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The Tale of Two Brothers

The story centers around two brothers: Anpu (Anubis), who is married,
and the younger Bata. The brothers work together, farming land and raising
cattle. One day, Anpu's wife attempts to seduce Bata. When he strongly rejects
her advances, the wife tells her husband that his brother attempted to seduce
her and beat her when she refused. In response to this, Anpu attempts to kill
Bata, who flees and prays to Re-Harakhti to save him. The god creates a
crocodile-infested lake between the two brothers, across which Bata is finally
able to appeal to his brother and share his side of the events. To emphasize his
sincerity, Bata severs his genitalia and throws them into the water, where
a catfish eats them.
Bata states that he is going to the Valley of the Cedar, where he will place
his heart on the top of the blossom of a cedar tree, so that if it is cut down
Anpu will be able to find it and allow Bata to become alive again. Bata tells
Anpu that if he is ever given a jar of beer that froths, he should know to seek
out his brother. After hearing of his brother's plan, Anpu returns home and
kills his wife. Meanwhile, Bata is establishing a life in the Valley of the Cedar,
building a new home for himself. Bata comes upon the Ennead, or the
principal Egyptian deities, who take pity on him. Khnum, the god frequently
depicted in Egyptian mythology as having fashioned humans on a potters'
wheel, creates a wife for Bata. Because of her divine creation, Bata's wife is
sought after by the pharaoh. When the pharoh succeeds in bringing her to live
with him, she tells him to cut down the tree in which Bata has put his heart.
They do so, and Bata dies.
Anpu then receives a frothy jar of beer and sets off to the Valley of the
Cedar. He searches for his brother's heart for more than three years, finding it
at the beginning of the fourth year. He follows Bata's instructions and puts the
heart in a bowl of cold water. As predicted, Bata is resurrected.
Bata then takes the form of a bull and goes to see his wife and the pharaoh.
His wife, aware of his presence as a bull, asks the pharaoh if she may eat its
liver. The bull is then sacrificed, and two drops of Bata's blood fall, from which
grow two Persea trees. Bata, now in the form of a tree, again addresses his wife,
and she appeals to the pharaoh to cut down the Persea trees and use them to
make furniture. As this is happening, a splinter ends up in the wife's mouth,

impregnating her. She eventually gives birth to a son, whom the pharaoh
ultimately makes crown prince. When the pharaoh dies, the crown prince (a
resurrected Bata) becomes king, and he appoints his elder brother Anpu as
crown prince. The story ends happily, with the brothers at peace with one
another and in control of their country.

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