the PEASANT and the WORKMAN the PREFACE A tale of the Ninth Dynasty, which from
the number of copies extant would seem to have been very popular, relates
how a peasant succeeded in obtaining justice after he had been robbed.
Justice was not very easily obtained in Egypt in those times, for it seems
to have been requisite that a peasant should attract the judge's attention
by some special means, if his case were to be heard at all. The story runs
thus:
In the Salt Country there dwelt a sekhti (peasant) with his family. He
made his living by trading with Henenseten in salt, natron, rushes, and
the other products of his country, and as he journeyed thither he had to
pass through the lands of the house of Fefa. Now there dwelt by the canal
a man named Tehuti-nekht, the son of Asri, a serf to the High Steward
Meruitensa. Tehuti-nekht had so far encroached on the path- for roads and
paths were not protected by law in Egypt as in other countries- that there
was but a narrow strip left, with the canal on one side and a cornfield on
the other. When Tehuti-nekht saw the sekhti approaching with his burdened
asses, his evil heart coveted the beasts and the goods they bore, and he
called to the gods to open a way for him to steal the possessions of the
sekhti.
This was the plan he conceived. "I will take," said he, "a shawl, and
will spread it upon the path. If the sekhti drives his asses over it- and
there is no other way- then I shall easily pick a quarrel with him." He
had no sooner thought of the project than it was carried into effect. A
servant, at Tehuti-nekht's bidding, fetched a shawl and spread it over the
path so that one end was in the water, the other among the corn.
When the sekhti drew nigh he drove his asses over the shawl. He had no
alternative.
"Hold!" cried Tehuti-nekht with well-simulated wrath, "surely you do
not intend to drive your beasts over my clothes!"
"I will try to avoid them," responded the good-natured peasant, and he
caused the rest of his asses to pass higher up, among the corn.
"Do you, then, drive your asses through my corn?," said Tehuti-nekht,
more wrathfully than ever.
"There is no other way," said the harassed peasant. "You have blocked
the path with your shawl, and I must leave the path."
While the two argued upon the matter one of the asses helped itself to
a mouthful of corn, whereupon Tehuti-nekht's plaints broke out afresh.
"Behold!" he cried, "your ass is eating my corn. I will take your ass,
and he shall pay for the theft."
"Shall I be robbed, cried the sekhti, "in the lands of the Lord Steward
Meruitensa who treateth robbers so hardly? Behold, I will go to him. He
will not suffer this misdeed of thine."
"Poor as thou art, who will concern himself with thy
woes?"
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"Thinkest thou he will hearken to thy plaint?" sneered Tehuti-nekht.
"Poor as thou art, who will concern himself with thy woes? Lo, I am the
Lord Steward Meruitensa," and so saying he beat the sekhti sorely, stole
all his asses and drove them into pasture.
In vain the sekhti wept and implored him restore his property.
Tehuti-nekht bade him hold his peace, threatening to send him to the Demon
of Silence if he continued to complain. Nevertheless, the sekhti
petitioned him for a whole day. At length, finding that he was wasting his
breath, the peasant betook himself to Henen-ni-sut, there to lay his case
before the Lord Steward Meruitensa. On his arrival he found the latter
preparing to embark in his boat, which was to carry him to the
judgment-hall. The sekhti bowed himself to the ground, and told the Lord
Steward that he had a grievance to lay before him, praying him to send one
of his followers to hear the tale. The Lord Steward granted the
suppliant's request and sent to him one from among his train. To the
messenger the sekhti revealed all that had befallen him on his journey,
the manner in which Tehuti-nekht had closed the path so as to force him to
trespass on the corn, and the cruelty with which he had beaten him and
stolen his property. In due time these matters were told to the Lord
Steward, who laid the case before the nobles who were with him in the
judgment-hall.
"Let this sekhti bring a witness," they said, " and if he establish his
case, it may be necessary to beat Tehuti-nekht, or perchance he will be
made to pay a trifle for the salt and natron he has stolen."
The Lord Steward said nothing, and the sekhti himself came unto him and
hailed him as the greatest of the great, the orphan's father, the widow's
husband, the guide of the needy, and so on.
Very eloquent was the sekhti, and in his florid speech he skillfully
combined eulogy with his plea for justice, so that the Lord Steward was
interested and flattered in spite of himself.
Now at that time there sat upon the throne of Egypt the King
Neb-ka-n-ra, and to him came the Lord Steward Meruitensa, saying:
"Behold my lord, I have been sought by a sekhti whose goods were
stolen. Most eloquent of mortals is he. What would my lord that I do unto
him?
"Do not answer his speeches, said the king, "but put his words in
writing and bring them to us. See that he and his wife and children are
supplied with meat and drink, but do not let him know who provides
it."
The Lord Steward did as the king had commanded him. He gave to the
peasant a daily ration of bread and beer, and to his wife sufficient corn
to feed herself and her children. But the sekhti knew not whence the
provisions came.
A second time the peasant sought the judgment hall and poured forth his
complaint to the Lord Steward; and yet a third time he came, and the Lord
Steward commanded that he be beaten with staves, to see whether he would
desist. But no, the sekhti came a fourth, a fifth, a sixth time,
endeavoring with pleasant speeches to open the ear of the judge.
Meruitensa hearkened to him not at all, yet the sekhti did not despair,
but came again unto the ninth time. And at the ninth time the Lord Steward
sent two of his followers to the sekhti, and the peasant trembled
exceedingly, for he feared that he was about to be beaten once more
because of his importunity. The message, however, was a reassuring one.
Meruitensa declared that he had been greatly delighted by the peasant's
eloquence and would see that he obtained satisfaction. He then caused the
sekhti's petitions to be written on clean papyri and sent to the king,
according as the monarch had commanded. Neb-ka-n-ra was also much pleased
with the speeches, but the giving of judgment he left entirely in the
hands of the Lord Steward.
Meruitensa therefore deprived Tehuti-nekht of all his offices and his
property, and gave them to the sekhti, who thenceforth dwelt at the king's
palace with all his family. And the sekhti became the chief overseer of
Neb-ka-n-ra, and was greatly beloved by him.
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