| James Henry Breasted - Egypt - 1905 - 828 pages
...Never have I done aught of violence toward any person."* Another, perhaps a private citizen, says, "Never was I beaten in the presence of any official since my birth; never did I take the property of any man by violence ; I was doer of that which pleased all men."3... | |
| James Henry Breasted - Egypt - 1906 - 396 pages
...mortuary offering of that which is with you come forth for me, for I was one beloved of the people. Never was I beaten in the presence of any official since my birth ; never did I take the property of any man by violence; (but) I was a doer of that which pleased all... | |
| James Henry Breasted - Egypt - 1906 - 410 pages
...mortuary offering of that which is with you come forth for me, for I was one beloved of the people. Never was I beaten in the presence of any official since my birth; never did I take the property of any man by violence; (but) I was a doer of that which pleased all... | |
| James Henry Breasted - Egypt - 1906 - 396 pages
...mortuary offering of that which is with you come forth for me, for I was one beloved of the people. Never was I beaten in the presence of any official since my birth; never did I take the property of any man by violence; (but) I was a doer of that which pleased all... | |
| James Henry Breasted - Egypt - 1912 - 412 pages
...let a mortuary offering of that which ye have come forth for me, for I was one beloved of the people. Never was I beaten in the presence of any official since my birth; never did I take the property of any man by violence; I was a doer of that which pleased all men."... | |
| Leonard Trelawny Hobhouse - Ethics, Evolutionary - 1915 - 672 pages
...bastinado. • Gardiner, 480. • A private citizen of the 5th Dynasty is pleased with himself because " Never was I beaten in the presence of any official since my birth " (Breasted, i. 126). 7 See incidents in the story of the Eloquent Peasant (Gardiner, hit Klage des... | |
| Mary Evelyn Monckton Jones - Egypt - 1924 - 300 pages
...conditions. Of a private citizen, Nezemib, it is written : "I was a master of secret things. . . . Never was I beaten in the presence of any official since my birth, never did I take the property of any man by violence ; I was a doer of that which pleased all men."1... | |
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