As he emerged from between her thighs, and his cord was cut with the pesesh-blade, he wailed with a great cry of “ny!” But the blood that emerged with him – it did not stop. It pooled like the inundation that satiated Sekhmet in the midst of her fury. The healer had used the ivory tusk and had placed the threads of the border of a knotted jaa.t-fabric in my mother and over it recited: “Anubis has come forth to keep the inundation from treading on what is pure – the land of Tait. Beware of what is in it!” But the gods did not hear, and when the day had dawned my mother had reached her final …show more content…
Each chapter of Daily Life in Ancient Egypt focuses on a different aspect of Egyptian life and culture all the way from birth to death. Although the pharaoh was seen as a divine being and even considered a god by some, he was no less dependent on the common citizens who put in hard labor and worked to maintain the order of maat in Ancient Egyptian society. According to Szpakowska, maat is a fundamental religious concept that embodies the concepts of justice, truth, right, and order on both a cosmic and social scale. It is a crucial factor in understanding the day-to-day lives of Ancient Egyptians. “Cultural values, traditions, norms, beliefs, and practices begin to be instilled in children from the moment of their birth, and are refined and further transmitted year after year. The continuation of life, the passing of beliefs, practices, customs, and knowledge from one generation to the next, is the single most critical factor for the preservation of a civilization.” (p.