(1 ms. adds before line 
			1: An, king of the gods, majestic one:) 
			 
			
			O King, storm of 
			majestic splendour, peerless Ninurta, possessing superior strength; 
			who pillages the Mountains all alone; deluge, indefatigable serpent 
			hurling yourself at the rebel land, Hero striding formidably into 
			battle; Lord whose powerful arm is fit to bear the mace, reaping 
			like barley the necks of the insubordinate; Ninurta, King, son in 
			whose strength his father rejoices; Hero whose awesomeness covers 
			the Mountains like a south storm; Ninurta, who makes the good tiara, 
			the rainbow (?), flash like lightning; grandly begotten by him who 
			wears the princely beard; dragon who turns on himself, strength of a 
			lion snarling at a snake, roaring hurricane; Ninurta, King, whom 
			Enlil has exalted above himself; Hero, great battle-net flung over 
			the foe; Ninurta, with the awesomeness of your shadow extending over 
			the Land; releasing fury on the rebel lands, overwhelming their 
			assemblies! Ninurta, King, son who has forced homage to his father 
			far and wide! (King and Hero are titles of Ninurta)
			
			Inspiring great numinous power, he had taken his place on the 
			throne, the august dais, and was sitting gladly at his ease at the 
			festival celebrated in his honour, rivalling An and Enlil in 
			drinking his fill, while Bau was pleading petitions in a prayer for 
			the king, and he, Ninurta, Enlil's son, was handing down decisions. 
			At that moment the Lord's battle-mace looked towards the Mountains, 
			the Car-ur cried out aloud to its master:
			
			"Lord of lofty station, foremost one, who presides over all lords 
			from the throne dais, Ninurta, whose orders are unalterable, whose 
			decisions are faithfully executed; my master! Heaven copulated with 
			the verdant Earth, Ninurta: she has born him a warrior who knows no 
			fear -- the Asag, a child who sucked the power of milk without ever 
			staying with a wet-nurse, a foster-child, O my master -- knowing no 
			father, a murderer from the Mountains, a youth who has come forth 
			from ......, whose face knows no shame; impudent of eye, an arrogant 
			male, Ninurta (1 ms. has instead: Ninjirsu), rejoicing in his 
			stature. My Hero, you who are like a bull, I will take my stand 
			beside you. My master, who turns sympathetically towards his own 
			city, who is effective in carrying out his mother's wishes: it has 
			sired offspring in the Mountains, and spread its seeds far and wide. 
			The plants have unanimously named it king over them; like a great 
			wild bull, it tosses its horns amongst them. The cu, the sajkal, the 
			esi (diorite), the usium, the kagina (haematite), and the heroic nu 
			stones, its warriors, constantly come raiding the cities. For them a 
			shark's tooth has grown up in the Mountains; it has stripped the 
			trees. Before its might the gods of those cities bow towards it. My 
			master, this same creature has erected a throne dais: it is not 
			lying idle. Ninurta, Lord, it actually decides the Land's lawsuits, 
			just as you do. Who can compass the Asag's dread glory? Who can 
			counteract the severity of its frown? People are terrified, fear 
			makes the flesh creep; their eyes are fixed upon it. My master, the 
			Mountains have taken their offerings to it."
			
			"Hero! They have appealed to you, because of your father; son of 
			Enlil, Lord, because of your superior strength they are looking to 
			you here; since you are strong, my master, they are calling for your 
			help, saying, Ninurta, that not a single warrior counts except for 
			you! They wanted to advise you about ....... Hero, there have been 
			consultations with a view to taking away your kingship. Ninurta, it 
			is confident that it can lay hands on the powers received by you in 
			the abzu. Its face is deformed, its location is continually 
			changing; day by day, the Asag adds territories to its domain."
			
			"But you will force it into the shackles of the gods. You, Antelope 
			of Heaven, must trample the Mountains beneath your hooves, Ninurta, 
			Lord, son of Enlil. Who has so far been able to resist its assault? 
			The besetting Asag is beyond all control, its weight is too heavy. 
			Rumours of its armies constantly arrive, before ever its soldiers 
			are seen. This thing's strength is massive, no weapon has been able 
			to overturn it. Ninurta, neither the axe nor the all-powerful spear 
			can penetrate its flesh, no warrior like it has ever been created 
			against you. Lord, you who reach out towards the august divine 
			powers, splendour, jewel of the gods, you bull with the features of 
			a wild bull, with a prominent backbone, ...... this fellow is 
			clever! My Ninurta, whose form Enki contemplates with favour, my 
			Uta-ulu, Lord, son of Enlil, what is to be done?
			
