CHAPTER II.
MAGICAL STONES OR AMULETS.
"AMULET" is a name given to a class of objects and ornaments, and
articles of dress and wearing apparel, made of various substances which
were employed by the Egyptians, and later by other nations, to protect the
human body, either living or dead, from baleful influences, and from the
attacks of visible and invisible foes. The word "amulet" is derived from
an Arabic root meaning "to bear, to carry," hence "amulet" is "something
which is carried or worn," and the name is applied broadly to any kind of
talisman or ornament to which supernatural powers are ascribed. It is not
clear whether the amulet was intended first of all to protect the living
or the dead body, but it seems that it was originally worn to guard its
owner from savage animals and from serpents. As time went on the
development of religious ideas and beliefs progressed, and as a result new
amulets representing new views were invented; and the objects which were
able to protect the living were made, by an easy transition
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in the minds of those who wore them, to protect the dead. Moreover, as
the preservation of the corruptible body, with the number of its members
complete and intact, was of the most vital importance for the life of the
spiritual and incorruptible body which was believed to spring therefrom,
under the influence of the new beliefs the dead body became a veritable
storehouse of amulets. Each member was placed under the specific
protection of some amulet, and a number of objects which were believed to
protect the body generally from serpents, worms, mildew, decay and
putrefaction were laid with a lavish hand in, and upon, and about it, and
between the bandages with which it was swathed. When men in Egypt began to
lay amulets on their dead cannot be said, and it is equally impossible to
say when the belief in the efficacy of such and such an amulet sprang into
being; it seems clear, however, that certain amulets represent beliefs and
superstitions so old that even the Egyptians were, at times, doubtful
about their origin and meaning.
Amulets are of two kinds: (1) those which are inscribed with magical
formulć, and (2) those which are not. In the earliest times formulć or
prayers were recited over the amulets that were worn by the living or
placed on the dead by priests or men set apart to perform religious
services by the community; but it was not in the power of every man to
employ them, and at a comparatively early date words of magical
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power and prayers were cut upon the amulets, which thus became
possessed of a twofold power, that is to say, the power which was thought
to be inherent in the substance of which the amulet was made, and that
which lay in the words inscribed upon it. The earliest name for the
formulć found upon amulets is hekau, and it was so necessary for
the deceased to be provided with these hekau, or "words of power," that in
the XVIth Century B.C., and probably more than a thousand years earlier, a
special section 1 was inserted in the Book of
the Dead with the object of causing them to come to him from whatever
place they were in, "swifter than greyhounds and quicker than light." The
earliest Egyptian amulets known are pieces of green schist, of various
shapes, animal. and otherwise, which were laid upon the breast of the
deceased; these are found in large numbers in the pre-historic or
predynastic graves at several places in Egypt. It is most unlikely that
they were made by the aboriginal inhabitants of Egypt, for,
notwithstanding the various conjectures which have been made as to their
object and use, it is pretty certain that, as M. J. de Morgan said, 2
they "belong to the cult." According to this writer their use was
exceedingly widespread until the end of the neolithic period, but with the
advent of the
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people whom we call Egyptians they become very rare. In the subsequent
period the animal forms disappear, and their place is taken by plaques of
schist, rectangular in shape, upon which are inscribed, in rough outline,
figures of animals, etc. The theory that these objects were intended as
whetstones, or as slabs upon which to rub down paint, will not hold, for
the reasons which M. J. de Morgan has given. Moreover, in the green stone
scarab which was laid upon the breast of the deceased in dynastic times,
we probably have a survival of the green schist amulet of predynastic
times in Egypt, both as regards the object with which it was made and the
material. But the custom of writing hekau, or words of power, upon papyrus
is almost as old as that of writing them upon stone, and we see from the
inscription on the walls of the corridors and chambers of the pyramid of
Unas, king of Egypt about B.C. 3300, that a "book with words of magical
power" was buried with him. 1 Elsewhere 2
we are told that the book which Teta, king of Egypt about B.C. 3266, had
with him "hath effect upon the heart of the gods"; and there is no doubt
that the object of every religious text ever written on tomb, stele,
amulet, coffin, papyrus, etc., was to bring the gods under the power of
the deceased, so that he might be able to compel them to do his will.
p. 29
1. THE AMULET OF THE HEART, 
The heart was not only the seat of the power of life, but also the
source of both good and evil thoughts; and it sometimes typified the
conscience. It was guarded after death with special care, and was
mummified separately, and then, with the lungs, was preserved in a jar
which was placed under the protection of the god Tuamutef. Its
preservation was considered to be of such importance that a text 1
was introduced into the Book of the Dead at an early period, with the view
of providing the deceased with a heart in the place of that which had been
removed in the process of mummification. The text reads:--
"May my heart be with me in the House of Hearts! May my breast 2
be with me in the House of Hearts! May my heart be with me, and may it
rest there, or I shall not eat of the cakes of Osiris on the eastern side
of the Lake of Flowers, neither shall I have a boat wherein to go down the
Nile, nor another wherein to go up, nor shall I be able to sail down the
Nile with thee. May my mouth [be given] to me that I may speak therewith,
and my two legs to walk therewith, and my two hands and arms to overthrow
my foe. May the doors of heaven be opened unto me; may Seb, the prince of
the gods, open wide his
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two jaws unto me; may he open my two eyes which are blindfolded; may he
cause me to stretch apart my two legs which are bound together; and may
Anpu (Anubis) make my thighs to be firm so that I may stand upon them. May
the goddess Sekhet make me to rise so that I may ascend into heaven, and
may that which I command in the House of the Ka of Ptah be done. I shall
understand with my heart, I shall gain the mastery over my heart, I shall
gain the mastery over my two hands, I shall gain the mastery over my legs,
I shall have the power to do whatsoever my ka (i.e., double)
pleaseth. My soul shall not be fettered to my body at the gates of the
underworld, but I shall enter in and come forth in peace."
