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[.
.] The door [keepers] say: "Let us go and plunder."
The
confectioners [. . .].
The washerman refuses to carry his load [.
. .]
The bird [catchers] have drawn up in line of battle
[. .
. the inhabitants] of the Delta carry shields.
The brewers [. .
.] sad.
A man regards his son as his enemy. Confusion [. . .]
another.
Come and conquer; judge [. . .] what was ordained for
you in the time of Horus,
in the age [of the Ennead . . .].
The
virtuous man goes in mourning because of what has happened in the
land [. . .] goes [. . .]
the tribes of the desert have become
Egyptians everywhere.
Indeed, the face is pale; [. . .] what the
ancestors foretold has arrived at [fruition . . .]
the land is
full of confederates, and a man goes to plough with his shield.
Indeed, the meek say: ["He who is . . . of] face is as a
well-born man."
Indeed, [the face] is pale; the bowman is
ready, wrongdoing is
everywhere, and there is no man of
yesterday.
Indeed, the plunderer [. . .] everywhere, and the
servant takes what he finds.
Indeed, the Nile overflows, yet none
plough for it. Everyone says:
"We do not know what will
happen throughout the land."
Indeed, the women are barren
and none conceive. Khnum fashions (men)
no more because of the
condition of the land.
the Nile overflows, yet none plough for
it:
II
Indeed, poor men have become owners of wealth, and
he who could not
make sandals for himself is now a possessor of
riches.
Indeed, men's slaves, their hearts are sad, and
magistrates do not
fraternize with their people when they shout.
Indeed, [hearts] are violent, pestilence is throughout the land,
blood is everywhere,
death is not lacking, and the mummy-cloth
speaks even before one comes near it.
Indeed, many dead are
buried in the river; the stream is a sepulcher
and the place of
embalmment has become a stream.
Indeed, noblemen are in distress,
while the poor man is full of joy.
Every town says: "Let us
suppress the powerful among us."
Indeed, men are like
ibises. Squalor is throughout the land, and there
are none indeed
whose clothes are white in these times.
Indeed, the land turns
around as does a potter's wheel; the robber is
a possessor of
riches and [the rich man is become] a plunderer.
Indeed, trusty
servants are [. . .]; the poor man [complains]: "How terrible!
What am I to do?"
Indeed, the river is blood, yet men drink
of it. Men shrink from human
beings and thirst after
water.
Indeed, gates, columns and walls are burnt up, while the
hall of the
palace stands firm and endures.
Indeed, the ship
of [the southerners] has broken up; towns are
destroyed and Upper
Egypt has become an empty waste.
Indeed, crocodiles [are glutted]
with the fish they have taken, for
men go to them of their own
accord; it is the destruction of the land.
Men say: "Do not
walk here; behold, it is a net." Behold, men tread
[the
water] like fishes, and the frightened man cannot distinguish it
because of terror.
Indeed, men are few, and he who places his
brother in the ground is
everywhere. When the wise man speaks,
[he flees without delay].
Indeed, the well-born man [. . .]
through lack of recognition, and the
child of his lady has become
the son of his maidservant. sad:
III
Indeed, the desert
is throughout the land, the nomes are laid waste,
and barbarians
from abroad have come to Egypt.
Indeed, men arrive [. . .] and
indeed, there are no Egyptians anywhere.
Indeed, gold and lapis
lazuli, silver and turquoise, carnelian and
amethyst, Ibhet-stone
and [. . .] are strung on the necks of
maidservants. Good things
are throughout the land, (yet) housewives
say: "Oh that we
had something to eat!"
Indeed, [. . .] noblewomen. Their
bodies are in sad plight by reason
of their rags, and their
hearts sink when greeting [one another].
Indeed, chests of ebony
are broken up, and precious ssnDm-wood is
cleft asunder in beds
[. . .].
Indeed, the builders [of pyramids have become]
cultivators, and those
who were in the sacred bark are now yoked
[to it].
None shall indeed sail northward to Byblos today; what
shall we do for cedar trees for
our mummies, and with the produce
of which priests are buried and with
the oil of which [chiefs]
are embalmed as far as Keftiu?