			The Lord cried "Alas!" so that Heaven trembled, and Earth huddled at 
			his feet and was terrified (?) at his strength. Enlil became 
			confused and went out of the E-kur. The Mountains were devastated. 
			That day the earth became dark, the Anuna trembled. The Hero beat 
			his thighs with his fists. The gods dispersed; the Anuna disappeared 
			over the horizon like sheep. The Lord arose, touching the sky; 
			Ninurta went to battle, with one step (?) he covered a league, he 
			was an alarming storm, and rode on the eight winds towards the rebel 
			lands. His arms grasped the lance. The mace snarled at the 
			Mountains, the club began to devour all the enemy. He fitted the 
			evil wind and the sirocco on a pole (?), he placed the quiver on its 
			hook (?). An enormous hurricane, irresistible, went before the Hero, 
			stirred up the dust, caused the dust to settle, levelled high and 
			low, filled the holes. It caused a rain of coals and flaming fires; 
			the fire consumed men. It overturned tall trees by their trunks, 
			reducing the forests to heaps, Earth put her hands on her heart and 
			cried harrowingly; the Tigris was muddied, disturbed, cloudy, 
			stirred up. He hurried to battle on the boat Ma-kar-nunta-eda; the 
			people there did not know where to turn, they bumped into (?) the 
			walls. The birds there tried to lift their heads to fly away, but 
			their wings trailed on the ground. The storm flooded out the fish 
			there in the subterranean waters, their mouths snapped at the air. 
			It reduced the animals of the open country to firewood, roasting 
			them like locusts. It was a deluge rising and disastrously ruining 
			the Mountains.
			
			The Hero Ninurta led the march through the rebel lands. He killed 
			their messengers in the Mountains, he crushed (?) their cities, he 
			smote their cowherds over the head like fluttering butterflies, he 
			tied together their hands with hirin grass, so that they dashed 
			their heads against walls. The lights of the Mountains did not gleam 
			in the distance any longer. People gasped for breath (?); those 
			people were ill, they hugged themselves, they cursed the Earth, they 
			considered the day of the Asag's birth a day of disaster. The Lord 
			caused bilious poison to run over the rebel lands. As he went the 
			gall followed, anger filled his heart, and he rose like a river in 
			spate and engulfed all the enemies. In his heart he beamed at his 
			lion-headed weapon, as it flew up like a bird, trampling the 
			Mountains for him. It raised itself on its wings to take away 
			prisoner the disobedient, it spun around the horizon of heaven to 
			find out what was happening. Someone from afar came to meet it, 
			brought news for the tireless one, the one who never rests, whose 
			wings bear the deluge, the Car-ur. What did it gather there ...... 
			for Lord Ninurta? It reported the deliberations of the Mountains, it 
			explained their intentions to Lord Ninurta, it outlined (?) what 
			people were saying about the Asag.
			
			"Hero, beware!" it said concernedly. The weapon embraced him whom it 
			loved, the Car-ur addressed Lord Ninurta: "Hero, pitfall (?), net of 
			battle, Ninurta, King, celestial mace ...... irresistible against 
			the enemy, vigorous one, tempest which rages against the rebel 
			lands, wave which submerges the harvest, King, you have looked on 
			battles, you have ...... in the thick of them. Ninurta, after 
			gathering the enemy in a battle-net, after erecting a great 
			reed-altar, Lord, heavenly serpent, purify your pickaxe and your 
			mace! Ninurta, I will enumerate the names of the warriors you have 
			already slain: the Kuli-ana, the Dragon, Gypsum, the Strong Copper, 
			the hero Six-headed Wild Ram, the Magilum boat, Lord Saman-ana, the 
			Bison bull, the Palm-tree King, the Anzud bird, the Seven-headed 
			Snake -- Ninurta, you slew them in the Mountains."
			
			"But Lord, do not venture again to a battle as terrible as that. Do 
			not lift your arm to the smiting of weapons, to the festival of the 
			young men, to Inana's dance! Lord, do not go to such a great battle 
			as this! Do not hurry; fix your feet on the ground. Ninurta, the 
			Asag is waiting for you in the Mountains. Hero who is so handsome in 
			his crown, firstborn son whom Ninlil has decorated with numberless 
			charms, good Lord, whom a princess bore to an en priest, Hero who 
			wears horns like the moon, who is long life for the king of the 
			Land, who opens the sky by great sublime strength, inundation who 
			engulfs the banks ......, Ninurta, Lord, full of fearsomeness, who 
			will hurry towards the Mountains, proud Hero without fellow, this 
			time you will not equal the Asag! Ninurta, do not make your young 
			men enter the Mountains."
			
			The Hero, the son, pride of his father, the very wise, rising from 
			profound deliberation, Ninurta, the Lord, the son of Enlil, gifted 
			with broad wisdom, the ...... god, the Lord stretched his leg to 
			mount the onager, and joined the battalions ....... He spread over 
			the Mountains his great long ......, he caused ...... to go out 
			among its people like the ....... He reached ....... He went into 
			the rebel lands in the vanguard of the battle. He gave orders to his 
			lance, and attached it ...... by its cord; the Lord commanded his 
			mace, and it went to its belt. The Hero hastened to the battle, he 
			...... heaven and earth. He prepared the throw-stick and the shield, 
			the Mountains were smitten and cringed beside the battle legions of 
			Ninurta. When the hero was girding on his mace, the sun did not 
			wait, the moon went in; they were forgotten, as he marched towards 
			the Mountains; the day became like pitch.
			
