Gardiner - Egyptian Hieratic Texts
Gardiner - Egyptian Hieratic Texts
Gardiner - Egyptian Hieratic Texts
I
TRANSCRIBED, TRANSLATED AND ANNOTATED
BY
ALAN H. GARDINKR
D. LITT.
T H E PAPYRUS ANASTASI I AND T H E PAPYRUS KOLLER, TOGETHER WITH THE PARALLEL TEXTS
LEIPZIG
J. C. H I N R I C H S S C H E B U C H H A N D E U N G
191I
The following extracts from the Prospectus in which the present work is announced will explain its scope and arrangement :It is proposed to divide the whole material into a number of es, each dealing with a different class of text: the first series will contain Liternvy Texts, the subject of the second will be Hngicnl Texts; other series will be devoted to Business Documents, 3wistic Texts, Letters, etc. Every series will comprise a certain number of parts, e a c h o f w h i c h will b e c o m p l e t e i n itself, containing one or more entire texts, together with bibliographical introductions, translations and notes. When a sufficient number of parts in any series has been issued, a volume will be concluded; the separate volumes will include full indices to the words discussed in the notes, and to personal, royal and geographical names; and the numbering of the pages will be so arranged that the printed portion containing the translations and introductions, and the autographed portion containing the text, may be bound up separately. In the autographed portion, the left-hand page will contain the hieroglyphic transscript, while the palaeographical comments will occupy the opposite page. T h e d i r e c t i o n a n d m u t u a l p o s i t i o n o f t h e s i g n s in the original will be r e t a i n e d in the transcript, in order to facilitate comparison with the hieratic. For economy of space and for other reasons the text will not be split up into sentences; nor will the restoration of lacunae be undertaken beyond a limited extent. Where more than one manuscript is preserved, the parallel texts will be reproduced in extemo side by side. It need hardly be said that the series aims at the most exemplary accuracy, particularly in the establishment of the text , the originals having been diligently collated in almost every case. The printed portion will consist of bibliographical introductiops, c o m p l e t e E n g l i s h t r a n s l a t i o n s , and such philological notes, with abundant references, as can be given without the use of hieroglyphic type. In the preparation of the translations all previous renderings will be carefully compared, so that no earlier suggestions of value may be ignored. The translations will err rather on the side of literalness than on that of freedom, but the notes will supply a certain corrective in the way of paraphrases and explanations of passages where the English rendering is obscure. Title-pages, Preface and Indices will follow later at the conclusion of Volume I. For the immediate convenience of the reader the following facts should be noted. The printed portion of the work is separately paged with numbers accompanied by asterisks ( I * ~2*, 3 9 and in seeking cross-references In the foot-notes this fact is strictly to be borne in mind. Such references as p. 5 , line 9, or p. 5 a, note I I d refer to the autographed text and to the autographed notes accompanying the same; and the page-numbers thus alluded to are those that will be found following the words Lit. Texts at the top right-hand corner of the autographed pages; the numbers at the bottom of the autographed pages will be omitted in subsequent parts, and should be disregarded altogether. The double mode of paginatioii has been adopted in order that the printed and autographed portions may later be bound up separately. The references to Egyptological literature are given in the forms commonly used in Egyptological books. The Semitic scholar should note that MAX MULLER,As. 21. Ear. = w. MAX MULLER,Asien und Ewo$n nach Altkgyjtischeiz Denkmalern, Leipzig I 893; and that BURCH.stands for MAXBUIXCHARDT, Bie nZthnnnan8ischen Fyemdworte und Ez&vznnmen ip% Aegyjtiscken: zzueiter (Schlass-)Ted, Listen der sydlabisch geschriebenen Wovte, Leipzig 19IO. For the the transcription of Egyptian words the symbols used in the graniniar of A. ERMAN have been retained, except t h a t j is replaced by y . A good comparative table of Egyptian and Semitic consonantal values (for Semitic words written in Egyptian of the New Kingdom) will be found in the above-quoted book by BURCI-IARDT, erster Teil, p. 52.
~-.____ -
4. A satirical letter.
Sources of the text. I. T h e P a p y r u s A n a s t a s i I (Pap. Brit. Mts. 10247) was purchased for the British Museum in 1839 from Signor ANASTASI, the Swedish Consul in Egypt. It measures 8 */4 metres in length; its height is 20.5 cni., i. e. it is of the normal height of literary papyri of the second Theban period, Both in respect of size and of calligraphy the papyrus is one of the finest specimens of a Ramesside book. The text, written upon the horizontal fibres, comprises 28 pages of 8 or g lines apiece; at the beginning there is a protecting strip of IO.5 CM. The vei-so is uninscribed, save for a few large illegible signs at the back of the 19th. page. The papyrus contains but a single composition, which is complete except for the losses caused by lacunae; these are very abundant, especially in the earlier pages. The composition is divided into nineteen paragraphs, of which the first words are always written in red. Verse-points occur on the 9th. and 10th. pages. Corrections are to be found here and there; one written at the top of page 3 is probably due to a teachers hand. The type of handwriting is closely similar to, b u t not identical with, that of Ennene, the scribe to whose industry we owe several of the finest of the London hieratic papyri. The papyrus Anastnsi I may therefore be dated with approximate accuracy to the reign of Sethos I1 (see MOLLER, Paliiographie I1 1111. A good hand-facsimile by J. NETHERCLIFT is published in the Select Papyri in the hiemtic chmactev f r o m the collections o f the British Mkseum, London I 842, plates XXXV-LXII2. In CHABAS book Le Voyage dun Eg-@ie~ the plates, comprising Arzast. 1 8 ; 18,3-8; 19 to 28, s~eemto have been merely reproduced from the official publication. - The transcript for the purposes of the Berlin hieroglyphic here given is based on that made by K. SETHE dictionary; this has been diligently collated with the original on several separate occasions 3. 2. O s t r a c o n b e l o n g i n g t o P r o f e s s o r P e t r i e (abbreviated 0. P.). A slab of limestone 2 1 x 2 6 cm., containing a half-obliterated duplicate of Anast. I I, 1-4 with some additions. Unpublished. 3. O s t r a c o n in t h e B i b l i o t h 6 q u e N a t i o n a l e , P a r i s (abbrev. 0.B. N.), a limestone tablet containing Aiznst. I 1,6-2,6 with iiumerous variants and additions. Published by W. SPIEGELBERG, Btitrage guy Erklhrung des Pnpyvus Annstnsi I in the Zeitschr@ f i r agyptische Spyache 44 (1908)~I 19-122 and Tafel V. VI, with ( I ) a photograph of the stone in its present much deteriorated condition, (2) a hand-copy of the hieratic made in 1892, and (3) a hieroglyphic transcription. My text is based on a comparison of these materials. 4. O s t r a c o n in t h e B r u s s e l s c o l l e c t i o n (abbrev. 0. Br.), a broken potsherd containing portions of Annst. 1 2 , 1-5 and closely following the ostracon of the Bibliothkque
I ) According to M ~ L L E R Ennene was a scribe of the Memphite school. The same would doubtless hold good of the writer of Anastasz I. 2) This is sometimes referred to in my notes upon the text as the facsimile. 3) The proofs of this edition were finally compared with the original in September 1910. G a rdiner.
I
2*
Nationale in its text. Published here for the first time from a photograph and a transcription 1 . provided b y Professor SPIEGELBERG 5. O s t r a c o n i n t h e L i b r a r y of Queens College, O x f o r d (abbrev. 0. Q. C.), a limestone fragment measuring 17,5x13 cm., containing the text of Anast. I3,4-4,1 with sundry additions. Brought back from Egypt b y BELZONI.Hitherto unpublished. 6. O s t r a c o n in t h e T u r i n M u s e u m (abbrev. 0. T.), a duplicate of Annst. I 6,5-7,3, on a fragment of limestone measuring 21x18 cm. Published PL.EYTE-ROSSI, Papyrus de Tzliin, plate CXLIX. Collated with the original. 7. O s t r a c o n in t h e L o u v r e (abbrev. 0. L.), a potsherd neatly inscribed with the Sur uiz text of Annst. I 8,3-g,~. An admirable facsimile is given by J. DE HORRACIC, ostrncon du f i A d e du Louvre in the Zeitschrzftf.r iigyptische Sprache 6 (1868)~ I--6, reprinted in the Bibliothhque Egj.ptologiqzie t. 17, p. 60-69. Here transcribed from the publication. 8. O s t r a c o n Cailliaud (abbrev. 0. C.), one of several inscribed fragments of limestone described as itrouv& dans les hypogkes de Gournah A Thkbes, containing the same passage as the Louvre ostracon in a slightly inferior but closely related version. A t the end there is a mention of the Vizier To, who lived in the reign of Rameses 111. A n adequate Y o y q e ii ZOnsis de Thkbes (deuxihme partie, facsimile is given in FREDERIC CAILLIAUD, pl. 25, no. I ; and thence CHARAS, op. cit., pl. 12. Transcribed from the publications. Paris 1862)~ 9. O s t r a c o n i n t h e B e r l i n c o l l e c t i o n (abbrev. 0. B.), a potsherd (P. 11236) coiitaining the text of Anast. I9,9-10,4, but with extensive lacunae. A small fragment of this potsherd which was acquired for the Leipzig collection together with bther ostraca has now been joined to the larger portion in Berlin. Published in Hie?patisc/zePnpyras nus dez ko~z&Zicheiz L%fZ.S&FZ zu BerliTz, Bd. 111, Tafel 28. My transcript is made from the original. IO. P a p y r u s in t h e T u r i n M u s e u m (abbrev. P. T.), a badly-written palimpsest, 21 cm. in height and 45 cni. in breadth, bearing upon the recto, i. e. upon the horizontal fibres, a duplicate of Aiznst. I 12,G-151. The verso gives the full titulature of Rameses IV. Pn$~wzisde Tzwin, pl. 62 (the wrso, pl. 63). Collated Published in facsimile PLEYTE-ROSSI, for the present edition with the original. Bibliographical notice. The third and last instalnient (1S44) of the Select Papyri (first series) contains some prefatory remarks, by Samuel BIncI-r, on the manuscripts comprised in the entire work. Here we find A~znstnsiI characterised as a continuous series of statements made apparently by a royal scribe in command of the troops, and the various paragraphs into which the papyrus is divided are briefly and somewhat vaguely summarized. Some years later Dr. HINCICSset himself to study the foreign place-names in the latter portions of the text, and in the E ~ ~ ~ Z S L ofW the ~Royal ~ O JIrish Z S Acndeiizy for 1848 was able to announce the discovery of the names of Berytus, Sidon and Sarepta. Consecutive translations, b y Dr. BIRCH,of certain passages interesting for their geographical data were embodied in a paper entitled Repknim nizd their comexion with Egyptian History, which Miss Fanny CORBAUX published in the yoz~ri~nl of Sac?*edLiterature for January 1852. In H. BRUGSCHS Aegypteizs (Geogmnphische Inschrgtm nltag-.ptisc/zer volume Die Geogrnphie der Nachba?#Z&zder De?zzlt.inhle?p, zweiter Band, Leipzig 1858) constant reference is made to our papyrus, and many of the Syrian towns mentioned in it are brilliantly identified. A remarkable attempt to cope with the difficulties of the text was next made by GOODWIN in his epoch-making not only gives a short article on Hieratic Papyri in the Cnmbri&e Essays of 1858; GOODWIN analysis of the entire composition from beginning to end, but also translates a considerable part of the last ten pages, often with astonishing accuracy and success. It is hardly to be wondered at if at this stage the literary tendency of the document was not yet recognized; GOODWIN
I ) I am greatly indebted to M. CAPART for calling my attention to this ostracon and giving me permission to publish it; and to Prof. SPIEGELBERG for surrendering his prior claim in my favour.
Anastasi I
3*
pronounced it to be the biographical memoir of a scribe, written by his pupil, and addressed to the object of the memoir himself. Much the same view was taken by Fransois CHABAS in his justly celebrated work Voyage dun Earyptien en Syrie, en Phenicie, en Palestine, &c; nu X I V m e sihcle nvnizt notre &e, published with GOODWINS collaboration in 1866. The book, a bulky quarto, is chiefly concerned with the last ten pages of the papyrus, which CHABAS regarded as the authentic narrative of a voyage in Syria retold to the scribe who had undertaken it b y his pupil. This portion of the text is dealt with in great detail, the translation being accompanied by an elaborate philological commentary. For the earlier parts of the papyrus CHABAS is content to give trailslations or abstracts of the sense, though allowing himself occasional digressions on linguistic points. The importance of the book as a contribution to Egyptian philology was at the time of its appearance very considerable, its renderings marking a great advance on what had thitherto been achieved. CIIABAS conception of the text as a whole is superior to that of GOODWIN only in the recognitioii of the fact that the writer here and there complains of his correspondents style, and when attacked defends himself against the latters sdathing comments. A n ill-tempered review of CHAEAS nzagnum opz~s was printed by BRUGSCH in the Revue Critique of 1867 1 , and led to an acrimonious controReyonse h In C~itiqz~e (Chalon-sur-Sa6ne and Paris, versy between the two scholars. CHABAS 1868; recently reprinted in Bibliothique Egyptologique, tome I I, p. 203-340) is not wholly lacking in scientific interest, but contains a preponderance of recrimination hardly to be excused by the fact that it certainly was not unprovoked. BRUCSCHS critique had the merit of showing the voyage recounted in the papyrus in a much truer perspective than theretofore; it was now seen to be no authentic relation of travels in Syria, but an imaginative picture of the perils attendant on such travels, the object being, as RRUGSCH thought, to deter the colleague addressed from fancying himself equal to heroic enterprises of the kind.2 This approximates very closely to the view of the text that is now accepted. In a pamphlet sought to prove that the Mohar, i. e. the which appeared in 1868 F. J. LAUTH, Egyptian traveller whose adventures in Syria are described in Annstasi 4 was none other than the biblical Moses (Moses der Ebraer nnch zwei agyptisckeiz Pnpyvzts- Uf,Kunden in Schriftnrt, Miinchen, 1868). This hypothesis, which was principally based on Annst. I hie?*atischer 18, 2, has deservedly passed into oblivion, but the book merits more attention than it has received on account of the complete translations of Annstasi I and Pap. Leiden 350 (recto) contained in its appendices; here LAUTH shows himself, according to his wont, as enterprising, acute; and unsound. Considerable portions of the first ten pages of the papyrus were translated by MASPERO in his thesis Du Genre kpistolnive chez Zes anciens Eg-$tiexs (Paris 1872)~ p. 106-114. For thirteen years after this no event of importance has to be recorded in the bibliographical history of the papyrus. A n English version of CHABAS and GOODWINS translation by S. M. DRACH was printed in the Records o f the Past (first series, no date) vol. 2, p. 107-116 under the title Travels o f niz Egyptian. A fragmentary papyrus in Turin and an ostracon in the Louvre were recognized as containing portions of the text of Azastnsi I; an ostracoii practically identical with that in the Louvre had long since been published by CAILLIAUD and used in CHABAS book.3 In 1885 Adolf ERMANS work Aegypten uizd agyptisches Lebeiz appeared, shedding new light on almost every province of EgyptoI ) Also obtainable separately at the Librairie A. Franck in Paris under the title Exalnen Critique du Livre de M . Chabas intituld Voyage dun Egyptien e n Syvie, e n Phenicie, e n Palestine, &c. a u
4"
logical science. Here the first Annsfnsi papyrus obtained its due in the shape of an admirable analysis interspersed with translations (p. 508-513); and the real subject of the book was lucidly and convincingly proved to be a literary controversy between two scribes, the form adopted being that of a letter pretending to be the answer to an ill-worded and pretentious comgeneral interpretation requires hardly any modificatioii today, and his munication. ERMAN'S translations need but little change, though naturally the latter embrace only the more easily intelligible and picturesque passages. For the past five and twenty years no dew edition or translation has to be noted, so that for complete, or nearly complete, renderings of the papyrus recourse must still be had to the works of CHABAS and LAUTH. A hieroglyphic transcription of Anast. I 18,3 to 28,s (the voyage) is given in E. A. W. BUDGE'S Egyptian Rending Rook (18%) p. 157-169, and in the larger edition of the same work (1896) p. 274-294. The geographical problems are minutely discussed in W. MAX MULLER'SAsien und Ezlropn nach altizgyptischen De?&= intilern (1893), particularly pp. 172-175. MASPERO has dealt with two passages of the voyage in his articles Entrp Yoppe' et Mngeddo in the &tudes . . . de'die'es h N le Dr. C. Lee?nnns, p. 4-6; and Notes SZM la ge'ographie kgyptienne de In Syrie, 1 1 1 in the Recueil de Tvnvnux 19, 68-73; SPIEGELBERG has given a rendering of, and commentary on, 9,4-10,6 under the title Eine Pyobe der 2gyptischen personlichen Sative in his %eitrage zzw ErKGiiiwzg des Papyrz~sAnnstasi 1 (A. Z 44 [1908], 118-125). A fine ostracon belonging to the Bibliothi.que Nationale, Paris, and supplementing the beginning of the papyrus is also published in the last-named article.
General remarks. The composition contained in the first Aitlastnsi papyrus was written certainly not earlier, but probably also not later, than the reign of Rameses 11, the name of that king occurring in several passages (12,3; IS$: 27J. 5). Of the ten ostraca and papyri preserving greater or less portions of the text none is of more recent date than about the middle of the 20th. Dynasty; and this quite unusual number of manuscripts, scattered over so brief a period, bears eloquent testimony to the popularity which the work enjoyed in the Ramesside schools. Nor is its popularity hard to explain, if the standards of taste current in those times are carefully borne in mind. In the first place the theme upon which the entire composition turns is the profession of the scribe, and no lesson was more assiduously instilled into the mind of the Egyptian schoolboy than the belief in the dignity and the advantages of that career. Thus from one aspect Annstasi I ought to be regarded ' as akin to the numerous effLisions in which the student is bidden apply himself diligently to the art of writingf, or where other occupations are invidiously compared with the labours of the scribe2. Secondly, its wealth of topics and consequent variety of vocabulary must have given the text particular value as a model of style and as a means of teaching orthography. The abundant use made of foreign words and the display of erudition with regard to outlandish place-names agree well with what we know of the predilections of the age3. Lastly, the good-humoured raillery which is the dominant note of the papyrus springs from one of most attractive sides of the Egyptian temperament. Hints of the Egyptian's love of repartee and appreciation of irony may be found in the snatches of conversation written above the scenes on the walls of tombs, or in the paintings and sculptures themselves, or in the rare caricatures that have survived, and samples are to be found here and there in the literature 4 ; but nowhere are these attributes more strikingly illustrated than in
See ERMAN, Aegypten p. 442 foll. E. g . Anust. I V 9, 4 foll. 3) See ERMAN, Aegypten p. 683. 4) See especially the letter Pup. Babl. Nut. 198, du Temps des Rois-PY&tvesp. 68-74.
