. The dawn of civilization: Egypt and Chaldaea . THE HEAVY INFANTRY OF THE PRINCES OF SICT, AHMED WITH LANCE AND BUCKLER. fear which was shed abroad by my soldiers protected him ; and the cattlein the fields were as safe there as in the stable ; the thief had becomean abomination to the god, and he no longer oppressed the serf, so that thelatter ceased to complain, and paid the exact dues of his land for love of me. 2Iu the time of Khîti IL, the son of Tefabi, the Heracleopolitans were stillmasters of Northern Egypt, but their authority was even then menaced by theturbulence of their own vassa


. The dawn of civilization: Egypt and Chaldaea . THE HEAVY INFANTRY OF THE PRINCES OF SICT, AHMED WITH LANCE AND BUCKLER. fear which was shed abroad by my soldiers protected him ; and the cattlein the fields were as safe there as in the stable ; the thief had becomean abomination to the god, and he no longer oppressed the serf, so that thelatter ceased to complain, and paid the exact dues of his land for love of me. 2Iu the time of Khîti IL, the son of Tefabi, the Heracleopolitans were stillmasters of Northern Egypt, but their authority was even then menaced by theturbulence of their own vassals, and Heracleopolis itself drove out the PharaohMirikarî, who was obliged to take refuge in Siût with that Khîti whom hecalled his Khîti gathered together such an extensive fleet that itencumbered the Nile from Shashhotpû to Gebel-Ahufodah, from one end of theprincipality of the Terebinth to the other. Vainly did the rebels unite withthe Thebans ; Khîti sowed terror over the world, and himself alone chastised 1 Drawn by Boudic


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidd, booksubjectcivilization