			The Asag leapt up at the head of the battle. For a club it uprooted 
			the sky, took it in its hand; like a snake it slid its head along 
			the ground. It was a mad dog attacking to kill the helpless, 
			dripping with sweat on its flanks. Like a wall collapsing, the Asag 
			fell on Ninurta the son of Enlil. Like an accursed storm, it howled 
			in a raucous voice; like a gigantic snake, it roared at the Land. It 
			dried up the waters of the Mountains, dragged away the tamarisks, 
			tore the flesh of the Earth and covered her with painful wounds. It 
			set fire to the reed-beds, bathed the sky in blood, turned it inside 
			out; it dispersed the people there. At that moment, on that day, the 
			fields became black potash, across the whole extent of the horizon, 
			reddish like purple dye -- truly it was so! An was overwhelmed, 
			crouched, wrung his hands against his stomach; Enlil groaned and hid 
			himself in a corner, the Anuna flattened themselves against walls, 
			the house was full of fearful sighing as of pigeons. The Great 
			Mountain Enlil cried to Ninlil:
			
			"My wife, my son is no longer here; what is there to support me? The 
			Lord, the authority of the E-kur, the King who imposes the strong 
			shackle for his father, a cedar rooted in the abzu, a crown with 
			broad shade, my son, my security -- he is not here any more: who 
			will take me by the hand?"
			
			The weapon which loved the Lord, obedient to its master, the Car-ur 
			...... for Lord Ninurta to his father in Nibru ....... The awesome 
			splendour enveloped Ninurta like a garment, ....... ...... bound 
			him: therefore the Lord ....... The weapon ...... spoke to Enlil.
			
			"...... Ninurta, having confidence in himself; ...... he will be 
			standing; the waters will be dried up as if by the sun's heat; 
			...... he will breathe again, he will be standing full of joy. I 
			shall cause horrid storms to rise against ...... of the Hero Ninurta 
			....... ...... as for him who resisted (?) the Mountains, he has 
			been amazed by his strength. Now I shall give my orders, you are to 
			follow these instructions:
			
			1 line unclear
			
			...... in the fields, let him not diminish the population. ...... 
			let him not cause a lack of posterity. Let him not cause to perish 
			the name of all the kinds of species whose destinies I, Enlil, have 
			decreed."
			
			The weapon, its heart ......, was reassured: it slapped its thighs, 
			the Car-ur began to run, it entered the rebel lands, joyfully it 
			reported the message to Lord Ninurta:
			
			"My master, ...... for you, Enlil has said: "As the Deluge i.e. 
			Ninurta, before whom the venom has piled up, attacks the enemy, let 
			him take the Asag by the shoulder, let him pierce its liver, let my 
			son enter with it into the E-kur. Then, Ninurta, to the limits of 
			the earth my people will deservedly praise your power." You, Lord 
			who trusts in the word of his father, do not tarry, great strength 
			of Enlil. Storm of the rebel lands, who grinds the Mountains like 
			flour, Ninurta, Enlil's seal-bearer, go to it! Do not tarry. My 
			master: the Asag has constructed a wall of stakes on an earthen 
			rampart; the fortress is too high and cannot be reached, ...... its 
			fierceness does not diminish.
			
			3 lines unclear
			
			My master, ......." Ninurta opened his mouth to speak to the mace 
			....... He aimed the lance at the Mountains ....... The Lord 
			stretched out an arm towards the clouds. Day became a dark night. He 
			yelled like a storm, .......
			
			2 lines unclear
			
			The Lord ...... clouds of dust. In his battle he smote the Mountains 
			with a cudgel. The Car-ur made the storm-wind rise to heaven, 
			scattering the people; like ...... it tore. Its venom alone 
			destroyed the townspeople. The destructive mace set fire to the 
			Mountains, the murderous weapon smashed skulls with its painful 
			teeth, the club which tears out entrails gnashed its teeth. The 
			lance was stuck into the ground and the crevasses filled with blood. 
			In the rebel lands dogs licked it up like milk. The enemy rose up, 
			crying to wife and child, "You did not lift your arms in prayer to 
			Lord Ninurta". The weapon covered the Mountains with dust, but did 
			not shake the heart of the Asag. The Car-ur threw its arms around 
			the neck of the Lord:
			
			"Hero, ah, what further awaits you? Do not on any account meddle 
			with the hurricane of the Mountains. Ninurta, Lord, son of Enlil, I 
			tell you again, it is made like a storm. It is a blister whose smell 
			is foul, like mucus which comes from the nose it is unpleasant, 
			Lord, its words are devious, it will not obey you. My master, it has 
			been created against you as a god; who can help you? Hero, it falls 
			on the land as a whirlwind, it scrubs it as if with saltwort, 
			Ninurta, it chases the onagers before it in the Mountains. Its 
			terrifying splendour sends the dust into clouds, it causes a 
			downpour of potsherds. In the rebel lands it is a lion striking with 
			savage teeth; no man can catch it. After reducing everything to 
			nothing in the north wind, it ....... The sheepfolds have been 
			closed by ghostly demons. It has dried up the waters in the ground. 
			In the whirlwind storm, the people are finished, they have no 
			solution (?). From an implacable enemy, great Hero, Lord, turn 
			away," he said quietly.
			
