Behold the glory, behold the wonder, What we have made shall not be torn asunder, Such vast achievement stone and papyrus, Beneath the gaze of Isis and Osiris. Land of majesty, Where the heavens smile, Jewel of history, Shining by the Nile. Serve and be silent, You who are chattel, We think of you as little more than cattle, This is your lot now and we advise you, To bow before whatever master buys you. Feel the power here, Power has its price, Some can live like gods, Some must sacrifice... Through the centuries, Many backs have bent, Many dreams are built, Many lives are spent. Look and be humbled, learn what your place is, Egyptian slave no matter what your race is, This is your future, your life suspended, And everything you knew before has ended. You are Egypt's now, We have all control, From your every step, To your very soul.
The sequel to Prince of Egypt would be where most of the adults leaving Egypt would eventually die due to their rebellion and disobedience against God. We could skip that chapter though and move onto the part where Joshua leads the remaining the Israelites and their descendants to reclaim the Promised Land in conquest.
The developers did a nice job portraying Bronze Age cultures in the Near East, with Ancient Egypt in particular. I recently discovered that in the Hamurabi Code, that universaly, the average slave price was 20 shekels, coincidence?
@@JuliaMuller-yr6xj the reason I found it is because the Bronze Age history is underrated. The Old Testament to me is nothing more but a bunch of rip-off copy-pastas of Mesopotamian folklore. If you want to believe in your god, you do you, just don't tell me to affirm that shit.
@@Kdssow I am not telling you to affirm anything if you don't believe in it you don't believe simple as that. What I am telling you is this why was the price of slave twenty shekels of silver specifically and then when you asked your self this question open the holy Bible and read genesis chapter 37 to chapter 50 and you will understand what I understand and know that I forgive you.
Yes! The wikipedia page for this score goes into excellent detail on the steps Danny Pelfrey took to compose the score with some help from Hans himself.
yk what neat about dream works making both of those films is that the story of Joseph are connected the reason the Israelites were in Egypt because of Joseph bringing his dad and brothers to Egypt many years late the Israelites were enslaved there. Then Moses came as a answer to their prayer of deliverance hence "deliver us" song in the film. Overall I would say the Prince of Egypt.
I loved this song when it played. Also these scene made me think of how modern say is alot like these anciant cotys in the bible Edit: sometimes big citys collectivly loose the same morals