Passages similar to: Egyptian Book of the Dead — Chapter LXIX
Source passage
Ancient Egyptian
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 of heart, with thousands of loaves, beer, beef, and fowl upon the table of my father, and the flesh of oxen and birds of various kinds, which I offer to Horus, which I present to Thoth, and which I sacrifice to the Lord of Heaven
Texts Of Miscellaneous Contents, Utterances 578-586 (580)
1543 To say: Thou who hast smitten (my) father; he who has killed (one) greater than he; 1543 thou hast smitten (my) father, thou hast killed one...
(580) 1543 To say: Thou who hast smitten (my) father; he who has killed (one) greater than he; 1543 thou hast smitten (my) father, thou hast killed one greater than thou. 1544 Father Osiris N. I have smitten for thee him who smote thee as an ox; 1544 I have killed for thee him who killed thee as a wild-bull. 1544 I have overpowered for thee him who overpowered thee as an ox; 1544 thou art upon his back as he who is upon the back of an ox. 1545 He who stretched thee out as the stretched out ox; he who slaughtered thee as the slaughtered ox; 1545 he who stunned thee as the stunned ox-- 1545 I have cut off his head; I have cut off his tail; 1545 I have cut off his two hands; I have cut off his two feet. 1546 His upper fore-legs including (lit. "being to") his lower forelegs belong t[o Atum], father of the gods; 1546 his two thighs belong to Shu and Tefnut; 1546 his two sides belong to Geb and Nut; 1547 his two shoulder blades belong to Isis and Nephthys; 1547 his two shoulders belong to Mnti-'irti and Hrti,-- 1547 his spinal column belongs to Neit and eret; his heart belongs to Sekhmet, the great; 1548 that which is in the back part of his body belongs to those four gods, the sons of Horus, his beloved, 1548 pi, 'Im.ti, Dw-mw.t.f, b-n.w.f. 1549 His head, his tail, his two hands, his two feet 1549 belong to Anubis, who is upon his mountain; to Osiris who is chief of his department (or, thigh-offering). 1549 That which the gods leave belongs to the Souls of Nekhen and the Souls of Buto. 1550 Eat, eat the red ox, for the voyage by sea, 1550 which Horus did for his father, Osiris N.
Utterances Concerning Well-being, Especially Food And Clothes, Utterances 401-426 (413)
Thy water belongs to thee., thine abundance belongs to thee, 734 thy milk belongs to thee, which is in the breasts of thy mother, Isis. 734 The childr...
(413) 734 To say: Raise thyself up, O king. Thy water belongs to thee., thine abundance belongs to thee, 734 thy milk belongs to thee, which is in the breasts of thy mother, Isis. 734 The children of Horus raise thee up; the children of him who is in Db`.wt-P (Buto), 734 like Set who is in n.t (Hypselis, or Ombos). 735 This Great One slept, after he had fallen to sleep. 735 Awake, N., raise thyself up, take to thee thy head; 735 unite to thee thy bones; shake off thy dust. 736 Sit thou upon thy firm throne, 736 that thou mayest eat the leg of meat, that thou mayest pass the cutlet (over thy mouth), 736 that thou mayest nourish thyself with thy double-rib piece in heaven among the gods.
Texts Of Miscellaneous Contents, Utterances 611-626 (619)
1747 To say: Raise thyself up, N.; raise thyself up, great nw; 1747 raise thyself up from (lit. on) thy left side, place thyself on thy right side....
(619) 1747 To say: Raise thyself up, N.; raise thyself up, great nw; 1747 raise thyself up from (lit. on) thy left side, place thyself on thy right side. 1748 Wash thy hands with this fresh water which I have given thee, my (lit. thy) father Osiris. 1748 I have tilled the barley; I have reaped the spelt, 1748 with which I made (an offering) for thy feasts, which the First of the Westerners offered for thee. 1749 Thy face is like that of a jackal; thy heart is like that of, b.t, thy seat is like that of a broad-hall. 1749 A stairway to heaven is built (for thee), that thou mayest ascend. 1750 Thou judgest between the two great gods, 1750 who support the Two Enneads. 1750 Isis weeps for thee; Nephthys calls thee; 1751 as for 'Imt.t she sits at the feet of thy throne. 1751 Thou seizest thy two oars 1751 of which one is of pine, the other of id; 1752 thou ferriest over the lake of thy house, the sea; 1752 and thou avengest thyself against him who did this against thee. 1752 O, Ho, may the great lake protect thee!
793 To say: Wake up for Horus; stand up against Set; 793 raise thyself up as Osiris, like the spirit, son of Geb, his first (born); 793 and stand up...