			But the Lord howled at the Mountains, could not withhold a roar. The 
			Hero did not address the rebel lands, he ....... He reversed the 
			evil that it had done ....... He smashed the heads of all the 
			enemies, he made the Mountains weep. The Lord ranged about in all 
			directions, like a soldier saying "I will go on the rampage". Like a 
			bird of prey the Asag looked up angrily from the Mountains. He 
			commanded the rebel lands to be silent and ....... Ninurta 
			approached the enemy and flattened him like a wave (?). The Asag's 
			terrifying splendour was contained, it began to fade, it began to 
			fade. It looked wonderingly upwards. Like water he agitated it, he 
			scattered it into the Mountains, like weeds he pulled it up, like 
			rushes he ripped it up. Ninurta's splendour covered the Land, he 
			pounded the Asag like roasted barley, he ...... its genitals (?), he 
			piled it up like a heap of broken bricks, he heaped it up like 
			flour, as a potter does with coals; he piled it up like stamped 
			earth whose mud is being stirred. The Hero had achieved his heart's 
			desire. Ninurta, the Lord, the son of Enlil, ...... began to calm 
			down.
			
			In the Mountains, the day came to an end. The sun bade it farewell. 
			The Lord ...... his belt and mace in water, he washed the blood from 
			his clothes, the Hero wiped his brow, he made a victory-chant over 
			the dead body. When he had brought the Asag which he had slain to 
			the condition of a ship wrecked by a tidal wave, the gods of the 
			Land came to him. Like exhausted wild asses they prostrated 
			themselves before him, and for this Lord, because of his proud 
			conduct, for Ninurta, the son of Enlil, they clapped their hands in 
			greeting. The Car-ur addressed these flattering words aloud to its 
			master (1 ms. has instead: to Lord Ninurta):
			
			"Lord, great mec tree in a watered field, Hero, who is like you? My 
			master, beside you there is no one else, nor can anyone stand like 
			you, nor is anyone born like you. Ninurta, from today no one in the 
			Mountains will rise against you. My master, if you give but one 
			roar, ...... how they will praise you!
			
			1 line unclear
			
			Lord Ninurta ......."
			
			7 lines damaged
			
			After he had pulled up the Asag like a weed in the rebel lands, torn 
			it up like a rush, Lord Ninurta ...... his club:
			
			1 line unclear
			
			"From today forward, do not say Asag: its name shall be Stone. Its 
			name shall be zalag stone, its name shall be Stone. This, its 
			entrails, shall be the underworld. Its valour shall belong to the 
			Lord."
			
			The blessing of the club, laid to rest in a corner: "The mighty 
			battle which reduces the Land".
			
			1 line missing
			
			At that time, the good water coming forth from the earth did not 
			pour down over the fields. The cold water (?) was piled up 
			everywhere, and the day when it began to ...... it brought 
			destruction in the Mountains, since the gods of the Land were 
			subject to servitude, and had to carry the hoe and the basket -- 
			this was their corvée work -- people called on a household for the 
			recruitment of workers. The Tigris did not bring up its flood in its 
			fullness. Its mouth did not finish in the sea, it did not carry 
			fresh water. No one brought (?) offerings to the market. The famine 
			was hard, as nothing had yet been born. No one yet cleaned the 
			little canals, the mud was not dredged up. Ditch-making did not yet 
			exist. People did not work (?) in furrows, barley was sown 
			broadcast.
			
			The Lord applied his great wisdom to it. Ninurta (1 ms. has instead: 
			Ninjirsu), the son of Enlil, set about it in a grand way. He made a 
			pile of stones in the Mountains. Like a floating cloud he stretched 
			out his arms over it. With a great wall he barred the front of the 
			Land. He installed a sluice (?) on the horizon. The Hero acted 
			cleverly, he dammed in the cities together. He blocked (?) the 
			powerful waters by means of stones. Now the waters will never again 
			go down from the Mountains into the earth. That which was dispersed 
			he gathered together. Where in the Mountains scattered lakes had 
			formed, he joined them all together and led them down to the Tigris. 
			He poured carp-floods of water over the fields.
			
			Now, today, throughout the whole world, kings of the Land far and 
			wide rejoice at Lord Ninurta. He provided water for the speckled 
			barley in the cultivated fields, he raised up (2 mss. have instead: 
			piled up) the harvest of fruits in garden and orchard. He heaped up 
			the grain piles like mounds. The Lord caused trading colonies to go 
			up from the Land of Sumer. He contented the desires of the gods. 
			They duly praised Ninurta's father.
			
