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Title: She
Author: H. Rider Haggard
Release date: April 6, 2006 [eBook #3155]
Most recently updated: June 14, 2022
Language: English
Credits: John Bickers, Dagny, William Kyngesburye and David Widger
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SHE ***
She
by H. Rider Haggard
First Published 1886.
IN EARTH AND SKIE AND SEA
STRANGE THYNGS THER BE
Doggerel couplet from the Sherd of Amenartas
Contents
INTRODUCTION |
I. MY VISITOR |
II. THE YEARS ROLL BY |
III. THE SHERD OF AMENARTAS |
IV. THE SQUALL |
V. THE HEAD OF THE ETHIOPIAN |
VI. AN EARLY CHRISTIAN CEREMONY |
VII. USTANE SINGS |
VIII. THE FEAST, AND AFTER! |
IX. A LITTLE FOOT |
X. SPECULATIONS |
XI. THE PLAIN OF KÔR |
XII. “SHE” |
XIII. AYESHA UNVEILS |
XIV. A SOUL IN HELL |
XV. AYESHA GIVES JUDGMENT |
XVI. THE TOMBS OF KÔR |
XVII. THE BALANCE TURNS |
XVIII. “GO, WOMAN!” |
XIX. “GIVE ME A BLACK GOAT!” |
XX. TRIUMPH |
XXI. THE DEAD AND LIVING MEET |
XXII. JOB HAS A PRESENTIMENT |
XXIII. THE TEMPLE OF TRUTH |
XXIV. WALKING THE PLANK |
XXV. THE SPIRIT OF LIFE |
XXVI. WHAT WE SAW |
XXVII. WE LEAP |
XXVIII. OVER THE MOUNTAIN |
I inscribe this history to
ANDREW LANG
in token of personal regard
and of
my sincere admiration
for his learning and his works
SHE
INTRODUCTION
In giving to the world the record of what, looked at as an adventure only, is I
suppose one of the most wonderful and mysterious experiences ever undergone by
mortal men, I feel it incumbent on me to explain what my exact connection with
it is. And so I may as well say at once that I am not the narrator but only the
editor of this extraordinary history, and then go on to tell how it found its
way into my hands.
Some years ago I, the editor, was stopping with a friend, “vir
doctissimus et amicus meus,” at a certain University, which for the
purposes of this history we will call Cambridge, and was one day much struck
with the appearance of two persons whom I saw going arm-in-arm down the street.
One of these gentlemen was I think, without exception, the handsomest young
fellow I have ever seen. He was very tall, very broad, and had a look of power
and a grace of bearing that seemed as native to him as it is to a wild stag. In
addition his face was almost without flaw—a good face as well as a
beautiful one, and when he lifted his hat, which he did just then to a passing
lady, I saw that his head was covered with little golden curls growing close to
the scalp.
“Good gracious!” I said to my friend, with whom I was walking,
“why, that fellow looks like a statue of Apollo come to life. What a
splendid man he is!”
“Yes,” he answered, “he is the handsomest man in the
University, and one of the nicest too. They call him ‘the Greek
god’; but look at the other one, he’s Vincey’s (that’s
the god’s name) guardian, and supposed to be full of every kind of
information. They call him ‘Charon.’” I looked, and found the
older man quite as interesting in his way as the glorified specimen of humanity
at his side. He appeared to be about forty years of age, and was I think as
ugly as his companion was handsome. To begin with, he was shortish, rather
bow-legged, very deep chested, and with unusually long arms. He had dark hair
and small eyes, and the hair grew right down on his forehead, and his whiskers
grew right up to his hair, so that there was uncommonly little of his
countenance to be seen. Altogether he reminded me forcibly of a gorilla, and
yet there was something very pleasing and genial about the man’s eye. I
remember saying that I should like to know him.
“All right,” answered my friend, “nothing easier. I know
Vincey; I’ll introduce you,” and he did, and for some minutes we
stood chatting—about the Zulu people, I think, for I had just returned
from the Cape at the time. Presently, however, a stoutish lady, whose name I do
not remember, came along the pavement, accompanied by a pretty fair-haired
girl, and these two Mr. Vincey, who clearly knew them well, at once joined,
walking off in their company. I remember being rather amused because of the
change in the expression of the elder man, whose name I discovered was Holly,
when he saw the ladies advancing. He suddenly stopped short in his talk, cast a
reproachful look at his companion, and, with an abrupt nod to myself, turned
and marched off alone across the street. I heard afterwards that he was
popularly supposed to be as much afraid of a woman as most people are of a mad
dog, which accounted for his precipitate retreat. I cannot say, however, that
young Vincey showed much aversion to feminine society on this occasion. Indeed
I remember laughing, and remarking to my friend at the time that he was not the
sort of man whom it would be desirable to introduce to the lady one was going
to marry, since it was exceedingly probable that the acquaintance would end in
a transfer of her affections. He was altogether too good-looking, and, what is
more, he had none of that consciousness and conceit about him which usually
afflicts handsome men, and makes them deservedly disliked by their fellows.
That same evening my visit came to an end, and this was the last I saw or heard
of “Charon” and “the Greek god” for many a long day.
Indeed, I have never seen either of them from that hour to this, and do not
think it probable that I shall. But a month ago I received a letter and two
packets, one of manuscript, and on opening the first found that it was signed
by “Horace Holly,” a name that at the moment was not familiar to
me. It ran as follows:—
“—— College, Cambridge, May 1, 18—
“My dear Sir,—You will be surprised, considering the very slight
nature of our acquaintance, to get a letter from me. Indeed, I think I had
better begin by reminding you that we once met, now some five years ago, when I
and my ward Leo Vincey were introduced to you in the street at Cambridge. To be
brief and come to my business. I have recently read with much interest a book
of yours describing a Central African adventure. I take it that this book is
partly true, and partly an effort of the imagination. However this may be, it
has given me an idea. It happens, how you will see in the accompanying
manuscript (which together with the Scarab, the ‘Royal Son of the
Sun,’ and the original sherd, I am sending to you by hand), that my ward,
or rather my adopted son Leo Vincey and myself have recently passed through a
real African adventure, of a nature so much more marvellous than the one which
you describe, that to tell the truth I am almost ashamed to submit it to you
lest you should disbelieve my tale. You will see it stated in this manuscript
that I, or rather we, had made up our minds not to make this history public
during our joint lives. Nor should we alter our determination were it not for a
circumstance which has recently arisen. We are for reasons that, after perusing
this manuscript, you may be able to guess, going away again this time to
Central Asia where, if anywhere upon this earth, wisdom is to be found, and we
anticipate that our sojourn there will be a long one. Possibly we shall not
return. Under these altered conditions it has become a question whether we are
justified in withholding from the world an account of a phenomenon which we
believe to be of unparalleled interest, merely because our private life is
involved, or because we are afraid of ridicule and doubt being cast upon our
statements. I hold one view about this matter, and Leo holds another, and
finally, after much discussion, we have come to a compromise, namely, to send
the history to you, giving you full leave to publish it if you think fit, the
only stipulation being that you shall disguise our real names, and as much
concerning our personal identity as is consistent with the maintenance of the
bona fides of the narrative.
“And now what am I to say further? I really do not know beyond once more
repeating that everything is described in the accompanying manuscript exactly
as it happened. As regards She herself I have nothing to add. Day by day
we gave greater occasion to regret that we did not better avail ourselves of
our opportunities to obtain more information from that marvellous woman. Who
was she? How did she first come to the Caves of Kôr, and what was her real
religion? We never ascertained, and now, alas! we never shall, at least not
yet. These and many other questions arise in my mind, but what is the good of
asking them now?
“Will you undertake the task? We give you complete freedom, and as a
reward you will, we believe, have the credit of presenting to the world the
most wonderful history, as distinguished from romance, that its records can
show. Read the manuscript (which I have copied out fairly for your benefit),
and let me know.
“Believe me, very truly yours, “L. Horace Holly.[1]
“P.S.—Of course, if any profit results from the sale of the writing
should you care to undertake its publication, you can do what you like with it,
but if there is a loss I will leave instructions with my lawyers, Messrs.
Geoffrey and Jordan, to meet it. We entrust the sherd, the scarab, and the
parchments to your keeping, till such time as we demand them back again.
—L. H. H.”
[1]
This name is varied throughout in accordance with the writer’s
request.—Editor.
This letter, as may be imagined, astonished me considerably, but when I came to
look at the MS., which the pressure of other work prevented me from doing for a
fortnight, I was still more astonished, as I think the reader will be also, and
at once made up my mind to press on with the matter. I wrote to this effect to
Mr. Holly, but a week afterwards received a letter from that gentleman’s
lawyers, returning my own, with the information that their client and Mr. Leo
Vincey had already left this country for Thibet, and they did not at present
know their address.
Well, that is all I have to say. Of the history itself the reader must judge. I
give it him, with the exception of a very few alterations, made with the object
of concealing the identity of the actors from the general public, exactly as it
came to me. Personally I have made up my mind to refrain from comments. At
first I was inclined to believe that this history of a woman on whom, clothed
in the majesty of her almost endless years, the shadow of Eternity itself lay
like the dark wing of Night, was some gigantic allegory of which I could not
catch the meaning. Then I thought that it might be a bold attempt to portray
the possible results of practical immortality, informing the substance of a
mortal who yet drew her strength from Earth, and in whose human bosom passions
yet rose and fell and beat as in the undying world around her the winds and the
tides rise and fall and beat unceasingly. But as I went on I abandoned that
idea also. To me the story seems to bear the stamp of truth upon its face. Its
explanation I must leave to others, and with this slight preface, which
circumstances make necessary, I introduce the world to Ayesha and the Caves of
Kôr.—The Editor.
P.S.—There is on consideration one circumstance that, after a reperusal
of this history, struck me with so much force that I cannot resist calling the
attention of the reader to it. He will observe that so far as we are made
acquainted with him there appears to be nothing in the character of Leo Vincey
which in the opinion of most people would have been likely to attract an
intellect so powerful as that of Ayesha. He is not even, at any rate to my
view, particularly interesting. Indeed, one might imagine that Mr. Holly would
under ordinary circumstances have easily outstripped him in the favour of
She. Can it be that extremes meet, and that the very excess and
splendour of her mind led her by means of some strange physical reaction to
worship at the shrine of matter? Was that ancient Kallikrates nothing but a
splendid animal loved for his hereditary Greek beauty? Or is the true
explanation what I believe it to be—namely, that Ayesha, seeing further
than we can see, perceived the germ and smouldering spark of greatness which
lay hid within her lover’s soul, and well knew that under the influence
of her gift of life, watered by her wisdom, and shone upon with the sunshine of
her presence, it would bloom like a flower and flash out like a star, filling
the world with light and fragrance?
Here also I am not able to answer, but must leave the reader to form his own
judgment on the facts before him, as detailed by Mr. Holly in the following
pages.
I.
MY VISITOR
There are some events of which each circumstance and surrounding detail seems
to be graven on the memory in such fashion that we cannot forget it, and so it
is with the scene that I am about to describe. It rises as clearly before my
mind at this moment as though it had happened but yesterday.
It was in this very month something over twenty years ago that I, Ludwig Horace
Holly, was sitting one night in my rooms at Cambridge, grinding away at some
mathematical work, I forget what. I was to go up for my fellowship within a
week, and was expected by my tutor and my college generally to distinguish
myself. At last, wearied out, I flung my book down, and, going to the
mantelpiece, took down a pipe and filled it. There was a candle burning on the
mantelpiece, and a long, narrow glass at the back of it; and as I was in the
act of lighting the pipe I caught sight of my own countenance in the glass, and
paused to reflect. The lighted match burnt away till it scorched my fingers,
forcing me to drop it; but still I stood and stared at myself in the glass, and
reflected.
“Well,” I said aloud, at last, “it is to be hoped that I
shall be able to do something with the inside of my head, for I shall certainly
never do anything by the help of the outside.”
This remark will doubtless strike anybody who reads it as being slightly
obscure, but I was in reality alluding to my physical deficiencies. Most men of
twenty-two are endowed at any rate with some share of the comeliness of youth,
but to me even this was denied. Short, thick-set, and deep-chested almost to
deformity, with long sinewy arms, heavy features, deep-set grey eyes, a low
brow half overgrown with a mop of thick black hair, like a deserted clearing on
which the forest had once more begun to encroach; such was my appearance nearly
a quarter of a century ago, and such, with some modification, it is to this
day. Like Cain, I was branded—branded by Nature with the stamp of
abnormal ugliness, as I was gifted by Nature with iron and abnormal strength
and considerable intellectual powers. So ugly was I that the spruce young men
of my College, though they were proud enough of my feats of endurance and
physical prowess, did not even care to be seen walking with me. Was it
wonderful that I was misanthropic and sullen? Was it wonderful that I brooded
and worked alone, and had no friends—at least, only one? I was set apart
by Nature to live alone, and draw comfort from her breast, and hers only. Women
hated the sight of me. Only a week before I had heard one call me a
“monster” when she thought I was out of hearing, and say that I had
converted her to the monkey theory. Once, indeed, a woman pretended to care for
me, and I lavished all the pent-up affection of my nature upon her. Then money
that was to have come to me went elsewhere, and she discarded me. I pleaded
with her as I have never pleaded with any living creature before or since, for
I was caught by her sweet face, and loved her; and in the end by way of answer
she took me to the glass, and stood side by side with me, and looked into it.
“Now,” she said, “if I am Beauty, who are you?” That
was when I was only twenty.
And so I stood and stared, and felt a sort of grim satisfaction in the sense of
my own loneliness; for I had neither father, nor mother, nor brother; and as I
did so there came a knock at my door.
I listened before I went to open it, for it was nearly twelve o’clock at
night, and I was in no mood to admit any stranger. I had but one friend in the
College, or, indeed, in the world—perhaps it was he.
Just then the person outside the door coughed, and I hastened to open it, for I
knew the cough.
A tall man of about thirty, with the remains of great personal beauty, came
hurrying in, staggering beneath the weight of a massive iron box which he
carried by a handle with his right hand. He placed the box upon the table, and
then fell into an awful fit of coughing. He coughed and coughed till his face
became quite purple, and at last he sank into a chair and began to spit up
blood. I poured out some whisky into a tumbler, and gave it to him. He drank
it, and seemed better; though his better was very bad indeed.
“Why did you keep me standing there in the cold?” he asked
pettishly. “You know the draughts are death to me.”
“I did not know who it was,” I answered. “You are a late
visitor.”
“Yes; and I verily believe it is my last visit,” he answered, with
a ghastly attempt at a smile. “I am done for, Holly. I am done for. I do
not believe that I shall see to-morrow.”
“Nonsense!” I said. “Let me go for a doctor.”
He waved me back imperiously with his hand. “It is sober sense; but I
want no doctors. I have studied medicine and I know all about it. No doctors
can help me. My last hour has come! For a year past I have only lived by a
miracle. Now listen to me as you have never listened to anybody before; for you
will not have the opportunity of getting me to repeat my words. We have been
friends for two years; now tell me how much do you know about me?”
“I know that you are rich, and have had a fancy to come to College long
after the age that most men leave it. I know that you have been married, and
that your wife died; and that you have been the best, indeed almost the only
friend I ever had.”
“Did you know that I have a son?”
“No.”
“I have. He is five years old. He cost me his mother’s life, and I
have never been able to bear to look upon his face in consequence. Holly, if
you will accept the trust, I am going to leave you that boy’s sole
guardian.”
I sprang almost out of my chair. “Me!” I said.
“Yes, you. I have not studied you for two years for nothing. I have known
for some time that I could not last, and since I realised the fact I have been
searching for some one to whom I could confide the boy and this,” and he
tapped the iron box. “You are the man, Holly; for, like a rugged tree,
you are hard and sound at core. Listen; the boy will be the only representative
of one of the most ancient families in the world, that is, so far as families
can be traced. You will laugh at me when I say it, but one day it will be
proved to you beyond a doubt, that my sixty-fifth or sixty-sixth lineal
ancestor was an Egyptian priest of Isis, though he was himself of Grecian
extraction, and was called Kallikrates.[1] His father was one of the Greek mercenaries
raised by Hak-Hor, a Mendesian Pharaoh of the twenty-ninth dynasty, and his
grandfather or great-grandfather, I believe, was that very Kallikrates
mentioned by Herodotus.[2] In
or about the year 339 before Christ, just at the time of the final fall of the
Pharaohs, this Kallikrates (the priest) broke his vows of celibacy and fled
from Egypt with a Princess of Royal blood who had fallen in love with him, and
was finally wrecked upon the coast of Africa, somewhere, as I believe, in the
neighbourhood of where Delagoa Bay now is, or rather to the north of it, he and
his wife being saved, and all the remainder of their company destroyed in one
way or another. Here they endured great hardships, but were at last entertained
by the mighty Queen of a savage people, a white woman of peculiar loveliness,
who, under circumstances which I cannot enter into, but which you will one day
learn, if you live, from the contents of the box, finally murdered my ancestor
Kallikrates. His wife, however, escaped, how, I know not, to Athens, bearing a
child with her, whom she named Tisisthenes, or the Mighty Avenger. Five hundred
years or more afterwards, the family migrated to Rome under circumstances of
which no trace remains, and here, probably with the idea of preserving the idea
of vengeance which we find set out in the name of Tisisthenes, they appear to
have pretty regularly assumed the cognomen of Vindex, or Avenger. Here, too,
they remained for another five centuries or more, till about 770 A.D., when
Charlemagne invaded Lombardy, where they were then settled, whereon the head of
the family seems to have attached himself to the great Emperor, and to have
returned with him across the Alps, and finally to have settled in Brittany.
Eight generations later his lineal representative crossed to England in the
reign of Edward the Confessor, and in the time of William the Conqueror was
advanced to great honour and power. From that time to the present day I can
trace my descent without a break. Not that the Vinceys—for that was the
final corruption of the name after its bearers took root in English
soil—have been particularly distinguished—they never came much to
the fore. Sometimes they were soldiers, sometimes merchants, but on the whole
they have preserved a dead level of respectability, and a still deader level of
mediocrity. From the time of Charles II. till the beginning of the present
century they were merchants. About 1790 my grandfather made a considerable
fortune out of brewing, and retired. In 1821 he died, and my father succeeded
him, and dissipated most of the money. Ten years ago he died also, leaving me a
net income of about two thousand a year. Then it was that I undertook an
expedition in connection with that,” and he pointed to the iron
chest, “which ended disastrously enough. On my way back I travelled in
the South of Europe, and finally reached Athens. There I met my beloved wife,
who might well also have been called the ‘Beautiful,’ like my old
Greek ancestor. There I married her, and there, a year afterwards, when my boy
was born, she died.”
[1]
The Strong and Beautiful, or, more accurately, the Beautiful in strength.
[2]
The Kallikrates here referred to by my friend was a Spartan, spoken of by
Herodotus (Herod. ix. 72) as being remarkable for his beauty. He fell at the
glorious battle of Platæa (September 22, B.C. 479), when the Lacedæmonians and
Athenians under Pausanias routed the Persians, putting nearly 300,000 of them
to the sword. The following is a translation of the passage, “For
Kallikrates died out of the battle, he came to the army the most beautiful man
of the Greeks of that day—not only of the Lacedæmonians themselves, but
of the other Greeks also. He when Pausanias was sacrificing was wounded in the
side by an arrow; and then they fought, but on being carried off he regretted
his death, and said to Arimnestus, a Platæan, that he did not grieve at dying
for Greece, but at not having struck a blow, or, although he desired so to do,
performed any deed worthy of himself.” This Kallikrates, who appears to
have been as brave as he was beautiful, is subsequently mentioned by Herodotus
as having been buried among the ἰρένες‚ (young commanders), apart from the
other Spartans and the Helots.—L. H. H.
He paused a while, his head sunk upon his hand, and then continued—
“My marriage had diverted me from a project which I cannot enter into
now. I have no time, Holly—I have no time! One day, if you accept my
trust, you will learn all about it. After my wife’s death I turned my
mind to it again. But first it was necessary, or, at least, I conceived that it
was necessary, that I should attain to a perfect knowledge of Eastern dialects,
especially Arabic. It was to facilitate my studies that I came here. Very soon,
however, my disease developed itself, and now there is an end of me.” And
as though to emphasise his words he burst into another terrible fit of
coughing.
I gave him some more whisky, and after resting he went on—
“I have never seen my boy, Leo, since he was a tiny baby. I never could
bear to see him, but they tell me that he is a quick and handsome child. In
this envelope,” and he produced a letter from his pocket addressed to
myself, “I have jotted down the course I wish followed in the boy’s
education. It is a somewhat peculiar one. At any rate, I could not entrust it
to a stranger. Once more, will you undertake it?”
“I must first know what I am to undertake,” I answered.
“You are to undertake to have the boy, Leo, to live with you till he is
twenty-five years of age—not to send him to school, remember. On his
twenty-fifth birthday your guardianship will end, and you will then, with the
keys that I give you now” (and he placed them on the table) “open
the iron box, and let him see and read the contents, and say whether or no he
is willing to undertake the quest. There is no obligation on him to do so. Now,
as regards terms. My present income is two thousand two hundred a year. Half of
that income I have secured to you by will for life, contingently on your
undertaking the guardianship—that is, one thousand a year remuneration to
yourself, for you will have to give up your life to it, and one hundred a year
to pay for the board of the boy. The rest is to accumulate till Leo is
twenty-five, so that there may be a sum in hand should he wish to undertake the
quest of which I spoke.”
“And suppose I were to die?” I asked.
“Then the boy must become a ward of Chancery and take his chance. Only be
careful that the iron chest is passed on to him by your will. Listen, Holly,
don’t refuse me. Believe me, this is to your advantage. You are not fit
to mix with the world—it would only embitter you. In a few weeks you will
become a Fellow of your College, and the income that you will derive from that
combined with what I have left you will enable you to live a life of learned
leisure, alternated with the sport of which you are so fond, such as will
exactly suit you.”
He paused and looked at me anxiously, but I still hesitated. The charge seemed
so very strange.
“For my sake, Holly. We have been good friends, and I have no time to
make other arrangements.”
“Very well,” I said, “I will do it, provided there is nothing
in this paper to make me change my mind,” and I touched the envelope he
had put upon the table by the keys.
“Thank you, Holly, thank you. There is nothing at all. Swear to me by God
that you will be a father to the boy, and follow my directions to the
letter.”
“I swear it,” I answered solemnly.
“Very well, remember that perhaps one day I shall ask for the account of
your oath, for though I am dead and forgotten, yet I shall live. There is no
such thing as death, Holly, only a change, and, as you may perhaps learn in
time to come, I believe that even that change could under certain circumstances
be indefinitely postponed,” and again he broke into one of his dreadful
fits of coughing.
“There,” he said, “I must go, you have the chest, and my will
will be found among my papers, under the authority of which the child will be
handed over to you. You will be well paid, Holly, and I know that you are
honest, but if you betray my trust, by Heaven, I will haunt you.”
I said nothing, being, indeed, too bewildered to speak.
He held up the candle, and looked at his own face in the glass. It had been a
beautiful face, but disease had wrecked it. “Food for the worms,”
he said. “Curious to think that in a few hours I shall be stiff and
cold—the journey done, the little game played out. Ah me, Holly! life is
not worth the trouble of life, except when one is in love—at least, mine
has not been; but the boy Leo’s may be if he has the courage and the
faith. Good-bye, my friend!” and with a sudden access of tenderness he
flung his arm about me and kissed me on the forehead, and then turned to go.
“Look here, Vincey,” I said, “if you are as ill as you think,
you had better let me fetch a doctor.”
“No, no,” he said earnestly. “Promise me that you
won’t. I am going to die, and, like a poisoned rat, I wish to die
alone.”
“I don’t believe that you are going to do anything of the
sort,” I answered. He smiled, and, with the word “Remember”
on his lips, was gone. As for myself, I sat down and rubbed my eyes, wondering
if I had been asleep. As this supposition would not bear investigation I gave
it up and began to think that Vincey must have been drinking. I knew that he
was, and had been, very ill, but still it seemed impossible that he could be in
such a condition as to be able to know for certain that he would not outlive
the night. Had he been so near dissolution surely he would scarcely have been
able to walk, and carry a heavy iron box with him. The whole story, on
reflection, seemed to me utterly incredible, for I was not then old enough to
be aware how many things happen in this world that the common sense of the
average man would set down as so improbable as to be absolutely impossible.
This is a fact that I have only recently mastered. Was it likely that a man
would have a son five years of age whom he had never seen since he was a tiny
infant? No. Was it likely that he could foretell his own death so accurately?
No. Was it likely that he could trace his pedigree for more than three
centuries before Christ, or that he would suddenly confide the absolute
guardianship of his child, and leave half his fortune, to a college friend?
Most certainly not. Clearly Vincey was either drunk or mad. That being so, what
did it mean? and what was in the sealed iron chest?
The whole thing baffled and puzzled me to such an extent that at last I could
stand it no longer, and determined to sleep over it. So I jumped up, and having
put the keys and the letter that Vincey had left away into my despatch-box, and
stowed the iron chest in a large portmanteau, I turned in, and was soon fast
asleep.
As it seemed to me, I had only been asleep for a few minutes when I was
awakened by somebody calling me. I sat up and rubbed my eyes; it was broad
daylight—eight o’clock, in fact.
“Why, what is the matter with you, John?” I asked of the gyp who
waited on Vincey and myself. “You look as though you had seen a
ghost!”
“Yes, sir, and so I have,” he answered, “leastways I’ve
seen a corpse, which is worse. I’ve been in to call Mr. Vincey, as usual,
and there he lies stark and dead!”
II.
THE YEARS ROLL BY
As might be expected, poor Vincey’s sudden death created a great stir in
the College; but, as he was known to be very ill, and a satisfactory
doctor’s certificate was forthcoming, there was no inquest. They were not
so particular about inquests in those days as they are now; indeed, they were
generally disliked, because of the scandal. Under all these circumstances,
being asked no questions, I did not feel called upon to volunteer any
information about our interview on the night of Vincey’s decease, beyond
saying that he had come into my rooms to see me, as he often did. On the day of
the funeral a lawyer came down from London and followed my poor friend’s
remains to the grave, and then went back with his papers and effects, except,
of course, the iron chest which had been left in my keeping. For a week after
this I heard no more of the matter, and, indeed, my attention was amply
occupied in other ways, for I was up for my Fellowship, a fact that had
prevented me from attending the funeral or seeing the lawyer. At last, however,
the examination was over, and I came back to my rooms and sank into an easy
chair with a happy consciousness that I had got through it very fairly.
Soon, however, my thoughts, relieved of the pressure that had crushed them into
a single groove during the last few days, turned to the events of the night of
poor Vincey’s death, and again I asked myself what it all meant, and
wondered if I should hear anything more of the matter, and if I did not, what
it would be my duty to do with the curious iron chest. I sat there and thought
and thought till I began to grow quite disturbed over the whole occurrence: the
mysterious midnight visit, the prophecy of death so shortly to be fulfilled,
the solemn oath that I had taken, and which Vincey had called on me to answer
to in another world than this. Had the man committed suicide? It looked like
it. And what was the quest of which he spoke? The circumstances were uncanny,
so much so that, though I am by no means nervous, or apt to be alarmed at
anything that may seem to cross the bounds of the natural, I grew afraid, and
began to wish I had nothing to do with them. How much more do I wish it now,
over twenty years afterwards!
As I sat and thought, there came a knock at the door, and a letter, in a big
blue envelope, was brought in to me. I saw at a glance that it was a
lawyer’s letter, and an instinct told me that it was connected with my
trust. The letter, which I still have, runs thus:—
“Sir,—Our client, the late M. L. Vincey, Esq., who died on the 9th
instant in —— College, Cambridge, has left behind him a Will, of
which you will please find copy enclosed and of which we are the executors.
Under this Will you will perceive that you take a life-interest in about half
of the late Mr. Vincey’s property, now invested in Consols, subject to
your acceptance of the guardianship of his only son, Leo Vincey, at present an
infant, aged five. Had we not ourselves drawn up the document in question in
obedience to Mr. Vincey’s clear and precise instructions, both personal
and written, and had he not then assured us that he had very good reasons for
what he was doing, we are bound to tell you that its provisions seem to us of
so unusual a nature, that we should have felt bound to call the attention of
the Court of Chancery to them, in order that such steps might be taken as
seemed desirable to it, either by contesting the capacity of the testator or
otherwise, to safeguard the interests of the infant. As it is, knowing that the
testator was a gentleman of the highest intelligence and acumen, and that he
has absolutely no relations living to whom he could have confided the
guardianship of the child, we do not feel justified in taking this course.
“Awaiting such instructions as you please to send us as regards the
delivery of the infant and the payment of the proportion of the dividends due
to you,
“We remain, Sir, faithfully yours,
“Geoffrey and Jordan.
“Horace L. Holly, Esq.”
I put down the letter, and ran my eye through the Will, which appeared, from
its utter unintelligibility, to have been drawn on the strictest legal
principles. So far as I could discover, however, it exactly bore out what my
friend Vincey had told me on the night of his death. So it was true after all.
I must take the boy. Suddenly I remembered the letter which Vincey had left
with the chest. I fetched and opened it. It only contained such directions as
he had already given to me as to opening the chest on Leo’s twenty-fifth
birthday, and laid down the outlines of the boy’s education, which was to
include Greek, the higher Mathematics, and Arabic. At the end there was
a postscript to the effect that if the boy died under the age of twenty-five,
which, however, he did not believe would be the case, I was to open the chest,
and act on the information I obtained if I saw fit. If I did not see fit, I was
to destroy all the contents. On no account was I to pass them on to a stranger.
As this letter added nothing material to my knowledge, and certainly raised no
further objection in my mind to entering on the task I had promised my dead
friend to undertake, there was only one course open to me—namely, to
write to Messrs. Geoffrey and Jordan, and express my acceptance of the trust,
stating that I should be willing to commence my guardianship of Leo in ten
days’ time. This done I went to the authorities of my college, and,
having told them as much of the story as I considered desirable, which was not
very much, after considerable difficulty succeeded in persuading them to
stretch a point, and, in the event of my having obtained a fellowship, which I
was pretty certain I had done, allow me to have the child to live with me.
Their consent, however, was only granted on the condition that I vacated my
rooms in college and took lodgings. This I did, and with some difficulty
succeeded in obtaining very good apartments quite close to the college gates.
The next thing was to find a nurse. And on this point I came to a
determination. I would have no woman to lord it over me about the child, and
steal his affections from me. The boy was old enough to do without female
assistance, so I set to work to hunt up a suitable male attendant. With some
difficulty I succeeded in hiring a most respectable round-faced young man, who
had been a helper in a hunting-stable, but who said that he was one of a family
of seventeen and well-accustomed to the ways of children, and professed himself
quite willing to undertake the charge of Master Leo when he arrived. Then,
having taken the iron box to town, and with my own hands deposited it at my
banker’s, I bought some books upon the health and management of children
and read them, first to myself, and then aloud to Job—that was the young
man’s name—and waited.
At length the child arrived in the charge of an elderly person, who wept
bitterly at parting with him, and a beautiful boy he was. Indeed, I do not
think that I ever saw such a perfect child before or since. His eyes were grey,
his forehead was broad, and his face, even at that early age, clean cut as a
cameo, without being pinched or thin. But perhaps his most attractive point was
his hair, which was pure gold in colour and tightly curled over his shapely
head. He cried a little when his nurse finally tore herself away and left him
with us. Never shall I forget the scene. There he stood, with the sunlight from
the window playing upon his golden curls, his fist screwed over one eye, whilst
he took us in with the other. I was seated in a chair, and stretched out my
hand to him to induce him to come to me, while Job, in the corner, was making a
sort of clucking noise, which, arguing from his previous experience, or from
the analogy of the hen, he judged would have a soothing effect, and inspire
confidence in the youthful mind, and running a wooden horse of peculiar
hideousness backwards and forwards in a way that was little short of inane.
This went on for some minutes, and then all of a sudden the lad stretched out
both his little arms and ran to me.
“I like you,” he said: “you is ugly, but you is good.”
Ten minutes afterwards he was eating large slices of bread and butter, with
every sign of satisfaction; Job wanted to put jam on to them, but I sternly
reminded him of the excellent works that we had read, and forbade it.
In a very little while (for, as I expected, I got my fellowship) the boy became
the favourite of the whole College—where, all orders and regulations to
the contrary notwithstanding, he was continually in and out—a sort of
chartered libertine, in whose favour all rules were relaxed. The offerings made
at his shrine were simply without number, and I had serious difference of
opinion with one old resident Fellow, now long dead, who was usually supposed
to be the crustiest man in the University, and to abhor the sight of a child.
And yet I discovered, when a frequently recurring fit of sickness had forced
Job to keep a strict look-out, that this unprincipled old man was in the habit
of enticing the boy to his rooms and there feeding him upon unlimited
quantities of brandy-balls, and making him promise to say nothing about it. Job
told him that he ought to be ashamed of himself, “at his age, too, when
he might have been a grandfather if he had done what was right,” by which
Job understood had got married, and thence arose the row.
But I have no space to dwell upon those delightful years, around which memory
still fondly hovers. One by one they went by, and as they passed we two grew
dearer and yet more dear to each other. Few sons have been loved as I love Leo,
and few fathers know the deep and continuous affection that Leo bears to me.
The child grew into the boy, and the boy into the young man, while one by one
the remorseless years flew by, and as he grew and increased so did his beauty
and the beauty of his mind grow with him. When he was about fifteen they used
to call him Beauty about the College, and me they nicknamed the Beast. Beauty
and the Beast was what they called us when we went out walking together, as we
used to do every day. Once Leo attacked a great strapping butcher’s man,
twice his size, because he sang it out after us, and thrashed him,
too—thrashed him fairly. I walked on and pretended not to see, till the
combat got too exciting, when I turned round and cheered him on to victory. It
was the chaff of the College at the time, but I could not help it. Then when he
was a little older the undergraduates found fresh names for us. They called me
Charon, and Leo the Greek god! I will pass over my own appellation with the
humble remark that I was never handsome, and did not grow more so as I grew
older. As for his, there was no doubt about its fitness. Leo at twenty-one
might have stood for a statue of the youthful Apollo. I never saw anybody to
touch him in looks, or anybody so absolutely unconscious of them. As for his
mind, he was brilliant and keen-witted, but not a scholar. He had not the
dulness necessary for that result. We followed out his father’s
instructions as regards his education strictly enough, and on the whole the
results, especially in the matters of Greek and Arabic, were satisfactory. I
learnt the latter language in order to help to teach it to him, but after five
years of it he knew it as well as I did—almost as well as the professor
who instructed us both. I always was a great sportsman—it is my one
passion—and every autumn we went away somewhere shooting or fishing,
sometimes to Scotland, sometimes to Norway, once even to Russia. I am a good
shot, but even in this he learnt to excel me.
When Leo was eighteen I moved back into my rooms, and entered him at my own
College, and at twenty-one he took his degree—a respectable degree, but
not a very high one. Then it was that I, for the first time, told him something
of his own story, and of the mystery that loomed ahead. Of course he was very
curious about it, and of course I explained to him that his curiosity could not
be gratified at present. After that, to pass the time away, I suggested that he
should get himself called to the Bar; and this he did, reading at Cambridge,
and only going up to London to eat his dinners.
I had only one trouble about him, and that was that every young woman who came
across him, or, if not every one, nearly so, would insist on falling in love
with him. Hence arose difficulties which I need not enter into here, though
they were troublesome enough at the time. On the whole, he behaved fairly well;
I cannot say more than that.
And so the time went by till at last he reached his twenty-fifth birthday, at
which date this strange and, in some ways, awful history really begins.
III.
THE SHERD OF AMENARTAS
On the day preceding Leo’s twenty-fifth birthday we both journeyed to
London, and extracted the mysterious chest from the bank where I had deposited
it twenty years before. It was, I remember, brought up by the same clerk who
had taken it down. He perfectly remembered having hidden it away. Had he not
done so, he said, he should have had difficulty in finding it, it was so
covered up with cobwebs.