(437) 793 To say: Wake up for Horus; stand up against Set; 793 raise thyself up as Osiris, like the spirit, son of Geb, his first (born); 793 and stand up as Anubis, who is on the min-w (-shrine), 794 before whom the Ennead tremble. The three beginnings (of the divisions of the year) will be celebrated for thee; 794 thou purifiest thyself on the day of the new-moon, thou dawnest on the first of the month. 794 The great min.t (-stake) mourns for thee 794 as for "Him who stands without being tired," who resides in Abydos. 795 Earth, hear that which the gods have spoken, 795 what R` says as he spiritualizes N., 795 that he may receive his spirituality as one at the head of the gods, like Horus, son of Osiris, 795 while he gives him his spirituality among the watchers Of Buto, 795 while he dignifies him as a god among the watchers of Hierakonpolis. 796 The earth speaks: 796 The double doors of Aker are open for thee; the double doors of Geb are open for thee. 796 Thou goest forth at the voice of Anubis, while he has spiritualized thee, like Thot, 797 that thou mayest judge the gods, that thou mayest set a boundary to the Bows, 797 between the two sceptres, in this thy dignity of spirit, commanded by Anubis. 798 If thou goest, Horus, goes; if thou speakest, Set speaks. 798 Thou approachest the sea (lake); thou advancest to the Thinite nome; 798 thou passest through Abydos. 799 A portal is open for thee in heaven, towards the horizon; 799 the heart of the gods rejoices at thy approach. 799 They take thee to heaven in thy (capacity as) soul; thou art a soul (mighty) among them. 800 Thou ascendest to heaven like Horus, who is over the sdsd of heaven, 800 in this thy dignity issuing from the mouth of R`, 800 as Horus among the spirits, 800 whilst thou sittest on thy firm throne. 801 Thou withdrawest thyself to heaven; 801 the ways, of the Bows, which lead up to Horus, are made firm for thee; 801 the heart of Set fraternizes with thee as (with) the Great One of Heliopolis. 802 Thou hast voyaged over the Winding Watercourse in the north of Nut 802 as a star, which ferries over the ocean, which is under the body of Nut. 802 The D.t strikes (takes) thy hand, towards the place of , 803 after the bull of heaven had given thee his arm. 803 Thou nourishest thyself with the food of the gods, with which they nourish themselves. 803 The odour of Ddwn is on thee, the Upper Egyptian youth, who is come from Nubia; 803 he gives thee the incense wherewith the gods cense themselves. 804 The two children (twin?) of the king of Lower Egypt, who are on his head, the possessors of the great (crown), have given birth to thee. 804 R` has called thee out of the 'iskn of heaven, 804 as Horus who is chief of his department (or, presides over his thigh-offering) he of tw-t, lord of bw.t (the rebel city), 804 as the jackal god, nome-governor of the Bows, as Anubis who presides over the pure (holy) land. 805 He appoints thee as the morning star (god of the morning) in the midst of the Marsh of Reeds, 805 and thou sittest upon thy throne. 805 Thy dismembered limbs are collected by the two mighty ones, the crowns of Upper and Lower Egypt, as lord of the Bows. 805 Thine abundance is in the field of the gods where they nourish themselves. 806 Thou hast thy spiritualization; thou hast thy messengers; 806 thou hast thine understanding; thou hast thine earthly servants. 806 May the king give an offering, may Anubis give an offering (of) thy thousand of the young of antelopes 806 from the desert, as they come to thee with bowed head. 807 May the king give an offering, may Anubis give an offering (of) thy thousand loaves of bread, thy thousand mugs of beer, 807 thy thousand large loaves, which come from the broad-hall, thy thousand of all sweet things, 807 thy thousand of oxen, thy thousand of all things which thou eatest, on which thy heart is set. 808 The 'im-tree serves thee, the nb-tree bows its head to thee, 808 such as Anubis will do for thee.
1065 To say: Greetings to thee, O Food; greetings to thee, O Abundance; 1065 greetings to thee, O Corn; greetings to thee, O Flour. 1065 Greetings to...
(496) 1065 To say: Greetings to thee, O Food; greetings to thee, O Abundance; 1065 greetings to thee, O Corn; greetings to thee, O Flour. 1065 Greetings to you, ye gods, who put the meal before R`, 1065 who --------- with w, who are at the M.t-wr.t; 1065 I will eat of the morsel of R`, sitting on the throne of splendour. 1066 I am she of Tentyra; I am come from Tentyra; 1066 Shu is behind N.; Tefnut is before him; 1066 it is Wp-w.wt, who serves as a protection (?) on the right of N. 1066 They cause this field-of-food of R` to keep me alive so that I may eat, 1066 after it is collected for me, as for him who rules over the Ennead, who lives at (or, on) M.t-wr.t.