			At that time he also reached a woman with compassion. Ninmah was 
			sleepless from remembering the place where she had conceived him. 
			She covered her outside with a fleece, like an unshorn ewe, she made 
			a great lament about the now inaccessible Mountains:
			
			"The Mountains could not bear the Lord's great strength. The great 
			Hero -- the force of whose rage no one can approach, like heaven 
			itself; the savage storm which walks on earth, spilling poison in 
			the earth's breast; the Lord, the life-breath of Enlil, whose head 
			is worthy of the tiara, ...... who knows nothing of ......: in 
			triumph he hurried by me, he with whom my husband made me pregnant 
			(?). I bore him for my husband. He was close ......; but the son of 
			Enlil passed by and did not lift his glance to me. For the good 
			youth" -- thus the good lady said, as she went to him in E-cumeca, 
			his chosen place, --" I will cut the knot. Now I, yes I, shall go to 
			the presumptuous Lord, to gaze upon the precious Lord. I will go 
			directly to him, to my son, Enlil's judge, the great Hero, favoured 
			by his father."
			
			The lady performed the song in a holy manner. Ninmah recited it to 
			Lord Ninurta. He looked at her with his life-giving looks and spoke 
			to her:
			
			"Lady, since you came to the Mountains, Ninmah ('Great Lady'), since 
			you entered the rebel lands for my sake, since you did not keep far 
			from me when I was surrounded by the horrors of battle -- let the 
			name of the pile which I, the Hero, have piled up be Mountain (hursaj) 
			and may you be its lady (nin): now that is the destiny decreed by 
			Ninurta. Henceforth people shall speak of Ninhursaja. So be it. Let 
			its meadows produce herbs for you. Let its slopes produce honey and 
			wine for you. Let its hillsides grow cedars, cypress, juniper and 
			box for you. Let it make abundant for you ripe fruits, as a garden. 
			Let the mountain supply you richly with divine perfumes. Let it mine 
			gold and silver for you, make ...... for you. Let it smelt copper 
			and tin for you, make its tribute for you. Let the Mountains make 
			wild animals teem for you. Let the mountain increase the fecundity 
			of quadrupeds for you. You, o Queen, become equal to An, wearing a 
			terrifying splendour. Great goddess who detests boasting, good lady, 
			maiden Ninhursaja, Nintud, ...... approach me. Lady, I have given 
			you great powers: may you be exalted."
			
			While the Lord was fixing the destiny of the Mountains, as he walked 
			about in the sanctuary of Nibru, the good lady whose powers excel 
			all powers, Lady-creatrix-of-the-womb, Aruru, Enlil's elder sister, 
			stood before him:
			
			"Great Hero whose word like that of his father is unalterable, Lord: 
			you have not fixed the destinies of the warriors that you have 
			slain."
			
			The Lord then addressed the u stone. He defined (?) its typical 
			behaviour. The Lord spoke to it in anger in the Land, Ninurta son of 
			Enlil cursed it:
			
			"U stone (emery), since you rose against me in the Mountains, since 
			you barred the way (2 mss. have instead: seized me) so as to detain 
			me, since you swore to put me to death, since you frightened me, 
			Lord Ninurta, on my great throne; you are powerful, a youth of 
			outstanding strength: may your size be diminished. A mighty lion, 
			confident in its strength, will tear you into pieces, the strong man 
			will fling you in his hand in combat (1 ms. has instead: for 
			strength). Young u stone, your brothers will heap you up like flour. 
			You will lift your hand against your offspring, sink your teeth into 
			their corpses. You, young man, though you may cry out, will end as 
			....... Like a great wild bull killed by many people, be divided 
			into portions. U stone, you will be hounded from the battlefield 
			with clubs, like a dog chased by shepherd boys. Because I am the 
			Lord: since cornelian is polished by you, you shall be called by its 
			name. And now, according to the destiny fixed by Ninurta, henceforth 
			when u stone touches it, there will be pierced cornelian. Let it be 
			so."
			
			The Hero addressed the cu and gasura stones. The Lord enumerated 
			their characteristics. Ninurta son of Enlil fixed their destiny:
			
			"Cu stones, since you attacked against my weapons; gasura stones, 
			since you stood fiercely against me like bulls, since you tossed (?) 
			your horns in the dust at me like wild bulls, you shall be ...... 
			like butterflies. My terrifying splendour will cover you. Since you 
			cannot escape from my (1 ms. has instead: his) great strength, the 
			goldsmith shall puff and blow on you with his breath. You shall be 
			shaped by him to form a matrix for his creations. People shall place 
			the first fruits of the gods on you at the time of the new moon."
			
