribe of cunning fingers Ameni-amen-aa; may he live in life, wealth, and health![pg 177]

Tales Of The MagiciansOne day, when King Khufu reigned over all the land, he said to his chancellor, who stood before him,“Go call me my sons and my councillors, that I may ask of them a thing.”And his sons and his councillors came and stood before him, and he said to them,“Know ye a man who can tell me tales of the deeds of the magicians?”Then the royal son Khafra stood forth and said,“I will tell thy Majesty a tale of the days of thy forefather Nebka, the blessed; of what came to pass when he went into the temple of Ptah of Ankhtaui.”[pg 160]Khafra's Tale“His Majesty was walking unto the temple of Ptah, and went unto the house of the chief reciter Uba-aner, with his train. Now when the wife of Uba-aner saw a page, among those who stood behind the King, her heart longed after him; and she sent her servant unto him, with a present of a box full of garments.“And he came then with the servant. Now there was a lodge in the garden of Uba-aner; and one day the page said to the wife of Uba-aner,‘In the garden of Uba-aner there is now a lodge; behold, let us therein take our pleasure.’So the wife of Uba-aner sent to the steward who had charge over the garden, saying,‘Let the lodge which is in the garden be made ready.’And she remained there, and rested and drank with the page until the sun went down.“And when the even was now come the page went forth to bathe. And the steward said,‘I must go and tell Uba-aner of this matter.’Now when this day was past, and another day came, then went the steward to Uba-aner, and told him of all these things.“Then said Uba-aner,‘Bring me my casket of ebony and electrum.’And they brought it; and he fashioned a crocodile of wax, seven fingers long: and he enchanted it, and said,‘When the page comes and bathes in my lake, seize on him.’And he gave it to the steward, and said to him,‘When the page shall go down into the lake to bathe, as he is daily wont to do, then throw in this crocodile behind him.’And the steward went forth bearing the crocodile.“And the wife of Uba-aner sent to the steward who had charge over the garden, saying,‘Let the lodge which is in the garden be made ready, for I come to tarry there.’“And the lodge was prepared with all good things; and she came and made merry therein with the page. And when the even was now come, the page went forth to bathe as he was wont to do. And the steward cast in the wax crocodile after him into the water; and, behold! it became a great crocodile seven cubits in length, and it seized on the page.“And Uba-aner abode yet seven days with the King of[pg 161]Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, the blessed, while the page was stifled in the crocodile. And after the seven days were passed, the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, the blessed, went forth, and Uba-aner went before him.“And Uba-aner said unto his Majesty,‘Will your Majesty come and see this wonder that has come to pass in your days unto a page?’And the King went with Uba-aner. And Uba-aner called unto the crocodile and said,‘Bring forth the page.’And the crocodile came forth from the lake with the page. Uba-aner said unto the King,‘Behold, whatever I command this crocodile he will do it.’And his Majesty said,‘I pray you send back this crocodile.’And Uba-aner stooped and took up the crocodile, and it became in his hand a crocodile of wax. And then Uba-aner told the King that which had passed in his house with the page and his wife. And his Majesty said unto the crocodile,‘Take to thee thy prey.’And the crocodile plunged into the lake with his prey, and no man knew whither he went.“And his Majesty the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, the blessed, commanded, and they brought forth the wife of Uba-aner to the north side of the harem, and burned her with fire, and cast her ashes in the river.“This is a wonder that came to pass in the days of thy forefather the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, of the acts of the chief reciter Uba-aner.”His Majesty the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, then said,“Let there be presented to the King Nebka, the blessed, 1,000 loaves, 100 draughts of beer, an ox, two jars of incense; and let there be presented a loaf, a jar of beer, a jar of incense and a piece of meat to the chief reciter Uba-aner; for I have seen the token of his learning.”And they did all things as his Majesty commanded.Bau-F-Ra's TaleThe royal son Bau-f-ra then stood forth and spake. He said,“I will tell thy Majesty of a wonder which came to pass in the days of thy father Seneferu, the blessed, of the deeds of the chief reciter Zazamankh. One day King Seneferu, being weary, went throughout his palace seeking for a pleasure[pg 162]to lighten his heart, but he found none. And he said,‘Haste, and bring before me the chief reciter and scribe of the rolls Zazamankh;’and they straightway brought him. And the King said,‘I have sought in my palace for some delight, but I have found none.’Then said Zazamankh to him,‘Let thy Majesty go upon the lake of the palace, and let there be made ready a boat, with all the fair maidens of the harem of thy palace; and the heart of thy Majesty shall be refreshed with the sight, in seeing their rowing up and down the water, and seeing the goodly pools of the birds upon the lake, and beholding its sweet fields and grassy shores; thus will thy heart be lightened. And I also will go with thee. Bring me twenty oars of ebony inlaid with gold, with blades of light wood inlaid with electrum; and bring me twenty maidens, fair in their limbs, their bosoms, and their hair, all virgins; and bring me twenty nets, and give these nets unto the maidens for their garments.’And they did according to all the commands of his Majesty.“And they rowed down the stream and up the stream, and the heart of his Majesty was glad with the sight of their rowing. But one of them at the steering struck her hair, and her jewel of new malachite fell into the water. And she ceased her song, and rowed not; and her companions ceased, and rowed not. And his Majesty said,‘Row you not further?’And they replied,‘Our little steerer here stays and rows not.’His Majesty then said to her,‘Wherefore rowest thou not?’She replied,‘It is for my jewel of new malachite which is fallen in the water.’And he said to her,‘Row on, for behold I will replace it.’And she answered,‘But I want my own piece back in its setting.’And his Majesty said,‘Haste, bring me the chief reciter Zazamankh,’and they brought him. And his Majesty said,‘Zazamankh, my brother, I have done as thou sayedst, and the heart of his Majesty is refreshed with the sight of their rowing. But now a jewel of new malachite of one of the little ones is fallen in the water, and she ceases and rows not, and she has spoiled the rowing of her side. And I said to her,“Wherefore rowest thou not?”and she answered to me,“It is for my jewel of new malachite which is fallen in the water.”I replied to her,“Row on, for behold[pg 163]I will replace it;”and she answered to me,“But I want my own piece again back in its setting.”’Then the chief reciter Zazamankh spake his magic speech. And he placed one part of the waters of the lake upon the other, and discovered the jewel lying upon a shard; and he took it up and gave it unto its mistress. And the water, which was twelve cubits deep in the middle, reached now to twenty-four cubits after he turned it. And he spake, and used his magic speech; and he brought again the water of the lake to its place. And his Majesty spent a joyful day with the whole of the royal house. Then rewarded he the chief reciter Zazamankh with all good things. Behold, this is a wonder that came to pass in the days of thy father, the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Seneferu, of the deeds of the chief reciter, the scribe of the rolls, Zazamankh.”Then said the majesty of the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, the blessed,“Let there be presented an offering of 1,000 cakes, 100 draughts of beer, an ox, and two jars of incense to the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Seneferu, the blessed; and let there be given a loaf, a jar of beer, and a jar of incense to the chief reciter, the scribe of the rolls, Zazamankh; for I have seen the token of his learning.”And they did all things as his Majesty commanded.Hordedef's TaleThe royal son Hordedef then stood forth and spake. He said:“Hitherto hast thou only heard tokens of those who have gone before, and of which no man knoweth their truth. But I will show thy Majesty a man of thine own days.”And his Majesty said,“Who is he, Hordedef?”And the royal son Hordedef answered,“It is a certain man named Dedi, who dwells at Dedsneferu. He is a man of 110 years old; and he eats 500 loaves of bread and a side of beef, and drinks 100 draughts of beer, unto this day. He knows how to restore the head that is smitten off; he knows how to cause the lion to follow him trailing his halter on the ground; he knows the designs of the dwelling of Tahuti. The majesty of the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, the blessed, has long sought for the designs of the dwelling of Tahuti, that he may make the like of them in his pyramid.”[pg 164]And his Majesty said,“Thou, thyself, Hordedef, my son, bring him to me.”Then were the ships made ready for the King's son Hordedef, and he went up the stream to Dedsneferu. And when the ships had moored at the haven, he landed, and sat him in a litter of ebony, the poles of which were of cedar wood overlaid with gold. Now when he drew near to Dedi, they set down the litter. And he arose to greet Dedi, and found him lying on a palmstick couch at the door of his house; one servant held his head and rubbed him, and another rubbed his feet.And the King's son Hordedef said,“Thy state is that of one who lives to good old age; for old age is the end of our voyage, the time of embalming, the time of burial. Lie, then, in the sun, free of infirmities, without the babble of dotage: this is the salutation to worthy age. I come from far to call thee, with a message from my father Khufu, the blessed, for thou shalt eat of the best which the King gives, and of the food which those have who follow after him; that he may bring thee in good estate to thy fathers who are in the tomb.”And Dedi replied to him:“Peace to thee! Peace to thee! Hordedef, son of the King, beloved of his father. May thy father Khufu, the blessed, praise thee, may he advance thee among the elders, may thykaprevail against the enemy, may thy soul know the right road to the gate of him who clothes the afflicted; this is the salutation to the King's son.”Then the King's son, Hordedef, stretched forth his hands to him, and raised him up, and went with him to the haven, giving unto him his arm. Then said Dedi,“Let there be given me a boat, to bring me my youths and my books.”And they made ready for him two boats with their rowers. And Dedi went down the river in the barge in which was the King's son, Hordedef. And when he had reached the palace, the King's son, Hordedef, entered in to give account unto his Majesty the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, the blessed. Then said the King's son Hordedef,“O King, life, wealth, and health! My lord, I have brought Dedi.”His Majesty replied,“Bring him to me speedily.”And his Majesty went into the hall of columns of Pharaoh (life, wealth, and health), and Dedi was led before him. And his Majesty said,“Wherefore[pg 165]is it, Dedi, that I have not yet seen thee?”And Dedi answered:“He who is called it is that comes; the King (life, wealth, and health) calls me, and behold I come.”And his Majesty said,“Is it true, that which men say, that thou canst restore the head which is smitten off?”And Dedi replied,“Truly, I know that, O King (life, wealth, and health), my lord.”And his Majesty said,“Let one bring me a prisoner who is in prison, that his punishment may be fulfilled.”And Dedi said:“Let it not be a man, O King, my lord; behold we do not even thus to our cattle.”And a duck was brought unto him, and its head was cut off. And the duck was laid on the west side of the hall, and its head on the east side of the hall. And Dedi spake his magic speech. And the duck fluttered along the ground, and its head came likewise; and when it had come part to part the duck stood and quacked. And they brought likewise a goose before him, and he did even so unto it. His Majesty caused an ox to be brought, and its head cast on the ground. And Dedi spake his magic speech. And the ox stood upright behind him, and followed him with his halter trailing on the ground.And King Khufu said,“And is it true what is said, that thou knowest the number of the designs of the dwelling of Tahuti?”And Dedi replied,“Pardon me, I know not their number, O King (life, wealth, and health), but I know where they are.”And his Majesty said,“Where is that?”And Dedi replied:“There is a chest of whetstone in a chamber named the plan-room, in Heliopolis; they are in this chest.”And Dedi said further unto him,“O King (life, wealth, and health), my lord, it is not I that is to bring them to thee.”And his Majesty said,“Who, then, is it that shall bring them to me?”And Dedi answered to him,“It is the eldest of the three children who are in the body of Rud-didet who shall bring them to thee.”And his Majesty said:“Would that it may be as thou sayest! And who is this Rud-didet?”And Dedi replied:“She is the wife of a priest of Ra, lord of Sakhebu. And she has conceived these three sons by Ra, lord of Sakhebu, and the god has promised her that they shall fulfil this noble office (of reigning) over all this land, and that the eldest of them shall be high-priest in Heliopolis.”And his Majesty's heart became[pg 166]troubled for this; but Dedi spake unto him:“What is this that thou thinkest, O King (life, wealth, health), my lord? Is it because of these three children? I tell thee thy son shall reign, and thy son's son, and then one of them.”His Majesty said,“And when shall Rud-didet bear these?”And he replied,“She shall bear them on the twenty-fifth of the month Tybi.”And his Majesty said,“When the banks of the canal of Letopolis are cut, I will walk there that I may see the temple of Ra, lord of Sakhebu.”And Dedi replied,“Then I will cause that there be four cubits of water by the banks of the canal of Letopolis.”When his Majesty returned to his palace, his Majesty said:“Let them place Dedi in the house of the royal son Hordedef, that he may dwell with him, and let them give him a daily portion of 1,000 loaves, 100 draughts of beer, an ox, and 100 bunches of onions.”And they did everything as his Majesty commanded.And one day it came to pass that Rud-didet felt the pains of birth. And the majesty of Ra, Lord of Sakhebu, said unto Isis, to Nebhat, to Meskhent, to Hakt, and to Khnumu:“Go ye, and deliver Rud-didet of these three children that she shall bear, who are to fulfil this noble office over all this land; that they may build up your temples, furnish your altars with offerings, supply your tables of libation, and increase your endowments.”Then went these deities; their fashion they made as that of dancing-girls, and Khnumu was with them as a porter. They drew near unto the house of Ra-user, and found him standing, with his girdle fallen. And they played before him with their instruments of music. But he said unto them,“My ladies, behold, here is a woman who feels the pains of birth.”They said to him,“Let us see her, for we know how to help her.”And he replied,“Come, then.”And they entered in straightway to Rud-didet, and they closed the door on her and on themselves. Then Isis stood before her, and Nebhat stood behind her, and Hakt helped her. And Isis said,“O child, by thy name of User-ref, do not do violence.”And the child came upon her hands, as a child of a cubit; its bones were strong, the beauty of its limbs was like gold, and its hair was like true lapis-lazuli. They washed him, and prepared him, and placed him on a carpet on the brickwork. Then[pg 167]Meskhent approached him and said,“This is a king who shall reign over all the land.”And Khnumu gave strength to his limbs. Then Isis stood before her, and Nebhat stood behind her, and Hakt helped her. And Isis said,“O child, by thy name of Sah-ra, stay not in her.”Then the child came upon her hands, a child of a cubit; its bones were strong, the beauty of its limbs was like gold, and its hair was like true lapis-lazuli. They washed him, and prepared him, and laid him on a carpet on the brickwork. Then Meskhent approached him and said,“This is a king who shall reign over all the land.”And Khnumu gave strength to his limbs. Then Isis stood before her, and Nebhat stood behind her, and Hakt helped her. And Isis said,“O child, by thy name of Kaku, remain not in darkness in her.”And the child came upon her hands, a child of a cubit; its bones were strong, the beauty of its limbs was like gold, and its hair was like true lapis-lazuli. And Meskhent approached him and said,“This is a king who shall reign over all the land.”And Khnumu gave strength to his limbs. And they washed him, and prepared him, and laid him on a carpet on the brickwork.And the deities went out, having delivered Rud-didet of the three children. And they said,“Rejoice! O Ra-user, for behold three children are born unto thee.”And he said unto them,“My ladies, and what shall I give unto ye? Behold, give this bushel of barley here unto your porter, that ye may take it as your reward to the brew-house.”And Khnumu loaded himself with the bushel of barley. And they went away toward the place from which they came. And Isis spake unto these goddesses, and said,“Wherefore have we come without doing a marvel for these children, that we may tell it to their father who has sent us?”Then made they the divine diadems of the King (life, wealth, and health), and laid them in the bushel of barley. And they caused the clouds to come with wind and rain; and they turned back again unto the house. And they said,“Let us put this barley in a closed chamber, sealed up, until we return northward, dancing.”And they placed the barley in a close chamber.And Rud-didet purified herself, with a purification of fourteen days. And she said to her handmaid,“Is the house made[pg 168]ready?”And she replied,“All things are made ready, but the brewing barley is not yet brought.”And Rud-didet said,“Wherefore is the brewing barley not yet brought?”And the servant answered,“It would all of it long since be ready if the barley had not been given to the dancing-girls, and lay in the chamber under their seal.”Rud-didet said,“Go down, and bring of it, and Ra-user shall give them in its stead when he shall come.”And the handmaid went, and opened the chamber. And she heard talking and singing, music and dancing, quavering, and all things which are performed for a king in his chamber. And she returned and told to Rud-didet all that she had heard. And she went through the chamber, but she found not the place where the sound was. And she laid her temple to the sack, and found that the sounds were in it. She placed it in a chest, and put that in another locker, and tied it fast with leather, and laid it in the storeroom, where the things were, and sealed it. And Ra-user came returning from the field; and Rud-didet repeated unto him these things; and his heart was glad above all things; and they sat down and made a joyful day.And after these days it came to pass that Rud-didet was wroth with her servant, and beat her with stripes. And the servant said unto those that were in the house:“Shall it be done thus unto me? She has borne three kings, and I will go and tell this to his Majesty King Khufu the blessed.”And she went, and found the eldest brother of her mother, who was binding his flax on the floor. And he said to her,“Whither goest thou, my little maid?”And she told him of all these things. And her brother said to her:“Wherefore comest thou thus to me? Shall I agree to treachery?”And he took a bunch of the flax to her, and laid on her a violent blow. And the servant went to fetch a handful of water, and a crocodile carried her away.Her uncle went therefore to tell of this to Rud-didet; and he found Rud-didet sitting, her head on her knees, and her heart beyond measure sad. And he said to her,“My lady, why makest thou thy heart thus?”And she answered,“It is because of this little wretch that was in the house; behold she went out saying,‘I will go and tell it.’”And he[pg 169]bowed his head unto the ground, and said,“My lady, she came and told me of these things, and made her complaint unto me; and I laid on her a violent blow. And she went forth to draw water, and a crocodile carried her away.”(The rest of the tale is lost.)

