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Canaanite Myth: The
Baal Epic
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Now Mighty Baal, son of Dagon, desired the kingship of the Gods.
He contended with Prince Yam-Nahar, the Son of El. But Kindly El,
Father Shunem, decided the case in favour of His son; He gave the
kingship to Prince Yam. He gave the power to Judge Nahar.
Fearsome Yam came to rule the Gods with an iron fist. He caused
Them to labor and toil under His reign. They cried unto Their
mother, Asherah, Lady of the Sea. They convinced Her to confront
Yam, to interceed in Their behalf.
Asherah went into the presence of Prince Yam. She came before
Judge Nahar. She begged that He release His grip upon the Gods Her
sons. But Mighty Yam declined Her request. She offered favours to
the Tyrant. But Powerful Nahar softened not His heart. Finally,
Kindly Asherah, who loves Her children, offered Herself to the God
of the Sea. She offered Her own body to the Lord of Rivers.
Yam-Nahar agreed to this, and Asherah returned to the Source of
the Two Rivers. She went home to the court of El. She came before
the Divine Council, and spoke of Her plan to the Gods Her children.
Baal was infuriated by Her speech. He was angered at the Gods who
would allow such a plot. He would not consent to surrendering Great
Asherah to the Tyrant Yam-Nahar. He swore to the Gods that He would
destroy Prince Yam. He would lay to rest the tyranny of Judge Nahar.
Yam-Nahar was made aware of the words of Baal. He sent His two
messengers to the court of El:
"Depart Lads!
Do not sit!
Then Ye shall surely set
face
Toward the Convocation of the Assembly
In the midst of
the mountain of Night.
At the feet of El do not fall,
Do not
prostrate Yourselves before the Convocation of the Assembly,
But
declare Your information!
And say to The Bull, My father,
El,
Declare to the Convocation of the Assembly:
'The message
of Yam, Your Lord,
Of Your master Judge River:
Give up, O
Gods, Him whom You harbor,
Him whom the multitude harbor!
Give
up Baal and His partisans,
Dagon's Son, so that I may inherit His
gold!'"
The lads depart
They do not Sit.
Then They set
face
Toward the Mountain of Night,
Toward the Convocation of
the Assembly.
The Gods had not even sat down,
The Deities to
dine,
When Baal stood up by El.
As soon as the Gods saw Them,
Saw the messengers of Yam
The
emissaries of Judge Nahar,
The Gods lowered Their heads upon
Their knees.
Yea, upon the thrones of Their lordships.
Baal rebukes Them:
"Why, O Gods, have Ye lowered
Your
heads on top of Your knees,
Yea, upon the thrones of Your
lordships?
Let a pair of Gods read the tablets of the messengers
of Yam,
Of the emissaries of Judge Nahar!
O Gods, lift up Your
heads
From the top of Your knees
Yea, from the thrones of Your
lordships!
And I shall answer
The messengers of Yam
The
emissaries of Judge Nahar!"
The Gods lift Their heads
From the
top of Their knees
Yea, from the thrones of thier lordships.
After there arrive the messengers of Yam,
The emissaries of
JudgeNahar.
At the feet of El They do not fall,
They do not
prostrate Themselves before the Convocation of the
Assembly.
Arise, for They declare Their information.
A fire,
two fires!
He sees a burnished sword!
They say to The Bull,
His father, El:
"The message of Yam, Your lord,
Of Your
master, Judge Nahar:
'Give up, O Gods, Him whom Ye harbor,
Him
whom the multitudes harbor!
Give up Baal and His
partisans,
Dagon's Son, so that I may inherit His gold!'"
And The Bull, His father, El, replies:
"Baal is Thy slave, O
Yam!
Baal is Thy slave O Yam!
Dagon's Son is Thy
captive!
He will bring Thy tribute like the Gods.
Like the
Deities, Thy gift!"
But Prince Baal was infuriated.
A knife He takes in the
hand
A dagger in the right hand.
To smite the lads He
flourishes it.
