词条 | Poor Man of Nippur |
释义 |
Instead he presents the goat to the mayor. This is interpreted as a bribe and Gimil-Ninurta is given only a mug of third-class beer and the leavings of the meal before being thrown out. Through the medium of the gatekeeper Gimil-Ninurta vows to avenge his mistreatment three times over but when the mayor hears this he laughs all day. Gimil-Ninurta hires a chariot and robe from the king on credit. Returning to the mayor's house with a locked chest containing two birds he presents himself as a royal courier conveying gold to the temple of Enlil. Arising in the night and opening the chest to release the birds, he beats the mayor for the purported theft and is compensated with two minas of red gold, twice the sum owed to the king. Gimil-Ninurta calls upon the mayor again disguised as an itinerant physician come to treat his wounds. Claiming that his medication is only effective in the darkness, he lures the mayor into a private room, binds the mayor's hands and feet to stakes and beats him once more. The mayor instructs his staff to watch for his persecutor but Gimil-Ninurta hires an accomplice to identify himself as 'the man with the goat' at the mayor's gate and draw them out. He hides under a bridge near the mayor's house and beats the mayor nigh to death while he is alone.[4] References1. ^{{cite book|title=Bribes|author=Noonan, John T.|authorlink=John T. Noonan, Jr.|publisher=University of California Press|year=1987|isbn=978-0-520-06154-5|page=4|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6zgp1_zeJbEC}} 2. ^Maria deJ. Ellis. A New Fragment of the Tale of the Poor Man of Nippur. Journal of Cuneiform Studies, Vol. 26, No. 2 (Apr., 1974), pp. 88-89 3. ^Jean Bottéro The Oldest Cuisine in the World: Cooking in Mesopotamia., 2004, page 98 4. ^Henry W.F. Saggs Everyday life in Babylonia and Assyria., 1965 External links
1 : Akkadian literature |
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