The Egyptian Book of the dead by P. Le Page Renouf and Edouard Naville

3. This legend of Nechen is connected with that of the dismemberment of

Horus (τὸ περὶ τὸν Ὥρου διαμελισμὸν), of which we have but very scanty information.[97] It must have been like a repetition of what had happened to his father Osiris. The limbs of Horus had been thrown into the water, and when Sebak threw his net, at the prayer of Isis, he brought up two fishes, into which the arms of Horus had been turned. Reminiscences of this story are preserved in the names of several localities. ⁂, “Two Fish,” is the name of the _Mer_ of the second Northern Nome, and of the _pehu_ of the seventeenth Southern Nome; just as ⁂, “Two Eyes,” is the name of the _pehu_ of the eleventh Northern Nome. The latter name may perhaps have reference to Osiris, but the same stories were probably told of both divinities.