One day, when King Khufu reigned over all the land, he said to his chancellor, who stood before him,“Go call me my sons and my councillors, that I may ask of them a thing.”And his sons and his councillors came and stood before him, and he said to them,“Know ye a man who can tell me tales of the deeds of the magicians?”

Then the royal son Khafra stood forth and said,“I will tell thy Majesty a tale of the days of thy forefather Nebka, the blessed; of what came to pass when he went into the temple of Ptah of Ankhtaui.”

Khafra's Tale“His Majesty was walking unto the temple of Ptah, and went unto the house of the chief reciter Uba-aner, with his train. Now when the wife of Uba-aner saw a page, among those who stood behind the King, her heart longed after him; and she sent her servant unto him, with a present of a box full of garments.“And he came then with the servant. Now there was a lodge in the garden of Uba-aner; and one day the page said to the wife of Uba-aner,‘In the garden of Uba-aner there is now a lodge; behold, let us therein take our pleasure.’So the wife of Uba-aner sent to the steward who had charge over the garden, saying,‘Let the lodge which is in the garden be made ready.’And she remained there, and rested and drank with the page until the sun went down.“And when the even was now come the page went forth to bathe. And the steward said,‘I must go and tell Uba-aner of this matter.’Now when this day was past, and another day came, then went the steward to Uba-aner, and told him of all these things.“Then said Uba-aner,‘Bring me my casket of ebony and electrum.’And they brought it; and he fashioned a crocodile of wax, seven fingers long: and he enchanted it, and said,‘When the page comes and bathes in my lake, seize on him.’And he gave it to the steward, and said to him,‘When the page shall go down into the lake to bathe, as he is daily wont to do, then throw in this crocodile behind him.’And the steward went forth bearing the crocodile.“And the wife of Uba-aner sent to the steward who had charge over the garden, saying,‘Let the lodge which is in the garden be made ready, for I come to tarry there.’“And the lodge was prepared with all good things; and she came and made merry therein with the page. And when the even was now come, the page went forth to bathe as he was wont to do. And the steward cast in the wax crocodile after him into the water; and, behold! it became a great crocodile seven cubits in length, and it seized on the page.“And Uba-aner abode yet seven days with the King of[pg 161]Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, the blessed, while the page was stifled in the crocodile. And after the seven days were passed, the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, the blessed, went forth, and Uba-aner went before him.“And Uba-aner said unto his Majesty,‘Will your Majesty come and see this wonder that has come to pass in your days unto a page?’And the King went with Uba-aner. And Uba-aner called unto the crocodile and said,‘Bring forth the page.’And the crocodile came forth from the lake with the page. Uba-aner said unto the King,‘Behold, whatever I command this crocodile he will do it.’And his Majesty said,‘I pray you send back this crocodile.’And Uba-aner stooped and took up the crocodile, and it became in his hand a crocodile of wax. And then Uba-aner told the King that which had passed in his house with the page and his wife. And his Majesty said unto the crocodile,‘Take to thee thy prey.’And the crocodile plunged into the lake with his prey, and no man knew whither he went.“And his Majesty the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, the blessed, commanded, and they brought forth the wife of Uba-aner to the north side of the harem, and burned her with fire, and cast her ashes in the river.“This is a wonder that came to pass in the days of thy forefather the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, of the acts of the chief reciter Uba-aner.”His Majesty the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, then said,“Let there be presented to the King Nebka, the blessed, 1,000 loaves, 100 draughts of beer, an ox, two jars of incense; and let there be presented a loaf, a jar of beer, a jar of incense and a piece of meat to the chief reciter Uba-aner; for I have seen the token of his learning.”And they did all things as his Majesty commanded.