In the evening we returned with our precious burden to Cambridge, and I think
that we might both of us have given away all the sleep we got that night and
not have been much the poorer. At daybreak Leo arrived in my room in a
dressing-gown, and suggested that we should at once proceed to business. I
scouted the idea as showing an unworthy curiosity. The chest had waited twenty
years, I said, so it could very well continue to wait until after breakfast.
Accordingly at nine—an unusually sharp nine—we breakfasted; and so
occupied was I with my own thoughts that I regret to state that I put a piece
of bacon into Leo’s tea in mistake for a lump of sugar. Job, too, to whom
the contagion of excitement had, of course, spread, managed to break the handle
off my Sèvres china tea-cup, the identical one I believe that Marat had been
drinking from just before he was stabbed in his bath.
At last, however, breakfast was cleared away, and Job, at my request, fetched
the chest, and placed it upon the table in a somewhat gingerly fashion, as
though he mistrusted it. Then he prepared to leave the room.
“Stop a moment, Job,” I said. “If Mr. Leo has no objection, I
should prefer to have an independent witness to this business, who can be
relied upon to hold his tongue unless he is asked to speak.”
“Certainly, Uncle Horace,” answered Leo; for I had brought him up
to call me uncle—though he varied the appellation somewhat
disrespectfully by calling me “old fellow,” or even “my
avuncular relative.”
Job touched his head, not having a hat on.
“Lock the door, Job,” I said, “and bring me my
despatch-box.”
He obeyed, and from the box I took the keys that poor Vincey, Leo’s
father, had given me on the night of his death. There were three of them; the
largest a comparatively modern key, the second an exceedingly ancient one, and
the third entirely unlike anything of the sort that we had ever seen before,
being fashioned apparently from a strip of solid silver, with a bar placed
across to serve as a handle, and leaving some nicks cut in the edge of the bar.
It was more like a model of an antediluvian railway key than anything else.
“Now are you both ready?” I said, as people do when they are going
to fire a mine. There was no answer, so I took the big key, rubbed some salad
oil into the wards, and after one or two bad shots, for my hands were shaking,
managed to fit it, and shoot the lock. Leo bent over and caught the massive lid
in both his hands, and with an effort, for the hinges had rusted, forced it
back. Its removal revealed another case covered with dust. This we extracted
from the iron chest without any difficulty, and removed the accumulated filth
of years from it with a clothes-brush.
It was, or appeared to be, of ebony, or some such close-grained black wood, and
was bound in every direction with flat bands of iron. Its antiquity must have
been extreme, for the dense heavy wood was in parts actually commencing to
crumble from age.
“Now for it,” I said, inserting the second key.
Job and Leo bent forward in breathless silence. The key turned, and I flung
back the lid, and uttered an exclamation, and no wonder, for inside the ebony
case was a magnificent silver casket, about twelve inches square by eight high.
It appeared to be of Egyptian workmanship, and the four legs were formed of
Sphinxes, and the dome-shaped cover was also surmounted by a Sphinx. The casket
was of course much tarnished and dinted with age, but otherwise in fairly sound
condition.
I drew it out and set it on the table, and then, in the midst of the most
perfect silence, I inserted the strange-looking silver key, and pressed this
way and that until at last the lock yielded, and the casket stood before us. It
was filled to the brim with some brown shredded material, more like vegetable
fibre than paper, the nature of which I have never been able to discover. This
I carefully removed to the depth of some three inches, when I came to a letter
enclosed in an ordinary modern-looking envelope, and addressed in the
handwriting of my dead friend Vincey.
“To my son Leo, should he live to open this casket.”
I handed the letter to Leo, who glanced at the envelope, and then put it down
upon the table, making a motion to me to go on emptying the casket.
The next thing that I found was a parchment carefully rolled up. I unrolled it,
and seeing that it was also in Vincey’s handwriting, and headed,
“Translation of the Uncial Greek Writing on the Potsherd,” put it
down by the letter. Then followed another ancient roll of parchment, that had
become yellow and crinkled with the passage of years. This I also unrolled. It
was likewise a translation of the same Greek original, but into black-letter
Latin, which at the first glance from the style and character appeared to me to
date from somewhere about the beginning of the sixteenth century. Immediately
beneath this roll was something hard and heavy, wrapped up in yellow linen, and
reposing upon another layer of the fibrous material. Slowly and carefully we
unrolled the linen, exposing to view a very large but undoubtedly ancient
potsherd of a dirty yellow colour! This potsherd had in my judgment, once been
a part of an ordinary amphora of medium size. For the rest, it measured ten and
a half inches in length by seven in width, was about a quarter of an inch
thick, and densely covered on the convex side that lay towards the bottom of
the box with writing in the later uncial Greek character, faded here and there,
but for the most part perfectly legible, the inscription having evidently been
executed with the greatest care, and by means of a reed pen, such as the
ancients often used. I must not forget to mention that in some remote age this
wonderful fragment had been broken in two, and rejoined by means of cement and
eight long rivets. Also there were numerous inscriptions on the inner side, but
these were of the most erratic character, and had clearly been made by
different hands and in many different ages, and of them, together with the
writings on the parchments, I shall have to speak presently.
![[Illustration]](https://img.gamelinxhub.com/images/plate1.jpg)
FACSIMILE OF THE SHERD OF AMENARTAS
One 1/2 size
Greatest length of the original 10½ inches
Greatest breadth 7 inches
Weight 1lb 5½ oz
![[Illustration]](https://img.gamelinxhub.com/images/plate2.jpg)
FACSIMILE OF THE SHERD OF AMENARTAS
One 1/2 size
“Is there anything more?” asked Leo, in a kind of excited whisper.
I groped about, and produced something hard, done up in a little linen bag. Out
of the bag we took first a very beautiful miniature done upon ivory, and
secondly, a small chocolate-coloured composition scarabæus, marked
thus:—
![[Illustration]](https://img.gamelinxhub.com/images/fig01.jpg)
symbols which, we have since ascertained, mean “Suten se Ra,” which
is being translated the “Royal Son of Ra or the Sun.” The miniature
was a picture of Leo’s Greek mother—a lovely, dark-eyed creature.
On the back of it was written, in poor Vincey’s handwriting, “My
beloved wife.”
“That is all,” I said.
“Very well,” answered Leo, putting down the miniature, at which he
had been gazing affectionately; “and now let us read the letter,”
and without further ado he broke the seal, and read aloud as follows:—
“My Son Leo,—When you open this, if you ever live to do so, you
will have attained to manhood, and I shall have been long enough dead to be
absolutely forgotten by nearly all who knew me. Yet in reading it remember that
I have been, and for anything you know may still be, and that in it, through
this link of pen and paper, I stretch out my hand to you across the gulf of
death, and my voice speaks to you from the silence of the grave. Though I am
dead, and no memory of me remains in your mind, yet am I with you in this hour
that you read. Since your birth to this day I have scarcely seen your face.
Forgive me this. Your life supplanted the life of one whom I loved better than
women are often loved, and the bitterness of it endureth yet. Had I lived I
should in time have conquered this foolish feeling, but I am not destined to
live. My sufferings, physical and mental, are more than I can bear, and when
such small arrangements as I have to make for your future well-being are
completed it is my intention to put a period to them. May God forgive me if I
do wrong. At the best I could not live more than another year.”
“So he killed himself,” I exclaimed. “I thought so.”
“And now,” Leo went on, without replying, “enough of myself.
What has to be said belongs to you who live, not to me, who am dead, and almost
as much forgotten as though I had never been. Holly, my friend (to whom, if he
will accept the trust, it is my intention to confide you), will have told you
something of the extraordinary antiquity of your race. In the contents of this
casket you will find sufficient to prove it. The strange legend that you will
find inscribed by your remote ancestress upon the potsherd was communicated to
me by my father on his deathbed, and took a strong hold in my imagination. When
I was only nineteen years of age I determined, as, to his misfortune, did one
of our ancestors about the time of Elizabeth, to investigate its truth. Into
all that befell me I cannot enter now. But this I saw with my own eyes. On the
coast of Africa, in a hitherto unexplored region, some distance to the north of
where the Zambesi falls into the sea, there is a headland, at the extremity of
which a peak towers up, shaped like the head of a negro, similar to that of
which the writing speaks. I landed there, and learnt from a wandering native,
who had been cast out by his people because of some crime which he had
committed, that far inland are great mountains, shaped like cups, and caves
surrounded by measureless swamps. I learnt also that the people there speak a
dialect of Arabic, and are ruled over by a beautiful white woman who is
seldom seen by them, but who is reported to have power over all things living
and dead. Two days after I had ascertained this the man died of fever
contracted in crossing the swamps, and I was forced by want of provisions and
by symptoms of an illness which afterwards prostrated me to take to my dhow
again.
“Of the adventures that befell me after this I need not now speak. I was
wrecked upon the coast of Madagascar, and rescued some months afterwards by an
English ship that brought me to Aden, whence I started for England, intending
to prosecute my search as soon as I had made sufficient preparations. On my way
I stopped in Greece, and there, for ‘Omnia vincit amor,’ I met your
beloved mother, and married her, and there you were born and she died. Then it
was that my last illness seized me, and I returned hither to die. But still I
hoped against hope, and set myself to work to learn Arabic, with the intention,
should I ever get better, of returning to the coast of Africa, and solving the
mystery of which the tradition has lived so many centuries in our family. But I
have not got better, and, so far as I am concerned, the story is at an end.
“For you, however, my son, it is not at an end, and to you I hand on
these the results of my labour, together with the hereditary proofs of its
origin. It is my intention to provide that they shall not be put into your
hands until you have reached an age when you will be able to judge for yourself
whether or no you will choose to investigate what, if it is true, must be the
greatest mystery in the world, or to put it by as an idle fable, originating in
the first place in a woman’s disordered brain.
“I do not believe that it is a fable; I believe that if it can only be
re-discovered there is a spot where the vital forces of the world visibly
exist. Life exists; why therefore should not the means of preserving it
indefinitely exist also? But I have no wish to prejudice your mind about the
matter. Read and judge for yourself. If you are inclined to undertake the
search, I have so provided that you will not lack for means. If, on the other
hand, you are satisfied that the whole thing is a chimera, then, I adjure you,
destroy the potsherd and the writings, and let a cause of troubling be removed
from our race for ever. Perhaps that will be wisest. The unknown is generally
taken to be terrible, not as the proverb would infer, from the inherent
superstition of man, but because it so often is terrible. He who would
tamper with the vast and secret forces that animate the world may well fall a
victim to them. And if the end were attained, if at last you emerged from the
trial ever beautiful and ever young, defying time and evil, and lifted above
the natural decay of flesh and intellect, who shall say that the awesome change
would prove a happy one? Choose, my son, and may the Power who rules all
things, and who says ‘thus far shalt thou go, and thus much shalt thou
learn,’ direct the choice to your own happiness and the happiness of the
world, which, in the event of your success, you would one day certainly rule by
the pure force of accumulated experience.— Farewell!”
Thus the letter, which was unsigned and undated, abruptly ended.
“What do you make of that, Uncle Holly,” said Leo, with a sort of
gasp, as he replaced it on the table. “We have been looking for a
mystery, and we certainly seem to have found one.”
“What do I make of it? Why, that your poor dear father was off his head,
of course,” I answered, testily. “I guessed as much that night,
twenty years ago, when he came into my room. You see he evidently hurried his
own end, poor man. It is absolute balderdash.”
“That’s it, sir!” said Job, solemnly. Job was a most
matter-of-fact specimen of a matter-of-fact class.
“Well, let’s see what the potsherd has to say, at any rate,”
said Leo, taking up the translation in his father’s writing, and
commencing to read:—
“I, Amenartas, of the Royal House of the Pharaohs of Egypt, wife of
Kallikrates (the Beautiful in Strength), a Priest of Isis whom the gods cherish
and the demons obey, being about to die, to my little son Tisisthenes (the
Mighty Avenger). I fled with thy father from Egypt in the days of
Nectanebes,[1] causing
him through love to break the vows that he had vowed. We fled southward, across
the waters, and we wandered for twice twelve moons on the coast of Libya
(Africa) that looks towards the rising sun, where by a river is a great rock
carven like the head of an Ethiopian. Four days on the water from the mouth of
a mighty river were we cast away, and some were drowned and some died of
sickness. But us wild men took through wastes and marshes, where the sea fowl
hid the sky, bearing us ten days’ journey till we came to a hollow
mountain, where a great city had been and fallen, and where there are caves of
which no man hath seen the end; and they brought us to the Queen of the people
who place pots upon the heads of strangers, who is a magician having a
knowledge of all things, and life and loveliness that does not die. And she
cast eyes of love upon thy father, Kallikrates, and would have slain me, and
taken him to husband, but he loved me and feared her, and would not. Then did
she take us, and lead us by terrible ways, by means of dark magic, to where the
great pit is, in the mouth of which the old philosopher lay dead, and showed to
us the rolling Pillar of Life that dies not, whereof the voice is as the voice
of thunder; and she did stand in the flames, and come forth unharmed, and yet
more beautiful. Then did she swear to make thy father undying even as she is,
if he would but slay me, and give himself to her, for me she could not slay
because of the magic of my own people that I have, and that prevailed thus far
against her. And he held his hand before his eyes to hide her beauty, and would
not. Then in her rage did she smite him by her magic, and he died; but she wept
over him, and bore him thence with lamentations: and being afraid, me she sent
to the mouth of the great river where the ships come, and I was carried far
away on the ships where I gave thee birth, and hither to Athens I came at last
after many wanderings. Now I say to thee, my son, Tisisthenes, seek out the
woman, and learn the secret of Life, and if thou mayest find a way slay her,
because of thy father Kallikrates; and if thou dost fear or fail, this I say to
all thy seed who come after thee, till at last a brave man be found among them
who shall bathe in the fire and sit in the place of the Pharaohs. I speak of
those things, that though they be past belief, yet I have known, and I lie
not.”
[1]
Nekht-nebf, or Nectanebo II., the last native Pharaoh of Egypt, fled from Ochus
to Ethiopia, B.C. 339.—Editor.
“May the Lord forgive her for that,” groaned Job, who had been
listening to this marvellous composition with his mouth open.
As for myself, I said nothing: my first idea being that my poor friend, being
demented, had composed the whole thing, though it scarcely seemed likely that
such a story could have been invented by anybody. It was too original. To solve
my doubts I took up the potsherd and began to read the close uncial Greek
writing on it; and very good Greek of the period it is, considering that it
came from the pen of an Egyptian born. Here is an exact transcript of
it:—
ΑΜΕΝΑΡΤΑΣΤΟΥΒΑΣΙΛΙΚΟΥΓΕΝΟΥΣΤΟΥΑΙΓΥΠΤΙΟΥΗΤΟΥΚΑΛΛΙΚΡΑΤΟΥΣΙΣΙΔΟΣΙΕΡΕΩΣΗΝΟ
ΙΜΕΝΘΕΟΙΤΡΕΦΟΥΣΙΤΑΔΕΔΑΙΜΟΝΙΑΥΠΟΤΑΣΣΕΤΑΙΗΔΗΤΕΛΕΥΤΩΣΑΤΙΣΙΣΘΕΝΕΙΤΩΠΑΙΔΙΕΠ
ΙΣΤΕΛΛΕΙΤΑΔΕΣΥΝΕΦΥΓΟΝΓΑΡΠΟΤΕΕΚΤΗΣΑΙΓΥΠΤΙΑΣΕΠΙΝΕΚΤΑΝΕΒΟΥΜΕΤΑΤΟΥΣΟΥΠΑΤΡΟ
ΣΔΙΑΤΟΝΕΡΩΤΑΤΟΝΕΜΟΝΕΠΙΟΡΚΗΣΑΝΤΟΣΦΥΓΟΝΤΕΣΔΕΠΡΟΣΝΟΤΟΝΔΙΑΠΟΝΤΙΟΙΚΑΙΚΔΜΗΝΑ
ΣΚΑΤΑΤΑΠΑΡΑΘΑΛΑΣΣΙΑΤΗΣΛΙΒΥΗΣΤΑΠΡΟΣΗΛΙΟΥΑΝΑΤΟΛΑΣΠΛΑΝΗΘΕΝΤΕΣΕΝΘΑΠΕΡΠΕΤΡΑ
ΤΙΣΜΕΓΑΛΗΓΛΥΠΤΟΝΟΜΟΙΩΜΑΑΙΘΙΟΠΟΣΚΕΦΑΛΗΣΕΙΤΑΗΜΕΡΑΣΔΑΠΟΣΤΟΜΑΤΟΣΠΟΤΑΜΟΥΜΕΓ
ΑΛΟΥΕΚΠΕΣΟΝΤΕΣΟΙΜΕΝΚΑΤΕΠΟΝΤΙΣΘΗΜΕΝΟΙΔΕΝΟΣΩΙΑΠΕΘΑΝΟΜΕΝΤΕΛΟΣΔΕΥΠΑΓΡΙΩΝΑΝ
ΘΡΩΠΩΝΕΦΕΡΟΜΕΘΑΔΙΑΕΛΕΩΝΤΕΚΑΙΤΕΝΑΓΕΩΝΕΝΘΑΠΕΡΠΤΗΝΩΝΠΛΗΘΟΣΑΠΟΚΡΥΠΤΕΙΤΟΝΟΥ
ΡΑΝΟΝΗΜΕΡΑΣΙΕΩΣΗΛΘΟΜΕΝΕΙΣΚΟΙΛΟΝΤΙΟΡΟΣΕΝΘΑΠΟΤΕΜΕΓΑΛΗΜΕΝΠΟΛΙΣΗΝΑΝΤΡΑΔΕΑΠ
ΕΙΡΟΝΑΗΓΑΓΟΝΔΕΩΣΒΑΣΙΛΕΙΑΝΤΗΝΤΩΝΞΕΝΟΥΣΧΥΤΡΑΙΣΣΤΕΦΑΝΟΥΝΤΩΝΗΤΙΣΜΑΓΕΙΑΜΕΝΕ
ΧΡΗΤΟΕΠΙΣΤΗΜΗΔΕΠΑΝΤΩΝΚΑΙΔΗΚΑΙΚΑΛΛΟΣΚΑΙΡΩΜΗΝΑΓΗΡΩΣΗΝΗΔΕΚΑΛΛΙΚΡΑΤΟΥΣΤΟΥΣ
ΟΥΠΑΤΡΟΣΕΡΑΣΘΕΙΣΑΤΟΜΕΝΠΡΩΤΟΝΣΥΝΟΙΚΕΙΝΕΒΟΥΛΕΤΟΕΜΕΔΕΑΝΕΛΕΙΝΕΠΕΙΤΑΩΣΟΥΚΑΝ
ΕΠΕΙΘΕΝΕΜΕΓΑΡΥΠΕΡΕΦΙΛΕΙΚΑΙΤΗΝΞΕΝΗΝΕΦΟΒΕΙΤΟΑΠΗΓΑΓΕΝΗΜΑΣΥΠΟΜΑΓΕΙΑΣΚΑΘΟΔΟ
ΥΣΣΦΑΛΕΡΑΣΕΝΘΑΤΟΒΑΡΑΘΡΟΝΤΟΜΕΓΑΟΥΚΑΤΑΣΤΟΜΑΕΚΕΙΤΟΟΓΕΡΩΝΟΦΙΛΟΣΟΦΟΣΤΕΘΝΕΩΣ
ΑΦΙΚΟΜΕΝΟΙΣΔΕΔΕΙΞΕΦΩΣΤΟΥΒΙΟΥΕΥΘΥΟΙΟΝΚΙΟΝΑΕΛΙΣΣΟΜΕΝΟΝΦΩΝΗΝΙΕΝΤΑΚΑΘΑΠΕΡΒ
ΡΟΝΤΗΣΕΙΤΑΔΙΑΠΥΡΟΣΒΕΒΗΚΥΙΑΑΒΛΑΒΗΣΚΑΙΕΤΙΚΑΛΛΙΩΝΑΥΤΗΕΑΥΤΗΣΕΞΕΦΑΝΗΕΚΔΕΤΟΥ
ΤΩΝΩΜΟΣΕΚΑΙΤΟΝΣΟΝΠΑΤΕΡΑΑΘΑΝΑΤΟΝΑΠΟΔΕΙΞΕΙΝΕΙΣΥΝΟΙΚΕΙΝΟΙΒΟΥΛΟΙΤΟΕΜΕΔΕΑΝΕ
ΛΕΙΝΟΥΓΑΡΟΥΝΑΥΤΗΑΝΕΛΕΙΝΙΣΧΥΕΝΥΠΟΤΩΝΗΜΕΔΑΠΩΝΗΝΚΑΙΑΥΤΗΕΧΩΜΑΓΕΙΑΣΟΔΟΥΔΕΝΤ
ΙΜΑΛΛΟΝΗΘΕΛΕΤΩΧΕΙΡΕΤΩΝΟΜΜΑΤΩΝΠΡΟΙΣΧΩΝΙΝΑΔΗΤΟΤΗΣΓΥΝΑΙΚΟΣΚΑΛΛΟΣΜΗΟΡΩΗΕΠΕ
ΙΤΑΟΡΓΙΣΘΕΙΣΑΚΑΤΕΓΟΗΤΕΥΣΕΜΕΝΑΥΤΟΝΑΠΟΛΟΜΕΝΟΝΜΕΝΤΟΙΚΛΑΟΥΣΑΚΑΙΟΔΥΡΟΜΕΝΗΕΚ
ΕΙΘΕΝΑΠΗΝΕΓΚΕΝΕΜΕΔΕΦΟΒΩΙΑΦΗΚΕΝΕΙΣΣΤΟΜΑΤΟΥΜΕΓΑΛΟΥΠΟΤΑΜΟΥΤΟΥΝΑΥΣΙΠΟΡΟΥΠΟ
ΡΡΩΔΕΝΑΥΣΙΝΕΦΩΝΠΕΡΠΛΕΟΥΣΑΕΤΕΚΟΝΣΕΑΠΟΠΛΕΥΣΑΣΑΜΟΛΙΣΠΟΤΕΔΕΥΡΟΑΘΗΝΑΖΕΚΑΤΗΓ
ΑΓΟΜΗΝΣΥΔΕΩΤΙΣΙΣΘΕΝΕΣΩΝΕΠΙΣΤΕΛΛΩΜΗΟΛΙΓΩΡΕΙΔΕΙΓΑΡΤΗΝΓΥΝΑΙΚΑΑΝΑΖΗΤΕΙΝΗΝΠ
ΩΣΤΟΤΟΥΒΙΟΥΜΥΣΤΗΡΙΟΝΑΝΕΥΡΗΣΚΑΙΑΝΑΙΡΕΙΝΗΝΠΟΥΠΑΡΑΣΧΗΔΙΑΤΟΝΣΟΝΠΑΤΕΡΑΚΑΛΛΙ
ΚΡΑΤΗΝΕΙΔΕΦΟΒΟΥΜΕΝΟΣΗΔΙΑΑΛΛΟΤΙΑΥΤΟΣΛΕΙΠΕΙΤΟΥΕΡΓΟΥΠΑΣΙΤΟΙΣΥΣΤΕΡΟΝΑΥΤΟΤΟ
ΥΤΟΕΠΙΣΤΕΛΛΩΕΩΣΠΟΤΕΑΓΑΘΟΣΤΙΣΓΕΝΟΜΕΝΟΣΤΩΠΥΡΙΛΟΥΣΑΣΘΑΙΤΟΛΜΗΣΕΙΚΑΙΤΑΑΡΙΣΤ
ΕΙΑΕΧΩΝΒΑΣΙΛΕΥΣΑΙΤΩΝΑΝΘΡΩΠΩΝΑΠΙΣΤΑΜΕΝΔΗΤΑΤΟΙΑΥΤΑΛΕΓΩΟΜΩΣΔΕΑΑΥΤΗΕΓΝΩΚΑΟ
ΥΚΕΨΕΥΣΑΜΗΝ
For general convenience in reading, I have here accurately transcribed this
inscription into the cursive character.
Ἀμενάρτας, τοῦ βασικοῦ γένους τοῦ Αἰγυπτίου, ἡ τοῦ Καλλικράτους Ἴσιδος ἱερέως,
ἣν οἱ μὲν θεοὶ τρέφουσι τὰ δὲ δαιμονια ὑποτάσσεται, ἤδη τελευτῶσα Τισισθένει τῷ
παιδὶ ἐπιστέλλει τάδε· συνέφυγον γάρ ποτε ἐκ τῆς Αἰγυπτίας ἐπὶ Νεκτανέβου μετὰ
τοῦ σοῦ πατρός, διὰ τὸν ἔρωτα τὸν ἐμὸν ἐπιορκήσαντος. φυγόντες δὲ πρὸς νότον
διαπόντιοι καὶ κʹδʹ μῆνας κατὰ τὰ παραθαλάσσια τῆς Αιβύης τὰ πρός ἡλίου
ἀνατολὰς πλανηθέντες, ἔνθαπερ πέτρα τις μελάλη, γλυπτὸν ὁμοίωμα Αἰθίοπος
κεφαλῆς, εἶτα ἡμέρας δʹ ἀπὸ στόματος ποταμοῦ μεγάλου ἐκπεσόντες, οἱ μέν
κατεποντίσθημεν, οἱ δὲ νόσῳ ἀπεθάνομεν· τέλος δὲ ὑπ᾽ ἀλρίων ἀνθρώπων ἐφερόμεθα
διὰ ἐλέων τε καὶ τεναλέων ἔνθαπερ πτηνῶν πλῆθος ἀποκρύπτει τὸν οὐρανὸν, ἡμέρας
ί, ἕως ἤλθομεν εἰς κοῖλόν τι ὄρος, ἔνθα ποτὲ μεγάλη μὲν πόλις ἦν, ἄντρα δὲ
ἀπείρονα· ἤγαγον δὲ ὡς βασίλειαν τὴν τῶν ξένους χύτραις στεφανούντων, ἥτις
μαλεία μὲν ἐχρῆτο ἐπιστήμη δὲ πάντων καὶ δὴ καὶ κάλλός καὶ ῥώμην ἀλήρως ἦν· ἡ
δὲ Καλλικράτους τοῦ πατρὸς ἐρασθεῖδα τὸ μὲν πρῶτον συνοικεῖν ἐβούλετο ἐμὲ δὲ
ἀνελεῖν· ἔπειτα, ὡς οὐκ ἀνέπειθεν, ἐμὲ γὰρ ὑπερεφίλει καὶ τὴν ξένην ἐφοβεῖτο,
ἀπήγαγεν ἡμᾶς ὑπὸ μαγείας καθʹ ὁδοὺς σφαλερὰς ἔνθα τὸ βάραθρον τὸ μέγα, οὗ κατὰ
στόμα ἔκειτο ὁ γέρων ὁ φιλόσοφος τεθνεώς, ἀφικομένοις δʹ ἔδειξε φῶς τοῦ βίου
εὐθύ, οἷον κίονα ἑλισσόμενον φώνην ἱέντα καθάπερ βροντῆς, εἶτα διὰ πυρὸς
βεβηκυῖα ἀβλαβὴς καὶ ἔτι καλλίων αὐτὴ ἑαυτῆς ἐξεφάνη. ἐκ δὲ τούτων ὤμοσε καὶ
τὸν σὸν πατέρα ἀθάνατον ἀποδείξειν, εἰ συνοικεῖν οἱ βούλοιτο ἐμὲ δε ὰνελεῖν, οὐ
γὰρ οὖν αὐτὴ ἀνελεῖν ἴσχυεν ὑπὸ τῶν ἡμεδαπῶν ἣν καὶ αὐτὴ ἔχω μαγείας. ὁ δʹ
οὐδέν τι μᾶλλον ἤθελε, τὼ χεῖρε τῶν ὀμμάτων προίσχων ἵνα δὴ τὸ τῆς γυναικὸς
κάλλος μὴ ὁρῴη· ἔπειτα ὀργισθεῖσα κατεγοήτευσε μὲν αὐτόν, ἀπολόμενον μέντοι
κλάουσα καὶ ὀδυρμένη ἐκεῖθεν ἀπήνεγκεν, ἐμὲ δὲ φόβῳ ἀφῆκεν εἰς στόμα τοῦ
μεγάλου ποταμοῦ τοῦ ναυσιπόρου, πόδδω δὲ ναυσίν, ἐφʹ ὧνπερ πλέουσα ἔτεκόν σε,
ἀποπλεύσασα μόλις ποτὲ δεῦρο Ἀθηνάζε κατηγαγόν. σὺ δέ, ὦ Τισίσθενες, ὧν
ἐπιστέλλω μὴ ὀλιγώρει· δεῖ γὰρ τῆν γυναῖκα ἀναζητεῖν ἤν πως τῦ βίου μυστήριον
ἀνεύρῃς, καὶ ἀναιρεῖν, ἤν που παρασχῇ, διὰ τὸν πατέρα Καλλικράτους. εἐ δὲ
φοβούμενος ἢ διὰ ἄλλο τι αὐτὸς λείπει τοῦ ἔργου, πᾶσι τοῖς ὕστερον αὐτὸ τοῦτο
ἐπιστέλλω, ἕως ποτὲ ἀγαθός τις γενόμενος τῷ πυρὶ λούσασθαι τολμήσει καὶ τὰ
ἀριστεῖα ἔχων βασιλεῦσαι τῶν ἀνθρώπων· ἄπιστα μὲν δὴ τὰ τοιαῦτα λέγω, ὅμως δὲ ἃ
αὐτὴ ἔγνωκα οὐκ ἐψευσάμην.
The English translation was, as I discovered on further investigation, and as
the reader may easily see by comparison, both accurate and elegant.
Besides the uncial writing on the convex side of the sherd at the top, painted
in dull red, on what had once been the lip of the amphora, was the cartouche
already mentioned as being on the scarabæus, which we had also found in
the casket. The hieroglyphics or symbols, however, were reversed, just as
though they had been pressed on wax. Whether this was the cartouche of the
original Kallikrates,[2] or
of some Prince or Pharaoh from whom his wife Amenartas was descended, I am not
sure, nor can I tell if it was drawn upon the sherd at the same time that the
uncial Greek was inscribed, or copied on more recently from the Scarab by some
other member of the family. Nor was this all. At the foot of the writing,
painted in the same dull red, was the faint outline of a somewhat rude drawing
of the head and shoulders of a Sphinx wearing two feathers, symbols of majesty,
which, though common enough upon the effigies of sacred bulls and gods, I have
never before met with on a Sphinx.
[2]
The cartouche, if it be a true cartouche, cannot have been that of Kallikrates,
as Mr. Holly suggests. Kallikrates was a priest and not entitled to a
cartouche, which was the prerogative of Egyptian royalty, though he might have
inscribed his name or title upon an oval.—Editor.
Also on the right-hand side of this surface of the sherd, painted obliquely in
red on the space not covered by the uncial characters, and signed in blue
paint, was the following quaint inscription:—
IN EARTH AND SKIE AND SEA
STRANGE THYNGES THER BE.
HOC FECIT
DOROTHEA VINCEY.
Perfectly bewildered, I turned the relic over. It was covered from top to
bottom with notes and signatures in Greek, Latin, and English. The first in
uncial Greek was by Tisisthenes, the son to whom the writing was addressed. It
was, “I could not go. Tisisthenes to his son, Kallikrates.” Here it
is in fac-simile with its cursive equivalent:—
ΟΥΚΑΝΔΥΝΑΙΜΗΝΠΟΡΕΥΕϹΘΑΙΤΙϹΙϹΘΕΝΗϹΚΑΛΛΙΚΡΑΤΕΙΤΩΙΠΑΙΔΙ
οὐκ ἂν δυναίμην πορεύεσθαι. Τισισθένης Καλλικράτει τῷ παιδί.
This Kallikrates (probably, in the Greek fashion, so named after his
grandfather) evidently made some attempt to start on the quest, for his entry
written in very faint and almost illegible uncial is, “I ceased from my
going, the gods being against me. Kallikrates to his son.” Here it is
also:—
ΤΩΝΘΕΩΝΑΝΤΙΣΤΑΝΤΩΝΕΠΑΥΣΑΜΗΝΤΗΣΠΟΡΕΙΑΣΑΛΛΙΚΡΑΤΗΣΤΩΙΠΑΙΔΙ
τῶν θεῶν ἀντιστάντων ἐπαυσάμην τῆς πορείας. Καλλικράτης τῷ παιδί.
Between these two ancient writings, the second of which was inscribed upside
down and was so faint and worn that, had it not been for the transcript of it
executed by Vincey, I should scarcely have been able to read it, since, owing
to its having been written on that portion of the tile which had, in the course
of ages, undergone the most handling, it was nearly rubbed out—was the
bold, modern-looking signature of one Lionel Vincey, “Ætate sua
17,” which was written thereon, I think, by Leo’s grandfather. To
the right of this were the initials “J. B. V.,” and below came a
variety of Greek signatures, in uncial and cursive character, and what appeared
to be some carelessly executed repetitions of the sentence τῷ παιδί (to my
son), showing that the relic was religiously passed on from generation to
generation.
The next legible thing after the Greek signatures was the word “Romae,
A.U.C.,” showing that the family had now migrated to Rome. Unfortunately,
however, with the exception of its termination (evi) the date of their
settlement there is for ever lost, for just where it had been placed a piece of
the potsherd is broken away.
Then followed twelve Latin signatures, jotted about here and there, wherever
there was a space upon the tile suitable to their inscription. These
signatures, with three exceptions only, ended with the name
“Vindex” or “the Avenger,” which seems to have been
adopted by the family after its migration to Rome as a kind of equivalent to
the Greek “Tisisthenes,” which also means an avenger. Ultimately,
as might be expected, this Latin cognomen of Vindex was transformed first into
De Vincey, and then into the plain, modern Vincey. It is very curious to
observe how the idea of revenge, inspired by an Egyptian who lived before the
time of Christ, is thus, as it were, embalmed in an English family name.
A few of the Roman names inscribed upon the sherd I have actually since found
mentioned in history and other records. They were, if I remember right,
MVSSIVS. VINDEX
SEX. VARIVS MARVLLVS
C. FVFIDIVS. C. F. VINDEX
and
LABERIA POMPEIANA. CONIVX. MACRINI. VINDICIS
this last being, of course, the name of a Roman lady.
The following list, however, comprises all the Latin names upon the
sherd:—
C. CAECILIVS VINDEX
M. AIMILIVS VINDEX
SEX. VARIVS. MARVLLVS
Q. SOSIVS PRISCVS SENECIO VINDEX
L. VALERIVS COMINIVS VINDEX
SEX. OTACILIVS. M. F.
L. ATTIVS. VINDEX
MVSSIVS VINDEX
C. FVFIDIVS. C. F. VINDEX
LICINIVS FAVSTVS
LABERIA POMPEIANA CONIVX MACRINI VINDICIS
MANILIA LVCILLA CONIVX MARVLLI VINDICIS
After the Roman names there is evidently a gap of very many centuries. Nobody
will ever know now what was the history of the relic during those dark ages, or
how it came to have been preserved in the family. My poor friend Vincey had, it
will be remembered, told me that his Roman ancestors finally settled in
Lombardy, and when Charlemagne invaded it, returned with him across the Alps,
and made their home in Brittany, whence they crossed to England in the reign of
Edward the Confessor. How he knew this I am not aware, for there is no
reference to Lombardy or Charlemagne upon the tile, though, as will presently
be seen, there is a reference to Brittany. To continue: the next entries on the
sherd, if I may except a long splash either of blood or red colouring matter of
some sort, consist of two crosses drawn in red pigment, and probably
representing Crusaders’ swords, and a rather neat monogram (“D.
V.”) in scarlet and blue, perhaps executed by that same Dorothea Vincey
who wrote, or rather painted, the doggrel couplet. To the left of this,
inscribed in faint blue, were the initials A. V., and after them a date, 1800.