			My King stood before the sajkal stone, he addressed the gulgul and 
			sajjar stones. Ninurta son of Enlil fixed their destiny:
			
			"Sajkal stone, since you flew up against me ......; gulgul stone, 
			since you sparked lightning against me ......; sajjar stone, since 
			you shook your head at me, since you ground your teeth at me, the 
			Lord! The sajkal stone will smash you, sajjar stone, young brave, 
			and the gulgul stone will destroy (gul) you. You will be discarded 
			as contemptible and valueless (saj nukala). Be a prey to the famine 
			(cagjar) of the Land; you shall be fed by the charity of your city. 
			You shall be accounted a common person, a warrior among slave-girls. 
			They shall say to you "Be off with you, hurry!", it shall be your 
			name. And now, by the destiny fixed by Ninurta, henceforth you shall 
			be called a bad lot in the Land. So be it."
			
			My King stood before the esi stone. ...... he spoke in hymnic 
			language. Ninurta son of Enlil fixed its destiny:
			
			"Esi (diorite), your army in battle changed sides separately (?). 
			You spread before me like thick smoke. You did not raise your hand. 
			You did not attack me. Since you said, "It is false. The Lord is 
			alone the Hero. Who can vie with Ninurta, son of Enlil?" -- they 
			shall extract you from the highland countries. They shall bring (?) 
			you from the land of Magan. You shall shape (?) Strong Copper like 
			leather and then you shall be perfectly adapted for my heroic arm, 
			for me, the Lord. When a king who is establishing his renown for 
			perpetuity has had its statues sculpted for all time, you shall be 
			placed in the place of libations -- and it shall suit you well -- in 
			my temple E-ninnu, the house full of grace."
			
			My King turned to the na stone. He ...... the body from the na 
			stone. Ninurta son of Enlil cursed it: "Stone, since you said, "If 
			only it had been me"; na stones, since you bewitched my powers -- 
			lie down there, you, to be worked on like a pig. Be discarded, be 
			used for nothing, end up by being reduced to tiny fragments. He who 
			knows you shall reduce you to liquid."
			
			My King turned to the elel stone. Ninurta son of Enlil fixed its 
			destiny: "Elel, intelligently you caused terror of me to descend on 
			the Mountains where discord had broken out. In the rebel lands you 
			proclaimed my name among my people who had banded together. Nothing 
			of your wholeness shall be diminished (?). It shall be difficult to 
			reduce your mass to small pieces. My divine ordinances shall be set 
			out in straight lines on your body. You shall be greatly suited to 
			the clash of weapons, when I have heroes to slay. You shall be set 
			up on a pedestal in my great courtyard. The Land shall praise you in 
			wonder, the foreign lands shall speak your praises (2 mss. have 
			instead: elevate you)."
			
			The Hero turned to the kagina (haematite) stone, he addressed it for 
			its hardness. Ninurta son of Enlil fixed its destiny: "Young man 
			worthy of respect, whose surface reflects the light, kagina, when 
			the demands of the rebel lands reached you, I did not conquer you 
			....... I did not notice you among the hostile ones. I shall make 
			room for you in the Land. The divine rites of Utu shall become your 
			powers. Be constituted as a judge in the foreign lands. The 
			craftsman, expert in everything, shall value you as if gold. Young 
			man of whom I have taken possession, because of you I shall not 
			sleep until you come to life. And now, according to the destiny 
			fixed by Ninurta, henceforth kagina shall live! So shall it be."
			
			The Hero stood before the jicnugal (alabaster) stone. Ninurta son of 
			Enlil fixed its destiny: "›icnu, whose body shines like the 
			daylight! Purified silver, youth destined for the palace, since you 
			alone held out your hands to me, and you prostrated yourself before 
			me in your Mountains, I did not smite you with the club, and I did 
			not turn my strength against you. Hero, you stood firm by me when I 
			yelled out. Your name shall be called benevolence. The treasury of 
			the Land shall be subject to your hand, you shall be its 
			seal-keeper. (1 ms. adds the line: The Anuna .......)"
			
			My King turned to the algamec stone and frowned. The Lord spoke to 
			it angrily in the Land. Ninurta son of Enlil cursed it: "What 
			provision did you make to assist my progress? Be the first to go 
			into my forge. Algamec, you shall be the regular sacrifice offered 
			daily by the smiths."
			
			My King turned to the ducia stone. He addressed the nir, the gug 
			(cornelian) and the zagin (lapis lazuli); the amac-pa-ed, the caba, 
			the hurizum, the gug-gazi and the marhali; the egi-zaga, the 
			girin-hiliba , the anzugulme and the nir-mucjir stones (1 ms.: the 
			...... and the gazi-musud stones). The Lord Ninurta, son of Enlil, 
			fixed their destinies for ...... the waterskin: "How you came to my 
			side, male and female in form, and in your own way! You committed no 
			fault, and you supported me with strength. You exalted me in public. 
			Now in my deliberation, I shall exalt you. Since you made yourself 
			general of the assembly, you, nir, shall be chosen for syrup and for 
			wine. You shall all be decorated with precious metal. The principal 
			among the gods shall cause the foreign lands to prostrate themselves 
			before you, putting their noses to the ground."
			