“His Majesty was walking unto the temple of Ptah, and went unto the house of the chief reciter Uba-aner, with his train. Now when the wife of Uba-aner saw a page, among those who stood behind the King, her heart longed after him; and she sent her servant unto him, with a present of a box full of garments.

“And he came then with the servant. Now there was a lodge in the garden of Uba-aner; and one day the page said to the wife of Uba-aner,‘In the garden of Uba-aner there is now a lodge; behold, let us therein take our pleasure.’So the wife of Uba-aner sent to the steward who had charge over the garden, saying,‘Let the lodge which is in the garden be made ready.’And she remained there, and rested and drank with the page until the sun went down.

“And when the even was now come the page went forth to bathe. And the steward said,‘I must go and tell Uba-aner of this matter.’Now when this day was past, and another day came, then went the steward to Uba-aner, and told him of all these things.

“Then said Uba-aner,‘Bring me my casket of ebony and electrum.’And they brought it; and he fashioned a crocodile of wax, seven fingers long: and he enchanted it, and said,‘When the page comes and bathes in my lake, seize on him.’And he gave it to the steward, and said to him,‘When the page shall go down into the lake to bathe, as he is daily wont to do, then throw in this crocodile behind him.’And the steward went forth bearing the crocodile.

“And the wife of Uba-aner sent to the steward who had charge over the garden, saying,‘Let the lodge which is in the garden be made ready, for I come to tarry there.’

“And the lodge was prepared with all good things; and she came and made merry therein with the page. And when the even was now come, the page went forth to bathe as he was wont to do. And the steward cast in the wax crocodile after him into the water; and, behold! it became a great crocodile seven cubits in length, and it seized on the page.

“And Uba-aner abode yet seven days with the King of[pg 161]Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, the blessed, while the page was stifled in the crocodile. And after the seven days were passed, the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, the blessed, went forth, and Uba-aner went before him.

“And Uba-aner said unto his Majesty,‘Will your Majesty come and see this wonder that has come to pass in your days unto a page?’And the King went with Uba-aner. And Uba-aner called unto the crocodile and said,‘Bring forth the page.’And the crocodile came forth from the lake with the page. Uba-aner said unto the King,‘Behold, whatever I command this crocodile he will do it.’And his Majesty said,‘I pray you send back this crocodile.’And Uba-aner stooped and took up the crocodile, and it became in his hand a crocodile of wax. And then Uba-aner told the King that which had passed in his house with the page and his wife. And his Majesty said unto the crocodile,‘Take to thee thy prey.’And the crocodile plunged into the lake with his prey, and no man knew whither he went.

“And his Majesty the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, the blessed, commanded, and they brought forth the wife of Uba-aner to the north side of the harem, and burned her with fire, and cast her ashes in the river.

“This is a wonder that came to pass in the days of thy forefather the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nebka, of the acts of the chief reciter Uba-aner.”

His Majesty the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, then said,“Let there be presented to the King Nebka, the blessed, 1,000 loaves, 100 draughts of beer, an ox, two jars of incense; and let there be presented a loaf, a jar of beer, a jar of incense and a piece of meat to the chief reciter Uba-aner; for I have seen the token of his learning.”And they did all things as his Majesty commanded.

Bau-F-Ra's TaleThe royal son Bau-f-ra then stood forth and spake. He said,“I will tell thy Majesty of a wonder which came to pass in the days of thy father Seneferu, the blessed, of the deeds of the chief reciter Zazamankh. One day King Seneferu, being weary, went throughout his palace seeking for a pleasure[pg 162]to lighten his heart, but he found none. And he said,‘Haste, and bring before me the chief reciter and scribe of the rolls Zazamankh;’and they straightway brought him. And the King said,‘I have sought in my palace for some delight, but I have found none.’Then said Zazamankh to him,‘Let thy Majesty go upon the lake of the palace, and let there be made ready a boat, with all the fair maidens of the harem of thy palace; and the heart of thy Majesty shall be refreshed with the sight, in seeing their rowing up and down the water, and seeing the goodly pools of the birds upon the lake, and beholding its sweet fields and grassy shores; thus will thy heart be lightened. And I also will go with thee. Bring me twenty oars of ebony inlaid with gold, with blades of light wood inlaid with electrum; and bring me twenty maidens, fair in their limbs, their bosoms, and their hair, all virgins; and bring me twenty nets, and give these nets unto the maidens for their garments.’And they did according to all the commands of his Majesty.“And they rowed down the stream and up the stream, and the heart of his Majesty was glad with the sight of their rowing. But one of them at the steering struck her hair, and her jewel of new malachite fell into the water. And she ceased her song, and rowed not; and her companions ceased, and rowed not. And his Majesty said,‘Row you not further?’And they replied,‘Our little steerer here stays and rows not.’His Majesty then said to her,‘Wherefore rowest thou not?’She replied,‘It is for my jewel of new malachite which is fallen in the water.’And he said to her,‘Row on, for behold I will replace it.’And she answered,‘But I want my own piece back in its setting.’And his Majesty said,‘Haste, bring me the chief reciter Zazamankh,’and they brought him. And his Majesty said,‘Zazamankh, my brother, I have done as thou sayedst, and the heart of his Majesty is refreshed with the sight of their rowing. But now a jewel of new malachite of one of the little ones is fallen in the water, and she ceases and rows not, and she has spoiled the rowing of her side. And I said to her,“Wherefore rowest thou not?”and she answered to me,“It is for my jewel of new malachite which is fallen in the water.”I replied to her,“Row on, for behold[pg 163]I will replace it;”and she answered to me,“But I want my own piece again back in its setting.”’Then the chief reciter Zazamankh spake his magic speech. And he placed one part of the waters of the lake upon the other, and discovered the jewel lying upon a shard; and he took it up and gave it unto its mistress. And the water, which was twelve cubits deep in the middle, reached now to twenty-four cubits after he turned it. And he spake, and used his magic speech; and he brought again the water of the lake to its place. And his Majesty spent a joyful day with the whole of the royal house. Then rewarded he the chief reciter Zazamankh with all good things. Behold, this is a wonder that came to pass in the days of thy father, the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Seneferu, of the deeds of the chief reciter, the scribe of the rolls, Zazamankh.”Then said the majesty of the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, the blessed,“Let there be presented an offering of 1,000 cakes, 100 draughts of beer, an ox, and two jars of incense to the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Seneferu, the blessed; and let there be given a loaf, a jar of beer, and a jar of incense to the chief reciter, the scribe of the rolls, Zazamankh; for I have seen the token of his learning.”And they did all things as his Majesty commanded.

The royal son Bau-f-ra then stood forth and spake. He said,“I will tell thy Majesty of a wonder which came to pass in the days of thy father Seneferu, the blessed, of the deeds of the chief reciter Zazamankh. One day King Seneferu, being weary, went throughout his palace seeking for a pleasure[pg 162]to lighten his heart, but he found none. And he said,‘Haste, and bring before me the chief reciter and scribe of the rolls Zazamankh;’and they straightway brought him. And the King said,‘I have sought in my palace for some delight, but I have found none.’Then said Zazamankh to him,‘Let thy Majesty go upon the lake of the palace, and let there be made ready a boat, with all the fair maidens of the harem of thy palace; and the heart of thy Majesty shall be refreshed with the sight, in seeing their rowing up and down the water, and seeing the goodly pools of the birds upon the lake, and beholding its sweet fields and grassy shores; thus will thy heart be lightened. And I also will go with thee. Bring me twenty oars of ebony inlaid with gold, with blades of light wood inlaid with electrum; and bring me twenty maidens, fair in their limbs, their bosoms, and their hair, all virgins; and bring me twenty nets, and give these nets unto the maidens for their garments.’And they did according to all the commands of his Majesty.

“And they rowed down the stream and up the stream, and the heart of his Majesty was glad with the sight of their rowing. But one of them at the steering struck her hair, and her jewel of new malachite fell into the water. And she ceased her song, and rowed not; and her companions ceased, and rowed not. And his Majesty said,‘Row you not further?’And they replied,‘Our little steerer here stays and rows not.’His Majesty then said to her,‘Wherefore rowest thou not?’She replied,‘It is for my jewel of new malachite which is fallen in the water.’And he said to her,‘Row on, for behold I will replace it.’And she answered,‘But I want my own piece back in its setting.’And his Majesty said,‘Haste, bring me the chief reciter Zazamankh,’and they brought him. And his Majesty said,‘Zazamankh, my brother, I have done as thou sayedst, and the heart of his Majesty is refreshed with the sight of their rowing. But now a jewel of new malachite of one of the little ones is fallen in the water, and she ceases and rows not, and she has spoiled the rowing of her side. And I said to her,“Wherefore rowest thou not?”and she answered to me,“It is for my jewel of new malachite which is fallen in the water.”I replied to her,“Row on, for behold[pg 163]I will replace it;”and she answered to me,“But I want my own piece again back in its setting.”’Then the chief reciter Zazamankh spake his magic speech. And he placed one part of the waters of the lake upon the other, and discovered the jewel lying upon a shard; and he took it up and gave it unto its mistress. And the water, which was twelve cubits deep in the middle, reached now to twenty-four cubits after he turned it. And he spake, and used his magic speech; and he brought again the water of the lake to its place. And his Majesty spent a joyful day with the whole of the royal house. Then rewarded he the chief reciter Zazamankh with all good things. Behold, this is a wonder that came to pass in the days of thy father, the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Seneferu, of the deeds of the chief reciter, the scribe of the rolls, Zazamankh.”

Then said the majesty of the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, the blessed,“Let there be presented an offering of 1,000 cakes, 100 draughts of beer, an ox, and two jars of incense to the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Seneferu, the blessed; and let there be given a loaf, a jar of beer, and a jar of incense to the chief reciter, the scribe of the rolls, Zazamankh; for I have seen the token of his learning.”And they did all things as his Majesty commanded.

