1 | In the beginning there was Apsu the Primeval, and Tiamat, who is Chaos. |
2 | There were no other beings. |
3 | The waters were not separated; they and the earth mingled, and there was no ground for the growth of anything. |
4 | Then nothing bore name; no destinies had been ordained. |
5 | Then the Gods came into existence: Lakhmu and Lakhamu. Ages passed. |
6 | Other Gods came into existence: Anshar and Kishar. |
7 | Ages passed. Then Ea, Anu, and Bel came into existence. |
8 | The Gods considered how the waters might be separated from each other, how the earth might be separated from the waters, how names might be given and destinies ordained. |
9 | And as the Gods considered these things, the realm of Tiamat, the Mother of All, was made small for her. |
10 | She conceived a hatred for the Gods; with Apsu she plotted the destruction of those whom she had borne. |
11 | Then, behold! Tiamat roused up the Ancient Monsters; she spawned monsters never known before. |
12 | She made ready to destroy the Gods. |
13 | The Gods felt their realm shake, and they were affrighted. |
14 | Then Anshar opened his mouth and spoke to Anu, his son. |
15 | He said to Anu, "Go forth and appease Tiamat, so that the Gods may not be destroyed by her who bore them." |
16 | Anu went forth. He saw the monsters that Tiamat had formed; his heart failed him, and he turned back to the dwelling-place of the Gods. |
17 | They were filled with fear when they looked upon the countenance of Anu. |
18 | Then Ea was sent forth to appease Tiamat. |
19 | He saw the Ancient Monsters that she had roused up. |
20 | They were sharp of tooth and cruel of fang; they bore merciless weapons. |
21 | Ea was affrighted, and he turned back to the dwelling-place of the Gods. |
22 | The Gods looked upon his countenance and they were affrighted. |
23 | The lesser Gods wailed bitterly, crying, "What has changed that she should conceive this hatred for us? We do not understand the evil will of Tiamat!" |
24 | Then Marduk, his heart prompting him, rose in the assembly of the Gods. |
25 | He opened his mouth and spoke, saying, "Lo, I, Marduk, will be the champion of the Gods if ye decree in your council that whatever I do shall remain unaltered, and that whatsoever my mouth speaketh shall never be changed nor made of no avail." |
26 | Then the Gods said, 'Thou shalt be the chiefest among the great Gods; established shall be the words of thy mouth; irresistible shall be thy command; none of the Gods shall transgress thine ordinances! |
27 | O Marduk, thou art our champion!" |
28 | They prepared for him a lordly chamber; they bestowed upon him the sceptre, the throne, and the ring. |
29 | And the Gods girded weapons upon their champion: they gave him his bow and his spear; they put a club in his right hand and he grasped it; they hung a quiver by his side. |
30 | He himself prepared a great net for the taking of the monsters that Tiamat had formed and the Ancient Monsters that she had roused up. |
31 | Tiamat raged; she was full of wrath against the Gods. |
32 | With terror and with splendour she clothed her monsters so that their crested heads were lifted high. |
33 | She gave them invincible weapons. With poison in. stead of blood their bodies were filled. |
34 | The dwelling-places of the Gods were shaken as she gave the battle signal to her hosts, as Tiamat uttered the spell that aroused them for battle. |
35 | Then Marduk went into his chariot; the lightning and the thunderbolt were in his hands. |
36 | The Gods beheld him and knew that none could inspire such terror as he. |
37 | He harnessed his four horses; he yoked them to the chariot. |
38 | Ferocious, high of courage, swift of pace were Marduk's horses; moreover, they had been trained to trample enemies underfoot. |
39 | They gnashed with their teeth and their bodies were flecked with foam. |
40 | So Marduk went forward, and the seven winds he had created followed in his course. |
41 | They were the Storm and the Hurricane; the Whirlwind, the Four-fold Wind and the Seven-fold Wind; the Wind that has no Equal, and the Wind that is called the Evil Wind. |
42 | The Gods followed Marduk. |
43 | Now when Marduk neared where Tiamat was, the movement of Tiamat's host ceased; the monsters were affrighted by the appearance of Marduk. |
44 | But Tiamat rushed on; she uttered angry cries; with unbent neck she taunted the Gods. |
45 | All things were shaken. |
46 | Marduk let loose the Evil Wind. |
47 | Tiamat's mouth was opened; the wind rushed in and filled her belly. |
48 | She lay down: no more could she give battle-orders to her monsters. |
49 | Marduk drove his spear through the heart of Tiamat. |
50 | He stood upon her prone body. |
51 | Then, sweeping his net around, he took the monsters in his net. |
52 | The whole world was filled with their cries. |
53 | He trampled on Tiamat, and she, the Mother of All, was as a reed that is broken. |
54 | With his club he shattered her skull. |
55 | He cut channels for the blood to flow out of her, and he bade the winds bear her blood away into the secret places. |
56 | As a man splits a flat fish, Marduk split the body of Tiamat. |
57 | He set one half of her above as a covering for the heavens; he fixed bolts there so that the floods that are above may not be voided upon the earth, and he stationed a watchman to guard the bolts. |
58 | Of the other half of Tiamat's body he made the earth. |
59 | He divided all that was made between Anu, Bel, and Ea--the Heavens, the Earth, and the Abyss. |
60 | He fixed the stars in their places; he ordained the year and divided it; he caused the Moon God to shine, and he gave him the night for his portion. |
61 | Thereafter Marduk devised a plan. |
62 | He opened his mouth and he spoke to Anu, Bel, and Ea. |
63 | My blood I will take and bone I will fashion; I will make man to inhabit the earth so that the service of the Gods may not fail ever. |
64 | So Marduk spoke, and man began to live upon the earth. |