When the deceased had uttered these words, it was believed that he
would at once obtain the powers which he wished to possess in the next
world; and when he had gained the mastery over his heart, the heart, the
double, and the soul had the power to go where they wished and to do what
they pleased. The mention of the god Ptah and of his consort Sekhet
indicates that the Chapter was the work of the priests of Memphis, and
that the ideas embodied in it are of great antiquity. According to the
Papyrus of Nekhtu-Amen, the amulet of the heart, which is referred to in
the above Chapter, was to be made of lapis-lazuli, and there is no doubt
that this stone was believed to
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possess certain qualities which were beneficial to those who wore it.
It will also be remembered that, according to one tradition, 1
the text of the LXIVth Chapter of the Book of the Dead was found written
in letters of lapis-lazuli in the reign of Hesep-ti, king of Egypt about
B.C. 4300, and the way in which the fact is mentioned in the Rubric to the
Chapter proves that special importance was attached to it.

Nefer-uben-f, a priest, guarding his heart against the
destroyer of hearts.
(From Naville, Todtenbuch, vol. I. plate 39.)
But although a heart might be given to a man by means of the above
Chapter, it was necessary for the deceased to take the greatest care that
it was not carried off from him by a monster, who was part man and part
beast, and who went about seeking for hearts to carry away. To prevent
such a calamity no less than seven Chapters of the Book of the Dead (Nos.
XXVII., XXVIII., XXIX., XXIXA, XXX., XXXA,
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and XXXB) were written. The XXVIIth Chapter was connected with a heart
amulet made of a white, semi-transparent stone, and reads:--
"Hail, ye who carry away hearts! Hail, ye who steal hearts, and who
make the heart of a man to go through its transformations according to its
deeds, let not what he hath done harm him before you! Homage to you, O ye
lords of eternity, ye possessors of ever lastingness, take ye not this
heart of Osiris 1 into your grasp, and cause ye
not words of evil to spring up against it; for it is the heart of Osiris,
and it belongeth unto him of many names, 2 the
mighty one whose words are his limbs, and who sendeth forth his heart to
dwell in his body. The heart of Osiris is triumphant, and it is made new
before the gods: he hath gained power over it, and he hath not been judged
according to what he hath done. He hath gotten power over his own members.
His heart obeyeth him, he is the lord thereof, it is in his body, and it
shall never fall away therefrom. I, Osiris, victorious in peace, and
triumphant in the beautiful Amenta and on the mountain of eternity, bid
thee [O heart] to be obedient unto me in the underworld."
Another Chapter (XXIXB) was connected with a heart amulet made of
carnelian, of which so many examples may be found in large museums; the
text
p. 33
reads: "I am the Bennu, 1 the soul of Râ,
and the guide of the gods who are in the underworld. Their divine souls
came forth upon earth to do the will of their doubles, let therefore the
soul of the Osiris come forth to do the will of his double." The Bennu was
also the soul of Osiris, and thus the amulet brought with it the
protection of both Osiris and Râ.
But of all the Chapters which related to the heart, the most popular
among the Egyptians was that which is commonly known as XXXB, and its
importance from a religious point of view cannot be overstated. The
antiquity of the Chapter is undoubted, for according to the Papyrus of Nu, 2
a document of the early part of the XVIIIth dynasty, it dates from the
time of Hesep-ti, king of Egypt about B.C. 4300, and it seems that it
formed a pendant or supplement to the LXIVth Chapter, which professed to
give the substance of all the "Chapters of Coming Forth by Day" in a
single Chapter. In the rubric to the longer version of the Chapter, given
in the same papyrus, 3 Chapter XXXB is
connected with Herutâtâf, the son of Khufu (Cheops), a man famed for
wisdom, and it is there ordered that the words of it be recited over a
hard, green stone scarab, which shall be laid in the breast of the
deceased where the heart would ordinarily be; this amulet would then
perform for him the "opening of the
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mouth," 1 for the words of the Chapter would
be indeed "words of power." From reciting the words of the Chapter over a
scarab to engraving them upon it was but a step, and this step was taken
as early as the IVth dynasty. The text is as follows:--
"My heart, my mother; my heart, my mother! My heart whereby I came into
being! May naught stand up to oppose me at [my] judgment; may there be no
opposition to me in the presence of the sovereign princes; may there be no
parting of thee from me in the presence of him that keepeth the Balance!
Thou art my double (ka), the dweller in my body, the god Khnemu who
knitteth and strengtheneth my limbs. Mayest thou come forth into the place
of happiness whither we go. May the Shenit, who form the conditions
of the lives of men, not make my name to stink. Let it be satisfactory
unto us, and let the listening be satisfactory unto us, and let there be
joy of heart unto us at the weighing of words. Let not that which is false
be uttered against me before the great god, the lord of Amentet. Verily
how great shalt thou be when thou risest in triumph."
It was this Chapter which the deceased recited when he was in the
Judgment Hall of Osiris, whilst his heart was being weighed in the Balance
against the feather symbolic of right and truth. From certain papyri it
seems as if the above words should, properly,
p. 35
be said by the deceased when he is being weighed against his own heart,
a conception which is quite different from that of the judgment of the
heart before the gods.

The scribe Nebsent being weighed in a balance against
his heart in the presence of Osiris.