Then came what was perhaps as curious an entry as anything upon this
extraordinary relic of the past. It is executed in black letter, written over
the crosses or Crusaders’ swords, and dated fourteen hundred and
forty-five. As the best plan will be to allow it to speak for itself, I here
give the black-letter fac-simile, together with the original Latin without the
contractions, from which it will be seen that the writer was a fair mediæval
Latinist. Also we discovered what is still more curious, an English version of
the black-letter Latin. This, also written in black letter, we found inscribed
on a second parchment that was in the coffer, apparently somewhat older in date
than that on which was inscribed the mediæval Latin translation of the uncial
Greek of which I shall speak presently. This I also give in full.
Fac-simile of Black-Letter Inscription on the Sherd of Amenartas.
“Iſta reliq̅ia eſt valde miſticu̅ et myrificu̅ op̅s q̅d maiores mei ex
Armorica ſſ Brittania mi̅ore ſecu̅ co̅veheba̅t et q̅dm ſc̅s cleric̅s ſe̅per
p̅ri meo in manu ferebat q̅d pe̅itus illvd deſtrueret, affirma̅s q̅d eſſet ab
ipſo ſathana co̅flatu̅ preſtigioſa et dyabolica arte q̅re p̅ter mevs co̅fregit
illvd i̅ dvas p̅tes q̅s q̅dm ego Johs̅ de Vi̅ceto ſalvas ſervavi et adaptavi
ſicut ap̅paret die lu̅e p̅r̅ poſt feſt beate Mrie vir{g} anni gr̅e
mccccxlv.”
Expanded Version of the above Black-Letter Inscription.
“Ista reliquia est valde misticum et myrificum opus, quod majores mei ex
Armorica, scilicet Britannia Minore, secum convehebant; et et quidam sanctus
clericus semper patri meo in manu ferebat quod penitus illud destrueret,
affirmans quod esset ab ipso Sathana conflatum prestigiosa et dyabolica arte,
quare pater meus confregit illud in duas partes, quas quidem ego Johannes de
Vinceto salvas servavi et adaptavi sicut apparet die lune proximo post festum
beate Marie Virginis anni gratie MCCCCXLV.”
Fac-simile of the Old English Black-Letter Translation of the above Latin
Inscription from the Sherd of Amenartas found inscribed upon a parchment.
“Thys rellike ys a ryghte mistycall worke & a marvaylous yᵉ whyche
myne aunceteres afore tyme dyd conveigh hider wᵗ yᵐ ffrom Armoryke whᵉ ys to
ſeien Britaine yᵉ leſſe & a certayne holye clerke ſhoulde allweyes beare my
ffadir on honde yᵗ he owghte uttirly ffor to ffruſſhe yᵉ ſame affyrmynge yᵗ yt
was ffourmyd & confflatyd off ſathanas hym ſelffe by arte magike &
dyvellyſſhe wherefore my ffadir dyd take yᵉ ſame & to braſt yt yn tweyne
but I John de Vincey dyd ſave whool yᵉ tweye p̄tes therof & topeecyd yᵐ
togydder agayne ſoe as yee ſe on y{s} daye mondaye next ffolowynge after yᵉ
ffeeste of ſeynte Marye yᵉ bleſſed vyrgyne yn yᵉ yeere of ſalvacioun ffowertene
hundreth & ffyve & ffowrti.”
Modernised Version of the above Black-Letter Translation.
“Thys rellike ys a ryghte mistycall worke and a marvaylous, ye whyche
myne aunceteres aforetyme dyd conveigh hider with them from Armoryke which ys
to seien Britaine ye Lesse and a certayne holye clerke should allweyes beare my
fadir on honde that he owghte uttirly for to frusshe ye same, affyrmynge that
yt was fourmed and conflatyed of Sathanas hym selfe by arte magike and
dyvellysshe wherefore my fadir dyd take ye same and tobrast yt yn tweyne, but
I, John de Vincey, dyd save whool ye tweye partes therof and topeecyd them
togydder agayne soe as yee se, on this daye mondaye next followynge after ye
feeste of Seynte Marye ye Blessed Vyrgyne yn ye yeere of Salvacioun fowertene
hundreth and fyve and fowerti.”
The next and, save one, last entry was Elizabethan, and dated 1564. “A
most strange historie, and one that did cost my father his life; for in
seekynge for the place upon the east coast of Africa, his pinnance was sunk by
a Portuguese galleon off Lorenzo Marquez, and he himself perished.—John
Vincey.”
Then came the last entry, apparently, to judge by the style of writing, made by
some representative of the family in the middle of the eighteenth century. It
was a misquotation of the well-known lines in Hamlet, and ran thus:
“There are more things in Heaven and earth than are dreamt of in your
philosophy, Horatio.”[3]
[3]
Another thing that makes me fix the date of this entry at the middle of the
eighteenth century is that, curiously enough, I have an acting copy of
“Hamlet,” written about 1740, in which these two lines are
misquoted almost exactly in the same way, and I have little doubt but that the
Vincey who wrote them on the potsherd heard them so misquoted at that date. Of
course, the lines really run:—
There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.—L. H. H.
And now there remained but one more document to be examined—namely, the
ancient black-letter transcription into mediæval Latin of the uncial
inscription on the sherd. As will be seen, this translation was executed and
subscribed in the year 1495, by a certain “learned man,” Edmundus
de Prato (Edmund Pratt) by name, licentiate in Canon Law, of Exeter College,
Oxford, who had actually been a pupil of Grocyn, the first scholar who taught
Greek in England.[4] No
doubt, on the fame of this new learning reaching his ears, the Vincey of the
day, perhaps that same John de Vincey who years before had saved the relic from
destruction and made the black-letter entry on the sherd in 1445, hurried off
to Oxford to see if perchance it might avail to dissolve the secret of the
mysterious inscription. Nor was he disappointed, for the learned Edmundus was
equal to the task. Indeed his rendering is so excellent an example of mediæval
learning and latinity that, even at the risk of sating the learned reader with
too many antiquities, I have made up my mind to give it in fac-simile, together
with an expanded version for the benefit of those who find the contractions
troublesome. The translation has several peculiarities on which this is not the
place to dwell, but I would in passing call the attention of scholars to the
passage “duxerunt autem nos ad reginam
advenaslasaniscoronantium,” which strikes me as a delightful
rendering of the original, “ἤγαγον δὲ ὡς βασίλειαν τὴν τῶν ξένους χύτραις
στεφανούντων.”
[4]
Grocyn, the instructor of Erasmus, studied Greek under Chalcondylas the
Byzantine at Florence, and first lectured in the Hall of Exeter College,
Oxford, in 1491.—Editor.
mediæval Black-Letter Latin Translation of the Uncial Inscription on the
Sherd of Amenartas
Amenartas e gen. reg. Egyptii uxor Callicratis ſacerdot̅ Iſidis qua̅ dei fove̅t
demonia atte̅du̅t filiol’ ſuo Tiſiſtheni ia̅ moribu̅da ita ma̅dat: Effugi
quo̅da̅ ex Egypto regna̅te Nectanebo cu̅ patre tuo, p̃pter mei amore̅ pejerato.
Fugie̅tes aute̅ v’ſus Notu̅ trans mare et xxiiij me̅ſes p’r litora Libye v’ſus
Orie̅te̅ errant̃ ubi eſt petra queda̅ m̃gna ſculpta inſtar Ethiop̃ capit̃,
deinde dies iiij ab oſt̃ flum̃ m̃gni eiecti p’tim ſubmerſi ſumus p’tim morbo
mortui ſum̃: in fine aute̅ a fer̃ ho̅i̅bs portabamur p̃r palud̃ et vada. ubi
aviu̅ m’titudo celu̅ obu̅brat dies x. donec advenim̃ ad cavu̅ que̅da̅ monte̅,
ubi olim m̃gna urbs erat, caverne quoq̃ im̅e̅ſe: duxeru̅t aute̅ nos ad regina̅
Advenaſlaſaniſcorona̅tiu̅ que magic̃ utebat̃ et peritia omniu̅ rer̃ et ſalte̅
pulcrit̃ et vigore i̅ſe̅eſcibil’ erat. Hec m̃gno patr̃ tui amore p̃culſa p’mu̅
q’de̅ ei con̅ubiu̅ michi morte̅ parabat. poſtea v’ro recuſa̅te Callicrate amore
mei et timore regine affecto nos p̃r magica̅ abduxit p’r vias horribil’ ubi eſt
puteus ille p̃fu̅dus, cuius iuxta aditu̅ iacebat ſenior̃ philoſophi cadaver, et
adve̅ie̅tib̃ mo̅ſtravit flam̅a̅ Vite erecta̅, i̅star columne voluta̅tis, voces
emitte̅te̅ q̃ſi tonitrus: tu̅c p̃r igne̅ i̅petu nociuo expers tra̅ſiit et ia̅
ipsa ſeſe formoſior viſa eſt.
Quib̃ fact̃ iuravit ſe patre̅ tuu̅ quoq̃ im̅ortale̅ oſte̅ſura̅ eſſe, ſi me
prius occiſa regine co̅tuberniu̅ mallet; neq̃ eni̅ ipſa me occidere valuit,
p̃pter noſtratu̅ m̃gica̅ cuius egomet p̃tem habeo. Ille vero nichil huius geñ
maluit, manib ante ocul̃ paſſis ne mulier̃ formoſitate̅ adſpiceret: poſtea eu̅
m̃gica p̃cuſſit arte, at mortuu̅ efferebat i̅de cu̅ fletib̃ et vagitib̃, me p̃r
timore̅ expulit ad oſtiu̅ m̃gni flumiñ veliuoli porro in nave in qua te peperi,
uix poſt dies hvc Athenas invecta ſu̅. At tu, O Tiſiſtheñ, ne q’d quoru̅ ma̅do
nauci fac: neceſſe eni̅ eſt muliere̅ exquirere ſi qva Vite myſteriu̅ i̅petres
et vi̅dicare, qua̅tu̅ in te eſt, patre̅ tuu̅ Callierat̃ in regine morte. Sin
timore ſue aliq̃ cavſa re̅ reli̅quis i̅fecta̅, hoc ipſu̅ oi̅b̃ poſter̃ ma̅do
du̅ bonvs q̃s inveniatur qvi ignis lauacru̅ no̅ p̃rhorreſcet et p̃tentia digñ
do̅i̅abit̃ ho̅i̅u̅.
Talia dico incredibilia q̃de̅ at min̅e ñcta de reb̃ michi cognitis.
Hec Grece scripta Latine reddidit vir doctus Edm̅ds de Prato, in Decretis
Licenciatus e Coll. Exon: Oxon: doctiſſimi Grocyni quondam e pupillis, Id. Apr.
Aᵒ. Dn̅i. MCCCCLXXXXV°.
Expanded Version of the above Mediæval Latin Translation
Amenartas, e genere regio Egyptii, uxor Callicratis, sacerdotis Isidis, quam
dei fovent demonia attendunt, filiolo suo Tisistheni jam moribunda ita mandat:
Effugi quodam ex Egypto, regnante Nectanebo, cum patre tuo, propter mei amorem
pejerato. Fugientes autem versus Notum trans mare, et viginti quatuor menses
per litora Libye versus Orientem errantes, ubi est petra quedam magna sculpta
instar Ethiopis capitis, deinde dies quatuor ab ostio fluminis magni ejecti
partim submersi sumus partim morbo mortui sumus: in fine autem a feris
hominibus portabamur per paludes et vada, ubi avium multitudo celum obumbrat,
dies decem, donec advenimus ad cavum quendam montem, ubi olim magna urbs erat,
caverne quoque immense; duxerunt autem nos ad reginam
Advenaslasaniscoronantium, que magicâ utebatur et peritiá omnium rerum, et
saltem pulcritudine et vigore insenescibilis erat. Hec magno patris tui amore
perculsa, primum quidem ei connubium michi mortem parabat; postea vero,
recusante Callicrate, amore mei et timore regine affecto, nos per magicam
abduxit per vias horribiles ubi est puteus ille profundus, cujus juxta aditum
jacebat senioris philosophi cadaver, et advenientibus monstravit flammam Vite
erectam, instar columne voluntantis, voces emittentem quasi tonitrus: tunc per
ignem impetu nocivo expers transiit et jam ipsa sese formosior visa est.
Quibus factis juravit se patrem tuum quoque immortalem ostensuram esse, si me
prius occisa regine contubernium mallet; neque enim ipsa me occidere valuit,
propter nostratum magicam cujus egomet partem habeo. Ille vero nichil hujus
generis malebat, manibus ante oculos passis, ne mulieris formositatem
adspiceret: postea illum magica percussit arte, at mortuum efferebat inde cum
fletibus et vagitibus, et me per timorem expulit ad ostium magni fluminis,
velivoli, porro in nave, in qua te peperi, vix post dies huc Athenas vecta sum.
At tu, O Tisisthenes, ne quid quorum mando nauci fac: necesse enim est mulierem
exquirere si qua Vite mysterium impetres et vindicare, quautum in te est,
patrem tuum Callieratem in regine morte. Sin timore sue aliqua causa rem
reliquis infectam, hoc ipsum omnibus posteris mando, dum bonus quis inveniatur
qui ignis lavacrum non perhorrescet, et potentia dignus dominabitur hominum.
Talia dico incredibilia quidem at minime ficta de rebus michi cognitis.
Hec Grece scripta Latine reddidit vir doctus Edmundus de Prato, in Descretis
Licenciatus, e Collegio Exoniensi Oxoniensi doctissimi Grocyni quondam e
pupillis, Idibus Aprilis Anno Domini MCCCCLXXXXV°.
“Well,” I said, when at length I had read out and carefully
examined these writings and paragraphs, at least those of them that were still
easily legible, “that is the conclusion of the whole matter, Leo, and now
you can form your own opinion on it. I have already formed mine.”
“And what is it?” he asked, in his quick way.
“It is this. I believe that potsherd to be perfectly genuine, and that,
wonderful as it may seem, it has come down in your family from since the fourth
century before Christ. The entries absolutely prove it, and therefore, however
improbable it may seem, it must be accepted. But there I stop. That your remote
ancestress, the Egyptian princess, or some scribe under her direction, wrote
that which we see on the sherd I have no doubt, nor have I the slightest doubt
but that her sufferings and the loss of her husband had turned her head, and
that she was not right in her mind when she did write it.”
“How do you account for what my father saw and heard there?” asked
Leo.
“Coincidence. No doubt there are bluffs on the coast of Africa that look
something like a man’s head, and plenty of people who speak bastard
Arabic. Also, I believe that there are lots of swamps. Another thing is, Leo,
and I am sorry to say it, but I do not believe that your poor father was quite
right when he wrote that letter. He had met with a great trouble, and also he
had allowed this story to prey on his imagination, and he was a very
imaginative man. Anyway, I believe that the whole thing is the most unmitigated
rubbish. I know that there are curious things and forces in nature which we
rarely meet with, and, when we do meet them, cannot understand. But until I see
it with my own eyes, which I am not likely to, I never will believe that there
is any means of avoiding death, even for a time, or that there is or was a
white sorceress living in the heart of an African swamp. It is bosh, my boy,
all bosh!—What do you say, Job?”
“I say, sir, that it is a lie, and, if it is true, I hope Mr. Leo
won’t meddle with no such things, for no good can’t come of
it.”
“Perhaps you are both right,” said Leo, very quietly. “I
express no opinion. But I say this. I am going to set the matter at rest once
and for all, and if you won’t come with me I will go by myself.”
I looked at the young man, and saw that he meant what he said. When Leo means
what he says he always puts on a curious look about the mouth. It has been a
trick of his from a child. Now, as a matter of fact, I had no intention of
allowing Leo to go anywhere by himself, for my own sake, if not for his. I was
far too attached to him for that. I am not a man of many ties or affections.
Circumstances have been against me in this respect, and men and women shrink
from me, or at least, I fancy that they do, which comes to the same thing,
thinking, perhaps, that my somewhat forbidding exterior is a key to my
character. Rather than endure this, I have, to a great extent, secluded myself
from the world, and cut myself off from those opportunities which with most men
result in the formation of relations more or less intimate. Therefore Leo was
all the world to me—brother, child, and friend—and until he wearied
of me, where he went there I should go too. But, of course, it would not do to
let him see how great a hold he had over me; so I cast about for some means
whereby I might let myself down easy.
“Yes, I shall go, Uncle; and if I don’t find the ‘rolling
Pillar of Life,’ at any rate I shall get some first-class
shooting.”
Here was my opportunity, and I took it.
“Shooting?” I said. “Ah! yes; I never thought of that. It
must be a very wild stretch of country, and full of big game. I have always
wanted to kill a buffalo before I die. Do you know, my boy, I don’t
believe in the quest, but I do believe in big game, and really on the whole,
if, after thinking it over, you make up your mind to go, I will take a holiday,
and come with you.”
“Ah,” said Leo, “I thought that you would not lose such a
chance. But how about money? We shall want a good lot.”
“You need not trouble about that,” I answered. “There is all
your income that has been accumulating for years, and besides that I have saved
two-thirds of what your father left to me, as I consider, in trust for you.
There is plenty of cash.”
“Very well, then, we may as well stow these things away and go up to town
to see about our guns. By the way, Job, are you coming too? It’s time you
began to see the world.”
“Well, sir,” answered Job, stolidly, “I don’t hold much
with foreign parts, but if both you gentlemen are going you will want somebody
to look after you, and I am not the man to stop behind after serving you for
twenty years.”
“That’s right, Job,” said I. “You won’t find out
anything wonderful, but you will get some good shooting. And now look here,
both of you. I won’t have a word said to a living soul about this
nonsense,” and I pointed to the potsherd. “If it got out, and
anything happened to me, my next of kin would dispute my will on the ground of
insanity, and I should become the laughing stock of Cambridge.”
That day three months we were on the ocean, bound for Zanzibar.
IV.
THE SQUALL
How different is the scene that I have now to tell from that which has just
been told! Gone are the quiet college rooms, gone the wind-swayed English elms,
the cawing rooks, and the familiar volumes on the shelves, and in their place
there rises a vision of the great calm ocean gleaming in shaded silver lights
beneath the beams of the full African moon. A gentle breeze fills the huge sail
of our dhow, and draws us through the water that ripples musically against her
sides. Most of the men are sleeping forward, for it is near midnight, but a
stout swarthy Arab, Mahomed by name, stands at the tiller, lazily steering by
the stars. Three miles or more to our starboard is a low dim line. It is the
Eastern shore of Central Africa. We are running to the southward, before the
North East Monsoon, between the mainland and the reef that for hundreds of
miles fringes this perilous coast. The night is quiet, so quiet that a whisper
can be heard fore and aft the dhow; so quiet that a faint booming sound rolls
across the water to us from the distant land.
The Arab at the tiller holds up his hand, and says one
word:—“Simba (lion)!”
We all sit up and listen. Then it comes again, a slow, majestic sound, that
thrills us to the marrow.
“To-morrow by ten o’clock,” I say, “we ought, if the
Captain is not out in his reckoning, which I think very probable, to make this
mysterious rock with a man’s head, and begin our shooting.”
“And begin our search for the ruined city and the Fire of Life,”
corrected Leo, taking his pipe from his mouth, and laughing a little.
“Nonsense!” I answered. “You were airing your Arabic with
that man at the tiller this afternoon. What did he tell you? He has been
trading (slave-trading, probably) up and down these latitudes for half of his
iniquitous life, and once landed on this very ‘man’ rock. Did he
ever hear anything of the ruined city or the caves?”
“No,” answered Leo. “He says that the country is all swamp
behind, and full of snakes, especially pythons, and game, and that no man lives
there. But then there is a belt of swamp all along the East African coast, so
that does not go for much.”
“Yes,” I said, “it does—it goes for malaria. You see
what sort of an opinion these gentry have of the country. Not one of them will
go with us. They think that we are mad, and upon my word I believe that they
are right. If ever we see old England again I shall be astonished. However, it
does not greatly matter to me at my age, but I am anxious for you, Leo, and for
Job. It’s a Tom Fool’s business, my boy.”
“All right, Uncle Horace. So far as I am concerned, I am willing to take
my chance. Look! What is that cloud?” and he pointed to a dark blotch
upon the starry sky, some miles astern of us.
“Go and ask the man at the tiller,” I said.
He rose, stretched his arms, and went. Presently he returned.
“He says it is a squall, but it will pass far on one side of us.”
Just then Job came up, looking very stout and English in his shooting-suit of
brown flannel, and with a sort of perplexed appearance upon his honest round
face that had been very common with him since he got into these strange waters.
“Please, sir,” he said, touching his sun hat, which was stuck on to
the back of his head in a somewhat ludicrous fashion, “as we have got all
those guns and things in the whale-boat astern, to say nothing of the
provisions in the lockers, I think it would be best if I got down and slept in
her. I don’t like the looks” (here he dropped his voice to a
portentous whisper) “of these black gentry; they have such a wonderful
thievish way about them. Supposing now that some of them were to slip into the
boat at night and cut the cable, and make off with her? That would be a pretty
go, that would.”
The whale-boat, I may explain, was one specially built for us at Dundee, in
Scotland. We had brought it with us, as we knew that this coast was a network
of creeks, and that we might require something to navigate them with. She was a
beautiful boat, thirty-feet in length, with a centre-board for sailing,
copper-bottomed to keep the worm out of her, and full of water-tight
compartments. The Captain of the dhow had told us that when we reached the
rock, which he knew, and which appeared to be identical with the one described
upon the sherd and by Leo’s father, he would probably not be able to run
up to it on account of the shallows and breakers. Therefore we had employed
three hours that very morning, whilst we were totally becalmed, the wind having
dropped at sunrise, in transferring most of our goods and chattels to the
whale-boat, and placing the guns, ammunition, and preserved provisions in the
water-tight lockers specially prepared for them, so that when we did sight the
fabled rock we should have nothing to do but step into the boat, and run her
ashore. Another reason that induced us to take this precautionary step was that
Arab captains are apt to run past the point that they are making, either from
carelessness or owing to a mistake in its identity. Now, as sailors know, it is
quite impossible for a dhow which is only rigged to run before the monsoon to
beat back against it. Therefore we got our boat ready to row for the rock at
any moment.
“Well, Job,” I said, “perhaps it would be as well. There are
lots of blankets there, only be careful to keep out of the moon, or it may turn
your head or blind you.”
“Lord, sir! I don’t think it would much matter if it did; it is
that turned already with the sight of these blackamoors and their filthy,
thieving ways. They are only fit for muck, they are; and they smell bad enough
for it already.”
Job, it will be perceived, was no admirer of the manners and customs of our
dark-skinned brothers.
Accordingly we hauled up the boat by the tow-rope till it was right under the
stern of the dhow, and Job bundled into her with all the grace of a falling
sack of potatoes. Then we returned and sat down on the deck again, and smoked
and talked in little gusts and jerks. The night was so lovely, and our brains
were so full of suppressed excitement of one sort and another, that we did not
feel inclined to turn in. For nearly an hour we sat thus, and then, I think, we
both dozed off. At least I have a faint recollection of Leo sleepily explaining
that the head was not a bad place to hit a buffalo, if you could catch him
exactly between the horns, or send your bullet down his throat, or some
nonsense of the sort.
Then I remember no more; till suddenly—a frightful roar of wind, a shriek
of terror from the awakening crew, and a whip-like sting of water in our faces.
Some of the men ran to let go the haulyards and lower the sail, but the parrel
jammed and the yard would not come down. I sprang to my feet and hung on to a
rope. The sky aft was dark as pitch, but the moon still shone brightly ahead of
us and lit up the blackness. Beneath its sheen a huge white-topped breaker,
twenty feet high or more, was rushing on to us. It was on the break—the
moon shone on its crest and tipped its foam with light. On it rushed beneath
the inky sky, driven by the awful squall behind it. Suddenly, in the twinkling
of an eye, I saw the black shape of the whale-boat cast high into the air on
the crest of the breaking wave. Then—a shock of water, a wild rush of
boiling foam, and I was clinging for my life to the shroud, ay, swept straight
out from it like a flag in a gale.
We were pooped.
The wave passed. It seemed to me that I was under water for
minutes—really it was seconds. I looked forward. The blast had torn out
the great sail, and high in the air it was fluttering away to leeward like a
huge wounded bird. Then for a moment there was comparative calm, and in it I
heard Job’s voice yelling wildly, “Come here to the boat.”
Bewildered and half-drowned as I was, I had the sense to rush aft. I felt the
dhow sinking under me—she was full of water. Under her counter the
whale-boat was tossing furiously, and I saw the Arab Mahomed, who had been
steering, leap into her. I gave one desperate pull at the tow-rope to bring the
boat alongside. Wildly I sprang also, Job caught me by the arm and I rolled
into the bottom of the boat. Down went the dhow bodily, and as she did so
Mahomed drew his curved knife and severed the fibre-rope by which we were fast
to her, and in another second we were driving before the storm over the place
where the dhow had been.
“Great God!” I shrieked, “where is Leo? Leo!
Leo!”
“He’s gone, sir, God help him!” roared Job into my ear; and
such was the fury of the squall that his voice sounded like a whisper.
I wrung my hands in agony. Leo was drowned, and I was left alive to mourn him.
“Look out,” yelled Job; “here comes another.”
I turned; a second huge wave was overtaking us. I half hoped that it would
drown me. With a curious fascination I watched its awful advent. The moon was
nearly hidden now by the wreaths of the rushing storm, but a little light still
caught the crest of the devouring breaker. There was something dark on
it—a piece of wreckage. It was on us now, and the boat was nearly full of
water. But she was built in air-tight compartments—Heaven bless the man
who invented them!—and lifted up through it like a swan. Through the foam
and turmoil I saw the black thing on the wave hurrying right at me. I put out
my right arm to ward it from me, and my hand closed on another arm, the wrist
of which my fingers gripped like a vice. I am a very strong man, and had
something to hold to, but my arm was nearly torn from its socket by the strain
and weight of the floating body. Had the rush lasted another two seconds I
might either have let go or gone with it. But it passed, leaving us up to our
knees in water.
“Bail out! bail out!” shouted Job, suiting the action to the word.
But I could not bail just then, for as the moon went out and left us in total
darkness, one faint, flying ray of light lit upon the face of the man I had
gripped, who was now half lying, half floating in the bottom of the boat.
It was Leo. Leo brought back by the wave—back, dead or alive, from the
very jaws of Death.
“Bail out! bail out!” yelled Job, “or we shall
founder.”
I seized a large tin bowl with a handle to it, which was fixed under one of the
seats, and the three of us bailed away for dear life. The furious tempest drove
over and round us, flinging the boat this way and that, the wind and the storm
wreaths and the sheets of stinging spray blinded and bewildered us, but through
it all we worked like demons with the wild exhilaration of despair, for even
despair can exhilarate. One minute! three minutes! six minutes! The boat began
to lighten, and no fresh wave swamped us. Five minutes more, and she was fairly
clear. Then, suddenly, above the awful shriekings of the hurricane came a
duller, deeper roar. Great Heavens! It was the voice of breakers!
At that moment the moon began to shine forth again—this time behind the
path of the squall. Out far across the torn bosom of the ocean shot the ragged
arrows of her light, and there, half a mile ahead of us, was a white line of
foam, then a little space of open-mouthed blackness, and then another line of
white. It was the breakers, and their roar grew clearer and yet more clear as
we sped down upon them like a swallow. There they were, boiling up in snowy
spouts of spray, smiting and gnashing together like the gleaming teeth of hell.
“Take the tiller, Mahomed!” I roared in Arabic. “We must try
and shoot them.” At the same moment I seized an oar, and got it out,
motioning to Job to do likewise.
Mahomed clambered aft, and got hold of the tiller, and with some difficulty
Job, who had sometimes pulled a tub upon the homely Cam, got out his oar. In
another minute the boat’s head was straight on to the ever-nearing foam,
towards which she plunged and tore with the speed of a racehorse. Just in front
of us the first line of breakers seemed a little thinner than to the right or
left—there was a cap of rather deeper water. I turned and pointed to it.
“Steer for your life, Mahomed!” I yelled. He was a skilful
steersman, and well acquainted with the dangers of this most perilous coast,
and I saw him grip the tiller, bend his heavy frame forward, and stare at the
foaming terror till his big round eyes looked as though they would start out of
his head. The send of the sea was driving the boat’s head round to
starboard. If we struck the line of breakers fifty yards to starboard of the
gap we must sink. It was a great field of twisting, spouting waves. Mahomed
planted his foot against the seat before him, and, glancing at him, I saw his
brown toes spread out like a hand with the weight he put upon them as he took
the strain of the tiller. She came round a bit, but not enough. I roared to Job
to back water, whilst I dragged and laboured at my oar. She answered now, and
none too soon.
Heavens, we were in them! And then followed a couple of minutes of
heart-breaking excitement such as I cannot hope to describe. All that I
remember is a shrieking sea of foam, out of which the billows rose here, there,
and everywhere like avenging ghosts from their ocean grave. Once we were turned
right round, but either by chance, or through Mahomed’s skilful steering,
the boat’s head came straight again before a breaker filled us. One
more—a monster. We were through it or over it—more through than
over—and then, with a wild yell of exultation from the Arab, we shot out
into the comparative smooth water of the mouth of sea between the teeth-like
lines of gnashing waves.
But we were nearly full of water again, and not more than half a mile ahead was
the second line of breakers. Again we set to and bailed furiously. Fortunately
the storm had now quite gone by, and the moon shone brightly, revealing a rocky
headland running half a mile or more out into the sea, of which this second
line of breakers appeared to be a continuation. At any rate, they boiled around
its foot. Probably the ridge that formed the headland ran out into the ocean,
only at a lower level, and made the reef also. This headland was terminated by
a curious peak that seemed not to be more than a mile away from us. Just as we
got the boat pretty clear for the second time, Leo, to my immense relief,
opened his eyes and remarked that the clothes had tumbled off the bed, and that
he supposed it was time to get up for chapel. I told him to shut his eyes and
keep quiet, which he did without in the slightest degree realizing the
position. As for myself, his reference to chapel made me reflect, with a sort
of sick longing, on my comfortable rooms at Cambridge. Why had I been such a
fool as to leave them? This is a reflection that has several times recurred to
me since, and with an ever-increasing force.
But now again we were drifting down on the breakers, though with lessened
speed, for the wind had fallen, and only the current or the tide (it afterwards
turned out to be the tide) was driving us.
Another minute, and with a sort of howl to Allah from the Arab, a pious
ejaculation from myself, and something that was not pious from Job, we were in
them. And then the whole scene, down to our final escape, repeated itself, only
not quite so violently. Mahomed’s skilful steering and the air-tight
compartments saved our lives. In five minutes we were through, and
drifting—for we were too exhausted to do anything to help ourselves
except keep her head straight—with the most startling rapidity round the
headland which I have described.
Round we went with the tide, until we got well under the lee of the point, and
then suddenly the speed slackened, we ceased to make way, and finally appeared
to be in dead water. The storm had entirely passed, leaving a clean-washed sky
behind it; the headland intercepted the heavy sea that had been occasioned by
the squall, and the tide, which had been running so fiercely up the river (for
we were now in the mouth of a river), was sluggish before it turned, so we
floated quietly, and before the moon went down managed to bail out the boat
thoroughly and get her a little ship-shape. Leo was sleeping profoundly, and on
the whole I thought it wise not to wake him. It was true he was sleeping in wet
clothes, but the night was now so warm that I thought (and so did Job) that
they were not likely to injure a man of his unusually vigorous constitution.
Besides, we had no dry ones at hand.
Presently the moon went down, and left us floating on the waters, now only
heaving like some troubled woman’s breast, with leisure to reflect upon
all that we had gone through and all that we had escaped. Job stationed himself
at the bow, Mahomed kept his post at the tiller, and I sat on a seat in the
middle of the boat close to where Leo was lying.
The moon went slowly down in chastened loveliness; she departed like some sweet
bride into her chamber, and long veil-like shadows crept up the sky through
which the stars peeped shyly out. Soon, however, they too began to pale before
a splendour in the east, and then the quivering footsteps of the dawn came
rushing across the new-born blue, and shook the high stars from their places.
Quieter and yet more quiet grew the sea, quiet as the soft mist that brooded on
her bosom, and covered up her troubling, as the illusive wreaths of sleep brood
upon a pain-racked mind, causing it to forget its sorrow. From the east to the
west sped the angels of the Dawn, from sea to sea, from mountain-top to
mountain-top, scattering light with both their hands. On they sped out of the
darkness, perfect, glorious, like spirits of the just breaking from the tomb;
on, over the quiet sea, over the low coastline, and the swamps beyond, and the
mountains above them; over those who slept in peace and those who woke in
sorrow; over the evil and the good; over the living and the dead; over the wide
world and all that breathes or has breathed thereon.
It was a wonderfully beautiful sight, and yet sad, perhaps, from the very
excess of its beauty. The arising sun; the setting sun! There we have the
symbol and the type of humanity, and all things with which humanity has to do.
The symbol and the type, yes, and the earthly beginning, and the end also. And
on that morning this came home to me with a peculiar force. The sun that rose
to-day for us had set last night for eighteen of our fellow-voyagers!—had
set everlastingly for eighteen whom we knew!
The dhow had gone down with them, they were tossing about among the rocks and
seaweed, so much human drift on the great ocean of Death! And we four were
saved. But one day a sunrise will come when we shall be among those who are
lost, and then others will watch those glorious rays, and grow sad in the midst
of beauty, and dream of Death in the full glow of arising Life!
For this is the lot of man.
V.
THE HEAD OF THE ETHIOPIAN
At length the heralds and forerunners of the royal sun had done their work,
and, searching out the shadows, had caused them to flee away. Then up he came
in glory from his ocean-bed, and flooded the earth with warmth and light. I sat
there in the boat listening to the gentle lapping of the water and watched him
rise, till presently the slight drift of the boat brought the odd-shaped rock,
or peak, at the end of the promontory which we had weathered with so much
peril, between me and the majestic sight, and blotted it from my view. I still
continued, however, to stare at the rock, absently enough, till presently it
became edged with the fire of the growing light behind it, and then I started,
as well I might, for I perceived that the top of the peak, which was about
eighty feet high by one hundred and fifty feet thick at its base, was shaped
like a negro’s head and face, whereon was stamped a most fiendish and
terrifying expression. There was no doubt about it; there were the thick lips,
the fat cheeks, and the squat nose standing out with startling clearness
against the flaming background. There, too, was the round skull, washed into
shape perhaps by thousands of years of wind and weather, and, to complete the
resemblance, there was a scrubby growth of weeds or lichen upon it, which
against the sun looked for all the world like the wool on a colossal
negro’s head. It certainly was very odd; so odd that now I believe it is
not a mere freak of nature but a gigantic monument fashioned, like the
well-known Egyptian Sphinx, by a forgotten people out of a pile of rock that
lent itself to their design, perhaps as an emblem of warning and defiance to
any enemies who approached the harbour. Unfortunately we were never able to
ascertain whether or not this was the case, inasmuch as the rock was difficult
of access both from the land and the waterside, and we had other things to
attend to. Myself, considering the matter by the light of what we afterwards
saw, I believe that it was fashioned by man, but whether or not this is so,
there it stands, and sullenly stares from age to age out across the changing
sea—there it stood two thousand years and more ago, when Amenartas, the
Egyptian princess, and the wife of Leo’s remote ancestor Kallikrates,
gazed upon its devilish face—and there I have no doubt it will still
stand when as many centuries as are numbered between her day and our own are
added to the year that bore us to oblivion.
“What do you think of that, Job?” I asked of our retainer, who was
sitting on the edge of the boat, trying to get as much sunshine as possible,
and generally looking uncommonly wretched, and I pointed to the fiery and
demoniacal head.
“Oh Lord, sir,” answered Job, who now perceived the object for the
first time, “I think that the old gentleman must have been sitting for
his portrait on them rocks.”
I laughed, and the laugh woke up Leo.
“Hullo,” he said, “what’s the matter with me? I am all
stiff—where is the dhow? Give me some brandy, please.”
“You may be thankful that you are not stiffer, my boy,” I answered.
“The dhow is sunk, everybody on board her is drowned with the exception
of us four, and your own life was only saved by a miracle”; and whilst
Job, now that it was light enough, searched about in a locker for the brandy
for which Leo asked, I told him the history of our night’s adventure.
