"there arose out of the darkness a great shining egg,
and this was Re."
| In the beginning, before
there was any land of Egypt, all was darkness, and there was nothing but a
great waste of water called Nun. The power of Nun was such that there
arose out of the darkness a great shining egg, and this was Re.
Now Re was all-powerful, and
he could take many forms. His power and the secret of it lay in his hidden
name; but if he spoke other names, that which he named came into being.
"I am Khepera at the
dawn, and Re at noon, and Tem in
the evening," he said. And the sun rose and passed across the sky and set for the
first time.
Then he named Shu, and the first
winds blew; he named Tefnut the spitter,
and the first rain fell. Next he named Geb, and the earth came
into being; he named the goddess Nut, and she was the
sky arched over the earth with her feet on one horizon and her hands on
the other; he named Hapi, and the great
River Nile flowed through Egypt and made it fruitful.
After this Re named all things that
are upon the earth, and they grew. Last of all he named mankind, and there
were men and women in the land of Egypt.
Then Re took on the shape of
a man and became the first Pharaoh, ruling over the whole country for
thousands and thousands of years, and giving such harvests that for ever
afterwards the Egyptians spoke of the good things "which happened in the
time of Re".
But, being in the form of a man, Re grew old. In time
men no longer feared him or obeyed his laws. They laughed at him, saying:
"Look at Re! His bones are like
silver, his flesh like gold, his hair is the colour of lapis lazuli!"
Re was angry when he
heard this, and he was more angry still at the evil deeds which men were
doing in disobedience to his laws. So he called together the gods whom he
had made - Shu and Tefnut and Geb and Nut - and he also
summoned Nun. Soon the gods gathered about Re in his Secret Place,
and the goddesses also. But mankind knew nothing of what was happening,
and continued to jeer at Re and to break his
commandments. Then Re spoke to Nun before
the assembled gods: "Eldest of the gods, you who made me; and you gods
whom I have made: look upon mankind who came into being at a glance of my
Eye. See how men plot against me; hear what they say of me; tell me what I
should do to them. For I will not destroy mankind until I have heard what
you advise."
Then Nun said: "My son Re, the god greater than
he who made him and mightier than those whom he has created, turn your
mighty Eye upon them and send destruction upon them in the form of your
daughter, the goddess Sekhmet."
Re answered: "Even now
fear is falling upon them and they are fleeing into the desert and hiding
themselves in the mountains in terror at the sound of my voice."
"Send against them the glance of your Eye in the form Sekhmet!" cried all
the other gods and goddesses, bowing before Re until their foreheads
touched the ground.
"...and her chief delight was in slaughter, and her
pleasure was in blood."
| So at the terrible glance from the Eye of Re his daughter Sekhmet came into
being, the fiercest of all goddesses. Like a lion she rushed upon her
prey, and her chief delight was in slaughter, and her pleasure was in
blood. At the bidding of Re she came into Upper
and Lower Egypt to slay those who had scorned and disobeyed him: she
killed them among the mountains which lie on either side of the Nile, and
down beside the river, and in the burning deserts. All whom she saw she
slew, rejoicing in slaughter and the taste of blood.
Presently Re looked out over the
land and saw what Sekhmet had done.
Then he called to her, saying: "Come, my daughter, and tell me how you
have obeyed my commands."
Sekhmet answered
with the terrible voice of a lioness as she tears her prey: "By the life
which you have given me, I have indeed done vengeance on mankind, and my
heart rejoices."
Now for many nights the Nile ran red with blood, and Sekhmet's feet were
red as she went hither and thither through all the land of Egypt slaying
and slaying.
Presently Re looked out over the
earth once more, and now his heart was stirred with pity for men, even
though they had rebelled against him. But none could stop the cruel
goddess Sekhmet, not even
Re himself: she must
cease from slaying of her own accord -and Re saw that this could
only come about through cunning.
So he gave his command: "Bring before me swift messengers who will run
upon the earth as silently as shadows and with the speed of the storm
winds." When these were brought he said to them: "Go as fast as you can up
the Nile to where it flows fiercely over the rocks and among the islands
of the First Cataract; go to the isle that is called Elephantine and
bring from it a great store of the red ochre which is to be found there."
The messengers sped on their way and returned with the blood-red ochre
to Heliopolis, the city
of Re where stand the stone
obelisks with points of gold that are like fingers pointing to the sun. It
was night when they came to the city, but all day the women of Heliopolis
had been brewing beer as Re bade them.
Re came to where the
beer stood waiting in seven thousand jars, and the gods came with him to
see how by his wisdom he would save mankind.
"Mingle the red ochre of Elephantine with the barley-beer," said Re, and it was done, so
that the beer gleamed red in the moonlight like the blood of men.
"Now take it to the place where Sekhmet proposes to
slay men when the sun rises," said Re. And while it was
still night the seven thousand jars of beer were taken and poured out over
the fields so that the ground was covered to the depth of nine inches --
three times the measure of the palm of a man's hand-with the strong beer,
whose other name is "sleep-maker".
When day came Sekhmet the
terrible came also, licking her lips at the thought of the men whom she
would slay. She found the place flooded and no living creature in sight;
but she saw the beer which was the colour of blood, and she thought it was
blood indeed -- the blood of those whom she had slain.
Then she laughed with joy, and her laughter was like the roar of a
lioness hungry for the kill. Thinking that it was indeed blood, she
stooped and drank. Again and yet again she drank, laughing with delight;
and the strength of the beer mounted to her brain, so that she could no
longer slay.
At last she came reeling back to where Re was waiting; that day
she had not killed even a single man.