(From the Papyrus of Nebseni, sheet 4.)
2. THE AMULET OF THE SCARAB, 
From what has been said above it will be seen that the amulet of the
heart, which was connected with the most important and most popular of the
Chapters for protecting the heart, was directed to be made in the form of
the scarab at a very early date. We can trace the ideas which the
Egyptians held about this insect as far back as the time of the building
of the Pyramids, 1 and there is no doubt that
they represented beliefs which even at that early period were very old.
The
p. 36
Egyptian seems to have reasoned thus: since the physical heart is taken
from the body before mummification, and the body has need of another to
act as the source of life and movement in its new life, another must be
put in its place. But a stone heart, whether made of lapis-lazuli or
carnelian, is only a stone heart after all, and even though by means of
prayers properly recited it prevents the physical heart from being carried
off by "those who plunder hearts," it possesses nothing of itself which
can be turned to account in giving new life and being to the body on which
it lies. But the scarab or beetle itself possesses remarkable powers, and
if a figure of the scarab be made, and the proper words of power be
written upon it, not only protection of the dead physical heart, but also
new life and existence will be given to him to whose body it is attached.
Moreover, the scarab was the type and symbol of the god Khepera, the
invisible power of creation which propelled the sun across the sky. The
particular beetle chosen by the Egyptians to copy for amulets belongs to
the family of dung-feeding Lamellicorns which live in tropical countries.
The species are generally of a black hue, but amongst them are to be found
some adorned with the richest metallic colours. A remarkable peculiarity
exists in the structure and situation of the hind legs, which are placed
so near the extremity of the body, and so far from each other, as to give
the insect a most
p. 37
extraordinary appearance when walking. This peculiar formation is,
nevertheless, particularly serviceable to its possessors in rolling the
balls of excrementitious matter in which they enclose their eggs. These
balls are at first irregular and soft, but, by degrees, and during the
process of rolling along, become rounded and harder; they are propelled by
means of the hind legs. Sometimes these balls are an inch and a half or
two inches in diameter, and in rolling them along the beetles stand almost
upon their beads, with the heads turned from the balls. These manuvres
have for their object the burying of the balls in holes, which the insects
have previously dug for their reception; and it is upon the dung thus
deposited that the larvć, when hatched, feed. It does not appear that
these beetles have the ability to distinguish their own balls, as they
will seize upon those belonging to another, in the case of their having
lost their own; indeed, it is said that several of them occasionally
assist in rolling the same ball. The males as well as the females assist
in rolling the pellets. They fly during the hottest part of the day. 1
Among the ancients several curious views were held about the scarab,
whether of the type scarabćus sacer or the ateuchus Ćgyptiorium, 2
and Ćlian, Porphyry,
p. 38
and Horapollo declared that no female scarab existed. The last named
writer stated that the scarab denoted "only begotten," because it was a
creature self-produced, being unconceived by a female. He goes on to say
that, having made a ball of dung, the beetle rolls it from east to west,
and having dug a hole, he buries it in it for eight and twenty days; on
the twenty-ninth day he opens the ball, and throws it into the water, and
from it the scarabći come forth. The fact that the scarab flies during the
hottest part of the day made the insect to be identified with the sun, and
the ball of eggs to be compared to the sun itself. The unseen power of
God, made manifest under the form of the god Khepera, caused the sun to
roll across the sky, and the act of rolling gave to the scarab its name
kheper, i.e., "he who rolls." The sun contained the germs of
all life, and as the insect's ball contained the germs of the young
scarabs it was identified also with the sun as a creature which produced
life in a special way. Now, the god Khepera also represented inert but
living matter, which was about to begin a course of existence, and at a
very early period he was considered to be a god of the resurrection; and
since the scarab was identified with him that insect became at once the
symbol of the god and the type of the resurrection. But the dead human
body, from one aspect, contained the germ of life, that is to say, the
germ of the spiritual body, which was called into being
p. 39
by means of the prayers that were recited and the ceremonies that were
performed on the day of the funeral; from this point of view the insect's
egg ball and the dead body were identical. Now, as the insect had given
potential life to its eggs in the ball, so, it was thought, would a model
of the scarab, itself the symbol of the god Khepera, also give potential
life to the dead body upon which it was placed, always provided that the
proper "words of power" were first said over it or written upon it. The
idea of "life" appears to have attached itself to the scarab from time
immemorial in Egypt and the Eastern Sűdân, for to this day the insect is
dried, pounded, and mixed with water, and then drunk by women who believe
it to be an unfailing specific for the production of large families. In
ancient days when a man wished to drive away the effects of every kind of
sorcery and incantations he might do so by cutting off the head and wings
of a large beetle, which he boiled and laid in oil. The head and wings
were then warmed up and steeped in the oil of the âpnent serpent,
and when they had been once more boiled the man was to drink the mixture. 1
The amulet of the scarab has been found in Egypt in untold thousands,
and the varieties are exceedingly numerous. They are made of green basalt,
green
p. 40
granite, limestone, green marble, blue paste, blue glass, purple, blue
and green glazed porcelain, etc.; and the words of power are usually cut
in outline on the base. In rare instances, the scarab has a human face or
head, and sometimes the backs are inscribed with figures of the boat of Râ,
of the Bennu bird, "the soul of Râ," and of the eye of Horus. The
green stone scarabs are often set in gold, and have a band of gold across
and

The scribe Ani holding a necklace with pectoral, on
which is a figure of the boat of Râ containing a scarab, or beetle, in the
presence of Anubis, the god of the dead. (From the Papyrus of Ani, plate
15.)