“Great Heavens!” he said faintly; “and to think that we
should have been chosen to live through it!”
By this time the brandy was forthcoming, and we all had a good pull at it, and
thankful enough we were for it. Also the sun was beginning to get strength, and
warm our chilled bones, for we had been wet through for five hours or more.
“Why,” said Leo, with a gasp as he put down the brandy bottle,
“there is the head the writing talks of, the ‘rock carven like the
head of an Ethiopian.’”
“Yes,” I said, “there it is.”
“Well, then,” he answered, “the whole thing is true.”
“I don’t see at all that that follows,” I answered. “We
knew this head was here: your father saw it. Very likely it is not the same
head that the writing talks of; or if it is, it proves nothing.”
Leo smiled at me in a superior way. “You are an unbelieving Jew, Uncle
Horace,” he said. “Those who live will see.”
“Exactly so,” I answered, “and now perhaps you will observe
that we are drifting across a sandbank into the mouth of the river. Get hold of
your oar, Job, and we will row in and see if we can find a place to
land.”
The river mouth which we were entering did not appear to be a very wide one,
though as yet the long banks of steaming mist that clung about its shores had
not lifted sufficiently to enable us to see its exact measure. There was, as is
the case with nearly every East African river, a considerable bar at the mouth,
which, no doubt, when the wind was on shore and the tide running out, was
absolutely impassable even for a boat drawing only a few inches. But as things
were it was manageable enough, and we did not ship a cupful of water. In twenty
minutes we were well across it, with but slight assistance from ourselves, and
being carried by a strong though somewhat variable breeze well up the harbour.
By this time the mist was being sucked up by the sun, which was getting
uncomfortably hot, and we saw that the mouth of the little estuary was here
about half a mile across, and that the banks were very marshy, and crowded with
crocodiles lying about on the mud like logs. About a mile ahead of us, however,
was what appeared to be a strip of firm land, and for this we steered. In
another quarter of an hour we were there, and making the boat fast to a
beautiful tree with broad shining leaves, and flowers of the magnolia species,
only they were rose-coloured and not white,[1] which hung over the water, we disembarked.
This done we undressed, washed ourselves, and spread our clothes, together with
the contents of the boat, in the sun to dry, which they very quickly did. Then,
taking shelter from the sun under some trees, we made a hearty breakfast off a
“Paysandu” potted tongue, of which we had brought a good quantity
with us, congratulating ourselves loudly on our good fortune in having loaded
and provisioned the boat on the previous day before the hurricane destroyed the
dhow. By the time that we had finished our meal our clothes were quite dry, and
we hastened to get into them, feeling not a little refreshed. Indeed, with the
exception of weariness and a few bruises, none of us were the worse for the
terrifying adventure which had been fatal to all our companions. Leo, it is
true, had been half-drowned, but that is no great matter to a vigorous young
athlete of five-and-twenty.
[1]
There is a known species of magnolia with pink flowers. It is indigenous in
Sikkim, and known as Magnolia Campbellii.—Editor.
After breakfast we started to look about us. We were on a strip of dry land
about two hundred yards broad by five hundred long, bordered on one side by the
river, and on the other three by endless desolate swamps, that stretched as far
as the eye could reach. This strip of land was raised about twenty-five feet
above the plain of the surrounding swamps and the river level: indeed it had
every appearance of having been made by the hand of man.
“This place has been a wharf,” said Leo, dogmatically.
“Nonsense,” I answered. “Who would be stupid enough to build
a wharf in the middle of these dreadful marshes in a country inhabited by
savages—that is, if it is inhabited at all?”
“Perhaps it was not always marsh, and perhaps the people were not always
savage,” he said drily, looking down the steep bank, for we were standing
by the river. “Look there,” he went on, pointing to a spot where
the hurricane of the previous night had torn up one of the magnolia trees by
the roots, which had grown on the extreme edge of the bank just where it sloped
down to the water, and lifted a large cake of earth with them. “Is not
that stonework? If not, it is very like it.”
“Nonsense,” I said again, but we clambered down to the spot, and
got between the upturned roots and the bank.
“Well?” he said.
But I did not answer this time. I only whistled. For there, laid bare by the
removal of the earth, was an undoubted facing of solid stone laid in large
blocks and bound together with brown cement, so hard that I could make no
impression on it with the file in my shooting-knife. Nor was this all; seeing
something projecting through the soil at the bottom of the bared patch of
walling, I removed the loose earth with my hands, and revealed a huge stone
ring, a foot or more in diameter, and about three inches thick. This fairly
staggered me.
“Looks rather like a wharf where good-sized vessels have been moored,
does it not, Uncle Horace?” said Leo, with an excited grin.
I tried to say “Nonsense” again, but the word stuck in my
throat—the ring spoke for itself. In some past age vessels had
been moored there, and this stone wall was undoubtedly the remnant of a solidly
constructed wharf. Probably the city to which it had belonged lay buried
beneath the swamp behind it.
“Begins to look as though there were something in the story after all,
Uncle Horace,” said the exultant Leo; and reflecting on the mysterious
negro’s head and the equally mysterious stonework, I made no direct
reply.
“A country like Africa,” I said, “is sure to be full of the
relics of long dead and forgotten civilisations. Nobody knows the age of the
Egyptian civilisation, and very likely it had offshoots. Then there were the
Babylonians and the Phœnicians, and the Persians, and all manner of people, all
more or less civilised, to say nothing of the Jews whom everybody
‘wants’ nowadays. It is possible that they, or any one of them, may
have had colonies or trading stations about here. Remember those buried Persian
cities that the consul showed us at Kilwa.”[2]
[2]
Near Kilwa, on the East Coast of Africa, about 400 miles south of Zanzibar, is
a cliff which has been recently washed by the waves. On the top of this cliff
are Persian tombs known to be at least seven centuries old by the dates still
legible upon them. Beneath these tombs is a layer of débris representing
a city. Farther down the cliff is a second layer representing an older city,
and farther down still a third layer, the remains of yet another city of vast
and unknown antiquity. Beneath the bottom city were recently found some
specimens of glazed earthenware, such as are occasionally to be met with on
that coast to this day. I believe that they are now in the possession of Sir
John Kirk.—Editor.
“Quite so,” said Leo, “but that is not what you said
before.”
“Well, what is to be done now?” I asked, turning the conversation.
As no answer was forthcoming we walked to the edge of the swamp, and looked
over it. It was apparently boundless, and vast flocks of every sort of
waterfowl flew from its recesses, till it was sometimes difficult to see the
sky. Now that the sun was getting high it drew thin sickly looking clouds of
poisonous vapour from the surface of the marsh and from the scummy pools of
stagnant water.
“Two things are clear to me,” I said, addressing my three
companions, who stared at this spectacle in dismay: “first, that we
can’t go across there” (I pointed to the swamp), “and,
secondly, that if we stop here we shall certainly die of fever.”
“That’s as clear as a haystack, sir,” said Job.
“Very well, then; there are two alternatives before us. One is to
‘bout ship, and try and run for some port in the whale-boat, which would
be a sufficiently risky proceeding, and the other to sail or row on up the
river, and see where we come to.”
“I don’t know what you are going to do,” said Leo, setting
his mouth, “but I am going up that river.”
Job turned up the whites of his eyes and groaned, and the Arab murmured
“Allah,” and groaned also. As for me, I remarked sweetly that as we
seemed to be between the devil and the deep sea, it did not much matter where
we went. But in reality I was as anxious to proceed as Leo. The colossal
negro’s head and the stone wharf had excited my curiosity to an extent of
which I was secretly ashamed, and I was prepared to gratify it at any cost.
Accordingly, having carefully fitted the mast, restowed the boat, and got out
our rifles, we embarked. Fortunately the wind was blowing on shore from the
ocean, so we were able to hoist the sail. Indeed, we afterwards found out that
as a general rule the wind set on shore from daybreak for some hours, and off
shore again at sunset, and the explanation that I offer of this is, that when
the earth is cooled by the dew and the night the hot air rises, and the draught
rushes in from the sea till the sun has once more heated it through. At least
that appeared to be the rule here.
Taking advantage of this favouring wind, we sailed merrily up the river for
three or four hours. Once we came across a school of hippopotami, which rose,
and bellowed dreadfully at us within ten or a dozen fathoms of the boat, much
to Job’s alarm, and, I will confess, to my own. These were the first
hippopotami that we had ever seen, and, to judge by their insatiable curiosity,
I should judge that we were the first white men that they had ever seen. Upon
my word, I once or twice thought that they were coming into the boat to gratify
it. Leo wanted to fire at them, but I dissuaded him, fearing the consequences.
Also, we saw hundreds of crocodiles basking on the muddy banks, and thousands
upon thousands of water-fowl. Some of these we shot, and among them was a wild
goose, which, in addition to the sharp-curved spurs on its wings, had a spur
about three-quarters of an inch long growing from the skull just between the
eyes. We never shot another like it, so I do not know if it was a
“sport” or a distinct species. In the latter case this incident may
interest naturalists. Job named it the Unicorn Goose.
About midday the sun grew intensely hot, and the stench drawn up by it from the
marshes which the river drains was something too awful, and caused us instantly
to swallow precautionary doses of quinine. Shortly afterwards the breeze died
away altogether, and as rowing our heavy boat against stream in the heat was
out of the question, we were thankful enough to get under the shade of a group
of trees—a species of willow—that grew by the edge of the river,
and lie there and gasp till at length the approach of sunset put a period to
our miseries. Seeing what appeared to be an open space of water straight ahead
of us, we determined to row there before settling what to do for the night.
Just as we were about to loosen the boat, however, a beautiful waterbuck, with
great horns curving forward, and a white stripe across the rump, came down to
the river to drink, without perceiving us hidden away within fifty yards under
the willows. Leo was the first to catch sight of it, and, being an ardent
sportsman, thirsting for the blood of big game, about which he had been
dreaming for months, he instantly stiffened all over, and pointed like a setter
dog. Seeing what was the matter, I handed him his express rifle, at the same
time taking my own.
“Now then,” I whispered, “mind you don’t miss.”
“Miss!” he whispered back contemptuously; “I could not miss
it if I tried.”
He lifted the rifle, and the roan-coloured buck, having drunk his fill, raised
his head and looked out across the river. He was standing right against the
sunset sky on a little eminence, or ridge of ground, which ran across the
swamp, evidently a favourite path for game, and there was something very
beautiful about him. Indeed, I do not think that if I live to a hundred I shall
ever forget that desolate and yet most fascinating scene; it is stamped upon my
memory. To the right and left were wide stretches of lonely death-breeding
swamp, unbroken and unrelieved so far as the eye could reach, except here and
there by ponds of black and peaty water that, mirror-like, flashed up the red
rays of the setting sun. Behind us and before stretched the vista of the
sluggish river, ending in glimpses of a reed-fringed lagoon, on the surface of
which the long lights of the evening played as the faint breeze stirred the
shadows. To the west loomed the huge red ball of the sinking sun, now vanishing
down the vapoury horizon, and filling the great heaven, high across whose arch
the cranes and wildfowl streamed in line, square, and triangle, with flashes of
flying gold and the lurid stain of blood. And then ourselves—three modern
Englishmen in a modern English boat—seeming to jar upon and look out of
tone with that measureless desolation; and in front of us the noble buck limned
out upon a background of ruddy sky.
Bang! Away he goes with a mighty bound. Leo has missed him. Bang!
right under him again. Now for a shot. I must have one, though he is going like
an arrow, and a hundred yards away and more. By Jove! over and over and over!
“Well, I think I’ve wiped your eye there, Master Leo,” I say,
struggling against the ungenerous exultation that in such a supreme moment of
one’s existence will rise in the best-mannered sportsman’s breast.
“Confound you, yes,” growled Leo; and then, with that quick smile
that is one of his charms lighting up his handsome face like a ray of light,
“I beg your pardon, old fellow. I congratulate you; it was a lovely shot,
and mine were vile.”
We got out of the boat and ran to the buck, which was shot through the spine
and stone dead. It took us a quarter of an hour or more to clean it and cut off
as much of the best meat as we could carry, and, having packed this away, we
had barely light enough to row up into the lagoon-like space, into which, there
being a hollow in the swamp, the river here expanded. Just as the light
vanished we cast anchor about thirty fathoms from the edge of the lake. We did
not dare to go ashore, not knowing if we should find dry ground to camp on, and
greatly fearing the poisonous exhalations from the marsh, from which we thought
we should be freer on the water. So we lighted a lantern, and made our evening
meal off another potted tongue in the best fashion that we could, and then
prepared to go to sleep, only, however, to find that sleep was impossible. For,
whether they were attracted by the lantern, or by the unaccustomed smell of a
white man for which they had been waiting for the last thousand years or so, I
know not; but certainly we were presently attacked by tens of thousands of the
most blood-thirsty, pertinacious, and huge mosquitoes that I ever saw or read
of. In clouds they came, and pinged and buzzed and bit till we were nearly mad.
Tobacco smoke only seemed to stir them into a merrier and more active life,
till at length we were driven to covering ourselves with blankets, head and
all, and sitting to slowly stew and continually scratch and swear beneath them.
And as we sat, suddenly rolling out like thunder through the silence came the
deep roar of a lion, and then of a second lion, moving among the reeds within
sixty yards of us.
“I say,” said Leo, sticking his head out from under his blanket,
“lucky we ain’t on the bank, eh, Avuncular?” (Leo sometimes
addressed me in this disrespectful way.) “Curse it! a mosquito has bitten
me on the nose,” and the head vanished again.
Shortly after this the moon came up, and notwithstanding every variety of roar
that echoed over the water to us from the lions on the banks, we began,
thinking ourselves perfectly secure, to gradually doze off.
I do not quite know what it was that made me poke my head out of the friendly
shelter of the blanket, perhaps because I found that the mosquitoes were biting
right through it. Anyhow, as I did so I heard Job whisper, in a frightened
voice—
“Oh, my stars, look there!”
Instantly we all of us looked, and this was what we saw in the moonlight. Near
the shore were two wide and ever-widening circles of concentric rings rippling
away across the surface of the water, and in the heart and centre of the
circles were two dark moving objects.
“What is it?” asked I.
“It is those damned lions, sir,” answered Job, in a tone which was
an odd mixture of a sense of personal injury, habitual respect, and
acknowledged fear, “and they are swimming here to heat us,”
he added, nervously picking up an “h” in his agitation.
I looked again: there was no doubt about it; I could catch the glare of their
ferocious eyes. Attracted either by the smell of the newly killed waterbuck
meat or of ourselves, the hungry beasts were actually storming our position.
Leo already had his rifle in his hand. I called to him to wait till they were
nearer, and meanwhile grabbed my own. Some fifteen feet from us the water
shallowed on a bank to the depth of about fifteen inches, and presently the
first of them—it was the lioness—got on to it, shook herself, and
roared. At that moment Leo fired, the bullet went right down her open mouth and
out at the back of her neck, and down she dropped, with a splash, dead. The
other lion—a full-grown male—was some two paces behind her. At this
second he got his forepaws on to the bank, when a strange thing happened. There
was a rush and disturbance of the water, such as one sees in a pond in England
when a pike takes a little fish, only a thousand times fiercer and larger, and
suddenly the lion gave a most terrific snarling roar and sprang forward on to
the bank, dragging something black with him.
“Allah!” shouted Mahomed, “a crocodile has got him by the
leg!” and sure enough he had. We could see the long snout with its
gleaming lines of teeth and the reptile body behind it.
And then followed an extraordinary scene indeed. The lion managed to get well
on to the bank, the crocodile half standing and half swimming, still nipping
his hind leg. He roared till the air quivered with the sound, and then, with a
savage, shrieking snarl, turned round and clawed hold of the crocodile’s
head. The crocodile shifted his grip, having, as we afterwards discovered, had
one of his eyes torn out, and slightly turned over; instantly the lion got him
by the throat and held on, and then over and over they rolled upon the bank
struggling hideously. It was impossible to follow their movements, but when
next we got a clear view the tables had turned, for the crocodile, whose head
seemed to be a mass of gore, had got the lion’s body in his iron jaws
just above the hips, and was squeezing him and shaking him to and fro. For his
part, the tortured brute, roaring in agony, was clawing and biting madly at his
enemy’s scaly head, and fixing his great hind claws in the
crocodile’s, comparatively speaking, soft throat, ripping it open as one
would rip a glove.
Then, all of a sudden, the end came. The lion’s head fell forward on the
crocodile’s back, and with an awful groan he died, and the crocodile,
after standing for a minute motionless, slowly rolled over on to his side, his
jaws still fixed across the carcase of the lion, which, we afterwards found, he
had bitten almost in halves.
This duel to the death was a wonderful and a shocking sight, and one that I
suppose few men have seen—and thus it ended.
When it was all over, leaving Mahomed to keep a look out, we managed to spend
the rest of the night as quietly as the mosquitoes would allow.
VI.
AN EARLY CHRISTIAN CEREMONY
Next morning, at the earliest light of dawn, we rose, performed such ablutions
as circumstances would allow, and generally made ready to start. I am bound to
say that when there was sufficient light to enable us to see each other’s
faces I, for one, burst out into a roar of laughter. Job’s fat and
comfortable countenance was swollen out to nearly twice its natural size from
mosquito bites, and Leo’s condition was not much better. Indeed, of the
three I had come off much the best, probably owing to the toughness of my dark
skin, and to the fact that a good deal of it was covered by hair, for since we
had started from England I had allowed my naturally luxuriant beard to grow at
its own sweet will. But the other two were, comparatively speaking, clean
shaved, which of course gave the enemy a larger extent of open country to
operate on, though in Mahomed’s case the mosquitoes, recognising the
taste of a true believer, would not touch him at any price. How often, I
wonder, during the next week or so did we wish that we were flavoured like an
Arab!
By the time that we had done laughing as heartily as our swollen lips would
allow, it was daylight, and the morning breeze was coming up from the sea,
cutting lanes through the dense marsh mists, and here and there rolling them
before it in great balls of fleecy vapour. So we set our sail, and having first
taken a look at the two dead lions and the alligator, which we were of course
unable to skin, being destitute of means of curing the pelts, we started, and,
sailing through the lagoon, followed the course of the river on the farther
side. At midday, when the breeze dropped, we were fortunate enough to find a
convenient piece of dry land on which to camp and light a fire, and here we
cooked two wild-ducks and some of the waterbuck’s flesh—not in a
very appetising way, it is true, but still sufficiently. The rest of the
buck’s flesh we cut into strips and hung in the sun to dry into
“biltong,” as, I believe, the South African Dutch call flesh thus
prepared. On this welcome patch of dry land we stopped till the following dawn,
and, as before, spent the night in warfare with the mosquitoes, but without
other troubles. The next day or two passed in similar fashion, and without
noticeable adventures, except that we shot a specimen of a peculiarly graceful
hornless buck, and saw many varieties of water-lily in full bloom, some of them
blue and of exquisite beauty, though few of the flowers were perfect, owing to
the prevalence of a white water-maggot with a green head that fed upon them.
It was on the fifth day of our journey, when we had travelled, so far as we
could reckon, about one hundred and thirty-five to a hundred and forty miles
westwards from the coast, that the first event of any real importance occurred.
On that morning the usual wind failed us about eleven o’clock, and after
pulling a little way we were forced to halt, more or less exhausted, at what
appeared to be the junction of our stream with another of a uniform width of
about fifty feet. Some trees grew near at hand—the only trees in all this
country were along the banks of the river, and under these we rested, and then,
the land being fairly dry just here, walked a little way along the edge of the
river to prospect, and shoot a few waterfowl for food. Before we had gone fifty
yards we perceived that all hopes of getting further up the stream in the
whale-boat were at an end, for not two hundred yards above where we had stopped
were a succession of shallows and mudbanks, with not six inches of water over
them. It was a watery cul de sac.
Turning back, we walked some way along the banks of the other river, and soon
came to the conclusion, from various indications, that it was not a river at
all, but an ancient canal, like the one which is to be seen above Mombasa, on
the Zanzibar coast, connecting the Tana River with the Ozy, in such a way as to
enable the shipping coming down the Tana to cross to the Ozy, and reach the sea
by it, and thus avoid the very dangerous bar that blocks the mouth of the Tana.
The canal before us had evidently been dug out by man at some remote period of
the world’s history, and the results of his digging still remained in the
shape of the raised banks that had no doubt once formed towing-paths. Except
here and there, where they had been hollowed out by the water or fallen in,
these banks of stiff binding clay were at a uniform distance from each other,
and the depth of the stream also appeared to be uniform. Current there was
little or none, and, as a consequence, the surface of the canal was choked with
vegetable growth, intersected by little paths of clear water, made, I suppose,
by the constant passage of waterfowl, iguanas, and other vermin. Now, as it was
evident that we could not proceed up the river, it became equally evident that
we must either try the canal or else return to the sea. We could not stop where
we were, to be baked by the sun and eaten up by the mosquitoes, till we died of
fever in that dreary marsh.
“Well, I suppose that we must try it,” I said; and the others
assented in their various ways—Leo, as though it were the best joke in
the world; Job, in respectful disgust; and Mahomed, with an invocation to the
Prophet, and a comprehensive curse upon all unbelievers and their ways of
thought and travel.
Accordingly, as soon as the sun got low, having little or nothing more to hope
for from our friendly wind, we started. For the first hour or so we managed to
row the boat, though with great labour; but after that the weeds got too thick
to allow of it, and we were obliged to resort to the primitive and most
exhausting resource of towing her. For two hours we laboured, Mahomed, Job, and
I, who was supposed to be strong enough to pull against the two of them, on the
bank, while Leo sat in the bow of the boat, and brushed away the weeds which
collected round the cutwater with Mahomed’s sword. At dark we halted for
some hours to rest and enjoy the mosquitoes, but about midnight we went on
again, taking advantage of the comparative cool of the night. At dawn we rested
for three hours, and then started once more, and laboured on till about ten
o’clock, when a thunderstorm, accompanied by a deluge of rain, overtook
us, and we spent the next six hours practically under water.
I do not know that there is any necessity for me to describe the next four days
of our voyage in detail, further than to say that they were, on the whole, the
most miserable that I ever spent in my life, forming one monotonous record of
heavy labour, heat, misery, and mosquitoes. All that dreary way we passed
through a region of almost endless swamp, and I can only attribute our escape
from fever and death to the constant doses of quinine and purgatives which we
took, and the unceasing toil which we were forced to undergo. On the third day
of our journey up the canal we had sighted a round hill that loomed dimly
through the vapours of the marsh, and on the evening of the fourth night, when
we camped, this hill seemed to be within five-and-twenty or thirty miles of us.
We were by now utterly exhausted, and felt as though our blistered hands could
not pull the boat a yard farther, and that the best thing that we could do
would be to lie down and die in that dreadful wilderness of swamp. It was an
awful position, and one in which I trust no other white man will ever be
placed; and as I threw myself down in the boat to sleep the sleep of utter
exhaustion, I bitterly cursed my folly in ever having been a party to such a
mad undertaking, which could, I saw, only end in our death in this ghastly
land. I thought, I remember, as I slowly sank into a doze, of what the
appearance of the boat and her unhappy crew would be in two or three
months’ time from that night. There she would lie, with gaping seams and
half filled with fœtid water, which, when the mist-laden wind stirred her,
would wash backwards and forwards through our mouldering bones, and that would
be the end of her, and of those in her who would follow after myths and seek
out the secrets of Nature.
Already I seemed to hear the water rippling against the desiccated bones and
rattling them together, rolling my skull against Mahomed’s, and his
against mine, till at last Mahomed’s stood straight up upon its vertebræ,
and glared at me through its empty eyeholes, and cursed me with its grinning
jaws, because I, a dog of a Christian, disturbed the last sleep of a true
believer. I opened my eyes, and shuddered at the horrid dream, and then
shuddered again at something that was not a dream, for two great eyes were
gleaming down at me through the misty darkness. I struggled up, and in my
terror and confusion shrieked, and shrieked again, so that the others sprang up
too, reeling, and drunken with sleep and fear. And then all of a sudden there
was a flash of cold steel, and a great spear was held against my throat, and
behind it other spears gleamed cruelly.
“Peace,” said a voice, speaking in Arabic, or rather in some
dialect into which Arabic entered very largely; “who are ye who come
hither swimming on the water? Speak or ye die,” and the steel pressed
sharply against my throat, sending a cold chill through me.
“We are travellers, and have come hither by chance,” I answered in
my best Arabic, which appeared to be understood, for the man turned his head,
and, addressing a tall form that towered up in the background, said,
“Father, shall we slay?”
“What is the colour of the men?” said a deep voice in answer.
“White is their colour.”
“Slay not,” was the reply. “Four suns since was the word
brought to me from ‘She-who-must-be-obeyed,’ ‘White
men come; if white men come, slay them not.’ Let them be brought to the
house of ‘She-who-must-be-obeyed.’ Bring forth the men, and
let that which they have with them be brought forth also.”
“Come,” said the man, half leading and half dragging me from the
boat, and as he did so I perceived other men doing the same kind office to my
companions.
On the bank were gathered a company of some fifty men. In that light all I
could make out was that they were armed with huge spears, were very tall, and
strongly built, comparatively light in colour, and nude, save for a leopard
skin tied round the middle.
Presently Leo and Job were bundled out and placed beside me.
“What on earth is up?” said Leo, rubbing his eyes.
“Oh, Lord! sir, here’s a rum go,” ejaculated Job; and just at
that moment a disturbance ensued, and Mahomed came tumbling between us,
followed by a shadowy form with an uplifted spear.
“Allah! Allah!” howled Mahomed, feeling that he had little to hope
from man, “protect me! protect me!”
“Father, it is a black one,” said a voice. “What said
‘She-who-must-be-obeyed’ about the black one?”
“She said naught; but slay him not. Come hither, my son.”
The man advanced, and the tall shadowy form bent forward and whispered
something.
“Yes, yes,” said the other, and chuckled in a rather blood-curdling
tone.
“Are the three white men there?” asked the form.
“Yes, they are there.”
“Then bring up that which is made ready for them, and let the men take
all that can be brought from the thing which floats.”
Hardly had he spoken when men came running up, carrying on their shoulders
neither more nor less than palanquins—four bearers and two spare men to a
palanquin—and in these it was promptly indicated we were expected to stow
ourselves.
“Well!” said Leo, “it is a blessing to find anybody to carry
us after having to carry ourselves so long.”
Leo always takes a cheerful view of things.
There being no help for it, after seeing the others into theirs I tumbled into
my own litter, and very comfortable I found it. It appeared to be manufactured
of cloth woven from grass-fibre, which stretched and yielded to every motion of
the body, and, being bound top and bottom to the bearing pole, gave a grateful
support to the head and neck.
Scarcely had I settled myself when, accompanying their steps with a monotonous
song, the bearers started at a swinging trot. For half an hour or so I lay
still, reflecting on the very remarkable experiences that we were going
through, and wondering if any of my eminently respectable fossil friends down
at Cambridge would believe me if I were to be miraculously set at the familiar
dinner-table for the purpose of relating them. I do not want to convey any
disrespectful notion or slight when I call those good and learned men fossils,
but my experience is that people are apt to fossilise even at a University if
they follow the same paths too persistently. I was getting fossilised myself,
but of late my stock of ideas has been very much enlarged. Well, I lay and
reflected, and wondered what on earth would be the end of it all, till at last
I ceased to wonder, and went to sleep.
I suppose I must have slept for seven or eight hours, getting the first real
rest that I had had since the night before the loss of the dhow, for when I
woke the sun was high in the heavens. We were still journeying on at a pace of
about four miles an hour. Peeping out through the mist-like curtains of the
litter, which were ingeniously fixed to the bearing pole, I perceived to my
infinite relief that we had passed out of the region of eternal swamp, and were
now travelling over swelling grassy plains towards a cup-shaped hill. Whether
or not it was the same hill that we had seen from the canal I do not know, and
have never since been able to discover, for, as we afterwards found out, these
people will give little information upon such points. Next I glanced at the men
who were bearing me. They were of a magnificent build, few of them being under
six feet in height, and yellowish in colour. Generally their appearance had a
good deal in common with that of the East African Somali, only their hair was
not frizzed up, but hung in thick black locks upon their shoulders. Their
features were aquiline, and in many cases exceedingly handsome, the teeth being
especially regular and beautiful. But notwithstanding their beauty, it struck
me that, on the whole, I had never seen a more evil-looking set of faces. There
was an aspect of cold and sullen cruelty stamped upon them that revolted me,
and which in some cases was almost uncanny in its intensity.
Another thing that struck me about them was that they never seemed to smile.
Sometimes they sang the monotonous song of which I have spoken, but when they
were not singing they remained almost perfectly silent, and the light of a
laugh never came to brighten their sombre and evil countenances. Of what race
could these people be? Their language was a bastard Arabic, and yet they were
not Arabs; I was quite sure of that. For one thing they were too dark, or
rather yellow. I could not say why, but I know that their appearance filled me
with a sick fear of which I felt ashamed. While I was still wondering another
litter came up alongside of mine. In it—for the curtains were
drawn—sat an old man, clothed in a whitish robe, made apparently from
coarse linen, that hung loosely about him, who, I at once jumped to the
conclusion, was the shadowy figure that had stood on the bank and been
addressed as “Father.” He was a wonderful-looking old man, with a
snowy beard, so long that the ends of it hung over the sides of the litter, and
he had a hooked nose, above which flashed out a pair of eyes as keen as a
snake’s, while his whole countenance was instinct with a look of wise and
sardonic humour impossible to describe on paper.
“Art thou awake, stranger?” he said in a deep and low voice.
“Surely, my father,” I answered courteously, feeling certain that I
should do well to conciliate this ancient Mammon of Unrighteousness.
He stroked his beautiful white beard, and smiled faintly.
“From whatever country thou camest,” he said, “and by the way
it must be from one where somewhat of our language is known, they teach their
children courtesy there, my stranger son. And now wherefore comest thou unto
this land, which scarce an alien foot has pressed from the time that man
knoweth? Art thou and those with thee weary of life?”
“We came to find new things,” I answered boldly. “We are
tired of the old things; we have come up out of the sea to know that which is
unknown. We are of a brave race who fear not death, my very much respected
father—that is, if we can get a little information before we die.”
“Humph!” said the old gentleman, “that may be true; it is
rash to contradict, otherwise I should say that thou wast lying, my son.
However, I dare to say that ‘She-who-must-be-obeyed’ will
meet thy wishes in the matter.”
“Who is ‘She-who-must-be-obeyed’?” I asked,
curiously.
The old man glanced at the bearers, and then answered, with a little smile that
somehow sent my blood to my heart—
“Surely, my stranger son, thou wilt learn soon enough, if it be her
pleasure to see thee at all in the flesh.”
“In the flesh?” I answered. “What may my father wish to
convey?”
But the old man only laughed a dreadful laugh, and made no reply.
“What is the name of my father’s people?” I asked.
“The name of my people is Amahagger” (the People of the Rocks).
“And if a son might ask, what is the name of my father?”
“My name is Billali.”
“And whither go we, my father?”
“That shalt thou see,” and at a sign from him his bearers started
forward at a run till they reached the litter in which Job was reposing (with
one leg hanging over the side). Apparently, however, he could not make much out
of Job, for presently I saw his bearers trot forward to Leo’s litter.
And after that, as nothing fresh occurred, I yielded to the pleasant swaying
motion of the litter, and went to sleep again. I was dreadfully tired. When I
woke I found that we were passing through a rocky defile of a lava formation
with precipitous sides, in which grew many beautiful trees and flowering
shrubs.
Presently this defile took a turn, and a lovely sight unfolded itself to my
eyes. Before us was a vast cup of green from four to six miles in extent, in
the shape of a Roman amphitheatre. The sides of this great cup were rocky, and
clothed with bush, but the centre was of the richest meadow land, studded with
single trees of magnificent growth, and watered by meandering brooks. On this
rich plain grazed herds of goats and cattle, but I saw no sheep. At first I
could not imagine what this strange spot could be, but presently it flashed
upon me that it must represent the crater of some long-extinct volcano which
had afterwards been a lake, and was ultimately drained in some unexplained way.
And here I may state that from my subsequent experience of this and a much
larger, but otherwise similar spot, which I shall have occasion to describe
by-and-by, I have every reason to believe that this conclusion was correct.
What puzzled me, however, was, that although there were people moving about
herding the goats and cattle, I saw no signs of any human habitation. Where did
they all live? I wondered. My curiosity was soon destined to be gratified.
Turning to the left the string of litters followed the cliffy sides of the
crater for a distance of about half a mile, or perhaps a little less, and then
halted. Seeing the old gentleman, my adopted “father,” Billali,
emerge from his litter, I did the same, and so did Leo and Job. The first thing
I saw was our wretched Arab companion, Mahomed, lying exhausted on the ground.
It appeared that he had not been provided with a litter, but had been forced to
run the entire distance, and, as he was already quite worn out when we started,
his condition now was one of great prostration.
On looking round we discovered that the place where we had halted was a
platform in front of the mouth of a great cave, and piled upon this platform
were the entire contents of the whale-boat, even down to the oars and sail.
Round the cave stood groups of the men who had escorted us, and other men of a
similar stamp. They were all tall and all handsome, though they varied in their
degree of darkness of skin, some being as dark as Mahomed, and some as yellow
as a Chinese. They were naked, except for the leopard-skin round the waist, and
each of them carried a huge spear.
There were also some women among them, who, instead of the leopard-skin, wore a
tanned hide of a small red buck, something like that of the oribé, only rather
darker in colour. These women were, as a class, exceedingly good-looking, with
large, dark eyes, well-cut features, and a thick bush of curling hair—not
crisped like a negro’s—ranging from black to chestnut in hue, with
all shades of intermediate colour. Some, but very few of them, wore a yellowish
linen garment, such as I have described as worn by Billali, but this, as we
afterwards discovered, was a mark of rank, rather than an attempt at clothing.
For the rest, their appearance was not quite so terrifying as that of the men,
and they sometimes, though rarely, smiled. As soon as we had alighted they
gathered round us and examined us with curiosity, but without excitement.
Leo’s tall, athletic form and clear-cut Grecian face, however, evidently
excited their attention, and when he politely lifted his hat to them, and
showed his curling yellow hair, there was a slight murmur of admiration. Nor
did it stop there; for, after regarding him critically from head to foot, the
handsomest of the young women—one wearing a robe, and with hair of a
shade between brown and chestnut—deliberately advanced to him, and, in a
way that would have been winning had it not been so determined, quietly put her
arm round his neck, bent forward, and kissed him on the lips.
I gave a gasp, expecting to see Leo instantly speared; and Job ejaculated,
“The hussy—well, I never!” As for Leo, he looked slightly
astonished; and then, remarking that we had clearly got into a country where
they followed the customs of the early Christians, deliberately returned the
embrace.
Again I gasped, thinking that something would happen; but, to my surprise,
though some of the young women showed traces of vexation, the older ones and
the men only smiled slightly. When we came to understand the customs of this
extraordinary people the mystery was explained. It then appeared that, in
direct opposition to the habits of almost every other savage race in the world,
women among the Amahagger are not only upon terms of perfect equality with the
men, but are not held to them by any binding ties. Descent is traced only
through the line of the mother, and while individuals are as proud of a long
and superior female ancestry as we are of our families in Europe, they never
pay attention to, or even acknowledge, any man as their father, even when their
male parentage is perfectly well known. There is but one titular male parent of
each tribe, or, as they call it, “Household,” and he is its elected
and immediate ruler, with the title of “Father.” For instance, the
man Billali was the father of this “household,” which consisted of
about seven thousand individuals all told, and no other man was ever called by
that name. When a woman took a fancy to a man she signified her preference by
advancing and embracing him publicly, in the same way that this handsome and
exceedingly prompt young lady, who was called Ustane, had embraced Leo. If he
kissed her back it was a token that he accepted her, and the arrangement
continued until one of them wearied of it. I am bound, however, to say that the
change of husbands was not nearly so frequent as might have been expected. Nor
did quarrels arise out of it, at least among the men, who, when their wives
deserted them in favour of a rival, accepted the whole thing much as we accept
the income-tax or our marriage laws, as something not to be disputed, and as
tending to the good of the community, however disagreeable they may in
particular instances prove to the individual.
