[71]. In one of the ancient chapters preserved in the tomb of Horhotep, the deceased, speaking in the person of Horus, talks (319) of quenching his thirst with the

of his father Osiris.

[72]. See a very interesting passage in Pap. Rhind 4, 4, with Brugsch’s translation.


CHAPTER LXIV.

Chapter whereby one cometh forth by day from the Netherworld.

I am Yesterday, To-day, and To-morrow, for I am born again and again; mine is the unseen Force,([1]) which createth the gods and giveth food to those in the Tuat([2]) at the West of Heaven; I am the Eastern Rudder,([3]) the Lord of Two Faces, who seeth by his own light; the Lord of Resurrections, who cometh forth from the dusk and whose birth is from the House of Death.