Searching...
Showing 1-20
Passages similar to: Pyramid Texts — Utterances Concerning Well-being, Especially Food And Clothes, Utterances 401-426
1
...
Source passage
Pyramid Texts
Utterances Concerning Well-being, Especially Food And Clothes, Utterances 401-426 (423)
765 To say: O Osiris N., take to thyself this thy libation, which is offered to thee by Horus, 765 in thy name of "He who is come from the cataract"; take to thyself thy natron that thou mayest be divine. 765 Thy mother Nut has made thee to be as a god to thine enemy (or, in spite of thee), in thy name of "God." 766 Take to thyself the efflux which goes forth from thee. 766 Horus has made me assemble for thee the gods from every place to which thou hast gone. 766 Take to thyself the efflux which goes forth from thee. 766 Horus has made me count for thee his children even to the place where thou wast drowned. 767 r-rnp.wi recognizes thee, for thou art made young again, ill this thy name of "Fresh water." 767 Horus is indeed a soul, for he recognizes his father in thee, in his name of "r-b-'iti-rp.t."
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter CXXVIII (5)
Ha, Osiris! I am come to thee; I am Horus and I restore thee unto life upon this day, with the funereal offerings and all good things for Osiris
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter XCII (5)
May the Eye of Horus deliver for me my Soul, and establish my splendour upon the brow of Rā, and may my radiance be upon your faces who are attached...
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter CLXXIII (2)
Hail, Osiris; I am thy son Horus; I have come
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter CLXX (2)
Horus has raised thee when he rose himself, as he did for him who is in the sacred abode
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter CLXXXI (6)
Thy son Horus avenges thee, he destroys all that is wrong in thee; he has fastened to thee thy flesh, he has set thy limbs and joined thy bones; he...
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter CLXXVIII (1)
Thou hast received the eye of Horus; thy table is a table of offerings
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter CLXXIII (26)
This Chapter is taken also from London 9900. The vignette at the end represents Osiris sitting in a naos. Before him are the offerings of fowl and...
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter CLXXXIII (7)
Thou hast handed over to thy son Horus all the gods of Heaven and the gods of earth, they are his servants at his gates, and all that he has...
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter CLXXV (9)
Horus is well established on his seat in order that he may take possession of his place of rest; also I send a soul to Sut in the West, who is...
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter CLXXVIII (2)
Hail, Hunnu, lift up thy heart to purify thy body; they have eaten the eye of Horus, the olive of Heliopolis, they destroy (what is wrong) in the...
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter CLXX (15)
Hail, N. , thou art Horus, the son of Osiris, begotten by Ptah, created by Nut. Thou shinest like Rā on the horizon when he lighteth the two earths...
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter CXXVIII (4)
Rise up Horus, son of Isis, and restore thy father Osiris!
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter CLXIX (1)
Thou art a lion, thou art a sphinx, thou art Horus who avengeth his father; thou art these four gods, those glorious ones who are shouting for joy,...
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter CLI (3)
I go round my brother Osiris N. I have come as thy protector. I am myself behind thee for ever, hearing when thou art addressed by Rā, and when thou a...
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter LXXVIII (17)
And I took possession of the inheritance of Horus from Osiris at the Tuat, and Horus repeated to me that which his father Osiris had said to him in th...
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter LXIX (13)
Let me seize that Thigh which is under the place of Osiris, with which I may open the mouth of the gods and sit by him, like Thoth the Scribe, sound...
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter CXXVIII (3)
Thoth speaketh to [Horus] with the potent utterances which have in himself their origin and proceed from his mouth, and which strengthen the heart of...
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter VIII (2)
And I call upon the Eye of Horus which gleams as an ornament upon the brow of Râ, the father of the gods
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter XV (36)
The Osiris N ; he saith when he adoreth Râ, the Horus of the Two Horizons, when setting in the Land of Life
Egyptian Book of the Dead
Chapter LXXVIII (16)
“Go back to the confines of Heaven, for thou art invested with the attributes of Horus: for thee the Nemmes is not, but free utterance is thine, even...
1
...