It is very curious to observe how the customs of mankind on this matter vary in
different countries, making morality an affair of latitude, and what is right
and proper in one place wrong and improper in another. It must, however, be
understood that, since all civilised nations appear to accept it as an axiom
that ceremony is the touchstone of morality, there is, even according to our
canons, nothing immoral about this Amahagger custom, seeing that the
interchange of the embrace answers to our ceremony of marriage, which, as we
know, justifies most things.
VII.
USTANE SINGS
When the kissing operation was finished—by the way, none of the young
ladies offered to pet me in this fashion, though I saw one hovering round Job,
to that respectable individual’s evident alarm—the old man Billali
advanced, and graciously waved us into the cave, whither we went, followed by
Ustane, who did not seem inclined to take the hints I gave her that we liked
privacy.
Before we had gone five paces it struck me that the cave that we were entering
was none of Nature’s handiwork, but, on the contrary, had been hollowed
by the hand of man. So far as we could judge it appeared to be about one
hundred feet in length by fifty wide, and very lofty, resembling a cathedral
aisle more than anything else. From this main aisle opened passages at a
distance of every twelve or fifteen feet, leading, I supposed, to smaller
chambers. About fifty feet from the entrance of the cave, just where the light
began to get dim, a fire was burning, which threw huge shadows upon the gloomy
walls around. Here Billali halted, and asked us to be seated, saying that the
people would bring us food, and accordingly we squatted ourselves down upon the
rugs of skins which were spread for us, and waited. Presently the food,
consisting of goat’s flesh boiled, fresh milk in an earthenware pot, and
boiled cobs of Indian corn, was brought by young girls. We were almost
starving, and I do not think that I ever in my life before ate with such
satisfaction. Indeed, before we had finished we literally ate up everything
that was set before us.
When we had done, our somewhat saturnine host, Billali, who had been watching
us in perfect silence, rose and addressed us. He said that it was a wonderful
thing that had happened. No man had ever known or heard of white strangers
arriving in the country of the People of the Rocks. Sometimes, though rarely,
black men had come here, and from them they had heard of the existence of men
much whiter than themselves, who sailed on the sea in ships, but for the
arrival of such there was no precedent. We had, however, been seen dragging the
boat up the canal, and he told us frankly that he had at once given orders for
our destruction, seeing that it was unlawful for any stranger to enter here,
when a message had come from “She-who-must-be-obeyed,”
saying that our lives were to be spared, and that we were to be brought hither.
“Pardon me, my father,” I interrupted at this point; “but if,
as I understand, ‘She-who-must-be-obeyed’ lives yet farther
off, how could she have known of our approach?”
Billali turned, and seeing that we were alone—for the young lady, Ustane,
had withdrawn when he had begun to speak—said, with a curious little
laugh—
“Are there none in your land who can see without eyes and hear without
ears? Ask no questions; She knew.”
I shrugged my shoulders at this, and he proceeded to say that no further
instructions had been received on the subject of our disposal, and this being
so he was about to start to interview
“She-who-must-be-obeyed,” generally spoken of, for the sake
of brevity, as “Hiya” or She simply, who he gave us to
understand was the Queen of the Amahagger, and learn her wishes.
I asked him how long he proposed to be away, and he said that by travelling
hard he might be back on the fifth day, but there were many miles of marsh to
cross before he came to where She was. He then said that every
arrangement would be made for our comfort during his absence, and that, as he
personally had taken a fancy to us, he sincerely trusted that the answer he
should bring from She would be one favourable to the continuation of our
existence, but at the same time he did not wish to conceal from us that he
thought this doubtful, as every stranger who had ever come into the country
during his grandmother’s life, his mother’s life, and his own life,
had been put to death without mercy, and in a way he would not harrow our
feelings by describing; and this had been done by the order of She
herself, at least he supposed that it was by her order. At any rate, she never
interfered to save them.
“Why,” I said, “but how can that be? You are an old man, and
the time you talk of must reach back three men’s lives. How therefore
could She have ordered the death of anybody at the beginning of the life
of your grandmother, seeing that herself she would not have been born?”
Again he smiled—that same faint, peculiar smile, and with a deep bow
departed, without making any answer; nor did we see him again for five days.
When he had gone we discussed the situation, which filled me with alarm. I did
not at all like the accounts of this mysterious Queen,
“She-who-must-be-obeyed,” or more shortly She, who
apparently ordered the execution of any unfortunate stranger in a fashion so
unmerciful. Leo, too, was depressed about it, but consoled himself by
triumphantly pointing out that this She was undoubtedly the person
referred to in the writing on the potsherd and in his father’s letter, in
proof of which he advanced Billali’s allusions to her age and power. I
was by this time too overwhelmed with the whole course of events that I had not
even the heart left to dispute a proposition so absurd, so I suggested that we
should try to go out and get a bath, of which we all stood sadly in need.
Accordingly, having indicated our wish to a middle-aged individual of an
unusually saturnine cast of countenance, even among this saturnine people, who
appeared to be deputed to look after us now that the Father of the hamlet had
departed, we started in a body—having first lit our pipes. Outside the
cave we found quite a crowd of people evidently watching for our appearance,
but when they saw us come out smoking they vanished this way and that, calling
out that we were great magicians. Indeed, nothing about us created so great a
sensation as our tobacco smoke—not even our firearms.[1] After this we succeeded in reaching a
stream that had its source in a strong ground spring, and taking our bath in
peace, though some of the women, not excepting Ustane, showed a decided
inclination to follow us even there.
[1]
We found tobacco growing in this country as it does in every other part of
Africa, and, although they were so absolutely ignorant of its other blessed
qualities, the Amahagger use it habitually in the form of snuff and also for
medicinal purposes.—L. H. H.
By the time that we had finished this most refreshing bath the sun was setting;
indeed, when we got back to the big cave it had already set. The cave itself
was full of people gathered round fires—for several more had now been
lighted—and eating their evening meal by their lurid light, and by that
of various lamps which were set about or hung upon the walls. These lamps were
of a rude manufacture of baked earthenware, and of all shapes, some of them
graceful enough. The larger ones were formed of big red earthenware pots,
filled with clarified melted fat, and having a reed wick stuck through a wooden
disk which filled the top of the pot. This sort of lamp required the most
constant attention to prevent its going out whenever the wick burnt down, as
there were no means of turning it up. The smaller hand lamps, however, which
were also made of baked clay, were fitted with wicks manufactured from the pith
of a palm-tree, or sometimes from the stem of a very handsome variety of fern.
This kind of wick was passed through a round hole at the end of the lamp, to
which a sharp piece of hard wood was attached wherewith to pierce and draw it
up whenever it showed signs of burning low.
For a while we sat down and watched this grim people eating their evening meal
in silence as grim as themselves, till at length, getting tired of
contemplating them and the huge moving shadows on the rocky walls, I suggested
to our new keeper that we should like to go to bed.
Without a word he rose, and, taking me politely by the hand, advanced with a
lamp to one of the small passages that I had noticed opening out of the central
cave. This we followed for about five paces, when it suddenly widened out into
a small chamber, about eight feet square, and hewn out of the living rock. On
one side of this chamber was a stone slab, about three feet from the ground,
and running its entire length like a bunk in a cabin, and on this slab he
intimated that I was to sleep. There was no window or air-hole to the chamber,
and no furniture; and, on looking at it more closely, I came to the disturbing
conclusion (in which, as I afterwards discovered, I was quite right) that it
had originally served for a sepulchre for the dead rather than a sleeping-place
for the living, the slab being designed to receive the corpse of the departed.
The thought made me shudder in spite of myself; but, seeing that I must sleep
somewhere, I got over the feeling as best I might, and returned to the cavern
to get my blanket, which had been brought up from the boat with the other
things. There I met Job, who, having been inducted to a similar apartment, had
flatly declined to stop in it, saying that the look of the place gave him the
horrors, and that he might as well be dead and buried in his
grandfather’s brick grave at once, and expressed his determination of
sleeping with me if I would allow him. This, of course, I was only too glad to
do.
The night passed very comfortably on the whole. I say on the whole, for
personally I went through a most horrible nightmare of being buried alive,
induced, no doubt, by the sepulchral nature of my surroundings. At dawn we were
aroused by a loud trumpeting sound, produced, as we afterwards discovered, by a
young Amahagger blowing through a hole bored in its side into a hollowed
elephant tusk, which was kept for the purpose.
Taking the hint, we got up and went down to the stream to wash, after which the
morning meal was served. At breakfast one of the women, no longer quite young,
advanced and publicly kissed Job. I think it was in its way the most delightful
thing (putting its impropriety aside for a moment) that I ever saw. Never shall
I forget the respectable Job’s abject terror and disgust. Job, like
myself, is a bit of a misogynist—I fancy chiefly owing to the fact of his
having been one of a family of seventeen—and the feelings expressed upon
his countenance when he realised that he was not only being embraced publicly,
and without authorisation on his own part, but also in the presence of his
masters, were too mixed and painful to admit of accurate description. He sprang
to his feet, and pushed the woman, a buxom person of about thirty, from him.
“Well, I never!” he gasped, whereupon probably thinking that he was
only coy, she embraced him again.
“Be off with you! Get away, you minx!” he shouted, waving the
wooden spoon, with which he was eating his breakfast, up and down before the
lady’s face. “Beg your pardon, gentlemen, I am sure I haven’t
encouraged her. Oh, Lord! she’s coming for me again. Hold her, Mr. Holly!
please hold her! I can’t stand it; I can’t, indeed. This has never
happened to me before, gentlemen, never. There’s nothing against my
character,” and here he broke off, and ran as hard as he could go down
the cave, and for once I saw the Amahagger laugh. As for the woman, however,
she did not laugh. On the contrary, she seemed to bristle with fury, which the
mockery of the other women about only served to intensify. She stood there
literally snarling and shaking with indignation, and, seeing her, I wished
Job’s scruples had been at Jericho, forming a shrewd guess that his
admirable behaviour had endangered our throats. Nor, as the sequel shows, was I
wrong.
The lady having retreated, Job returned in a great state of nervousness, and
keeping his weather eye fixed upon every woman who came near him. I took an
opportunity to explain to our hosts that Job was a married man, and had had
very unhappy experiences in his domestic relations, which accounted for his
presence here and his terror at the sight of women, but my remarks were
received in grim silence, it being evident that our retainer’s behaviour
was considered as a slight to the “household” at large, although
the women, after the manner of some of their most civilised sisters, made merry
at the rebuff of their companion.
After breakfast we took a walk and inspected the Amahagger herds, and also
their cultivated lands. They have two breeds of cattle, one large and angular,
with no horns, but yielding beautiful milk; and the other, a red breed, very
small and fat, excellent for meat, but of no value for milking purposes. This
last breed closely resembles the Norfolk red-pole strain, only it has horns
which generally curve forward over the head, sometimes to such an extent that
they have to be cut to prevent them from growing into the bones of the skull.
The goats are long-haired, and are used for eating only, at least I never saw
them milked. As for the Amahagger cultivation, it is primitive in the extreme,
being all done by means of a spade made of iron, for these people smelt and
work iron. This spade is shaped more like a big spear-head than anything else,
and has no shoulder to it on which the foot can be set. As a consequence, the
labour of digging is very great. It is, however, all done by the men, the
women, contrary to the habits of most savage races, being entirely exempt from
manual toil. But then, as I think I have said elsewhere, among the Amahagger
the weaker sex has established its rights.
At first we were much puzzled as to the origin and constitution of this
extraordinary race, points upon which they were singularly uncommunicative. As
the time went on—for the next four days passed without any striking
event—we learnt something from Leo’s lady friend Ustane, who, by
the way, stuck to that young gentleman like his own shadow. As to origin, they
had none, at least, so far as she was aware. There were, however, she informed
us, mounds of masonry and many pillars, near the place where She lived,
which was called Kôr, and which the wise said had once been houses wherein men
lived, and it was suggested that they were descended from these men. No one,
however, dared go near these great ruins, because they were haunted: they only
looked on them from a distance. Other similar ruins were to be seen, she had
heard, in various parts of the country, that is, wherever one of the mountains
rose above the level of the swamp. Also the caves in which they lived had been
hollowed out of the rocks by men, perhaps the same who built the cities. They
themselves had no written laws, only custom, which was, however, quite as
binding as law. If any man offended against the custom, he was put to death by
order of the Father of the “Household.” I asked how he was put to
death, and she only smiled and said that I might see one day soon.
They had a Queen, however. She was their Queen, but she was very rarely
seen, perhaps once in two or three years, when she came forth to pass sentence
on some offenders, and when seen was muffled up in a big cloak, so that nobody
could look upon her face. Those who waited upon her were deaf and dumb, and
therefore could tell no tales, but it was reported that she was lovely as no
other woman was lovely, or ever had been. It was rumoured also that she was
immortal, and had power over all things, but she, Ustane, could say nothing of
all that. What she believed was that the Queen chose a husband from time to
time, and as soon as a female child was born, this husband, who was never again
seen, was put to death. Then the female child grew up and took the place of the
Queen when its mother died, and had been buried in the great caves. But of
these matters none could speak with certainty. Only She was obeyed
throughout the length and breadth of the land, and to question her command was
instant death. She kept a guard, but had no regular army, and to disobey her
was to die.
I asked what size the land was, and how many people lived in it. She answered
that there were ten “Households,” like this that she knew of,
including the big “Household,” where the Queen was, that all the
“Households” lived in caves, in places resembling this stretch of
raised country, dotted about in a vast extent of swamp, which was only to be
threaded by secret paths. Often the “Households” made war on each
other until She sent word that it was to stop, and then they instantly
ceased. That and the fever which they caught in crossing the swamps prevented
their numbers from increasing too much. They had no connection with any other
race, indeed none lived near them, or were able to thread the vast swamps. Once
an army from the direction of the great river (presumably the Zambesi) had
attempted to attack them, but they got lost in the marshes, and at night,
seeing the great balls of fire that move about there, tried to come to them,
thinking that they marked the enemy camp, and half of them were drowned. As for
the rest, they soon died of fever and starvation, not a blow being struck at
them. The marshes, she told us, were absolutely impassable except to those who
knew the paths, adding, what I could well believe, that we should never have
reached this place where we then were had we not been brought thither.
These and many other things we learnt from Ustane during the four days’
pause before our real adventures began, and, as may be imagined, they gave us
considerable cause for thought. The whole thing was exceedingly remarkable,
almost incredibly so, indeed, and the oddest part of it was that so far it did
more or less correspond to the ancient writing on the sherd. And now it
appeared that there was a mysterious Queen clothed by rumour with dread and
wonderful attributes, and commonly known by the impersonal, but, to my mind,
rather awesome title of She. Altogether, I could not make it out, nor
could Leo, though of course he was exceedingly triumphant over me because I had
persistently mocked at the whole thing. As for Job, he had long since abandoned
any attempt to call his reason his own, and left it to drift upon the sea of
circumstance. Mahomed, the Arab, who was, by the way, treated civilly indeed,
but with chilling contempt, by the Amahagger, was, I discovered, in a great
fright, though I could not quite make out what he was frightened about. He
would sit crouched up in a corner of the cave all day long, calling upon Allah
and the Prophet to protect him. When I pressed him about it, he said that he
was afraid because these people were not men or women at all, but devils, and
that this was an enchanted land; and, upon my word, once or twice since then I
have been inclined to agree with him. And so the time went on, till the night
of the fourth day after Billali had left, when something happened.
We three and Ustane were sitting round a fire in the cave just before bedtime,
when suddenly the woman, who had been brooding in silence, rose, and laid her
hand upon Leo’s golden curls, and addressed him. Even now, when I shut my
eyes, I can see her proud, imperial form, clothed alternately in dense shadow
and the red flickering of the fire, as she stood, the wild centre of as weird a
scene as I ever witnessed, and delivered herself of the burden of her thoughts
and forebodings in a kind of rhythmical speech that ran something as
follows:—
Thou art my chosen—I have waited for thee from the beginning!
Thou art very beautiful. Who hath hair like unto thee, or skin so white?
Who hath so strong an arm, who is so much a man?
Thine eyes are the sky, and the light in them is the stars.
Thou art perfect and of a happy face, and my heart turned itself towards thee.
Ay, when mine eyes fell upon thee I did desire thee,—
Then did I take thee to me—oh, thou Beloved,
And hold thee fast, lest harm should come unto thee.
Ay, I did cover thine head with mine hair, lest the sun should strike it;
And altogether was I thine, and thou wast altogether mine.
And so it went for a little space, till Time was in labour with an evil Day;
And then what befell on that day? Alas! my Beloved, I know not!
But I, I saw thee no more—I, I was lost in the blackness.
And she who is stronger did take thee; ay, she who is fairer than Ustane.
Yet didst thou turn and call upon me, and let thine eyes wander in the darkness.
But, nevertheless, she prevailed by Beauty, and led thee down horrible places,
And then, ah! then my Beloved——
Here this extraordinary woman broke off her speech, or chant, which was so much
musical gibberish to us, for all that we understood of what she was talking
about, and seemed to fix her flashing eyes upon the deep shadow before her.
Then in a moment they acquired a vacant, terrified stare, as though they were
striving to realise some half-seen horror. She lifted her hand from Leo’s
head, and pointed into the darkness. We all looked, and could see nothing; but
she saw something, or thought she did, and something evidently that affected
even her iron nerves, for, without another sound, down she fell senseless
between us.
Leo, who was growing really attached to this remarkable young person, was in a
great state of alarm and distress, and I, to be perfectly candid, was in a
condition not far removed from superstitious fear. The whole scene was an
uncanny one.
Presently, however, she recovered, and sat up with an extraordinary convulsive
shudder.
“What didst thou mean, Ustane?” asked Leo, who, thanks to years of
tuition, spoke Arabic very prettily.
“Nay, my chosen,” she answered, with a little forced laugh.
“I did but sing unto thee after the fashion of my people. Surely, I meant
nothing. How could I speak of that which is not yet?”
“And what didst thou see, Ustane?” I asked, looking her sharply in
the face.
“Nay,” she answered again, “I saw naught. Ask me not what I
saw. Why should I fright ye?” And then, turning to Leo with a look of the
most utter tenderness that I ever saw upon the face of a woman, civilised or
savage, she took his head between her hands, and kissed him on the forehead as
a mother might.
“When I am gone from thee, my chosen,” she said; “when at
night thou stretchest out thine hand and canst not find me, then shouldst thou
think at times of me, for of a truth I love thee well, though I be not fit to
wash thy feet. And now let us love and take that which is given us, and be
happy; for in the grave there is no love and no warmth, nor any touching of the
lips. Nothing perchance, or perchance but bitter memories of what might have
been. To-night the hours are our own, how know we to whom they shall belong
to-morrow?”
VIII.
THE FEAST, AND AFTER!
On the day following this remarkable scene—a scene calculated to make a
deep impression upon anybody who beheld it, more because of what it suggested
and seemed to foreshadow than of what it revealed—it was announced to us
that a feast would be held that evening in our honour. I did my best to get out
of it, saying that we were modest people, and cared little for feasts, but my
remarks being received with the silence of displeasure, I thought it wisest to
hold my tongue.
Accordingly, just before sundown, I was informed that everything was ready,
and, accompanied by Job, went into the cave, where I met Leo, who was, as
usual, followed by Ustane. These two had been out walking somewhere, and knew
nothing of the projected festivity till that moment. When Ustane heard of it I
saw an expression of horror spring up upon her handsome features. Turning she
caught a man who was passing up the cave by the arm, and asked him something in
an imperious tone. His answer seemed to reassure her a little, for she looked
relieved, though far from satisfied. Next she appeared to attempt some
remonstrance with the man, who was a person in authority, but he spoke angrily
to her, and shook her off, and then, changing his mind, led her by the arm, and
sat her down between himself and another man in the circle round the fire, and
I perceived that for some reason of her own she thought it best to submit.
The fire in the cave was an unusually big one that night, and in a large circle
round it were gathered about thirty-five men and two women, Ustane and the
woman to avoid whom Job had played the rôle of another Scriptural
character. The men were sitting in perfect silence, as was their custom, each
with his great spear stuck upright behind him, in a socket cut in the rock for
that purpose. Only one or two wore the yellowish linen garment of which I have
spoken, the rest had nothing on except the leopard’s skin about the
middle.
“What’s up now, sir,” said Job, doubtfully. “Bless us
and save us, there’s that woman again. Now, surely, she can’t be
after me, seeing that I have given her no encouragement. They give me the
creeps, the whole lot of them, and that’s a fact. Why look, they have
asked Mahomed to dine, too. There, that lady of mine is talking to him in as
nice and civil a way as possible. Well, I’m glad it isn’t me,
that’s all.”
We looked up, and sure enough the woman in question had risen, and was
escorting the wretched Mahomed from his corner, where, overcome by some acute
prescience of horror, he had been seated, shivering, and calling on Allah. He
appeared unwilling enough to come, if for no other reason perhaps because it
was an unaccustomed honour, for hitherto his food had been given to him apart.
Anyway I could see that he was in a state of great terror, for his tottering
legs would scarcely support his stout, bulky form, and I think it was rather
owing to the resources of barbarism behind him, in the shape of a huge
Amahagger with a proportionately huge spear, than to the seductions of the lady
who led him by the hand, that he consented to come at all.
“Well,” I said to the others, “I don’t at all like the
look of things, but I suppose we must face it out. Have you fellows got your
revolvers on? because, if so, you had better see that they are loaded.”
“I have, sir,” said Job, tapping his Colt, “but Mr. Leo has
only got his hunting knife, though that is big enough, surely.”
Feeling that it would not do to wait while the missing weapon was fetched, we
advanced boldly, and seated ourselves in a line, with our backs against the
side of the cave.
As soon as we were seated, an earthenware jar was passed round containing a
fermented fluid, of by no means unpleasant taste, though apt to turn upon the
stomach, made from crushed grain—not Indian corn, but a small brown grain
that grows upon its stem in clusters, not unlike that which in the southern
part of Africa is known by the name of Kafir corn. The vase which contained
this liquor was very curious, and as it more or less resembled many hundreds of
others in use among the Amahagger I may as well describe it. These vases are of
a very ancient manufacture, and of all sizes. None such can have been made in
the country for hundreds, or rather thousands, of years. They are found in the
rock tombs, of which I shall give a description in their proper place, and my
own belief is that, after the fashion of the Egyptians, with whom the former
inhabitants of this country may have had some connection, they were used to
receive the viscera of the dead. Leo, however, is of opinion that, as in the
case of Etruscan amphoræ, they were placed there for the spiritual use of the
deceased. They are mostly two-handled, and of all sizes, some being nearly
three feet in height, and running from that down to as many inches. In shape
they vary, but all are exceedingly beautiful and graceful, being made of a very
fine black ware, not lustrous, but slightly rough. On this groundwork are
inlaid figures much more graceful and lifelike than any others that I have seen
on antique vases. Some of these inlaid pictures represent love-scenes with a
childlike simplicity and freedom of manner which would not commend itself to
the taste of the present day. Others again give pictures of maidens dancing,
and yet others of hunting-scenes. For instance, the very vase from which we
were then drinking had on one side a most spirited drawing of men, apparently
white in colour, attacking a bull-elephant with spears, while on the reverse
was a picture, not quite so well done, of a hunter shooting an arrow at a
running antelope, I should say from the look of it either an eland or a koodoo.
This is a digression at a critical moment, but it is not too long for the
occasion, for the occasion itself was very long. With the exception of the
periodical passing of the vase, and the movement necessary to throw fuel on to
the fire, nothing happened for the best part of a whole hour. Nobody spoke a
word. There we all sat in perfect silence, staring at the glare and glow of the
large fire, and at the shadows thrown by the flickering earthenware lamps
(which, by the way, were not ancient). On the open space between us and the
fire lay a large wooden tray, with four short handles to it, exactly like a
butcher’s tray, only not hollowed out. By the side of the tray was a
great pair of long-handled iron pincers, and on the other side of the fire was
a similar pair. Somehow I did not at all like the appearance of this tray and
the accompanying pincers. There I sat and stared at them and at the silent
circle of the fierce moody faces of the men, and reflected that it was all very
awful, and that we were absolutely in the power of this alarming people, who,
to me at any rate, were all the more formidable because their true character
was still very much of a mystery to us. They might be better than I thought
them, or they might be worse. I feared that they were worse, and I was not
wrong. It was a curious sort of a feast, I reflected, in appearance indeed, an
entertainment of the Barmecide stamp, for there was absolutely nothing to eat.
At last, just as I was beginning to feel as though I were being mesmerised, a
move was made. Without the slightest warning, a man from the other side of the
circle called out in a loud voice—
“Where is the flesh that we shall eat?”
Thereon everybody in the circle answered in a deep measured tone, and
stretching out the right arm towards the fire as he spoke—
“The flesh will come.”
“Is it a goat?” said the same man.
“It is a goat without horns, and more than a goat, and we shall slay
it,” they answered with one voice, and turning half round they one
and all grasped the handles of their spears with the right hand, and then
simultaneously let them go.
“Is it an ox?” said the man again.
“It is an ox without horns, and more than an ox, and we shall slay
it,” was the answer, and again the spears were grasped, and again let
go.
Then came a pause, and I noticed, with horror and a rising of the hair, that
the woman next to Mahomed began to fondle him, patting his cheeks and calling
him by names of endearment while her fierce eyes played up and down his
trembling form. I do not know why the sight frightened me so, but it did
frighten us all dreadfully, especially Leo. The caressing was so snake-like,
and so evidently a part of some ghastly formula that had to be gone through.[1] I saw Mahomed turn white
under his brown skin, sickly white with fear.
[1]
We afterwards learnt that its object was to pretend to the victim that he was
the object of love and admiration, and so to sooth his injured feelings, and
cause him to expire in a happy and contented frame of mind.—L. H. H.
“Is the meat ready to be cooked?” asked the voice, more rapidly.
“It is ready; it is ready.”
“Is the pot hot to cook it?” it continued, in a sort of scream that
echoed painfully down the great recesses of the cave.
“It is hot; it is hot.”
“Great heavens!” roared Leo, “remember the writing,
‘The people who place pots upon the heads of
strangers.’”
As he said the words, before we could stir, or even take the matter in, two
great ruffians jumped up, and, seizing the long pincers, thrust them into the
heart of the fire, and the woman who had been caressing Mahomed suddenly
produced a fibre noose from under her girdle or moocha, and, slipping it over
his shoulders, ran it tight, while the men next to him seized him by the legs.
The two men with the pincers gave a heave, and, scattering the fire this way
and that upon the rocky floor, lifted from it a large earthenware pot, heated
to a white heat. In an instant, almost with a single movement, they had reached
the spot where Mahomed was struggling. He fought like a fiend, shrieking in the
abandonment of his despair, and notwithstanding the noose round him, and the
efforts of the men who held his legs, the advancing wretches were for the
moment unable to accomplish their purpose, which, horrible and incredible as it
seems, was to put the red-hot pot upon his head.
I sprang to my feet with a yell of horror, and drawing my revolver fired it by
a sort of instinct straight at the diabolical woman who had been caressing
Mahomed, and was now gripping him in her arms. The bullet struck her in the
back and killed her, and to this day I am glad that it did, for, as it
afterwards transpired, she had availed herself of the anthropophagous customs
of the Amahagger to organise the whole thing in revenge of the slight put upon
her by Job. She sank down dead, and as she did so, to my terror and dismay,
Mahomed, by a superhuman effort, burst from his tormenters, and, springing high
into the air, fell dying upon her corpse. The heavy bullet from my pistol had
driven through the bodies of both, at once striking down the murderess, and
saving her victim from a death a hundred times more horrible. It was an awful
and yet a most merciful accident.
For a moment there was a silence of astonishment. The Amahagger had never heard
the report of a firearm before, and its effects dismayed them. But the next instant a
man close to us recovered himself, and seized his spear preparatory to making a
lunge with it at Leo, who was the nearest to him.
“Run for it!” I shouted, setting the example by starting up the
cave as hard as my legs would carry me. I would have made for the open air if
it had been possible, but there were men in the way, and, besides, I had caught
sight of the forms of a crowd of people standing out clear against the skyline
beyond the entrance to the cave. Up the cave I went, and after me came the
others, and after them thundered the whole crowd of cannibals, mad with fury at
the death of the woman. With a bound I cleared the prostrate form of Mahomed.
As I flew over him I felt the heat from the red-hot pot, which was lying close
by, strike upon my legs, and by its glow saw his hands—for he was not
quite dead—still feebly moving. At the top of the cave was a little
platform of rock three feet or so high by about eight deep, on which two large
lamps were placed at night. Whether this platform had been left as a seat, or
as a raised point afterwards to be cut away when it had served its purpose as a
standing place from which to carry on the excavations, I do not know—at
least, I did not then. At any rate, we all three reached it, and, jumping on
it, prepared to sell our lives as dearly as we could. For a few seconds the
crowd that was pressing on our heels hung back when they saw us face round upon
them. Job was on one side of the rock to the left, Leo in the centre, and I to
the right. Behind us were the lamps. Leo bent forward, and looked down the long
lane of shadows, terminating in the fire and lighted lamps, through which the
quiet forms of our would-be murderers flitted to and fro with the faint light
glinting on their spears, for even their fury was silent as a bulldog’s.
The only other thing visible was the red-hot pot still glowing angrily in the
gloom. There was a curious light in Leo’s eyes, and his handsome face was
set like a stone. In his right hand was his heavy hunting-knife. He shifted its
thong a little up his wrist and then put his arm round me and gave me a good
hug.
“Good-bye, old fellow,” he said, “my dear friend—my
more than father. We have no chance against those scoundrels; they will finish
us in a few minutes, and eat us afterwards, I suppose. Good-bye. I led you into
this. I hope you will forgive me. Good-bye, Job.”
“God’s will be done,” I said, setting my teeth, as I prepared
for the end. At that moment, with an exclamation, Job lifted his revolver and
fired, and hit a man—not the man he had aimed at, by the way: anything
that Job shot at was perfectly safe.
On they came with a rush, and I fired too as fast as I could, and checked
them—between us, Job and I, besides the woman, killed or mortally wounded
five men with our pistols before they were emptied. But we had no time to
reload, and they still came on in a way that was almost splendid in its
recklessness, seeing that they did not know but that we could go on firing for
ever.
A great fellow bounded up upon the platform, and Leo struck him dead with one
blow of his powerful arm, sending the knife right through him. I did the same
by another, but Job missed his stroke, and I saw a brawny Amahagger grip him by
the middle and whirl him off the rock. The knife not being secured by a thong
fell from Job’s hand as he did so, and, by a most happy accident for him,
lit upon its handle on the rock, just as the body of the Amahagger, who was
undermost, struck upon its point and was transfixed upon it. What happened to
Job after that I am sure I do not know, but my own impression is that he lay
still upon the corpse of his deceased assailant, “playing
‘possum” as the Americans say. As for myself, I was soon involved
in a desperate encounter with two ruffians, who, luckily for me, had left their
spears behind them; and for the first time in my life the great physical power
with which Nature has endowed me stood me in good stead. I had hacked at the
head of one man with my hunting-knife, which was almost as big and heavy as a
short sword, with such vigour, that the sharp steel had split his skull down to
the eyes, and was held so fast by it that as he suddenly fell sideways the
knife was twisted right out of my hand.
Then it was that the two others sprang upon me. I saw them coming, and got an
arm round the waist of each, and down we all fell upon the floor of the cave
together, rolling over and over. They were strong men, but I was mad with rage,
and that awful lust for slaughter which will creep into the hearts of the most
civilised of us when blows are flying, and life and death tremble on the turn.
My arms were round the two swarthy demons, and I hugged them till I heard their
ribs crack and crunch up beneath my grip. They twisted and writhed like snakes,
and clawed and battered at me with their fists, but I held on. Lying on my back
there, so that their bodies might protect me from spear thrusts from above, I
slowly crushed the life out of them, and as I did so, strange as it may seem, I
thought of what the amiable Head of my College at Cambridge (who is a member of
the Peace Society) and my brother Fellows would say if by clairvoyance they
could see me, of all men, playing such a bloody game. Soon my assailants grew
faint, and almost ceased to struggle, their breath had failed them, and they
were dying, but still I dared not leave them, for they died very slowly. I knew
that if I relaxed my grip they would revive. The other ruffians probably
thought—for we were all three lying in the shadow of the ledge—that
we were all dead together, at any rate they did not interfere with our little
tragedy.
I turned my head, and as I lay gasping in the throes of that awful struggle I
could see that Leo was off the rock now, for the lamplight fell full upon him.
He was still on his feet, but in the centre of a surging mass of struggling
men, who were striving to pull him down as wolves pull down a stag. Up above
them towered his beautiful pale face crowned with its bright curls (for Leo is
six feet two high), and I saw that he was fighting with a desperate abandonment
and energy that was at once splendid and hideous to behold. He drove his knife
through one man—they were so close to and mixed up with him that they
could not get at him to kill him with their big spears, and they had no knives
or sticks. The man fell, and then somehow the knife was wrenched from his hand,
leaving him defenceless, and I thought the end had come. But no; with a
desperate effort he broke loose from them, seized the body of the man he had
just slain, and lifting it high in the air hurled it right at the mob of his
assailants, so that the shock and weight of it swept some five or six of them
to the earth. But in a minute they were all up again, except one, whose skull
was smashed, and had once more fastened upon him. And then slowly, and with
infinite labour and struggling, the wolves bore the lion down. Once even then
he recovered himself, and felled an Amahagger with his fist, but it was more
than man could do to hold his own for long against so many, and at last he came
crashing down upon the rock floor, falling as an oak falls, and bearing with
him to the earth all those who clung about him. They gripped him by his arms
and legs, and then cleared off his body.
“A spear,” cried a voice—“a spear to cut his throat,
and a vessel to catch his blood.”
I shut my eyes, for I saw the man coming with a spear, and myself, I could not
stir to Leo’s help, for I was growing weak, and the two men on me were
not yet dead, and a deadly sickness overcame me.
Then suddenly there was a disturbance, and involuntarily I opened my eyes
again, and looked towards the scene of murder. The girl Ustane had thrown
herself on Leo’s prostrate form, covering his body with her body, and
fastening her arms about his neck. They tried to drag her from him, but she
twisted her legs round his, and hung on like a bulldog, or rather like a
creeper to a tree, and they could not. Then they tried to stab him in the side
without hurting her, but somehow she shielded him, and he was only wounded.
At last they lost patience.
“Drive the spear through the man and the woman together,” said a
voice, the same voice that had asked the questions at that ghastly feast,
“so of a verity shall they be wed.”
Then I saw the man with the weapon straighten himself for the effort. I saw the
cold steel gleam on high, and once more I shut my eyes.
As I did so I heard the voice of a man thunder out in tones that rang and
echoed down the rocky ways—
“Cease!”
Then I fainted, and as I did so it flashed through my darkening mind that I was
passing down into the last oblivion of death.
IX.
A LITTLE FOOT
When I opened my eyes again I found myself lying on a skin mat not far from the
fire round which we had been gathered for that dreadful feast. Near me lay Leo,
still apparently in a swoon, and over him was bending the tall form of the girl
Ustane, who was washing a deep spear wound in his side with cold water
preparatory to binding it up with linen. Leaning against the wall of the cave
behind her was Job, apparently uninjured, but bruised and trembling. On the
other side of the fire, tossed about this way and that, as though they had
thrown themselves down to sleep in some moment of absolute exhaustion, were the
bodies of those whom we had killed in our frightful struggle for life. I
counted them: there were twelve besides the woman, and the corpse of poor
Mahomed, who had died by my hand, which, the fire-stained pot at its side, was
placed at the end of the irregular line. To the left a body of men were engaged
in binding the arms of the survivors of the cannibals behind them, and then
fastening them two and two. The villains were submitting with a look of sulky
indifference upon their faces which accorded ill with the baffled fury that
gleamed in their sombre eyes. In front of these men, directing the operations,
stood no other than our friend Billali, looking rather tired, but particularly
patriarchal with his flowing beard, and as cool and unconcerned as though he
were superintending the cutting up of an ox.