Anath siezes His right hand,
Astarte seizes His
left hand:
"How canst Thou smite the messengers of Yam?
The
emissaries of Judge Nahar?
They have merely brought the words of
Yam-Nahar.
Word of Their Lord and Master."
But Prince Baal is infuriated. He spares the lives of the
messengers; He sends Them back to Their master. He instructs Them to
give His information: Baal will not bow to Prince Yam. He will not
be the slave of Judge Nahar. He declares once more that He shall
slay the Tyrant lord of the Gods.
"To the earth let Our mighty one fall!
Yea, to dust Our strong
one!"
From His mouth the word had not yet gone forth,
Nor from
His lips, His utterance.
And His voice was given forth
Like a
mountain under the throne of Prince Yam.
And Kothar-u-Khasis declared:
"Did I not tell Thee, O Prince
Baal,
Nor declare, O Rider of Clouds?
'Lo, Thine enemies, O
Baal,
Lo, Thine enemies wilt Thou smite
Lo, Thou wilt van
quish Thy foes.
Thou wilt take Thine eternal kingdom;
Thine
everlasting sovereignty!'"
Kothar brings down two clubs
And proclaims Their
Names.
"Thy Name, even Thine, is Yagrush!
Yagrush, expel
Yam
Expel Yam from His throne
Nahar from the seat of His
sovereignty!
Thou shalt swoop from the hands of Baal
Like an
Eagle from His fingers!
Strike the shoulders of Prince
Yam
Twixt the hands of Judge Nahar!"
The club swoops from the hands of Baal
Like an eagle from His
fingers.
It strikes the shoulders of Prince Yam,
Twixt the
hands of Judge Nahar.
Yam is strong;
He is not
vanquished,
His joints do not fail,
Nor His frame
collapse.
Kothar brings down a second club,
And proclaims His
Name.
"Thy Name, even Thine, is Aymur!
Aymur, drive
Yam,
Drive Yam from His throne!
Nahar from His seat of His
sovereignty!
Thou shalt swoop from the hands of Baal
Like an
Eagle from His fingers!
Strike the head of Prince Yam
Twixt
the eyes of Judge Nahar!
Let Yam sink
And fall to the
earth!"
And the club swoops from the hands of Baal
Like an eagle from
His fingers.
It strikes the head of Prince Yam,
Twixt the eyes
of Judge Nahar.
Yam sinks,
Falls to the earth.
His joints fail
His frame
collapses.
Baal drags and poises Yam
Destroys Judge Nahar.
By Name, Astarte rebukes:
"Shmae, O Aliyan Baal,
Shame, O
Rider of the Clouds!
For Prince Yam was Our captive
For Judge
River was Our captive."
And there went out Baal,
Verily ashamed is Aliyan Baal
And
Prince Yam is, indeed, dead.
So let Baal reign!
Baal was now King of the Gods. Lord of the Mountain of Saphon.
But Baal had no palace like the other Gods. He speaks His word to
Kothat-u-Khasis:
"There are the dwelling of El,
The shelter of His sons.
The
dwelling of Lady Asherah of the Sea,
The dwelling of the renowned
brides.
The dwelling of Pidray, girl of Light,
The shelter of
Tallay, girl of rain,
The dwelling of Arsay, girl of Yaabdar.
Also, something else I'll tell Thee.
Go to!
Beseech Lady
Asherah of the Sea,
Entreat the Creatress of Gods!"
The Skilled One goes up to the bellows.
In the hands of Khasis
are the tongs.
He pours silver,
He casts gold.
He pours
silver by thousands of shekels,
Gold He pours by myriads.
A
glorious crown studded with silver,
Adorned with red gold.
A
glorious throne,
A dais above a glorious footstool,
Which
glisters in purity.
Glorious shoes of reception,
Thereover He
brings them gold.
A glorious table that is full.
A glorious
bowl, fine work of Kamares,
Set like the realm of Yam,
In
which there are buffaloes by myriads.
