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-
THE HULUPPU
TREE
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- Version
One
-
- In days of yore, in the
distant days of yore,
- In nights of yore, in
the far-off nights of yore,
- In days of yore, in the
distant days of yore,
-
- After in days of yore
all things needful had been brought into being,
- After in days of yore
all things needful had been ordered,
- After bread had been
tasted in the shrines of the Land,
- After bread had been
baked in the ovens of the Land,
- After heaven had been
moved away from earth,
- After earth had been
separated from heaven,
- After the name of man
had been fixed,
- After An had carried off heaven,
- After Enlil had carried off earth,
- After Ereshkigal had been carried off into the
nether world as its prize --
-
- After he had set sail,
after he had set sail,
- After the father had
set sail for the nether world,
- Against the king, the
small were hurled,
- Against Enki, the large were hurled,
- Its small stones of the
hand,
- Its large stones of the
dancing reeds,
- The keel of
Enki's boat,
- Overwhelm in battle
like an attacking storm,
- Against the king, the
water at the head of the boat,
- Devours like a
wolf,
- Against Enki, the water
at the rear of the boat,
- Strikes down like a
lion.
- Enki
is the patron god of music and arts. Inanna stole the power of
music.
-
- Once upon a time, a
tree, a huluppu, a tree --
- It had been planted on
the bank of the Euphrates,
- It was watered by the
Euphrates --
- The violence of the
South
Wind plucked up
its roots,
- Tore away its
crown,
- The Euphrates carried
it off on its waters.
-
- The woman, roving about in fear at the word of
An,
- Roving about in fear at
the word of Enlil,
- Took the
tree in her
hand, brought it
to Erech:
- "I shall bring it to
pure Inanna's
fruitful garden."
-
- The woman tended the
tree with her hand, placed it by her foot,
- Inanna tended the tree
with her hand, placed it by her foot,
- "When will it be a
fruitful throne
for me to sit on," she said,
- "When will it be a
fruitful bed for me to lie on," she said.
-
- The tree grew big, its
trunk bore no foliage,
- In its roots the
snake who knows no charm set up its nest,
- In its crown the
Imdugud-bird placed its young,
- In its midst the maid
Lilith built her house --
- The always laughing,
always rejoicing maid,
- The maid Inanna -- how
she weeps! See in Apocryphon of John.
- See
The Origin of the World
-
- As light broke, as the
horizon brightened,
- As Utu came forth from
the "princely field,"
- His sister, the holy
Inanna,
- Says to her brother
Utu:
- "My brother, after in
days of yore the fates had been decreed,
- After abundance had
sated the land,
- After An had carried
off heaven,
- After Enlil had carried
off earth,
- After Ereshkigal had
been carried off into the nether world as its prize --
-
- After he had set sail,
after he had set sail,
- After the father had
set sail for the nether world,
- Against the king, the
small were hurled,
- Against Enki, the large
were hurled,
- Its small stones of the
hand,
- Its large stones of the
dancing reeds,
- The keel of Enki's
boat,
- Overwhelm in battle
like an attacking storm,
- Against the king, the
water at the head of the boat,
- Devours like a
wolf,
- Against Enki, the water
at the rear of the boat,
- Strikes down like a
lion.
-
- Once upon a time, a
tree, a huluppu, a tree --
- It had been planted on
the bank of the Euphrates,
- It was watered by the
Euphrates --
- The violence of the
South Wind plucked up its roots,
- Tore away its
crown,
- The Euphrates carried
it off on its waters.
-
- The woman, roving about
in fear at the word of An,
- Roving about in fear at
the word of Enlil,
- Took the tree in her
hand, brought it to Erech:
- "I shall bring it to
pure Inanna's fruitful garden.'
-
- The woman tended the
tree with her hand, placed it by her foot,
- Inanna tended the tree
with her hand, placed it by her foot,
- "When will it be a
fruitful throne for me to sit on,' she said,
- "When will it be a
fruitful bed for me to lie on,' she said.
-
- The tree grew big, its
trunk bore no foliage,
- In its roots the snake
who knows no charm set up its nest,
- In its crown the
Imdugud-bird placed its young,
- In its midst the maid
Lilith built her house --
- The always laughing,
always rejoicing maid,
- I, the maid Inanna, how
I weep!"
-
- Her brother, the hero,
the valiant Utu,
- Stood not by her in
this matter.