down the back where the wings join; sometimes the whole back is gilded,
and sometimes the base is covered with a plate of gold upon which the
words of power have been stamped or engraved. Occasionally the base of the
scarab is made in the form of a heart, a fact which proves the closeness
of the relationship which existed between the amulets of the heart and
scarab. In late times, that is to say about B.C. 1200,
p. 41
large funeral scarabs were set in pylon-shaped pectorals, made of
porcelain of various colours, upon which the boat of the Sun was either
traced in colours or worked in relief, and the scarab is placed so as to
appear to be carried in the boat; on the left stands Isis and on the right
Nephthys. 1 The oldest green stone funeral
scarab known to me is in the British Museum (No. 29,224); it was found at
Kűrna near Thebes and belongs to the period of the XIth dynasty, about
B.C. 2600. The name of the man for whom it was made (he appears to have
been an official of the Temple of Amen) was traced on it in light coloured
paint which was afterwards varnished; there are no "words of power" on
this interesting object.
When once the custom of burying scarabs with the bodies of the dead
became recognized, the habit of wearing them as ornaments by the living
came into fashion, and as a result scarabs of almost every sort and kind
may be found by the thousand in many collections, and it is probable that
the number of varieties of them was only limited by the ability of those
who manufactured them in ancient days to invent new sorts. The use of the
scarab amulet passed into Western Asia and into several countries which
lay on the Mediterranean, and those who wore it seem to have attached to
it much the same idea as its early inventors, the
p. 42
Egyptians. From a Greek magical papyrus translated by Goodwin 1
we may see that certain solemn ceremonies were performed over a scarab
before it was worn, even in the period of the rule of the Greeks and
Romans. Thus about the "ring of Horus" and the "ceremony of the beetle" we
are told to take a beetle, sculptured as described below, and to place it
on a paper table, and under the table there shall be a pure linen cloth;
under it put some olive wood, and set on the middle of the table a small
censer wherein myrrh and kyphi shall be offered. And have at hand a small
vessel of chrysolite into which ointment of lilies, or myrrh, or cinnamon,
shall be put, and take the ring and lay it in the ointment, having first
made it pure and clean, and offer it up in the censer with kyphi and
myrrh; leave the ring for three days, and take it out and put it in a safe
place. At the celebration let there lie near at hand some pure loaves, and
such fruits as are in season, and having made another sacrifice upon vine
sticks, during the sacrifice take the ring out of the ointment, and anoint
thyself with the unction from it. Thou shalt anoint thyself early in the
morning, and turning towards the east shalt pronounce the words written
below. The beetle shall be carved out of a precious emerald; bore it and
pass a gold wire through it, and beneath the beetle carve the
p. 43
holy Isis, and having consecrated it as above written, use it. The
proper days for the celebration were the 7th, 9th, 10th, 12th, 14th, 16th,
21st, 24th, and 25th, from the beginning of the month; on other days
abstain. The spell to be recited began, "I am Thoth," the inventor and
founder of medicines and letters; "come to me, thou that art under the
earth, rise up to me, thou great spirit."
3. THE AMULET OF THE BUCKLE 
This amulet represents the buckle of the girdle of Isis, and is usually
made of carnelian, red jasper, red glass, and of other substances of a red
colour; it is sometimes made of gold, and of substances covered with gold.
It is always associated with the CLVIth Chapter of the Book of the Dead,
which is frequently inscribed upon it, and which reads:--
"The blood of Isis, and the strength of Isis, and the words of power of
Isis shall be mighty to act as powers to protect this great and divine
being, and to guard him from him that would do unto him anything that he
holdeth in abomination."
But before the buckle was attached to the neck of the deceased, where
the rubric ordered it to be placed, it had to be dipped in water in which
ânkham flowers had been steeped; and when the words of the Chapter
of the Buckle given above had been recited over it,
p. 44
the amulet brought to the deceased the protection of the blood of Isis,
and of her words of power. It will be remembered that she raised the dead
body of Osiris by means of her words of power, and there is a legend to
the effect that she smote the Sun-god Râ with severe sickness by the
magical power which she possessed. Another object of the buckle was to
give the deceased access to every place in the underworld, and to enable
him to have "one hand towards heaven, and one hand towards earth."
4. THE AMULET OF THE TET. 
This amulet probably represents the tree trunk in which the goddess
Isis concealed the dead body of her husband, and the four cross-bars
indicate the four cardinal points; it became a symbol of the highest
religious importance to the Egyptians, and the setting up of the Tet at
Busiris, which symbolized the reconstituting of the body of Osiris, was
one of the most solemn of all the ceremonies performed in connexion with
the worship of Osiris. The Tet represents neither the mason's table nor a
Nilometer, as some have thought, It is always associated with the CLVth
Chapter of the Book of the Dead, which reads:--
"Rise up thou, O Osiris! Thou hast thy backbone, O Still-Heart! Thou
hast the fastenings of thy neck and back, O Still-Heart! Place thou
thyself upon
p. 45

The mummy of Ani the scribe, lying on a bier, attended
by Isis, Nephthys, Anubis, the four children of Horus, the ushabti
figure, his soul, the TET, etc. (From the Papyrus of Ani, plates 33, 34).
p. 47
thy base, I put water beneath thee, and I bring unto thee a Tet of gold
that thou mayest rejoice therein."
Like the buckle, the Tet had to be dipped in the water in which ânkham
flowers had been steeped, and laid upon the neck of the deceased, to whom
it gave the power to reconstitute the body and to become a perfect KHU (i.e.,
spirit) in the underworld. On coffins the right hand of the deceased
grasps the buckle, and the left the Tet; both are made of wood,
notwithstanding the fact that the rubric to the Chapter of the Te orders
the Tet to be made of gold.