Kothar-u-Kasis goes to the Lady Asherah of the Sea, Mother of the
Seventy Gods. He offers these gifts unto Her.
He adorns Her with the covering of Her flesh.
She tears Her
clothing.
On the second day
He adorns Her in the two
rivers.
She sets a pot on the fire
A vessel on top of the
coals.
She propitiates The Bull, God of Mercy,
Entreats the Creator
of Creatures.
On lifting Her eyes
She sees.
Asherah sees
Baal's going,
Yea the going of the Virgin Anath,
The tread of
the Progenitress of Heroes.
After Aliyan Baal came,
And came the Virgin Anath,
They
besought Lady Asherah of the Sea.
Yea entreated the Creatress of
the Gods.
And Lady Asherah of the Sea replied:
"How can Ye
beseech Lady Asherah of the Sea,
Yea entreat the Creatress of the
Gods?
Have Ye besought The Bull, God of Mercy,
Or entreated
the Creator of Creatures?
And the Virgin Anath replied:
"We do beseech Lady Asherah of
the Sea.
We entreat the Creatress of Gods.
The Gods eat and
drink,
And those that suck the breast quaff
With a keen
knife
A slice of fatling.
They drink wine from a
goblet,
From a cup of gold, the blood of vines."
Asherah of the Sea declares:
"Saddle an ass,
Hitch a
donkey!
Put on a harness of silver,
Trappings of
gold.
Prepare the harness of My jennies!
Qadish-u-Amrar hearkens.
He saddles an ass
Hitches a
donkey.
Put on a harness of silver,
Trappings of
gold.
Prepares the harness of Her jennies!
Qadish-u-Amrar
embraces;
He sets Asherah on the back of the ass,
On the
beautiful back of the donkey.
Qadish begins to light the
way,
Even Amrar like a star.
Forward goes the Virgin
Anath,
And Baal departs for the heights of Saphon.
Then She sets face toward El,
At the sources of the Two
Rivers,
In the midst of the streams of the Two Deeps.
She
enters the abode of El,
And comes into the domicile of the King,
Father Shunem.
At the feet of El She bows and falls,
She
prostrates Herself and honors Him.
As soon as El sees Her,
He cracks a smile and laughs.
His
feet He sets on the footstool,
And twiddles His fingers.
He
lifts His voice
And shouts:
"Why has Lady Asherah of the Sea
come?
Why came the Creatress of Gods?
Art Thou hungry?
Then
have a morsel!
Or art Thou thirsty?
Then have a
drink!
Eat!
Or drink!
Eat bread from the tables!
Drink
wine from the goblets!
From a cup of gold, the blood of
vines!
If the love of El moves Thee,
Yea the affection of The
Bull arouses Thee!"
And Lady Asherah of the Sea replies:
"Thy word, El, is
wise;
Thou art wise unto eternity;
Lucky life is Thy
word.
Our king is Aliyan Baal,
Out judge, and none is above
Him.
Let both of Us drain His chalice;
Both of Us drain His
cup!"
Loudly Bull-El, Her father, shouts,
King El who brought Her
into being;
There shout Asherah and Her sons,
The Goddess and
the band of Her brood:
"Lo there is no house unto Baal like the
Gods.
Not a court like the sons of Asherah:
The dwelling of
El,
The shelter of His sons.
The dwelling of Lady Asherah of
the Sea,
The dwelling of the renowned brides.
The dwelling of
Pidray, girl of Light.
The shelter of Tallay, girl of
rain.
The dwelling of Arsay, girl of Yaabdar."
And the God of Mercy replied:
"Am I to act as a lackey of
Asherah?
Am I to act like the holder of a trowel?
If the
handmaid of Asherah will make the bricks
A house shall be built
for Baal like the Gods.
Yea a court like the sons of
Asherah."
And Lady Asherah of the Sea replied:
"Thou art great, O
El,
Thou are verily wise!
The gray of Thy beard hath verily
instructed Thee!
Here are pectorals of gold for Thy breast.
Lo, also it is the time of His rain.
