Legends of the Gods

The Egyptian Texts, edited with Translations

by E. A. Wallis Budge

London: Kegan Paul, Trench and Trner & Co. Ltd.

[1912]

THE LEGEND OF THE DEATH OF HORUS THROUGH THE STING OF A SCORPION AND OF HIS
RESURRECTION THROUGH THOTH, AND OTHER MAGICAL TEXTS.

I.–INCANTATIONS AGAINST REPTILES AND NOXIOUS CREATURES IN GENERAL

Get thee back, Apep, thou enemy of Ra, thou winding serpent in the form of
an intestine, without arms [and] without legs. Thy body cannot stand upright so
that thou mayest have therein being, long is thy
tail in front of thy 1 den, thou enemy; retreat before
Ra.

Thy head shall be cut off, and the slaughter of thee shall be carried out.
Thou shalt not lift up thy face, for his (i.e., Ra’s) flame is in thy accursed
soul. The odour which is in his chamber of slaughter is in thy members, and thy
form shall be overthrown by the slaughtering knife of the great god. The spell
of the Scorpion-goddess Serq driveth back thy might. Stand still, stand still,
and retreat through her spell.

Be vomited, O poison, I adjure thee to come forth on the earth. Horus uttereth
a spell over thee, Horus hacketh thee in pieces, he spitteth upon thee; thou shalt
not rise up towards heaven, but shalt totter downwards, O feeble one, without
strength, cowardly, unable to fight, blind, without eyes, and with thine head
turned upside down. Lift not up thy face. Get thee back quickly, and find not
the way. Lie down in despair, rejoice not, retreat speedily, and show not thy
face because of the speech of Horus, who is perfect in words of power. The poison
rejoiced, [but] the heart[s] of many were very sad thereat.

Horus hath smitten it with his magical spells, and he who was in sorrow is
[now] in joy. Stand still then, O thou who art in sorrow, [for] Horus hath been
endowed with life. He coineth charged, appearing himself to overthrow the Sebiu
fiends which bite. All men when they see Ra praise the son of Osiris. Get thee
back, Worm, 8 and draw out thy poison which is in all the members of him that
is under the knife. Verily the might of the word of power of Horus is against
thee. Vomit thou, O Enemy, get thee back, O poison.

Footnotes

1 Literally, “his.”