Projects about JAESON AND THE ARGONAUTS-
Lots of possibilities, but your project should include THE MONOMYTH or a section about the heroes journey.
We finished the movie.
We're going to read something, just quick, to use for projects, below:
Lots of possibilities, but your project should include THE MONOMYTH or a section about the heroes journey.
We finished the movie.
We're going to read something, just quick, to use for projects, below:
Under the heading of this chapter may well be included the
Story of the Shipwrecked Traveller. The text of this remarkable story is
written in the hieratic character upon a roll of papyrus, which is preserved in
the Imperial Library at St. Petersburg. It is probable that a layer of facts
underlies the story, but the form in which we have it justifies us in assigning
to it a place among the fairy stories of Ancient Egypt. Prefixed to the
narrative of the shipwrecked traveller is the following:
"A certain servant of wise understanding hath said, Let
thy heart be of good cheer, O prince. Verily we have arrived at [our] homes.
The mallet hath been grasped, and the anchor-post hath been driven into the
ground, and the bow of the boat hath grounded on the bank. Thanksgivings have
been offered up to God, and every man hath embraced [208]his neighbour. Our
sailors have returned in peace and safety, and our fighting men have lost none
of their comrades, even though we travelled to the uttermost parts of Uauat
(Nubia), and through the country of Senmut (Northern Nubia). Verily we have
arrived in peace, and we have reached our own land [again]. Hearken, O prince,
unto me, even though I be a poor man. Wash thyself, and let water run over thy
fingers. I would that thou shouldst be ready to return an answer to the man who
addresseth thee, and to speak to the King [from] thy heart, and assuredly thou
must give thine answer promptly and without hesitation. The mouth of a man
delivereth him, and his words provide a covering for [his] face. Act thou
according to the promptings of thine heart, and when thou hast spoken [thou
wilt have made him] to be at rest." The shipwrecked traveller then
narrates his experiences in the following words: I will now speak and give thee
a description of the things that [once] happened to me myself [when] I was
journeying to the copper mines of the king. I went down into the sea[1] in a
ship that was one hundred and fifty cubits (225 feet) in length, and forty
cubits (60 feet) in breadth, and it was manned by one hundred and fifty sailors
who were chosen from among the best sailors of Egypt. They had looked upon the
sky, they had looked upon the land, and their hearts were more understanding
than the hearts of lions. Now although they were able to say beforehand when a
tempest was coming, and could tell when a squall was going to rise before it
broke upon them, a storm actually overtook us when we were still on the sea.
Before we could make the land the wind blew with redoubled violence, and it
drove before it upon us a wave that was eight cubits (12 feet) [high]. A plank
was driven towards me by it, and I seized it; and as for the ship, those who
were therein perished, and not one of them escaped.
[1] The sea was the Red Sea, and the narrator must have been
on his way to Wādī Maghārah or Sarābīt al-Khādim in the Peninsula of Sinai.
Then a wave of the sea bore me along and cast me up upon an
island, and I passed three days there by myself, with none but mine own heart
for a companion; I laid me down and [209]slept in a hollow in a thicket, and I
hugged the shade. And I lifted up my legs (i.e. I walked about), so that I
might find out what to put in my mouth, and I found there figs and grapes, and
all kinds of fine large berries; and there were there gourds, and melons, and
pumpkins as large as barrels (?), and there were also there fish and
water-fowl. There was no [food] of any sort or kind that did not grow in this
island. And when I had eaten all I could eat, I laid the remainder of the food
upon the ground, for it was too much for me [to carry] in my arms. I then dug a
hole in the ground and made a fire, and I prepared pieces of wood and a
burnt-offering for the gods.
And I heard a sound [as of] thunder, which I thought to be
[caused by] a wave of the sea, and the trees rocked and the earth quaked, and I
covered my face. And I found [that the sound was caused by] a serpent that was
coming towards me. It was thirty cubits (45 feet) in length, and its beard was
more than two cubits in length, and its body was covered with [scales of] gold,
and the two ridges over its eyes were of pure lapis-lazuli (i.e. they were
blue); and it coiled its whole length up before me. And it opened its mouth to
me, now I was lying flat on my stomach in front of it, and it said unto me,
"Who hath brought thee hither? Who hath brought thee hither, O miserable
one? Who hath brought thee hither? If thou dost not immediately declare unto me
who hath brought thee to this island, I will make thee to know what it is to be
burnt with fire, and thou wilt become a thing that is invisible. Thou speakest
to me, but I cannot hear what thou sayest; I am before thee, dost thou not know
me?" Then the serpent took me in its mouth, and carried me off to the
place where it was wont to rest, and it set me down there, having done me no
harm whatsoever; I was sound and whole, and it had not carried away any portion
of my body. And it opened its mouth to me whilst I was lying flat on my
stomach, and it said unto me, "Who hath brought thee thither? Who hath
brought thee hither, O miserable one? Who hath brought thee to this island of
the sea, the two sides of which are in the waves?"
Then I made answer to the serpent, my two hands being
[210]folded humbly before it, and I said unto it, "I am one who was
travelling to the mines on a mission of the king in a ship that was one hundred
and fifty cubits long, and fifty cubits in breadth, and it was manned by a crew
of one hundred and fifty men, who were chosen from among the best sailors of
Egypt. They had looked upon the sky, they had looked upon the earth, and their
hearts were more understanding than the hearts of lions. They were able to say
beforehand when a tempest was coming, and to tell when a squall was about to
rise before it broke. The heart of every man among them was wiser than that of
his neighbour, and the arm of each was stronger than that of his neighbour;
there was not one weak man among them. Nevertheless it blew a gale of wind
whilst we were still on the sea and before we could make the land. A gale rose,
which continued to increase in violence, and with it there came upon [us] a
wave eight cubits [high]. A plank of wood was driven towards me by this wave, and
I seized it; and as for the ship, those who were therein perished and not one
of them escaped alive [except] myself. And now behold me by thy side! It was a
wave of the sea that brought me to this island."