5. THE AMULET OF THE PILLOW, 
This amulet is a model of the pillow which is found placed under the
neck of the mummy in the coffin, and its object is to "lift up" and to
protect the head of the deceased; it is usually made of hćmatite, and is
inscribed with the text of the CLXVIth Chapter of the Book of the Dead,
which reads:--
"Thou art lifted up, O sick one that liest prostrate. They lift up thy
head to the horizon, thou art raised up, and dost triumph by reason of
what hath been done for thee. Ptah hath overthrown thine enemies, which
was ordered to be done for thee. Thou art Horus, the son of Hathor, . . .
who givest back the head after the slaughter. Thy head shall not be
carried away from thee after [the slaughter], thy head shall never, never
be carried away from thee."
p. 48
6. THE AMULET OF THE VULTURE, 
This amulet was intended to cause the power of Isis as the "divine
mother" to be a protection for the deceased, and was made of gold in the
form of a vulture hovering in the air with outstretched wings and holding
in each talon the symbol of "life" and was placed on
the neck on the day of the funeral. With this amulet the CLVIIth Chapter
of the Book of the Dead was associated, and it was ordered by the rubric
to it to be recited over it; this text reads:--
"Isis cometh and hovereth over the city, and she goeth about seeking
the secret habitations of Horus as he emergeth from his papyrus swamps,
and she raiseth up his shoulder which is in evil case. He is made one of
the company in the divine boat, and the sovereignty of the whole world is
decreed for him. He hath warred mightily, and he maketh his deeds to be
remembered; he hath made the fear of him to exist and awe of him to have
its being. His mother the mighty lady, protecteth him, and she hath
transferred her power unto him." The first allusion is to the care which
Isis shewed for Horus when she was bringing him up in the papyrus swamps,
and the second to his combat with Set, whom he vanquished through the
might of Isis.
p. 49
7. THE AMULET OF THE COLLAR OF GOLD,

This amulet was intended to give the deceased power to free himself
from his swathings; it is ordered by the rubric to the CLVIIIth Chapter of
the Book of the Dead to be placed on his neck on the day of the funeral,
and to be made of gold. The text of the Chapter reads:--"O my father, my
brother, my mother Isis, I am unswathed, and I see. I am one of those who
are unswathed and who see the god Seb." This amulet is very rare, and
appears to have been the expression of beliefs which grew up in the period
of the XXVIth dynasty, about B.C. 550.
8. THE AMULET OF THE PAPYRUS SCEPTRE,

This amulet was intended to give the deceased vigour and renewal of
youth; it was made of mother-of-emerald, or of light green or blue
porcelain, and, when the words of the CLIXth Chapter of the Book of the
Dead had been recited over it, it was placed on his neck on the day of the
funeral. In the XXVIth dynasty and later it seems as if the amulet
represented the power of Isis, who derived it from her father, the husband
of Renenet, the goddess of abundant harvests and food. At an earlier
period, judging from the text of the CLXth Chapter, the amulet is put by
the god
p. 50
[paragraph continues] Thoth into the hands
of the deceased, who says, "It is in sound state, and I am in sound state;
it is not injured, and I am not injured; it is not worn away, and I am not
worn away."
9. THE AMULET OF THE SOUL, 
This amulet was made of gold inlaid with precious stones in the form of
a human-headed hawk, and, when the words of the LXXXIXth Chapter of the
Book of the Dead had been recited over it, it was directed by the rubric
to the Chapter to be placed upon the breast of the deceased. The object of
the amulet is apparent from the text in which the deceased is made to say,
"Hail, thou god Anniu! Hail, thou god Pehrer, who dwellest in thy hall!
Grant thou that my soul may come unto me from wheresoever it may be. If it
would tarry, then let my soul be brought unto me from wheresoever it may
be. . . . Let me have possession of my soul and of my spirit, and let me
be true of voice with them wheresoever they may be. . . . Hail, ye gods,
who tow along the boat of the lord of millions of years, who bring it
above the underworld, and who make it to travel over Nut, who make souls
to enter into their spiritual bodies, . . . grant that the soul of the
Osiris 1
p. 51
"may come forth before the gods, and that it may be true of voice with
you in the east of the sky, and follow unto the place where it was
yesterday, and enjoy twofold peace in Amentet. May it look upon its
natural body, may it rest upon its spiritual body, and may its body
neither perish nor suffer corruption for ever!" Thus the amulet of the
soul was intended to enable the soul both to unite with the mummified
body, and to be with its spirit (khu) and spiritual body at will.
10. THE AMULET OF THE LADDER 
In tombs of the Ancient and Middle Empires small objects of wood and
other substances in the form of ladders have often been found, but the
signification of them is not always apparent. From the texts inscribed
upon the walls of the corridors and chambers of the pyramids of Unas, Teta,
Pepi, and other early kings, it is clear that the primitive Egyptians
believed that the floor of heaven, which also formed the sky of this
world, was made of an immense plate of iron, rectangular in shape, the
four corners of which rested upon four pillars which served to mark the
cardinal points. On this plate of iron lived the gods and the blessed
dead, and it was the aim of every good Egyptian to go there after death.
