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

3. _Distress_, ⁂⁂⁂⁂. “Te semper anteit saeva

_necessitas_,” Horace says to Fortuna. The determinative ⁂ and the Coptic ⲙⲣ̄ evidently point to the notion of _constraint_, but the few texts in which the word is found imply _want_, _need_ (_angustiæ_, ἀνάγκη),[136] rather than captivity. Amenemhat at Benihassan (tomb 2) boasts that in his days and under his government no one was seen “in distress (⁂⁂⁂⁂⁂⁂), or starving.” And Horus at Edfu (Naville, _Mythe d’Horus_, pl. XXII) is said to protect the _needy_ or _distressed_ (⁂⁂⁂) against the powerful. This is an honour already claimed by Antuf on his tablet (Louvre, C. 26 line 17), who mentions the _maȧru_ as being an object of interest to him, like the orphan and the widow.