-
- As light broke, as the
horizon brightened,
- As Utu came forth from
the "princely field,"
- His sister, the holy
Inanna,
- Speaks to the hero
Gilgamesh:
- "My brother, after in
days of yore the fates had been decreed,
- After abundance had
sated the land,
- After An had carried
off heaven,
- After Enlil had carried
off earth,
- After Ereshkigal had
been carried off into the nether world as its prize --
-
- After he had set sail,
after he had set sail,
- After the father had
set sail for the nether world,
- Against the king, the
small were hurled,
- Against Enki, the large
were hurled,
- Its small stones of the
hand,
- Its large stones of the
dancing reeds,
- The keel of Enki's
boat,
- Overwhelm in battle
like an attacking storm,
- Against the king, the
water at the head of the boat,
- Devours like a
wolf,
- Against Enki, the water
at the rear of the boat,
- Strikes down like a
lion.
-
- Once upon a time, a
tree, a huluppu, a tree --
- It had been planted on
the bank of the Euphrates,
- It was watered by the
Euphrates --
- The violence of the
South Wind plucked up its roots,
- Tore away its
crown,
- The Euphrates carried
it off on its waters.
-
- The woman, roving about
in fear at the word of An,
- Roving about in fear at
the word of Enlil,
- Took the tree in her
hand, brought it to Erech:
- "I shall bring it to
pure Inanna's fruitful garden.'
-
- The woman tended the
tree with her hand, placed it by her foot,
- Inanna tended the tree
with her hand, placed it by her foot,
- "When will it be a
fruitful throne for me to sit on,' she said,
- "When will it be a
fruitful bed for me to lie on,' she said.
-
- The tree grew big, its
trunk bore no foliage,
- In its roots the snake
who knows no charm set up its nest,
- In its crown the
Imdugud-bird placed its young,
- In its midst the maid
Lilith built her house --
- The always laughing,
always rejoicing maid,
- I, the maid Inanna, how
I weep!"
-
- Her brother, the hero Gilgamesh,
- Stood by her in this
matter,
- He donned armor
weighing fifty minas about his waist --
- Fifty minas were
handled by him like thirty shekels --
- His "ax of the road"
--
- Seven talents and seven
minas -- he took in his hand,
- At its roots he struck
down the snake who knows no charm,
- In its
crown the
Imdugud-bird took its young, climbed to the
mountains,
- In its midst the
maid
Lilith tore down
her house, fled to the wastes.
-
- The tree -- he plucked
at its roots, tore at its crown,
- The sons of the city
who accompanied him cut off its branches,
- He gives it to holy
Inanna for her throne,
- Gives it to her for her
bed,
- She fashions its roots
into a pukku for him,
- Fashions its crown into
a mikku for him.
-
- The summoning pukku -- in street and lane he made
the pukku resound,
- The loud drumming -- in street and lane he made
the drumming
resound,
- The young men of the
city, summoned by the pukku --
- Bitterness and woe --
he is the
affliction of their widows,
- "O my mate, O my
spouse," they lament,
- Who had a mother -- she
brings bread to her son,
- Who had a sister -- she
brings water to her brother.
-
- After the
evening star had
disappeared,
- And he had marked the
places where his pukku had been,
- He carried the pukku
before him, brought it to his house,
- At dawn in the places
he had marked -- bitterness and woe!
- Captives! Dead!
Widows!
-
- Because of the cry of
the young maidens,
- His pukku and mikku
fell into the "great dwelling,"
- He put in his hand,
could not reach them,
- Put in his foot, could
not reach them,
- He sat down at the
great gate ganzir, the "eye" of the nether world,
- Gilgamesh wept, his
face turns pale . . . .
-
- The Sumerians.
Samuel Noah Kramer, p. 199.
-
- Version
Two
- The
Huluppu-Tree
-
- Wolkstein, Diane &
Samuel Noah Kramer. (1983). Inanna queen of
- heaven and earth: Her
stories and hymns from Sumer. New York: Harper &
Row.
-
- In the first days, in
the very first days,
- In the first nights, in
the very first nights,
- In the first years, in
the very first years,
-
- In the first days when
everything needed was brought into being,
- In the first days when
everything needed was properly nourished,
- When bread was baked in
the shrines of the land,
- And bread was tasted in
the homes of the land,
- When heaven had moved
away from earth,
- And the earth had
seperated from heaven,
- And the name of man was
fixed;
- When the
Sky God, An, had carried off the heavens,
- And the
Air God, Enlil, had carried off the
earth,
- When the Queen of
the Great Below, Ereshkigal, was given
- the underworld for her domain,
-
- He set sail; the Father
set sail,
- Enki, the God of Wisdom, set sail for the
underworld.
- Small windstones were
tossed up against him;
- Large hailstones were
hurled up against him;
- Like onrushing
turtles,
- They charged the keel
of Enki's boat.
- The waters of the sea
devoured the bow of his boat like wolves;
- The waters of the sea
struck the stern of his boat like lions.