At certain sacred spots the edge of
p. 52
the plate was so near the tops of the mountains that the deceased might
easily clamber on to it and so obtain admission into heaven, but at others
the distance between it and the earth was so great that he needed help to
reach it. There existed a belief that Osiris himself experienced some
difficulty of getting up to the iron plate, and that it was only by means
of the ladder which his father Râ provided that he at length ascended into
heaven. On one side of the ladder stood Râ, and on the other stood Horus, 1
the son of Isis, and each god assisted Osiris to mount it. Originally the
two guardians of the ladder were Horus the Elder and Set, and there are
several references in the early texts to the help which they rendered to
the deceased, who was, of course, identified with the god Osiris. But,
with a view either of reminding these gods of their supposed duty, or of
compelling them to do it, the model of a ladder was often placed on or
near the dead body in the tomb, and a special composition was prepared
which had the effect of making the ladder become the means of the ascent
of the deceased into heaven. Thus in the text written for Pepi 2
the deceased is made to address the ladder in these words: "Homage to
thee, O divine Ladder! Homage to thee, O Ladder of Set! Stand thou
upright, O divine Ladder! Stand thou upright, O Ladder of Set! Stand thou
upright, O Ladder of Horus, whereby Osiris
p. 53
came forth into heaven when he made use of his magical power upon Râ. .
. . For Pepi is thy son, and Pepi is Horus, and thou hast given birth unto
Pepi even as thou hast given birth unto the god who is the lord of the
Ladder (i.e., Horus); and thou shalt give unto Pepi the Ladder of
the god (i.e., Horus), thou shalt give unto him the Ladder of the
god Set whereby this Pepi shall come forth into heaven when he shall have
made use of his magical power upon Râ. O 'thou god of those whose doubles
(kau) pass onwards, (when the Eye of Horus soareth upon the wing of
'Thoth on the east side of the divine Ladder (or Ladder of God), O men
whose bodies [would go] into heaven, Pepi is the Eye of Horus, and when
the 'Eye turneth itself to any place where he is, Pepi goeth side by side
with the Eye of Horus, and O ye who are the brethren of the gods, rejoice
ye that Pepi journeyeth among you. And the brethren of Pepi who axe the
gods shall be glad when they meet Pepi, even as Horus is glad when he
meeteth his Eye. He hath placed his Eye before his father Seb, and every
god and every spirit stretcheth out his hand towards Pepi when he cometh
forth into heaven from the Ladder. Pepi hath need neither to 'plough the
earth,' nor to 'collect the offering'; and he hath (need neither to go to
the Hall which is in Annu (Heliopolis), nor to the Hall of the Morning
which is in Annu; for that which he seeth and that which he
p. 54
heareth shall feed him and nourish him when he appeareth in heaven from
the Ladder. Pepi riseth like the uraeus on the forehead of Set, and every
god and every spirit stretcheth out his hand to Pepi on the Ladder. Pepi
hath gathered together his bones, be hath collected his flesh, and he hath
gone quickly into heaven by means of the two fingers 1
of the god of the Ladder (i.e., Horus). Elsewhere 2
the gods Khonsu, Sept, etc., are invoked to bring the ladder to Pepi, and
the ladder itself is adjured to come with its name, and in another place 3
we read, Homage to thee, O thou Ladder that supportest the golden vase of
the Spirits of Pe and the Spirits of Nekhen, stretch out thy hand to this
Pepi, and let him take his seat between the two great gods who (care in
the place of this Pepi; take him by the hand and lead him towards
Sekhet-Hetep (i.e., the Elysian Fields), and let him take his seat
among the stars which are in the sky."
In the Theban Recension of the Book of the Dead the importance of the
ladder is also seen, for in Chapter CXLIX. 4
the deceased says, "I set up a Ladder among the gods, and I am a divine
being among them"; and in Chapter CLIII. he says, "The
p. 55
[paragraph continues] Osiris Nu shall come
forth upon your Ladder which Râ hath made for him, and Horus and Set shall
grasp him firmly by the hand." Finally, when the custom of placing a model
of the ladder in the tomb fell into disuse, the priests provided for the
necessity of the dead by painting a ladder on the papyri that were
inscribed with the texts from the Book of the Dead and were buried
with them. 1
11. THE AMULET OF THE TWO FINGERS, 
This amulet is intended to represent the two fingers, index and medius,
which the god Horus employed in helping his father Osiris up the ladder 2
into heaven, as has been described above; it is found in the interior of
mummies and is usually made of obsidian or hćmatite.
12. THE AMULET OF THE EYE OF HORUS, 
The Eye of Horus amulet, or Utchat, is one of the commonest of all, and
its use seems to have been universal at all periods. It was made of gold,
silver, granite, hćmatite, carnelian, lapis-lazuli, porcelain, wood, etc.,
although the rubric of a late Chapter of the Book of the Dead 3
directs that the amulet
p. 56
should be made either of lapis-lazuli or of mak stone. The
Utchat is of two kinds, one facing to the left and the other to the right,
and together they represent the two eyes of Horus, one of which, according
to an ancient text, was white and the other black; from another point of
view one Utchat represents the Sun and the other the Moon, or Râ and
Osiris respectively. But speaking generally, when the Egyptians wore the
Utchat as an amulet they intended it to bring to them the blessings of
strength, vigour, protection, safety, good health, and the like, and they
had in their minds the Eye of Horus, probably the white one, or the Sun.