Baal sets the
season,
And gives forth His voice from the clouds.
He flashes
lightning to the earth.
As a house of cedars let Him complete
it,
Or a house of bricks let Him erect it!
Let it be told to
Aliyan Baal:
'The mountains will bring Thee much silver.
The
hills, the choicest of gold;
The mines will bring Thee precious
stones,
And build a house of silver and gold.
A house of lapis
gems!'"
The Virgin Anath rejoices.
She jumps with the feet
And
leaves the earth.
Then She sets face toward the Lord of Saphon's
crest
By the thousand acres,
Yea the myriad hectares.
The
Virgin Anath laughs.
She lifts Her voice
And shouts:
"Be
informed, Baal!
Thy news I bring!
A house shall be built for
Thee as for Thy brothers,
Even as a court as for Thy kin!
The
mountains will bring Thee much silver.
The hills, the choicest of
gold;
The mines will bring Thee precious stones,
And build a
house of silver and gold.
A house of lapis gems!"
Aliyan Baal rejoices.
The mountains bring Him much
silver,
The mines bring Him precious stones.
Kothar-u-Khasis is sent.
After Kothar-u-Khasis arrived,
He
sets an ox in front of Him.
A fatling directly before Him.
A
chair is placed,
And He is seated
At the right of Aliyan
Baal,
Until They have eaten
And drunk.
And Aliyan Baal declares:
"Hurry, let a house be
built.
Hurry, let a palace be erected!
Hurry, let a house be
built.
Hurry, let a palace be erected
In the midst of the
heights of Saphon!
A thousand acres the house is to
comprise,
A myriad hectares, the palace!"
And Kothar-u-Khasis declares:
"Hear, O Aliyan
Baal!
Percieve, O Rider of Clouds!
I shall surely put a window
in the house,
A casement in the midst of the palace!"
And Aliyan Baal replies:
"Do not put a window in the
house,
A casement in the midst of the palace!
Let not Pidray,
girl of Light,
Nor Tallay, girl of rain,
Be seen by El's
beloved Yam Nahar!"
The Lord reviles and spits.
And Kothar-u-Khasis replies:
"Thou wilt return, Baal, to My
word."
Of ceders His house is to be built,
Of bricks is His palace to
be erected.
He goes to Lebabob and it's trees,
To Syria and
the choicest of it's cedars.
Lo, Lebanon and it's trees,
Syria
and it's cedars.
Fire is set on the house,
Flame on the
palace.
Behold a day and a second,
The fire eats into the
house,
The flame into the palace.
A fifth, a sixth day,
The
fire eats into the house,
The flame in the midst of the
palace.
Behold, on the seventh day,
The fire departs from the
house,
The flame from the palace.
Silver turns from
blocks,
Gold is turned from bricks.
Aliyan Baal rejoices.
"My house have I built of silver.
My
palace of gold have I made."
His house, Baal prepairs.
Hadad prepares the housewarming of
His palace.
He slaughters great and small cattle
He fells oxen
and ram-fatlings.
Yearling calves,
Little lambs and
kids.
He called His brothers into His house.
His kinsmen into
the midst of His palace.
He called the Seventy sons of
Asherah.
He caused the shep Gods to drink wine.
He caused the
ewe Goddesses to drink wine.
He cause the bull Gods to drink
wine.
He caused the cow Goddesses to drink wine.
He caused the
throne Gods to drink wine.
He caused the chair Goddesses to drink
wine.
He caused the jar Gods to drink wine.
He caused the jug
Goddesses to drink wine.
Until the Gods had eaten and
drunk,
And the sucklings quaffed
With a keen knife
A slice
of fatling.
They drink wine from a goblet,
From a cup of gold,
the blood of vines.
Lord Baal went on to take possesion of many earthly cities.
Sixty-six, Seventy-Seven towns He took. Eighty, Ninety was the total
number of cities that fell to the posession of Mighty Hadad. Thus
Baal returned to His home as Lord of all the World.