And the serpent said unto me, "Have no fear, have no
fear, O little one, and let not thy face be sad, now that thou hast arrived at
the place where I am. Verily, God hath spared thy life, and thou hast been
brought to this island where there is food. There is no kind of food that is
not here, and it is filled with good things of every kind. Verily, thou shalt
pass month after month on this island, until thou hast come to the end of four
months, and then a ship shall come, and there shall be therein sailors who are
acquaintances of thine, and thou shalt go with them to thy country, and thou
shalt die in thy native town." [And the serpent continued,] "What a
joyful thing it is for the man who hath experienced evil fortunes, and hath
passed safely through them, to declare them! I will now describe unto thee some
of the things that have happened unto me on this island. I used to live here
with my brethren, and with my children who dwelt among them; now my children
and my brethren [211]together numbered seventy-five. I do not make mention of a
little maiden who had been brought to me by fate. And a star fell [from
heaven], and these (i.e. his children, and his brethren, and the maiden) came
into the fire which fell with it. I myself was not with those who were burnt in
the fire, and I was not in their midst, but I [well-nigh] died [of grief] for
them. And I found a place wherein I buried them all together. Now, if thou art
strong, and thy heart flourisheth, thou shalt fill both thy arms (i.e. embrace)
with thy children, and thou shalt kiss thy wife, and thou shalt see thine own
house, which is the most beautiful thing of all, and thou shalt reach thy
country, and thou shalt live therein again together with thy brethren, and
dwell therein."
Then I cast myself down flat upon my stomach, and I pressed
the ground before the serpent with my forehead, saying, "I will describe
thy power to the King, and I will make him to understand thy greatness. I will
cause to be brought unto thee the unguent and spices called aba, and hekenu,
and inteneb, and khasait, and the incense that is offered up in the temples,
whereby every god is propitiated. I will relate [unto him] the things that have
happened unto me, and declare the things that have been seen by me through thy
power, and praise and thanksgiving shall be made unto thee in my city in the
presence of all the nobles of the country. I will slaughter bulls for thee, and
will offer them up as burnt-offerings, and I will pluck feathered fowl in thine
[honour]. And I will cause to come to thee boats laden with all the most costly
products of the land of Egypt, even according to what is done for a god who is
beloved by men and women in a land far away, whom they know not." Then the
serpent smiled at me, and the things which I had said to it were regarded by it
in its heart as nonsense, for it said unto me, "Thou hast not a very great
store of myrrh [in Egypt], and all that thou hast is incense. Behold, I am the
Prince of Punt, and the myrrh which is therein belongeth to me. And as for the
heken which thou hast said thou wilt cause to be brought to me, is it not one
of the chief [products] of this island? And behold, it shall come to pass that
when thou hast once [212]departed from this place, thou shalt never more see
this island, for it shall disappear into the waves."
And in due course, even as the serpent had predicted, a ship
arrived, and I climbed up to the top of a high tree, and I recognised those who
were in it. Then I went to announce the matter to the serpent, but I found that
it had knowledge thereof already. And the serpent said unto me, "A safe
[journey], a safe [journey], O little one, to thy house. Thou shalt see thy
children [again]. I beseech thee that my name may be held in fair repute in thy
city, for verily this is the thing which I desire of thee." Then I threw
myself flat upon my stomach, and my two hands were folded humbly before the
serpent. And the serpent gave me a [ship-] load of things, namely, myrrh,
heken, inteneb, khasait, thsheps and shaas spices, eye-paint (antimony), skins
of panthers, great balls of incense, tusks of elephants, greyhounds, apes,
monkeys, and beautiful and costly products of all sorts and kinds. And when I
had loaded these things into the ship, and had thrown myself flat upon my
stomach in order to give thanks unto it for the same, it spake unto me, saying,
"Verily thou shalt travel to [thy] country in two months, and thou shalt
fill both thy arms with thy children, and thou shalt renew thy youth in thy
coffin." Then I went down to the place on the sea-shore where the ship was,
and I hailed the bowmen who were in the ship, and I spake words of thanksgiving
to the lord of this island, and those who were in the ship did the same. Then
we set sail, and we journeyed on and returned to the country of the King, and
we arrived there at the end of two months, according to all that the serpent
had said. And I entered into the presence of the King, and I took with me for
him the offerings which I had brought out of the island. And the King praised
me and thanked me in the presence of the nobles of all his country, and he
appointed me to be one of his bodyguard, and I received my wages along with
those who were his [regular] servants.
Cast thou thy glance then upon me [O Prince], now that I
have set my feet on my native land once more, having seen and experienced what
I have seen and experienced. Hearken [213]thou unto me, for verily it is a good
thing to hearken unto men. And the Prince said unto me, "Make not thyself
out to be perfect, my friend! Doth a man give water to a fowl at daybreak which
he is going to kill during the day?"
Here endeth [The Story of the Shipwrecked Traveller], which
hath been written from the beginning to the end thereof according to the text
that hath been found written in an [ancient] book. It hath been written (i.e.
copied) by Ameni-Amen-āa, a scribe with skilful fingers. Life, strength, and
health be to him!
[TABLE OF CONTENTS]
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