Hordedef's TaleThe royal son Hordedef then stood forth and spake. He said:“Hitherto hast thou only heard tokens of those who have gone before, and of which no man knoweth their truth. But I will show thy Majesty a man of thine own days.”And his Majesty said,“Who is he, Hordedef?”And the royal son Hordedef answered,“It is a certain man named Dedi, who dwells at Dedsneferu. He is a man of 110 years old; and he eats 500 loaves of bread and a side of beef, and drinks 100 draughts of beer, unto this day. He knows how to restore the head that is smitten off; he knows how to cause the lion to follow him trailing his halter on the ground; he knows the designs of the dwelling of Tahuti. The majesty of the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, the blessed, has long sought for the designs of the dwelling of Tahuti, that he may make the like of them in his pyramid.”[pg 164]And his Majesty said,“Thou, thyself, Hordedef, my son, bring him to me.”Then were the ships made ready for the King's son Hordedef, and he went up the stream to Dedsneferu. And when the ships had moored at the haven, he landed, and sat him in a litter of ebony, the poles of which were of cedar wood overlaid with gold. Now when he drew near to Dedi, they set down the litter. And he arose to greet Dedi, and found him lying on a palmstick couch at the door of his house; one servant held his head and rubbed him, and another rubbed his feet.And the King's son Hordedef said,“Thy state is that of one who lives to good old age; for old age is the end of our voyage, the time of embalming, the time of burial. Lie, then, in the sun, free of infirmities, without the babble of dotage: this is the salutation to worthy age. I come from far to call thee, with a message from my father Khufu, the blessed, for thou shalt eat of the best which the King gives, and of the food which those have who follow after him; that he may bring thee in good estate to thy fathers who are in the tomb.”And Dedi replied to him:“Peace to thee! Peace to thee! Hordedef, son of the King, beloved of his father. May thy father Khufu, the blessed, praise thee, may he advance thee among the elders, may thykaprevail against the enemy, may thy soul know the right road to the gate of him who clothes the afflicted; this is the salutation to the King's son.”Then the King's son, Hordedef, stretched forth his hands to him, and raised him up, and went with him to the haven, giving unto him his arm. Then said Dedi,“Let there be given me a boat, to bring me my youths and my books.”And they made ready for him two boats with their rowers. And Dedi went down the river in the barge in which was the King's son, Hordedef. And when he had reached the palace, the King's son, Hordedef, entered in to give account unto his Majesty the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, the blessed. Then said the King's son Hordedef,“O King, life, wealth, and health! My lord, I have brought Dedi.”His Majesty replied,“Bring him to me speedily.”And his Majesty went into the hall of columns of Pharaoh (life, wealth, and health), and Dedi was led before him. And his Majesty said,“Wherefore[pg 165]is it, Dedi, that I have not yet seen thee?”And Dedi answered:“He who is called it is that comes; the King (life, wealth, and health) calls me, and behold I come.”And his Majesty said,“Is it true, that which men say, that thou canst restore the head which is smitten off?”And Dedi replied,“Truly, I know that, O King (life, wealth, and health), my lord.”And his Majesty said,“Let one bring me a prisoner who is in prison, that his punishment may be fulfilled.”And Dedi said:“Let it not be a man, O King, my lord; behold we do not even thus to our cattle.”And a duck was brought unto him, and its head was cut off. And the duck was laid on the west side of the hall, and its head on the east side of the hall. And Dedi spake his magic speech. And the duck fluttered along the ground, and its head came likewise; and when it had come part to part the duck stood and quacked. And they brought likewise a goose before him, and he did even so unto it. His Majesty caused an ox to be brought, and its head cast on the ground. And Dedi spake his magic speech. And the ox stood upright behind him, and followed him with his halter trailing on the ground.And King Khufu said,“And is it true what is said, that thou knowest the number of the designs of the dwelling of Tahuti?”And Dedi replied,“Pardon me, I know not their number, O King (life, wealth, and health), but I know where they are.”And his Majesty said,“Where is that?”And Dedi replied:“There is a chest of whetstone in a chamber named the plan-room, in Heliopolis; they are in this chest.”And Dedi said further unto him,“O King (life, wealth, and health), my lord, it is not I that is to bring them to thee.”And his Majesty said,“Who, then, is it that shall bring them to me?”And Dedi answered to him,“It is the eldest of the three children who are in the body of Rud-didet who shall bring them to thee.”And his Majesty said:“Would that it may be as thou sayest! And who is this Rud-didet?”And Dedi replied:“She is the wife of a priest of Ra, lord of Sakhebu. And she has conceived these three sons by Ra, lord of Sakhebu, and the god has promised her that they shall fulfil this noble office (of reigning) over all this land, and that the eldest of them shall be high-priest in Heliopolis.”And his Majesty's heart became[pg 166]troubled for this; but Dedi spake unto him:“What is this that thou thinkest, O King (life, wealth, health), my lord? Is it because of these three children? I tell thee thy son shall reign, and thy son's son, and then one of them.”His Majesty said,“And when shall Rud-didet bear these?”And he replied,“She shall bear them on the twenty-fifth of the month Tybi.”And his Majesty said,“When the banks of the canal of Letopolis are cut, I will walk there that I may see the temple of Ra, lord of Sakhebu.”And Dedi replied,“Then I will cause that there be four cubits of water by the banks of the canal of Letopolis.”When his Majesty returned to his palace, his Majesty said:“Let them place Dedi in the house of the royal son Hordedef, that he may dwell with him, and let them give him a daily portion of 1,000 loaves, 100 draughts of beer, an ox, and 100 bunches of onions.”And they did everything as his Majesty commanded.And one day it came to pass that Rud-didet felt the pains of birth. And the majesty of Ra, Lord of Sakhebu, said unto Isis, to Nebhat, to Meskhent, to Hakt, and to Khnumu:“Go ye, and deliver Rud-didet of these three children that she shall bear, who are to fulfil this noble office over all this land; that they may build up your temples, furnish your altars with offerings, supply your tables of libation, and increase your endowments.”Then went these deities; their fashion they made as that of dancing-girls, and Khnumu was with them as a porter. They drew near unto the house of Ra-user, and found him standing, with his girdle fallen. And they played before him with their instruments of music. But he said unto them,“My ladies, behold, here is a woman who feels the pains of birth.”They said to him,“Let us see her, for we know how to help her.”And he replied,“Come, then.”And they entered in straightway to Rud-didet, and they closed the door on her and on themselves. Then Isis stood before her, and Nebhat stood behind her, and Hakt helped her. And Isis said,“O child, by thy name of User-ref, do not do violence.”And the child came upon her hands, as a child of a cubit; its bones were strong, the beauty of its limbs was like gold, and its hair was like true lapis-lazuli. They washed him, and prepared him, and placed him on a carpet on the brickwork. Then[pg 167]Meskhent approached him and said,“This is a king who shall reign over all the land.”And Khnumu gave strength to his limbs. Then Isis stood before her, and Nebhat stood behind her, and Hakt helped her. And Isis said,“O child, by thy name of Sah-ra, stay not in her.”Then the child came upon her hands, a child of a cubit; its bones were strong, the beauty of its limbs was like gold, and its hair was like true lapis-lazuli. They washed him, and prepared him, and laid him on a carpet on the brickwork. Then Meskhent approached him and said,“This is a king who shall reign over all the land.”And Khnumu gave strength to his limbs. Then Isis stood before her, and Nebhat stood behind her, and Hakt helped her. And Isis said,“O child, by thy name of Kaku, remain not in darkness in her.”And the child came upon her hands, a child of a cubit; its bones were strong, the beauty of its limbs was like gold, and its hair was like true lapis-lazuli. And Meskhent approached him and said,“This is a king who shall reign over all the land.”And Khnumu gave strength to his limbs. And they washed him, and prepared him, and laid him on a carpet on the brickwork.And the deities went out, having delivered Rud-didet of the three children. And they said,“Rejoice! O Ra-user, for behold three children are born unto thee.”And he said unto them,“My ladies, and what shall I give unto ye? Behold, give this bushel of barley here unto your porter, that ye may take it as your reward to the brew-house.”And Khnumu loaded himself with the bushel of barley. And they went away toward the place from which they came. And Isis spake unto these goddesses, and said,“Wherefore have we come without doing a marvel for these children, that we may tell it to their father who has sent us?”Then made they the divine diadems of the King (life, wealth, and health), and laid them in the bushel of barley. And they caused the clouds to come with wind and rain; and they turned back again unto the house. And they said,“Let us put this barley in a closed chamber, sealed up, until we return northward, dancing.”And they placed the barley in a close chamber.And Rud-didet purified herself, with a purification of fourteen days. And she said to her handmaid,“Is the house made[pg 168]ready?”And she replied,“All things are made ready, but the brewing barley is not yet brought.”And Rud-didet said,“Wherefore is the brewing barley not yet brought?”And the servant answered,“It would all of it long since be ready if the barley had not been given to the dancing-girls, and lay in the chamber under their seal.”Rud-didet said,“Go down, and bring of it, and Ra-user shall give them in its stead when he shall come.”And the handmaid went, and opened the chamber. And she heard talking and singing, music and dancing, quavering, and all things which are performed for a king in his chamber. And she returned and told to Rud-didet all that she had heard. And she went through the chamber, but she found not the place where the sound was. And she laid her temple to the sack, and found that the sounds were in it. She placed it in a chest, and put that in another locker, and tied it fast with leather, and laid it in the storeroom, where the things were, and sealed it. And Ra-user came returning from the field; and Rud-didet repeated unto him these things; and his heart was glad above all things; and they sat down and made a joyful day.And after these days it came to pass that Rud-didet was wroth with her servant, and beat her with stripes. And the servant said unto those that were in the house:“Shall it be done thus unto me? She has borne three kings, and I will go and tell this to his Majesty King Khufu the blessed.”And she went, and found the eldest brother of her mother, who was binding his flax on the floor. And he said to her,“Whither goest thou, my little maid?”And she told him of all these things. And her brother said to her:“Wherefore comest thou thus to me? Shall I agree to treachery?”And he took a bunch of the flax to her, and laid on her a violent blow. And the servant went to fetch a handful of water, and a crocodile carried her away.Her uncle went therefore to tell of this to Rud-didet; and he found Rud-didet sitting, her head on her knees, and her heart beyond measure sad. And he said to her,“My lady, why makest thou thy heart thus?”And she answered,“It is because of this little wretch that was in the house; behold she went out saying,‘I will go and tell it.’”And he[pg 169]bowed his head unto the ground, and said,“My lady, she came and told me of these things, and made her complaint unto me; and I laid on her a violent blow. And she went forth to draw water, and a crocodile carried her away.”(The rest of the tale is lost.)

