Page:The Religion of Ancient Egypt.djvu/224

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
RELIGIOUS BOOKS AND HYMNS.
209

Ye prototypes of the image of all that exists, ye fathers and mothers of the solar orb, ye forms, ye great ones (uru), ye mighty ones (āaiu), ye strong ones (nutriu), first company of the gods of Almu, who generated men and shaped the form of every form, ye lords of all things: hail to you, ye lords of eternity and everlasting."

The author of this composition, the text of which has only been published quite recently,[1] and was quite unknown to me when I delivered my third Lecture, has evidently the same conception of the gods of Egypt as that which I inferred from the scattered utterances we come across in the course of the national literature. The gods of Egypt are the "mighty ones," the forces acting throughout the universe, in heaven and on earth, according to fixed and unchangeable law, for ever and ever.


Rhind Papyri.

A still more recent book is one which was discovered by Mr. Rhind at Thebes. The papyri are of the Roman period, and they are bilingual. The upper portion of each page is in the ancient language, written in hieratic characters; the lower contains a

  1. Wiedemann, Hieratische Texte aus den Museen zu Berlin und Paris; Leipzig, 1879, Taf. 1. This text is from the Louvre papyrus 3283, of which a notice is found in Deveria's "Catalogue des Manuscrits Egyptiens," p. 143.