Presently he turned, and perceiving that I was sitting up advanced to me, and
with the utmost courtesy said that he trusted that I felt better. I answered
that at present I scarcely knew how I felt, except that I ached all over.
Then he bent down and examined Leo’s wound.
“It is an evil cut,” he said, “but the spear has not pierced
the entrails. He will recover.”
“Thanks to thy arrival, my father,” I answered. “In another
minute we should all have been beyond the reach of recovery, for those devils
of thine would have slain us as they would have slain our servant,” and I
pointed towards Mahomed.
The old man ground his teeth, and I saw an extraordinary expression of
malignity light up his eyes.
“Fear not, my son,” he answered. “Vengeance shall be taken on
them such as would make the flesh twist upon the bones merely to hear of it. To
She shall they go, and her vengeance shall be worthy of her greatness.
That man,” pointing to Mahomed, “I tell thee that man would have
died a merciful death to the death these hyæna-men shall die. Tell me, I pray
of thee, how it came about.”
In a few words I sketched what had happened.
“Ah, so,” he answered. “Thou seest, my son, here there is a
custom that if a stranger comes into this country he may be slain by ‘the
pot,’ and eaten.”
“It is hospitality turned upside down,” I answered feebly.
“In our country we entertain a stranger, and give him food to eat. Here
ye eat him, and are entertained.”
“It is a custom,” he answered, with a shrug. “Myself I think
it an evil one; but then,” he added by an afterthought, “I do not
like the taste of strangers, especially after they have wandered through the
swamps and lived on wild-fowl. When She-who-must-be-obeyed sent orders
that ye were to be saved alive she said naught of the black man, therefore,
being hyænas, these men lusted after his flesh, and the woman it was, whom thou
didst rightly slay, who put it into their evil hearts to hot-pot him. Well,
they will have their reward. Better for them would it be if they had never seen
the light than that they should stand before She in her terrible anger.
Happy are those of them who died by your hands.”
“Ah,” he went on, “it was a gallant fight that ye fought.
Knowest thou that, long-armed old baboon that thou art, thou hast crushed in
the ribs of those two who are laid out there as though they were but as the
shell on an egg? And the young one, the lion, it was a beautiful stand that he
made—one against so many—three did he slay outright, and that one
there”—and he pointed to a body that was still moving a
little—“will die anon, for his head is cracked across, and others
of those who are bound are hurt. It was a gallant fight, and thou and he have
made a friend of me by it, for I love to see a well-fought fray. But tell me,
my son, the baboon—and now I think of it thy face, too, is hairy, and
altogether like a baboon’s—how was it that ye slew those with a
hole in them?—Ye made a noise, they say, and slew them—they fell
down on the faces at the noise?”
I explained to him as well as I could, but very shortly—for I was
terribly wearied, and only persuaded to talk at all through fear of offending
one so powerful if I refused to do so—what were the properties of
gunpowder, and he instantly suggested that I should illustrate what I said by
operating on the person of one of the prisoners. One, he said, never would be
counted, and it would not only be very interesting to him, but would give me
the opportunity of an instalment of revenge. He was greatly astounded when I
told him that it was not our custom to avenge ourselves in cold blood, and that
we left vengeance to the law and a higher power, of which he knew nothing. I
added, however, that when I recovered I would take him out shooting with us,
and he should kill an animal for himself, and at this he was as pleased as a
child at the promise of a new toy.
Just then Leo opened his eyes beneath the stimulus of some brandy (of which we
still had a little) that Job had poured down his throat, and our conversation
came to an end.
After this we managed to get Leo, who was in a very poor way indeed, and only
half conscious, safely off to bed, supported by Job and that brave girl Ustane,
to whom, had I not been afraid that she might resent it, I would certainly have
given a kiss for her splendid behaviour in saving my boy’s life at the
risk of her own. But Ustane was not the sort of young person with whom one
would care to take liberties unless one were perfectly certain that they would
not be misunderstood, so I repressed my inclinations. Then, bruised and
battered, but with a sense of safety in my breast to which I had for some days
been a stranger, I crept off to my own little sepulchre, not forgetting before
I laid down in it to thank Providence from the bottom of my heart that it was
not a sepulchre indeed, as, save for a merciful combination of events that I
can only attribute to its protection, it would certainly have been for me that
night. Few men have been nearer their end and yet escaped it than we were on
that dreadful day.
I am a bad sleeper at the best of times, and my dreams that night when at last
I got to rest were not of the pleasantest. The awful vision of poor Mahomed
struggling to escape the red-hot pot would haunt them, and then in the
background, as it were, a veiled form was always hovering, which, from time to
time, seemed to draw the coverings from its body, revealing now the perfect
shape of a lovely blooming woman, and now again the white bones of a grinning
skeleton, and which, as it veiled and unveiled, uttered the mysterious and
apparently meaningless sentence:—
“That which is alive and hath known death, and that which is dead yet can
never die, for in the Circle of the Spirit life is naught and death is naught.
Yea, all things live for ever, though at times they sleep and are
forgotten.”
The morning came at last, but when it came I found that I was too stiff and
sore to rise. About seven Job arrived, limping terribly, and with his face the
colour of a rotten apple, and told me that Leo had slept fairly, but was very
weak. Two hours afterwards Billali (Job called him “Billy-goat,” to
which, indeed, his white beard gave him some resemblance, or more familiarly,
“Billy”) came too, bearing a lamp in his hand, his towering form
reaching nearly to the roof of the little chamber. I pretended to be asleep,
and through the cracks of my eyelids watched his sardonic but handsome old
face. He fixed his hawk-like eyes upon me, and stroked his glorious white
beard, which, by the way, would have been worth a hundred a year to any London
barber as an advertisement.
“Ah!” I heard him mutter (Billali had a habit of muttering to
himself), “he is ugly—ugly as the other is beautiful—a very
Baboon, it was a good name. But I like the man. Strange now, at my age, that I
should like a man. What says the proverb—’Mistrust all men, and
slay him whom thou mistrustest overmuch; and as for women, flee from them, for
they are evil, and in the end will destroy thee.’ It is a good proverb,
especially the last part of it: I think that it must have come down from the
ancients. Nevertheless I like this Baboon, and I wonder where they taught him
his tricks, and I trust that She will not bewitch him. Poor Baboon! he
must be wearied after that fight. I will go lest I should awake him.”
I waited till he had turned and was nearly through the entrance, walking softly
on tiptoe, and then I called after him.
“My father,” I said, “is it thou?”
“Yes, my son, it is I; but let me not disturb thee. I did but come to see
how thou didst fare, and to tell thee that those who would have slain thee, my
Baboon, are by now far on their road to She. She said that ye
also were to come at once, but I fear ye cannot yet.”
“Nay,” I said, “not till we have recovered a little; but have
me borne out into the daylight, I pray thee, my father. I love not this
place.”
“Ah, no,” he answered, “it hath a sad air. I remember when I
was a boy I found the body of a fair woman lying where thou liest now, yes, on
that very bench. She was so beautiful that I was wont to creep in hither with a
lamp and gaze upon her. Had it not been for her cold hands, almost could I
think that she slept and would one day awake, so fair and peaceful was she in
her robes of white. White was she, too, and her hair was yellow and lay down
her almost to the feet. There are many such still in the tombs at the place
where She is, for those who set them there had a way I know naught of,
whereby to keep their beloved out of the crumbling hand of Decay, even when
Death had slain them. Ay, day by day I came hither, and gazed on her till at
last—laugh not at me, stranger, for I was but a silly lad—I learned
to love that dead form, that shell which once had held a life that no more is.
I would creep up to her and kiss her cold face, and wonder how many men had
lived and died since she was, and who had loved her and embraced her in the
days that long had passed away. And, my Baboon, I think I learned wisdom from
that dead one, for of a truth it taught me of the littleness of life, and the
length of Death, and how all things that are under the sun go down one path,
and are for ever forgotten. And so I mused, and it seemed to me that wisdom
flowed into me from the dead, till one day my mother, a watchful woman, but
hasty-minded, seeing I was changed, followed me, and saw the beautiful white
one, and feared that I was bewitched, as, indeed, I was. So half in dread, and
half in anger, she took up the lamp, and standing the dead woman up against the
wall even there, set fire to her hair, and she burnt fiercely, even down to the
feet, for those who are thus kept burn excellently well.
“See, my son, there on the roof is yet the smoke of her burning.”
I looked up doubtfully, and there, sure enough, on the roof of the sepulchre,
was a peculiarly unctuous and sooty mark, three feet or more across. Doubtless
it had in the course of years been rubbed off the sides of the little cave, but
on the roof it remained, and there was no mistaking its appearance.
“She burnt,” he went on in a meditative way, “even to the
feet, but the feet I came back and saved, cutting the burnt bone from them, and
hid them under the stone bench there, wrapped up in a piece of linen. Surely, I
remember it as though it were but yesterday. Perchance they are there, if none
have found them, even to this hour. Of a truth I have not entered this chamber
from that time to this very day. Stay, I will look,” and, kneeling down,
he groped about with his long arm in the recess under the stone bench.
Presently his face brightened, and with an exclamation he pulled something
forth which was caked in dust; which he shook on to the floor. It was covered
with the remains of a rotting rag, which he undid, and revealed to my
astonished gaze a beautifully shaped and almost white woman’s foot,
looking as fresh and firm as though it had but now been placed there.
“Thou seest, my son, the Baboon,” he said, in a sad voice, “I
spake the truth to thee, for here is yet one foot remaining. Take it, my son,
and gaze upon it.”
I took this cold fragment of mortality in my hand and looked at it in the light
of the lamp with feelings which I cannot describe, so mixed up were they
between astonishment, fear, and fascination. It was light, much lighter I
should say than it had been in the living state, and the flesh to all
appearance was still flesh, though about it there clung a faintly aromatic
odour. For the rest it was not shrunk or shrivelled, or even black and
unsightly, like the flesh of Egyptian mummies, but plump and fair, and, except
where it had been slightly burnt, perfect as on the day of death—a very
triumph of embalming.
Poor little foot! I set it down upon the stone bench where it had lain for so
many thousand years, and wondered whose was the beauty that it had upborne
through the pomp and pageantry of a forgotten civilisation—first as a
merry child’s, then as a blushing maid’s, and lastly as a perfect
woman’s. Through what halls of Life had its soft step echoed, and in the
end, with what courage had it trodden down the dusty ways of Death! To whose
side had it stolen in the hush of night when the black slave slept upon the
marble floor, and who had listened for its stealing? Shapely little foot! Well
might it have been set upon the proud neck of a conqueror bent at last to
woman’s beauty, and well might the lips of nobles and of kings have been
pressed upon its jewelled whiteness.
I wrapped up this relic of the past in the remnants of the old linen rag which
had evidently formed a portion of its owner’s grave-clothes, for it was
partially burnt, and put it away in my Gladstone bag—a strange
combination, I thought. Then with Billali’s help I staggered off to see
Leo. I found him dreadfully bruised, worse even than myself, perhaps owing to
the excessive whiteness of his skin, and faint and weak with the loss of blood
from the flesh wound in his side, but for all that cheerful as a cricket, and
asking for some breakfast. Job and Ustane got him on to the bottom, or rather
the sacking of a litter, which was removed from its pole for that purpose, and
with the aid of old Billali carried him out into the shade at the mouth of the
cave, from which, by the way, every trace of the slaughter of the previous
night had now been removed, and there we all breakfasted, and indeed spent that
day, and most of the two following ones.
On the third morning Job and myself were practically recovered. Leo also was so
much better that I yielded to Billali’s often expressed entreaty, and
agreed to start at once upon our journey to Kôr, which we were told was the
name of the place where the mysterious She lived, though I still feared
for its effect upon Leo, and especially lest the motion should cause his wound,
which was scarcely skinned over, to break open again. Indeed, had it not been
for Billali’s evident anxiety to get off, which led us to suspect that
some difficulty or danger might threaten us if we did not comply with it, I
would not have consented to go.
X.
SPECULATIONS
Within an hour of our finally deciding to start five litters were brought up to
the door of the cave, each accompanied by four regular bearers and two spare
hands, also a band of about fifty armed Amahagger, who were to form the escort
and carry the baggage. Three of these litters, of course, were for us, and one
for Billali, who, I was immensely relieved to hear, was to be our companion,
while the fifth I presumed was for the use of Ustane.
“Does the lady go with us, my father?” I asked of Billali, as he
stood superintending things in general.
He shrugged his shoulders as he answered—
“If she wills. In this country the women do what they please. We worship
them, and give them their way, because without them the world could not go on;
they are the source of life.”
“Ah,” I said, the matter never having struck me quite in that light
before.
“We worship them,” he went on, “up to a point, till at last
they get unbearable, which,” he added, “they do about every second
generation.”
“And then what do you do?” I asked, with curiosity.
“Then,” he answered, with a faint smile, “we rise, and kill
the old ones as an example to the young ones, and to show them that we are the
strongest. My poor wife was killed in that way three years ago. It was very
sad, but to tell thee the truth, my son, life has been happier since, for my
age protects me from the young ones.”
“In short,” I replied, quoting the saying of a great man whose
wisdom has not yet lightened the darkness of the Amahagger, “thou hast
found thy position one of greater freedom and less responsibility.”
This phrase puzzled him a little at first from its vagueness, though I think my
translation hit off its sense very well, but at last he saw it, and appreciated
it.
“Yes, yes, my Baboon,” he said, “I see it now, but all the
‘responsibilities’ are killed, at least some of them are, and that
is why there are so few old women about just now. Well, they brought it on
themselves. As for this girl,” he went on, in a graver tone, “I
know not what to say. She is a brave girl, and she loves the Lion (Leo); thou
sawest how she clung to him, and saved his life. Also, she is, according to our
custom, wed to him, and has a right to go where he goes, unless,” he
added significantly, “She would say her no, for her word overrides
all rights.”
“And if She bade her leave him, and the girl refused? What
then?”
“If,” he said, with a shrug, “the hurricane bids the tree to
bend, and it will not; what happens?”
And then, without waiting for an answer, he turned and walked to his litter,
and in ten minutes from that time we were all well under way.
It took us an hour and more to cross the cup of the volcanic plain, and another
half-hour or so to climb the edge on the farther side. Once there, however, the
view was a very fine one. Before us was a long steep slope of grassy plain,
broken here and there by clumps of trees mostly of the thorn tribe. At the
bottom of this gentle slope, some nine or ten miles away, we could make out a
dim sea of marsh, over which the foul vapours hung like smoke about a city. It
was easy going for the bearers down the slopes, and by midday we had reached
the borders of the dismal swamp. Here we halted to eat our midday meal, and
then, following a winding and devious path, plunged into the morass. Presently
the path, at any rate to our unaccustomed eyes, grew so faint as to be almost
indistinguishable from those made by the aquatic beasts and birds, and it is to
this day a mystery to me how our bearers found their way across the marshes.
Ahead of the cavalcade marched two men with long poles, which they now and
again plunged into the ground before them, the reason of this being that the
nature of the soil frequently changed from causes with which I am not
acquainted, so that places which might be safe enough to cross one month would
certainly swallow the wayfarer the next. Never did I see a more dreary and
depressing scene. Miles on miles of quagmire, varied only by bright green
strips of comparatively solid ground, and by deep and sullen pools fringed with
tall rushes, in which the bitterns boomed and the frogs croaked incessantly:
miles on miles of it without a break, unless the fever fog can be called a
break. The only life in this great morass was that of the aquatic birds, and
the animals that fed on them, of both of which there were vast numbers. Geese,
cranes, ducks, teal, coot, snipe, and plover swarmed all around us, many being
of varieties that were quite new to me, and all so tame that one could almost
have knocked them over with a stick. Among these birds I especially noticed a
very beautiful variety of painted snipe, almost the size of a woodcock, and
with a flight more resembling that bird’s than an English snipe’s.
In the pools, too, was a species of small alligator or enormous iguana, I do
not know which, that fed, Billali told me, upon the waterfowl, also large
quantities of a hideous black water-snake, of which the bite is very dangerous,
though not, I gathered, so deadly as a cobra’s or a puff adder’s.
The bull-frogs were also very large, and with voices proportionate to their
size; and as for the mosquitoes—the “musqueteers,” as Job
called them—they were, if possible, even worse than they had been on the
river, and tormented us greatly. Undoubtedly, however, the worst feature of the
swamp was the awful smell of rotting vegetation that hung about it, which was
at times positively overpowering, and the malarious exhalations that
accompanied it, which we were of course obliged to breathe.
On we went through it all, till at last the sun sank in sullen splendour just
as we reached a spot of rising ground about two acres in extent—a little
oasis of dry in the midst of the miry wilderness—where Billali announced
that we were to camp. The camping, however, turned out to be a very simple
process, and consisted, in fact, in sitting down on the ground round a scanty
fire made of dry reeds and some wood that had been brought with us. However, we
made the best we could of it, and smoked and ate with such appetite as the
smell of damp, stifling heat would allow, for it was very hot on this low land,
and yet, oddly enough, chilly at times. But, however hot it was, we were glad
enough to keep near the fire, because we found that the mosquitoes did not like
the smoke. Presently we rolled ourselves up in our blankets and tried to go to
sleep, but so far as I was concerned the bull-frogs, and the extraordinary
roaring and alarming sound produced by hundreds of snipe hovering high in the
air, made sleep an impossibility, to say nothing of our other discomforts. I
turned and looked at Leo, who was next me; he was dozing, but his face had a
flushed appearance that I did not like, and by the flickering fire-light I saw
Ustane, who was lying on the other side of him, raise herself from time to time
upon her elbow, and look at him anxiously enough.
However, I could do nothing for him, for we had all already taken a good dose
of quinine, which was the only preventive we had; so I lay and watched the
stars come out by thousands, till all the immense arch of heaven was strewn
with glittering points, and every point a world! Here was a glorious sight by
which man might well measure his own insignificance! Soon I gave up thinking
about it, for the mind wearies easily when it strives to grapple with the
Infinite, and to trace the footsteps of the Almighty as he strides from sphere
to sphere, or deduce His purpose from His works. Such things are not for us to
know. Knowledge is to the strong, and we are weak. Too much wisdom would
perchance blind our imperfect sight, and too much strength would make us drunk,
and over-weight our feeble reason till it fell and we were drowned in the
depths of our own vanity. For what is the first result of man’s increased
knowledge interpreted from Nature’s book by the persistent effort of his
purblind observation? Is it not but too often to make him question the
existence of his Maker, or indeed of any intelligent purpose beyond his own?
The truth is veiled, because we could no more look upon her glory than we can
upon the sun. It would destroy us. Full knowledge is not for man as man is
here, for his capacities, which he is apt to think so great, are indeed but
small. The vessel is soon filled, and, were one-thousandth part of the
unutterable and silent wisdom that directs the rolling of those shining
spheres, and the Force which makes them roll, pressed into it, it would be
shattered into fragments. Perhaps in some other place and time it may be
otherwise, who can tell? Here the lot of man born of the flesh is but to endure
midst toil and tribulation, to catch at the bubbles blown by Fate, which he
calls pleasure, thankful if before they burst they rest a moment in his hand,
and when the tragedy is played out, and his hour comes to perish, to pass
humbly whither he knows not.
Above me, as I lay, shone the eternal stars, and there at my feet the impish
marsh-born balls of fire rolled this way and that, vapour-tossed and
earth-desiring, and methought that in the two I saw a type and image of what
man is, and what perchance man may one day be, if the living Force who ordained
him and them should so ordain this also. Oh, that it might be ours to rest year
by year upon that high level of the heart to which at times we momentarily
attain! Oh, that we could shake loose the prisoned pinions of the soul and soar
to that superior point, whence, like to some traveller looking out through
space from Darien’s giddiest peak, we might gaze with spiritual eyes deep
into Infinity!
What would it be to cast off this earthy robe, to have done for ever with these
earthy thoughts and miserable desires; no longer, like those corpse candles, to
be tossed this way and that, by forces beyond our control; or which, if we can
theoretically control them, we are at times driven by the exigencies of our
nature to obey! Yes, to cast them off, to have done with the foul and thorny
places of the world; and, like to those glittering points above me, to rest on
high wrapped for ever in the brightness of our better selves, that even now
shines in us as fire faintly shines within those lurid balls, and lay down our
littleness in that wide glory of our dreams, that invisible but surrounding
Good, from which all truth and beauty comes!
These and many such thoughts passed through my mind that night. They come to
torment us all at times. I say to torment, for, alas! thinking can only serve
to measure out the helplessness of thought. What is the purpose of our feeble
crying in the awful silences of space? Can our dim intelligence read the
secrets of that star-strewn sky? Does any answer come out of it? Never any at
all, nothing but echoes and fantastic visions! And yet we believe that there is
an answer, and that upon a time a new Dawn will come blushing down the ways of
our enduring night. We believe it, for its reflected beauty even now shines up
continually in our hearts from beneath the horizon of the grave, and we call it
Hope. Without Hope we should suffer moral death, and by the help of Hope we yet
may climb to Heaven, or at the worst, if she also prove but a kindly mockery
given to hold us from despair, be gently lowered into the abysses of eternal
sleep.
Then I fell to reflecting upon the undertaking on which we were bent, and what
a wild one it was, and yet how strangely the story seemed to fit in with what
had been written centuries ago upon the sherd. Who was this extraordinary
woman, Queen over a people apparently as extraordinary as herself, and reigning
amidst the vestiges of a lost civilisation? And what was the meaning of this
story of the Fire that gave unending life? Could it be possible that any fluid
or essence should exist which might so fortify these fleshy walls that they
should from age to age resist the mines and batterings of decay? It was
possible, though not probable. The infinite continuation of life would not, as
poor Vincey said, be so marvellous a thing as the production of life and its
temporary endurance. And if it were true, what then? The person who found it
could no doubt rule the world. He could accumulate all the wealth in the world,
and all the power, and all the wisdom that is power. He might give a lifetime
to the study of each art or science. Well, if that were so, and this She
were practically immortal, which I did not for one moment believe, how was it
that, with all these things at her feet, she preferred to remain in a cave
amongst a society of cannibals? This surely settled the question. The whole
story was monstrous, and only worthy of the superstitious days in which it was
written. At any rate I was very sure that I would not attempt to attain
unending life. I had had far too many worries and disappointments and secret
bitternesses during my forty odd years of existence to wish that this state of
affairs should be continued indefinitely. And yet I suppose that my life has
been, comparatively speaking, a happy one.
And then, reflecting that at the present moment there was far more likelihood
of our earthly careers being cut exceedingly short than of their being unduly
prolonged, I at last managed to get to sleep, a fact for which anybody who
reads this narrative, if anybody ever does, may very probably be thankful.
When I woke again it was just dawning, and the guard and bearers were moving
about like ghosts through the dense morning mists, getting ready for our start.
The fire had died quite down, and I rose and stretched myself, shivering in
every limb from the damp cold of the dawn. Then I looked at Leo. He was sitting
up, holding his hands to his head, and I saw that his face was flushed and his
eye bright, and yet yellow round the pupil.
“Well, Leo,” I said, “how do you feel?”
“I feel as though I were going to die,” he answered hoarsely.
“My head is splitting, my body is trembling, and I am as sick as a
cat.”
I whistled, or if I did not whistle I felt inclined to—Leo had got a
sharp attack of fever. I went to Job, and asked him for the quinine, of which
fortunately we had still a good supply, only to find that Job himself was not
much better. He complained of pains across the back, and dizziness, and was
almost incapable of helping himself. Then I did the only thing it was possible
to do under the circumstances—gave them both about ten grains of quinine,
and took a slightly smaller dose myself as a matter of precaution. After that I
found Billali, and explained to him how matters stood, asking at the same time
what he thought had best be done. He came with me, and looked at Leo and Job
(whom, by the way, he had named the Pig on account of his fatness, round face,
and small eyes).
“Ah,” he said, when we were out of earshot, “the fever! I
thought so. The Lion has it badly, but he is young, and he may live. As for the
Pig, his attack is not so bad; it is the ‘little fever’ which he
has; that always begins with pains across the back, it will spend itself upon
his fat.”
“Can they go on, my father?” I asked.
“Nay, my son, they must go on. If they stop here they will certainly die;
also, they will be better in the litters than on the ground. By to-night, if
all goes well, we shall be across the marsh and in good air. Come, let us lift
them into the litters and start, for it is very bad to stand still in this
morning fog. We can eat our meal as we go.”
This we accordingly did, and with a heavy heart I once more set out upon our
strange journey. For the first three hours all went as well as could be
expected, and then an accident happened that nearly lost us the pleasure of the
company of our venerable friend Billali, whose litter was leading the
cavalcade. We were going through a particularly dangerous stretch of quagmire,
in which the bearers sometimes sank up to their knees. Indeed, it was a mystery
to me how they contrived to carry the heavy litters at all over such ground as
that which we were traversing, though the two spare hands, as well as the four
regular ones, had of course to put their shoulders to the pole.
Presently, as we blundered and floundered along, there was a sharp cry, then a
storm of exclamations, and, last of all, a most tremendous splash, and the
whole caravan halted.
I jumped out of my litter and ran forward. About twenty yards ahead was the
edge of one of those sullen peaty pools of which I have spoken, the path we
were following running along the top of its bank, that, as it happened, was a
steep one. Looking towards this pool, to my horror I saw that Billali’s
litter was floating on it, and as for Billali himself, he was nowhere to be
seen. To make matters clear I may as well explain at once what had happened.
One of Billali’s bearers had unfortunately trodden on a basking snake,
which had bitten him in the leg, whereon he had, not unnaturally, let go of the
pole, and then, finding that he was tumbling down the bank, grasped at the
litter to save himself. The result of this was what might have been expected.
The litter was pulled over the edge of the bank, the bearers let go, and the
whole thing, including Billali and the man who had been bitten, rolled into the
slimy pool. When I got to the edge of the water neither of them were to be
seen; indeed, the unfortunate bearer never was seen again. Either he struck his
head against something, or got wedged in the mud, or possibly the snake-bite
paralyzed him. At any rate he vanished. But though Billali was not to be seen,
his whereabouts was clear enough from the agitation of the floating litter, in
the bearing cloth and curtains of which he was entangled.
“He is there! Our father is there!” said one of the men, but he did
not stir a finger to help him, nor did any of the others. They simply stood and
stared at the water.
“Out of the way, you brutes!” I shouted in English, and throwing
off my hat I took a run and sprang well out into the horrid slimy-looking pool.
A couple of strokes took me to where Billali was struggling beneath the cloth.
Somehow, I do not quite know how, I managed to push it free of him, and his
venerable head all covered with green slime, like that of a yellowish Bacchus
with ivy leaves, emerged upon the surface of the water. The rest was easy, for
Billali was an eminently practical individual, and had the common sense not to
grasp hold of me as drowning people often do, so I got him by the arm, and
towed him to the bank, through the mud of which we were with difficulty
dragged. Such a filthy spectacle as we presented I have never seen before or
since, and it will perhaps give some idea of the almost superhuman dignity of
Billali’s appearance when I say that, coughing, half-drowned, and covered
with mud and green slime as he was, with his beautiful beard coming to a
dripping point, like a Chinaman’s freshly-oiled pig-tail, he still looked
venerable and imposing.
“Ye dogs,” he said, addressing the bearers, as soon as he had
sufficiently recovered to speak, “ye left me, your father, to drown. Had
it not been for this stranger, my son the Baboon, assuredly I should have
drowned. Well, I will remember it,” and he fixed them with his gleaming
though slightly watery eye, in a way I saw that they did not like, though they
tried to appear sulkily indifferent.
“As for thee, my son,” the old man went on, turning towards me and
grasping my hand, “rest assured that I am thy friend through good and
evil. Thou hast saved my life: perchance a day may come when I shall save
thine.”
After that we cleaned ourselves as best we could, fished out the litter, and
went on, minus the man who had been drowned. I do not know if it was
owing to his being an unpopular character, or from native indifference and
selfishness of temperament, but I am bound to say that nobody seemed to grieve
much over his sudden and final disappearance, unless, perhaps, it was the men
who had to do his share of the work.
XI.
THE PLAIN OF KÔR
About an hour before sundown we at last, to my unbounded gratitude, emerged
from the great belt of marsh on to land that swelled upwards in a succession of
rolling waves. Just on the hither side of the crest of the first wave we halted
for the night. My first act was to examine Leo’s condition. It was, if
anything, worse than in the morning, and a new and very distressing feature,
vomiting, set in, and continued till dawn. Not one wink of sleep did I get that
night, for I passed it in assisting Ustane, who was one of the most gentle and
indefatigable nurses I ever saw, to wait upon Leo and Job. However, the air
here was warm and genial without being too hot, and there were no mosquitoes to
speak of. Also we were above the level of the marsh mist, which lay stretched
beneath us like the dim smoke-pall over a city, lit up here and there by the
wandering globes of fen fire. Thus it will be seen that we were, speaking
comparatively, in clover.
By dawn on the following morning Leo was quite light-headed, and fancied that
he was divided into halves. I was dreadfully distressed, and began to wonder
with a sort of sick fear what the end of the attack would be. Alas! I had heard
but too much of how these attacks generally terminate. As I was wondering
Billali came up and said that we must be getting on, more especially as, in his
opinion, if Leo did not reach some spot where he could be quiet, and have
proper nursing, within the next twelve hours, his life would only be a matter
of a day or two. I could not but agree with him, so we got Leo into the litter,
and started on, Ustane walking by his side to keep the flies off him, and see
that he did not throw himself out on to the ground.
Within half an hour of sunrise we had reached the top of the rise of which I
have spoken, and a most beautiful view broke upon our gaze. Beneath us was a
rich stretch of country, verdant with grass and lovely with foliage and
flowers. In the background, at a distance, so far as I could judge, of some
eighteen miles from where we then stood, a huge and extraordinary mountain rose
abruptly from the plain. The base of this great mountain appeared to consist of
a grassy slope, but rising from this, I should say, from subsequent
observation, at a height of about five hundred feet above the level of the
plain, was a most tremendous and absolutely precipitous wall of bare rock,
quite twelve or fifteen hundred feet in height. The shape of the mountain,
which was undoubtedly of volcanic origin, was round, and of course, as only a
segment of its circle was visible, it was difficult to estimate its exact size,
which was enormous. I afterwards discovered that it could not cover less than
fifty square miles of ground. Anything more grand and imposing than the sight
presented by this great natural castle, starting in solitary grandeur from the
level of the plain, I never saw, and I suppose I never shall. Its very solitude
added to its majesty, and its towering cliffs seemed to kiss the sky. Indeed,
generally speaking, they were clothed in clouds that lay in fleecy masses upon
their broad and level battlements.
I sat up in my hammock and gazed out across the plain at this thrilling and
majestic sight, and I suppose that Billali noticed it, for he brought his
litter alongside.
“Behold the house of ‘She-who-must-be-obeyed!’”
he said. “Had ever a queen such a throne before?”
“It is wonderful, my father,” I answered. “But how do we
enter? Those cliffs look hard to climb.”
“Thou shalt see, my Baboon. Look now at the path below us. What thinkest
thou that it is? Thou art a wise man. Come, tell me.”
I looked, and saw what appeared to be the line of roadway running straight
towards the base of the mountain, though it was covered with turf. There were
high banks on each side of it, broken here and there, but fairly continuous on
the whole, the meaning of which I did not understand. It seemed so very odd
that anybody should embank a roadway.
“Well, my father,” I answered, “I suppose that it is a road,
otherwise I should have been inclined to say that it was the bed of a river, or
rather,” I added, observing the extraordinary directness of the cutting,
“of a canal.”
Billali—who, by the way, was none the worse for his immersion of the day
before—nodded his head sagely as he replied—
“Thou art right, my son. It is a channel cut out by those who were before
us in this place to carry away water. Of this I am sure: within the rocky
circle of the mountain whither we journey was once a great lake. But those who
were before us, by wonderful arts of which I know naught, hewed a path for the
water through the solid rock of the mountain, piercing even to the bed of the
lake. But first they cut the channel that thou seest across the plain. Then,
when at last the water burst out, it rushed down the channel that had been made
to receive it, and crossed this plain till it reached the low land behind the
rise, and there, perchance, it made the swamp through which we have come. Then
when the lake was drained dry, the people whereof I speak built a mighty city
on its bed, whereof naught but ruins and the name of Kôr yet remaineth, and
from age to age hewed the caves and passages that thou wilt see.”
“It may be,” I answered; “but if so, how is it that the lake
does not fill up again with the rains and the water of the springs?”
“Nay, my son, the people were a wise people, and they left a drain to
keep it clear. Seest thou the river to the right?” and he pointed to a
fair-sized stream that wound away across the plain, some four miles from us.
“That is the drain, and it comes out through the mountain wall where this
cutting goes in. At first, perhaps, the water ran down this canal, but
afterwards the people turned it, and used the cutting for a road.”
“And is there then no other place where one may enter into the great
mountain,” I asked, “except through that drain?”
“There is a place,” he answered, “where cattle and men on
foot may cross with much labour, but it is secret. A year mightest thou search
and shouldst never find it. It is only used once a year, when the herds of
cattle that have been fatting on the slopes of the mountain, and on this plain,
are driven into the space within.”
“And does She live there always?” I asked, “or does
she come at times without the mountain?”
“Nay, my son, where she is, there she is.”
By now we were well on to the great plain, and I was examining with delight the
varied beauty of its semi-tropical flowers and trees, the latter of which grew
singly, or at most in clumps of three or four, much of the timber being of
large size, and belonging apparently to a variety of evergreen oak. There were
also many palms, some of them more than one hundred feet high, and the largest
and most beautiful tree ferns that I ever saw, about which hung clouds of
jewelled honeysuckers and great-winged butterflies. Wandering about among the
trees or crouching in the long and feathered grass were all varieties of game,
from rhinoceroses down. I saw a rhinoceros, buffalo (a large herd), eland,
quagga, and sable antelope, the most beautiful of all the bucks, not to mention
many smaller varieties of game, and three ostriches which scudded away at our
approach like white drift before a gale. So plentiful was the game that at last
I could stand it no longer. I had a single barrel sporting Martini with me in
the litter, the “Express” being too cumbersome, and espying a
beautiful fat eland rubbing himself under one of the oak-like trees, I jumped
out of the litter, and proceeded to creep as near to him as I could. He let me
come within eighty yards, and then turned his head, and stared at me,
preparatory to running away. I lifted the rifle, and taking him about midway
down the shoulder, for he was side on to me, fired. I never made a cleaner shot
or a better kill in all my small experience, for the great buck sprang right up
into the air and fell dead. The bearers, who had all halted to see the
performance, gave a murmur of surprise, an unwonted compliment from these
sullen people, who never appear to be surprised at anything, and a party of the
guard at once ran off to cut the animal up. As for myself, though I was longing
to have a look at him, I sauntered back to my litter as though I had been in
the habit of killing eland all my life, feeling that I had gone up several
degrees in the estimation of the Amahagger, who looked on the whole thing as a
very high-class manifestation of witchcraft. As a matter of fact, however, I
had never seen an eland in a wild state before. Billali received me with
enthusiasm.
“It is wonderful, my son the Baboon,” he cried; “wonderful!
Thou art a very great man, though so ugly. Had I not seen, surely I would never
have believed. And thou sayest that thou wilt teach me to slay in this
fashion?”
“Certainly, my father,” I said airily; “it is nothing.”
But all the same I firmly made up my mind that when “my father”
Billali began to fire I would without fail lie down or take refuge behind a
tree.
