6. MOSTLY SERPENT CHARMS, UTTERANCES 226-243
(788 total words in this text) (191 reads) 
6. MOSTLY SERPENT CHARMS, UTTERANCES 226-243.
Utterance
226.
225a. To say: One serpent is encircled by another serpent,
225b. when a toothless (?) calf born on pasture-land is encircled.
225c. Earth, devour that which has come forth from thee. Monster (beast),
lie down, glide away.
226a. A servant (holy person) who belongs to the Ennead (pelican) is fallen
in water.
226b. Serpent, turn over that Rē may see thee.
Utterance
227.
227a. To say: The head of the great black bull was cut off.
227b. Hpn.w-serpent, this is said
to thee. Ḫśr?-ntr-scorpion, this
is said to thee:
227c. Turn over, glide into the ground. I have said this to thee.
p. 71
Utterance
228.
228a. To say: Face falls on face; face sees face.
228b. A knife, coloured black and green, goes out against it, until it has
swallowed that which it has licked.
Utterance
229.
229a. To say: This is the finger-nail of Atum,
229b. which is upon the dorsal vertebra of the Nḥb.w-kȝ.w (serpent) and which caused the strife in Wn.w to cease.
229c. Fall, glide away.
Utterance
230.
230a. To say: Be thy two poison-glands in the ground; be thy two rows of
ribs in the hole.
230b. Pour out the liquid. The two kites stand there.
230c. Thy mouth is closed by the hangman's tool; the mouth of the hangman's
tool is closed by the mȝfd.t (lynx).
230d. The one made tired is bitten by a serpent.
231a. O Rē, N. has bitten the earth; N. has bitten Geb.
231b. N. has bitten the father of him who bit him.
231c. This is the being who has bitten N., (though) N. did not bite him.
232a. It is he who is come against N., (though) N. does not go against him;
232b. the second moment after he saw N., the second moment after he
perceived N.
232c. If thou bitest N., he will make one (piece) of thee; if thou regardest
N., he will make two of thee.
233a. The nw-serpent (male) is
bitten by the n.t-serpent (female);
the n.t-serpent is bitten by the nw-serpent.
233b. Heaven is protected magically; earth is protected magically; the
"manly" who is behind mankind is protected magically.
234a. The god whose head is blind is protected magically; thou thyself,
scorpion, art protected magically.
234b. These are the two knots (charm) of Elephantiné which are in the mouth
of Osiris,
234c. which Horus knotted concerning the backbone.
p. 72
Utterance
231.
235a. To say: Thy bone is a harpoon-point by which thou wilt be harpooned.
Hearts are checked; the nomads are in the place of the spear,
235b. they are cast down. That is, the god Ḥmn.
Utterance
232.
236a. To say: Mti, Mti, Mti,
Mti;
236b. Tiw, his mother, Tiw, his mother; Miti, Miti.
236c. Be thou watered (washed), O desert; (let there be) water, not sand.
Utterance
233.
237a. To say: The serpent which came forth from the earth is fallen; the
flame which came forth from Nun is fallen.
237b. Fall; glide away.
Utterance
234.
238a. To say: A face is upon thee; thou who art on thy belly. Descend on thy
backbone, thou who art in thy nȝw.t-bush.
238b. Give away before the serpent who is provided with her two heads.
Utterance
235.
239a. To say: Kwtiw, Imḥw, Imḥw.
239b. Thou hast raped the two keepers of the stone door-jamb of It-ti-i-iȝ-i.
Utterance
236.
240. To say: Kbbhititibiti Šś,
son of Ḥifg.t, that is thy name.
Utterance
237.
241a. To say: Spittle, which is not dried up (in dust?), (which has not)
disappeared (flown) into the house of his mother,
241b. serpent (beast), lie down.
Utterance
238.
242a. To say: The bread of thy father belongs to thee, Iki-nhii;
242b. thine own bread belongs to thy father and to thee, Ik(i)-nhii.
p. 73
242c. jewelry, oil, Ḫi-tȝw,
that is thine ox, the renowned, for whose deed this is being done.
Utterance
239.
243a. To say: The white crown is gone forth; she has devoured the Great.
243b. The tongue of the white crown has devoured the Great, yet the tongue
was not seen.
Utterance
240.
244a. To say: The uraeus-serpent belongs to heaven; the centipede of Horus,
belongs in the earth.
244b. Horus was an ox-herd when he trod on (things). N. treads upon the walk
(gliding-place) of Horus,
244c. while N. knows not him who is not known.
245a. A face is, upon thee, thou who art in his (thy) nȝw.t-bush; mayest thou be lain on thy back, thou who art in his
(thy) hole.
245b. Meat-cooker of Horus, escape into the earth. O let the beast, O
desert, glide away.
Utterance
241.
246a. To say: "Spitting of the wall"; "Vomiting of the
brick,"
246b. that which comes out of thy mouth is thrown back against thyself.
Utterance
242.
247a. To say: Extinguished is the flame. The flame-serpent is not found in
the house of him who possesses Ombos.
247b. It is a serpent, which will bite, which has slipped back into the
house of him whom it will bite, that it may remain in it.
Utterance
243.
248a. To say: Two ḥtś-sceptres
and two ḥtś-sceptres are for both dm-cords, (to say) twice, as bread
which is withheld from thee.
248b. Art thou then really here, art thou then really there? O slave, go
away.
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