I)
2)
Anastasi I
Aizastnsi 1 : If it must be confessed that the quality of the wit is poor, and that the satirical vein is intolerably insistent, still, that a Ramesside author should so well have understood to use language in a way not immediately suggested by its plain face-value is an achievement to be respected. The whole character of the book would make it impossible to translate satisfactorily into any modern language, even if its vocabulary were more familiar to us. As it is, our ignorance of many of the actual words often leaves the sense totally obscure; and the difficulties are further increased by the frequency of the lacunae and by the textual corruptions. In the rare cases where more than two manuscripts are preserved Anastnsi I is as a rule found to stand alone in its readings; the Brussels ostracon agrees closely with that of the Biblioth6que Nationale, the Cailliaud ostracon still more closely with that of the Louvre. Possibly the reason may be that Anastnsi I i s a Memphitic textl, whereas the ostraca without exceptioii are of Thebaii provenance. Perhaps of all the sources the Louvre ostracon has the least corrupt text; the most corrupt is certainly the Turin papyrus. As for Annstasi 4 in many passages it is obviously in error (see for a particularly glaring case 4~); but it would not be wise in the present state of our knowledge to pronounce a very definite verdict on the degree of its inaccuracy. The language is similar to that of other literary texts of the period, i. e. a mixture between the vulgar spoken dialect and the old classical style.
The argument. (I) The scribe Hori, a man of great erudition and celebrity, etnployed in the Royal stables, (11) writes to his friend the scribe Amenemope, (111) wishing him all prosperity in this world and all happiness in the next, (IV) Hori writes to say that his friends letter reached him at a moment of leisure; bis joy at its reception was lessened by a perusal of the contents, which appeared to him to be very mediocre. (V) In spite of his having called many helpers to his aid, Amenemope has contrived to make a bad job of the commission he was called upon to perform. (VI) Hori will now reply in a letter of the same kind, and will excel Amenemope a t every point, dealing with the very same topics. At the outset Amenemope has had the discourtesy to omit the usual salutations. (VII) H e has also expressed his contempt of Horis ability. The latter replies ironically, naming various persons who have attained to positions of ease and wealth in spite of some ludicrous moral or physical defect; the exact point of the answer is not clear. (VIII) Hori goes 011 to poke fun at his friends pretensions to learning and ends by advising him not to meddle with ancient lore. (IX) Accused of having no right to his title of scribe, Hori refers Amenemope to the official registers. (X) An obscure competition between the rivals. (XI) Again accused of being no true scribe, Hori asks that the god Onuris shall be appealed to as arbiter. (XII) When commanded to undertake any difficult calculation, Amenemope either turns to others for advice, or else fails to give any answer; this is illustrated by several examples, the building of a ramp, (XIII) the transport of an obelisk, (XIV) the erection of a colossus, and (XV) the furnishing of supplies for the troops on a foreign military expedition. (XVI) Amenemope has laid claim to the title of Maher; Hori replies by enumerating a number of places in Northern Syria never visited by Amenernope, and an imaginary picture of the latter enduring the discomforts of the Mahers life is conjured up. (XVII) Amenemope is questioned as to the towns of Phoenicia (XVIII) and as to the towns further southwards. (XIX) Sundry other places frequented by the Maher are named, and Amenemope is imagined as experiencing the adventures of the Mahers life - the traversing of a precipitous region, the danger from wild beasts, the breaking of the chariot, the arrival at Joppa, and finally the repairing of the chariot and the start 011 a new journey. (XX) Hori cross-examines his friend as to the places on the high-road to Gaza, and finds him totally ignorant of them.
I)
I-Ie regards his own superiority as now fully proved, and bids Amenemope not to be angry but to listen coolly; in this way he too will learn to discourse about foreign parts and the incidents of travel.
The goddess of writing. 3) Thoth of Hermopolis Magna. 4) Variant 0. P. his hall. 5 ) 0.P.obviouslybetter teacher of subordinates. 6 ) 0. P. continues differently thus: [skilled in(?)] his profession; knowing the secrets of heaven and earth . . ; there is none who repels(?) . . . . . in writing. First of his fellows in the midst of his neighbours; chief of his contemporaries, they are not equal [to him]; teacher of subordinates in the office of writing; his merit is proved in every stripling. Lamp.. . . (end). 7) Literally: one makes sure of him for every stripling, i. e. he is a successful teacher of the young; ivt nan m cf. WEILL, Sinai 63,s. In 0. P. this sentence more appropriately follows sb3y n &&-<. 8 ) That PY h v d-tf is not to be taken with hwnw n b (every stripling who passes through his hands) seems probable from 0. P. should perhaps be omitted. 9) ip d-t to apprehend, take stock of (ones own) body, an Egyptian phrase for to have ones wits about one, cf. Pyr. 2084; Leiden V 93; Urk. IV 160. - The preposition hr is superfluous. IO) Emend hr-s referring to s3v-t? 1 1 ) The reading i t n is rather uncertain. 12) Reading sp_hr, cf. 12, I. I 3) 11%-t, 3 bw-t charm of appearance [love. liness of appearance; cf. esp. A n a s t . I I I q , ~ z ; O s t rBrit.
2)
.. .
. ..
..
H v
- T w t , a rare adjective meaning pleasant delightful or the like, cf. Cairo, Hymn to Amon I I J ; twt h3-t, epithet of Ptah, MAR, Denzd. I 39c. 71; I1 57d: twt k d epithet of Osiris, ROCHEM., Edfou I 1 5 , 37; I 317. 14) M i ir-sn, cf. Ostr. B r i t . Mus. 29549. IS) Variant Ostv. Bibl. ATat. (0. B . N.) all that goes out over his limb (read lip) is mixed with honey. 16) M r i , cf. BURCHARDT, Aliknnaanaische Fvemdworte (henceforth cited as BURCH.) no. 466. 17) Shpr, cf. p ih n shpr, PIEHL,Inscr. 111 45. Nfrw, wrongly determined in A n a s t . I ; cf. Piankhi 64; 0. R.N. variant htri. I S ) Mniti cf. Sall. I I 4, 9 ; Pap. Turin 147, col. 2, I 2, and possibly Pap. Kahun 14, 5 ; here metaphorically. 19) Variant 0. B. N. excellent cultivator of his position. 20) An obscure phrase thus to be rendered literally; sense perhaps outstripping all his olde colleagues. 21) 0. B. N., supported in part by the Brussels ostracon, continues as follows: - wzb-priest of Sekhme, excellent (?) beyond (?) men of the future (?); directing the two limits of time according to their needs(?); over the secrets of the horizons; keen in converse, never yielding (?); servant of Wsrti, admitted to sacred ground; not revealing (?) what he knows to the H3w-nb; web-priest of Sekhme, Hori son of Onnofre.
Mus. 29549.
Anastasi I
who looses the yoke, [Hori] son of Onnofre of the region of Abydos, island of the just; born of Tewosre in the district of Belbeis, singer of Ubast in S @ [ ~ Z L Y ] ~ .
2,s
I ) For i w m3tizu, an epithet of Abydos, see below p. 15,l. 5 ; Havhotep 93. 506; Totb. ed. NAV., 17, 24. 2 ) Bvs-t, Belbeis on the border of the desert in the Bubastite nome, see NAVILLE, M o u n d of the Jew p. 22. 23. 3) The region of Bubastis, cf. BR., Dict. Gdogr. 381; Proc. S . B. A . 13,36. 4) The name of Horis rival was read Nht-stp by ERMAN; the version of 0. B. N . finally disproves this view. For mi nht cf. below I ~ J ; A n a s t . I;S 5,1; Urk. IV 654. 659, there varying with mi n n&w, 654. 655. 5) Variant 0. B. N.: - Beloved of all men, without fault, charming, pleasant and praiseworthy (?) in the sight of others. 6 ) M t n w n b of all sorts, cf. Koller 4 7 ; H a r r i s I 72, 5 ; Rec. de Trav. 30, 216. 7 ) This and the following epithets are lacking in 0. R. N .
8) Restored from 0. B . N. 9) The name of a god (e. g. Nepri) must be supplied. IO) For this word cf. Anast. 111,5,z; instead of his it is just possible to read thy. 11) @tp m, cf. Anast. I I I 4,s. 12) Read vw-t for mvh (?). But ( z 3 t i might be read tz3t-t Lfinest oil; then the sentence would read thy oil being of the best [like ( ?)I the Just (I?). I 3) Elsewhere always Onuiis-Shu; he was the son of Re with the high plumes lord of Thinis. 14) W-p&(r), the burialplace of Osiris in Abydos, article A. 2.41 (1904), 107-110. see SCHAFERS 15) The ostracon in Queens College, Oxford (0. Q.C.) here inserts: mayest thou eat (?) bread and herbs (7) in the Region of Food (i3-t &3); may there be presented to thee offering-loaves made beside (the god?), besprinkled from the two dsr-t vases with the water of _T3w-wr.
the train of Sokaris; mayest thou join the crew of the Neshmet barki, without being turned back; mayest thou see the sun in heaven when he opens the year; may Anubis attach for thee thy head to thy bones2; mayest thou come forth from the Hidden Place3, without being destroyed; mayest thou [behold] the sheen4 in the Netherworld as it passes by thee; may Nun5 be abundant in thy domain, may he inundate thy path, may he overflow (the land to) seven ells (depth) beside thy tomb6; mayest thou sit at the rivers brink in thy moment of repose; mayest thou lave thy face and thy hand; mayest thou receive offerings; ma? thy nose inhale7 the breeze; mayest thou relax thy throat; the clothes of Tayt(?)8 . . , . . . . . . . ; may Nepri give thee bread, and Hathor beerg; mayest thou may the best oils(?) be opened for(?) suck a t the breast of the Cow S&iyyt-@riO; theell; mayest thou enter . . . . . . . . . . ., mayest thou set him on his seat; may the Ushebti-figures receive thee(?) . . . . . . . . carrying sand from the East to the West; mayest t h o u . . . . . . . . [the goddess in] thy sycamore, may she moisten thy throat; mayest thou repel [thy enemies (?); mayest thou be p~werful(?)~ on] earth, mayest thou be brighti4 . . . . . . . . . . ., mayest thou be justified in heaveni5 . , . . . . . . . ; mayest thou descend to the . . . . . . . . , without being 4,5 destroyed; mayest thou make thy transformations as thou listest like the Phoenix, every form of thine being a god when thou . . , . , . , . , .
. . .
of Hathor with beer, cf. Deslructio.ii of M a n k i n d (Sethos) 23. IO) Snk m mnd to suck at the breast cf. Pap. Lezden 343, recto 6 1 1 ; to suckle at the breast Urk. IV 237. 239; and for the cow Sb3yt-Hr in this context cf. P y r . 1375; CAPART, Recueil 148. 11) Very doubtful; read wn n k instead of wn-k (?). 12) S j d to grasp occurs once on a M . K . coffin (A.2. 47 [ I ~ I O ] ,101); here meaning and construction are obscure. 13) Read wsr-k (?). 14) It is tempting to find in this damaged passage a variation of the common formula mayest in heaven, mayest thou be thou be bright (is@) powerful on earth, mayest thou be justified in the netherworld, In this case the spelling of is&-k here would need some alteration. 15) One expects dw3-t; see last note. 16) Lit. of resting for a while. 17) For gm-z I found emend gm-wi found me cf. Sznache R 19.
Anastasi I
and was glad, I made ready to reply1. I entered into my stable2 to examine thy letter. I found it consisted neither of praises nor of insults3. Thy utterances confuse this with that, all thy words are perverted, they are not coherent4. All 5,1 thy writing is . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . mixing(?) [evil things] with choice, the best with . . . . . . . Thy sayings are [not(?)] sweet; they are not bitter. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . with honey; thou dost excel must mingled with unmellowed wine 5.
.................
* >
but not excellent(?). As for me, when [I] say [to] thee . . . . . . . . . . . speak coolly(?)7. Thy speeches . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . perturbed(?), to frighten me(?)8. But I feel no awe before thee, I know thy nature, I feel sureg that thou wilt answer itio alor,e by thyselfi1. But loi2, thy protector^'^ stand behind thee; thou hast assembled many . . . . . . . . of(?) helpersi4 such as thou wouldst (collect(??)) for a bench of judges15. Thy looks are troubled, whilst thou standest coaxing the assistants(?)16 and saying: Come (join) with me and lend a hand to me! Thou
I ) HY r, cf. especially R., I. H . 227, 62. @sf to answer a letter (S-f), clear in P a p . Lezden 365 verso 3; 367, 6. Cf. too Lezpzig ostracon 5, verso; beLow 5, 5 ; 7, 4; 28, 5. 2 ) Smm-t has more than one meaning: (I) stable cf. P i a n k h i 109. 113. 114; 3 vz imm(-t), a title, SaZZ. I 4, I O ; ( 2 ) granary, certain from P a p . T u r z n 51, 4 (fern.); cf. also P a p . T u r i n 100, 5.
7; r57, 3 (masc.); (3) as part(?) of a magazine full of sand employed in the erection of a colossus, below 16,8. 3) The sense of shwri as insults offensive words is fixed by 8, 2 and by P a p . Bibl. N u t . 198, 2 , recto 4; 6, 2 below is very obscure. 4) _Ts lit., tied connected 5) P w r , a kind of wine drunk by the servants cf. Anast. I V 16, I = Anast. III 8, 2 ; together with irp and Sdh, A n a s t . I V 7, 4 ; in the Golenischeff Vocabulary (7, 7) next to hm_d vinegar. 6) No new paragraph is marked in the original, but I have indicated one in the translation, since the writer here passes o n to review the way in which he imagines Amenemope must have written his letter. The first sentences are utterly obscure owing to the lacunae. Hori finds to his surprise that Amenemope has taken other scribes to help him-with his writing, having won their assistance by giving them presents. From 6, 3 and the following lines it appears that Amenemopes letter was in some way concerned with the fetching of grain from the granary for the rations of the soldiers; here too Amenemope had proved his incompetence, his accounts being confused and inexact. The last sentences of the section are difficult to understand.
G a r diner.
7) K b , lit. cool, coolly occurs in several obscure sentences in A n a s t . I . Almost certainly vain, meaningless in 13, I . Sense doubtful here In 28, 8 probably dispassionately. and in 7, 8) [Sr]ir(?), cf. Sr[Sr](?)5, 8, a mere guess. R sndzu-i, cf. I I , 4, lit. perhaps for my fear. 9) I b to believe, imagine, again below 24,8 ; also Shipwrecked Sailor 58 ; perhaps already QUIBELL, Excavations a t Saqqava I11 p. 83, 1. I O (0. K.). IO) H s f , see n. I on this page. The suffix refers to 5-t the letter. I I) Hr tp-k, cf. 7,6; Sall. III 8, 7; rather differently 5 , 7 end. 12)The authors expectations are deceived; Amenemope gets others to help him with his letter. 13) Read wwnf, as is hinted by the variant o f the Louvre Ostracon to 9, I. For the word, which jn late texts is parallel to n h y and n_d, both of them meaning protector, cf. Siut 3 , 3 ; Mzllingen 2, 2 ; Rec. de Trav. 4, 131; P i a n k h i 124; Goshen 2, I ; ROCHEM., Edf0.u I 278. 280. 542; I1 39. 47. 14) Kpw is a word used for men who, together with whw, bring tribute of wild fowl Harris I 12 b, 6; 32b,9; 69,8; the title 3 R. kpze,, P a p . Bibl. N u t . 203, 4. 5. 6 (= SPIEGELBERG, Rechnungen). - For dr, in Hebrew IW, see the references BURCH. no. 303. 15) The sense may be guessed to be thou hast enough helpers to compose a whole bench of judges in a court of justice. A verb is perhaps lost after iwk. 16) P s d y again in 9, 2, and in the plural ny-w p s d y parallel to ny-ze, & their helpers in an obscure context Petrze Ustracon 6 (a fragmentary hymn to Amon).
. :
ro*
presentest them with giftsi, each man separately, and they say to thee: Take heart, we will overcome himg. Thou standest p e r t ~ r b e d ( ? ).~ . . . . . . . . . before them(?); and they sit deliberating, the six scribes. Thou hastenest with them . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . seven(?)4. Thou givest two section^(?)^ in charge to each man, and completest thy letter again. [One] (scribe ~pealts[?]j praises, two (utter [?I) insults(?)6. A n ~ t h e r ( ? ) stands ~ and examines them according to the rules. [The fifth] says: DO not hurry, be patient about it in making (it) perfect. The sixth hastens to measure the [corn(?)I9;he exerts himself(?)1to have it delivered1. The seventh stands at (his) side in the act of receiving the rations for the soldiers. Thy listsx2 are confused, and cannot be made right. Kharofi3 plays the deaf man and will not hearken, H e takes an oath by Ptahx4 saying: I will not let the seali5 be set upon the granary. H e goes forth in a ragexG. By what (number) of bushels is one short(?)I7? (What[?]) is the loss of pints in it for every measure? Beholdlg thou art a scribe in command of the army. Men hearken to what thou sayest, thou art not disregarded! Thou art clever as a scribe, there is nothing thou dost not know! Thy letter is deemed too second-
I ) B r k is akin to the Hebrew 3313, see BURCII. no. 360 for references. 2 ) I. e. probably Amenemopes rival, the author of the book. 3) See above p. g*, n. 8. 4) The sense may be in order to get a seventh scribe. Without some such statement there would be a curious contradiction between the mention of the six scribes in the preceding sentence and the naming of a seventh below in 6,4. 5) Sd-t is found again only in 7, 8 ; the sense may be columns, pages, sections (cf. the German Spalte). 6) For jzsy and s@wi see above p. 9*, n. 3 ; jzv is possibly the common ellipse for hv _dd (see ERMAN, A e g . Gramm.2 Q 380). The different kind of aid rendered by the seven scribes is here detailed. Three apparently assist in the actual composition of the letter, one suggesting complimentary things, and two supplying insulting or unpleasant phrases (cf. 4, 7. 8 for the mixed nature of Amenemopes letter). A fourth scribe contents himself with criticism, while a fifth is lavish of encouraging words. The sixth and seventh scribes busy themselves with the practical task connected with the letter (see p. 9*, n. 6), namely the fetching of grain from the granary. 7 ) P h y the other must refer to the fourth scribe, but the presence of the definite article is disconcerting. 8) For the formation of ordinal numbers with prefixed p-ntz, see SETHE i n d . 2 . 3 8 goo), 144-145. 9) RIat the end of the line should perhaps be omitted. Sd-twf in 6, 4 shows that a word for corn or the like is lost in the lacuna. IO) The sense is guessed
Sd is shown by the Pap. Rollin ( P a p . Bibl. 205) and other documents to have been the technical term for withdrawing corn from the granary; Sp, conversely, is the term for receiving it when withdrawn. 12) For wp-wt specifications see GRIFFITH on P a p . KaJtun g, 2 and my own note Admonitions P. 48. 13) Hrize-f is the pretended name of the superintendent of the granary. 14) Ptah is invoked as the lord of Truth, cf. 8,4. 15) gt [a seal (quite distinct from h t m signet-ring) cf. Abbott 5, 8 ; Inscr. . . h e r . Char. 18, 6: P a p . T u r i n 51, 4 ; in demotic see SPIEGELBERG, Petzdbastis, index no. 314. The Turin passage well illustrates what is here meant. After the government granaries had beeneopened, the proper official closed them again with his own seal, this serving as a token that he had cognisance of the proceeding. 16) Hdn to be angry, cf. below 28,s; Unamon I, x 8; 2,46; P a p . Bibl. Nat. rg8, 2,4; Max. dAnii 2, 5 ; P a p . B r i t . Mzx. 10,335 (Proc. S . B. A. IO, 44). 17) G3b may have a somewhat similar sense below 7, I . The T u r i n Ostvacon (0. T.) has tw-k g3b-2i art thou short instead of twtw g3b. IS) This sentence is obscure grammatically. Leipzig Ostracon z deals with a complaint of the workmen that the measure (ip-t ome) used for measuring their rations showed a shortage of pints (hn-w). 19) The next sentences, down to disregarded are wanting in 0. T . 20) For zun neglect see SETHE, Einsetzung des Veziers p. 21, n. go. These sentences are of course ironically meant.
