Very few papyri have this chapter as complete as Af., which is taken here as standard for text and vignettes, but there are fragments of it here and there. The Turin version is much shorter than the old one. The papyrus of Nu (ed. Budge) contains the texts of the four walls with rubrics very similar to those of the steles in Marseilles. They form a special chapter joined to 137A, with the title: What is done secretly in the Tuat, the mysteries of the Tuat, the introduction into the mysteries of the Netherworld.
In order to facilitate the understanding of the chapter, I have lettered the words spoken by the various figures.
[1.] Renouf would have translated (see Chapter 42), thy eyebrows are those of Anubis; but the following chapter shows that we have to translate with Anubis, which should mean here, under the protection of Anubis.
[2.] The rubrics say the figure is made of palm wood, and is seven fingers high.
[3.] The rubric of this Tat is the following: said on a Tat of crystal, the branches of which are of gold. It is folded up in fine linen.
There is another chapter of the Tat put on the neck of the deceased (Chapter 155), the words of which are totally different.
[4.] According to the rubric, the flame is a torch made of reeds