Let me call to thee, and do thou answer me,

Let me address thee, and do thou hearken unto me.'

By the command of Anu, Anatum, and Belit, recite the incantation.

The hymns to the fire-god, Nusku (or Girru), of which the 'Maklu' series naturally furnishes many specimens,[398] are all pretty much alike. I choose one which illustrates in greater detail the symbolical burning of the image of the witch:[399]

Nusku, great offspring of Anu,

The likeness of his father, the first-born of Bel,

The product of the deep, sprung from Ea,[400]

I raise the torch to illumine thee, yea, thee.

The sorcerer who has bewitched me,

Through the witchcraft by means of which he has bewitched me, do thou bewitch him.