I I)
N u t . 204.
Anastasi I
I I*
rate(?)I to be listened to. Thou hast parted from(?) thy papyrus to no purpose(??). Thou didst enter3 knowing beforehand(?): it is not good(?); do cause it to be brought, saying: the . . . . . . . are continually . . . . . . .5 at my fingerends(?), like a book of incantations(?) at the neck of a sick manfi; it is continually . . . . . , it does not tire of being fastened by the thread of my ring.
..
I reply to thee in like fashionS, in a letter newly (-composed) from the first
word(?)9, down to the finis(?)l0, filled with expressions of my lips invented by myself alone, none other being with me. By the might of Thothl! I made it by myself, without summoning any scribe that he might help. I will give thee more thaii(?)I3 twenty themes(?), I will repeat for thee what thou hast said, (every) theme in its place, (from) the fourteen columns(?)l4 (of) thy letter. Take for thyself(?)l a sheet of papyrus; I will tell thee many things, and will pour out for thee choice words16. - T h e Nile spreads abroad (its) flood when(?) the inundation season is bright(??);it takes possession of the - All my words are sweet and pleasant in the saying(?)aS;I do not act as thou dost when [I] invoke(?) thee. Thou startest with insults to me; thou dost not salute me at the beginning of thy letter. Thy words are far from me, they do not come near (me); for Thoth,
I) S-&ri- seems to mean to underestimate (causative from _hvi- subordinate) in 8, 7; 17,6. Here possibly to think inferior. Obscure in P a p .
9) A corrupt word.
8,r
T u r i n 146, 11.
Very uncertain. G3b-ti (so 0. T.) may mean [thou art bereft of, short of, see p. IO*, n. 17. For k b cf. p. g*, n. 7 . - 0.T . here adds an obscure sentence. 3) The final sentences of the section are exceedingly obscure, and my translation is merely tentative. What may be meant is that Amenemope, though aware of the inferior quality of his writing, yet boasts that he has his learning at his finger-tips, and that it clings to him as closely as the magical charm round the neck of a sick man. 4) Grammatically it would be also possible to translate it is not good that thou shouldst not cause it to be brought, tm-k then being infinitive (see SETHE, Verbum I1 5 587. But this gives no sense. T m - k may be the sdm-f form optatively used, a use perhaps confined to Anast. I; cf. g, 7(?); 13,4;28, 7. 5) B-g and w-t-m are unknown words. 6) Charms were often hung around the necks of sufferers; compare for example the directions given in ERMAN, Zaubevs9r. f. Mutter u. K i n d 1,4; 8 , ~ ; .7 . 9, 3 7) H s 3 , in Coptic p c , cf. Harris I 13b, 3; 21 a, S; 52b, 2. SPIEGELBERG gives an archaeological illustration A. 2. 44 (1go7),123. 8) Lit. with the like of it, scil. of your letter.
2)
Rec. de Trao. 27, 2 0 5 . 16) Stp-w, cf. 2, 6 ; 5, I. 17) The simile here abruptly inserted clearly
alludes to the copiousness of the writers eloquence, - The construction of bk 3h-t is quite obscure, I3d-t cf. Eloquent Peasant B I, 143; Totb. ed. NAV. 169,5 ; L., D. I11 140b,8; Dachel stele 12; MAR.,
12
8,s
my god, is a shield about me. By the might of Ptah, the Lord of Truth, . . , . . . . . . . . . . . Behold make thy words so that(?) they come to pass; make every utterance of thy mouth into every (kind of) enemy. (Yet[?]) shall I be buried in Abydos [in] the abode of my father; for I ani the son of Truth in the city of the Lord(?)3(of Truth). I shall be buried among my compeers(?) in the hill of the Sacred Land. Wherefore am I (as) a reprobate in thy heart? Then visit(?) it (upon me[?])4. T o whom have I recalled thee with an evil r e ~ a l l i n g ? I ~ will make for thee a volumeG as a pleasant jest (so that) thou becomest the sport of everybody.
..
I ) Note that w3 v hpv means come to pass, not are far from happening, see Adwzonitions p. 53. - If I grasp the drift of these sentences it is: (DO thy very worst, make thy words as hostile as thou wilt; yet thou canst not prevent my being buried in Abydos in the tomb of my father. It is significant that the name of the writer is Hori, and that of his father Onnofre. - The Louvre and Cailliaud ostraca (0.L. a n d 0 . C.) omit from By the might of Ptah down to come to pass. 2) Variant 0. L. and 0. C. tomb. 3 ) A n a s t . I has n-t nb, which can hardly here mean every town; I therefore take n b as lord and assume that M3-t has been erroneously omitted. 0. L. and 0. C. have I am the son of Right (Truth) in the island of the Righteous i. e. Abydos, see p. 7*, n. I. 4) Lit. then thou bringest it. The ostraca have wlsy-k wi, which suggests a similar meaning; wjs sometimes means to inform against, accuse, see ERMANS note on Westcnv 12, 23. 5) The text of the papyrus is corrupt; 0. L. supplies the true reading and, together with 0. C., gives the variant with evil words for with a bad recalling. 6) Shvy seems to be the technical word for a papyrus; so gsti hn shv-t, palette and papyrus Decvee of Havemheb, 13; shy-t n S-t a papyrus-
i b l .N a t . 198, I , 19; letter P a p . Leiden 369; P a p . B the same word too above 4,8. 7) 0. L. and 0. C. substitute people rejoice at reading it (sdm to listen to someone reading aloud, practically equivalent to our to read) as it were a sport. 8) Concerning me, so the ostraca. 9) Lit. broken. IO) SJgi-, see above p. II*, n. I . 11) The ostraca have n(3) i r - y i. e. probably have I spent? - 4 3 ) being the equivalent of in. 1 2 ) Mwnf, see above p. 9*, n. 13. 13) Lit.: another is hurting me. - I3d to persecute, hurt, actively, cf. Totb. ed. LEPS., 162,3; R., I. W . 141,21. 14) P s d y , see above p.9*, n. 16. The author seems to state that he was a helper of other men by royal appointment. The wit of this passage is not very intelligible to the Western mind. 15) Here begins a long descriptive passage where various persons with moral or physical defects are named, who yet have attained to wealth and dignities. T h e implication seems to be that Amenemope, the royal scribe, is only one grade better than them. SPIEGELBERG has dealt with the passage A. 2. 44 (19071, 123-125. 16) Cf. for example Uvk. IV 61; here however there is not room for v ht n b in the lacuna.
Anastasi I
9,s
13
likeness of the scribe Roy, who was called the firebrand(?) of the granary. He never moved and never ran since (the day of) his birth. He detested the work of an active man, and never (came to) know it. And (yet) he rests in the Amente, his skin whole, and the dread of the Goode God3 overtakes him not. Thou art more(?) foolish4 than(?) Kasa, the reckoner of cattle5. Run(??), for(?) I will tell thee his likeness; do not(?) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6. Thou hast surely heard the name of Amen-wah-se, an old man in [the] Treasury. He passed his lifetime as controller in the workshop beside the armoury. Come let me tell thee of Nakht, I 0 , I him ofs the wine-store; he will please thee ten times better than these. Let me tell thee of P-har-pideg who lives in Heliopolis; [he is an old] man of the Palace. He is smaller (than)10 a cat, and bigger than an ape; he prospers in his house a n d . . . . . . . ., (while[?]) thou wilt be here in the stable for ever(?)l. Thou hast heard the name of Ke-sop(??), the . . . . . . .(?)i2, who moves over the ground ~nnoticed~, di~orderly(?)*~ of attire and tightly swathed15. If thou wert to see him at evening in the darkness, thou wouldst fancy him a passing bird. Put 10,s him in the scale and see how heavy he is. He will come outi6 at ten pounds or even lighter stilli7. If thou blowest beside him as he passes, he will drop down far off like a leaf of foliage. If I tell thee of Wah, him of the cattle-
. .
I) M - k , a &zag ? b ~ y 6 p ~ ~ ~ v . K m ( 3 ) , the Coptic KIM, only here in lateEgyptian. 3) Lit. the dread of the Good God did not take him away. The Good God is a constant epithet of the reigning Pharaoh. It is probably meant that this lazy official is now safe from the resentment of the king his master. 4) Swg is the Coptic cod stultus, insanus, see GRIFFITH, Rylands P a p y r i , p. 232 note 1 2 for the demotic equivalent. In late-Egyptian, cf. swgt i w n mi 3pdw ye were senseless as geese, MAR., Kavnak 5 2 , 17; nhn swg, i w t i it-/ a witless child, without a father, Metternich stele 196. 170 (also 171. 201 not so clearly); m S swg [a foolish expedition, Unamon 2, 23. 22. The comparative more foolish is here doubtful. 5) In the papyrus the verse-point precedes p hsbihw instead of following it; but as all the other names quoted in this passage are accompanied by titles, it is probably misplaced. H p t perhaps imperative of the verb studied in BRUGSCH, Worterb. 949; S u p p l . 81 I. 6) _T-n(r)-han unknown word; _t-r-h, differently spelt, occurs in the sentence do not sin (? _t-r-h) against (m) an aged man or woman when the7 are o l d Petvze Ostvacon I I. BURCHARDTS identification with h5b pardon (no. 1155) gives no suitab!e sense. 7) @pS, cf. below 26, 4; Anast. IV 11, 2 ; elsewhere only in the titles overseer of the workshop ([zm-t) of the armoury of Pharaoh P a p . Bologna 1094, I, 3; and scribe of the workshop of the armoury of Pharaoh zbid. I , 9; 3, 5 ; 4, I ; 5, I ; 7, IO.
2)
8 ) M i n k , abbreviated for m i s_dd-i f i k , cf. A n a s t . 111 s , 9 = Anast. I V 9, 7; also mi nh r, Florence Ostvacon 2619 = A. 2. 17 (1880), 96. P-n for p(3)n cf. below IO, 6; p-n lJt3, Sal1 111 4, 7. In a neuter sense p-n si nb every mans share below 1 7 , ~ p-n ; Imn?atpthe feast of Amenothes Ostr. Queens Coll. Oxford. 9) P-hri-pdt as proper name, cf. A n a s t . V I I 7, 5 ; P a p . B i b l . N u t . 204 col. I , 11 (quoted by
SPIEGELBERG). IO) Emend r m y . 11) R S w is perhaps the equivalent of a Swe in Demotic; cf. P a p . mag. 13, 9; I K h a m . 3, 33; 11 K h a m . 2, 7; 6, 2. However THOMPSON points out that all the Dem. instances are in negative sentences. Another doubtful hieroglyphic example BR., Grosse Oase 16, 32. 12) 3-h-k, an unknown word. 13) The Berlin ostracon (0. B.) shows how the ambiguously-written verb in Anast. I is to be understood. 14) 3-(n)r-f,only again in 24, 1-2; perhaps to be ruffled, originally of hair. IS) Btzd, corruptly written b d n below 28, 3; cf. Totb. ed. LETS. 163,16; P a p . Turin 137,8. 0. B . has here the more appropriate determinatives. 16) Pr, cf. I I , ~ ;SPIEG. further quotes Urh. IV 119. 17) Wi3-tw,see my note A.Z.47(1910),134-136. 18) G3b ,,leaf is the Coptic d w k , Boh. .zrwhr. Dbw is a rarer word with similar meaning, preserved in Sah. Tookkq (SPIEG., Rec. de Trav. 26, 37).
14
stalls, thou wilt reward me with thrice refined(?) gold. I swear by the Lord of Khmun and Nehem-awayt, thou art strong of arm, thou wilt overthrow them3. Let [them(?)] b e examined, these(?) with those. I will smite them with my arm, [nor shall any turn(?)l aside my hands. - Good Sir, my friend, who dost not know what thou sayest, I solve thy riddles; arduous things I make easy!
I. e. Thoth, cf. I, z and note thereon. 3) Sarcastic comfort seems here to be offered to Amenemope; such rivals at least as these he will be able to overcome. 4) Emend nzn svwi? - The meaning of this sentence is very obscure. 5) Mi-pw, a mode of address found again below 14, 8 ; 18, I ; 26,9; and A n a s f . 111 4,4. Doubtless rightly explained by PIEHL, Proc. S . B. B.13, 239--240 as derived from mi-pw who is it? The word is used like the Arabic a&. 6) A royal prince of the age of Mycerinus renowned for his wisdom and literary achievements. See ERMAN, Die Marchen des P a p y r u s Westcar I 18-19. 7) g-n(r)-f, only here. 8) R sndw-i, cf. above 5,4. 9) D d t , unknown word. IO) K-f, only here; perhaps connected with the obscure word g-f, A n a s t . V 7, 2.
2)
.Hf is frequent in Greek timcs for to see, e. g. MAR., Dend. I 43b; I1 60c; in earlier texts here only. 13) In reality, the writer argues, Amenemope knows nothing of the profound mysteries into which he claims to have been initiated. He will therefore do well to refrain altogether from nieddling with the hieroglyphs. 14) The last words of this passage (not understood by me when the text was autographed) should be emended to hb sn-t, cf. Totb. ed. NAV., 17, 2 . The complexities of the art of letters are compared with those of the game of draughts. 15) For iry-k tw m thou dost represent thyself as, cf. 20,4, and the variant of 0. T . to 6,s. - It is very tempting to restore ri-&vi after ry, but the traces are against this. 16) Hr wti, see my Inscription of M e s , p. 17. - With the next words hv mntk Horis rejoinder begins.
Anastasi I
I 5
of heaven are open before thee. Haste thee to the place [of the12 books, that they may let thee see the chest with the register^]^, taking an offering to ili_y-i4 that he may quickly disclose(?) to thee my(?) reputation. Thou wilt find my name upon the roll as officer6 of the great stable of Sese7-miamun. Thou wilt bear witness to the command in the stable (which I hold), for provisions(?)g are enteredg in my name. So I have served as officer! So I have been a 12,s scribe! There is no stripling of thy(?) generation who can measure himself with mei. Let a man inquire from his mother! Hie thee to my superior officers, that they may declare to thee mp reputation.
. . . . . . . .(?)I
X. An imaginary competition in which the writers superiority is proved. Again thou sayest concerning me: A high . . . treei2 is before thee; enter
thou into the difficult(?) . . . . . . tree; thou canst not do it! Enter thou in before me, and I will come after thee. Admit(?)I3, thou hast never approached it, nor canst thou(?) draw nigh to it. If thou discoverest the inner part of it, I have I ~ , I retreated (still further). Beware of laying hands on me in order to pull me out.
. . .
I) A word for [secrets(?); the determinative does not suit <gates. 2) Or t s-t [s3m] sSw the place of the [keepers] of the books. 3) Imi-rnf seems a fairly certain conjecture. 4) This name, which belongs to an imagined keeper of the books, is not found elsewhere. 5) Sml-i, without the possessive article, is found below in 1z,6. The sentence might run; wn-f nk 3[s] [hr(?)] j 1 3 - 2 ( ? ) s m i , but the construction and several words are doubtful. The sense however is obvious. 6) This title, of which the reading and the exact meaning are unknown, occurs in the GoIe9zischeff Vocabulavy (3, IO) between the armour-bearer (j3y hw) and the groom (yn-r-2); for other instances see p. 21 a, note gm. Another hieroglyphic instance Brit. Mus. 321. 7) The shortened form of the name Rameses; the most recent discussion is that of VON CALICE, 8. 2.46 (1909), 111. 8) D-r-w-t, an unknown word. 9) Lit. are in writing. IO) Emend s_tni-f Y (zw-l as in 28, 2 ; and cf. i_t s1n-f n @n-k who can compare himself to thy k j e s t y , MAR., A b y d . I1 54, 11. I I) I h , cf. Paheri 5 ; NAV., Deir-el-Bahavi Sg;
reliefs . . . . . zu Knrlsruhe 7 ; Sphinx stele 11; Leipzig Ostracon 8. 12) It must be assumed that h&w, if this be the
original reading (see critical note), was the name of a lofty tree difficult to climb. Here there is a figurative competition between the two scribes, to see which of them can penetrate farthest into the midst of the tree (the branches?). In idiomatic English it might be said that they are trying to test which of them can get nearer to the top of the tree. The artificiality of the long-sustained metaphor makes it difficult for a modern reader to appreciate. 13) H n occurs several times thus obscurely before a negative, cf. Anast. I V 13, I ; MAR., Kavnak 55, 77; the sense is not by any means certain. 14) These words are omitted in the T u r i n
P a p y r u s ( P . T.). 15) Lit. if thou findest its interior. Variant P. T . if thou art found in its interior. 16) I ( w ) n ( j ) , Coptic an, has here its original
emphatic meaning, cf. A. 2.41 (1904), 130. 17) K b , see above p. 9*, n. 7. 18) A+? @i(w)-t only here; for _d3-t see A. 2. 42 (19051, 58. 19) Dn, a difficult and rather uncertain word, cf. Rec. de Trav. 16, 129; Leipzig Ostracon 23, recto. 20) g - n (&?-&-iw),cf. Israel Stele 14; possibly also R., I . H . 144, 46-47.
Amherst Papyri
20,
I 6*
to exhaust(?)l me(?>. Thou dost harness thyself against me yet again. Thy sayings do injustice; they will not be hearkened to. Let thy letters3 be taken before OnGris4, that he may decide for us who is in the right; do not be angry5.
. . . . . . . . . able
XII. Two instances of the incompetence of Amenemope: in the supplying of rations for the troops, and in the building of a ramp.
