food to the mice in their holes, and to the flying creatures on the trees.
'Hail to thee! say all creatures, from the height of heaven to the breadth of the earth, and to the deep places of the sea—Adoration unto thee who hast created us!
'The spirits thou hast made bow down before thee; the gods adore thy majesty. We, the creatures of thy hand, praise thee for our being, we give thanks to thee for thy mercy towards us,—whose name is hidden from his creatures—in his Name which is Amen.'[1]
The hymn to the Nile, which is ascribed to
the preceding dynasty, is very remarkable from
the twofold aspect it presents us. At first we
seem to behold only the river or some local
deity impersonated in the river:—
'Hail to thee, O Nile!
Coming in peace, giving life to Khemi,
Watering the land unceasingly,
He maketh the fields ready for the plough;
Every creature receiveth food.'
After the song has proceeded for some time in this strain, all on a sudden the Nile disappears from view, and the worshipper is in the presence of the divine and unutterable, though with no apparent change of person:—
- ↑ The Hidden or Unseen.