After this little incident nothing happened of any note till about an hour and
a half before sundown, when we arrived beneath the shadow of the towering
volcanic mass that I have already described. It is quite impossible for me to
describe its grim grandeur as it appeared to me while my patient bearers toiled
along the bed of the ancient watercourse towards the spot where the rich
brown-hued cliff shot up from precipice to precipice till its crown lost itself
in a cloud. All I can say is that it almost awed me by the intensity of its
lonesome and most solemn greatness. On we went up the bright and sunny slope,
till at last the creeping shadows from above swallowed up its brightness, and
presently we began to pass through a cutting hewn in the living rock. Deeper
and deeper grew this marvellous work, which must, I should say, have employed
thousands of men for many years. Indeed, how it was ever executed at all
without the aid of blasting-powder or dynamite I cannot to this day imagine. It
is and must remain one of the mysteries of that wild land. I can only suppose
that these cuttings and the vast caves that had been hollowed out of the rocks
they pierced were the State undertakings of the people of Kôr, who lived here
in the dim lost ages of the world, and, as in the case of the Egyptian
monuments, were executed by the forced labour of tens of thousands of captives,
carried on through an indefinite number of centuries. But who were the people?
At last we reached the face of the precipice itself, and found ourselves
looking into the mouth of a dark tunnel that forcibly reminded me of those
undertaken by our nineteenth-century engineers in the construction of railway
lines. Out of this tunnel flowed a considerable stream of water. Indeed, though
I do not think that I have mentioned it, we had followed this stream, which
ultimately developed into the river I have already described as winding away to
the right, from the spot where the cutting in the solid rock commenced. Half of
this cutting formed a channel for the stream, and half, which was placed on a
slightly higher level—eight feet perhaps—was devoted to the
purposes of a roadway. At the termination of the cutting, however, the stream
turned off across the plain and followed a channel of its own. At the mouth of
the cave the cavalcade was halted, and, while the men employed themselves in
lighting some earthenware lamps they had brought with them, Billali, descending
from his litter, informed me politely but firmly that the orders of She
were that we were now to be blindfolded, so that we should not learn the secret
of the paths through the bowels of the mountains. To this I, of course,
assented cheerfully enough, but Job, who was now very much better,
notwithstanding the journey, did not like it at all, fancying, I believe, that
it was but a preliminary step to being hot-potted. He was, however, a little
consoled when I pointed out to him that there were no hot pots at hand, and, so
far as I knew, no fire to heat them in. As for poor Leo, after turning
restlessly for hours, he had, to my deep thankfulness, at last dropped off into
a sleep or stupor, I do not know which, so there was no need to blindfold him.
The blindfolding was performed by binding a piece of the yellowish linen
whereof those of the Amahagger who condescended to wear anything in particular
made their dresses, tightly round the eyes. This linen I afterwards discovered
was taken from the tombs, and was not, as I had at first supposed, of native
manufacture. The bandage was then knotted at the back of the head, and finally
brought down again and the ends bound under the chin to prevent its slipping.
Ustane was, by the way, also blindfolded, I do not know why, unless it was from
fear that she should impart the secrets of the route to us.
This operation performed we started on once more, and soon, by the echoing
sound of the footsteps of the bearers and the increased noise of the water
caused by reverberation in a confined space, I knew that we were entering into
the bowels of the great mountain. It was an eerie sensation, being borne along
into the dead heart of the rock we knew not whither, but I was getting used to
eerie sensations by this time, and by now was pretty well prepared for
anything. So I lay still, and listened to the tramp, tramp of the bearers and
the rushing of the water, and tried to believe that I was enjoying myself.
Presently the men set up the melancholy little chant that I had heard on the
first night when we were captured in the whaleboat, and the effect produced by
their voices was very curious, and quite indescribable. After a while the air
began to get exceedingly thick and heavy, so much so, indeed, that I felt as
though I were going to choke, till at length the litter took a sharp turn, then
another and another, and the sound of the running water ceased. After this the
air was fresher again, but the turns were continuous, and to me, blindfolded as
I was, most bewildering. I tried to keep a map of them in my mind in case it
might ever be necessary for us to try and escape by this route, but, needless
to say, failed utterly. Another half-hour or so passed, and then suddenly I
became aware that we were once more in the open air. I could see the light
through my bandage and feel its freshness on my face. A few more minutes and
the caravan halted, and I heard Billali order Ustane to remove her bandage and
undo ours. Without waiting for her attentions I got the knot of mine loose, and
looked out.
As I anticipated, we had passed right through the precipice, and were now on
the farther side, and immediately beneath its beetling face. The first thing I
noticed was that the cliff is not nearly so high here, not so high I should say
by five hundred feet, which proved that the bed of the lake, or rather of the
vast ancient crater in which we stood, was much above the level of the
surrounding plain. For the rest, we found ourselves in a huge rock-surrounded
cup, not unlike that of the first place where we had sojourned, only ten times
the size. Indeed, I could only just make out the frowning line of the opposite
cliffs. A great portion of the plain thus enclosed by nature was cultivated,
and fenced in with walls of stone placed there to keep the cattle and goats, of
which there were large herds about, from breaking into the gardens. Here and
there rose great grass mounds, and some miles away towards the centre I thought
that I could see the outline of colossal ruins. I had no time to observe
anything more at the moment, for we were instantly surrounded by crowds of
Amahagger, similar in every particular to those with whom we were already
familiar, who, though they spoke little, pressed round us so closely as to
obscure the view to a person lying in a hammock. Then all of a sudden a number
of armed men arranged in companies, and marshalled by officers who held ivory
wands in their hands, came running swiftly towards us, having, so far as I
could make out, emerged from the face of the precipice like ants from their
burrows. These men as well as their officers were all robed in addition to the
usual leopard skin, and, as I gathered, formed the bodyguard of She
herself.
Their leader advanced to Billali, saluted him by placing his ivory wand
transversely across his forehead, and then asked some question which I could
not catch, and Billali having answered him the whole regiment turned and
marched along the side of the cliff, our cavalcade of litters following in
their track. After going thus for about half a mile we halted once more in
front of the mouth of a tremendous cave, measuring about sixty feet in height
by eighty wide, and here Billali descended finally, and requested Job and
myself to do the same. Leo, of course, was far too ill to do anything of the
sort. I did so, and we entered the great cave, into which the light of the
setting sun penetrated for some distance, while beyond the reach of the
daylight it was faintly illuminated with lamps which seemed to me to stretch
away for an almost immeasurable distance, like the gas lights of an empty
London street. The first thing I noticed was that the walls were covered with
sculptures in bas-relief, of a sort, pictorially speaking, similar to those
that I have described upon the vases;—love-scenes principally, then
hunting pictures, pictures of executions, and the torture of criminals by the
placing of a, presumably, red-hot pot upon the head, showing whence our hosts
had derived this pleasant practice. There were very few battle-pieces, though
many of duels, and men running and wrestling, and from this fact I am led to
believe that this people were not much subject to attack by exterior foes,
either on account of the isolation of their position or because of their great
strength. Between the pictures were columns of stone characters of a formation
absolutely new to me; at any rate, they were neither Greek nor Egyptian, nor
Hebrew, nor Assyrian—that I am sure of. They looked more like Chinese
writings than any other that I am acquainted with. Near to the entrance of the
cave both pictures and writings were worn away, but further in they were in
many cases absolutely fresh and perfect as the day on which the sculptor had
ceased work on them.
The regiment of guards did not come further than the entrance to the cave,
where they formed up to let us pass through. On entering the place itself we
were, however, met by a man robed in white, who bowed humbly, but said nothing,
which, as it afterwards appeared that he was a deaf mute, was not very
wonderful.
Running at right angles to the great cave, at a distance of some twenty feet
from the entrance, was a smaller cave or wide gallery, that was pierced into
the rock both to the right and to the left of the main cavern. In front of the
gallery to our left stood two guards, from which circumstance I argued that it
was the entrance to the apartments of She herself. The mouth of the
right-hand gallery was unguarded, and along it the mute indicated that we were
to go. Walking a few yards down this passage, which was lighted with lamps, we
came to the entrance of a chamber having a curtain made of some grass material,
not unlike a Zanzibar mat in appearance, hung over the doorway. This the mute
drew back with another profound obeisance, and led the way into a good-sized
apartment, hewn, of course, out of the solid rock, but to my great relief
lighted by means of a shaft pierced in the face of the precipice. In this room
was a stone bedstead, pots full of water for washing, and beautifully tanned
leopard skins to serve as blankets.
Here we left Leo, who was still sleeping heavily, and with him stopped Ustane.
I noticed that the mute gave her a very sharp look, as much as to say,
“Who are you, and by whose order do you come here?” Then he
conducted us to another similar room which Job took, and then to two more that
were respectively occupied by Billali and myself.
XII.
“SHE”
The first care of Job and myself, after seeing to Leo, was to wash ourselves
and put on clean clothing, for what we were wearing had not been changed since
the loss of the dhow. Fortunately, as I think that I have said, by far the
greater part of our personal baggage had been packed into the whaleboat, and
was therefore saved—and brought hither by the bearers—although all
the stores laid in by us for barter and presents to the natives were lost.
Nearly all our clothing was made of a well-shrunk and very strong grey flannel,
and excellent I found it for travelling in these places, because though a
Norfolk jacket, shirt, and pair of trousers of it only weighed about four
pounds, a great consideration in a tropical country, where every extra ounce
tells on the wearer, it was warm, and offered a good resistance to the rays of
the sun, and best of all to chills, which are so apt to result from sudden
changes of temperature.
Never shall I forget the comfort of the “wash and brush-up,” and of
those clean flannels. The only thing that was wanting to complete my joy was a
cake of soap, of which we had none.
Afterwards I discovered that the Amahagger, who do not reckon dirt among their
many disagreeable qualities, use a kind of burnt earth for washing purposes,
which, though unpleasant to the touch till one gets accustomed to it, forms a
very fair substitute for soap.
By the time that I was dressed, and had combed and trimmed my black beard, the
previous condition of which was certainly sufficiently unkempt to give weight
to Billali’s appellation for me of “Baboon,” I began to feel
most uncommonly hungry. Therefore I was by no means sorry when, without the
slightest preparatory sound or warning, the curtain over the entrance to my
cave was flung aside, and another mute, a young girl this time, announced to me
by signs that I could not misunderstand—that is, by opening her mouth and
pointing down it—that there was something ready to eat. Accordingly I
followed her into the next chamber, which we had not yet entered, where I found
Job, who had also, to his great embarrassment, been conducted thither by a fair
mute. Job never got over the advances the former lady had made towards him, and
suspected every girl who came near to him of similar designs.
“These young parties have a way of looking at one, sir,” he would
say apologetically, “which I don’t call respectable.”
This chamber was twice the size of the sleeping caves, and I saw at once that
it had originally served as a refectory, and also probably as an embalming room
for the Priests of the Dead; for I may as well say at once that these
hollowed-out caves were nothing more nor less than vast catacombs, in which for
tens of ages the mortal remains of the great extinct race whose monuments
surrounded us had been first preserved, with an art and a completeness that has
never since been equalled, and then hidden away for all time. On each side of
this particular rock-chamber was a long and solid stone table, about three feet
wide by three feet six in height, hewn out of the living rock, of which it had
formed part, and was still attached to at the base. These tables were slightly
hollowed out or curved inward, to give room for the knees of any one sitting on
the stone ledge that had been cut for a bench along the side of the cave at a
distance of about two feet from them. Each of them, also, was so arranged that
it ended right under a shaft pierced in the rock for the admission of light and
air. On examining them carefully, however, I saw that there was a difference
between them that had at first escaped my attention, viz. that one of the
tables, that to the left as we entered the cave, had evidently been used, not
to eat upon, but for the purposes of embalming. That this was beyond all
question the case was clear from five shallow depressions in the stone of the
table, all shaped like a human form, with a separate place for the head to lie
in, and a little bridge to support the neck, each depression being of a
different size, so as to fit bodies varying in stature from a full-grown
man’s to a small child’s, and with little holes bored at intervals
to carry off fluid. And, indeed, if any further confirmation was required, we
had but to look at the wall of the cave above to find it. For there, sculptured
all round the apartment, and looking nearly as fresh as the day it was done,
was the pictorial representation of the death, embalming, and burial of an old
man with a long beard, probably an ancient king or grandee of this country.
The first picture represented his death. He was lying upon a couch which had
four short curved posts at the corners coming to a knob at the end, in
appearance something like written notes of music, and was evidently in the very
act of expiring. Gathered round the couch were women and children weeping, the
former with their hair hanging down their backs. The next scene represented the
embalmment of the body, which lay stark upon a table with depressions in it,
similar to the one before us; probably, indeed, it was a picture of the same
table. Three men were employed at the work—one superintending, one
holding a funnel shaped exactly like a port wine strainer, of which the narrow
end was fixed in an incision in the breast, no doubt in the great pectoral
artery; while the third, who was depicted as standing straddle-legged over the
corpse, held a kind of large jug high in his hand, and poured from it some
steaming fluid which fell accurately into the funnel. The most curious part of
this sculpture is that both the man with the funnel and the man who pours the
fluid are drawn holding their noses, either I suppose because of the stench
arising from the body, or more probably to keep out the aromatic fumes of the
hot fluid which was being forced into the dead man’s veins. Another
curious thing which I am unable to explain is that all three men were
represented as having a band of linen tied round the face with holes in it for
the eyes.
The third sculpture was a picture of the burial of the deceased. There he was,
stiff and cold, clothed in a linen robe, and laid out on a stone slab such as I
had slept upon at our first sojourning-place. At his head and feet burnt lamps,
and by his side were placed several of the beautiful painted vases that I have
described, which were perhaps supposed to be full of provisions. The little
chamber was crowded with mourners, and with musicians playing on an instrument
resembling a lyre, while near the foot of the corpse stood a man holding a
sheet, with which he was preparing to cover it from view.
These sculptures, looked at merely as works of art, were so remarkable that I
make no apology for describing them rather fully. They struck me also as being
of surpassing interest as representing, probably with studious accuracy, the
last rites of the dead as practised among an utterly lost people, and even then
I thought how envious some antiquarian friends of my own at Cambridge would be
if ever I found an opportunity of describing these wonderful remains to them.
Probably they would say that I was exaggerating, notwithstanding that every
page of this history must bear so much internal evidence of its truth that it
would obviously have been quite impossible for me to have invented it.
To return. As soon as I had hastily examined these sculptures, which I think I
omitted to mention were executed in relief, we sat down to a very excellent
meal of boiled goat’s-flesh, fresh milk, and cakes made of meal, the
whole being served upon clean wooden platters.
When we had eaten we returned to see how Leo was getting on, Billali saying
that he must now wait upon She, and hear her commands. On reaching
Leo’s room we found the poor boy in a very bad way. He had woke up from
his torpor, and was altogether off his head, babbling about some boat-race on
the Cam, and was inclined to be violent. Indeed, when we entered the room
Ustane was holding him down. I spoke to him, and my voice seemed to soothe him;
at any rate he grew much quieter, and was persuaded to swallow a dose of
quinine.
I had been sitting with him for an hour, perhaps—at any rate I know that
it was getting so dark that I could only just make out his head lying like a
gleam of gold upon the pillow we had extemporised out of a bag covered with a
blanket—when suddenly Billali arrived with an air of great importance,
and informed me that She herself had deigned to express a wish to see
me—an honour, he added, accorded to but very few. I think that he was a
little horrified at my cool way of taking the honour, but the fact was that I
did not feel overwhelmed with gratitude at the prospect of seeing some savage,
dusky queen, however absolute and mysterious she might be, more especially as
my mind was full of dear Leo, for whose life I began to have great fears.
However, I rose to follow him, and as I did so I caught sight of something
bright lying on the floor, which I picked up. Perhaps the reader will remember
that with the potsherd in the casket was a composition scarabæus marked with a
round O, a goose, and another curious hieroglyphic, the meaning of which is
“Suten se Ra,” or “Royal Son of the Sun.” The scarab,
which is a very small one, Leo had insisted upon having set in a massive gold
ring, such as is generally used for signets, and it was this very ring that I
now picked up. He had pulled it off in the paroxysm of his fever, at least I
suppose so, and flung it down upon the rock-floor. Thinking that if I left it
about it might get lost, I slipped it on my own little finger, and then
followed Billali, leaving Job and Ustane with Leo.
We passed down the passage, crossed the great aisle-like cave, and came to the
corresponding passage on the other side, at the mouth of which the guards stood
like two statues. As we came they bowed their heads in salutation, and then
lifting their long spears placed them transversely across their foreheads, as
the leaders of the troop that had met us had done with their ivory wands. We
stepped between them, and found ourselves in an exactly similar gallery to that
which led to our own apartments, only this passage was, comparatively speaking,
brilliantly lighted. A few paces down it we were met by four mutes—two
men and two women—who bowed low and then arranged themselves, the women
in front and the men behind of us, and in this order we continued our
procession past several doorways hung with curtains resembling those leading to
our own quarters, and which I afterwards found opened out into chambers
occupied by the mutes who attended on She. A few paces more and we came
to another doorway facing us, and not to our left like the others, which seemed
to mark the termination of the passage. Here two more white-, or rather
yellow-robed guards were standing, and they too bowed, saluted, and let us pass
through heavy curtains into a great antechamber, quite forty feet long by as
many wide, in which some eight or ten women, most of them young and handsome,
with yellowish hair, sat on cushions working with ivory needles at what had the
appearance of being embroidery frames. These women were also deaf and dumb. At
the farther end of this great lamp-lit apartment was another doorway closed in
with heavy Oriental-looking curtains, quite unlike those that hung before the
doors of our own rooms, and here stood two particularly handsome girl mutes,
their heads bowed upon their bosoms and their hands crossed in an attitude of
humble submission. As we advanced they each stretched out an arm and drew back
the curtains. Thereupon Billali did a curious thing. Down he went, that
venerable-looking old gentleman—for Billali is a gentleman at the
bottom—down on to his hands and knees, and in this undignified position,
with his long white beard trailing on the ground, he began to creep into the
apartment beyond. I followed him, standing on my feet in the usual fashion.
Looking over his shoulder he perceived it.
“Down, my son; down, my Baboon; down on to thy hands and knees. We enter
the presence of She, and, if thou art not humble, of a surety she will
blast thee where thou standest.”
I halted, and felt scared. Indeed, my knees began to give way of their own mere
motion; but reflection came to my aid. I was an Englishman, and why, I asked
myself, should I creep into the presence of some savage woman as though I were
a monkey in fact as well as in name? I would not and could not do it, that is,
unless I was absolutely sure that my life or comfort depended upon it. If once
I began to creep upon my knees I should always have to do so, and it would be a
patent acknowledgment of inferiority. So, fortified by an insular prejudice
against “kootooing,” which has, like most of our so-called
prejudices, a good deal of common sense to recommend it, I marched in boldly
after Billali. I found myself in another apartment, considerably smaller than
the anteroom, of which the walls were entirely hung with rich-looking curtains
of the same make as those over the door, the work, as I subsequently
discovered, of the mutes who sat in the antechamber and wove them in strips,
which were afterwards sewn together. Also, here and there about the room, were
settees of a beautiful black wood of the ebony tribe, inlaid with ivory, and
all over the floor were other tapestries, or rather rugs. At the top end of
this apartment was what appeared to be a recess, also draped with curtains,
through which shone rays of light. There was nobody in the place except
ourselves.
Painfully and slowly old Billali crept up the length of the cave, and with the
most dignified stride that I could command I followed after him. But I felt
that it was more or less of a failure. To begin with, it is not possible to
look dignified when you are following in the wake of an old man writhing along
on his stomach like a snake, and then, in order to go sufficiently slowly,
either I had to keep my leg some seconds in the air at every step, or else to
advance with a full stop between each stride, like Mary Queen of Scots going to
execution in a play. Billali was not good at crawling, I suppose his years
stood in the way, and our progress up that apartment was a very long affair. I
was immediately behind him, and several times I was sorely tempted to help him
on with a good kick. It is so absurd to advance into the presence of savage
royalty after the fashion of an Irishman driving a pig to market, for that is
what we looked like, and the idea nearly made me burst out laughing then and
there. I had to work off my dangerous tendency to unseemly merriment by blowing
my nose, a proceeding which filled old Billali with horror, for he looked over
his shoulder and made a ghastly face at me, and I heard him murmur, “Oh,
my poor Baboon!”
At last we reached the curtains, and here Billali collapsed flat on to his
stomach, with his hands stretched out before him as though he were dead, and I,
not knowing what to do, began to stare about the place. But presently I clearly
felt that somebody was looking at me from behind the curtains. I could not see
the person, but I could distinctly feel his or her gaze, and, what is more, it
produced a very odd effect upon my nerves. I was frightened, I do not know why.
The place was a strange one, it is true, and looked lonely, notwithstanding its
rich hangings and the soft glow of the lamps—indeed, these accessories
added to, rather than detracted from its loneliness, just as a lighted street
at night has always a more solitary appearance than a dark one. It was so
silent in the place, and there lay Billali like one dead before the heavy
curtains, through which the odour of perfume seemed to float up towards the
gloom of the arched roof above. Minute grew into minute, and still there was no
sign of life, nor did the curtain move; but I felt the gaze of the unknown
being sinking through and through me, and filling me with a nameless terror,
till the perspiration stood in beads upon my brow.
At length the curtain began to move. Who could be behind it?—some naked
savage queen, a languishing Oriental beauty, or a nineteenth-century young
lady, drinking afternoon tea? I had not the slightest idea, and should not have
been astonished at seeing any of the three. I was getting beyond astonishment.
The curtain agitated itself a little, then suddenly between its folds there
appeared a most beautiful white hand (white as snow), and with long tapering
fingers, ending in the pinkest nails. The hand grasped the curtain, and drew it
aside, and as it did so I heard a voice, I think the softest and yet most
silvery voice I ever heard. It reminded me of the murmur of a brook.
“Stranger,” said the voice in Arabic, but much purer and more
classical Arabic than the Amahagger talk—“stranger, wherefore art
thou so much afraid?”
Now I flattered myself that in spite of my inward terrors I had kept a very
fair command of my countenance, and was, therefore, a little astonished at this
question. Before I had made up my mind how to answer it, however, the curtain
was drawn, and a tall figure stood before us. I say a figure, for not only the
body, but also the face was wrapped up in soft white, gauzy material in such a
way as at first sight to remind me most forcibly of a corpse in its
grave-clothes. And yet I do not know why it should have given me that idea,
seeing that the wrappings were so thin that one could distinctly see the gleam
of the pink flesh beneath them. I suppose it was owing to the way in which they
were arranged, either accidentally, or more probably by design. Anyhow, I felt
more frightened than ever at this ghost-like apparition, and my hair began to
rise upon my head as the feeling crept over me that I was in the presence of
something that was not canny. I could, however, clearly distinguish that the
swathed mummy-like form before me was that of a tall and lovely woman, instinct
with beauty in every part, and also with a certain snake-like grace which I had
never seen anything to equal before. When she moved a hand or foot her entire
frame seemed to undulate, and the neck did not bend, it curved.
“Why art thou so frightened, stranger?” asked the sweet voice
again—a voice which seemed to draw the heart out of me, like the strains
of softest music. “Is there that about me that should affright a man?
Then surely are men changed from what they used to be!” And with a little
coquettish movement she turned herself, and held up one arm, so as to show all
her loveliness and the rich hair of raven blackness that streamed in soft
ripples down her snowy robes, almost to her sandalled feet.
“It is thy beauty that makes me fear, oh Queen,” I answered humbly,
scarcely knowing what to say, and I thought that as I did so I heard old
Billali, who was still lying prostrate on the floor, mutter, “Good, my
Baboon, good.”
“I see that men still know how to beguile us women with false words. Ah,
stranger,” she answered, with a laugh that sounded like distant silver
bells, “thou wast afraid because mine eyes were searching out thine
heart, therefore wast thou afraid. Yet being but a woman, I forgive thee for
the lie, for it was courteously said. And now tell me how came ye hither to
this land of the dwellers among the caves—a land of swamps and evil
things and dead old shadows of the dead? What came ye for to see? How is it
that ye hold your lives so cheap as to place them in the hollow of the hand of
Hiya, into the hand of ‘She-who-must-be-obeyed’? Tell
me also how come ye to know the tongue I talk. It is an ancient tongue, that
sweet child of the old Syriac. Liveth it yet in the world? Thou seest I dwell
among the caves and the dead, and naught know I of the affairs of men, nor have
I cared to know. I have lived, O stranger, with my memories, and my memories
are in a grave that mine hands hollowed, for truly hath it been said that the
child of man maketh his own path evil;” and her beautiful voice quivered,
and broke in a note as soft as any wood-bird’s. Suddenly her eye fell
upon the sprawling frame of Billali, and she seemed to recollect herself.
“Ah! thou art there, old man. Tell me how it is that things have gone
wrong in thine household. Forsooth, it seems that these my guests were set
upon. Ay, and one was nigh to being slain by the hot-pot to be eaten of those
brutes, thy children, and had not the others fought gallantly they too had been
slain, and not even I could have called back the life which had been loosed
from the body. What means it, old man? What hast thou to say that I should not
give thee over to those who execute my vengeance?”
Her voice had risen in her anger, and it rang clear and cold against the rocky
walls. Also I thought I could see her eyes flash through the gauze that hid
them. I saw poor Billali, whom I had believed to be a very fearless person,
positively quiver with terror at her words.
“Oh ‘Hiya!’ oh She!” he said, without lifting
his white head from the floor. “Oh She, as thou art great be
merciful, for I am now as ever thy servant to obey. It was no plan or fault of
mine, oh She, it was those wicked ones who are called my children. Led
on by a woman whom thy guest the Pig had scorned, they would have followed the
ancient custom of the land, and eaten the fat black stranger who came hither
with these thy guests the Baboon and the Lion who is sick, thinking that no
word had come from thee about the Black one. But when the Baboon and the Lion
saw what they would do, they slew the woman, and slew also their servant to
save him from the horror of the pot. Then those evil ones, ay, those children
of the Wicked One who lives in the Pit, they went mad with the lust of blood,
and flew at the throats of the Lion and the Baboon and the Pig. But gallantly
they fought. Oh Hiya! they fought like very men, and slew many, and held
their own, and then I came and saved them, and the evildoers have I sent on
hither to Kôr to be judged of thy greatness, oh She! and here they
are.”
“Ay, old man, I know it, and to-morrow will I sit in the great hall and
do justice upon them, fear not. And for thee, I forgive thee, though hardly.
See that thou dost keep thine household better. Go.”
Billali rose upon his knees with astonishing alacrity, bowed his head thrice,
and his white beard sweeping the ground, crawled down the apartment as he had
crawled up it, till he finally vanished through the curtains, leaving me, not a
little to my alarm, alone with this terrible but most fascinating person.
XIII.
AYESHA UNVEILS
“There,” said She, “he has gone, the white-bearded old
fool! Ah, how little knowledge does a man acquire in his life. He gathereth it
up like water, but like water it runneth through his fingers, and yet, if his
hands be but wet as though with dew, behold a generation of fools call out,
‘See, he is a wise man!’ Is it not so? But how call they thee?
‘Baboon,’ he says,” and she laughed; “but that is the
fashion of these savages who lack imagination, and fly to the beasts they
resemble for a name. How do they call thee in thine own country,
stranger?”
“They call me Holly, oh Queen,” I answered.
“Holly,” she answered, speaking the word with difficulty, and yet
with a most charming accent; “and what is ‘Holly’?”
“’Holly’ is a prickly tree,” I said.
“So. Well, thou hast a prickly and yet a tree-like look. Strong art thou,
and ugly, but if my wisdom be not at fault, honest at the core, and a staff to
lean on. Also one who thinks. But stay, oh Holly, stand not there, enter with
me and be seated by me. I would not see thee crawl before me like those slaves.
I am aweary of their worship and their terror; sometimes when they vex me I
could blast them for very sport, and to see the rest turn white, even to the
heart.” And she held the curtain aside with her ivory hand to let me pass
in.
I entered, shuddering. This woman was very terrible. Within the curtains was a
recess, about twelve feet by ten, and in the recess was a couch and a table
whereon stood fruit and sparkling water. By it, at its end, was a vessel like a
font cut in carved stone, also full of pure water. The place was softly lit
with lamps formed out of the beautiful vessels of which I have spoken, and the
air and curtains were laden with a subtle perfume. Perfume too seemed to
emanate from the glorious hair and white-clinging vestments of She
herself. I entered the little room, and there stood uncertain.
“Sit,” said She, pointing to the couch. “As yet thou
hast no cause to fear me. If thou hast cause, thou shalt not fear for long, for
I shall slay thee. Therefore let thy heart be light.”
I sat down on the foot of the couch near to the font-like basin of water, and
She sank down softly on to the other end.
“Now, Holly,” she said, “how comest thou to speak Arabic? It
is my own dear tongue, for Arabian am I by my birth, even ‘al Arab al
Ariba’ (an Arab of the Arabs), and of the race of our father Yárab, the
son of Kâhtan, for in that fair and ancient city Ozal was I born, in the
province of Yaman the Happy. Yet dost thou not speak it as we used to speak.
Thy talk doth lack the music of the sweet tongue of the tribes of Hamyar which
I was wont to hear. Some of the words too seemed changed, even as among these
Amahagger, who have debased and defiled its purity, so that I must speak with
them in what is to me another tongue.”[1]
[1]
Yárab the son of Kâhtan, who lived some centuries before the time of Abraham,
was the father of the ancient Arabs, and gave its name Araba to the country. In
speaking of herself as “al Arab al Ariba,” She no doubt
meant to convey that she was of the true Arab blood as distinguished from the
naturalised Arabs, the descendants of Ismael, the son of Abraham and Hagar, who
were known as “al Arab al mostáraba.” The dialect of the Koreish
was usually called the clear or “perspicuous” Arabic, but the
Hamaritic dialect approached nearer to the purity of the mother
Syriac.—L. H. H.
“I have studied it,” I answered, “for many years. Also the
language is spoken in Egypt and elsewhere.”
“So it is still spoken, and there is yet an Egypt? And what Pharaoh sits
upon the throne? Still one of the spawn of the Persian Ochús, or are the
Achæmenians gone, for far is it to the days of Ochús.”
“The Persians have been gone from Egypt for nigh two thousand years, and
since then the Ptolemies, the Romans, and many others have flourished and held
sway upon the Nile, and fallen when their time was ripe,” I said, aghast.
“What canst thou know of the Persian Artaxerxes?”
She laughed, and made no answer, and again a cold chill went through me.
“And Greece,” she said; “is there still a Greece? Ah, I loved
the Greeks. Beautiful were they as the day, and clever, but fierce at heart and
fickle, notwithstanding.”
“Yes,” I said, “there is a Greece; and, just now, it is once
more a people. Yet the Greeks of to-day are not what the Greeks of the old time
were, and Greece herself is but a mockery of the Greece that was.”
“So! The Hebrews, are they yet at Jerusalem? And does the Temple that the
wise king built stand, and if so what God do they worship therein? Is their
Messiah come, of whom they preached so much and prophesied so loudly, and doth
He rule the earth?”
“The Jews are broken and gone, and the fragments of their people strew
the world, and Jerusalem is no more. As for the temple that Herod
built——”
“Herod!” she said. “I know not Herod. But go on.”
“The Romans burnt it, and the Roman eagles flew across its ruins, and now
Judæa is a desert.”
“So, so! They were a great people, those Romans, and went straight to
their end—ay, they sped to it like Fate, or like their own eagles on
their prey!—and left peace behind them.”
“Solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant,” I suggested.
“Ah, thou canst speak the Latin tongue, too!” she said, in
surprise. “It hath a strange ring in my ears after all these days, and it
seems to me that thy accent does not fall as the Romans put it. Who was it
wrote that? I know not the saying, but it is a true one of that great people.
It seems that I have found a learned man—one whose hands have held the
water of the world’s knowledge. Knowest thou Greek also?”
“Yes, oh Queen, and something of Hebrew, but not to speak them well. They
are all dead languages now.”
She clapped her hands in childish glee. “Of a truth, ugly tree that thou
art, thou growest the fruits of wisdom, oh Holly,” she said; “but
of those Jews whom I hated, for they called me ‘heathen’ when I
would have taught them my philosophy—did their Messiah come, and doth He
rule the world?”
“Their Messiah came,” I answered with reverence; “but He came
poor and lowly, and they would have none of Him. They scourged Him, and
crucified Him upon a tree, but yet His words and His works live on, for He was
the Son of God, and now of a truth He doth rule half the world, but not with an
Empire of the World.”
“Ah, the fierce-hearted wolves,” she said, “the followers of
Sense and many gods—greedy of gain and faction-torn. I can see their dark
faces yet. So they crucified their Messiah? Well can I believe it. That He was
a Son of the Living Spirit would be naught to them, if indeed He was so, and of
that we will talk afterwards. They would care naught for any God if He came not
with pomp and power. They, a chosen people, a vessel of Him they call Jehovah,
ay, and a vessel of Baal, and a vessel of Astoreth, and a vessel of the gods of
the Egyptians—a high-stomached people, greedy of aught that brought them
wealth and power. So they crucified their Messiah because He came in lowly
guise—and now are they scattered about the earth? Why, if I remember, so
said one of their prophets that it should be. Well, let them go—they
broke my heart, those Jews, and made me look with evil eyes across the world,
ay, and drove me to this wilderness, this place of a people that was before
them. When I would have taught them wisdom in Jerusalem they stoned me, ay, at
the Gate of the Temple those white-bearded hypocrites and Rabbis hounded the
people on to stone me! See, here is the mark of it to this day!” and with
a sudden move she pulled up the gauzy wrapping on her rounded arm, and pointed
to a little scar that showed red against its milky beauty.
I shrank back, horrified.
“Pardon me, oh Queen,” I said, “but I am bewildered. Nigh
upon two thousand years have rolled across the earth since the Jewish Messiah
hung upon His cross at Golgotha. How then canst thou have taught thy philosophy
to the Jews before He was? Thou art a woman and no spirit. How can a woman live
two thousand years? Why dost thou befool me, oh Queen?”
She leaned back upon the couch, and once more I felt the hidden eyes playing
upon me and searching out my heart.
“Oh man!” she said at last, speaking very slowly and deliberately,
“it seems that there are still things upon the earth of which thou
knowest naught. Dost thou still believe that all things die, even as those very
Jews believed? I tell thee that naught dies. There is no such thing as Death,
though there be a thing called Change. See,” and she pointed to some
sculptures on the rocky wall. “Three times two thousand years have passed
since the last of the great race that hewed those pictures fell before the
breath of the pestilence which destroyed them, yet are they not dead.
E’en now they live; perchance their spirits are drawn towards us at this
very hour,” and she glanced round. “Of a surety it sometimes seems
to me that my eyes can see them.”
“Yes, but to the world they are dead.”
“Ay, for a time; but even to the world are they born again and again. I,
yes I, Ayesha[2]—for
that, stranger, is my name—I say to thee that I wait now for one I loved
to be born again, and here I tarry till he finds me, knowing of a surety that
hither he will come, and that here, and here only, shall he greet me. Why, dost
thou believe that I, who am all-powerful, I, whose loveliness is more than the
loveliness of the Grecian Helen, of whom they used to sing, and whose wisdom is
wider, ay, far more wide and deep than the wisdom of Solomon the Wise—I,
who know the secrets of the earth and its riches, and can turn all things to my
uses—I, who have even for a while overcome Change, that ye call
Death—why, I say, oh stranger, dost thou think that I herd here with
barbarians lower than the beasts?”
[2]
Pronounced Assha.—L. H. H.
“I know not,” I said humbly.
“Because I wait for him I love. My life has perchance been evil, I know
not—for who can say what is evil and what good?—so I fear to die
even if I could die, which I cannot until mine hour comes, to go and seek him
where he is; for between us there might rise a wall I could not climb, at
least, I dread it. Surely easy would it be also to lose the way in seeking in
those great spaces wherein the planets wander on for ever. But the day will
come, it may be when five thousand more years have passed, and are lost and
melted into the vault of Time, even as the little clouds melt into the gloom of
night, or it may be to-morrow, when he, my love, shall be born again, and then,
following a law that is stronger than any human plan, he shall find me
here, where once he knew me, and of a surety his heart will soften
towards me, though I sinned against him; ay, even though he knew me not again,
yet will he love me, if only for my beauty’s sake.”
For a moment I was dumbfounded, and could not answer. The matter was too
overpowering for my intellect to grasp.
