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Observations placeholder

Shuruppak - Atrahasis - Tablet 3

Identifier

022114

Type of Spiritual Experience

Background

A description of the experience

Enki opened his mouth and addressed his servant:

You say, What am I to seek?
Heed then the message I will speak to you:
Wall, listen now to me, reed wall, heed all my words:
Demolish the house, build a boat;
spurn property and save life.
The boat that you are to build ...
shall be roofed with sturdy covering like the Apsu [7] ;
to prevent Shamash [8] seeing inside it,
have it roofed both over and under.
The tackle must be very strong,
and the pitch tough to impart strength.
Soon I will rain down upon you an abundance of fowl,
a profusion of fish. [9]
[Observe the appointed time that I tell you;
enter the boat and close the door of the boat.
Send up into it your grain, goods and chattels,
your wife and family, your kinsfolk, and the master-craftsmen.
Creatures of the plains, all the wild creatures that eat grass,
I will send to you and they will wait at your door.] { Babylonian fragment }

He opened the clock and filled it [10] ;
he told him that the coming [11] of the flood would be on the seventh night.

Atrakhasis, having received the command,
assembled his elders to his gate.
Atrakhasis opened his mouth and addressed the elders:
My god does not agree with your god;
Enki and Enlil are angry with each other.
They have cast me out of [my house].
Since I am a worshipper of Enki,
he told me of this matter.
I cannot live in [your country any more];
I cannot set my foot on the land of Enlil now. . . .
The people helped him build his boat.
The wood-worker carried his ax;
the reed-worker carried his flattener made of stone;
the child carried the bitumen,
the poor man brought what was needed. . . .
Lean animals and fat animals he stowed in it.
He caught and put on board the winged birds of the heavens. . . .
The moon disappeared. . . .
He invited his people . . . to a banquet.
He sent his family on board;
they ate and they drank;
but he himself kept going in and out,
he could neither sit nor squat,
because his heart was broken and he was spewing bile.
The aspect of the weather altered,
as Adad roared in the clouds.
When he heard the noise made by Adad,
pitch was brought for him to caulk his door.
After he had barred his door,
Adad was roaring in the clouds;
the winds became ferocious
as he rose to sever the hawser and set the boat adrift.
{AV} The chariot of the gods ... was ravaging,
slaughtering, threshing.
Ninurta caused the dykes to overflow,
Errakal tore up the posts.
3 Anzu with his talons rent the heavens apart,
shattering the land noisily like a pot.
{BV} The flood set in . . .,
its force came upon the people like an army.
People could not see one another;
they could not be recognized in the disaster.
The flood bellowed like a wild ox,
while the wind howled like a whinnying wild ass.
The darkness was thick,
the sun [12] . was gone. . . .
The noise of the flood caused the gods to tremble. . . .
[Enki] was beside himself,
as his children were thrown down before him.
The lips of Nintu, [13] the great lady,
were overcome with feverishness. [14]
The Anunnaki, the great gods,
sat hungering and thirsting.
The goddess saw it as she wept,
the midwife of the gods, wise Mami: [15]
Let the day become dark, let it return to gloom.
In the assembly of the gods,
how could I have joined them in commanding annihilation?
Enlil is sated with commanding abomination,
like that vile Tiruru, [16] . he uttered abomination.
By my own deliberate choice,
and to my own hurt, I listened to their noise.
My offspring have become like flies around me,
and I, like a dweller in a house of lamentation,
my crying has ceased.
Shall I go up to heaven,
as if to dwell in a treasure house? [17]
Where has Anu the president gone,
whose commands his divine sons obeyed,
he who without consideration brought on a flood
and consigned the people to destruction? . . .
4 What? Have they given birth to the sea? [18]
They have filled the river like dragon flies.
Now like a raft they have put in to the edge,
like a raft landing (?) they have put in to the bank.
I have seen it and wept over them;
I have exhausted my lamenting over them.
She wept and gave relief to her heart;
Nintu wailed and quelled her emotion.
The gods wept with her for the land;
she was sated with grief, and she thirsted for beer.
Where she sat, they sat also, weeping,
like sheep crowded in a trough. [19]
Their lips suffered unquenched thirst,
they endured cramp from hunger.
For seven days and seven nights the deluge,
storm, and flood went on. . . .