Another topic. Behold I am come full of thy office; I cause thee to know how matters stand with thee6 when thou sayest: I am the scribe, commander of soldiers. There is given to thee a lake to dig. Thou comest to me to inquire concerning the giving of rations to the soldiers, and sayest to me: LReckonit out. Thou desertest thy office; the (task of) teaching thee to perform it falls upon my shoulders*. Come, I will tell thee more than thou hast said(?). I will cause thee to be abashed(?). I will disclose to thee a command of thy Lord, since thou art his royal scribe, (since) thou art despatched to conveylo great monuments for Horus, the Lord of the Two Lands. For thou (in sooth) art the clever scribe who is at the head of the soldiers! - There is madeTi a ramp of 730 cubits, with a breadth of 55 cubits, consisting of 1 2 0 compartments(?), filIed12 with reedsi3 and beams, with a height of14 60 cubits at its summit, its
I) Pnk to draw water, or to bale water out Baug. of a boat, the Coptic nwrrr; cf. BORCHARDT, d. Amonstempels 41; Eloquent Peasant, B I, 94, 278; Totb. ed. NAV. 99, 24. Here probably in a metaphorical sense. The determinative in the papyrus n . seems to be borrowed from p 2) Lit. yokest thyself. 3) P. T .has the variant my letters, which is perhaps better; Hori is rebutting an attack upon himself. 4) Oniiris receives the epithet w_d ~ ~ 3 ad 4 judicating the truth on a late stele Leaden VLDJ 4; and a Thinite temple mentioned in Harris I 57, I I ; 61 a, 3 bears the name Rameses judging Truth (wd m3-t) in the house of Oniiris. 5 ) For tnz-k optatively, see p. II*, n. 4. 6) Lit. I cause thee to know thy condition (shy, way, plan, condition). 7) The reading of this common word for rations (ci. 6, 4) is not yet established. Its sense cannot easily be connected that of the stem spd, and it appears to me almost certain that the word is a derivative of d i to give, since the three hieroglyphic examples known to me (TYLOR, T o m b of Sebeknekht 7, 13 [collated]; Uvk. IV 64; Decree of Haremheb, right side) write it with the old triangular sign for di. SETHEhowever points out that the signs for spd and d i are occasionally interchanged in the 18th Dynasty. and quotes U r k . IV 240 as an instance. 8) H r nhbl-i upon my neck; in the same Rekhmara 2, 1.2. metaphorical sense cf. NEWBERRY,
9) F - n ( r ) - g only here with the determinative of evil; with that of weariness, cf. there is none who drives his horses(?) into his neighbourhood; every land is abashed (? hn(r)g) by his power (m k3-j) DE MORGAN, Cat. d . Mon. I 7 (I owe the example to M. D ~ V A U D ) Whether . this word is akin to ?L3g, 6-r-g to be pleased, content, is not clear; for the latter cf. Rzfeh, tomb 7, IO. 26; MAR., A b y d . 1 2 9 ; ROCHEM., Edjou I 74; cf. zhd and the reduplicated form hjggsg. IO) P. T . reads thou art sent beneath the (Royal) balcony with regard to all kinds of goodly works, (when) the mountains are disgorging (read &r kc, cf. Hood I, 2) great monuments etc. I I ) At this point there begins the description of one of three engineering problems by which Amenemopes vaunted skill is to be put to the test and proved non-existent. The technical details are discussed in the Appendix that follows the translation. 12) Anast. I rightly mh, masculine, agreeing with st3; P. T . mh-Li, which could onIy agree with r-g-t. Filled here means provided with, containing ; the literal sense must not be too closely pressed, 13) G-S, in Coptic SLAY (the exceptional equivalence g = K should be noted), cf. A n a s t . I V I b, 3; 13, 11; 14, 7 (= Koller 5, 8); Harvis I 19b, I O ; 72, I ; MAR., Devid. IV 39, 15 I . 14) M b y with a height of, followed by a genitive, cf. Harris I 59, 2.
Anastasi I
I7*
middle of 30 cubits, its batter(?) 1 5 cubits, its base(??) of 5 cubits. The quantity of bricks needed for it is asked of the commander of the army. All the scribes 14,s together lack knowledge among them(?). They put their faith in thee, all of them, saying: Thou art a clever scribe, my friend! Decide for us quickly! Behold thy name is famous; let one be found in this place (able) to magnify3 the other thirty! Let it not be said of thee that there is aught that thou dost not know! Answer us (as to) the quantity of bricks needed! Behold its measurem e n t ~ ( ? ?are ) ~ before thee; each one of its compartments(?) is of 30 cubits (long) and 7 cubits broadj.
XIIL Amenemope is unable to determine the number of men required in the transport of an obelisk of given dimensions.
1 5 9 1
Come, good sir, vigilant scribe, who art at the head of the army, distinguished when thou standest at the great Palace-gates, comely when thou bowest down beneath the Balcony6! A despatch has come from the crown-prince7 at R-Kj8t o rejoice the heart of the Horus of Gold, to extol(?) the raging Lion(?), telling that an obelisk has been newly made, graven with the name of His Majesty, of I I O cubits in length of shaft; its pedestal I O cubits (square), the block at its base making 7 cubits in every direction; it goes in a slope(?) towards the 15,s summit(?), one cubit and one finger(?); its pyramidion one cubit in height, its point(?) (measuring) two fingers. Add them together(??) so as to make them into a list(??), so that thou mayest appoint every man needed to(??) drag them, and send them to the Red Mountain. Behold, they are waiting for
I) M h i b only here exactly-in this sense; but the phrase is used of having confidence in something asserted or believed; see my Inscription of M e s p. 15, n. 23. 2) Variant P. T . thou art keen of wit. 3) I. e. able, by solving the problem, to save the reputation of his colleagues. - Gm with object, closely followed by Y with a n infinitive, is an idiom with various slight shades of meaning e. g. to find someone able, ready, competent to do something. Cf. below 23, 2; 28, 8; P a p . Leiden 370, recto 16; A n a s t . V 9, 4; 17, 7; Turin Lowesongs I , 14. 4) H t i w might mean either (I) pedestals, Lsteps, or (2) threshing-floors; neither of these senses is here suitable. What we clearly need is a word for measurements, and perhaps the original reading was ny-f h3y its measurements; for h3y cf. DARESSY, Ostraca 25262 (Cairo); P a p . Twin 71, I (omitted in facsimile). 5) Amenemope makes no answer, and thesubject is dismissed in silence. 6) SSd, g o a y 7 fenestra; see H~LSCHER, Das hohe T o r won Medinet H a b a , p. 49-50 for a good archaeological illustration.
Gardiner.
7) R$ti in the New Kingdom is as a rule the designation of the Crown-prince; convincing examples are dorbiney 19, 2. 6 ; Harris I 42, 8 ; P a p . T u r i n 17, I , 102, 2, 9; Inscr. dedic. 44. probably here means district of or the 8) R like. A canal or branch of the Nile named K3 is mentioned on several wine-jars from the Ramesseum, Hier. Ostr. nos. 209. 217. 218. 269. viz. SPIEGELBERG, 289. 292. In the last-quoted instance K3 is connected with the water of Ptah, which is found in a list of canals etc. appended to the Catalogue of Lower EgypDict. Gkogr. 239); but that tian nomes (see BRUGSCH, the word k 3 in the same list (op. cit. 1271) is no geographical name seems fairly clear. For the location of KS note that the Red Mountain is implied in 15, 6 to have been the quarry where the obelisk was made; this is the Gebel Ahmar near Cairo, see my Notes on the Story of Sinuhe, on B 14-15. 9) I. e. the Pharaoh. Probably we should read Y swh m3i nSn; for swh with a direct object see Admonitions p. 28. IO) For the technical words see the Appendix. 11) A very difficult and uncertain sentence. 12) See above n. 8. 3
18
[them] Prepare(?) the way for!?) the crown-prince Mi-ifn. Approach(?) and decide for us the number of men who (shall go) before him. Let them not have to write again! T h e monument (lies ready) in the quarry. Answer quickly, do not dawdle3! Behold thou art seeking them4 for thyself! Get thee on5! Behold thou art bestirring thyself(?)6. I cause thee to rejoice; I used formerly to . . . . . . like thee. Let LIS join the fray together7, for my heart is tried, my fingers are apt and clever when thou goest astray. Get thee (onwards)! Do not weep! Thy helperi9 stands behind thee! I will cause thee to say: There is a royal scribe with the Horus, the Victorious Bull, and thou shalt order men to make chests into which to put letters. I would have written for thee stealthily(??)i2, but(?) behold thou art seeking it for thyselfl3. Thou settest my fingers , , . , . . . .14 like a bull at a festival at every festival of . . . . . . . , .
therefore knows how to cope with such difficulties. _Ts skw, see Admonitions p. 2 0 ; n sp is the Coptic iicon. 8) Lit. hear (understand) cleverness. rightly emends ims-tw as in I j, 8. 9) ERMAN IO) For cjr see above p. 9*, n. 14. 11) The meaning perhaps is that Amenemope, having found a helper, not only loudly exclaims that Pharaoh possesses in himself a competent royal scribe, but even goes so far as to order the boxes into which his letters are to be put. -- The suffix -sn makes it necessary to emend the plural p d s w boxes. 12) H-r-j-j only here. 13) See above 1 5 8 , and n. 4 on this page. 14) Nsns, $?tag ~ E ~ ~ ~ E Here Y O Y again . the sense is utterly obscure. 1 5 ) For the mode of erection contemplated see the Appendix. 16) Smm see above p. 9*, n. 2. 17) Dsy, twlzze, (?) and sg3 are unknown words. 18) It is hardly possible to translate differently, but my rendering gives no satisfactory sense. M b3h seems to be used in reference to ascertained dimensions in 14, 8. 19) Wr, Coptic OTHp, cf. below 27, 8 ; Anast. 20, 5 ; Unavnon I, x 15.
Anastasi I
I g*
it in six hours - (if[?])2 apt are their minds(?), but small their desire to demolish it without there coming a pause when thou givest a rest3 to the soldiers, that they may take their meal4 - so that the monument may be established in its place? It is Pharaohs desire to see it beautiful!
elsewhere linked together as the Ms. reading suggests; hence a number may have fallen out of the text. See p. 29a, note 4c. IO) Wis-tw, see 1 1 . 2. 47 ( I ~ I O ) , 134-136. 1 1 ) From the stem b h ; BURCH. no. 871. I 2 ) N k t provisions, an exceptional sense of the word found again Aqzast. 1 1 7 13, 1 2 . 13) Bmh, an ancient Egyptian word related to Hebrew hnp; BURCH. no. 984. no. 39. 14) I-p-t, from 3DH to bake, BURCH. 15) S-bvi-, see above p, I I * , n. I . 16) P-n, see above p. 13*, n. 8. 17) M !3w(t), Coptic fixrose fuvtim, cf. below 20, 4; Anast. I V 4, 1 1 . 18) Two Semitic words, which in Hebrew would be 3 . i ~ ?DO. 19) The reading is uncertain; seep. 29a, note IGi. 2 0 ) F3 to start, cf. 20, I. 21) _Ts pd-t, cf. MAR., Abydos I 5 3 ; Ros., Man.
Stov. I
22)
125.
M kf is elsewhere found at the end of negative sentences for emphasis (like i n an), cf. 27,3; 17,7. Hence the Anast. I V 13, 5 ; Anast. V 7, I ; conjecture b.12 here. 3
20
ging of us? Nay, but thou art a clever scribe! Approach to give the food*! An hour becomes(?) a day without the scribe from(??) the Ruler. (What means(??)) thy being brought to punish us? This is not good; let Mose3 hear (of it), and he will send to destroy thee!
x
18,s
4) h-s-k, see BR., Worterb. S u p p l . 658, where the Coptic AWKC [pungere is compared. Pointed sayings, pungent sayings, seems a likelier meaning than koupures, the rendering of CHABAS, or paragraphes, that of BRUGSCH. 5) This obscure sentence may possibly mean: thou hast piled up big words in a reckless manner, and must now accept from me the retort which they seem themselves to ask for. Fk3 means to reward (to be distinguished from f k 3 to pluck, see the note on Kollev 2,8); here perhaps fk3-w tw should be emended. 6) Lit. as thou didst wish. 7) The word Yn-h-v, which is found frequently in the next pages of Anastasi I but nowhere else, must be the technical name given to the Egyptian emissary in Syria. The derivation from 7 5 speedy ~ suggested by CHABAS (p. 81) is very uncertain, but has not been bettered. If speedy were the etymological sense one might expect the determinatives of movement. The determinative of the child, which in some instances precedes or replaces that of violent action, is borrowed from a word for suckling (cf. DE MORGAN, Cat. des Mon., I I I 7, a I ; Rec. de Trav. 18, 162) that is itself derived from a word meaning to provide with milk discussed by PIEHL, Sphinx IV 12-14; thence too comes Ynhr milkman in Hood 2, 13 =Golenischeff Vocabulavy 2, 12, where the
context and (in one case) the determinatives render the meaning certain. 8) In-n I say (lit. we say) can stand either before or after the words quoted; after, cf. above 11, 7; P a p . Bibl. N a t . 198, 2, 12; before, here 17, 8 and P a p . Bibl. N a t . 198, 3, 16. 9) SvS to be swift, cf. Uvkunden IV 697; P a p . T u v i n 26 col. 3, 6 ; late examples MAR.,Dend. I 46b; I11 2 8 h ; 52p; DUM.,Geogv. Inscv. IV 123. The jackal as an image of speed, cf. L., D. I11 195a. It is not clear whether the epithet red-eared refers to the horse or the jackal. IO) Hnr reins, see BURCH. no 727. I I ) CHABAStranslates this and the numerous sentences of similar type in the next pages interrogatively, nes-tu pas all& nas-tu pas vu, etc. BRUGSCH rightly animadverts on this mistake in his article in the Revue- Cvitique; though it must be admitted that the blending of the denials that Amenemope has ever been in Syria with the descriptions of what would have happened to him if he had been there is very misleading. The most conclusive evidence that the sentences in questioli are negative statements, intended, like many of the preceding sections, to demonstrate the ignorance of Amenemope, will be found in the c1ausesethou answerest me neither good nor evil, thou renderest no report, 27,z; thou hast never trodden it a t all (vn kf), 27, 3; thou hast never seen them since t h y birth, 27, 7 (cf. 9, 5); notice particularly the italicized words. ERMAN ( A g y p t e n 5 I O foll.) was mistaken in returning to CHABAS view. 12) I-p is a land situated at the northern extremity of H3rzu (Syria), Damascus being one of its towns. Identical with Ube of the Amarna letters, cf. E. MEYER, Festschvift f . G. Ebevs, p. 71. See too KNUDTZON, El-Avnavna- Tafeln, p. I I IO- I I I I.
Anastasi I
21
not the nature of it, and Fg-d-y in like manner. What is the D - W Y ( ? )of ~ 19,1 Sese like? On which side of it is the town of H-Y. . . . . . 3 ? What is its stream4 like? Thou hast never set forth to Kadesh5 and to D-d-h6. Thou hast not gone to the region of the Shosu with the troops of the army. Thou hast [not] trodden the way to the M - ~ - Y * (where) , the sky is dark by day, and it is overgrown with cypresses(?) and oaks1 and cedars that reach the heavens; (where) lions are more plenteous than leopards and hyenas12(?), and (it) is girt about with Sliosu on (every) side. Thou hast not climbed the mountain of 3-7~~.
19,s
Thou hast not trodden (the road(?))14, thy hands placed upon . . . . . . . . . . . thy chariot worni5 by ropes, thy horse being dragged(??). Prithee let [me tell thee of] . . . . . . -6-y-P(?). Thou shrinkest frorn(?)l7 its ascent, and crossest its stream because of it(?). Thou beholdest how it tastes to b e a Maher! Thy chariot rests upon thy [shoulder(?)]19. Thy [assistant(?)] is worn outz0. Thou makest
- 1
Unknown localities. M. MULLER(0.L. 2. I 382-3) reads-the g-m-r of Sese i. e. of Rameses 11; this he would separate from the Simyra near Arvad (Urk. IV 689), as too far north for a fortress of Rameses 11, and accordingly he identifies it with the Sumur of the conjectured to letters of Ribaddi, which WINCKLER be much nearer to Byblos. The present tendency is to identify Sumur with Simyra, the modern Sumra on the Nahr el KebPr, rejecting WINCKLERS view (see KNUDTZOn, 09. cit. 1141). If d-m-r is the right reading, as is probable, it must be understood as Simyra. 3) CHABAS here readg-r-b, Aleppo, but wrongly; see p. 30a, note 171. 4) &ld is surely not ford, but stream (BRUGSCH rightly courant) ; it is clearly derived from the verb LO flow down, ([to sail downstream. Elsewhere only as name of a canal, Berlin 15393 (Saitic stele); MAR., Dend. I 66b. 5 ) Probably Kadesh on the Orontes; so MASPERO, Rec. de Trav. 19, 68-72, where the entire context rejects this view, perhaps is discussed. MAXMULLER only for the reason that Kadesh occurs again below 22,4, and identifies Kadesh here with the Galilaean town of that name, KidSa in the Amarna letters and perhaps the first name in Thutmosis 111s Retenu list (Urk. IV 781); see As. u. Eur. 173. MASPEROS theory is far preferable; all the identifiable names in this passage are in the far North of Syria. 6) D-b-Jj (UrR. IV 781,6) is h23 (11Sam. 8, 8, LXX), the TubiJji of the Amarna letters; probably a little S. of Damascus, see MAX MULLER, Die Palastinaliste Th. 111 p. 9 7 ) Pd-t m?, cf. 17,4. 8) P-m-g-r, unknown; for suggested etymoloI)
2)
gies see MASPERO, 1. c.; it is uncertain whether p ( 3 ) is here the article or not. 9) The wood of the tree wn-t was used for making staves (03iZi) cf. Mallet I, 7; Pa$.Turin 2,9. no. 76. IO) I-n(r)-n oak j?5!, BURCH. 11) R 3by should not be misread as d 3 b y ; this would be a n impossible spelling for 35 bears, which MAX MULLERstill upholds, As. u.Eur. 89. 12) Ytm-t only here, below 20, 7, and in the very late text BRUGSCH, Rec. I1 71,4; in the last instance with a dog-like determinative. CHABAS unwarrantably identified htm-t and ht-t, ZOITE. I retain the rendering hyena for want of a better. (As. u. Euv. 13) 3-w, identified by MAXMULLER 199) with a peak of the Lebanon called Saua in an inscription of Tiglat-pilesar. BURCHARDT considers this phonetically impossible, 14) Emend bw dgs-k (sw)or (w3-t). 15) ShtZ lit. beaten. 16) H3-my may be compared with h3n3 my 27,4. M y , below 20, 8; 21, 5; 22, I. 7; 27, 4, is clearly the enclitic particle discussed Admonitions p. 105. The place-name -b-r-t cannot be Berytus, as MASPERO would have it, on account of the unintelligible traces preceding, which must belong to the word.
17) H - f 4 , here apparently an active verb with the meaning to fly from something in terror, is no. 675 gives the doubtless the Hebrew 7bh; BURCH. word a wrong meaning. Perhaps in the sense terror dreadfulness, CHAMP., Mon. 228 (collated). 18) Lit. the taste of a Maher; for the metaphor see Admonitions p. 41. 19) Sense perhaps: thou hast to support thy chariot. 20) W h s , cf. 25,6; Rnast. I I I 4 , 3 (= Anast. V 9, I corrupt).