The royal son Hordedef then stood forth and spake. He said:“Hitherto hast thou only heard tokens of those who have gone before, and of which no man knoweth their truth. But I will show thy Majesty a man of thine own days.”And his Majesty said,“Who is he, Hordedef?”And the royal son Hordedef answered,“It is a certain man named Dedi, who dwells at Dedsneferu. He is a man of 110 years old; and he eats 500 loaves of bread and a side of beef, and drinks 100 draughts of beer, unto this day. He knows how to restore the head that is smitten off; he knows how to cause the lion to follow him trailing his halter on the ground; he knows the designs of the dwelling of Tahuti. The majesty of the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, the blessed, has long sought for the designs of the dwelling of Tahuti, that he may make the like of them in his pyramid.”

And his Majesty said,“Thou, thyself, Hordedef, my son, bring him to me.”Then were the ships made ready for the King's son Hordedef, and he went up the stream to Dedsneferu. And when the ships had moored at the haven, he landed, and sat him in a litter of ebony, the poles of which were of cedar wood overlaid with gold. Now when he drew near to Dedi, they set down the litter. And he arose to greet Dedi, and found him lying on a palmstick couch at the door of his house; one servant held his head and rubbed him, and another rubbed his feet.

And the King's son Hordedef said,“Thy state is that of one who lives to good old age; for old age is the end of our voyage, the time of embalming, the time of burial. Lie, then, in the sun, free of infirmities, without the babble of dotage: this is the salutation to worthy age. I come from far to call thee, with a message from my father Khufu, the blessed, for thou shalt eat of the best which the King gives, and of the food which those have who follow after him; that he may bring thee in good estate to thy fathers who are in the tomb.”

And Dedi replied to him:“Peace to thee! Peace to thee! Hordedef, son of the King, beloved of his father. May thy father Khufu, the blessed, praise thee, may he advance thee among the elders, may thykaprevail against the enemy, may thy soul know the right road to the gate of him who clothes the afflicted; this is the salutation to the King's son.”Then the King's son, Hordedef, stretched forth his hands to him, and raised him up, and went with him to the haven, giving unto him his arm. Then said Dedi,“Let there be given me a boat, to bring me my youths and my books.”And they made ready for him two boats with their rowers. And Dedi went down the river in the barge in which was the King's son, Hordedef. And when he had reached the palace, the King's son, Hordedef, entered in to give account unto his Majesty the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khufu, the blessed. Then said the King's son Hordedef,“O King, life, wealth, and health! My lord, I have brought Dedi.”His Majesty replied,“Bring him to me speedily.”And his Majesty went into the hall of columns of Pharaoh (life, wealth, and health), and Dedi was led before him. And his Majesty said,“Wherefore[pg 165]is it, Dedi, that I have not yet seen thee?”And Dedi answered:“He who is called it is that comes; the King (life, wealth, and health) calls me, and behold I come.”And his Majesty said,“Is it true, that which men say, that thou canst restore the head which is smitten off?”And Dedi replied,“Truly, I know that, O King (life, wealth, and health), my lord.”And his Majesty said,“Let one bring me a prisoner who is in prison, that his punishment may be fulfilled.”And Dedi said:“Let it not be a man, O King, my lord; behold we do not even thus to our cattle.”And a duck was brought unto him, and its head was cut off. And the duck was laid on the west side of the hall, and its head on the east side of the hall. And Dedi spake his magic speech. And the duck fluttered along the ground, and its head came likewise; and when it had come part to part the duck stood and quacked. And they brought likewise a goose before him, and he did even so unto it. His Majesty caused an ox to be brought, and its head cast on the ground. And Dedi spake his magic speech. And the ox stood upright behind him, and followed him with his halter trailing on the ground.

And King Khufu said,“And is it true what is said, that thou knowest the number of the designs of the dwelling of Tahuti?”And Dedi replied,“Pardon me, I know not their number, O King (life, wealth, and health), but I know where they are.”And his Majesty said,“Where is that?”And Dedi replied:“There is a chest of whetstone in a chamber named the plan-room, in Heliopolis; they are in this chest.”And Dedi said further unto him,“O King (life, wealth, and health), my lord, it is not I that is to bring them to thee.”And his Majesty said,“Who, then, is it that shall bring them to me?”And Dedi answered to him,“It is the eldest of the three children who are in the body of Rud-didet who shall bring them to thee.”And his Majesty said:“Would that it may be as thou sayest! And who is this Rud-didet?”And Dedi replied:“She is the wife of a priest of Ra, lord of Sakhebu. And she has conceived these three sons by Ra, lord of Sakhebu, and the god has promised her that they shall fulfil this noble office (of reigning) over all this land, and that the eldest of them shall be high-priest in Heliopolis.”And his Majesty's heart became[pg 166]troubled for this; but Dedi spake unto him:“What is this that thou thinkest, O King (life, wealth, health), my lord? Is it because of these three children? I tell thee thy son shall reign, and thy son's son, and then one of them.”His Majesty said,“And when shall Rud-didet bear these?”And he replied,“She shall bear them on the twenty-fifth of the month Tybi.”And his Majesty said,“When the banks of the canal of Letopolis are cut, I will walk there that I may see the temple of Ra, lord of Sakhebu.”And Dedi replied,“Then I will cause that there be four cubits of water by the banks of the canal of Letopolis.”When his Majesty returned to his palace, his Majesty said:“Let them place Dedi in the house of the royal son Hordedef, that he may dwell with him, and let them give him a daily portion of 1,000 loaves, 100 draughts of beer, an ox, and 100 bunches of onions.”And they did everything as his Majesty commanded.

And one day it came to pass that Rud-didet felt the pains of birth. And the majesty of Ra, Lord of Sakhebu, said unto Isis, to Nebhat, to Meskhent, to Hakt, and to Khnumu:“Go ye, and deliver Rud-didet of these three children that she shall bear, who are to fulfil this noble office over all this land; that they may build up your temples, furnish your altars with offerings, supply your tables of libation, and increase your endowments.”Then went these deities; their fashion they made as that of dancing-girls, and Khnumu was with them as a porter. They drew near unto the house of Ra-user, and found him standing, with his girdle fallen. And they played before him with their instruments of music. But he said unto them,“My ladies, behold, here is a woman who feels the pains of birth.”They said to him,“Let us see her, for we know how to help her.”And he replied,“Come, then.”And they entered in straightway to Rud-didet, and they closed the door on her and on themselves. Then Isis stood before her, and Nebhat stood behind her, and Hakt helped her. And Isis said,“O child, by thy name of User-ref, do not do violence.”And the child came upon her hands, as a child of a cubit; its bones were strong, the beauty of its limbs was like gold, and its hair was like true lapis-lazuli. They washed him, and prepared him, and placed him on a carpet on the brickwork. Then[pg 167]Meskhent approached him and said,“This is a king who shall reign over all the land.”And Khnumu gave strength to his limbs. Then Isis stood before her, and Nebhat stood behind her, and Hakt helped her. And Isis said,“O child, by thy name of Sah-ra, stay not in her.”Then the child came upon her hands, a child of a cubit; its bones were strong, the beauty of its limbs was like gold, and its hair was like true lapis-lazuli. They washed him, and prepared him, and laid him on a carpet on the brickwork. Then Meskhent approached him and said,“This is a king who shall reign over all the land.”And Khnumu gave strength to his limbs. Then Isis stood before her, and Nebhat stood behind her, and Hakt helped her. And Isis said,“O child, by thy name of Kaku, remain not in darkness in her.”And the child came upon her hands, a child of a cubit; its bones were strong, the beauty of its limbs was like gold, and its hair was like true lapis-lazuli. And Meskhent approached him and said,“This is a king who shall reign over all the land.”And Khnumu gave strength to his limbs. And they washed him, and prepared him, and laid him on a carpet on the brickwork.

And the deities went out, having delivered Rud-didet of the three children. And they said,“Rejoice! O Ra-user, for behold three children are born unto thee.”And he said unto them,“My ladies, and what shall I give unto ye? Behold, give this bushel of barley here unto your porter, that ye may take it as your reward to the brew-house.”And Khnumu loaded himself with the bushel of barley. And they went away toward the place from which they came. And Isis spake unto these goddesses, and said,“Wherefore have we come without doing a marvel for these children, that we may tell it to their father who has sent us?”Then made they the divine diadems of the King (life, wealth, and health), and laid them in the bushel of barley. And they caused the clouds to come with wind and rain; and they turned back again unto the house. And they said,“Let us put this barley in a closed chamber, sealed up, until we return northward, dancing.”And they placed the barley in a close chamber.

And Rud-didet purified herself, with a purification of fourteen days. And she said to her handmaid,“Is the house made[pg 168]ready?”And she replied,“All things are made ready, but the brewing barley is not yet brought.”And Rud-didet said,“Wherefore is the brewing barley not yet brought?”And the servant answered,“It would all of it long since be ready if the barley had not been given to the dancing-girls, and lay in the chamber under their seal.”Rud-didet said,“Go down, and bring of it, and Ra-user shall give them in its stead when he shall come.”And the handmaid went, and opened the chamber. And she heard talking and singing, music and dancing, quavering, and all things which are performed for a king in his chamber. And she returned and told to Rud-didet all that she had heard. And she went through the chamber, but she found not the place where the sound was. And she laid her temple to the sack, and found that the sounds were in it. She placed it in a chest, and put that in another locker, and tied it fast with leather, and laid it in the storeroom, where the things were, and sealed it. And Ra-user came returning from the field; and Rud-didet repeated unto him these things; and his heart was glad above all things; and they sat down and made a joyful day.

And after these days it came to pass that Rud-didet was wroth with her servant, and beat her with stripes. And the servant said unto those that were in the house:“Shall it be done thus unto me? She has borne three kings, and I will go and tell this to his Majesty King Khufu the blessed.”And she went, and found the eldest brother of her mother, who was binding his flax on the floor. And he said to her,“Whither goest thou, my little maid?”And she told him of all these things. And her brother said to her:“Wherefore comest thou thus to me? Shall I agree to treachery?”And he took a bunch of the flax to her, and laid on her a violent blow. And the servant went to fetch a handful of water, and a crocodile carried her away.

