The Great Pharoah Ramses had a son named Setna. Setna himself had a
son named Se-Osiris. Se-Osiris was strong in the learned arts of
magic.
One day, Se-Osiris and Setna were standing in
the palace, looking out the great windows. They saw two funerals that
day as they watched. The first funeral was for that of a wealthy
nobleman. His body was carried in a wooden sarcophagus overlaid with
gold. Dozens of mourners and priests accompanied the coffin, singing
hymns and carrying gifts for him to use on his journey through the
Underworld. The second funeral was for a poor worker. His two sons
carried the unadorned coffin for him, while his widowed wife and two
daughters-in-law followed behind.
Setna remarked, "I hope that my funeral will be like that of the nobleman"
Se-Osiris shook his head. "No, Father, may your fate be like that of the poor man."
Setna was disturbed and hurt by this, so he asked his son, "Why would you say such a thing?"
Se-Osiris
turned and said, "Come, and we will go to the Underworld together, so
that you can see what is taking place for both men."
So
the two of them went to the temple of Osiris, and the child began to
draw magic circles on the ground. On the altar to Osiris, he lit a fire
of cedar wood, which blazed up towards the ceiling. He threw a powder
onto the fire, and Setna was surprised to see a ball of fire rise out of
the flames and float away, as if it were a grain of sand carried by the
wind. Then Se-Osiris spoke some words of power, and as he finished,
the flames blazed and were then suddenly extinguished, the entire place
being plunged into inky darkness.
Soon Setna became
aware of a light, however, and turned to see what caused it. He nearly
cried out in horror at the sight: his son's body lay on one side of the
altar, and his own body lay on the other side. Floating above them
were tongues of flame - their spirits.
Se-Osiris, in a
soft whisper, said, "We must hurry. If we are not back before morning,
we will never see the sun rise again." Setna looked at Se-Osiris, whose
soul was like that of a great bird.
"Lead me," Setna answered, and followed his son on his own soul's golden wings.
They
flew through the temple roof, and made straightway Underworld, West of
the land of Egypt, just as the sun was setting. They reached the Gap of
The Destroyer, passing over the boat in which Ra crosses into the
Underworld at the end of each day. It was a wonderful boat to behold,
colored as the great amethysts and emeralds of the kingdom. It also had
adornings of turqoise, gold, and jade.
The two souls
of Setna and Se-Osiris settled into the boat, in order that they may
ride across the River with the other souls of those who have departed
this life. The boat, pulled along by a troop of gods, approached the
great doors of the first region of the Underworld, doors which were
guarded on either side by six serpents.
The boat moved
along the river, until it came to the doors of the second region. Here
the river flowed between tall walls, the tops of which were decorated
with the points of spears, so that none could climb over. The great
doorway at the entrance was guarded by fire-breathing serpents, who
coiled at the base of the great wooden doors. The doors to the second
region of the Underworld turned on pivots, and each of the souls in the
boat whispered words of power as the doors swung open and the serpents
regarded them with greedy eyes.
The second region,
which they had now entered, was the Kingdom of Ra, with whom dwelt all
the heroes and gods of old. It was a place of peace and happiness, yet
no one could set foot here until they had first passed into the third
region: The Judgment Hall of Osiris.
The boat came to
the next doorway, and its passengers spoke the words of power. The boat
continued on, until the dead that were in it disembarked onto the
shore, outside of the The Judgment Hall of Osiris. The boat continued
on through the other nine regions, carrying Ra out of the mouth of the
Eastern Dragon as daylight once more dawned. But Setna and Se-Osiris
did not stay in the boat. Instead, their souls flew over the others,
who waited in line to be admitted by the Door-Keeper.
This is what Se-Osiris showed his father:
The
Door-Keeper would not allow a soul to enter into The Judgment Hall
unless it could announce his name. The soul who was prepared would
answer, "Understander of Hearts is your name, and you are the Searcher
of Bodies.
"To whom should I announce you?" the Door-Keeper would then inquire.
"Tell of my coming to the Interpreter of Two Lands!" was the response.
"And what is his name?"
"Thoth."
So the souls would then pass through the doorway, where Thoth would meet them. "What is your purpose here?"
The soul would answer Thoth: "I have come to be judged."
"And what is your condition?"
"I am pure of sin."
"Shall
I then announce you to he whose ceiling is flame and whose walls are
living serpents? He whose ground is paved with water?"
"Yes."
So
Thoth would lead the souls to Osiris, who sat upon his throne. In his
hands were the scourge and crook, upon his head was the serpent crown,
and his body was wrapped in the linen of the dead. In front of his
great throne was a large balance, its two scales even, one empty, the
other holding The Feather of Truth. Anubis stood before the throne. He
took each soul from Thoth and led it into the presence of Osiris.
As the soul approached, he would speak in his defense, saying, "I am pure!"
Then
the judgement would come. Anubis would take the heart from each soul
and place it on the scale. If the heart was heavier than the Feather of
Truth, then it was full of evil and would sink down. If it sank far
enough down, Ammit, the Devourer of Hearts, would catch the heart in its
jaws and carry it off. The sinner would then be driven out into the
Underworld, where it would live for eternity in the Pits of Fire, ruled
over by Apep the Terrible.
But if a soul was good, and
the heart rose, Thoth would cry to Osiris, "True is this soul's
proclamation! He has not sinned against the gods or man! He shall not
go down to Apep, but shall find a place in the Fields of Peace!"
Then
Horus would take the soul and lead it to Osiris. He would declare the
soul worthy before Osiris, saying, "May he be like those who follow
Horus!"
Then Osiris would grant that the soul could
pass on into the Fields of Peace. The Fields of Peace offered all the
joys of life: land, food, wine, leisure. There, the souls who passed
the scales would dwell until Osiris returns to earth, bringing them
back.
Se-Osiris showed Setna all of these things. He
turned to his father and asked, "Do you understand why I wished your
fate to be like that of the worker, and not the nobleman? For the
nobleman is being tormented forever, while the poor worker is dressed in
ornate robes, surrounded by wealth and pleasure."
Then
the souls of father and son flew back to Thebes, where they entered
their bodies. They returned to their home as the sun rose, turning the
cliffs to pink and purple, the golden sun casting its light over
the kingdom of Egypt.
-From Egypt
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