As Baal went into the midst of the house
Aliyan Baal
declared:
"I would install, Kothar, son of the Sea,
Yea
Kothar, son of the assembly!
Let a casement be opened in the
house;
A window in the midst of the palace,
And let the clouds
be opened with rain
On the opening of Kothar-u-Khasis."
Kothar-u-Khasis laughed.
He lifts His voice
And
shouts:
"Did I not tell Thee, O Aliyan Baal,
That Thou wouldst
return, Baal, to My word?
Let a casement be opened in the
house,
A window in the midst of the palace!"
Baal opened the clouds with rain,
His holy voice He gives
forth in the heavens.
The enemies of Baal seize the forests,
The foes of Hadad, the
fringes of the mountain.
And Aliyan Baal declares:
"Enemies of
Hadad, why do Ye invade?
Why do Ye invade the arsenal of Our
defense?"
Weeping, Baal returns to His house:
"Whether
king
Or commander
Be invested with sovereignty over the
land,
Respects I shall not send to Mavet,
Nor greetings to
El's beloved, the Hero!"
Mavet calls from His throat,
The Beloved meditates in His
inwards:
"I alone am He who will rule over the Gods.
Yea
command Gods and men.
Even dominate the multitudes of the
earth."
Aloud Baal cries to His lads:
"Look, Gupan and Ugar, sons of
Galmat,
Errand lads, sons of Zalmat
The lofty and
distinguished!
Then surely set face
Toward the mountain of
Tergezz,
Toward the mountain of Shermeg,
Toward the furrow of
the thriving of the earth.
Lift the mountain on the hands,
The
hill on top of the palms,
And go down into to nether-reaches of
the earth
So that You will be counted amoung those who go down
into the earth!
Then shall Ye set face
Toward His city,
Hemry.
Lo, the throne on which He sits
In the midst of the
land of His inheritance
And the guards of the defense of the
Gods.
Do not draw near the God Mavet,
Lest He make You like a
lamb in His mouth,
Like a kid in His jaws Ye be crushed!
The
Torch of the Gods, Shapash, burns;
The heavens halt on account of
El's darling, Mavet.
By the thousand acres,
Yea the myriad
hectares
At the feet of Mavet bow and fall.
Prostrate
Yourselves and honor Him!
And say to the God Mavet,
Declare to
El's beloved, the Hero:
And Baal spoke His word to His lads. He sent His message to
Mavet. The Lord Hadad refused to pay tribute to the Beloved of El.
Mavet was enfuriated, and sent His word back to Baal. He declared
that, because Baal had destroyed the Serpent Lotan, He would exact
revenge by devouring Baal. The messengers of Baal informed Baal that
Mavet would open His mouth wide.
"A lip to earth,
A lip to heaven,
And a tounge to the
stars
So that Baal may enter His inwards,
Yea, descend into
His mouth
As scorched is the olive,
The produce of the
Earth,
And the fruit of the Trees."
Aliyan Baal fears Him,
The Rider of the Clouds dreads
Him.
"Depart! Speak to the God Mavet.
Declare to El's Beloved,
the Hero:
The message of Aliyan Baal,
The word of Aliy the
Warrior:
'Hail, O God Mavet!
Thy slave am I,
Yea Thine
forever.'"
The Gods depart and do not sit.
Then They set face toward the
God Mavet.
Toward His city, Hemry.
Behold it is the throne of
His sitting,
Yea the land of His inheritance!
They lift Their
voices
And shout:
"The message of Aliyan Baal
The word of
Aliy the Warrior!
"Hail, O God Mavet!
Thy slave am I,
Yea
Thine forever!"
The God Mavet is glad. Baal will be delivered unto Him, and the
fertility of the land will die with Him. Baal feasts His last meal,
and Mavet commands Him:
"I shall put Him in the grave of the Gods of the earth.
And
Thou, take Thy clouds,
Thy wind, Thy storm, Thy rains!
With
Thee Thy seven lads,
Thine eight swine.
With Thee, Pidray,
girl of Light,
With Thee, Tallay, girl of rain.