In religious texts the expression meh Utchat, i.e., the
"filling of the Utchat," is often used, and from many considerations it is
clear that we must understand it to refer to the Sun at the summer
solstice; thus the amulet seems to have been intended to bring to its
wearer strength and health similar to that of the Sun at the season of the
year when it is most powerful. In the CLXVIIth Chapter of the Book of the
Dead the deceased is made to say, "The god Thoth hath brought the Utchat,
and he hath made it to rest after it departed, O Râ. It was grievously
afflicted by the storm, but Thoth made it to rest after it departed out of
the storm. I am sound, and it is sound; I am sound, and it is sound; and
Nebseni, the lord of piety, is sound." To obtain the full benefit of the
Utchat amulet for the deceased it was obligatory to
p. 57
make one in lapis-lazuli and to plate it with gold, and then to offer
to it offerings at the summer solstice; another had then to be made of
jasper and, if after the specified Chapter (CXL.) had been recited over
it, it was laid on any part of the body of the deceased, he would become a
god and take his place in the boat of Râ. At this solstice twelve altars 1
had to be lighted, four for Râ-Temu, four for the Utchat, and four for the
other gods who had been mentioned in the Chapter. An interesting example
of the use of the utchat occurs in a Greek spell for the discovery
of a thief written as late as the IVth century of our era. 2
In it we are told to "take the herb khelkbei and bugloss,
press out the juice and burn the crushed leaves and mix the ashes with the
juice. Anoint and write upon a wall Khoô with these materials. And take a
common piece of wood, and cut a hammer out of it, and strike with it upon
the ear, pronouncing this spell:--'I adjure thee by the holy names, render
up the thief, who has carried away such [and such] a thing Khalkhak,
Khalkoum, Khiam, Khar, Khroum, Zbar, Bęri, Zbarkom, Khrę, Kariôb, Pharibou,
and by the terrible names αεεηηηιιιιοοοοουυυυυυωωωωωωω {Greek
aeehhhiiiiooooouuuuuuwwwwwww}'" 3 Following
these words we have a picture of the utchat
p. 58
with an arrangement of certain vowels on each side of it thus:
|
ω
υυ
ιιιι
ηηηηη
εεεεεε
ααααααα {Greek
w
uu
iiii
hhhhh
eeeeee
aaaaaaa}
|

|
α
εε
ηηη
ιιιι
ηηηηη
εεεεεε
ααααααα {Greek
a
ee
hhh
iiii
hhhhh
eeeeee
aaaaaaa}
|
The spell continues, "Render up the thief who has stolen
such [and such] a thing: as long as I strike the ear with this hammer, let
the eye of the thief be smitten and inflamed until it betrays him.' Saying
these words strike with the hammer." 1
13. THE AMULET OF "LIFE," (ÂNKH).
The object which is represented by this amulet is unknown, and of all
the suggestions which have been made concerning it none is more unlikely
than that which would give it a phallic origin. Whatever it may represent,
it certainly symbolizes "life"; every god carries it, and it seems, even
in the earliest times, to be a conventional representation of some object
which in the remotest period had been used as an . amulet. In the Papyrus
of Ani (2nd edit., plate 2) the Ânkh rises from the Tet, and the arms
which project from it support the disk of the sun as here seen. This
amulet is made of

p. 59
various substances, and was chiefly employed as a pendant of a
necklace.
14. THE AMULET NEFER, 
This amulet signifies "happiness, good luck," etc., and represents a
musical instrument; it was made of carnelian, red stone, red porcelain,
and the like, and was a very favourite form for the pendants of necklaces
and strings of beads.
15. THE AMULET OF THE SERPENT'S HEAD,

This amulet was placed on the dead body to keep it from being bitten by
snakes in the underworld or tomb. It is made of red stone, red jasper, red
paste, and carnelian. As the goddess Isis is often typified by a serpent,
and red is a colour peculiar to her, it seems as if the idea underlying
the use of this amulet was to vanquish the snakes in the tomb by means of
the power of the great snake-goddess Isis. This power had been transferred
to it by means of the words of the XXXIVth Chapter of the Book of the
Dead, which are often inscribed upon it. The text reads: "O Serpent! I am
the flame which shineth upon the Opener of hundreds of thousands of years,
and the standard of the god Tenpu," or as others say, "the standard of
young plants and flowers. Depart ye from me, for I am the divine Lynx."
Some
p. 60
have thought that the snake's head represents the serpent which
surmounts the ram's head on the urhekau instrument used in
performing the ceremony of "Opening the mouth." 1

The Kher-heb priest touching the statue of the deceased
with the urhekau instrument to effect the "opening
of the mouth." (From the Papyrus of Ani, plate 15)
16. THE AMULET OF THE MENAT, 
This amulet was in use in Egypt as early as the VIth dynasty, and it
was worn or held or carried with the sistrum by gods, kings, priests,
priestesses, etc.; usually it is held in the hand, but it is often worn on
the neck. Its object was to bring joy and health to the wearer, and it was
believed to possess magical properties; it represented nutrition 2
and
p. 61
strength, and the might of the male and female organs of generation,
mystically considered, was supposed to be united therein. The amulet is
made in bronze, stone, porcelain, and other substances, and when laid upon
the body of the dead brought to it the power of life and reproduction.
17. THE AMULET OF THE SAM, 
This amulet is probably intended to represent an
organ of the human body, and its use is very ancient; it is made of
lapis-lazuli and other hard stone substances, and in the late period is
often found in the swathings of mummies. Its primary meaning is "union,"
and refers to animal pleasure.
18. THE AMULET OF THE SHEN, 
This amulet is intended to represent the sun's orbit, and it became the
symbol of an undefined period of time, i.e., eternity; it was laid
upon the body of the dead with the view of giving to it life which should
endure as long as the sun revolved in its orbit in the heavens. In the
picture of the mummy chamber 1 the goddesses
Isis and Nephthys are seen kneeling and resting their hands on shen.