They come no more; gold is lacking
[. . .] and materials for every kind of craft
have come to an
end. The [. . .] of the palace is despoiled.
How often do people
of the oases come with their festival spices, mats, and
skins,
with fresh rdmt-plants, grease of birds . . . ?
Indeed,
Elephantine and Thinis [...] of Upper Egypt, (but) without
paying
taxes owing to civil strife.
Lacking are grain, charcoal,
irtyw-fruit, m'w-wood, nwt-wood, and brushwood.
The work of
craftsmen and [. . .] are the profit of the palace.
To what
purpose is a treasury without its revenues?
Happy indeed is the
heart of the king when truth comes to him!
And every foreign land
[comes]! That is our fate and that is our happiness!
What can we
do about it? All is ruin!
Indeed, laughter is perished and is [no
longer] made; it is groaning
that is throughout the land, mingled
with complaints. barbarians :
IV
Indeed, every dead
person is as a well-born man.
Those who were Egyptians [have
become] foreigners and are thrust aside.
Indeed, hair [has fallen
out] for everybody, and the man of rank can
no longer be
distinguished from him who is nobody.
Indeed, [. . .] because of
noise; noise is not [. . .] in years of
noise, and there is no
end [of] noise.
Indeed, great and small [say]: "I wish I
might die." Little children
say: "He should not have
caused [me] to live."
Indeed, the children of princes are
dashed against walls, and the
children of the neck are laid out
on the high ground.
Indeed, those who were in the place of
embalmment are laid out on the
high ground, and the secrets of
the embalmers are thrown down because of it.
Indeed,
that has perished which yesterday was seen, and the land is
left
over to its weakness like the cutting of flax.
Indeed, the Delta
in its entirety will not be hidden, and Lower Egypt
puts trust in
trodden roads. What can one do? No [. . .] exist anywhere, and men
say:
"Perdition to the secret place!"
Behold, it is
in the hands of those who do not know it like those who know it.
The
desert dwellers are skilled in the crafts of the Delta.
Indeed,
citizens are put to the corn-rubbers,
and those who used to don
fine linen are beaten with . . .
Those who used never to see the
day have gone out unhindered;
those who were on their husbands'
beds, let them lie on rafts.
I say: "It is too heavy for
me," concerning rafts bearing myrrh.
Load them with vessels
filled with [. . . Let] them know the palanquin.
As for the
butler, he is ruined. There are no remedies for it;
noblewomen
suffer like maidservants, minstrels are at
the looms within the
weaving-rooms, and what they sing to the
Songstress-goddess is
mourning. Talkers [. . .] corn-rubbers.
Indeed, all female slaves
are free with their tongues, and when their
mistress speaks, it
is irksome to the maidservants.
Indeed, trees are felled and
branches are stripped off. Indeed,
every dead person is as a
well-born man.
Those who were Egyptians [have become] foreigners
and are thrust aside.:
V
I have separated him and his
household slaves, and men will say when
they hear it: "Cakes
are lacking for most children; there is no food
[. . .]. What is
the taste of it like today?"
Indeed, magnates are hungry and
perishing, followers are followed
[. . .] because of complaints.
Indeed, the hot-tempered man says: "If I knew where God is,
then I would serve Him."
Indeed,
[Right] pervades the land in name, but what men do in trusting to it
is Wrong.
Indeed, runners are fighting over the spoil [of ] the
robber, and all
his property is carried off.
Indeed, all
animals, their hearts weep; cattle moan because of the state of the
land.
Indeed, the children of princes are dashed against walls,
and the
children of the neck are laid out on the high ground.
Khnum groans
because of his weariness.
Indeed, terror kills;
the frightened man opposes what is done against
your enemies.
Moreover, the few are pleased, while the rest are . . .
Is it by
following the crocodile and cleaving it asunder? Is it by
slaying
the lion roasted on the fire? [Is it] by sprinkling for Ptah
and
taking [. . .]? Why do you give to him? There is no reaching him.
It
is misery which you give to him.
