[10.] Green. The Egyptian
is probably nearer in meaning to the Greek χλωρός, ‘pale green, yellowish-green.’
[11.] The Rubric ends here in Pb. Lc. adds, “They[“They] shall offer bread, beer, and all good things on the Birth-day of Osiris. And if these rites are performed for him, his soul will rise up and live for ever; he will not ever die a second time in the divine Nether world.”
The later texts add the information that the text was discovered in the great hall of the palace in the time of king Septa, and that it was found in a pit or chamber in the rock,
. It was made by Horus for his father Osiris Unneferu. Septa is the fifth royal name on the great tablet of Abydos.