22*
a halt in the evening; all thy body is crushed and battered(?)2; thy [limbs1 20,1 are b r u i ~ e d ( ? . )~ . . . . . . . . from sleep4. Thou wakest, and it is the hour for starting5 in the drear(?) night, Thou art alone to harness (the horse); brother comes not to brother. A fugitive(??)6has entered into the camp. T h e horse has been let loose7. T h e . , . . . . . . has turned back(?) in the night. Thy clothes have been taken away. Thy groom has awoke in the night, and marked what he has done(?)g; he takes what remains and joins (the ranks of) the wicked, he mingles with the people of the Shosu and disguises himselflo as an Asiatic. 2015 The enemy comes to pillage in secret. They find thee inert. Thou wakest up and findest no trace of them12; they have made awayi3 with thy things, Thou art becoming a fully-equippedt4 Maher, thou fillest thy ear(?)l5.
XVII. The Phoenician cities. I will tell thee of another mysterious city. BybloslG is its name; what is
it like - and its(?) goddess, once again? Thou hast not trodden it. Come teach mei7 about Berytus, and about Sidonlg and Sarepta2. Where is the
I ) Lit. proceedest to stop; for spr as an auxiliary verb cf. A n a s t . I V 9, 11; A n a s t . V IO, 7. - Wh perhaps properly to stop, leave off work, so Pahevi 3; derivatively, to return from work, so dOrbiney 4, 3; R., I . H . 248, 85: wh w z rwh? also, in a somewhat similar sense, dOrbiney 4 > 7 ; 13, 7. 2 ) H d h d , only here in this sense; cf. Urk. 1V 710 for hdhd in a quite different sense. 3) WS(3)wS(3),cf. Boh. O G E ~ O G W Y - , properly to bruise crush, cf. A n a s t . I V 9, 7 = Anast. 111 .5, 9 ; A n a s t . V IO, 7 = Sall. I 3, 9 ; derivatively to break smash, see below 26, I ; then to break open, M a y e r A , recto 3, 4 ; unpublished Turin p a p y r u s = SPmG., Z w e i Reitrage, p, 12. 4) I now believe that the word jnm (sic ?) is on a misplaced fragment. The restoration of the passage is quite obscure. 5) FS in this sense, see above 17, 8. 6) N-h-r elsewhere (R., I . H . 143,41) means to flee and is probably connected with Semitic to flow. Here the feminine article t3 is incomprehensible, and the sense is obscure. 7) _Tt to untie loose, cf. Pap. Turin 23, 6; 33, 9; 73, IO; Israel stele 6; Harris 500 recto 4, 8; Vatican Magical P a p . = A . 2. 31 (1893), 122. 8) @tbt-(tw), the pseudoparticiple *ðGt; it is tempting to render has been ransacked, comparing ~ O T : ~do~deT, T but no evidence for this meaning is forthcoming in late-Egyptian. 9) Ir-nf can hardly be meant for what has been done to him, cf. 18, 7; the sense is obscure.
See above p. 14*, n. 15. S(S)d(5)),probably l Y t 5 to be violent, to violate, see BURCH. no. 593. 12) For trace cf. Anast. V 20, 4; obscure L., D . 111 140d, 5. 13) Rmn only once again in this sense, Urk. I11 106; cf. mnmn.
IO)
11)
14) S d b h to furnish equip, cf. Anasb. I V Anast. V 3 ; Anast. I V 13, I O = Koller 5, 8 ; A n a s t . I V 16 verso, 6 ; Hnvvis I 77,9. 15) The wa of mh-k 9% msdr-k is perhaps to be omitted; see Koller 3, 2. The sense may perhaps be : thou art listening attentively, and gradually acquiring the experience of a ,Maher. 16) For Byblos and its goddess Hathor see especially SETHES article, 6 .2. 45 (1908), 7-14. The list of Phoenician towns is in correct geographical order from North to South. 17) Mtr-tm y r also 21, 5; 22, I . 7; the infinitive here probably replaces the imperative, see SETHE, V e r b u m I1 5 566. Mtr Y to instruct someone about something, cf. A n a s t . I V 14, 8; Decree of Haremheb, right side, 5.
I Z , ~ =
18) B-r-t, Berytus, be-Tu-tu in the Amarna tablets; only here in Egyptian texts, see BURCH. no. 366. 19) D-d-n, Sidon, T W S , mentioned also Unnm o n I, x f 24.
20) 0-r-p-t, hb%, 2apenza, Sariptu of the Taylor cylinder of Sennacherib, on the high road between Tyre and Sidon. In Egyptian only here.
Anastasi I
23 *
stream of N-_t-n? What is ?(_t2 like? They tell of another city in the sea, Tyre-the-port is its name. Water is taken over to it in boats, and it is richer in fishes than in sand.
_ _ _ ~
.~
I) The stream of X-t-vz can only be the Nahr el Icasimfye, i. e. the lower courses of the LitBni, see M~SPERO,H i s t . Anc., 11 p. 6, note 6; the identification of the name N-L-YLwith LitAnP is however As u. open to serious objections, see MAXMULLER, Euv. 185. 2 ) I-& (BURCH.no. 190) is Uzu in the Tyrian series of the Amarna letters; ED. MEYER, Encycl. Babl. col. 3733, accepts PRA~FKS identification with Palaetyrus. 3) D-Y, often in Egyptian (BURCH. no, 1227), is 7 3 , Tipog. The island of Tyre lies about a mile from the shore and lacks both water and vegetation. For the translation Tyre-the-Port, see MAXMULLER, As. u. Euv. 185, note I . 4) Tp-ksn only here; but t p is used with various adjectives in a similar way, cf. tp-nfv, tp-mtv, tp-w,
tp-sw.
5) The locality D-v--m (the final r?z may well be a corruption of ?zM[3]) is compared by MAXMULLER with h Y 7 ~ & p a of Judges 1 8 , ~ ; Joshua 19,41, which was in Dan. This seems too far south for the context. DE ROUGB (quoted by BRUGSCH in the Cvzttque) cleverly suggested that there is here a pun hornets; see next note. upon the word 6) D d b to sting is not elsewhere determined with the sign for fire; but ddm, demonstrably only another form of the same word, is so determined P a p . Twin 133, 12. Thus DE ROUGBS ingenious suggestion mentioned in the last note is brilliantly confirmed. 7) The word southward shows that the writer is following, or at least intends to follow, some
geographical older. Almost immediately after Tyre no place could more appropriately named than Acco, for which -k+z is doubtless a corruption. All the known localities in this section lie to the S. of Carmel with the exception of Hazor. 8) It is probable that -k-s-p is a misspelling of i-k-s-p ( Uvk. Iv 782, 40), i. e. ;112JK on the border of Asher; see BURCH. no. 168. E. MEYm (Encycl. Bzbl. 3733) identifies -k-s-p with z%&; this is a particularly attractive suggestion, since Achzib is in the near neighbourhood of Acco; the equivalence s = T is however open to serious objections. 9) Unknown name. IO) S-k-m, evidently the b:.j of the old Testament, see MAXMULLER, As.u. Euv. 394; probably it is Mount Ebal that is meant, 1 1 ) H - l - v clear!y corresponds to Hebiew Y l Y h (BURCH. no. 709) and to &?u-zu-~i of the Amarna Tablets. This town was situated near the waters of Merom, not far from ICedesh. 12) H-m-t here and in the Palestine list of Thutmosis I11 is thought to be Hammath nnh south of the Sea of Galilee, see MAXMULLER, Die Palnstinaliste T h u t m . 111, p. I I ; BURCH. no. 678. 13) T is-t swtwt lit. the place ofpromenading; swtwt means to walk for pleasure LO promenade make an excursion. 14) I-d-m-nz (cf. I-i-m-~vl in the list of Th. 111) has been compared with the trl?ilN h??? on the border betweenBenjamin and Judah; seeMAx MULLER, Dze Palastinnlzste Thzitm. 111, p. 15. 15) Utterly corrupt; emend s?zn(zn-i(?).
24*
4) T-m-n-t is surely not h38h in Judah; for while of the seven names here given four are unknown, the other three are N. of Damascus. 5) KdS is Kadesh on the Orontes, see especially BREASTED, T h e Battle of Kadesh, 13-21. A Kadesh was mentioned above in r9, I , see p. ZI*, n. 5. 6) D-p-r, a town stormed by Rameses 11, probably quite close to Kadesh, see MAXMULLER, As.u. Eur. 221; BREASTED (Ancient Records I11 159) places it further south. 7) The Ms. has Kirjath--n-b and Beth-i-p-r. MAX MULLER(As. u. Eur. 170) formerly proposed to interchange Kirjath and Beth in these names, since Y?b-h;T? (so LXX rightly) is mentioned in conjunction with 322 in Joshua I 5,49. However DARESSY reads Kirjath--n-b(w) in a list of foreign names a t Abydos ( R e c . de Trav. 21, z ) , where MARIETTE read Kirjath--n-l(w); and MAXMULLERhimself has found Kirjath--n-b-w in a palimpsest list at Karnak (Researches I 57, 14). There can be little doubt, in any case, that the same places are meant as are referred to the passage of Joshua; these are situated in the hill-country of Judah. 8) For i-d-r-n the i-d-r-m of the list of She, u been compared, see shonk (19) and ! F ? ~ have BURCH. no, 201. The Adoraim of the 0. T. is iden-
tified with modern Dura, to the S. W. of Hebron in Southern Judaea. 9) Cf. the name D-d-p-t-r in the Sheshonlr list (34) ; otherwise unknown. IO) Unidentified. 1 1 ) See above p. zo*, n. 12. 12) 8 - y - n is very probably identical with K n in the Annals of Thutmosis I11 (Urk. IV 655. 657), near Megiddo, the Gina of the Amarna letters; see MAX MULLER in Encycl. Bibl. col. 3547. - The injured word for appearance (or statue??) is read sdi by BRUGSCH and compared, probably wrongly, with the late word s_dd (Wdrterb. 1357). 13) R-h-b is in Asher, often mentionedin Egyptian texts; see BURCH. no. 628, and MAXMULLER, As. u. E w . 153. 14) Byl-S-ir, a jN-U%h>, often named in hieroglyphs, see BURCH.no. 388; not localised, but it occurs next Rehob, ~s here, in the Sheshonk list (16). I S ) Unknown; it is tempting to transpose and read k-v-t-ir i. e. a h - h Y p ; so CHABAS,but see MAX MULLER,A s . u. E w . 175, footnote. 16) Y-v-d-n, in Hebrew jil?, only here; the word ought to have the determinative of water. 17) See the critical note. 18) N l i hr-f can hardly be translated which is upon it, since Megiddo is not on the Jordan, while the writers knowledge of Palestinian geography was evidently admirable. On the other hand to render qui est en outre de cela (CHABAS), comparing n t i hry-sn 2 2 , 3, is a very bold expedient. 1 3, 6; Sall. 11 19) Pr--ib, cf. 26, 9; A n a s t . 1
IO, I.
9.
- For
the idiom gw
see
Anastasi I
25*
23,s
Mariannu, forward to shoot(?)! Behold the . . . . . . . 3 is in a ravine* two thousand cubits deep, filled with boulders5 and pebbles6. Thou drawest back(?), thou graspest the bow, thou dost . . . . . . . . . thy left hand, thou causest the great ones to look. Their eyes are good, thy hand grows weak(?)q. DYI 1 7 +IS ~ ~3 ~XIN. Thou makest the name of every Maher, officers of the land of Egypt. Thy name becomes like (that of) IC&-d-y, the chief of I-s-y, when the hyenai3 found him in the balsam-tree. - The(?) narrow defile is infested(?) with Shosu concealed beneath the bushes; some of them are of four cubits or of five cubits, from head(??) to foot(?)16, fierce of fake, their heart is not mild, and they hearken not to coaxing. Thou art alone, there is no helper(?)I7 with thee, no army* . . . . to make for thee a way of crossing. behind thee. Thou findest no
..
I) M - r - y - n , a word found often in Egyptian texts in reference to Syrian farriors (BURCH. no. 470). The translation lords seems to me erroneous, though doubtless the warrior-class was held in high honour in the small Syrian states. This translation is probably due to the old etymology from Aramaic k t ~ n(CHABAS) ; another Semitic derivation that has been proposed is from h?n to be contentious rebellious. WINCKLER has recently found the word in the form mariannu in the tablets from Boghazkoi, and boldly connects the word with the Vedic mndryu man hero (Or. L i t . Zeit., 13 [ I ~ I O ] , 291-298). Both here and in 28, I it is apparently parallel to m-h-r (Maher). 2) N hr-k, cf. 15,8; 24, I ; cf. too DUM.,Hist. Inschr. I1 47,4 and the passages quoted by GRIFFITH, Proc. S. B. A . 19,298. N hr-tn rs is used as an exclamation forward I in P i a n k h i 95. 3) A corrupt word with the determinative of land; probably from the stem n . - It seems necessary tQ delete the preposition hr after mik. 4) 3-d-r-t only here and in 24,3; the approximate sense seems certain. 5 ) Dh-wt only here and 2 4 , ~ . 6) The word -n(r)is the Coptic &A, see BURCH. no. 270 274. 7) S-w-b-b is thought to be 2 2 1 to ~ turn back (BURCH.no. 768), though neither determinative nor sense seems very appropriate. The word cannot be suqposed. identified with 22b, as CHABAS 8) P-r-$, an unknown verb. 9) W r w nfr (sic) is usually divided from what translated so ermudet ihr Auge follows; thus ERMAN auf deiner Hand. But gnn is not used of the eye, nor does it mean to grow tired; and the preposition hr would be strangely used. Probably hr should be omitted; for gnn dt-k cf. Koller 5, 3; R., I . H. 24I,43* IO) So BURCHARDT (under no. 32), who proposes as the meaning of these words thou slayest like a lion, o . Maher. Whether the remainder of this translation be correct or not, it seems probable, in
.. .
Gardiner.
spite of BURCHARDTS objections, that the last word is b?! pleasant, delightful. 11) Without emending it is impossible to translate otherwise; nb cannot here mean lord. 12) I-s-r (mentioned among South-Palestinian names under Sethos I, L., D. 111 140) is probably the tribal name ? t $ ; see E. MEYER, Die Israeliten und ihre Nachbnvslamme, p. 540. 13) Htm-t, see above p. 21*, n. 12. 14) BkZ, Hebrew ma, only here (BURCH. no. 374). 15) Hitherto it has been customary to connect hr 13 gsw-t and what follows with the preceding simile, which then only ends with szvnzvn-w in 23,8. This view is untenable for several reasons: (I) the first sentence of the simile (when the hyena found him in the balsam-tree in the narrow defile, infested with Shosu concealed beneath the branches) is breathlessly long and gives no good sense; the presence of the Shosu would diminish, rather than increase, the dangerousness of the hyena; (2) the words some of them are incompatible with the singular word the hyena in the text of A n a s t . I . The difficulty is a t once solved by the omission of hr before t3 g3w-t; from this ppint onwards it is the journey of the Mahar in the mountainous pass (g3w-t also in the sequel 24,6) that is described, not the adventures of the prince of Asher. The statement some were of four cubits or five cubits (i. e. 6 foot I O inches to 8 foot 6 inches) now refers to the Shosu, as with due allowance for Egyptian exaggeration it well may do; and the words they do not listen tb coaxing obtain a more natural and less metaphorical meaning. 16) Whether the suggestion fnd in the critical note is correct remains quite uncertain. For the (collective?) form rd-yt I have no parallel. 17) For d-r the context clearly demands some word for helper, and I propose -&q comparing 1 6 , ~ 7-s ; messenger is not appropriate. 18) D-b-i, the Hebrew xi; cf. 27, I and BURCH. no. 1207. 19) I-r-i-r, an unlrnown word; the sense required is guide or the like. BURCH.no. 9 2 differently. 4
26*
%5
Thou decidest(?) (the matter) bv marching onward, though thou knowest not the road. Shuddering(?) seizes thee, (the hair of) thy head stands up(?)3, thy soul is in thy hand. Thy path is filled with boulders and pebbles*, without a passable track(??)j, overgrown with reeds and brambles, briers (?) and wolfs-pads. The ravineg is on one side of thee, the mountain rises(?) on the other. On thou goest jolting(?)l, thy chariot on its side. Thou fearest to crush(?) thy horse. If it be thrown towards the abyss(?)I3, thy ~ollar-piece(?)~ is left bare(?), thy girth(?)15 falls. Thou unfastenest the horse1 so as to repair the collar-piece(?) at the top of the defile. Thou art not expert in the way of binding it together; thou knowest not how to tie(?)* it. The , . , . , . . , .Ig is left where it is; the chariot is too heavy to bear the loadzo of it(?). Thy heart is weary. Thou startest trotting(?)21.
I ) W@-rZ-tw appears to be a compound verb construed as a pseudoparticiple; for pseudoparticiple 2nd p. sing. absolutely cf. h-tw 5, 6; snd-tw 24,4; in any case the sense is clear. N hv-k, see p. 25*, n. 2. 2) D-n-n may be connected with i > Y to be cold; cf. for the construction l3y-k p isdd 24,s. 3) S-n(r)-f see above p. 13*, n. 14. 4) For db-mt and - n ( r ) see p. 25*, notes 5 and 6. 5) A desperate guess. 6 ) I-s-b-r, also Sall. I 7, 5 as a tall kind of reed, probably a species of bamboo; the common word for whip (BURCH.no. 134) is obviously related. 7) K-d, Hebrew rip, see BURCH.no. 955.
8) The plants n-h the dangerous and $bwC zvnS wolfssandals are not named elsewhere. 9) S-d-r-t, only in 23,3 above. IO) Read here the verb 4; with a postulated word h cliff the construction would be awkward. 1 1 ) H-s-k-t, to judge from the determinatives a verb of motion, only here. 12) Mdd to press, here possibly of crushing the horse against the side of the mountain; a less probable rendering would be to press forward urge on. 13) Without emendation this sentence can only mean: if the horse be let slip at the edge of the chasm. It is clear from what follows that the horse is not pictured as completely lost over the precipice, but as having slipped and broken part of its harness. For abyss the word dw3-t netherworld (misspelled) is used. 14) 0 - t , a part of the chariot, to which something made of leather was attached, cf. 26,6; named also in the d-t (plural) of thy chariot are Anat and Astarte Edinburgh, Poem concersing the chariot, verso I 2.
Since in the latter passage a two-horse chariot is envisaged, whereas our text only refers to a chariot with one horse (an interesting point, as one-horse chariots are rare in Ancient Egypt, see WILKINSON, W a y s and M a n n e r s [ed. Birch], I1 p. 7-34), it seems clear that the singular here must point to some portion of the vehicle directly connected with the horse. This cannot be the pole or shaft (), nor yet the yoke (nhb);possibly the saddle or collarpiece is meant. When it is said that this is uncovered left bare it may be meant that the leather padding (m-S-y cf. 26, 6 ) is torn off. K-w-S-n might then be the girth, which would naturally fall simultaneously. The horse has then to be extricated from the chariot in order that the collar-piece may be mended; this is tied or lashed on to the yoke (?). This explanation however is purely conjectural. I S ) K-w-S-n only here; see last note. 16) Ntf to untie loosen, cf. Israel stele 6; P a p . mag. Harris, verso A 6 ; P a p . T u r i n I8+73, I . - Htri here and below seems to mean the horse and chariot combined, whereas ssm-t is the horse alone. 17) Sm3m Yo slay makes no sense; emend sm wi renew. 18) G-w-t-n, only here and in Koller 3, 2 = A n a s t . I V 3, I, an obscure passage where the object is p-t-r threads. 19) Inkfkf-t, only here. 20) Chariot is here hi%, i. e. horse and chariot combined; jitp-st probably means to load it (the inkfkf-t) in the chariot, my rendering above being a paraphrase,
2 1 ) F3 reflexively, cf. d0rbiney 6 , 3 ; IO, 6 ; 13, I ; Sall. I 2, 11; NEWBERRY, Amherst P a p y r i 21, I, 2 ; the idiom is preserved in Demotic and Coptic, see Petubastis, Index, p. 22*, footnote. SPIEGELBERG, Tntn only here; A n a s t . I V 8, 8 has &i apparently in a similar sense.