Indeed, slaves . . . throughout
the land, and the strong man sends to
everyone; a man strikes his
maternal brother. What is it that has been
done? I speak to a
ruined man.
Indeed, the ways are [. . .], the roads are watched;
men sit in the
bushes until the benighted traveler comes in order
to plunder his
burden, and what is upon him is taken away. He is
belabored with blows
of a stick and murdered.
Indeed, that
has perished which yesterday was seen, and the land is
left over
to its weakness like the cutting of flax, commoners coming
and
going in dissolution [. . .]. I have separated him and his household
slaves:
VI
Would that there were an end of men, without
conception, without birth!
Then would the land be quiet from
noise and tumult be no more.
Indeed, [men eat] herbage and wash
[it] down with water; neither fruit nor herbage can be found
[for]
the birds, and [. . .] is taken away from the mouth of the pig.
No
face is bright which you have [. . .] for me through hunger.
Indeed,
everywhere barley has perished and men are stripped of
clothes,
spice, and oil; everyone says: "There is none."
The storehouse is empty and its keeper is stretched on the
ground;
a happy state of affairs! . . .
Would that I had
raised my voice at that moment,
that it might have saved me from
the pain in which I am.
Indeed, the private council-chamber,
its
writings are taken away and the mysteries which were [in it] are laid
bare.
Indeed, magic spells are divulged; smw- and shnw-spells are
frustrated
because they are remembered by men.
Indeed, public
offices are opened and their inventories are taken away;
the serf
has become an owner of serfs.
Indeed, [scribes] are killed and
their writings are taken away.
Woe is me because of the misery of
this time!
Indeed, the writings of the scribes of the cadaster
are destroyed,
and the corn of Egypt is common property.
Indeed,
the laws of the council chamber are thrown out; indeed, men
walk
on them in public places, and poor men break them up in the streets.
Indeed, the poor man has attained to the state of the Nine Gods,
and the erstwhile procedure of the House of the Thirty is
divulged.
Indeed, the great council-chamber is a popular resort,
and poor men come and go to the Great Mansions.
Indeed, the
children of magnates are ejected into the streets;
the wise man
agrees and the fool says "no,"
and it is pleasing in
the sight of him who knows nothing about it.
Indeed, those who
were in the place of embalmment are laid out on the high ground,
and
the secrets of the embalmers are thrown down because of it.
VII
Behold, the fire has gone up on high,
and its burning goes
forth against the enemies of the land.
Behold, things have been
done which have not happened for a long time past;
the king has
been deposed by the rabble.
Behold, he who was buried as a falcon
[is devoid] of biers,
and what the pyramid concealed has become
empty.
Behold, it has befallen that the land has been deprived of
the kingship by a few lawless men.
Behold, men have fallen into
rebellion against the Uraeus, the [. . .] of Re,
even she who
makes the Two Lands content.
Behold, the secret of the land whose
limits were unknown is divulged,
and the Residence is thrown down
in a moment.
Behold, Egypt is fallen to pouring of water,
and
he who poured water on the ground has carried off the strong man in
misery.
Behold, the Serpent is taken from its hole,
and the
secrets of the Kings of Upper and Lower Egypt are divulged.
Behold,
the Residence is afraid because of want,
and [men go about]
unopposed to stir up strife.
Behold, the land has knotted itself
up with confederacies,
and the coward takes the brave man's
property.
Behold, the Serpent [. . .] the dead:
he who could
not make a sarcophagus for himself is now the possessor of a tomb.
Behold, the possessors of tombs are ejected on to the high
ground,
while he who could not make a coffin for himself is now
[the possessor] of a treasury.
Behold, this has happened [to]
men;
he who could not build a room for himself is now a possessor
of walls.
Behold, the magistrates of the land are driven out
throughout the land:
[. . .] are driven out from the palaces.
deposed by the rabble:
Behold, noble ladies are now on rafts, and
magnates are in the labor establishment,
while he who could not
sleep even on walls is now the possessor of a bed.
Behold, the
possessor of wealth now spends the night thirsty,
while he who
once begged his dregs for himself is now the possessor of overflowing
bowls.