Her uncle went therefore to tell of this to Rud-didet; and he found Rud-didet sitting, her head on her knees, and her heart beyond measure sad. And he said to her,“My lady, why makest thou thy heart thus?”And she answered,“It is because of this little wretch that was in the house; behold she went out saying,‘I will go and tell it.’”And he[pg 169]bowed his head unto the ground, and said,“My lady, she came and told me of these things, and made her complaint unto me; and I laid on her a violent blow. And she went forth to draw water, and a crocodile carried her away.”

(The rest of the tale is lost.)

The Peasant And The WorkmanThere dwelt in the Sekhet Hemat—or Salt Country—a peasant called the Sekhti, with his wife and children, his asses and his dogs; and he trafficked in all good things of the Sekhet Hemat to Henenseten. Behold now he went with rushes, natron, and salt, with wood and pods, with stones and seeds, and all good products of the Sekhet Hemat. And this Sekhti journeyed to the south unto Henenseten; and when he came to the lands of the house of Fefa, north of Denat, he found a man there standing on the bank, a man called Hemti—the workman—son of a man called Asri, who was a serf of the high-steward Meruitensa. Now said this Hemti, when he saw the asses of Sekhti, that were pleasing in his eyes,“Oh that some good god would grant me to steal away the goods of Sekhti from him!”Now the Hemti's house was by the dike of the tow-path, which was straightened, and not wide, as much as the width of a waistcloth: on the one side of it was the water, and on the other side of it grew his corn. Hemti said then to his servant,“Hasten! bring me a shawl from the house,”and it was brought instantly. Then spread he out this shawl on the face of the dike, and it lay with its fastening on the water and its fringe on the corn.Now Sekhti approached along the path used by all men. Said Hemti:“Have a care, Sekhti! you are not going to trample on my clothes!”Said Sekhti,“I will do as you like, I will pass carefully.”Then went he up on the higher side. But Hemti said,“Go you over my corn, instead of the path?”Said Sekhti:“I am going carefully; this high field of corn is not my choice, but you have stopped your path with your clothes, and will you then not let us pass by the side of the path?”And one of the asses filled its[pg 170]mouth with a cluster of corn. Said Hemti:“Look you, I shall take away your ass, Sekhti, for eating my corn; behold it will have to pay according to the amount of the injury.”Said Sekhti:“I am going carefully; the one way is stopped, therefore took I my ass by the inclosed ground; and do you seize it for filling its mouth with a cluster of corn? Moreover, I know unto whom this domain belongs, even unto the lord steward Meruitensa. He it is who smites every robber in this whole land; and shall I then be robbed in his domain?”Said Hemti,“This is the proverb which men speak:‘A poor man's name is only his own matter.’I am he of whom you spake, even the lord steward of whom you think.”Thereon he took to him branches of green tamarisk and scourged all his limbs, took his asses, and drave them into the pasture. And Sekhti wept very greatly, by reason of the pain of what he had suffered. Said Hemti,“Lift not up your voice, Sekhti, or you shall go to the demon of silence.”Sekhti answered:“You beat me, you steal my goods, and now would take away even my voice, O demon of silence! If you will restore my goods, then will I cease to cry out at your violence.”Sekhti stayed the whole day petitioning Hemti, but he would not give ear unto him. And Sekhti went his way to Khenensuten to complain to the lord steward Meruitensa. He found him coming out from the door of his house to embark on his boat, that he might go to the judgment-hall. Sekhti said:“Ho! turn, that I may please thy heart with this discourse. Now at this time let one of thy followers, whom thou wilt, come to me that I may send him to thee concerning it.”The lord steward Meruitensa made his follower, whom he chose, go straight unto him, and Sekhti sent him back with an account of all these matters. Then the lord steward Meruitensa accused Hemti unto the nobles who sat with him; and they said unto him:“By your leave: As to this Sekhti of yours, let him bring a witness. Behold thou it is our custom with our Sekhtis; witnesses come with them; behold, that is our custom. Then it will be fitting to beat this Hemti for a trifle of natron and a trifle of salt; if he is commanded to pay for it, he will pay for it.”But the high steward Meruitensa held his[pg 171]peace; for he would not reply unto these nobles, but would reply unto the Sekhti.Now Sekhti came to appeal to the lord steward Meruitensa, and said,“O my lord steward, greatest of the great, guide of the needy:When thou embarkest on the lake of truth—Mayest thou sail upon it with a fair wind;May thy mainsail not fly loose.May there not be lamentation in thy cabin;May not misfortune come after thee.May not thy mainstays be snapped;Mayest thou not run aground.May not the wave seize thee;Mayest thou not taste the impurities of the river;Mayest thou not see the face of fear.May the fish come to thee without escape;Mayest thou reach unto plump water-fowl.For thou art the orphan's father, the widow's husband,The desolate woman's brother, the garment of the motherless.Let me celebrate thy name in this land for every virtue,A guide without greediness of heart;A great one without any meanness.Destroying deceit, encouraging justice;Coming to the cry, and allowing utterance.Let me speak, do thou hear and do justice;O praised! whom the praised ones praise.Abolish oppression, behold me, I am overladen,Reckon with me, behold me defrauded.”Now the Sekhti made this speech in the time of the majesty of the King Neb-ka-n-ra, blessed. The lord steward Meruitensa went away straight to the King and said:“My lord, I have found one of these Sekhti, excellent of speech, in very truth; stolen are his goods, and he has come to complain to me of the matter.”His Majesty said:“As thou wishest that I may see health! lengthen out his complaint, without replying to any of his speeches. He who desireth him to continue speaking should be silent; behold, bring us his words in writing, that we may listen to them. But provide for his wife and his children, and[pg 172]let the Sekhti himself also have a living. Thou must cause one to give him his portion without letting him know that thou art he who is giving it to him.”There were given to him four loaves and two draughts of beer each day; which the lord steward Meruitensa provided for him, giving it to a friend of his, who furnished it unto him. Then the lord steward Meruitensa sent the governor of the Sekhet Hemat to make provision for the wife of the Sekhti, three rations of corn each day.Then came the Sekhti a second time, and even a third time, unto the lord steward Meruitensa; but he told two of his followers to go unto the Sekhti, and seize on him, and beat him with staves. But he came again unto him, even unto six times, and said:“My Lord Steward—Destroying deceit, and encouraging justice;Raising up every good thing, and crushing every evil;As plenty comes removing famine,As clothing covers nakedness,As clear sky after storm warms the shivering;As fire cooks that which is raw,As water quenches the thirst;Look with thy face upon my lot; do not covet, but content me without fail; do the right and do not evil,”But yet Meruitensa would not hearken unto his complaint; and the Sekhti came yet, and yet again, even unto the ninth time. Then the lord steward told two of his followers to go unto the Sekhti; and the Sekhti feared that he should be beaten as at the third request. But the lord steward Meruitensa then said unto him:“Fear not, Sekhti, for what thou hast done. The Sekhti has made many speeches, delightful to the heart of his Majesty, and I take an oath—as I eat bread, and as I drink water—that thou shalt be remembered to eternity.”Said the lord steward,“Moreover, thou shalt be satisfied when thou shalt hear of thy complaints.”He caused to be written on a clean roll of papyrus each petition to the end, and the lord steward Meruitensa sent it to the majesty of the King Neb-ka-n-ra, blessed, and it was good to him more than anything that is in the whole land: but his Majesty said to Meruitensa:“Judge it thyself; I do not desire it.”[pg 173]The lord steward Meruitensa made two of his followers to go to the Sekhet Hemat, and bring a list of the household of the Sekhti; and its amount was six persons, beside his oxen and his goats, his wheat and his barley, his asses and his dogs; and moreover he gave all that which belonged unto the Hemti to the Sekhti, even all his property and his officers, and the Sekhti was beloved of the King more than all his overseers, and ate of all the good things of the King, with all his household.

There dwelt in the Sekhet Hemat—or Salt Country—a peasant called the Sekhti, with his wife and children, his asses and his dogs; and he trafficked in all good things of the Sekhet Hemat to Henenseten. Behold now he went with rushes, natron, and salt, with wood and pods, with stones and seeds, and all good products of the Sekhet Hemat. And this Sekhti journeyed to the south unto Henenseten; and when he came to the lands of the house of Fefa, north of Denat, he found a man there standing on the bank, a man called Hemti—the workman—son of a man called Asri, who was a serf of the high-steward Meruitensa. Now said this Hemti, when he saw the asses of Sekhti, that were pleasing in his eyes,“Oh that some good god would grant me to steal away the goods of Sekhti from him!”

Now the Hemti's house was by the dike of the tow-path, which was straightened, and not wide, as much as the width of a waistcloth: on the one side of it was the water, and on the other side of it grew his corn. Hemti said then to his servant,“Hasten! bring me a shawl from the house,”and it was brought instantly. Then spread he out this shawl on the face of the dike, and it lay with its fastening on the water and its fringe on the corn.

Now Sekhti approached along the path used by all men. Said Hemti:“Have a care, Sekhti! you are not going to trample on my clothes!”Said Sekhti,“I will do as you like, I will pass carefully.”Then went he up on the higher side. But Hemti said,“Go you over my corn, instead of the path?”Said Sekhti:“I am going carefully; this high field of corn is not my choice, but you have stopped your path with your clothes, and will you then not let us pass by the side of the path?”And one of the asses filled its[pg 170]mouth with a cluster of corn. Said Hemti:“Look you, I shall take away your ass, Sekhti, for eating my corn; behold it will have to pay according to the amount of the injury.”Said Sekhti:“I am going carefully; the one way is stopped, therefore took I my ass by the inclosed ground; and do you seize it for filling its mouth with a cluster of corn? Moreover, I know unto whom this domain belongs, even unto the lord steward Meruitensa. He it is who smites every robber in this whole land; and shall I then be robbed in his domain?”

Said Hemti,“This is the proverb which men speak:‘A poor man's name is only his own matter.’I am he of whom you spake, even the lord steward of whom you think.”Thereon he took to him branches of green tamarisk and scourged all his limbs, took his asses, and drave them into the pasture. And Sekhti wept very greatly, by reason of the pain of what he had suffered. Said Hemti,“Lift not up your voice, Sekhti, or you shall go to the demon of silence.”Sekhti answered:“You beat me, you steal my goods, and now would take away even my voice, O demon of silence! If you will restore my goods, then will I cease to cry out at your violence.”

