4
THE INSTALLATION OF A VIZIER
with ^ is expected. Cf. however 1. 24 and four examples-from Pap. Ebers (Sethk,
Verbum, II, §706).
1
............:'.'..;! 000L
: 0 o on ws
i K2 KSI' Ci
"Behold, the Vizier, he is not mild. Behold, he is stern (1) when he [calleth
upon (2) (men) to speak (?)]. He is bronze (3), a bulwark (4) of gold to the house of
his [lord]. Behold, lie is one who doth not turn his face toward officiais and coun-
cillors, nor maketh [favourites (5)] among any people. Behold, [when] a man [is] in
the household of lus lord, he [doeth] that which is good to him, behold, [he] doeth
not [that which is good (?)] to another (6)."
The character of the idéal Vizier. The paragraph closes with a sentence, the
meaning of which is somewhat obscure. If the restorations here proposed are correct»
the sensé must be :— The Vizier should not show favour to individuals in exercising
his office; to do so would be to serve two masters, not merely his real master, the king.
— (1) Bnr and dhr are similarly contrasted : Erman, Mutter a. Kind, II, 1. 4,
is sweet to men, and bitter to those yonder (i. e., the dead)". Dhr accordingly means
"bitter", "sour" and metaphorically "stern".
(2) Read Q \>['^=^i,^~^^^Ê- Some such expression as .["<
1 1 1
may
have stood at the end of the line. — ^ must here express simultaneity and be équi-
valent to jN^"when" : just so, mi and m interchange in the formula 2(01'^^)^^
etc
I I !
1. Half-destroyed.
THE INSTALLATION OF A VIZIER
with ^ is expected. Cf. however 1. 24 and four examples-from Pap. Ebers (Sethk,
Verbum, II, §706).
1
............:'.'..;! 000L
: 0 o on ws
i K2 KSI' Ci
"Behold, the Vizier, he is not mild. Behold, he is stern (1) when he [calleth
upon (2) (men) to speak (?)]. He is bronze (3), a bulwark (4) of gold to the house of
his [lord]. Behold, lie is one who doth not turn his face toward officiais and coun-
cillors, nor maketh [favourites (5)] among any people. Behold, [when] a man [is] in
the household of lus lord, he [doeth] that which is good to him, behold, [he] doeth
not [that which is good (?)] to another (6)."
The character of the idéal Vizier. The paragraph closes with a sentence, the
meaning of which is somewhat obscure. If the restorations here proposed are correct»
the sensé must be :— The Vizier should not show favour to individuals in exercising
his office; to do so would be to serve two masters, not merely his real master, the king.
— (1) Bnr and dhr are similarly contrasted : Erman, Mutter a. Kind, II, 1. 4,
is sweet to men, and bitter to those yonder (i. e., the dead)". Dhr accordingly means
"bitter", "sour" and metaphorically "stern".
(2) Read Q \>['^=^i,^~^^^Ê- Some such expression as .["<
1 1 1
may
have stood at the end of the line. — ^ must here express simultaneity and be équi-
valent to jN^"when" : just so, mi and m interchange in the formula 2(01'^^)^^
etc
I I !
1. Half-destroyed.