Anastasi I
2 7
The sky is revealed. Thou fanciest2 that the enemy is behind thee; trembling . . . to put-upon the other seizes thee3. Would that thou hadst a hedge4 of side! The chariot is damaged(?)6at the moment thou findest a ~arnping-place(?)~. Thou perceivest the taste of pain! Thou hast entered Joppa8, and findest the flowers blossomingg in their season. Thou forcest a way in(?) . . . . .O Thou findest the fair maiden who keeps watch over the gardens. S h e takes thee to herself for a companion, and surrenders to thee her charms. Thou art recognized, and bearest witness (against thyself[?]). Thou art disrnissed(?)l from (the rank of) Maher. Thy shirt of fine linen of Upper Egypt, thou sellest it. Tell me how(??)12thou liest every night, with a piece of woollen cloth(?)l 3 over thee. Thou slumberest, for thou art worn outi4. A . . . . .15 takes away thy bow, thy knife for the belti6, and thy quiver. Thy reins have been cut in the darkness. Thy horse is gone and is speeding(??) over the slippery groundig. The road stretches before it. It smashes2 thy chariot and makes thy . . . . . . . 2 1 ; thy weapons fall to the ground, and are buried(?) in the sand; they become desert(?).
.. .
...
...
. .
..
I ) Lit. the sky is opened; the Maher emerges from the narrow thickly-wooded defile. MASPERO (in the k t u d e s dediees d Leemans, p. 4-6) rightly jdentifies the defile (g3w-t) here described with that mentioned in the Annals of Thutmosis I11 as in the vicinity of Megiddo; it is the Wady el Arah, a wooded pass that would be the natural haunt of brigand Beduins. 2) Ib, see above p. 9*, n. 9. 3) Lit. thou takest the terror; for the construction and the use of the definite article, cf. 24, I . 4 ) I n b seems to be simply the word for wall in a specialized sense. It is impossible to connect 2nb here with the plant inbi mentioned Eloquent Peasqnt R 26 = Butler 12; Ebers 2 1 , 17; 8 3 , ~ . 5 ) Hh literally to shave; apparently the chariot is damaged at the very moment when the Maher is about to stop for the night. 6 ) F o r the temporal sentence gm-k sgry (probably read s_dy-t, cf. sgr-t 1 8 , I ) without a retrospective pronoun governed by a preposition cf. above
I 7, I -2.
7) On this metaphor see p. 21*, n. 18. 8) Y-p, Hebrew W, ia-pu in the E l Amarna letters; BURGH. no. 215. 9) GOODWIN translated thou findest the fruit trees blooming in their season; 3b3&is to bloom, but could not possibly refer to the ripeness of fruit. In Anast. IF 1 2 , s ( i ) 3 & (this reading seems more probable than $3, see the analogous word field and SPIEGELBERGS notes Rec. de Trav. 24,180--2) does seem to mean fruit, but everywhere else it signifies flowers (e. g. MAR., Karnak 34, 2 8 ; Urk. IV 462), which suits the verb 3h3h far better. I O ) W t n is usually to make a breach in a wall Oslraca 25269; to cf. Abbott 2, 13. 1 7 ; DARESSY,
objects to the word pierce, A n a s t . 111 6,g. SETHE on grammatical grounds and emends wstn (Verbum I1 $ 195). The crux lies in the last words of the sentence, which look like n wnrn of eating. The preceding sentence has however nothing to do with fruit (see last note), and it is rather doubtful whether wnm eating should be read, as the same group occurs below in 28, 5, where any reference to eating seems out of the question. 1 1 ) Wd to sever; w d rndi only here. 1 2 ) Corrupt words. 13) S-g only here; the determinative suggests wool. 14) Whs, see above p. 21*, n. 20. 1 5 ) Hmy is apparently subject, but is puzzling; it cannot be a fitting of the chariot (cf. KoZZer1,4), unless ty-k h m y - t be emended; i_t3 would then be passive. 16) S f t n kniw, here only. 17) I-s-$4, Hebrew hQt5K,.see BURCH. no. 137. 18) _Ts m-r-i is probably an idiomatic expression for to speed or the like. M-r-i cannot be the word for groom for several reasons: I) the first radical is differently spelt, cf. I, 8; 20, 3 ; 2) the definite article is wanting; 3) 43 would require an object, which is lacking. 19) g-r-k-t, Hebrew Bp3R, only here. 20) WS(s)wS(3), see above p. zz*, n. 3. 2 1 ) Corrupt words. 22) T(i)ms to cover or bury is undoubtedly the same word as trns in the sentence bury your staves in it (scil. the barley), Pap. RyZands IX 1 1 , 5 ; and both are clearly identical with FWMC to bury. The derivation of the latter from sm3-t3 seems to rest on nothing but the similarity of meaning; and it is difficult to save this etymology by assuming that t m s is a variant spelling of sm3-t~~ metathesis having already occurred.
4*
28*
Thy . . . . , begs the . . . . . . . thy mouth: Give (me) food and water, for I have arrived safely. They turn a deaf ear, they do not listen, they do not heed2 thy tales. Thou makest thy way into the armoury3; workshops surround thee4; smiths 2 6 5 and leather-workers are all about thee. They do all that thou wishest. They attend to thy chariot, so that it may cease from lying idle. Thy pole6 is newly ~ h a p e d ( ? ) its ~ , . . . . . . . . .8 are adjusted. They give leather covering^(?)^ to thy They supply thy yoke. They adjust(?) thy . . . .12 (worked) collar-piece(?)iO . with the chisel(?)13 to(?) the . . . . . . . . . .I4 They give a . . . . . , (of metal)i5 to thy whip16; they fasten [to] it lashes17. Forth thou goest quickly to fight on the open field, to accomplish the deeds of the brave18!
..
XX. The first stations on the Syrian high-road. End of the Controversy, Conclusion.
27,I
Good sir, thou honoured scribe, Maher cunning of hand, at the head of in front of the army20, [I will describe to] thee the [lands] of the the extremity of the land of Canaanz1. Thou answerest me neither good nor evil; thou returnest me no report. Come I will tell thee [of many things(??)]; (turn(?))
I)
2)
H n to heed, see SETHE,Die Eznsetzung des Vezievs, p. 21, note 91. 3) @pS, see above p. 13*, n. 7. 4) l i d to surround, cf. especially Anast. I V 12, 4. 5) Tb-w properly sandal-makers.
6) The is certainly the pole of the chariot (also in the case of a single-horse chariot doubtless the double shafts); for the pole particularly good wood was selected, cf. Koller 2, I ; the pole comes from Upe, Anast. I V 16, 11; a chariot is bought, its pole for 3 dbn, the chariot (itself) for 5 dbn, Anast. 111 6, 7. 7) G-r-p occurs only here, but is certainly identical with g-r-b, An&. I V 16, 11 = Koller 2, I , also in reference to the chariot-pole. In Aramaic 253 is a knife for cutting, in Phoenician a barber. 8 ) Dby-wt, only here; sense unknown. 9) M-S-y, again only in Koller 2, I . IO) D-t, see above p. 26*, n. 14. The following word h3w is quite obscure. XI) For rr cf. Pap. Turin 67, IO; Unamon 2,4z; R., I . H . 201, 8 ; metaphorically to acomplish plans, commands, cf. Unamon 2,32; R., I. H . 145,551; Pap. Bibl. Nut. 197, 3, 4. 6. 12) The dbw must be an important part of the chariot; it might b e of gold, see Uvk. IV 663. 669.
c)
13) The usual phrase for worked with the chisel is j3(w) m bsn-t, cf. Harris 1 6 , 7. 9; 47, 3. 4. _Ts(w) w j 3 bsn occurs Koller I , 7, where as in the present passage it is hard to explain. 14) M-h-t occurs (with determinative of wood) once again Anast. I V 16, 12, where it is a part of the chariot adorned with metal; the meaning is unknown. 15) I-j-m-y, only here. 16) I-s-b-r, see BURCH. no. 134. 17) M-t-d-i, only here. IS) Pr-<-tb, see above p. 24*, n. 19. 19) N--r-n, see above p. 19*, n. 8. 20) D-b-t, see above p. 25*, n. 18. 21) T3 n p K-nc-n, in Hebrew p 2 Y%, only here with t3 n. P K-n-n is not very often mentioned in the Egyptian texts, see BURCH. no. 988; except in Anast. I I I 8 , 5 = Anast. I V 16, 4 it has always the definite article. So far as the Egyptian texts are concerned, Canaan might be the name of merely the south of Philistia; but Kinahhi in the Amarna letters appears to indicate a wider extension. The present passage describes the localities lying between the fortress-town of Zaru and the Philistine city of Gaza, and is strikingly illustrated by the scenes on the N. Wall of Karnak depicting the conquests of Sethos I (L., D. 111 Iz8b; Tz8a; 127a; 126b in this order). The accuracy of the authors geographical knowledge is convincingly attested by a comparison with these sculptures.
Anastasi I
29
27,s
2 0
thy face(?) (towards(?)) the fortress of the Ways of Horusoa. I begin for thee with the House of Sese3. Thou hast never trodden it; thou hast not eaten the fish of (the waters of) . . . . . . ,; thou hast not bathed in them. Come prithee4 let me recount to thee H-ty-9~~; where is its fortress? Come let me tell thee about ~, the district o t Buto of Sese, In(?) his house of victories(?) of U ~ i m a r & S-b-ZP and %-s-@. Let me describe to thee the manner of y-n-nlo; thou knowest not its positionl. N-&-s~ and &&5-r-ti3, thou hast never seen them since thy birth. 0 Mohar, where is RaphiaI4? What is its wall like? How many leaguesi5 march is it to Gazai6? Answer quickly! Render me a report, that I may call thee a Maher, that I may boast to others of thy name of MariannuI7. So will I say to them(?). Thou art angry at the thing I [have] said to thee. I am experienced in every rankI8. My father taught me, he knew and instructed(??) (me) very often. I know how to hold the reinsig, beyond thy skill indeed! There is no
I) The text here is damaged and probably also corrupt. The crux of the passage is to determine n the grammatical construction of the words p this name becomes clearly similar to m py-f n&tw Wsr-m3t-R in the papyrus. The, meaning of nhtw (masc. sing.) is not certain; possibly the preposition m should be omitted. 8) S-b-21, an unknown locality. 9) Ib-s-k-b, apparently a pool rather than a well, occurs in its right ppsition L., D . I11 127a. IO) The locality -y-n-n is unknown. I I ) Tp-rd, lit. principle or rule, doubtless here means the position in relation to other places; cf.28,8. 12) N-h-s occurs in the Sethos reliefs, though it is not depicted in any of the publications. DAVIES writes to me that under the horses tails in L., D. I11 126b there should be inserted a small fortress over a pool or well; this bears the name (3)h(?)-s(w) (det. of water) of the Prince . . 13) Before H-b-r-t in the papyrus there is an r, which should probably be omitted. This name also possibly occurs, though in a damaged form, in the Sethos reliefs; it is the fortress at the top of L., D. I11 126b, with the inscription The town which his Majesty newly built at the-well of H-b(?)-[r]-t the stroke after the second letter shows that this can be neither w nor 3 as the publications give, 14) R - p h , Raphia, the modern Rafah, a town not far from the sea about 2 2 or 23 miles south of Gam. Also mentionea in the palimpsest list of Sethos I, MAXMULLER, Eg. Researches 157,16; 58,17. 15) W r , see above p. 18*, n. 19. - The length .of the itr, or schoenus, is not yet determined, see 8 . 2. 41 (ig04), 58-60. 16) K-&-t, h W , r a & the southernmost of the Philistine cities; elsewhere in Egyptian spelt G-$4, BURCH. no. 1071. 17) S w h M <toboast of, see Admonitions p. 28. - n4-r-y-n, see ab0v.e p. 25*, n. I. 18) Hori goes on to contrast his own knowledge and skill with the ignorance of Amenemope. These sentences are very obscure in part. 19) @ n - ( r ) - y , see above p. zo*, n. IO.
W 3 - w t Hr. 2 ) W3-wt [Hr] is now known to be an alternative name for the celebrated frontier fortress of r 3 r w (Zaru), see ERMANS article A. 2. 43 (1906), 72-73. This was the starting-point of the great military road to Palestine followed by all the early armies; thus by that of Sethos I, cf. p &tmn _T3rw, L., D. ! I 1 128b, completed by CHAMP.,Not. Descr. I1 94. Hitherto Zaru has been placed in the neighbourhood of the modern town Ismailiyeh; but Herr KUTHMANN, whose researches on the subject will be published in a thesis entitled Die Ostgrenze Aegyptens, appears to have good reasons for placing it much farther to the North, in the vicinity of El Kantara. 3) T -t Ssw, identical with T 4 Rmssw-mry I m n ; which was reachable by boat from Zaru, see Anast. V24,8. Also doubtless the same as T 4 fl Msi T h e House of the Lion in the Setlios reliefs, L., D. 1 1 1 128a; this too is connected with Zaru by water, possibly, as KUTHMANN suggests, the Pelusiac branch of the Nile. 4) H ( 3 ) n ( 3 )would that, cf. A n a s t . I V 11, 12; Sall. III 6, 7 (the hieroglyphic texts have here (233); cf. too h3 m y , above 19,6. 5) H-j-y-n is very plausibly compared by MAX MULLER( A s . 2.1. Eur. 134) with the name of a well in L., D . I11 128a (under the horses tail), but all the copyists confirm the reading &-p-?-n, (not h-4-n) there. The name is now destroyed, as N. de G. DAVIES, to whom I am deeply indebted for a collation of the Karnak reliefs, informs me. 6) Identical with W3_dy-t n S t y - M r - n - Ptlz in L., D . I11 128a. - M i &(read n k ? ) r , seep. 13*, n. 8. 7) In the Karnak scenes (L., D.1 1 1 127a) the next fortress to that of But0 is called P-n&tw n(?) S t y - M r - n - P t h ; with the natural change of the royal name Sethos into that of Rameses I1 (cf. last note),
. ..
.I
30*
28,s
brave man who can measure himself with me! I am initiated in the decrees(?) of Month2. How marred is every (word) that cometh out over thy tongue! How feeble3 are thy sentences! Thou comest to me wrapt up4 in confusions, loaded with errors. Thou splittest words asunder, plunging ahead(?)5. Thou art not wearied of groping6. Be strong! Forwards! Get thee along(?)7! Thou dost not fall. What is it like not to know what one has reached8? And how will it end? I retreat. Behold, I have arrived. Thy passion is soothed(??)l, thy heart is calm. Do not be angry1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . i 3 . I curtail(?)i4 for thee the end of thy letter, I answer(?) for thee what thou hast said. Thy narratives are collected upon my tongue, established upon my lips. They are confusing to heari5; none who converses(?)16 (with thee) can unravel them. They are like the talk of a man of the Delta with a man of ElephantineI7. Nay, but thou art a scribe of the Great Gates, reporting the affairs of the lands, goodly and fair [to] him who sees it. Say not that I have made thy name stinki9 before others(?). Behold, I have told thee the nature of the Maher; I have traversed for thee Retenu. I have marshalled beforez1 thee the foreign countries all at once, and the towns in their order. Attend(?)2zto me, and look at them calmlyz3; (thus) thou shalt be found able to describe themz4, and shalt become a travelled(?) . . . . . . . . . . .25
S_tn v hw-j, see above p. 15*, n. IO. W n m occurs once again on a writing-board in University College, London (= Rec. de. Tvav. I9,95), where wn-2 tw should be emended for wn-twi. The
I)
2)
determinatives of wd are perhaps wrongly borrowed from wdb. Month is here the war-god, so that the sentence is a further assertion of the martial qualities of Hori. 3) TVi(3)wc(3), cf. Bevlin Ostracon 10616; Pap. Bibl. N a t . 198, 2,21 ; M e d i w t Habu, unpublished, under the Balcony in the southern colonnade. 4) Bnd, see p. 13*, n. 15. 5) Lit. in entering before thyself; the sense is apparently that Amenemope continues to write in haste, heedless of the injuries which his precipitate behaviour causes him to inflict upon the language. - N hv-k, see p. 25*, n. 2. 6) Gmgm touchings fingerings; for gmgrn thus as the equivalent of ~ O M ~ +alpare, M cf. Harris 500, recto I , 2 ; 7, 12. 7) The writer sarcastically encourages Amenemope to persevere in his writing. - I suspect that the words imi &s-3st-tw are simply a corruption of ms-tw (cf. 15, 8), with elements borrowed from 3s to hasten and s&s to run. 8) I. e. thou art ignorant of thy plight. 9) Phwi nn m i&; this phrase occurs again on Petrie Ostracon 45.
IO) Read bh3-i. Hori announces his intention of retiring from the contest. I I ) Hn-twmight possibly be imperative: give in I 12) Hdn, see above p. IO*, n. 16. 13) S y is unknown; for n imw cf. p. 27*, n. IO. 14) Hk lit. shave, probably here in the sense to curtail or to summarize. 15) Lit. confused in hearing. 16) For 3 cf. Israel stele 22, where conversing clearly seems to be meant; so too perhaps Sall. I 8, I . Compare too the difficult epithet (or title) 3 of which SPIEGELBERG has collected the examples Rec. de Tvav. 14, 41. 17) This sentence is rightly often quoted in proof of the existence of dialects during the New Kingdom. 18) I. e. probably, who sees what thou doest. 19) Tm-k optatively, seep. I I*, n.4.-@n5,Coptic g ~ o g only , here transitively. 20) Xnw is doubtless a corruption of Rtnw, as throughout in the great Berlin manuscript of Sinuhe. 21) Lit. I have led to thee. 22) H n to bow 9ncline, with the meaning to attend to, cf. above 26, 3. 23) K b , see above p. 9*, n. 7. 24) Gm r, see p. 17*, n. 3. 25) For the sense cf. 20, 6. Hori holds out to Amenemope the hope that he may some day appear to be a much-travelled warrior.
Anastasi I
3 I*
( 1 4 , 2 1 7 , 2 ) .