			My King turned to the jir-zu-jal (flint), and frowned. The Lord 
			spoke to it angrily in the Land. Ninurta son of Enlil cursed it: 
			"Ah, duplicitous jir-zu-jal, what then? They shall split your horns, 
			wild bull, in your Mountains. Lie down before the ....... You were 
			not equal to me who supported you. I shall rip you like a sack, and 
			people will smash you into tiny pieces. The metalworker shall deal 
			with you, he shall use his chisel on you. Young man, massive, bearer 
			of hatred: the carpenter, saying "I wish to buy it for my work", 
			shall wet you with water ...... and shall crush you like malt."
			
			My King turned to the iman stones, he addressed the alliga stones. 
			Ninurta son of Enlil fixed their destiny: "Iman stones, in the 
			Mountains you cried out against me. You fiercely uttered 
			battle-yells. I shall enflame you like fire. Like a storm I shall 
			overturn you. I shall strip you like rushes. I shall rip you up like 
			weeds. Who will assist you then? Iman stone: your cries shall not be 
			valued, no attention shall be paid to them. Iman stone, alliga 
			stone: your path shall not lead to the palace."
			
			My King turned to the macda stone. He addressed the dubban and 
			urutum stones. Ninurta son of Enlil defined (?) their characteristic 
			behaviour: "Macda stone, dubban stone, blazing fires; urutum stone, 
			which nothing resists; when the gasura stone ...... and you were set 
			ablaze, you burnt against me in the rebel lands like a brazier. 
			Since you all stood against me in the land of Saba: macda stone, 
			they shall slaughter you like a sheep. Dubban stone, they shall 
			crunch you for pulverising. Urutum stone, they shall sharpen you for 
			the battle-mace; with bronze, the arrowheads of the gods, they shall 
			smash you with the axe, stinging with fierce swords."
			
			My King turned to the cagara stone. Ninurta son of Enlil fixed its 
			destiny: "Cagara stone, who smash (?) your head against anyone 
			travelling alone in the desert, in the Mountains when my arms were 
			occupied you tried to trample on me. Since you glutted yourself in 
			the battle, the reed-worker shall make the reeds jump with you. You 
			shall be thrown onto your couch; the appearance (?) of your mother 
			and father who bore you shall be forgotten (?). No one shall say to 
			you, "Get up", no one shall have the feeling that he misses you, the 
			people shall not complain about your loss. In praise of the 
			eternally-created powers in Ninhursaja's resting place, you shall be 
			discarded on the dais there. They shall feed you on malt, as they do 
			for sheep; you shall content yourself with a portion of scattered 
			flour. This shall be the explanation for you."
			
			My King turned to the marhuca stone, Ninurta the son of Enlil 
			pronounced its destiny. "Marhuca, ...... the string in my place, 
			...... you were taken, since you did not participate in the crimes 
			of your city, ......; you shall be the bowl under the filter-jug, 
			the water shall filter into you. Marhusa, you shall be used for 
			inlay-work, ....... You shall be the perfect ornament for sacred 
			brooches. Marhuca, you shall be duly praised in the temples of the 
			gods."
			
			The Hero turned to the hactum stone and frowned. In the Land the 
			Lord addressed it angrily; Ninurta the son of Enlil pronounced its 
			destiny: "Hactum stone, you cried out against me in the Mountains. 
			You yelled fiercely with wild battle-yells. With your yelling, you 
			fixed a lila demon in the Mountains. Young man, because of your 
			digging, Ditch (hactum) shall be your name. And now, according to 
			the destiny of Ninurta, henceforth they shall say hactum. So be it."
			
			My King turned to the durul stone. Ninurta son of Enlil fixed its 
			destiny: "Durul stone, holy garment of mourning, blinded youth whom 
			people carve, in the Mountains you prostrated yourself before me. 
			Since you said to me, "If only it had been me who broke the bars of 
			the gates, if only I had stood before him, before my King, Lord 
			Ninurta", your name shall be magnified of its own accord wherever it 
			is mentioned. As the connoisseur says of precious metal, "I will buy 
			it", so the foreign nations, like musicians playing the reed-pipe, 
			shall pursue you."
			
			My King turned to the cigcig stone, he addressed the engen and 
			ezinum stones. For the ug-gun, the hem, the madanum, the sajgirmud, 
			the ...... and the mursuh stones, Ninurta son of Enlil fixed their 
			destiny:
			
			2 lines unclear
			
			"with ribs drawn in, balancing on the haunches, heart elated, legs 
			bent like a bear, ......: I shall come to you; now, being an ally, 
			you come forward from all of them; who shall extend the hand to 
			them? You were the club, you stood as the doorway.
			
			3 lines unclear
			
			In the Land, the champion shall always look (?) with favour on you."
			