Then Thy face
shalt Thou set toward the mountain of Kenkeny.
Lift the mountain
on the hands,
The hill on top of the palms,
And go down to the
nether reaches of the earth
So that Thou mayest be counted amoung
those who do down into the earth,
And all may know that Thou art
dead!"
Aliyan Baal hearkens.
He loves a heifer in Deber,
A young
cow in the fields of Shechelmemet.
He lies with Her seventy-seven
times,
Yea, eighty-eight times,
So that She conceives
And
bears Moshe.
Baal was found dead there in the fields of Shechelmemet, in the
land of Deber. The news reaches the ears of El, Father of Shunem:
Thereupon the God of Mercy
Goes down from the throne,
Sits
on the footstool,
And from the footstool sits on the earth.
He
pours the ashes of grief on His head,
The dust of wallowing on
His pate.
For clothing, He is covered with a doubled cloak.
He
roams the mountain in mourning,
Yea through the forest in
grief.
He cuts cheek and chin,
He lacerates His
forearms.
He plows His chest like a garden;
Like a vale He
lacerates His back.
He lifts His voice
And shouts:
"Baal is
dead!
Woe to the people of Dagon's son!
Woe to the multitudes
of Athar-Baal!
I shall go down into the earth."
Also Anath goes
And treads every mountain to the midst of the
Earth.
Every hill to the midst of the fields.
She comes to the
goodness of the land of Deber,
The beauty of the fields of
Shechelmemet.
She comes upon Baal prostrate on the earth.
For clothing She is covered with a doubled cloak.
The mountain
in mournig She roams.
In grief, through the forest.
She cuts
cheek and chin.
She lacerates Her forearms.
She plows lake a
garden Her chest,
Like a vale She lacerates the back.
"Baal is
dead!
Woe to the people of Dagon's son!
Woe to the multitudes
of Athar-Baal!
Let us go down into the earth."
With Her goes down the Torch of the Gods, Shapash.
Until She
is sated with weeping,
She drinks tears like wine.
Aloud She
cries to the Torch of the Gods, Shapash:
"Load Aliyan Baal on to
Me!"
The Torch of the Gods, Shapash, hearkens.
She lifts Aliyan
Baal,
On the shoulders of Anath She places Him,
She raises Him
into the heights of Saphon.
She weeps for Him and buries
Him.
She puts Him in the grave of the Gods of the earth.
She sacrifices seventy buffaloes
As an offering for Aliyan
Baal.
She sacrifices seventy oxen
As an offering for Aliyan
Baal.
She sacrifices seventy head of small cattle
As an
offering for Aliyan Baal.
She sacrifices seventy deer
As an
offering for Aliyan Baal.
She sacrifices seventy wild goats
As
an offering for Aliyan Baal.
She sacrifices seventy asses
As
an offering for Aliyan Baal.
Then She sets face toward El
At the sources of the Two
Rivers,
In the midst of the streams of the Two Deeps.
She
enters the abode of El,
Goes into the domicile of the King,
Father Shunem.
At the feet of El She bends and
falls,
Prostrates Herself and honors Him.
She lifts Her
voice
And shouts:
"Let Asherah and Her sons rejoice,
The
Goddess and the band of Her brood!
For dead is Aliyan
Baal,
For Perished is the Prince, Lord of Earth!"
Aloud cries El to Asherah of the Sea:
"Hear, O Lady Asherah of
the Sea!
Give one of Thy sons that I may make Him king!"
And Lady Asherah of the Sea replies:
"Let Us make king one who
knows how to govern!"
And the God of Mercy declares:
"One feeble of frame will not
vie with Baal,
Nor wield a spear against Dagon's son."
When the parley is finished,
Lady Asherah of the Sea
declares:
"Let Us make Ashtar the Terrible king!
Let Ashtar
the Terrible reign!"
Thereupon Ashtar the Terrible
Goes into the heights of
Saphon
That He may sit on the throne of Aliyan Baal.