Behold, the possessors of robes are now in rags,
while
he who could not weave for himself is now a possessor of fine linen.
Behold, he who could not build a boat for himself is now the
possessor of a fleet;
their erstwhile owner looks at them, but
they are not his.
Behold, he who had no shade is now the possessor
of shade,
while the erstwhile possessors of shade are now in the
full blast of the storm.
Behold, he who was ignorant of the lyre
is now the possessor of a harp,
while he who never sang for
himself now vaunts the Songstress-goddess.
Behold, those who
possessed vessel-stands of copper [. . .]
not one of the jars
thereof has been adorned.
Behold, noble ladies are now on rafts,
and magnates are in the labor establishment,
while he who could
not sleep even on walls is now the possessor of a bed:
VIII
Behold, he who slept wifeless through want [finds] riches,
while
he whom he never saw stands making dole.
Behold, he who had no
property is now a possessor of wealth,
and the magnate praises
him.
Behold, the poor of the land have become rich,
and the
[erstwhile owner] of property is one who has nothing.
Behold,
serving-men have become masters of butlers,
and he who was once a
messenger now sends someone else.
Behold, he who had no loaf is
now the owner of a barn,
and his storehouse is provided with the
goods of another.
Behold, he whose hair is fallen out and who had
no oil has now become the possessors of jars of sweet myrrh.
Behold,
she who had no box is now the owner of a coffer,
and she who had
to look at her face in the water is now the owner of a mirror.
Behold, [. . .].
Behold, a man is happy eating his food.
Consume your goods in gladness and unhindered,
for it is good
for a man to eat his food;
God commands it for him whom He has
favored [. . .].
[Behold, he who did not know] his god now offers
to him with incense of another
[who is] not known [to him].
[Behold,] great ladies, once possessors of riches, now give their
children for beds.
Behold, a man [to whom is given] a noble lady
as wife,
her father protects him, and he who has not [. . .]
killing him.
Behold, the children of magistrates are [ . . . the
calves] of cattle [are given over] to the plunderers.
Behold,
priests transgress with the cattle of the poor [. . .].
Behold,
he who could not slaughter for himself now slaughters bulls,
and
he who did not know how to carve now sees [. . .].
Behold,
priests transgress with geese, which are given [to] the gods instead
of oxen.
Behold, maidservants [. . .] offer ducks; noblewomen [.
. .].
Behold, noblewomen flee; the overseers of [. . .] and their
[children] are cast down through fear of death.
[Behold,] the
chiefs of the land flee; there is no purpose for them because of
want.
The lord of [. . .]. priests transgress with the cattle of
the poor [. . .].:
IX
[Behold,] those who once owned beds
are now on the ground,
while he who once slept in squalor now
lays out a skin-mat for himself.
Behold, noblewomen go hungry,
while the priests are sated with what has been prepared for them.
Behold, no offices are in their right place, like a herd running
at random without a herdsman.
Behold, cattle stray and there is
none to collect them,
but everyone fetches for himself those that
are branded with his name.
Behold, a man is slain beside his
brother, who runs away and abandons him to save his own skin.
Behold, he who had no yoke of oxen is now the owner of a herd,
and he who could find for himself no ploughman is now the owner
of cattle.
Behold, he who had no grain is now the owner of
granaries,
and he who had to fetch loan-corn for himself is now
one who issues it.
Behold, he who had no dependents is now an
owner of serfs,
and he who was [a magnate] now performs his own
errands.
Behold, the strong men of the land, the condition of the
people is not reported [to them].
All is ruin!
Behold, no
craftsmen work, for the enemies of the land have impoverished its
craftsmen.
[Behold, he who once recorded] the harvest now knows
nothing about it,
while he who never ploughed [for himself is now
the owner of corn;
the reaping] takes place but is not reported.
The scribe [sits in his office], but his hands [are idle] in it.
Destroyed is [. . .] in that time, and a man looks [on his friend
as] an adversary.
The infirm man brings coolness [to what is hot
. . .] fear [. . .. . .].
Poor men [. . . the land] is not bright
because of it.
