CHARMS, UTTERANCES
275-299.
Utterance 275.
415a. To say: N. comes
to you, ye falcons,
415b. since (?) your
houses are barred off for N.,
415c. his m‘rḳ-garment
of ape-skin on his back.
416a. N. opens the
double doors (of heaven); N. goes to the boundary of the horizon;
40b. N. laid down the
mśd.t-garment on the ground;
416c. N. became like
the Great One who is in Crocodilopolis.
Utterance 276.
417a. To say: Thy act
is against thee, what thou doest is against thee,
417b. O sksk-serpent,
which is in his (thy) hole?, the opponent.
Utterance 277.
418a. To say: Horus
falls because of his eye; the bull (Set) collapses because of his testicles.
418b. Fall, collapse!
Utterances 278.
419a. To say: Bȝbi is
arisen, he is against the chief of Letopolis,
419b. whom that spittle
protected; this (spittle) protects every one beloved of me.
419c. Thou art loosed,
O wfi-serpent. Cause N. to be protected.
p. 96
Utterance 279.
420a. To say: N., I
have trampled the mud of the water-courses. Thot is the protector of N.,
420b. when it is dark,
when it is dark.
Utterance 280.
421a. To say: Doer,
doer; passer, passer;
421b. thy face behind
thee; guard thyself against the great door,
Utterance 281.
422a. To say: Punish
the serpent, Kbbhḥrwbi,
422b. O lion of phti, O
lion of ptti, the phti (and) ptti.
422c. Give to me now, ḥrwtwbś,
meat, now, one pot.
422d. Go, go, serpent,
serpent.
Utterance 282.
423a. To say: Lo, this
foreign country of the mouth of the river, this is thy complaint:
423b. "This
foreign country of the mouth of the river belongs to me, the lord of Ḥknw."
423c. It is Ḫ‘i-tȝw of Ḥknw,
this thine ox-god, the renowned, against whom this has been done.
Utterance 283.
424a. To say: Truly, N.
wags his thumb, the left one, against thee.
424b. He gives a sign
with it to Min (with his) thunderbolt. O robber, rob not.
Utterance 284.
425a. To say: He
(serpent) whom Atum has bitten has filled the mouth of N.,
425b. while he wound
himself up (lit. wound a winding).
425c. The centipede was
smitten by the householder, the householder was smitten by the centipede.
425d. That lion is
inside this lion.
425e. Two bulls fight
inside the ibis.
p. 97
Utterance 285.
426a. Thy two drops of
poison are on the way to thy two poison-vessels. Spit both out now,
426b. for they two are
rich in water. O thou who winkest, thou . who art (adorned with) a head-band, O
Śšȝ.w,
426c. rain, that the
serpent may become cowardly and the throat (canal) of my heart may be safe;
426d. storm, that the
lion may drown himself in water and the throat of the heart of the king (?) may
be wide.
Utterance 286.
427a. To say: O ye, who
gurgle like the young of a "water-pest" (crocodile), tmti, thn.w,
427b. kbnw, those who
glide away! The red crowns (i.e. water-flowers) praise
427c. the tiw-šii; the
tiw-šii belong to him who has elevated the red crowns.
427d. Hail, we two!
Utterance 287.
428a. To say: Nni, his
mother; Nni, his mother.
428b. Art thou really
here, art thou really here? Lion, get away.
Utterance 288.
429a. To say:
Hki-serpent or hkr.t-serpent, go away
429b. (with) face on
the road. Eye of N., look not at him.
429c. Thou shalt not do
thy will with N. Get away.
Utterance 289.
430a. To say: A bull is
fallen because of the śdḥ-serpent; the śdḥ- serpent is fallen because of the
bull.
430b. Fall, glide away.
Utterance 290.
43m. To say: Face falls
on face; a knife coloured and black, goes out against it, until it has swallowed
that
431b. which it has
seized.
p. 98
Utterance 291.
432a. To say: Thine
honour is effaced, O white hole, by him who has escaped the fnt-worm.
432b. Thine honour is
robbed, O white hole, by him who has escaped the fnt-worm.
Utterance 292.
433a. To say: Thou art
seized, thou, O ’iknhi-serpent;
433b. thy neighbour (?)
has seized thee, ’iknhi-serpent.
Utterance 293.
434a. To say: Back,
hidden serpent; hide thyself,
434b. and let N. not
see thee.
434c. Back, hidden
serpent; hide thyself,
434d. and come not to
the place where N. is,
434e. lest he pronounce
against thee that name of thine, Nmi son of Nmi.t.
435a. A servant (holy
person) as the Ennead's pelican (once) fell into the Nile, (so) flee, flee.
435b. Serpent (beast),
lie down.
Utterance 294.
436a. To say: N. is
Horus who comes forth from the acacia, who comes forth from the acacia,
436b. to whom it was,
commanded: "Be thou aware of the lion," he comes forth to whom it was
commanded: "Be thou aware of the lion."
437a. N. has come forth
from his dni.t-jar, after he had passed the night in his dni.t-jar,
437b. and N. appears in
the morning.
43 7c. He has come
forth from his dni.t-jar, after he had passed the night in his dni.t-jar,
437d. and N. appears in
the morning.
Utterance 295.
438a. To say: The
mȝfd.t-lynx springs on the neck of the ’in-di-f-serpent.
p. 99
438b. It repeats it on
the neck of the serpent with the raised head (dśr-tp).
438c. Who is it who
will remain? It is N. who will remain.
Utterance 296.
439a. To say:
Tt.w-serpent, where to? Thou shalt not go. Stand by N.
439b. N. is Geb.
Hmt-serpent, brother of hmt.t-serpent,
439c. should thy
father, the d‘‘miw, die?
Utterance 297.
440a. The hand of N.
which is come upon thee--
440b. it is a violent
one which is come upon thee,
440c. it is the
mȝfd.t-lynx, which is in the house of life.
440d. She strikes thee
in thy face; she scratches thee in thine eyes,
441a. so that thou
fallest in thy dung and glidest in thy urine.
441b. Fall, lie down,
glide away, so that thy mother Nut may see thee.
Utterance 298.
442a. To say: Rē‘
dawns, his uraeus on his head,
442b. against this
serpent, which is come out of the earth, (and) which is under the fingers of N.
442c. He (N.) cuts off
thy head with this knife, which was in the hand of the mȝfd.t-lynx, [which
lives in the house of life];
443a. he draws, (the
teeth) which are upon (in) thy mouth; he saps thy poison
443b. with those four
strings, which were in the service of the sandals of Osiris.
443c. Serpent (beast),
lie down; bull, glide away.
Utterance, 299.
444a. To say: The
uraeus-serpent is for heaven; the centipede of Horus is for the earth.
444b. Horus had a
sandal as he advanced (towards) the master of the house, the bull of the hole,
444c. the
combat-serpent. N. will not be beaten,
444d. (for) his
protective sycamore is the protective sycamore of N., his refuge is the refuge
of N.
444e. Whom N. finds in
his way, him he eats for himself bit by bit.
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