-
- At that time, a tree, a
single tree, a huluppu-tree (Willow)
- Was planted by the
banks of the Euphrates.
- The tree was nurtured
by the waters of the Euphrates.
- The whirling South Wind
arose, pulling at its roots
- And ripping at its
branches
- Until the waters of the
Euphrates carried
it away.
-
- A woman who walked in
fear of the word of the Sky God, An,
- Who walked in fear of
the Air God,
Enlil,
- Plucked the tree from
the river and spoke:
- "I shall bring this
tree to Uruk.
- I shall plant this
tree in my holy garden."
-
- Inanna cared for the tree with her hand
- She settled the earth
around the tree with her foot
- She wondered:
-
- "How long will it be
until I have a shining throne to sit upon?
- How Long will it be
until I have a shining bed to lie upon?"
-
- The years passed; five
years, and then ten years.
- The tree grew
thick,
- But its bark did not
split.
- Then the serpent who
could not be charmed
- Made it's nest in the
roots of the huluppu-tree.
- The Anzu-bird set its
you in the branches of the tree.
- And the dark maid Lilith
built her home
in the trunk.
- The young woman who
loved to laugh wept.
- How Inanna wept!
-
- (Yet they would not
leave her tree.)
-
- As the birds began to sing at the coming of the
dawn,
- The sun God, Utu, left
his royal bedchamber.
- Inanna called to her
brother Utu, saying:
-
- "O Utu, in the days
when the fates were decreed,
- When abudance
overflowed in the land,
- When the Sky God took
the heavens and the Air God the earth,
- When Ereshkigal was
given the Great Below for her domain,
- The God of Wisdom,
Father Enki, set sail for the underworld,
- And the underworld rose
up and attacked him....
-
- At that time, a tree, a
single
tree, the
huluppa-tree
- Was planted by the
banks of the Euphrates.
- The South Wind pulled
at its roots and ripped its branches
- Until the water of the
Euphrates carried it away.
- I plucked the tree from
the river;
- I brought it to my
holy
garden.
- I tended the tree,
waiting for my
shining throne and bed.
-
- Then a serpent who could not be charmed
- Made its nest in the
roots of the tree,
- The Anzu-bird set his
young in the branches of the tree,
- And the dark maid Lilith built her home in the
trunk.
- I wept.
- How I wept!
- (Yet they would not
leave my tree."
-
- Utu, the valiant
warrior, Utu,
- Would not help his
sister, Inanna.
-
- As the birds befan to
sing at the coming of the second dawn,
- Inanna called to her
brother Gilgamesh, saying:
-
- "O Gilgamesh, in the
days when the fates were decreed,
- When abundance
overflowed in Sumer,
- When the Sky God had
taken the heavens and the Air God
- the earth,
- When Ereshkigal was
given the Great Below for her domain,
- The God of Wisdom,
Father Enki, set sail for the
- underworld,
-
- And the underworld rose
up and attacked him.
- At that time, a tree, a
single tree, a huluppu-tree
- Was planted by the
banks of the Euphrates.
- The South Wind pulled
at its roots adn ripped at its
- branches
-
- Until the waters of the
Euphrates carried it away.
- I plucked the tree from
the river;
- I brought it to my holy
garden.
- I tended the tree,
waiting for my shining throne and bed.
-
- Then a serpent who
could not be charmed
- Made its nest in the
roots of the tree,
- The Anzu-bird set his
young in the branches of the tree,
- And the dark maid
Lilith built her home in the trunk.
-
- I wept.
- How I wept!
- (Yet they would not
leave my tree.)"
-
- Gilgamesh, the valiant
warrior Gilgamesh,
- The hero of Uruk, stood
by Inanna.
-
- Gilgamesh fastened his
armor of fifty minas around his chest.
- The fifty minas weighed
as little to him as fifty feathers.
- He lifted his bronze
ax, the ax of the road,
- Weighing seven talents
and seven minas, to his shoulder.
- He entered Inanna's
holy garden.
-
- Gilgamesh struck the
serpent who could not be charmed.
- The Anzu-bird flew with
his young to the mountains;
- And Lilith smashed her
home and fled to the wild, uninhabited
- places.
-
- Gilgamesh then loosened
the roots of the huluppa-tree;
- And the sons of the
city, who accompanied him, cut off the
- branches.
-
- From the trunk of the
tree he carved a throne for his holy
- sister.
- From the trunk of the
tree Gilgamesh carved a bed for Inanna.
- From the roots of the
tree she fashioned a pukku for her brother.
- From the crown of the
tree Inanna fashioned a mikku for Gilgamesh
- the hero of
Uruk.
-
Babylon
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