His feet
do not reach the footstool,
Nor does His head reach it's
top.
And Ashtar the Terrible says:
"I cannot rule in the
heights of Saphon!"
Ashtar the Terrible goes down,
Goes down
from the throne of Aliyan Baal,
That He may rule over all the
grand earth.
Anath goes now to face Mavet, the Darling of El, the Hero.
As with the heart of a cow toward her calf,
As with the heart
of an ete toward her lamb,
So is the heart of Anath toward
Baal.
She seizes Mavet, in ripping His garment.
She closes in
on Him, in tearing His clothes.
She lifts Her voice
And
shouts:
"Come, Mavet, yield My brother!"
And the God Mavet replies:
"What does Thou ask, O Virgin
Anath?
I was going,
And roaming
Every mountain to the midst
of the earth,
Every hill to the midst of the fields.
A soul
was missing amoung men,
A soul of the multitudes of the
earth.
I arrived at the goodness of the land of Debar,
The
beauty of the fields of Shechelmemet.
I met Aliyan Baal;
I
made Him like a lamb in My mouth.
Like a kid in My jaws was He
crushed."
The Torch of the Gods, Shapash, glows,
The heavens stop on
account of the God Mavet.
A day, two days pass.
From days to
months.
The maiden Anath meets Him.
As with the heart of a cow toward
her calf,
As with the heart of an ete toward her lamb,
So is
the heart of Anath toward Baal.
She siezes the God Mavet.
With
a sword She cleaves Him,
With a pitchfork She winnows
Him,
With a fire She burns Him,
In the millstones She grinds
Him,
In the fields She plants Him,
So that the birds do not
eat His flesh,
Nor the fowl destroy His portion.
Flesh calls
to flesh.
The Great El, Father Shunem, declares of the lost God Baal:
"For perished is the Prince, Lord of Earth.
And if Aliyan Baal
is alive,
And if the Prince, Lord of Earth, exists,
In a dream
of the God of Mercy,
In a vision of the Creator of
Creatures,
Let the heavens rain oil,
The wadies run with
honey,
That I may know that Aliyan Baal is alive,
That the
Prince, Lord of Earth, exists."
In a dream of the God of Mercy,
In a vision of the Creator of
Creatures,
The heavens rain oil,
The wadies run with
honey,
The God of Mercy rejoices.
His feet He sets on the
footstool.
He cracks a smile and laughs.
He lifts His
voice
And shouts:
"Let Me sit and rest,
And let My soul
repose in My breast.
For Aliyan Baal is alive,
For the Prince,
Lord of Earth, exists."
Aloud shouts El to the Virgin
Anath:
"Hear, O Virgin Anath,
Say to the Torch of the Gods,
Shapash:
'Over the furrows of the fields, O Shapash,
Over the
furrows of the fields let El set Thee.
As for the Lord of the
Plowed Furrows,
Where is Aliyan Baal?
Where is the Prince,
Lord of Earth?'"
The Virgin Anath departs.
Then She sets face toward the Torch
of the Gods, Shapash.
She lifts Her voice
And shouts:
"The
message of Bull-El, Thy father,
The word of the God of Mercy, Thy
begetter:
'Over the furrows of the fields, O Shapash,
Over the
furrows of the fields let El set Thee!
As for the Lord of the
Furrows of His plowing,
Where is Aliyan Baal?
Where is the
Prince, Lord of Earth?'"
And the Torch of the Gods, Shapash, replies:
"I shall seek
Aliyan Baal!"
And the Virgin Anath answers:
"As for Me, tis not I, O
Shapash!
As for Me, tis not I, but El summons Thee!
May the
Gods guard Thee in Sheol!"
Shapash descends into the underworld. She enters the relm of
Sheol. Upon Her return to the world above, She carries Great Baal
with Her. Ball goes into the heights of Saphon. He confronts Mavet,
the Hero.
Baal seizes the son of Asherah.
The great one He smites on the
shoulder.
The tyrant He smites with a stick.
