THE FIRST TABLET
When there was no heaven,
no earth, no height, no depth, no name,
when Apsu was alone,
the sweet water, the first begetter; and Tiamat
the bitter water, and that
return to the womb, her Mummu,
when there were no gods-
When sweet and bitter
mingled together, no reed was plaited, no rushes
muddied the water,
the gods were nameless, natureless, futureless, then
from Apsu and Tiamat
in the waters gods were created, in the waters
silt precipitated,
Lahmu and Lahumu,
were named; they were not yet old
not yet grown tall
when Anshar and Kishar overtook them both,
the lines of sky and earth
stretched where horizons meet to separate
cloud from silt.
Days on days, years
on year passed till Anu, the empty heaven,
heir and supplanter,
first-born of his father, in his own nature
begot Nudimmud-Ea,
intellect, wisdom, wider than heaven's horizon,
the strongest of all the kindred.
Discord broke out among the gods although they were brothers, warring and
jarring in the belly of Tiamat, heaven shook, it reeled with the surge of the
dance; Apsu could not silence the clamour, their behavior was bad, overbearing
and proud.
But still Tiamat lay inert till Apsu, the father of gods, bellowed for that
servant who clouds his judgment, his Mummu,
'Dear counselor, come with me to Taimat.'
They have gone, and in front of Tiamat they sit down and talk together about the
young gods, their first-born children; Apsu said,
'Their manners revolt me, day and night without remission we suffer. My will is
to destroy them, all of their kind, we shall have peace at last and we will
sleep again.'
When Tiamat heard she was stung, she writhed in lonely desolation, her heart
worked in secret passion, Tiamat said,
'Why must we destroy the children that we made? If their ways are troublesome,
let us wait a little while.'
Then Mummu advised Apsu, and he spoke in malice,
'Father, destroy them in full rebellion, you will have quiet in the daytime and
at night you will sleep.'
When Apsu heard, the die was cast against his children, his face flamed with the
pleasure of evil;; but Mummu her embraced,
he hung on his neck, he sat him down on his knees and kissed him.
The decision was known to all their children; confusion seized them and after, a
great silence, for they were confounded.
The god who is the source of wisdom, the bright intelligence that perceives and
plans, Nudimmud-Ea, saw through it, he sounded the coil of chaos, and against it
devised the artifice of the universe.
He spoke the word that charmed the waters, it fell upon Apsu, he lay asleep, the
sweet waters slept, Apsu slept, Mummu was overcome, Apsu lay drowned, undone.
Then Ea ripped off his flaming glory coat and took his crown, he set on himself
the aureole of the king. When Ea has bound Apsu he killed him, and Mummu, the
dark counselor, he led by the nose and locked away.
Ea has defeated his enemies and trodden them down. Now that his triumph was
completed, in deep peace he rested, in his holy palace Ea slept. Over the abyss,
the distance, he built his house and shrine and there magnificently he lived
with his wife Damkina .
In that room, at the point of decision where what is to come is predetermined,
he was conceived, the most sagacious, the one from the first most absolute in
action.
In the deep abyss he was conceived, MARDUK was made in the heart of the apsu,
MARDUK was created in the heart of the holy apsu. Ea begot him and Damkina bore
him, father and mother; he sucked the paps of goddesses, from his nurses he was
fed on the terrib leness that filled him.
His body was beautiful; when he raised his eyes great lights flared; his stride
was majestic; he was the leader from the first.
When Ea who begot him saw him he exulted, he was radiant, light-hearted, for he
saw that he was perfect, and he multiplied his godhead, the one to be first and
stand highest.
His limbs were immaculate, the making a fearful mystery beyond comprehension;
with four eyes for limitless sight, and four ears hearing all; when his lips
moved a tongue of fire burst out. Titanic limbs, standing so high he overtopped
the tallest god; he was strong and he wore the glory of ten, and their
lightnings played round him.
'My son, my son, son of the sun, and heaven's sun!'
Then Anu begot winds and brought them from the four quarters, to be the can and
to command the ranks and he brought the tornado, a wild surf to worry Tiamat.
But now the other gods had no rest any more, tormented by storms, they conspired
in their secret hearts and brought to Tiamat the matter of their plot. To their
own mother they said,
'When they killed Apsu you did not stir, you brought no help to him, your
husband. Now Anu has called up from the four quarters this abomination of winds
to rage in your guts, and we cannot rest for the pain;
Remember Apsu in your heart, your husband, remember Mummu who was defeated; now
you are all alone, and thrash around in desolation, and we have lost your love,
our eyes ache and we long for sleep.
'Rouse up, our Mother! Pay them back and make them empty like the wind.'
Tiamat approved it, she said,
'I approve this advice: we will make monsters, and monsters and gods against
hods will march into battle together.'
Together they jostle the ranks to march with Tiamat, day and night furiously
they plot, the growling roaring rout, ready for battle, while the Old Hag, the
first mother, mothers a new brood.
She loosed the irresistible missile, she spawned enormous serpents with cutting
fangs, chock-full of venom in stead of blood, snarling dragons wearing their
glory like gods. (Whoever sees this thing received the shock of death, for when
they heave those b odies up they never turn them back.)
She made the Worm
the Dragon
the Female Monster
the Great Lion
the Mad Dog
the Man Scorpion
the Howling Storm
Kulili
Kusariqu
There was no pity in their weapons, they did not flinch from battle for her law
was binding, irrevocable.
Eleven such monsters she made, but she took from among the gods the clumsy
laborer
KINGU
one of the first generation to be her Captain, War-leader, Assembly-leader ,
ordering the supplies, leading the van to battle.
SUPREME COMMANDER OF THE WARS
All this she gave him when she raised their Company, she said.
'Now it is in your hands, my spell will hold them bound, they must obey my will.
You are supreme, my one husband, your word will hold the rebel hordes.
She gave him the Tables of Fate and fastened them on to his breast,
'Now and for ever more your word is irrevocable, your judgments will last! They
will quench the fire and the swinging mace will fail of its power.'
When Kingu had received the authority, that belonged before to Anu, in their
several natures they confirmed the brood of monsters.