Figures of the shen were
p. 62
painted upon stelć, coffins, etc.; as an amulet it is commonly made of
lapis-lazuli or carnelian. The amulet of the cartouche
has been supposed to be nothing more than shen
elongated, but it probably refers to the ordinary
meaning of i.e., "name."
19. THE AMULET OF THE STEPS, 
This amulet seems to have two meanings: to lift up to heaven, and the
throne of Osiris. According to one legend, when the god Shu wished to lift
up the goddess Nut from the embrace of the god Seb, so that her body,
supported by her stretched-out arms and legs, might form the sky, he found
that he was not tall enough to do so; in this difficulty he made use of a
flight of steps, and having mounted to the top of these he found himself
able to perform his work. In the fourth section of the Elysian Fields 1
three such flights of steps are depicted. In the XXIInd Chapter of the
Book of the Dead the deceased prays that he "may have a portion with him
who is on the top of the steps," i.e., Osiris, and in funeral
vignettes this god is seen seated upon the top of a flight of steps and
holding his usual symbols of sovereignty and dominion. The amulet of the
Steps is usually made of green or blue glazed porcelain.
p. 63
20. THE AMULET OF THE FROG, 
This amulet is typical of teeming life and of the resurrection. The
frog-headed goddess Heqt, the wife of Khnemu, was associated with the
resurrection, and this amulet, when laid upon the body of the dead, was
intended to transfer to it her power. The frog is often represented on the
upper part of the Greek and Roman terra-cotta lamps which are found in
Egypt, and on one of them written in Greek is the legend, "I am the
resurrection." 1
The amulets described above are those which are most commonly found in
the tombs and on mummies, but a few others are also known, e.g.,
the White crown of the South,
the Red crown of the North, the horizon, or place
where the sun rises, an angle, typifying protection,
the horns, disk, and plumes,
or the plummet, etc. Besides these, any ring, or
pendant, or ornament, or any object whatsoever, upon which was inscribed
the name of a god or his emblem, or picture, became an amulet with
protective powers; and it seems that these powers remained active as long
as the substance lasted and as long as the name, or emblem, or picture,
was not
p. 64
erased from it. The use of amulets was common in Egypt from the
earliest times to the Roman Period, and when the Egyptians embraced
Christianity, they, in common with the Gnostics and semi-Christian sects,
imported into their new faith many of the views and beliefs which their
so-called heathen ancestors had held, and with them the use of the names
of ancient Egyptian gods, and goddesses, and demons, and formulć, which
they employed in much the same way as they were employed in the days of
old.
Footnotes
27:1 I.e., Chapter
XXIV., which is entitled, "The Chapter of bringing words of power unto
Osiris in the underworld."
27:2 Ethnographie
Prehistorique, p. 144.
28:1 Unas, ed. Maspero,
line 584.
28:2 Teta, ed. Maspero,
line 351.
29:1 Chapter XXVI., entitled,
"The Chapter of giving a heart to the deceased."
29:2 Literally,
"pericardium."
31:1 See Chapters of Coming
Forth by Day (translation, p. 119).
32:1 I.e., the
deceased who was identified with Osiris, the god and judge of the dead.
32:2 I.e., Thoth.
33:1 The Bennu bird is
usually identified with the phoenix.
33:2 Brit. Mus., No. 10,477,
sheet 13.
33:3 See sheet 21.
34:1 See Chapter VI. (Magical
Ceremonies).
35:1 King Teta is said to "live
like the scarab" (Teta, line 89); and in it is said, "Pepi is the
son of the Scarab which is born in Hetepet under the hair of the northern
Iusâas" (Pepi, line 422).
37:1 See J. O. Westwood,
Introduction to the Modern Classification of Insects, London, 1839,
vol. i. p. 204 ff.
37:2 See my Mummy, p.
233.
39:1 See Joachim, Das
älteste Buch über Heilkunde, Berlin, 1800, p. 160.
41:1 have given a summary of
the chief varieties of the funeral scarab in my Papyrus of Ani,
London, 1895, p. 262.
42:1 Fragment of a Grćco-Egyptian
Work upon Magic (Publications of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society,
1852).
50:1 I.e., the
deceased, who is identified with the god Osiris.
52:1 Unas, line 579.
52:2 Line 192 f.
54:1 Compare, "Give thou to
Pepi these two fingers which thou hast given to Nefert, the daughter of
the great god, as messengers from heaven to earth" (Pepi, line
422).
54:2 Pepi, line 200.
54:3 Pepi, line 471.
54:4 See my Chapters of
Coming Forth by Day, translation, p. 270.
55:1 See the Papyrus of Ani,
2nd edition, pl. 22.
55:2 See Pepi, line 196.
55:3 I.e., CXL.
57:1 One for each month of
the year.
57:2 Kenyon, Catalogue of
Greek Papyri, p. 61.
57:3 The seven vowels were
supposed in the Gnostic system to contain all the names of God, and were,
therefore, most powerful when used as a spell.
58:1 See Goodwin, Fragment of a
Grćco-Egyptian work upon Magic, p. 7.
60:1 See the description of
this ceremony in Chapter VI.
60:2 Menat is
connected with the root from which the word for "nurse" (menât) is
derived; see the article by Lefébure, "Le Menat et le Nom de l'Eunuque" in
Proc. Soc. Bibl. Arch., 1891, p. 333 f.
61:1 See Papyrus of Ani,
2nd edit, plates 33, 31.
62:1 See Papyrus of Ani,
2nd edit., plate 35.
63:1 See Lanzone,
Dizionario, p. 853. |