Mavet is
vanquished,
Reaches earth.
Baal returns to the throne of His kingship,
Dagon's son to the
seat of His sovereignty.
From days to months,
From months to
years,
Lo in the seventh year.
And the God Mavet addresses Himself to Aliyan Baal.
He lifts
His voice
And shouts:
"Because of Thee, O Baal, I have
experienced humiliation.
Because of Thee, experienced scattering
by the sword.
Because of Thee, experienced burning in the
fire.
Because of Thee, experienced grinding in the
millstones.
Because of Thee, experienced winnowing by the
pitchfork.
Because of Thee, experienced being planted in the
feilds.
Because of Thee, experienced being sown in the sea."
Thereupon Mavet threatens to destroy Baal in revenge. He
threatens to take the kingship of Baal. Baal expels Him, drives Him
out of the heights of Saphon. Mavet vows His revenge eupon Baal:
"And lo, as a brother of Yam Thou art made, Baal is given
As
retribution for the destroyed sons of My mother!"
He returns to the Lord of the heights of Saphon,
He lifts His
voice
And shouts:
"A brother of Yam Thou art made, O
Baal!
As retribution for the destroyed sons of My mother!"
They shake each other like Gemar-beasts,
Mavet is strong, Baal
is strong.
They gore each other like buffaloes,
Mavet is
strong, Baal is strong.
They bite like serpents,
Mavet is
strong, Baal is strong.
They kick like racing beasts,
Mavet is
down, Ball is down.
Up comes Shapash.
She cries to Mavet:
"Hear, O God
Mavet!
How canst Thou fight with Aliyan Baal?
How will
Bull-El, Thy father, not hear Thee?
Will He not remove the
supports of Thy throne?
Nor upset the seat of Thy
kingship?
Nor break the scepter of Thy rule?"
The Got Mavet is afraid,
El's Beloved, the Hero, is
frightened.
Mavet is roused from His prstration.
The God of Sterility submits to Baal. He conceeds the kingship to
the Lord of Earth. Baal returns to the Heights of Saphon, but Anath
does not go with Him. She turns Her anger to the enemies of Baal. To
those who were fickle against Baal in His trials. The attacks
mankind.
Like the fruit of seven daughters,
The scent of kids and
anhb-animals,
Both gates of Anath's house.
And the lads chance upon the Lady of the Mountain.
And lo,
Anath smites in the valley,
Fighting between the two
cities.
She smites the people of the seashore,
Destroys
mankind of the sunrise.
Under Her are heads like
vultures.
Over Her are hands like locusts,
Like thorns, the
hands of troops.
She piles up heads on Her back,
She ties up
hands in Her bundle.
Knee-deep She plunges in the blood of
soldiery,
Up to the neck in the gore of troops.
With a stick
She drives out foes,
Against the flank She draws Her bow.
And lo, Anath reaches Her house,
Yea the Goddess enters Her
palace,
But is not satisfied.
She had smitten in the
valley,
Fought between the two cities.
She hurls chairs at the troops,
Hurling tables at the
soldiers,
Footstools at the heroes.
Much She smites and
looks,
Fights and views.
Anath gluts Her liver with
laughter.
Her heart is filled with joy,
For Anath's hand is
victory.
For knee-deep She plunges in the blood of
soldiery,
Up to the neck in the gore of troops.
Until She is sated She smites in the house,
Fights between the
two tables,
Shedding the blood of soldiery.
Pouring the oil of peace from a bowl,
The Virgin Anath washes
Her hands,
The Progenitress of Heroes, Her fingers.
She washes
Her hands in the blood of soldiery,
Her fingers in the gore of
troops.
Arranging portions by the chairs,
Tables by the
tables,
Footstools She arranges by the footstools.
She gathers
water and washes
With dew of heaven,
Fat of earth,
Rain of
the Rider of Clouds,
The dew that the heavens pour,
The rain
that the stars pour.
The anhb-animals leap by the thousand
acres,
The zuh-fish in the sea, by the myriads of
hectares.
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