Sekhti stayed the whole day petitioning Hemti, but he would not give ear unto him. And Sekhti went his way to Khenensuten to complain to the lord steward Meruitensa. He found him coming out from the door of his house to embark on his boat, that he might go to the judgment-hall. Sekhti said:“Ho! turn, that I may please thy heart with this discourse. Now at this time let one of thy followers, whom thou wilt, come to me that I may send him to thee concerning it.”The lord steward Meruitensa made his follower, whom he chose, go straight unto him, and Sekhti sent him back with an account of all these matters. Then the lord steward Meruitensa accused Hemti unto the nobles who sat with him; and they said unto him:“By your leave: As to this Sekhti of yours, let him bring a witness. Behold thou it is our custom with our Sekhtis; witnesses come with them; behold, that is our custom. Then it will be fitting to beat this Hemti for a trifle of natron and a trifle of salt; if he is commanded to pay for it, he will pay for it.”But the high steward Meruitensa held his[pg 171]peace; for he would not reply unto these nobles, but would reply unto the Sekhti.

Now Sekhti came to appeal to the lord steward Meruitensa, and said,“O my lord steward, greatest of the great, guide of the needy:

When thou embarkest on the lake of truth—Mayest thou sail upon it with a fair wind;May thy mainsail not fly loose.May there not be lamentation in thy cabin;May not misfortune come after thee.May not thy mainstays be snapped;Mayest thou not run aground.May not the wave seize thee;Mayest thou not taste the impurities of the river;Mayest thou not see the face of fear.May the fish come to thee without escape;Mayest thou reach unto plump water-fowl.For thou art the orphan's father, the widow's husband,The desolate woman's brother, the garment of the motherless.Let me celebrate thy name in this land for every virtue,A guide without greediness of heart;A great one without any meanness.Destroying deceit, encouraging justice;Coming to the cry, and allowing utterance.Let me speak, do thou hear and do justice;O praised! whom the praised ones praise.Abolish oppression, behold me, I am overladen,Reckon with me, behold me defrauded.”

When thou embarkest on the lake of truth—Mayest thou sail upon it with a fair wind;May thy mainsail not fly loose.May there not be lamentation in thy cabin;May not misfortune come after thee.May not thy mainstays be snapped;Mayest thou not run aground.May not the wave seize thee;Mayest thou not taste the impurities of the river;Mayest thou not see the face of fear.

When thou embarkest on the lake of truth—

Mayest thou sail upon it with a fair wind;

May thy mainsail not fly loose.

May there not be lamentation in thy cabin;

May not misfortune come after thee.

May not thy mainstays be snapped;

Mayest thou not run aground.

May not the wave seize thee;

Mayest thou not taste the impurities of the river;

Mayest thou not see the face of fear.

May the fish come to thee without escape;Mayest thou reach unto plump water-fowl.For thou art the orphan's father, the widow's husband,The desolate woman's brother, the garment of the motherless.Let me celebrate thy name in this land for every virtue,A guide without greediness of heart;A great one without any meanness.

May the fish come to thee without escape;

Mayest thou reach unto plump water-fowl.

For thou art the orphan's father, the widow's husband,

The desolate woman's brother, the garment of the motherless.

Let me celebrate thy name in this land for every virtue,

A guide without greediness of heart;

A great one without any meanness.

Destroying deceit, encouraging justice;Coming to the cry, and allowing utterance.

Destroying deceit, encouraging justice;

Coming to the cry, and allowing utterance.

Let me speak, do thou hear and do justice;O praised! whom the praised ones praise.

Let me speak, do thou hear and do justice;

O praised! whom the praised ones praise.

Abolish oppression, behold me, I am overladen,Reckon with me, behold me defrauded.”

Abolish oppression, behold me, I am overladen,

Reckon with me, behold me defrauded.”

Now the Sekhti made this speech in the time of the majesty of the King Neb-ka-n-ra, blessed. The lord steward Meruitensa went away straight to the King and said:“My lord, I have found one of these Sekhti, excellent of speech, in very truth; stolen are his goods, and he has come to complain to me of the matter.”

His Majesty said:“As thou wishest that I may see health! lengthen out his complaint, without replying to any of his speeches. He who desireth him to continue speaking should be silent; behold, bring us his words in writing, that we may listen to them. But provide for his wife and his children, and[pg 172]let the Sekhti himself also have a living. Thou must cause one to give him his portion without letting him know that thou art he who is giving it to him.”

There were given to him four loaves and two draughts of beer each day; which the lord steward Meruitensa provided for him, giving it to a friend of his, who furnished it unto him. Then the lord steward Meruitensa sent the governor of the Sekhet Hemat to make provision for the wife of the Sekhti, three rations of corn each day.

Then came the Sekhti a second time, and even a third time, unto the lord steward Meruitensa; but he told two of his followers to go unto the Sekhti, and seize on him, and beat him with staves. But he came again unto him, even unto six times, and said:

“My Lord Steward—Destroying deceit, and encouraging justice;Raising up every good thing, and crushing every evil;As plenty comes removing famine,As clothing covers nakedness,As clear sky after storm warms the shivering;As fire cooks that which is raw,As water quenches the thirst;Look with thy face upon my lot; do not covet, but content me without fail; do the right and do not evil,”

“My Lord Steward—Destroying deceit, and encouraging justice;Raising up every good thing, and crushing every evil;As plenty comes removing famine,As clothing covers nakedness,As clear sky after storm warms the shivering;As fire cooks that which is raw,As water quenches the thirst;Look with thy face upon my lot; do not covet, but content me without fail; do the right and do not evil,”

“My Lord Steward—

Destroying deceit, and encouraging justice;

Raising up every good thing, and crushing every evil;

As plenty comes removing famine,

As clothing covers nakedness,

As clear sky after storm warms the shivering;

As fire cooks that which is raw,

As water quenches the thirst;

Look with thy face upon my lot; do not covet, but content me without fail; do the right and do not evil,”

But yet Meruitensa would not hearken unto his complaint; and the Sekhti came yet, and yet again, even unto the ninth time. Then the lord steward told two of his followers to go unto the Sekhti; and the Sekhti feared that he should be beaten as at the third request. But the lord steward Meruitensa then said unto him:“Fear not, Sekhti, for what thou hast done. The Sekhti has made many speeches, delightful to the heart of his Majesty, and I take an oath—as I eat bread, and as I drink water—that thou shalt be remembered to eternity.”Said the lord steward,“Moreover, thou shalt be satisfied when thou shalt hear of thy complaints.”He caused to be written on a clean roll of papyrus each petition to the end, and the lord steward Meruitensa sent it to the majesty of the King Neb-ka-n-ra, blessed, and it was good to him more than anything that is in the whole land: but his Majesty said to Meruitensa:“Judge it thyself; I do not desire it.”

The lord steward Meruitensa made two of his followers to go to the Sekhet Hemat, and bring a list of the household of the Sekhti; and its amount was six persons, beside his oxen and his goats, his wheat and his barley, his asses and his dogs; and moreover he gave all that which belonged unto the Hemti to the Sekhti, even all his property and his officers, and the Sekhti was beloved of the King more than all his overseers, and ate of all the good things of the King, with all his household.