In the course of the controversy the, scribe Hori propounds three problems connected with the building and erection of monuments such as a royal scribe in command of the soldiers might be called upon to solve. Amenemopes vaunted skill in his profession is thereby put to a very severe test, and in every instance he finds himself unable to reply. The technicalities of these passages are such that the modern Egyptologist is placed in a far worse quandary than this ancient scribe; so far from being able to supply the answers, he is barely able to understand the questions. I shall here attempt, as far as is possible, to define the nature of the three problems; in dealing with this difficult subject I have had the great the first authority in such matters, and advantage of consulting with Professor BORCHARDT, I am indebted to him for a number of valuable hints. P r o b l e m I (14,2-8). This deals with the building of a brick ramp of unusually large dimensions. The Egyptian word is st3, which etymologically means a place over which something is dragged or drawn. In the royal tombs the sloping, downward, passages were called st.3 ntr the divine passage. In Piarzkki gr st.3 is an ascending ramp used for scaling the walls of a hostile fortress. That st3 here is an ascending ramp is clear from the description, the length being 730 cubits (more than 383 metres), and the breadth 5 5 cubits (nearly 29 metres). The ramp is said to consist of 120 r-x-t, concerning which we later learn that each conjectures with great probameasured 30 cubits, by a breadth of 7 cubits, BORCHARDT bility that these were compartments (Kasten) in the interior of the ramp, formed b y brick partition-walls of no great thickness; these compartments would be filled with sand, a great saving of bricks thus being effected. A ramp constructed exactly in this manner has been found just to the South of the mortuary temple of the Second Pyramid, and belongs to about the 19th. Dynasty. If the view of the r-g-t here takeh be correct, the word may possibly be derived from rz mouth (cf. rz-st3, rz-w3t) and g(2)t(z) shrine box Worterd. 1520; SgjpZ. 1289; Pap. Turin 1 0 5 ~ 2 1 107,1g). ; With a length of 30 cubits, (BRUGSCH, the 7-g-t would leave a reasonable thickness of
= 12.
of the ramp2. On the other hand the indication that the compartments (r-g-t) were 120 x 7 = 840 cubits for the length of the ramp, without reckoning either the thickness of the partition-walls between the compartments or that of the end-walls at the top and the bottom of the ramp. In spite of this serious difficulty, RORCHARDTS view of the r-g-t seems the only way of accounting for their number and their length, The ramp, (i. e. its exterior walls) is stated to have been filled with reeds and beams. This of course alludes to the practice of strengthening vast brick walls with reedmats interposed between the courses and with transverse wooden beams inserted at a distance of some feet from one another. This mode of building is exemplified in the fortresses in the Second Cataract and elsewhere; see HOLSCHER, Das Hoke Tor von.Medinet H a h , p. 36. The height of the ramp a t its highest part was 60 cubits3 and, if I understand the next words rightly, the height in the middle of its upward slant was 30 cubits. To me it
I ) Regierungsbaumeister HOLSCHER,in whose forthcoming book on the temple of the Second Pyramid a plan and section of the ramp will be found, tells me that the breadth of the compartments averages about 3 5 metres, i. e. approximately 7 cubits. 2) Measured at the top; the thickness at the bottom would be 27 5 cubits, owing to the batter, if my hypothesis (see below) be correct. 3) This gives a slant of 8 z cubits in every 100; that of the ramp leading to the pyramid of Neuser-Re waslequal to 7,75 cubits in every IOO (BORCHARDT, Das Grabde?zkYnal des Ne-user-re, p. 44).
3 2
appears that ~ Y ~ - z following % A immediately upon hr &&-f, must be correlated with the same, and must therefore represent the height of the ramp at its centre; unless this view be taken, the words &Y d3&-f would be redundant, the height at the top being sufficiently clearly expressed by the words sn by alone. BORCHARDT points out, however, that the measurement at the middle is quite superfluous, and proposes to understand hri-2b-f as its interior, i. e. the space between the two sides of the ramp. It may be objected to this view that the space referred to is later mentioned as the length of the Y-g-tcompartments (30 cubits); and the philological objection already mentioned is considerable 1. The dimension next named, m i-sp (sp sn) rnh 15, is still more problematical. The phrase m i-sp (sp sn) occurs only once again, namely in the description of the obelisk ( 5 , 4 ) . agrees The exact words there are h u t - f n z 2-sp (sp sn) Y -tp m m& I, & I(?)2. BORCHARDT with me that this sentence must refer to the tapering of the obelisk towards its summit, though he disagrees in his translation of m 2-sp (sp sn). H e conjectures that 2-sp (sp sn) is a peculiar phrase for (end, so that the rendering of 15,4 would be it goes from end to top as I cubit and I finger, i. e. the falling away from the perpendicular on the entire height of the obelisk (110 cubits) amounts to I cubit and I finger; this is equivalent to rather of a finger to every cubit, which gives a quite reasonable angle3. Applying more than the sense thus obtained for i-sp (sp sz) to the problem of the ramp, BORCHARDT supposes that the end meant is the thickness of the short wall that joined the side-walls at the top of the ramp; the thickness of the top end would then be 15 cubits4. It appears to me that 2-sp (sp sn) is a very unlikely kind of expression for so concrete an idea as the end; and a greater similarity of meaning might be expected in the two sentences. Now let it be noted that the sense of 15, 4 would not be modified if we translate (it goes with a g ~ a d u a d slope (m 2-sp [sp-sn])towards the top as I cubit and I finger. On this view i-sp (sp sn) would be a technical term expressing the extent of divergence from the perpendicular at the summit of a monument. Applying this hypothesis to our ramp, we there find that a slope or batter of 15 cubits is indicateds. This batter must of course be that of the long exterior walls of the ramp, and the 15 cubits are reckoned, as in the case of the obelisk, at the top of the monument. The height of the ramp being 60 cubits, this gives a batter of I in 4, br 13/4 spans to the cubit, or an angle of 7 5 0 ; and it adds greatly to the probability of the theory here put forward that the ramp leading up to the pyramid ofSahure . exhibits precisely the same batter 6. Lastly, the ns-t of the ramp is said to measure 5 cubits. In the story of Sethon ns-t is the name given to the mastaba or stone bench outside house-doors (cf. GRIFFITHs note on I Khamuas 5, 11). BORCHARDT conjectures that the end-wall at the bottom of the ramp, corresponding with 2-sp, the end-wall (according to him), at the top, may be meant. Another possibility suggested by HOLSCHER is that ns-t may here signify the brick floor or surface of the ramp above the compartments (y-g-t) and the sand; this might well have a depth of 5 cubits in so vast a monument.
For the space between the walls, the interior, we should expect knw rather than hvi-ib. The sign in the Ms. is probably a corruption of db. 3) The Egyptians usually expressed this angle by a term skd, which states the number of spans divergence from the perpendicular for a height of one cubit; see the article by BORCHARDT, A . 2. 31 (1893), 1 5 . 4) It is not absolutely essential that there should have been an end-wall at the top, if the ramp was built against some other structure. 5 ) The literal translation would be with a batter of 15 cubits. Das Grabdenkmal des Konigs Sahu-re, p. 39. Unfortunately my hypothesis 6) See BORCHARDT, was framed too late to be submitted to Professor BORCHARDTS criticism; Herr HOLSCHER finds no technical difficulties in it.
I)
2)
Anastasi I
33*
The problem before the scribe Amenemope was to reckon out the quantity of bricks that would be needed in constructing the ramp. All the requisite data are givenl; but it would sorely tax the powers of a modern builder to give even an approximate estimate of the number of bricks needed.
730
ELEVATION.
>5@) <
A
55
<
$30
GROUND-PLAN,
. 2
SECTION ATTOP,
The accompanying diagrams display the proportions of the ramp, so far as they can be understood from the papyrus. Where different suggestions have been made, BORCHARDTS opinion is indicated by (B), HOLSCHERS by (H), and my own by (G). P r o b l e m z (14,8-16,s). A n obelisk that has been hewn in the quarries of the Gebel Akhmar near Heliopolis lies ready to be conveyed to the Capital. All its dimensions are given, and the problem which Amenemope is called upon to solve is the number of men needed for its transport. Most of the technical terms employed in the text are &rag ley6pevcul but their sense is for the most part not difficult to determine. The first measurement clearly refers to the length of shaft 2; iwn, given, I IO cubits ?z h n n &nt(?), the most important element in the compound expression used, is of course the word for column. The ddy-t3 of IO cubits next named must be the pedestal; the measurement is obviously the length of the sides, the height, which must have been less, being omitted. With this identification of the dby-t agrees the next datum, lp-snw (or p-Snw)4 n p&wz-fmakes 7 cubits on every side; the size of the obelisk at the base of its shaft is here evidently intended. Next comes the clause with the problematical term j-sp (sp sn) discussed in dealing with the first problem; as we saw, this must refer to the
I) The size of the brick is assumed to be known. The obelisk is thus far taller than any that has been preserved. PETRIEhas however calculated that the Constantinople obelisk may have measured 172 feet in height (see PETRIE,History I1 132); in the NovthamPton stele two obelisks of 108 cubits each (= 185 feet) are mentioned (Urk. IV 425). 3) The word occurs once again on an ostracon in my own possession (no. 3) giving a list of objects 2wt m E-t m mitt ty-f dby-t the statue of wood and also its pedestal, of wood; among the latter is dby-t naturally being determined with the sign for wood. Dby-t is probably to be distinguished from db-t brick, though the latter is occasionally used of blocks of stone. 4) Apparently only here.
2)
G a r d i n er.
34
extent of the divergence from the perpendicular, which amounted to I cubit and I finger(?) on the entire height of I I O cubits, or o . 26 fingers in every cubit 1. The pyramidion ( @ - - brbr) is stated to have been I cubit in height, of course an impossibly small measurement. Lastly, the point of the pyramidion (&ty, only here) is said to have measured two fingers; BORCHARDT understands this to refer to the length of the sides of the tiny square surface at the summit of the pyramidion. For all these measurements, see the figure on the preceding page. All the dimensions required for determining the content of the obelisk, and hence also its weight, appear to be given. P r o b l e m 3 (16~6-17~2).The last problem is, of the three, by far the most difficult to understand. It is at all events clear that it concerns the erection of a colossal statue, and that this statue had to b e gradually lowered to its ultimate position by the removal of a great artificial magazine of sand on to which it had been hauled(?). The statue covers 30 cubits as it lies stretched upon the ground, and has a breadth of 20 cubits. The word for magazine is m & y , the ordinary word for a store-house in which corn or other things were kept; and its sub-divisions(?) are called Smm,also a known word. All the other technical terms and dimensions are quite obscure. The Smm are stated to have been filled with sand from the river-banks, and the magazine, which was situated under (&Y) the colossus, has to be emptied (sSW). The question asked of Amenemope is as to the number of men to be employed in order to remove the sand (bm demolish overturn) in six hours. The use of sand for the gradual lowering of monuments is, as BORCHARDT points out, exemplied b y the late tombs near the Pyramid of Onnos (see BARSANTIS article, Annnlts du Seruice I 283-4) where the massive lid of a sarcophagus was supported upon wooden pillars resting upon sand; when it was desired to bring the lid into its final position, the sand was gradually allowed to escape from under the wooden pillarsz.
The batter of the obelisk is I ) It is probable that the h after mh I should be emended into db. quite unusually steep. 2) One may also compare BONOMIS theory of the manner in which the colossus known as the Vocal Memnon was erected ( A . 2 . 4 5 [1908], 32-34); however BORCHARDT is of the opinion that sand cannot have been used in that case.
2)
5*
3f5*
matter of the texts copied ill conceals their educational aim; this is particularly the case with the collections of model letters, or miscellaniesi, of which the Papyrus Koller affords a very typical example. The letters contained in these miscellanies are of diverse kinds. The simplest consist of little beyond the elaborate salutations demanded b y Egyptian good-breeding. Others, even less readable, are mere lists of articles to be manufactured or foodstuffs to be provided and are simply designed for the purpose of widening the pupil's vocabulary. The majority concern such cominissions or affairs of everyday life as might later claim the scribe's attention in the course of his professional career. When the subject-matter permitted, the pupil frequently substituted his own and his teacher's names for those of the original writer and recipient of the letter; Koller 5,s for example, mentions the names of two scribes, of which Amenemope may be that of the master, and Paibes that of the pupil 2. Besides letters, the miscellanies here described often contain short compositions of a more purely literary character; hymns to Thoth or Amon, eulogies of the Pharaoh or of the Capital, and above all homilies (as a rule not lacking in humorous touches) on the dignity of the scribe's profession. The KolZer comprises four letters, the first lacking the customary salutations and the last ending abruptly after a few opening sentences. The subjects are as follows: a) The equipment of a Syrian expedition ( I,I-2,2). b) Warnings to an idle scribe (2,2-3,3). c) A letter concerning Nubian tribute (3,3-54). d) A n order to make preparations for Pharaoh's arrival (5,5-5,8). Short introductions with bibliographical notes being prefixed to the translations of each section, only a few general remarks are here ne5essary. The KoZZer is particularly closely related to the London papyrus Aiznstnsi IV, with which it has two sections in common. The orthography is good, and mistakes or corruptions seem to be relatively few. The pupil by whom the KoZZev was written seems to have aspired to erudition, for the texts chosen are full of technical and foreign words. The first to translate the papyrus was A. WIEDEMANN, whose renderings (op. cit. p. 19-23) are accompanied b y brief notes on the subject-matter but without a philological commentary. The only other treatment of the papyrus as a whole is that ofERMAN in the handbook entitled Aus den Pn$yrus der KiinigZichen &!useen, Berlin 1899, belonging to the .official series of Hnndbiichev de!? Kb'nigZichen Museen xu BevZiz (p. 93-97).
I)
The best-known of these are Anastasi I I . I I I . I V . V ; Sallier I , in the British Museum; Pap.
Koller
37*
Anastasi I and the Edinbuvgh Poem about the Chariot (A. 2 .18 [1880], 94-95). No translations of this section seem to have published besides those named above in the general introduction.
~
(The scribe Amenope writes to the scribe Paibes,? saying: - Take good heed to make ready the array(?) of horses which is (bound) for Syria, together with their stable-men3, and likewise their grooms4; their coats5 . . . -ed and filled with provender and straw, rubbed down twice over; their corn-bags(?)6 filled with kyllestis-bread, a single ass(?)in the charge ofa (every) two men. Their chariots are of b r y - ~ o o d ( ?filled ) ~ with (all kinds of(?)? weapons of warfare; eighty arrows in the 1,5 quiver, the . . . . . , . l a , the lance(?)13, the swordi4, the dagger, the . . . . . . . . 15,
the . . . . . . . , IF, the whip17 of _t3g-wood1* furnished with lashes, the chariottheir clubao, the staff(?)2iof watchfulness, the javelin of Kheta, the rein-l~oser(?)~, facings (of) bronze of six-fold alloyz4, graven with chiselling(?)z5,. . , . . . -ed, and . . . . . . -ed26. Their cuirassesz7 are placed beside them. The bows are adjustThe names are restored from 5, 5. R k s is possibly identical with the rare Hebrew collective word for horses t h 7 ; see BURCH. no. 642, where the phonetic difficulty is pointed out. - For grg we should expect grg-tw (cf. 5,6), but in 3, 5 and d0rbiney 2, 2 the ending is similarly omitted. 3) H r y ib, a very common title, which in itself probably indicates quite a low rank. 4) Mri, see p. 6*, n. 16. 5) gnw lit. hair, only here of horses coats. 6) Here the provisions for the stable-men and grooms appear to be referred to; these were carried on asses. - H3r, properly a corn-measure, is occasionally determined with the sign for the hide, cf. Rhind Math. P a p . 4 1 ~ 3 .4 ; 43, I , MAR., Karnak 54,46. 7) The k-r-S-t was a small loaf weighing from about half to three-quarters of a pound, see EISENLOHR, Proc. S . B. A . 19, 263; the name is preserved in the Greek xvL?.fang, a word known from Hdt. I1 77 and other sources (see A. 2. 47 [ I ~ I O ] , 159 footnote). 8) R iwd as preposition means either ( I ) in the charge of, so here and P a p . Bologna 1094, 6,7; P a p . Bibl. Nut. 187, 3, 4. 6; or ( 2 ) with (apud) cf. Salt 124, verso I,I; P a p . Turin 57, I ; 103, I , 16. 9) B r y , only here and A n a s t . I V 16,7, where it is likewise a kind of wood of which chariots were made. IO) Probably emend hw (nb) n rc h-t; note that in this expression h-t is written with t and stroke during the 18th. Dynasty, (cf. Urk. IV 699). 11) Is-p-t, see above p. 27*, n. 17, 12) Hnay-t, as a weapon belonging to the chariot, Edinburgh Poena about Chariot, recto 11. 13) M-r-h, only here and A n a s f . I V 17,r; cf. mepep, but this comparison perhaps fails if the
I)
2)
. .
Boheiric form mepe5 quoted by Peyron is well authenticated. 14) H-r-p, Hebrew >2?, also Anast. I V 17,1; Edinburgh Poena, recto 13. 15) K-w-t, only here. 16) Sk-hna(w), again only Anast. IV 17, I. 17) Is-b-r,seeBuRcH.no.134 and above p.26*,n.6. 18) _T3g, a species of wood; whips are made of ; chariot-pole, below it, as here, A n a s t . IT/ 1 7 , ~ the 2 , I ; chariots, U r k . I V 707; the word also ib. 701. 705. 732. 19) Rwd-(wt) lashes, only here; Anast. I26,S uses another word; for rwd-(wt) as bow-string cf. below 1 8 ; LACAU, Sarcophages I I , Index. 20) So too t wn-t n ty-k mrkb-t, Edinburgh Poem, verso 9. 21) H(w), elsewhere only d0rbiney 13,1 (conclusive as to sense); Anast. I V I ~ J . 2 2 ) The weapon niw seems from the hieroglyphic determinative in R., I. H . 215,31; 240, 37; 241,44 to be a javelin; for javelins, see WILKINSON, Anc. Egyptians (ed. BIRCH), 1208. Cf. p niw n ty-k mrkb-t, Edinburgh Poena, recto 1 1 . 23) For it to loose see p. zz*, n. 7, and for hnr see p. zo*, n. IO; what instrument is here meant is hard to say. 24) Sna(3) n sis is evidently an alloy of six ingredients; from this passage and from Harris I 45,s; 47,6; 5 2 b 9 it is plainly a kind of bronze, and from ibid. 6,g; 47,4 we know that it was of the colour of gold, i. e. probably like brass, Other references, Harris I59,3; P a p . Turin 3 2 ~9; . A n a s t . I V 16,12. 25) For this difficult phrase see p. 28*, n. 13. 26) Fti and na-s-&, unknown verbs. 27) R-b-S-y, from Hebrew rr53.5; see SPIEGELBERG, Petubastis, Index no. 235-236 or demotic instances and some important remarks.
38*
ed(??) to their strings, their wood2 being tested in drawing, their(?) binding^(?)^ consisting of clean . . . . leather(?)4. T h e pole5 is of &g-woodG, . . . . . . -ed7, shaped(?)8,fitted with leatherg, finished off(?), oiledO and polished(?)l.