X
Destroyed is [. . .] their food is taken
from them [. . . through] fear of his terror.
The commoner begs
[. . .] messenger, but not [. . .] time.
He is captured laden
with goods and [all his property] is taken away.
[. . .] men pass
by his door [. . .] the outside of the wall, a shed, and rooms
containing falcons.
It is the common man who will be vigilant,
the day having dawned on him without his dreading it.
Men run
because of [. . . for] the temple of the head, strained through a
woven cloth within the house.
What they make are tents, just like
the desert folk.
Destroyed is the doing of that for which men are
sent by retainers in the service of their masters;
they have no
readiness.
Behold, they are five men, and they say: "Go on
the road you know, for we have arrived."
Lower Egypt weeps;
the king's storehouse is the common property of everyone,
and the
entire palace is without its revenues.
To it belong emmer and
barley, fowl and fish;
to it belong white cloth and fine linen,
copper and oil;
to it belong carpet and mat, [. . .] flowers and
wheat-sheaf and all good revenues . . .
If the . . . it in the
palace were delayed, men would be devoid [of . . .].
Destroy the
enemies of the august Residence, splendid of magistrates
[. . .]
in it like [. . .]; indeed, the Governor of the City goes unescorted.
Destroy [the enemies of the august Residence,] splendid [. . .].
[Destroy the enemies of] that erstwhile august Residence,
manifold of laws [. . .].
[Destroy the enemies of] that erstwhile
august [Residence . . .].
Destroy the enemies of that erstwhile
august Residence [. . .] none can stand [. . .].
Destroy the
enemies of that erstwhile august Residence, manifold of offices;
indeed [. . .].
Remember to immerse [. . .] him who is in pain
when he is sick in his body;
show respect [. . .] because of his
god that he may guard the utterance [. . .]
his children who are
witnesses of the surging of the flood.
XI
Remember to [.
. . . . .]. . . shrine, to fumigate with incense and to offer water
in a jar in the early morning.
Remember [to bring] fat r-geese,
trp-geese, and ducks and to offer god's offerings to the gods.
Remember to chew natron and to prepare white bread; a man [should
do it] on the day of wetting the head.
Remember to erect
flagstaffs and to carve offering stones,
the priest cleansing the
chapels and the temple being plastered (white) like milk;
to make
pleasant the odor of the horizon and to provide bread-offerings.
Remember to observe regulations, to fix dates correctly,
and
to remove him who enters on the priestly office in impurity of body,
for that is doing it wrongfully,
it is destruction of the
heart [. . .] the day which precedes eternity, the months [. . .]
years are known.
Remember to slaughter oxen [. . .].
Remember
to go forth purged [. . .] who calls to you; to put r-geese on the
fire
[. . .] to open the jar [. . .] the shore of the waters [. .
.] of women [. . .]
clothing [. . .. . .] to give praise . . . in
order to appease you.
[. . .] lack of people; come [. . .] Re who
commands [. . .] worshipping him [. . .]
West until [. . .] are
diminished [. . .].
Behold, why does he seek to fashion [men . .
.]?
The frightened man is not distinguished from the violent one.
XII
He brings coolness upon heat; men say: "He is
the herdsman of mankind, and there is no evil in his heart."
Though his herds are few, yet he spends a day to collect them,
their hearts being on fire.
Would that he had perceived their
nature in the first generation;
then he would have imposed
obstacles, he would have stretched out his arm against them,
he
would have destroyed their herds and their heritage.
Men desire
the giving of birth, but sadness supervenes, with needy people on all
sides.
So it is, and it will not pass away while the gods who are
in the midst of it exist.
Seed goes forth into mortal women, but
none are found on the road.
Combat has gone forth, and he who
should be a redresser of evils
is one who commits them;
neither
do men act as pilot in their hour of duty.
Where is he today? Is
he asleep?
Behold, his power is not seen.
If we had been fed,
I would not have found you, I would not have been summoned in vain;
"Aggression against it means pain of heart" is a saying
on the lips of everyone.
Today he who is afraid . . . a myriad of
people; [. . .] did not see [. . .]
against the enemies of [. .
