upper leaf, and the name of the lower leaf?" [And the Osiris the scribe Ani]
possession of the god Hu, and who hath taken possession of the Powers of Tem.
whom thou wilt make perfect, [and place it] in the boat. Make it to sail in the
to nought the acts of the foes of Nebertcher. "Deliver thou the scribe Nebseni,
others say that he is Nefer-Tem; and others say that he is Sept who doth bring
thou shalt make a cavity in the south wall, and, having turned the front of the
self-born, king of the earth, prince of the Tuat (the Other World), governor of
two sisters (Isis and Nephthys) are given to thee for thy delight. Thou hast
Hail, thou god Tem, who comest forth from the Great Deep, who shinest gloriously comest forth from Rasta, I have not slain men. Hail, Ruruti, who comest forth
that I may come forth, and that I may be master of my legs, and let me live
stars which are imperishable glorify thee as thou sinkest to rest in the horizon
have come unto thee. I see thee. I have forced a way through the Tuat. I see my
of Ra, who loveth him; he cometh forth therefore and ascendeth into heaven. Ra
in heaven. Ye who were in the forms of geese, your navel strings are on the
livers of the great ones on the day of the Great Judgment. Grant ye that I may
bearing the decree of Neb-er-tcher, and I am the Horus who taketh possession of horizon and sheddest thy beams of light upon the Lands of the South and of the
is truth, is strong on the earth and in Khert-Neter. O Osiris Ani, whose word is
RUBRIC (From the Papyrus of Nu): [This Chapter] shall be said over a Tet of
the favoured one of the Urrt Crown, fall ye down upon your faces. The word of
head. The gods shall serve him. Millions of years...... in his Eye, the Only One
of his word, which is truth, in Khert-Neter. Grant thou that he may be in lighten the darkness; it is light. I have lightened the darkness. I have
not my Heart- soul be driven away [from me]; and grant me a sight of the Disk
Hail, thou who art exalted high upon thy standard, thou Lord of the Atef Crown,
hath Ra carried away from him. The Sons of Revolt shall never more rise up. The
was originally. Let nothing happen to shake it off again! Make ye me safe from upper leaf, and the name of the lower leaf?" [And the Osiris the scribe Ani]
possession of the god Hu, and who hath taken possession of the Powers of Tem.
whom thou wilt make perfect, [and place it] in the boat. Make it to sail in the
to nought the acts of the foes of Nebertcher. "Deliver thou the scribe Nebseni,
others say that he is Nefer-Tem; and others say that he is Sept who doth bring
thou shalt make a cavity in the south wall, and, having turned the front of the
self-born, king of the earth, prince of the Tuat (the Other World), governor of
two sisters (Isis and Nephthys) are given to thee for thy delight. Thou hast
Hail, thou god Tem, who comest forth from the Great Deep, who shinest gloriously RUBRIC: If this Chapter be recited for, or over, the deceased, he shall come
in Tetu: When the Smaiu fiends of Set came [there], having transformed
Hail, Thoth, who didst make the word of Osiris to be true against his enemies,
have not been a stirrer up of strife. Hail, Neb-heru, who comest forth from
come into being among you. My coming is like unto that god who eateth men, and
whose word is truth, they ascribe praise unto him as unto Ra. The Osiris Ani is
is no escape from their fingers. May they never stab me with their knives, may I
A New Plan.
Before he had got many chips in it, however, he happened to think that the
wheelbarrow would be a better thing to get them in with. They would not
stick in that as they did in the basket. "Men always use a wheelbarrow,"
he said to himself, "and why should not I?"
So he turned the chips out of his basket, thus losing so much labor, and
went after the wheelbarrow. He spent some time in looking to see how Jonas That evening Rollo and his father set off in the chaise to go to the
corporal's. It was not very far. They rode along by some very pleasant
farm-houses, and came at length to the house where Georgie lived. They
then went down the hill; but, just before they came to the bridge, they
turned off among the trees, into a secluded road, which led along the bank
of the stream. After going on a short distance, they came out into a kind
of opening among the trees, where a mill came into view, by the side of
the stream; and opposite to it, across the road, under the trees, was the take the wheelbarrow to its place, and go on with his work in the way he
began.
But Rollo, like all other boys who have not learned to work, was more
inclined to get somebody to help him do what was beyond his own strength,
than to go quietly on alone in doing what he himself was able to do. So he
left the wheelbarrow, and went into the house to try to find somebody to
help him. the yard, and sat down on a log by the side of Jonas, who was busily at
work mending the wheelbarrow.
Rollo sat singing to himself for some time, and then he said,
"Jonas, father thinks I am not big enough to work; don't you think I am?"
"I don't know," said Jonas, hesitating. "You do not seem to be very
industrious just now." "But it seems to me you are not a very profitable workman, Rollo, after
all. You wanted me very much to go and get you a small basket, because the
common basket was too large and heavy; so I left my work, and went and got
it for you. But you soon lay it aside, and go, of your own accord, and get
something heavier than the common chip-basket, a great deal. And now I
must leave my work and go down and wheel it along for you."
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