I) Rwd-(wt), see above note 18; the meaning of _tsy here is obscure. 2 ) Dbw lit. horns, here clearly the wooden part of the bows; the word for bow in other languages not seldom alludes to its shape, cf. arcus,
Bogen. 3) M-S-y, only here and Anast. I 26,6. 4) For mtr-t we may possibly compare P a p . K a h u n 19,57. 5) For the word see p. z8*, n. 6. 6) _Tsg, see p. 37*, n. 18. 7) G-p does not occur in the parallel text Anast. I V 16, 11-12, and has evidently nothing
to do with g-p below 2 , s ; it may be for g-r-p, a gloss on g-r-b (see next note). 8) G-r-b (so too A n a s t . I V 16, 11) is identical with g-r-p, A n a s t . I 26, 5; see p. z8*, n. 7. 9) T b y is clearly derived from _tbw sandalmaker, leather-worker; in the sense shod, cf. Anast. 1 1 18,6 = Anast. I V 16, 5. IO) Sgnn to oil, cf.Anast. I I I 8 , 4 = Anast. I V 16,3; A n a s t . I V 15,4; 16,12; Sall. I 4 , 1 0 ; 5,3; Harris 500, verso 5,g. I I ) M-S-r-v (also in A n a s t . I V 16,1z) looks like a Semitic passive participle *wzashr.iir; the word is unknown.
They1 tell me that thou forsakest writing, and departest and dost flee; that thou forsakest writing and usest thy legs3 like horses of the riding-s~hool(??)~. Thy heart is fluttered; thou art like an ky-bird5. Thy ear is deaf(?)6; thou
I) The section opens with the usual epistolary formula r nti to wit, which is best omitted in translating. 2) Not books; for SS to write so-determined cf. Anast. V 8,3; Inscr. of M e s N 14. 3) The expression wzh-k m rdwi-k, lit. thou seizest (or art full of) thy legs, seems to occur only here; Anast. I V has a superfluous wz before mh. 4) _T-h-b only here; the sense is quite problematical. - H t r i seems never to be used in lateEgyptian for simply one horse; it means a pair, or a horse and chariot. 5) The bird by is also mentioned A n a s t . I V I b, I ; P a p . wed. Berlin 21,z. 6) D-n(r)-gonly here; however the proper name D-n(r)-g (BURCH. no. rI8g), older D3g (e. g. Cairo stele M . K . 20007; L. D.I1 147b), is often deterqined with the ear, implying that the verb was common.
Koller
39
art like an ass in taking beatings. Thou art like an antilope in fleeing. Thou 2,s art not2 a hunter3 of the desert, nor a Mazoi4 of the West! Thou art one who is deaf and does not hear5, to whom men make (signs) with the hand. Thou art like the mate of a skipper skilled in (managing) the boat. When he is skipper6 in ,the boat, he stands at the prow(?)7, he does not look out for dangerous winds, he does not search for the current*; if the outer(?)9 rope is let go, the rope in front(?)O is in his neck(?)ii. When he is pulling the rope1, he ~atches(?)~ the . . . . . . -birds, he plucksi4 . . . . . flower^(?)'^ on the banks, he cuts awayrGclods of earth(??)?. His . . . . . . 8. . . . . . . . . . -trees, he . . . . . . . . ksb-treesi9. His . . . . . . 2o is of seven cubits, he cuts reeds(?). His tresses(??)2i 3,r . . . . . . to his feet, in work of Kush. His . . . . . . . . . is of bright. . . . . . . . .22 in work of the overseer of . . . . . . . .23. He binds threadsz4 to its(??) end, in
I) I. e. thou art as stubborn and unresponsive when punished as a beaten ass. 2 ) A n a s t . I V wrongly omits the negation here and inserts it before mntk shy. 3) For similar writings of nw hunter (for the sense see the determinative in Urk. I 2 ) cf. Urk. I V 994; Harris I28,4; L.,D. I11 356. 4) For the Mazoi as hunters, cf. especially A n a s t . I V IO,^; in Urk. IV 994 the titles great one of the MdJw and overseer of hunters occur in parallelism with one another. See now MAXMULLER, Egypt. Researches I1 p. 76-77. 5) Cf. A n a s t . I 6,6; 26,3. 6) I. e, when the mate (&vi- subordinate) is acting as the skipper or rkis. 7) Tpli, probably a special nautical term; tp-t is the name of a part or an appurtenance of a boat made of cedar-wood and measuring 20-30 cubits ( T u r i n . P a p . unpublished); tpti may be a nisbe-form from it. 8) H-(y)-n,Coptic ~ O E I M(Rec. de Trav. 28,214); elsewhere the word clearly means waves, not current, e. g. Anast. I V Ib, 2. 9) If n bn(r) is read with Koller, this must be a genitive qualifying p nwh; if the reading of Anast. I V be preferred hJ Y bn(r) means Yo let go. IO)@nt-t is possibly a technical term for the rope attached at the prow. 11) I. e. probably, becomes entangled with his neck, WIEDEMANN takes this clause to mean, the towing-rope is placed round his neck, but this cannot be correct, as the sentence clearly continues the description of what happens when the mate is acting as skipper. - &@wZ-k, which KOLLER reads instead of hzwi-f (Anast. I V ) , is certainly a mistake, like rdw2-K in 3 ,I; the scribe is still influenced by the pronouns of the second person with which the text began. 12) Wnn-f ith p n w h (parallel to wnn-f m n j w above) introduces a new picture of the mates heedlessness; he is now imagined as towing on the riverbank. For 2th p nwh the Modern Egyptian would say quite similarly
+..
13)G-p is here probably the equivalent of k p (see above p. 9*,n. 14); the substitution of g for k is however difficult to parallel at this period. 14)Fg, so written also P a p . Leiden 345, recto G Z,I,is the equivalent of f k in P a p . Turiva 8g,5; doubtless Coptic qwde: qczr euellere. 15)Sri(zw), only here. 16) Pns means to cut off the head (e. g. MAR., Must. D IO; M i s s i o n V 622) or the ribs (cf. NAV., Deiv el B a h a r i 107; Mission V 617) of a bull to be sacrificed; also cut away hair, Ebers 63,13. Here I imagine the meaning to be that the idle sailor, instead of attending to his towing, amuses himself with hunting the birds or picking the flowers on the bank, or else in knocking away the heavy lumps of muddy earth at the edge of which he is walking. 17)M - k - k , cf. A n a s t . 111 2,4, where the word occurs together with 3h-t fields. IS) Mtr-? here is of unknown meaning. 19)Before ksb, a kind of tree mentioned already in the Pyramidtexts (e. g. 456. 994), an infinitive is n to bring. expected; perhaps emend i 20) WJh-t, meaning unknown. 21) Nbd-t means tressed hair in d o r b i n e y IO,^. 9; I I,Z. 4; A n a s t . 111 3,3; masculine in Harris 500, recto 6,1. The damaged word following is perhaps a verb t o dangle hang down or the like. For the erroneous reading rdzwi-k of KOLLERsee above n. 11. - The very obscure sentences which follow may allude to the foppish attire of the skippers mate, another sign of his disinclination for regular work. 22) The words i-t-t and n-f- are 8naE A E Y ~ ~ E V C Z . 23) Reading and meaning uncertain; the title occurs again Harris I7,y (see A. 2 . 2 3 [1885], 60-61), where its connection with cattle suggests that it means (overseer of horns. 24) G-w-in seems from Anust. I 24,6 to mean to bind or tie. - P-t-r probably the Hebrew h D , see BURCH.no. 430. The meaning of the sentence i s quite obscure.
40
order to wear a loin-cloth(??). He is one who pricks up(?) the ear on the day of the ass; (he is) a rudder on the day of the boat. I will do all these things to him3, if he turns his back4 on his office.
I ) This garment, the transcription of which is unknown, is often mentioned in late-Egyptian texts e. g. below 4,6; BERGMANN, Hierat. Texte 1 , 2 . 5; P a p . Berlin 9784,6; Harris 500, verso I , I I ; and six times in Harris I . z) M h msdr, lit. to fill the ear, i. e. probably to <listen hear hearken; cf. Anast. I z0,6 (with a superfluous m); Anast. I V 5 4 ; both rather obscure passages. 3) These words must refer to the lazy pupil
addressed in the first words of this effusion, and we should therefore expect the second person; this however is given by neither text, though Koller has had two examples of the suffix 2nd. pers. sing. where it was not required (see p. 39*, n. I I). Nor is it plain to what the words all these things refer, since no punishments have been threatened or described. 4) H3 h3-f Y, cf. Anast. V 6,1; 15,7 = Sall. I 6 , 2 ; P a p . T u r i n 88, 11; Israel stele 11; Berlin Ostracon 11 247 (Hierat. P a p . 111, 35).
The fan-bearer at the right hand of the king, the captain of auxiliary troops, the overseer of the countries of Kush, Paser*, writes to him who protects his people, to wit: - This communication is brought to thee saying: when my letter reaches thee thou shalt cause the tribute to be made ready3 in all its items4, in iw+bulls, young g+bulls, wndw-bulls, gazelles, oryxes, ibexes6, ostriches7; their broad-boats, cattle-boats and (ordinary) boats being ready to hand(?)9, their
I ) The titles are unusual, but fanbearer etc. and overseer of the lands of Kush suggest that the Royal Son of Kush is meant. One Royal Son or Viceroy named Paser lived in the reign of Eye (stelae at Gebel Addeh); another seems to be mentioned under Rameses I1 on a monument at Thesaurus, 953. Naples, see BRUGSCH, z ) Mik rm_t-f is found nowhere else either as a title or as a proper name. Sr., H . 0. had a different reading: [to . . . . . . the overseer(?) of the . . . . of] Kush. 3) Variant of SP., H . O., thou shalt take heed to have [the tribute] made ready.
. .
. . . .
4) Lit. in all its things. 5) M.-h_d, for this animal see VON BISSING, Mast. d. Gemnikai I 3 4 , and for the spelling cf. Harris I4,S; zoa, 12. 13 etc. 6) Nr3w, a late writing of the old word nisw, found first in Benihasan I1 4. 13; for the animal, see VON BISSING, 09. cit., p. 35. 7) Niw, already P y r . 46ga; a good instance Urk. IV 19; cf. too below 4.1. 8) Hn-ihw, cf. Anast. I V 6,r I ; 7 , 6 ; Harris I Izb, 1 1 ; 69,13. 9) Tpti-dt, only here.
Koller
4I*
skippers and their crews prepared for starting; much gold wrought into dishes, refined gold(?) in bushels(?), good gold, precious stones(?) of the desert in bags 41 of red cloth, ivory and ebony, ostrich3 feathers, nebk fruit in . . . . . . . . . , bread of(?) m-y-n-y-&s5,&-&-&6, Ssy, panther skins, gums, of the nebk4, i-&-r-&-dy baboons, , apes, didy-berriesg, red jasper, arnethyst(?)l, crystal, cats of M ~ w ~ Saw-vessels containing &nfi(?)-pigmei~t~, cyperus-roots (?)5, sacks(?)andfs-packets(??)*6; numerous men of %-m-ii7 in front of the revenues, their staves(??)18 adorned with 20 . . . . . . -ed2Iwith . . . . . . .22 4,s gold, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . containing . . . . . . . . ,
. .
. . .
I ) Dd-t, so written too Anast. I V 16,2, is a flat dish, cf. Urk. IV 631; the word occurs already in the Old Kingdom, cf. L., D. 1128, and its connection with the Hebrew Ti? seems very doubtful. 2 ) Gmw,an unknown word. 3) N r w is a spelling for niw (see above p. 40*, n. 7) cf. Pap. Turin 1256. 4) The tree called nbs in Egyptian, in Old Coptic rrosplc (A. Z. 38 [ I ~ o o ] ,87), is the zizyphus, or Christs thorn-tree, called by the Arabs +; its fruit is sweet and palatable when ripe; the bread of the nbs-tree, mentioned here and in the lists of offerings, is probably a cake made from the dried fruit. See MASPEROS article Proc. S. B. A . 13, 496-498. g w @ n is unknown. 5) Two unknown Nubian words, of which the first is probably the name of a fruit, the second that of a tree. 6) H-(i+, a fruit of some kind, conjectured by BRUGSCH to be that of the dum-palm, sec Worterb. Sufi@ 855; further examples in the Petrie Ostraca 31. 37; for the spelling here cf. Harris I 19b, 12; 36b, 5. 7) 3s-y, probably a fruit, is mentioned next to h-k-k in Harris I 65a, 4. 5 and again ibid. 74, 3. 4. 8) Krny gum, x o , u p ~in Greek and KOMH in Boheiric, see especially KRALL,Studien z. Gesch. d. alten Aegypten IV, ~ 7 ~ 3 0 . 9) D i d y , according to BRUGSCH(A. 2. 29, [1891], 31-33) the magically potent red berry of the mandrake; this plant was particularly abundant in Elephantine, cf. besides BRUGSCHS references Urk. IV, 5 5 . Pliny (Hist. Nat. 24, 102) mentions a plant called ophiusa which grew at Elephantine and possessed very remarkable properties. IO) Hnm-t, probably either red jasper or carneNot. lian; for the colour cf. L., D. I11 117 = CHAMP., Descr. I 479; Zauberspr. f. Mutter u. K i n d I , I ; Turin Loue-songs 2,3. The knot-amulet, which is usually of jasper or cornelian, is said in Totb. ed. LEPS., 159 to be made of hnna-t. The Hebrew h h t t was compared with hnrn-t by BRUGSCH, Wortevb. I 100; but LXX interprets this as 8pud8v~t0g. grim-t as a product of Nubia, cf. Pap. Turan 67,11; Sehel, Famine Inscrifition 16. 11) H - w k is without doubt merely a variant
writing of hm3g34 which is mentioned elsewhere as a product of Nubia, see BRUGSCH, Sieben Jahre der (Les Mktazcx, Hungersnot, p. I 29. LEPSIUS-BEREND p. 21 footnote) cites HOSKINS for the fact that this precious stone is depicted as red. If this evidence be relied upon, hmlg3-t might be carnelian, hnm-t being red jasper; or vice versa. However a word for amethyst is still wanting, and I prefer provisionally to identify hrn3g3-t with this. 12) I-r-k-b-s is rightly identified by BONDI, Lehnworter 28, with Hebrew t h h Assyrian algarnlsu. 13) Miw, a Nubian district, mentioned Urk. IV 796 and often. 14) &TntZ(?)is often mentioned as a material used in writing, e. g. Pap. Leiden 347, 12,9; Totb. ed. NAV., 130,44; I34,17; together with other colours used for writing or painting, cf. Mission XV 26 (Luxor) ; Ostracon Cairo 25 247; Sny-vessels containing hnti(?), cf. Harris I 6 5 a , 3; 742. Possibly this is the name of the raw material out of which the ordinary red paint was made. I 5) Nfwis compared by NEWBERRY (Proc. S. B. A. 22, 146-148) to a vegetable product, the root of the Cypevus esculentus, L., still known in the Sudan under the name 16) Ps, cf. Harris I 65a, 8 ; 746, in connection with nfw. 17) IY-mi,a well known tribe of the Sudan, cf. Urk. IV 333. 796; L., D. 111 218 c and elsewhere. MASPERO (Rec. de Trav. 8,84) recalled the fact that the Galla race call themselves Ihn Ornaa the sons of Orma, and concluded that the ancient word Ir-nz-i is preserved in the modern Ilna; TOMKINS (Rec. de Trau. 10,98) prefers to identify Ir-rn-iwith Orma, and if the name I l m Orma has anything at all to do with Ir-m-i, this surely is the more likely view of the two, Ilm meaning simply sons of like Arabic 18) I-b-r-$(?)-i, an unknown word. 19) K-r-k-r-t-b-iis unknown, and the verb (?)s-U-w has a very suspicious appearance. 20) S-n(r)-wis a BnaE Aeydpmov. 21) Tftf in Pap. Turin 74,5 means to be dis. turbed fluttered like the simplex ifi; its sense here is unknown. 22) &lpi-t, another unknown word.
$.
A.
Gardiner.
42
and with all precious stones; tall men of T - Y ~ in loin-cloths(?), their fans2 of gold, wearing high feathers3, their bracelets (??)4 of woven thread; many Negroes of all sorts5. Increase thy contribution every year! Have a care for thy head, and turn thee from thy indolence. Thou art [old]; look to it diligently6, and beware! Be mindful of the day7 when the revenues are brought, and thou passest into the Presence beneath the Balcony8; the nobles ranged on either side in front of his Majesty, the chiefs and envoysg of every land standing gazing and loaking at the revenues. Thou art afraid and shrinltest(?)lO,thy hand grows feeble, and thou knowest not whether it be death or life that lies before thee. Thou art profuse in prayers [to] thy gods: Save me, prosper mela this one time!
I ) T-r-k does not seem to occur elsewhere, unless the name hitherto read 3-r-k (URK. IV 796; DE MORGAN,Cat. d. Mon. I 67) should really be read with the liw bird. 2 ) Bh-t, cf. Harris I 21a, 2 ; Harris 500, recto 3,11; the phrase hbs bh-t to carry(?) the fan cf. DAVIES, A m a v n a VI 2 0 ; Anast. 111 8,6 = Anast. I V 16,5; L., D. 111 218 c. regards the words high of feathers 3) ERMAN as an attribute of the fans; this appears to me less probable. 4) K-r-m-t occurs again only in the description of Negroes Anast. I11 8,7 = Anast. I V 16,6 their k-r-m-t are upon (Y) their hands.
5) M tnw nb, see above p. 7*, n. 6. 6) For b, see ERMANS remarks A . 2. 42 (1905),
107. 7) Cf. sh? nk hrw n krs, Sinuhe B 190. 8) SSd, see p. 17*, n. 6. 9) MSyti, only here; from m i to travel. IO) Thbh is probably to be emended into tnbh, for which see Admonitions p. 67. 11) For n . n whether . . or, see 1%scription of Mes, p. 16. 12) Sw/d?-i, probably infinitive used as imperative, see SETHE, Verbum I1 S 566; see above p. 22*, n. 17, and cf. in-i, P a p . Bzbl. Nat. 197, 4, 6; int-i, P a p . Bzbl. Nat. 197,6, 2 .
..
..
The scribe Amenope writes (to) the scribe Paibes. This letter is brought unto thee to say: - Take heed to have preparations made for Pharaoh, thy good lord, in fair and excellent order. Do not draw down punishment upon thyself. Look to it diligently, and beware! Do not be remiss! List of all the things that thou shalt cause to be provided. - Let materials be procured for the basket-makers consisting of reeds and and is-r-grass; and likewise . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . , (End).
. .
3
4
5-
7
P
7
0
a.
a .
b 4-
?/
&.Zl
'9
/ . 5
anad&
143-7.
3P
,b
as
40
t 1 IQ
94
Lihw-ibGIq,t-S
40
e:
1.
e
6%
'h
60
zf
4.
5- .c
7.
7.
+f
9201- 4UOn
68
/Q
f5
74
77
80
2.
acxd%cLmolPmod$ &,
U
5"
/O
/3-
X & J #
-7.
5
Li
IO
/S
a:
(Si
to
15