In the genealogy broken by the priests of Heliopolis, Isis was one of the children of God Geb and goddess Nut. As the sister whom Osiris precious on earth she devotedly serves him in the government of Egypt. In the earliest quotations to the goddess in the Pyramid Texts she looks to foresee his murder by Set, and is described as sitting black, weeping for her brother. After his death she and her sister Nephthys mourn inconsolably in the process of kites. She wearilessly seeks, and rules his body later her brother Set had set it into the Nile; she reassembles Osiriss remains after Seth had dismembered it and broken the parts passim Egypt (see Osiris for more details of the myth). In the Great Hymn to Osiris on the stela of Amenemose (18th Dynasty) in the Louvre Museum, the goddess is imagined as a kite protectively blending the god with her feather, the breeze created by her wings providing breath for him. She then acts as a hold over the god. This is iconographically read in some statues by the goddess straight in human form, stretches forward her arms from which grow flies to flank the figure of Osiris before her a clear statement of how the Egyptians saw Isis as an example of supreme devotion to her husband. It is through her magic that Osiris names her pregnant the god now leading Egypt for his purpose as Underworld Rex.