Then Re said: "You come in
peace, sweet one." And her name was changed to Hathor, and her
nature was changed also to the sweetness of love and the strength of
desire. And henceforth Hathor laid low men
and women only with the great power of love. But for ever after her
priestesses drank in her honour of the beer of Heliopolis coloured with
the red ochre of Elephantine when they celebrated her festival each New
Year.
So mankind was saved, and Re continued to rule old
though he was. But the time was drawing near when he must leave the earth
to reign for ever in the heavens, letting the younger gods rule in his
place. For dwelling in the form of a man, of a Pharaoh of Egypt, Re was losing his
wisdom; yet he continued to reign, and no one could take his power from
him, since that power dwelt in his secret name which none knew but
himself. If only anyone could discover his Name of Power, Re would reign no longer
on earth; but only by magic arts was this possible.
Geb and Nut had children:
these were the younger gods whose day had come to rule, and their names
were Osiris and Isis, Nephthys and Seth. Of these Isis was the wisest:
she was cleverer than a million men, her knowledge was greater than that
of a million of the noble dead. She knew all things in heaven and earth,
except only for the Secret Name of Re, and that she now set
herself to learn by guile.
Now Re was growing older
every day. As he passed across the land of Egypt his head shook from side
to side with age, his jaw trembled, and he dribbled at the mouth as do the
very old among men. As his spittle fell upon the ground it made mud, and
this Isis took in her hands
and kneaded together as if it had been dough. Then she formed it into the
shape of a serpent, making the first cobra -- the uraeus, which
ever after was the symbol of royalty worn by Pharaoh and his queen.
"...the venom of its bite coursed through his
veins..."
| Isis placed the first
cobra in the dust of the road by which Re passed each day as he
went through his two kingdoms of Upper and Lower Egypt. As Re passed by the cobra
bit him and then vanished into the grass. But the venom of its bite
coursed through his veins, and for a while Re was speechless, save
for one great cry of pain which rang across the earth from the eastern to
the western horizon. The gods who followed him crowded round, asking:
"What is it? What ails you?" But he could find no words; his lips trembled
and he shuddered in all his limbs, while the poison spread over his body
as the Nile spreads over Egypt at the inundation. When at last he could
speak, Re said: "Help me, you
whom I have made. Something has hurt me, and I do not know what it is. I
created all things, yet this thing I did not make. It is a pain such as I
have never known before, and no other pain is equal to it. Yet who can
hurt me?-for none knows my Secret Name which is hidden in my heart, giving
me all power and guarding me against the magic of both wizard and witch.
Nevertheless as I passed through the world which I have created, through
the two lands that are my special care, something stung me. It is like
fire, yet is not fire; it is like water and not water. I burn and I
shiver, while all my limbs tremble. So call before me all the gods who
have skill in healing and knowledge of magic, and wisdom that reaches to
the heavens."
Then all the gods came to Re, weeping and
lamenting at the terrible thing which had befallen him. With them came Isis, the healer, the
queen of magic, who breathes the breath of life and knows words to revive
those who are dying. And she said:
"What is it, divine father? Has a snake bitten you. Has a creature of
your own creating lifted up its head against you? I will drive it out by
the magic that is mine, and make it tremble and fall down before your
glory."
"I went by the usual way through my two lands of Egypt," answered Re, "for I wished to
look upon all that I had made. And as I went I was bitten by a snake which
I did not see -- a snake that, I had not created. Now I burn as if with
fire and shiver as if my veins were filled with water, and the sweat runs
down my face it runs down the faces of men on the hottest days of summer."
"Tell me your Secret Name." said Isis in a sweet, soothing voice. "Tell
it me, divine father; for only by speaking your name in my spells can I
cure you."
Then Re spoke the many names
that were his: "I am Maker Heaven and Earth." he said. "I am Builder of
the Mountains. I am Source of the Waters throughout all the world. I am
Light and Darkness. I am Creator of the Great River of Egypt. I am the
Kindler of the Fire that burns in the sky; yes, I am Khepera in the,
morning, Re at the noontide, and
Tum in the evening."
But Isis said never a
word, and the poison had its way in the veins of Re. For she knew that he
had told her only the names which all men knew, and that his Secret Name,
the Name of Power, still lay hidden in his heart.
At last she said: "You know well that the name which I need to learn is
not among those which you have spoken. Come, tell me the Secret Name; for
if you do the poison will come forth and you will have an end of pain."
The poison burned with a great burning, more powerful than any flame of
fire, and Re cried out at last:
"Let the Name of Power pass from my heart into the heart of Isis! But before it
does, swear to me that you will tell it to no other save only the son whom
you will have, whose name shall be Horus. And bind him first with such an
oath that the name will remain with him and be passed on to no other gods
or men."
Isis the great magician swore the oath, and the knowledge of the Name
of Power passed from the heart of Re into hers.
Then she said: "By the name which I know, let the poison go from Re for ever!"
So it passed from him and he had peace. But he reigned
upon earth no longer. Instead he took his place in the high heavens,
traveling each day across the sky in the likeness of the sun itself, and
by night crossing the underworld of Amenti in the Boat of Re and passing through
the twelve divisions of Duat where many dangers lurk. Yet Re passes safely, and
with him he takes those souls of the dead who know all the charms and
prayers and words that must be said. And so that a man might not go
unprepared for his voyage in the Boat of Re, the Egyptians
painted all the scenes of that journey on the walls of the tombs of the
Pharaohs, with all the knowledge that was written in The Book of the
Dead, of which a copy was buried in the grave of lesser men so that
they too might read and come safely to the land beyond the west where the
dead dwell.
|