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Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

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Graham Hancock – <strong>FINGERPRINTS</strong> <strong>OF</strong> <strong>THE</strong> <strong>GODS</strong><br />

goddess of war and sexual love and Ea, lord of the waters, man’s natural<br />

friend and protector.<br />

In those days the world teemed, the people multiplied, the world bellowed like a<br />

wild bull, and the great god was aroused by the clamour. Enlil heard the clamour<br />

and he said to the gods in council, ‘The uproar of mankind is intolerable and sleep<br />

is no longer possible by reason of the babel.’ So the gods agreed to exterminate<br />

mankind.’ 2<br />

Ea, however, took pity on Utnapishtim. Speaking through the reed wall of<br />

the king’s house he told him of the imminent catastrophe and instructed<br />

him to build a boat in which he and his family could survive:<br />

Tear down your house and build a boat, abandon possessions and look for life,<br />

despise wordly goods and save your soul ... Tear down your house, I say, and<br />

build a boat with her dimensions in proportion—her width and length in harmony.<br />

Put aboard the seed of all living things, into the boat. 3<br />

In the nick of time Utnapishtim built the boat as ordered. ‘I loaded into<br />

her all that I had,’ he said, ‘loaded her with the seed of all living things’:<br />

I put on board all my kith and kin, put on board cattle, wild beasts from open<br />

country, all kinds of craftsmen ... The time was fulfilled. When the first light of<br />

dawn appeared a black cloud came up from the base of the sky; it thundered<br />

within where Adad, lord of the storm was riding ... A stupor of despair went up to<br />

heaven when the god of the storm turned daylight to darkness, when he smashed<br />

the land like a cup ...<br />

On the first day the tempest blew swiftly and brought the flood ... No man could<br />

see his fellow. Nor could the people be distinguished from the sky. Even the gods<br />

were afraid of the flood. They withdrew; they went up to the heaven of Anu and<br />

crouched in the outskirts. The gods cowered like curs while Ishtar cried, shrieking<br />

aloud, ‘Have I given birth unto these mine own people only to glut with their<br />

bodies the sea as though they were fish?’ 4<br />

Meanwhile, continued Utnapishtim:<br />

For six days and nights the wind blew, torrent and tempest and flood<br />

overwhelmed the world, tempest and flood raged together like warring hosts.<br />

When the seventh day dawned the storm from the south subsided, the sea grew<br />

calm, the flood was stilled. I looked at the face of the world and there was silence.<br />

The surface of the sea stretched as flat as a roof-top. All mankind had returned to<br />

clay ... I opened a hatch and light fell on my face. Then I bowed low, I sat down<br />

and I wept, the tears streamed down my face, for on every side was the waste of<br />

water ... Fourteen leagues distant there appeared a mountain, and there the boat<br />

grounded; on the mountain of Nisir the boat held fast, she held fast and did not<br />

budge ... When the seventh day dawned I loosed a dove and let her go. She flew<br />

away, but finding no resting place she returned. Then I loosed a swallow, and she<br />

flew away but finding no resting place she returned. I loosed a raven, she saw that<br />

the waters had retreated, she ate, she flew around, she cawed, and she did not<br />

2 Ibid., p. 108.<br />

3 Ibid., and Myths from Mesopotamia, p. 110.<br />

4 Myths from Mesopotamia, pp. 112-13; Gilgamesh, pp. 109-11; Edmund Sollberger, The<br />

Babylonian Legend of the Flood, British Museum Publications, 1984, p. 26.<br />

185

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