			The Hero turned to the kurgaranum stone. He addressed the bal stone; 
			the Lord Ninurta, son of Enlil, fixed the destiny for the yellow-coloured 
			cimbi (kohl): "Since you said, "I will bring forth the people",
			
			1 line unclear
			
			you ...... as if ...... the young man who has obtained (?) glory for 
			you; the young artisan shall sing your praises. You shall be 
			favoured for the festival of spirits of the dead; on the ninth day 
			of the month, at the new moon, the young men shall ...... for you." 
			He assigned ...... them to the cult of Ninhursaja.
			
			The Hero had conquered the Mountains. As he moved across the desert, 
			he ....... Through the crowd, he came forth among their acclamations 
			(?), majestically he ....... Ninurta joyfully went to his beloved 
			barge, the Lord set foot in the boat Ma-kar-nunta-eda. The boatmen 
			sang a pleasant song, for the Lord they sang his praise. They 
			addressed an eternal greeting to Ninurta son of Enlil: "God who 
			outstrips the heroes, Lord Ninurta, king of the Anuna gods, holding 
			a cudgel in his right hand, bearded, you fall as a torrent on all 
			enemies; who can rival your great works? Hero, deluge, without 
			equal, the enki and ninki deities do not dare to resist (?) you. 
			Hero who pillages the cities, who subjugates the Mountains, son of 
			Enlil, who will rise up against you? Ninurta, Lord, son of Enlil, 
			Hero, who is like you?
			
			"My King: there is a hero who is devoted to you and to your 
			offerings, he is as just as his reputation, he walks in your ways; 
			since he has brilliantly accomplished all that is proper for you in 
			your temple, since he has made your shrine rise from the dust for 
			you, let him do everything magnificently for your festival. Let him 
			accomplish perfectly for you your holy rites. He has formulated a 
			vow for his life. May he praise you in the Land. "May An's heart be 
			appeased for the Lord, may the maiden mother Bau shine like the 
			daylight for Ninurta, Enlil's strength."
			
			They sang to the Lord in the ceremonial (?) boat. The boat, floating 
			of its own accord, was piled up with riches. The boat Ma-kar-nunta-eda 
			proceeded shiningly. To greet the Hero from the smiting of weapons, 
			the Anuna ...... came to meet him. They pressed their noses to the 
			ground, they placed their hands on their chests. They addressed a 
			prayer and a supplication to the Lord: "May your anger be appeased 
			....... Ninurta, King, Utu-ulu, lift your head to heaven".
			
			His father Enlil blessed him: "......, pre-eminent with your great 
			name, you have established your habitation ....... Chest, fittingly 
			......, King of battle, I presented the storm of heaven to you for 
			use against the rebel lands. O Hero of heaven and earth I presented 
			to you the club, the deluge which sets the Mountains on fire. King, 
			ahead of your storm the way was narrow. But, Ninurta, I had 
			confidence in your march to the Mountains. Like a wolf (?) set free 
			to seize his prey, in your storm you adventured into the rebel lands 
			from above. The mountain that you have handed over shall not be 
			restored. You have caused its cities to be counted as ruin-mounds. 
			Its mighty rulers have lost their breath before you. A celestial 
			mace, a prosperous and unchanging rule, eternal life, the good 
			favour of Enlil, o King, and the strength of An: these shall be your 
			reward."
			
			Since the Hero had killed the Asag, since the Lord had made that 
			pile of stones, since he had given the order "Let it be called 
			stone", since he had ...... the roaring dragon, since the Hero had 
			traced the way of the waters ...... down from above, since he had 
			brought them to the fertile fields, since he had made famous the 
			plough of abundance, since the Lord had established it in regular 
			furrows, since Ninurta son of Enlil had heaped up grain-piles and 
			granaries -- Ninurta the son of Enlil entrusted their keeping to the 
			care of the lady who possesses the divine powers which exist of 
			themselves, who is eminently worthy of praise, to Nisaba, good lady, 
			greatly wise, pre-eminent in the lands, her who possesses the 
			principal tablet with the obligations of en and lugal, endowed by 
			Enki on the Holy Mound with a great intelligence.
			
			To the lady, the celestial star, made magnificently beautiful by the 
			prince in the abzu, to the lady of knowledge who gladdens hearts, 
			who alone has the gift of governing, endowed with prudence, ......, 
			who rules the black-headed, who possesses the tablet with all the 
			names (?), from whose suspended nets the birds which are caught do 
			not escape, whose every work accomplished meets with complete 
			success, to her ...... which is not unravelled, to her for whom the 
			days are counted according to the phases of the moon, to her who is 
			unassailable as if a fortress of copper ......, who is ...... in 
			counsels, and wise in all manner of things, ...... who cares for the 
			black-headed, who rules the people justly, ......, the replica of 
			Enlil, to the bright good lady who takes counsel with An -- to 
			Nisaba be praise.
			
			Enlil's mighty Lord, Ninurta, great son of the E-kur, heroic one of 
			the father who bore him: it is good to praise you.