The Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature
(Texts: All Artifacts, Color Coding, & Writings in Bold Type With Italics Inside Parenthesis, are Added by Editor R. Brown, not the Authors, Translators, or Publishers!)
(gods in blue)
“Maiden, the cattle-pen ……; maiden Inana, the sheepfold ……. …… bending in the furrows.
(Inanna, prominent alien goddess, directing as much as she can, backed by Enlil)
Inana (Inanna), let me stroll with you; …… the emmer …….
Young lady, let me …….”
“I am a woman and I won’t do that, I won’t! I am a star ……, and I won’t!
I won’t be the wife of a shepherd!”
Her (twin) brother, the warrior youth Utu (Shamash), said to holy Inana:
(damaged semi-divine mixed-breed king stands before Utu, the Sun god; twin gods Utu & Inanna, children of Nannar)
“My sister, let the shepherd marry you!
Maiden Inana, why are you unwilling?
His butter is good, his milk is good (2 mss. have instead: He of good butter, he of good milk) —
all the work of the shepherd’s hands is splendid.
Inana, let Dumuzid (Dumuzi) marry you.
(Inanna wearing her cuba jewels, holding alien advanced technologies)
You who wear jewelery, who wear cuba jewels, why are you unwilling?
(1 ms. adds 2 lines: His butter is good, his milk is good — all the work of the shepherd’s hands is splendid.)
He will eat his good butter with you.
Protector of the king, why are you unwilling?”
“The shepherd shall not marry me!
He shall not make me carry his garments of new wool.
His brand new wool will not influence me.
Let the farmer marry me, the maiden.
With the farmer who grows colorful flax with the farmer who grows dappled grain …….”
1 line fragmentary
approx. 7 lines missing
“The shepherd shall not marry me!”
These words ……. ……the farmer to the shepherd.
My king ……, the shepherd, Dumuzid ……. …… to say ……:
“In what is the farmer superior to me, the farmer to me, the farmer to me?
Enkimdu, the man of the dykes and canals (Adad was initial god of the dykes & canals) —
in what is that farmer superior to me?
Let him give me his black garment, and I will give the farmer my black ewe for it.
Let him give me his white garment, and I will give the farmer my white ewe for it.
Let him pour me his best beer, and I will pour the farmer my yellow milk for it.
(drinking beer through a straw, avoiding the floating thick mash)
Let him pour me his fine beer, and I will pour the farmer my soured (?) milk for it.
Let him pour me his brewed beer, and I will pour the farmer my whipped milk for it.
Let him pour me his beer shandy, and I will pour the farmer my …… milk for it.
“Let him give me his best filtered beer, and I will give the farmer my curds (?).
Let him give me his best bread, and I will give the farmer my …… milk for it.
Let him give me his little beans, and I will give the farmer my small cheeses for them.
(1 ms. adds 2 lines: Let him give me his large beans, and I will give the farmer my big cheeses for them.)
After letting him eat and letting him drink,
I will even leave extra butter for him, and I will leave extra milk for him.
In what is the farmer superior to me?”
He was cheerful, he was cheerful, at the edge of the riverbank, he was cheerful.
On the riverbank, the shepherd on the riverbank,
(Dumuzi bound hand & foot, earliest of modern earthlings, & Dumuzi the Shepherd)
now the shepherd was even pasturing the sheep on the riverbank.
The farmer approached the shepherd there, the shepherd pasturing the sheep on the riverbank;
the farmer Enkimdu approached him there.
Dumuzid …… the farmer, the king of dyke and canal.
From the plain where he was,
the shepherd from the plain where he was provoked a quarrel with him;
(this text is very similar to the much later Biblical account of Cain & Abel, farmer vs. shepherd, competing for god’s approval over the other)
the shepherd Dumuzid from the plain where he was provoked a quarrel with him.
“Why should I compete against you, shepherd, I against you, shepherd, I against you?
Let your sheep eat the grass of the riverbank, let your sheep graze on my stubble.
Let them eat grain in the jeweled (?) fields of Unug (Uruk),
let your kids and lambs drink water from my Surungal canal.
(Dumuzi the Shepherd taught earthlings the trade of herding livestock)
“As for me who am a shepherd: when I am married, farmer, you are going to be counted as my friend.
Farmer Enkimdu, you are going to be counted as my friend, farmer, as my friend.”
“I will bring you wheat, and I will bring you beans; I will bring you two-row barley from the threshing-floor.
(earthlings working for, & feeding the giant alien gods)
And you, maiden, I will bring you whatever you please, maiden Inana, …… barley or …… beans.”
The dispute between the shepherd and the farmer:
maiden Inana, your praise is sweet.
A balbale.