The Shipwrecked SailorThe wise servant said:“Let thy heart be satisfied, O my lord, for that we have come back to the country; after we have long been on board, and rowed much, the prow has at last touched land. All the people rejoice, and embrace us one after another. Moreover, we have come back in good health, and not a man is lacking; although we have been to the ends of Wawat, and gone through the land of Senmut, we have returned in peace, and our land—behold, we have come back to it. Hear me, my lord; I have no other refuge. Wash thee, and turn the water over thy fingers; then go and tell the tale to the Majesty.”His lord replied:“Thy heart continues still its wandering words! but although the mouth of a man may save him, his words may also cover his face with confusion. Wilt thou do then as thy heart moves thee? This that thou wilt say, tell quietly.”The sailor then answered:“Now I shall tell that which has happened to me, to my very self. I was going to the mines of Pharaoh, and I went down on the sea on a ship of 150 cubits long and forty cubits wide, with 150 sailors of the best of Egypt, who had seen heaven and earth, and whose hearts were stronger than lions. They had said that the wind would not be contrary, or that there would be none. But as we approached the land the wind arose, and threw up waves eight cubits high. As for me, I seized a piece of wood; but those who were in the vessel perished, without one remaining. A wave threw me on an island, after that I had been three[pg 174]days alone, without a companion beside my own heart. I laid me in a thicket, and the shadow covered me. Then stretched I my limbs to try to find something for my mouth. I found there figs and grapes, all manner of good herbs, berries and grain, melons of all kinds, fishes and birds. Nothing was lacking. And I satisfied myself; and left on the ground that which was over, of what my arms had been filled withal. I dug a pit, I lighted a fire, and I made a burnt-offering unto the gods.“Suddenly I heard a noise as of thunder, which I thought to be that of a wave of the sea. The trees shook, and the earth was moved. I uncovered my face, and I saw that a serpent drew near. He was thirty cubits long, and his beard greater than two cubits; his body was as overlaid with gold, and his color as that of true lazuli. He coiled himself before me.“Then he opened his mouth, while that I lay on my face before him, and he said to me:‘What has brought thee, what has brought thee, little one, what has brought thee? If thou sayest not speedily what has brought thee to this isle, I will make thee know thyself; as a flame thou shalt vanish, if thou tellest me not something I had not heard, or which I knew not, before thee.’“Then he took me in his mouth and carried me to his resting-place, and laid me down without any hurt. I was whole and sound, and nothing was gone from me. Then he opened his mouth against me, while that I lay on my face before him, and he said,‘What has brought thee, what has brought thee, little one, what has brought thee to this isle which is in the sea, and of which the shores are in the midst of the waves?’“Then I replied to him, and holding my arms low before him, I said to him:‘I was embarked for the mines by the order of the majesty, in a ship; 150 cubits was its length, and the width of it forty cubits. It had 150 sailors of the best of Egypt, who had seen heaven and earth, and the hearts of whom were stronger than lions. They said that the wind would not be contrary, or that there would be none. Each of them exceeded his companion in the prudence of his heart and the strength of his arm, and I was not beneath any of them. A storm came upon us while we were on the sea. Hardly could we reach to the shore when the wind waxed yet greater,[pg 175]and the waves rose even eight cubits. As for me, I seized a piece of wood, while those who were in the boat perished without one being left with me for three days. Behold me now before thee, for I was brought to this isle by a wave of the sea.’“Then said he to me:‘Fear not, fear not, little one, and make not thy face sad. If thou hast come to me, it is God who has let thee live. For it is he who has brought thee to this isle of the blest, where nothing is lacking, and which is filled with all good things. See now, thou shalt pass one month after another, until thou shalt be four months in this isle. Then a ship shall come from thy land with sailors, and thou shalt leave with them and go to thy country, and thou shalt die in thy town.’“‘Converse is pleasing, and he who tastes of it passes over his misery. I will therefore tell thee of that which is in this isle. I am here with my brethren and my children around me; we are seventy-five serpents, children and kindred; without naming a young girl who was brought unto me by chance, and on whom the fire of heaven fell, and burnt her to ashes.“‘As for thee if thou art strong, and if thy heart waits patiently, thou shalt press thy infants to thy bosom and embrace thy wife. Thou shalt return to thy house, which is full of all good things; thou shalt see thy land, where thou shalt dwell in the midst of thy kindred.’“Then I bowed, in my obeisance, and I touched the ground before him.‘Behold now that which I have told thee before. I shall tell of thy presence unto Pharaoh, I shall make him to know of thy greatness, and I will bring to thee of the sacred oils and perfumes, and of incense of the temples with which all gods are honored. I shall tell, moreover, of that which I do now see (thanks to him), and there shall be rendered to thee praises before the fulness of all the land. I shall slay asses for thee in sacrifice, I shall pluck for thee the birds, and I shall bring for thee ships full of all kinds of the treasures of Egypt, as is comely to do unto a god, a friend of men in a far country, of which men know not.’“Then he smiled at my speech, because of that which was in his heart, for he said to me:‘Thou art not rich in perfumes, for all that thou hast is but common incense. As for me I am Prince of the land of Punt, and I have perfumes.[pg 176]Only the oil which thou sayest thou wouldst bring is not common in this isle. But, when thou shalt depart from this place, thou shalt never more see this isle; it shall be changed into waves.’“And, behold, when the ship drew near, according to all that he had told me before, I got me up into an high tree, to strive to see those who were within it. Then I came and told to him this matter; but it was already known unto him before. Then he said to me:‘Farewell, farewell; go to thy house, little one, see again thy children, and let thy name be good in thy town; these are my wishes for thee.’“Then I bowed myself before him, and held my arms low before him, and he, he gave me gifts of precious perfumes, of cassia, of sweet woods, of kohl, of cypress, an abundance of incense, of ivory tusks, of baboons, of apes, and all kinds of precious things. I embarked all in the ship which was come, and, bowing myself, I prayed God for him.“Then he said to me,‘Behold thou shalt come to thy country in two months, thou shalt press to thy bosom thy children, and thou shalt rest in thy tomb.’After this I went down to the shore unto the ship, and I called to the sailors who were there. Then on the shore I rendered adoration to the master of this isle and to those who dwelt therein.“When we shall come, in our return, to the house of Pharaoh, in the second month, according to all that the serpent has said, we shall approach unto the palace. And I shall go in before Pharaoh, I shall bring the gifts which I have brought from this isle into the country. Then he shall thank me before the fulness of all the land. Grant them unto me a follower, and lead me to the courtiers of the King. Cast thy eye upon me, after that I am come to land again, after that I have both seen and proved this. Hear my prayer, for it is good to listen to people. It was said unto me,‘Become a wise man, and thou shalt come to honor,’and behold I have become such.”This is finished from its beginning unto its end, even as it was found in a writing. It is written by the scribe of cunning fingers Ameni-amen-aa; may he live in life, wealth, and health!

The wise servant said:“Let thy heart be satisfied, O my lord, for that we have come back to the country; after we have long been on board, and rowed much, the prow has at last touched land. All the people rejoice, and embrace us one after another. Moreover, we have come back in good health, and not a man is lacking; although we have been to the ends of Wawat, and gone through the land of Senmut, we have returned in peace, and our land—behold, we have come back to it. Hear me, my lord; I have no other refuge. Wash thee, and turn the water over thy fingers; then go and tell the tale to the Majesty.”

His lord replied:“Thy heart continues still its wandering words! but although the mouth of a man may save him, his words may also cover his face with confusion. Wilt thou do then as thy heart moves thee? This that thou wilt say, tell quietly.”

The sailor then answered:“Now I shall tell that which has happened to me, to my very self. I was going to the mines of Pharaoh, and I went down on the sea on a ship of 150 cubits long and forty cubits wide, with 150 sailors of the best of Egypt, who had seen heaven and earth, and whose hearts were stronger than lions. They had said that the wind would not be contrary, or that there would be none. But as we approached the land the wind arose, and threw up waves eight cubits high. As for me, I seized a piece of wood; but those who were in the vessel perished, without one remaining. A wave threw me on an island, after that I had been three[pg 174]days alone, without a companion beside my own heart. I laid me in a thicket, and the shadow covered me. Then stretched I my limbs to try to find something for my mouth. I found there figs and grapes, all manner of good herbs, berries and grain, melons of all kinds, fishes and birds. Nothing was lacking. And I satisfied myself; and left on the ground that which was over, of what my arms had been filled withal. I dug a pit, I lighted a fire, and I made a burnt-offering unto the gods.

“Suddenly I heard a noise as of thunder, which I thought to be that of a wave of the sea. The trees shook, and the earth was moved. I uncovered my face, and I saw that a serpent drew near. He was thirty cubits long, and his beard greater than two cubits; his body was as overlaid with gold, and his color as that of true lazuli. He coiled himself before me.

“Then he opened his mouth, while that I lay on my face before him, and he said to me:‘What has brought thee, what has brought thee, little one, what has brought thee? If thou sayest not speedily what has brought thee to this isle, I will make thee know thyself; as a flame thou shalt vanish, if thou tellest me not something I had not heard, or which I knew not, before thee.’

“Then he took me in his mouth and carried me to his resting-place, and laid me down without any hurt. I was whole and sound, and nothing was gone from me. Then he opened his mouth against me, while that I lay on my face before him, and he said,‘What has brought thee, what has brought thee, little one, what has brought thee to this isle which is in the sea, and of which the shores are in the midst of the waves?’

“Then I replied to him, and holding my arms low before him, I said to him:‘I was embarked for the mines by the order of the majesty, in a ship; 150 cubits was its length, and the width of it forty cubits. It had 150 sailors of the best of Egypt, who had seen heaven and earth, and the hearts of whom were stronger than lions. They said that the wind would not be contrary, or that there would be none. Each of them exceeded his companion in the prudence of his heart and the strength of his arm, and I was not beneath any of them. A storm came upon us while we were on the sea. Hardly could we reach to the shore when the wind waxed yet greater,[pg 175]and the waves rose even eight cubits. As for me, I seized a piece of wood, while those who were in the boat perished without one being left with me for three days. Behold me now before thee, for I was brought to this isle by a wave of the sea.’

“Then said he to me:‘Fear not, fear not, little one, and make not thy face sad. If thou hast come to me, it is God who has let thee live. For it is he who has brought thee to this isle of the blest, where nothing is lacking, and which is filled with all good things. See now, thou shalt pass one month after another, until thou shalt be four months in this isle. Then a ship shall come from thy land with sailors, and thou shalt leave with them and go to thy country, and thou shalt die in thy town.’

“‘Converse is pleasing, and he who tastes of it passes over his misery. I will therefore tell thee of that which is in this isle. I am here with my brethren and my children around me; we are seventy-five serpents, children and kindred; without naming a young girl who was brought unto me by chance, and on whom the fire of heaven fell, and burnt her to ashes.

“‘As for thee if thou art strong, and if thy heart waits patiently, thou shalt press thy infants to thy bosom and embrace thy wife. Thou shalt return to thy house, which is full of all good things; thou shalt see thy land, where thou shalt dwell in the midst of thy kindred.’

“Then I bowed, in my obeisance, and I touched the ground before him.‘Behold now that which I have told thee before. I shall tell of thy presence unto Pharaoh, I shall make him to know of thy greatness, and I will bring to thee of the sacred oils and perfumes, and of incense of the temples with which all gods are honored. I shall tell, moreover, of that which I do now see (thanks to him), and there shall be rendered to thee praises before the fulness of all the land. I shall slay asses for thee in sacrifice, I shall pluck for thee the birds, and I shall bring for thee ships full of all kinds of the treasures of Egypt, as is comely to do unto a god, a friend of men in a far country, of which men know not.’

“Then he smiled at my speech, because of that which was in his heart, for he said to me:‘Thou art not rich in perfumes, for all that thou hast is but common incense. As for me I am Prince of the land of Punt, and I have perfumes.[pg 176]Only the oil which thou sayest thou wouldst bring is not common in this isle. But, when thou shalt depart from this place, thou shalt never more see this isle; it shall be changed into waves.’

“And, behold, when the ship drew near, according to all that he had told me before, I got me up into an high tree, to strive to see those who were within it. Then I came and told to him this matter; but it was already known unto him before. Then he said to me:‘Farewell, farewell; go to thy house, little one, see again thy children, and let thy name be good in thy town; these are my wishes for thee.’

“Then I bowed myself before him, and held my arms low before him, and he, he gave me gifts of precious perfumes, of cassia, of sweet woods, of kohl, of cypress, an abundance of incense, of ivory tusks, of baboons, of apes, and all kinds of precious things. I embarked all in the ship which was come, and, bowing myself, I prayed God for him.

“Then he said to me,‘Behold thou shalt come to thy country in two months, thou shalt press to thy bosom thy children, and thou shalt rest in thy tomb.’After this I went down to the shore unto the ship, and I called to the sailors who were there. Then on the shore I rendered adoration to the master of this isle and to those who dwelt therein.

“When we shall come, in our return, to the house of Pharaoh, in the second month, according to all that the serpent has said, we shall approach unto the palace. And I shall go in before Pharaoh, I shall bring the gifts which I have brought from this isle into the country. Then he shall thank me before the fulness of all the land. Grant them unto me a follower, and lead me to the courtiers of the King. Cast thy eye upon me, after that I am come to land again, after that I have both seen and proved this. Hear my prayer, for it is good to listen to people. It was said unto me,‘Become a wise man, and thou shalt come to honor,’and behold I have become such.”

This is finished from its beginning unto its end, even as it was found in a writing. It is written by the scribe of cunning fingers Ameni-amen-aa; may he live in life, wealth, and health!


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