The description of the end of the flood is lost.  The story resumes where the hero has emerged from the ship and is making an offering to the gods.[BEC].

The gods sniffed the fragrance
and gathered like flies over the offering.
After they had eaten up the offering,
Nintu arose to inveigh against them all:
Where has Anu the president been?
Did Enlil go to the incense too?
They who without consideration brought a flood
and consigned the people to destruction?
You decided on annihilation,
and now their clear faces have become clouded.
Then she approached the large flies
that Anu had made and was carrying:
His grief is mine! How determine my fate!
Let him get me out of this distress
and open my face again. . . . (with 3.6 cp. Gilgamesh 11.4)
6 Let these flies be lapis lazuli jewels around my neck
that I may remember [for evermore].
The stalwart Enlil saw the ship
and was filled with anger against the deities: [20]
All we great divinities [21] decided on an oath together.
Where did life make its escape?
How did any human survive the destruction?
Anu opened his mouth and addressed the stalwart Enlil:

Who but Enki could have done this? . . .

Enki opened his mouth and addressed the great gods:

Indeed I did it in front of you, to preserve life [22] . . . .
      {The rest of Enki's statement is damaged or entirely lost (cp. Ea's words in Gilgamesh 11.4)[BEC].}

Then Enlil opened his mouth and addressed Enki the artful:

Come then, summon Nintu, the birth-goddess, you and she shall confer in the assembly.
Enki opened his mouth and addressed Nintu, the birth-goddess:
You, the birth-goddess, creatress of destinies . . . .
      {Enki's utterance is damaged, but apparently he is announcing a divine program of birth control [BEC].}

A new solution

7 Let only a third among the people come into being(?)
Let there be women who bear and women who do not bear.
Let there be among the people the pashittu-demon, [23]
to snatch the infant from the knees of the woman who gives birth. [24]
Establish women in certain religious orders [25]
and let it be taboo for them to bear children . . . . {some 35 lines missing}

8 We sent the flood but a human survived the destruction.
You [26] are the governor of the gods;
on your orders I [27] created strife.
For your praise let the Igigi deities hear this song
and extol your greatness together.
To all peoples I sing of the flood. Listen now.

Colophon

The end, third tablet, inuma ilu awilum (when the gods instead of humans), 300 lines, total 1245 for the three tablets, by the hand of Nur-Aya, junior scribe, month Ayyar, day [ ], year Ammi-saduqa was king. A statue of himself . . . .

The source of the experience

Mesopotamian system

Concepts, symbols and science items

Concepts

Symbols

Flood

Science Items

Activities and commonsteps

Activities

Commonsteps

References

[7] Primordial God of subterranean fresh water. Trapped under the earth in a coma by Ea. But this may be a sub-terranian world as well. In the epic, Gilgamesh digs (or dives) down to the Apsu to get the plant of life, and Utnapishtim decieves his neighbors by saying that the must go to the Apsu to serve Ea (who is playing Enki's role in that version of this story).

[8] The sun god, usually portrayed positively, but Enki is afraid he will give away what Atrahasis is doing.

[9] Apparently, no cats and dogs, however.

[10] with water or sand? [BEC]

[11] or: sand [BEC].

[12] or: the god Shamash [BEC]

[13] Mother goddess, who in tablet one, created the first humans.

[14] or: Nintu gnawed her lips in anguish [BEC].

[15] another name for Nintu.

[16] a demon

[17] secluded? cloistered? [BEC].

[18] covered as it is with their bodies? [BEC].

[19] waiting for a drink [BEC].

[20] Igigi [BEC].

[21] Anunnaki [BEC].

[22] the lives of gods as well as humans? [BEC].

[23] 'she who wipes out' [BEC].

[24] A role taken up by Lilith in later Judaism.

[25] ugbabtu, entu, igisîtu [BEC].

[26] Enlil? cp. 1.1 [BEC].

[27] Enki? [BEC].