.] at his outer chamber; who enter the temple [. . .] weeping for him
[. . .] that one who confounds what he has said . . .
The
land has not fallen [. . .] the statues are burned and their tombs
destroyed
[. . .] he sees the day of [. . .].
He who could
not make for himself [. . .] between sky and ground is afraid of
everybody.
. . . if he does it . . . what you dislike taking.
Authority, knowledge, and truth are with you,
yet confusion
is what you set throughout the land, also the noise of tumult.
Behold, one deals harm to another, for men conform to what you
have commanded.
If three men travel on the road, they are found
to be only two, for the many kill the few.
XIII
Does a
herdsman desire death?
Then may you command reply to be made,
because it means that one loves, another detests; it means that
their existences are few everywhere;
it means that you have acted
so as to bring those things to pass.
You have told lies, and the
land is a weed which destroys men, and none can count on life.
All
these years are strife, and a man is murdered on his housetop even
though he was vigilant in his gate lodge.
Is he brave and saves
himself? It means he will live.
When men send a servant for
humble folk, he goes on the road until he sees the flood;
the
road is washed out and he stands worried.
What is on him is taken
away, he is belabored with blows of a stick and wrongfully slain.
Oh
that you could taste a little of the misery of it!
Then you would
say [. . .] from someone else as a wall, over and above [. . .] hot .
. . years . . . [. . .].
[It is indeed good] when ships fare
upstream [. . . . . .] robbing them.
It is indeed good [. . .].
[It is indeed] good when the net is drawn in and birds are tied up [.
. .].
It is [indeed] good [. . .] dignities for them, and the
roads are passable.
It is indeed good when the hands of men build
pyramids,
when ponds are dug and plantations of the trees of the
gods are made.
It is indeed good when men are drunk; they drink
myt and their hearts are happy.
XIV
It is indeed good
when shouting is in men's mouths,
when the magnates of districts
stand looking on at the shouting in their houses,
clad in a
cloak, cleansed in front and well-provided within.
It is indeed
good when beds are prepared and the headrests of magistrates are
safely secured.
Every man's need is satisfied with a couch in the
shade,
and a door is now shut on him who once slept in the
bushes.
It is indeed good when fine linen is spread out on New
Year's Day
[. . .] on the bank; when fine linen is spread out and
cloaks are on the ground.
The overseer of [. . .] the trees, the
poor [. . .. . .] in their midst like Asiatics
[. . .]. Men [. .
.] the state thereof; they have come to an end of themselves;
none
can be found to stand up and protect themselves [. . .].
Everyone
fights for his sister and saves his own skin.
Is it Nubians? Then
will we guard ourselves; warriors are made many in order to ward off
foreigners.
Is it Libyans? Then we will turn away.
The Medjay
are pleased with Egypt.
XV
How comes it that every man
kills his brother?
The troops whom we marshaled for ourselves
have turned into foreigners and have taken to ravaging.
What has
come to pass through it is informing the Asiatics of the state of the
land;
all the desert folk are possessed with the fear of it.
What the plebs have tasted [. . .] without giving Egypt over [to]
the sand.
It is strong [. . .] speak about you after years
[.
. .] devastate itself, it is the threshing floor which nourishes
their houses
[. . .] to nourish his children [. . .] said by the
troops [. . . . . .]
fish [. . .] gum, lotus leaves [. . .]
excess of food.
XVI
What Ipuwer said when he addressed
the Majesty of the Lord of All:
[. . .] all herds.
It means
that ignorance of it is what is pleasing to the heart.
You have
done what was good in their hearts and you have nourished the people
with it.
They cover their faces through fear of the morrow.
That
is how a man grows old before he dies, while his son is a lad of
understanding;
he does not open [his] mouth to speak to you,
but
you seize him in the doom of death [. . .] weep [. . .] go [. . .]
after you, that the land may be [. . .] on every side.
XVII
If men call to [. . .] weep [. . .] them,
who break into the
tombs and burn the statues
[. . .] the corpses of the nobles [. .
.. . .] of directing work.
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