“But even so, oh Queen,” I said at last, “even if we men be
born again and again, that is not so with thee, if thou speakest truly.”
Here she looked up sharply, and once more I caught the flash of those hidden
eyes; “thou,” I went on hurriedly, “who hast never
died?”
“That is so,” she said; “and it is so because I have, half by
chance and half by learning, solved one of the great secrets of the world. Tell
me, stranger: life is—why therefore should not life be lengthened for a
while? What are ten or twenty or fifty thousand years in the history of life?
Why in ten thousand years scarce will the rain and storms lessen a mountain top
by a span in thickness? In two thousand years these caves have not changed,
nothing has changed but the beasts, and man, who is as the beasts. There is
naught that is wonderful about the matter, couldst thou but understand. Life is
wonderful, ay, but that it should be a little lengthened is not wonderful.
Nature hath her animating spirit as well as man, who is Nature’s child,
and he who can find that spirit, and let it breathe upon him, shall live with
her life. He shall not live eternally, for Nature is not eternal, and she
herself must die, even as the nature of the moon hath died. She herself must
die, I say, or rather change and sleep till it be time for her to live again.
But when shall she die? Not yet, I ween, and while she lives, so shall he who
hath all her secret live with her. All I have it not, yet have I some, more
perchance than any who were before me. Now, to thee I doubt not that this thing
is a great mystery, therefore I will not overcome thee with it now. Another
time I will tell thee more if the mood be on me, though perchance I shall never
speak thereof again. Dost thou wonder how I knew that ye were coming to this
land, and so saved your heads from the hot-pot?”
“Ay, oh Queen,” I answered feebly.
“Then gaze upon that water,” and she pointed to the font-like
vessel, and then, bending forward, held her hand over it.
I rose and gazed, and instantly the water darkened. Then it cleared, and I saw
as distinctly as I ever saw anything in my life—I saw, I say, our boat
upon that horrible canal. There was Leo lying at the bottom asleep in it, with
a coat thrown over him to keep off the mosquitoes, in such a fashion as to hide
his face, and myself, Job, and Mahomed towing on the bank.
I started back, aghast, and cried out that it was magic, for I recognised the
whole scene—it was one which had actually occurred.
“Nay, nay; oh Holly,” she answered, “it is no magic, that is
a fiction of ignorance. There is no such thing as magic, though there is such a
thing as a knowledge of the secrets of Nature. That water is my glass; in it I
see what passes if I will to summon up the pictures, which is not often.
Therein I can show thee what thou wilt of the past, if it be anything that hath
to do with this country and with what I have known, or anything that thou, the
gazer, hast known. Think of a face if thou wilt, and it shall be reflected from
thy mind upon the water. I know not all the secret yet—I can read nothing
in the future. But it is an old secret; I did not find it. In Arabia and in
Egypt the sorcerers knew it centuries gone. So one day I chanced to bethink me
of that old canal—some twenty ages since I sailed upon it, and I was
minded to look thereon again. So I looked, and there I saw the boat and three
men walking, and one, whose face I could not see, but a youth of noble form,
sleeping in the boat, and so I sent and saved ye. And now farewell. But stay,
tell me of this youth—the Lion, as the old man calls him. I would look
upon him, but he is sick, thou sayest—sick with the fever, and also
wounded in the fray.”
“He is very sick,” I answered sadly; “canst thou do nothing
for him, oh Queen! who knowest so much?”
“Of a surety I can. I can cure him; but why speakest thou so sadly? Dost
thou love the youth? Is he perchance thy son?”
“He is my adopted son, oh Queen! Shall he be brought in before
thee?”
“Nay. How long hath the fever taken him?”
“This is the third day.”
“Good; then let him lie another day. Then will he perchance throw it off
by his own strength, and that is better than that I should cure him, for my
medicine is of a sort to shake the life in its very citadel. If, however, by
to-morrow night, at that hour when the fever first took him, he doth not begin
to mend, then will I come to him and cure him. Stay, who nurses him?”
“Our white servant, him whom Billali names the Pig; also,” and here
I spoke with some little hesitation, “a woman named Ustane, a very
handsome woman of this country, who came and embraced him when she first saw
him, and hath stayed by him ever since, as I understand is the fashion of thy
people, oh Queen.”
“My people! speak not to me of my people,” she answered hastily;
“these slaves are no people of mine, they are but dogs to do my bidding
till the day of my deliverance comes; and, as for their customs, naught have I
to do with them. Also, call me not Queen—I am weary of flattery and
titles—call me Ayesha, the name hath a sweet sound in mine ears, it is an
echo from the past. As for this Ustane, I know not. I wonder if it be she
against whom I was warned, and whom I in turn did warn? Hath she—stay, I
will see;” and, bending forward, she passed her hand over the font of
water and gazed intently into it. “See,” she said quietly,
“is that the woman?”
I looked into the water, and there, mirrored upon its placid surface, was the
silhouette of Ustane’s stately face. She was bending forward, with a look
of infinite tenderness upon her features, watching something beneath her, and
with her chestnut locks falling on to her right shoulder.
“It is she,” I said, in a low voice, for once more I felt much
disturbed at this most uncommon sight. “She watches Leo asleep.”
“Leo!” said Ayesha, in an absent voice; “why, that is
‘lion’ in the Latin tongue. The old man hath named happily for
once. It is very strange,” she went on, speaking to herself, “very.
So like—but it is not possible!” With an impatient gesture she
passed her hand over the water once more. It darkened, and the image vanished
silently and mysteriously as it had risen, and once more the lamplight, and the
lamplight only, shone on the placid surface of that limpid, living mirror.
“Hast thou aught to ask me before thou goest, oh Holly?” she said,
after a few moments’ reflection. “It is but a rude life that thou
must live here, for these people are savages, and know not the ways of
cultivated man. Not that I am troubled thereby, for behold my food,” and
she pointed to the fruit upon the little table. “Naught but fruit doth
ever pass my lips—fruit and cakes of flour, and a little water. I have
bidden my girls to wait upon thee. They are mutes, thou knowest, deaf are they
and dumb, and therefore the safest of servants, save to those who can read
their faces and their signs. I bred them so—it hath taken many centuries
and much trouble; but at last I have triumphed. Once I succeeded before, but
the race was too ugly, so I let it die away; but now, as thou seest, they are
otherwise. Once, too, I reared a race of giants, but after a while Nature would
no more of it, and it died away. Hast thou aught to ask of me?”
“Ay, one thing, oh Ayesha,” I said boldly; but feeling by no means
as bold as I trust I looked. “I would gaze upon thy face.”
She laughed out in her bell-like notes. “Bethink thee, Holly,” she
answered; “bethink thee. It seems that thou knowest the old myths of the
gods of Greece. Was there not one Actæon who perished miserably because he
looked on too much beauty? If I show thee my face, perchance thou wouldst
perish miserably also; perchance thou wouldst eat out thy heart in impotent
desire; for know I am not for thee—I am for no man, save one, who hath
been, but is not yet.”
“As thou wilt, Ayesha,” I said. “I fear not thy beauty. I
have put my heart away from such vanity as woman’s loveliness, that
passeth like a flower.”
“Nay, thou errest,” she said; “that does not pass. My
beauty endures even as I endure; still, if thou wilt, oh rash man, have thy
will; but blame not me if passion mount thy reason, as the Egyptian breakers
used to mount a colt, and guide it whither thou wilt not. Never may the man to
whom my beauty has been unveiled put it from his mind, and therefore even with
these savages do I go veiled, lest they vex me, and I should slay them. Say,
wilt thou see?”
“I will,” I answered, my curiosity overpowering me.
She lifted her white and rounded arms—never had I seen such arms
before—and slowly, very slowly, withdrew some fastening beneath her hair.
Then all of a sudden the long, corpse-like wrappings fell from her to the
ground, and my eyes travelled up her form, now only robed in a garb of clinging
white that did but serve to show its perfect and imperial shape, instinct with
a life that was more than life, and with a certain serpent-like grace that was
more than human. On her little feet were sandals, fastened with studs of gold.
Then came ankles more perfect than ever sculptor dreamed of. About the waist
her white kirtle was fastened by a double-headed snake of solid gold, above
which her gracious form swelled up in lines as pure as they were lovely, till
the kirtle ended on the snowy argent of her breast, whereon her arms were
folded. I gazed above them at her face, and—I do not
exaggerate—shrank back blinded and amazed. I have heard of the beauty of
celestial beings, now I saw it; only this beauty, with all its awful loveliness
and purity, was evil—at least, at the time, it struck me as evil.
How am I to describe it? I cannot—simply I cannot! The man does not live
whose pen could convey a sense of what I saw. I might talk of the great
changing eyes of deepest, softest black, of the tinted face, of the broad and
noble brow, on which the hair grew low, and delicate, straight features. But,
beautiful, surpassingly beautiful as they all were, her loveliness did not lie
in them. It lay rather, if it can be said to have had any fixed abiding place,
in a visible majesty, in an imperial grace, in a godlike stamp of softened
power, which shone upon that radiant countenance like a living halo. Never
before had I guessed what beauty made sublime could be—and yet, the
sublimity was a dark one—the glory was not all of heaven—though
none the less was it glorious. Though the face before me was that of a young
woman of certainly not more than thirty years, in perfect health, and the first
flush of ripened beauty, yet it had stamped upon it a look of unutterable
experience, and of deep acquaintance with grief and passion. Not even the
lovely smile that crept about the dimples of her mouth could hide this shadow
of sin and sorrow. It shone even in the light of the glorious eyes, it was
present in the air of majesty, and it seemed to say: “Behold me, lovely
as no woman was or is, undying and half-divine; memory haunts me from age to
age, and passion leads me by the hand—evil have I done, and from age to
age evil I shall do, and sorrow shall I know till my redemption comes.”
Drawn by some magnetic force which I could not resist, I let my eyes rest upon
her shining orbs, and felt a current pass from them to me that bewildered and
half-blinded me.
She laughed—ah, how musically! and nodded her little head at me with an
air of sublimated coquetry that would have done credit to a Venus Victrix.
“Rash man!” she said; “like Actæon, thou hast had thy will;
be careful lest, like Actæon, thou too dost perish miserably, torn to pieces by
the ban-hounds of thine own passions. I too, oh Holly, am a virgin goddess, not
to be moved of any man, save one, and it is not thou. Say, hast thou seen
enough!”
“I have looked on beauty, and I am blinded,” I said hoarsely,
lifting my hand to cover up my eyes.
“So! what did I tell thee? Beauty is like the lightning; it is lovely,
but it destroys—especially trees, oh Holly!” and again she nodded
and laughed.
Suddenly she paused, and through my fingers I saw an awful change come over her
countenance. Her great eyes suddenly fixed themselves into an expression in
which horror seemed to struggle with some tremendous hope arising through the
depths of her dark soul. The lovely face grew rigid, and the gracious willowy
form seemed to erect itself.
“Man,” she half whispered, half hissed, throwing back her head like
a snake about to strike—“Man, whence hadst thou that scarab on thy
hand? Speak, or by the Spirit of Life I will blast thee where thou
standest!” and she took one light step towards me, and from her eyes
there shone such an awful light—to me it seemed almost like a
flame—that I fell, then and there, on the ground before her, babbling
confusedly in my terror.
“Peace,” she said, with a sudden change of manner, and speaking in
her former soft voice. “I did affright thee! Forgive me! But at times, oh
Holly, the almost infinite mind grows impatient of the slowness of the very
finite, and am I tempted to use my power out of vexation—very nearly wast
thou dead, but I remembered——. But the scarab—about the
scarabæus!”
“I picked it up,” I gurgled feebly, as I got on to my feet again,
and it is a solemn fact that my mind was so disturbed that at the moment I
could remember nothing else about the ring except that I had picked it up in
Leo’s cave.
“It is very strange,” she said with a sudden access of womanlike
trembling and agitation which seemed out of place in this awful
woman—“but once I knew a scarab like to that. It—hung round
the neck—of one I loved,” and she gave a little sob, and I saw that
after all she was only a woman, although she might be a very old one.
“There,” she went on, “it must be one like to it, and yet
never did I see one like to it, for thereto hung a history, and he who wore it
prized it much.[3] But the
scarab that I knew was not set thus in the bezel of a ring. Go now, Holly, go,
and, if thou canst, try to forget that thou hast of thy folly looked upon
Ayesha’s beauty,” and, turning from me, she flung herself on her
couch, and buried her face in the cushions.
[3]
I am informed by a renowned and learned Egyptologist, to whom I have submitted
this very interesting and beautifully finished scarab, “Suten se
Ra,” that he has never seen one resembling it. Although it bears a title
frequently given to Egyptian royalty, he is of opinion that it is not
necessarily the cartouche of a Pharaoh, on which either the throne or personal
name of the monarch is generally inscribed. What the history of this particular
scarab may have been we can now, unfortunately, never know, but I have little
doubt but that it played some part in the tragic story of the Princess
Amenartas and her lover Kallikrates, the forsworn priest of Isis.—Editor.
As for me, I stumbled from her presence, and I do not remember how I reached my
own cave.
XIV.
A SOUL IN HELL
It was nearly ten o’clock at night when I cast myself down upon my bed,
and began to gather my scattered wits, and reflect upon what I had seen and
heard. But the more I reflected the less I could make of it. Was I mad, or
drunk, or dreaming, or was I merely the victim of a gigantic and most elaborate
hoax? How was it possible that I, a rational man, not unacquainted with the
leading scientific facts of our history, and hitherto an absolute and utter
disbeliever in all the hocus-pocus which in Europe goes by the name of the
supernatural, could believe that I had within the last few minutes been engaged
in conversation with a woman two thousand and odd years old? The thing was
contrary to the experience of human nature, and absolutely and utterly
impossible. It must be a hoax, and yet, if it were a hoax, what was I to make
of it? What, too, was to be said of the figures on the water, of the
woman’s extraordinary acquaintance with the remote past, and her
ignorance, or apparent ignorance, of any subsequent history? What, too, of her
wonderful and awful loveliness? This, at any rate, was a patent fact, and
beyond the experience of the world. No merely mortal woman could shine with
such a supernatural radiance. About that she had, at any rate, been in the
right—it was not safe for any man to look upon such beauty. I was a
hardened vessel in such matters, having, with the exception of one painful
experience of my green and tender youth, put the softer sex (I sometimes think
that this is a misnomer) almost entirely out of my thoughts. But now, to my
intense horror, I knew that I could never put away the vision of those
glorious eyes; and alas! the very diablerie of the woman, whilst it
horrified and repelled, attracted in even a greater degree. A person with the
experience of two thousand years at her back, with the command of such
tremendous powers, and the knowledge of a mystery that could hold off death,
was certainly worth falling in love with, if ever woman was. But, alas! it was
not a question of whether or no she was worth it, for so far as I could judge,
not being versed in such matters, I, a fellow of my college, noted for what my
acquaintances are pleased to call my misogyny, and a respectable man now well
on in middle life, had fallen absolutely and hopelessly in love with this white
sorceress. Nonsense; it must be nonsense! She had warned me fairly, and I had
refused to take the warning. Curses on the fatal curiosity that is ever
prompting man to draw the veil from woman, and curses on the natural impulse
that begets it! It is the cause of half—ay, and more than half—of
our misfortunes. Why cannot man be content to live alone and be happy, and let
the women live alone and be happy too? But perhaps they would not be happy, and
I am not sure that we should either. Here is a nice state of affairs. I, at my
age, to fall a victim to this modern Circe! But then she was not modern, at
least she said not. She was almost as ancient as the original Circe.
I tore my hair, and jumped up from my couch, feeling that if I did not do
something I should go off my head. What did she mean about the scarabæus too?
It was Leo’s scarabæus, and had come out of the old coffer that Vincey
had left in my rooms nearly one-and-twenty years before. Could it be, after
all, that the whole story was true, and the writing on the sherd was not
a forgery, or the invention of some crack-brained, long-forgotten individual?
And if so, could it be that Leo was the man that She was waiting
for—the dead man who was to be born again! Impossible! The whole thing
was gibberish! Who ever heard of a man being born again?
But if it were possible that a woman could exist for two thousand years, this
might be possible also—anything might be possible. I myself might, for
aught I knew, be a reincarnation of some other forgotten self, or perhaps the
last of a long line of ancestral selves. Well, vive la guerre! why not?
Only, unfortunately, I had no recollection of these previous conditions. The
idea was so absurd to me that I burst out laughing, and, addressing the
sculptured picture of a grim-looking warrior on the cave wall, called out to
him aloud, “Who knows, old fellow?—perhaps I was your contemporary.
By Jove! perhaps I was you and you are I,” and then I laughed again at my
own folly, and the sound of my laughter rang dismally along the vaulted roof,
as though the ghost of the warrior had echoed the ghost of a laugh.
Next I bethought me that I had not been to see how Leo was, so, taking up one
of the lamps which was burning at my bedside, I slipped off my shoes and crept
down the passage to the entrance of his sleeping cave. The draught of the night
air was lifting his curtain to and fro gently, as though spirit hands were
drawing and redrawing it. I slid into the vault-like apartment, and looked
round. There was a light by which I could see that Leo was lying on the couch,
tossing restlessly in his fever, but asleep. At his side, half-lying on the
floor, half-leaning against the stone couch, was Ustane. She held his hand in
one of hers, but she too was dozing, and the two made a pretty, or rather a
pathetic, picture. Poor Leo! his cheek was burning red, there were dark shadows
beneath his eyes, and his breath came heavily. He was very, very ill; and again
the horrible fear seized me that he might die, and I be left alone in the
world. And yet if he lived he would perhaps be my rival with Ayesha; even if he
were not the man, what chance should I, middle-aged and hideous, have against
his bright youth and beauty? Well, thank Heaven! my sense of right was not
dead. She had not killed that yet; and, as I stood there, I prayed to
Heaven in my heart that my boy, my more than son, might live—ay, even if
he proved to be the man.
Then I went back as softly as I had come, but still I could not sleep; the
sight and thought of dear Leo lying there so ill had but added fuel to the fire
of my unrest. My wearied body and overstrained mind awakened all my imagination
into preternatural activity. Ideas, visions, almost inspirations, floated
before it with startling vividness. Most of them were grotesque enough, some
were ghastly, some recalled thoughts and sensations that had for years been
buried in the débris of my past life. But, behind and above them all,
hovered the shape of that awful woman, and through them gleamed the memory of
her entrancing loveliness. Up and down the cave I strode—up and down.
Suddenly I observed, what I had not noticed before, that there was a narrow
aperture in the rocky wall. I took up the lamp and examined it; the aperture
led to a passage. Now, I was still sufficiently sensible to remember that it is
not pleasant, in such a situation as ours was, to have passages running into
one’s bed-chamber from no one knows where. If there are passages, people
can come up them; they can come up when one is asleep. Partly to see where it
went to, and partly from a restless desire to be doing something, I followed
the passage. It led to a stone stair, which I descended; the stair ended in
another passage, or rather tunnel, also hewn out of the bed-rock, and running,
so far as I could judge, exactly beneath the gallery that led to the entrance
of our rooms, and across the great central cave. I went on down it: it was as
silent as the grave, but still, drawn by some sensation or attraction that I
cannot define, I followed on, my stockinged feet falling without noise on the
smooth and rocky floor. When I had traversed some fifty yards of space, I came
to another passage running at right angles, and here an awful thing happened to
me: the sharp draught caught my lamp and extinguished it, leaving me in utter
darkness in the bowels of that mysterious place. I took a couple of strides
forward so as to clear the bisecting tunnel, being terribly afraid lest I
should turn up it in the dark if once I got confused as to the direction, and
then paused to think. What was I to do? I had no match; it seemed awful to
attempt that long journey back through the utter gloom, and yet I could not
stand there all night, and, if I did, probably it would not help me much, for
in the bowels of the rock it would be as dark at midday as at midnight. I
looked back over my shoulder—not a sight or a sound. I peered forward
into the darkness: surely, far away, I saw something like the faint glow of
fire. Perhaps it was a cave where I could get a light—at any rate, it was
worth investigating. Slowly and painfully I crept along the tunnel, keeping my
hand against its wall, and feeling at every step with my foot before I put it
down, fearing lest I should fall into some pit. Thirty paces—there was a
light, a broad light that came and went, shining through curtains! Fifty
paces—it was close at hand! Sixty—oh, great heaven!
I was at the curtains, and they did not hang close, so I could see clearly into
the little cavern beyond them. It had all the appearance of being a tomb, and
was lit up by a fire that burnt in its centre with a whitish flame and without
smoke. Indeed, there, to the left, was a stone shelf with a little ledge to it
three inches or so high, and on the shelf lay what I took to be a corpse; at
any rate, it looked like one, with something white thrown over it. To the right
was a similar shelf, on which lay some broidered coverings. Over the fire bent
the figure of a woman; she was sideways to me and facing the corpse, wrapped in
a dark mantle that hid her like a nun’s cloak. She seemed to be staring
at the flickering flame. Suddenly, as I was trying to make up my mind what to
do, with a convulsive movement that somehow gave an impression of despairing
energy, the woman rose to her feet and cast the dark cloak from her.
It was She herself!
She was clothed, as I had seen her when she unveiled, in the kirtle of clinging
white, cut low upon her bosom, and bound in at the waist with the barbaric
double-headed snake, and, as before, her rippling black hair fell in heavy
masses down her back. But her face was what caught my eye, and held me as in a
vice, not this time by the force of its beauty, but by the power of fascinated
terror. The beauty was still there, indeed, but the agony, the blind passion,
and the awful vindictiveness displayed upon those quivering features, and in
the tortured look of the upturned eyes, were such as surpass my powers of
description.
For a moment she stood still, her hands raised high above her head, and as she
did so the white robe slipped from her down to her golden girdle, baring the
blinding loveliness of her form. She stood there, her fingers clenched, and the
awful look of malevolence gathered and deepened on her face.
Suddenly I thought of what would happen if she discovered me, and the
reflection made me turn sick and faint. But, even if I had known that I must
die if I stopped, I do not believe that I could have moved, for I was
absolutely fascinated. But still I knew my danger. Supposing she should hear
me, or see me through the curtain, supposing I even sneezed, or that her magic
told her that she was being watched—swift indeed would be my doom.
Down came the clenched hands to her sides, then up again above her head, and,
as I am a living and honourable man, the white flame of the fire leapt up after
them, almost to the roof, throwing a fierce and ghastly glare upon She
herself, upon the white figure beneath the covering, and every scroll and
detail of the rockwork.
Down came the ivory arms again, and as they did so she spoke, or rather hissed,
in Arabic, in a note that curdled my blood, and for a second stopped my heart.
“Curse her, may she be everlastingly accursed.”
The arms fell and the flame sank. Up they went again, and the broad tongue of
fire shot up after them; and then again they fell.
“Curse her memory—accursed be the memory of the Egyptian.”
Up again, and again down.
“Curse her, the daughter of the Nile, because of her beauty.
“Curse her, because her magic hath prevailed against me.
“Curse her, because she held my beloved from me.”
And again the flame dwindled and shrank.
She put her hands before her eyes, and abandoning the hissing tone, cried
aloud:—
“What is the use of cursing?—she prevailed, and she is gone.”
Then she recommenced with an even more frightful energy:—
“Curse her where she is. Let my curses reach her where she is and disturb
her rest.
“Curse her through the starry spaces. Let her shadow be accursed.
“Let my power find her even there.
“Let her hear me even there. Let her hide herself in the blackness.
“Let her go down into the pit of despair, because I shall one day find
her.”
Again the flame fell, and again she covered her eyes with her hands.
“It is of no use—no use,” she wailed; “who can reach
those who sleep? Not even I can reach them.”
Then once more she began her unholy rites.
“Curse her when she shall be born again. Let her be born accursed.
“Let her be utterly accursed from the hour of her birth until sleep finds
her.
“Yea, then, let her be accursed; for then shall I overtake her with my
vengeance, and utterly destroy her.”
And so on. The flame rose and fell, reflecting itself in her agonised eyes; the
hissing sound of her terrible maledictions, and no words of mine can convey how
terrible they were, ran round the walls and died away in little echoes, and the
fierce light and deep gloom alternated themselves on the white and dreadful
form stretched upon that bier of stone.
But at length she seemed to wear herself out and cease. She sat herself down
upon the rocky floor, shook the dense cloud of her beautiful hair over her face
and breast, and began to sob terribly in the torture of a heartrending despair.
“Two thousand years,” she moaned—“two thousand years
have I wanted and endured; but though century doth still creep on to century,
and time give place to time, the sting of memory hath not lessened, the light
of hope doth not shine more bright. Oh! to have lived two thousand years, with
all my passion eating out my heart, and with my sin ever before me. Oh, that
for me life cannot bring forgetfulness! Oh, for the weary years that have been
and are yet to come, and evermore to come, endless and without end!
“My love! my love! my love! Why did that stranger bring thee back to me
after this sort? For five hundred years I have not suffered thus. Oh, if I
sinned against thee, have I not wiped away the sin? When wilt thou come back to
me who have all, and yet without thee have naught? What is there that I can do?
What? What? What? And perchance she—perchance that Egyptian doth abide
with thee where thou art, and mock my memory. Oh, why could I not die with
thee, I who slew thee? Alas, that I cannot die! Alas! Alas!” and she
flung herself prone upon the ground, and sobbed and wept till I thought her
heart must burst.
Suddenly she ceased, raised herself to her feet, rearranged her robe, and,
tossing back her long locks impatiently, swept across to where the figure lay
upon the stone.
“Oh Kallikrates,” she cried, and I trembled at the name, “I
must look upon thy face again, though it be agony. It is a generation since I
looked upon thee whom I slew—slew with mine own hand,” and with
trembling fingers she seized the corner of the sheet-like wrapping that covered
the form upon the stone bier, and then paused. When she spoke again, it was in
a kind of awed whisper, as though her idea were terrible even to herself.
“Shall I raise thee,” she said, apparently addressing the corpse,
“so that thou standest there before me, as of old? I can do
it,” and she held out her hands over the sheeted dead, while her whole
frame became rigid and terrible to see, and her eyes grew fixed and dull. I
shrank in horror behind the curtain, my hair stood up upon my head, and,
whether it was my imagination or a fact I am unable to say, but I thought that
the quiet form beneath the covering began to quiver, and the winding sheet to
lift as though it lay on the breast of one who slept. Suddenly she withdrew her
hands, and the motion of the corpse seemed to me to cease.
“To what purpose?” she said gloomily. “Of what good is it to
recall the semblance of life when I cannot recall the spirit? Even if thou
stoodest before me thou wouldst not know me, and couldst but do what I bid
thee. The life in thee would be my life, and not thy life,
Kallikrates.”
For a moment she stood there brooding, and then cast herself down on her knees
beside the form, and began to press her lips against the sheet, and weep. There
was something so horrible about the sight of this awe-inspiring woman letting
loose her passion on the dead—so much more horrible even than anything
that had gone before—that I could no longer bear to look at it, and,
turning, began to creep, shaking as I was in every limb, slowly along the
pitch-dark passage, feeling in my trembling heart that I had seen a vision of a
Soul in Hell.
On I stumbled, I scarcely know how. Twice I fell, once I turned up the
bisecting passage, but fortunately found out my mistake in time. For twenty
minutes or more I crept along, till at last it occurred to me that I must have
passed the little stair by which I had descended. So, utterly exhausted, and
nearly frightened to death, I sank down at length there on the stone flooring,
and sank into oblivion.
When I came to I noticed a faint ray of light in the passage just behind me. I
crept to it, and found it was the little stair down which the weak dawn was
stealing. Passing up it, I gained my chamber in safety, and, flinging myself on
the couch, was soon lost in slumber or rather stupor.
XV.
AYESHA GIVES JUDGMENT
The next thing that I remember was opening my eyes and perceiving the form of
Job, who had now practically recovered from his attack of fever. He was
standing in the ray of light that pierced into the cave from the outer air,
shaking out my clothes as a makeshift for brushing them, which he could not do
because there was no brush, and then folding them up neatly and laying them on
the foot of the stone couch. This done, he got my travelling dressing-case out
of the Gladstone bag, and opened it ready for my use. First he stood it on the
foot of the couch also, then, being afraid, I suppose, that I should kick it
off, he placed it on a leopard skin on the floor, and stood back a step or two
to observe the effect. It was not satisfactory, so he shut up the bag, turned
it on end, and, having rested it against the foot of the couch, placed the
dressing-case on it. Next he looked at the pots full of water, which
constituted our washing apparatus. “Ah!” I heard him murmur,
“no hot water in this beastly place. I suppose these poor creatures only
use it to boil each other in,” and he sighed deeply.
“What is the matter, Job?” I said.
“Beg pardon, sir,” he said, touching his hair. “I thought you
were asleep, sir; and I am sure you seem as though you want it. One might think
from the look of you that you had been having a night of it.”
I only groaned by way of answer. I had, indeed, been having a night of it, such
as I hope never to have again.
“How is Mr. Leo, Job?”
“Much the same, sir. If he don’t soon mend, he’ll end, sir;
and that’s all about it; though I must say that that there savage,
Ustane, do do her best for him, almost like a baptised Christian. She is always
hanging round and looking after him, and if I ventures to interfere it’s
awful to see her; her hair seems to stand on end, and she curses and swears
away in her heathen talk—at least I fancy she must be cursing, from the
look of her.”
“And what do you do then?”
“I make her a perlite bow, and I say, ‘Young woman, your position
is one that I don’t quite understand, and can’t recognise. Let me
tell you that I has a duty to perform to my master as is incapacitated by
illness, and that I am going to perform it until I am incapacitated too,’
but she don’t take no heed, not she—only curses and swears away
worse than ever. Last night she put her hand under that sort of night-shirt she
wears and whips out a knife with a kind of a curl in the blade, so I whips out
my revolver, and we walks round and round each other till at last she bursts
out laughing. It isn’t nice treatment for a Christian man to have to put
up with from a savage, however handsome she may be, but it is what people must
expect as is fools enough” (Job laid great emphasis on the
“fools”) “to come to such a place to look for things no man
is meant to find. It’s a judgment on us, sir—that’s my view;
and I, for one, is of opinion that the judgment isn’t half done yet, and
when it is done we shall be done too, and just stop in these beastly caves with
the ghosts and the corpseses for once and all. And now, sir, I must be seeing
about Mr. Leo’s broth, if that wild cat will let me; and, perhaps, you
would like to get up, sir, because it’s past nine o’clock.”
Job’s remarks were not of an exactly cheering order to a man who had
passed such a night as I had; and, what is more, they had the weight of truth.
Taking one thing with another, it appeared to me to be an utter impossibility
that we should escape from the place we were. Supposing that Leo recovered, and
supposing that She would let us go, which was exceedingly doubtful, and
that she did not “blast” us in some moment of vexation, and that we
were not hot-potted by the Amahagger, it would be quite impossible for us to
find our way across the network of marshes which, stretching for scores and
scores of miles, formed a stronger and more impassable fortification round the
various Amahagger households than any that could be built or designed by man.
No, there was but one thing to do—face it out; and, speaking for my own
part, I was so intensely interested in the whole weird story that, so far as I
was concerned, notwithstanding the shattered state of my nerves, I asked
nothing better, even if my life paid forfeit to my curiosity. What man for whom
physiology has charms could forbear to study such a character as that of this
Ayesha when the opportunity of doing so presented itself? The very terror of
the pursuit added to its fascination, and besides, as I was forced to own to
myself even now in the sober light of day, she herself had attractions that I
could not forget. Not even the dreadful sight which I had witnessed during the
night could drive that folly from my mind; and alas! that I should have to
admit it, it has not been driven thence to this hour.
After I had dressed myself I passed into the eating, or rather embalming
chamber, and had some food, which was as before brought to me by the girl
mutes. When I had finished I went and saw poor Leo, who was quite off his head,
and did not even know me. I asked Ustane how she thought he was; but she only
shook her head and began to cry a little. Evidently her hopes were small; and I
then and there made up my mind that, if it were in any way possible, I would
get She to come and see him. Surely she would cure him if she
chose—at any rate she said she could. While I was in the room, Billali
entered, and also shook his head.
“He will die at night,” he said.
“God forbid, my father,” I answered, and turned away with a heavy
heart.
“She-who-must-be-obeyed commands thy presence, my Baboon,”
said the old man as soon as we got to the curtain; “but, oh my dear son,
be more careful. Yesterday I made sure in my heart that She would blast
thee when thou didst not crawl upon thy stomach before her. She is sitting in
the great hall even now to do justice upon those who would have smitten thee
and the Lion. Come on, my son; come swiftly.”
I turned, and followed him down the passage, and when we reached the great
central cave saw that many Amahagger, some robed, and some merely clad in the
sweet simplicity of a leopard skin, were hurrying along it. We mingled with the
throng, and walked up the enormous and, indeed, almost interminable cave. All
the way its walls were elaborately sculptured, and every twenty paces or so
passages opened out of it at right angles, leading, Billali told me, to tombs,
hollowed in the rock by “the people who were before.” Nobody
visited those tombs now, he said; and I must say that my heart rejoiced when I
thought of the opportunities of antiquarian research which opened out before
me.
At last we came to the head of the cave, where there was a rock daïs almost
exactly similar to the one on which we had been so furiously attacked, a fact
that proved to me that these daïs must have been used as altars, probably for
the celebration of religious ceremonies, and more especially of rites connected
with the interment of the dead. On either side of this daïs were passages
leading, Billali informed me, to other caves full of dead bodies.
“Indeed,” he added, “the whole mountain is full of dead, and
nearly all of them are perfect.”
In front of the daïs were gathered a great number of people of both sexes, who
stood staring about in their peculiar gloomy fashion, which would have reduced
Mark Tapley himself to misery in about five minutes. On the daïs was a rude
chair of black wood inlaid with ivory, having a seat made of grass fibre, and a
footstool formed of a wooden slab attached to the framework of the chair.
Suddenly there was a cry of “Hiya! Hiya!” (“She!
She!”), and thereupon the entire crowd of spectators instantly
precipitated itself upon the ground, and lay still as though it were
individually and collectively stricken dead, leaving me standing there like
some solitary survivor of a massacre. As it did so a long string of guards
began to defile from a passage to the left, and ranged themselves on either
side of the daïs. Then followed about a score of male mutes, then as many women
mutes bearing lamps, and then a tall white figure, swathed from head to foot,
in whom I recognised She herself. She mounted the daïs and sat down upon
the chair, and spoke to me in Greek, I suppose because she did not wish
those present to understand what she said.
“Come hither, oh Holly,” she said, “and sit thou at my feet,
and see me do justice on those who would have slain thee. Forgive me if my
Greek doth halt like a lame man; it is so long since I have heard the sound of
it that my tongue is stiff, and will not bend rightly to the words.”
I bowed, and, mounting the daïs, sat down at her feet.
“How hast thou slept, my Holly?” she asked.
“I slept not well, oh Ayesha!” I answered with perfect truth, and
with an inward fear that perhaps she knew how I had passed the heart of the
night.
“So,” she said, with a little laugh; “I, too, have not slept
well. Last night I had dreams, and methinks that thou didst call them to me, oh
Holly.”
“Of what didst thou dream, Ayesha?” I asked indifferently.
“I dreamed,” she answered quickly, “of one I hate and one I
love,” and then, as though to turn the conversation, she addressed the
captain of her guard in Arabic: “Let the men be brought before me.”
The captain bowed low, for the guard and her attendants did not prostrate
themselves, but had remained standing, and departed with his underlings down a
passage to the right.
Then came a silence. She leaned her swathed head upon her hand and
appeared to be lost in thought, while the multitude before her continued to
grovel upon their stomachs, only screwing their heads round a little so as to
get a view of us with one eye. It seemed that their Queen so rarely appeared in
public that they were willing to undergo this inconvenience, and even graver
risks, to have the opportunity of looking on her, or rather on her garments,
for no living man there except myself had ever seen her face. At last we caught
sight of the waving of lights, and heard the tramp of men coming along the
passage, and in filed the guard, and with them the survivors of our would-be
murderers, to the number of twenty or more, on whose countenances a natural
expression of sullenness struggled with the terror that evidently filled their
savage hearts. They were ranged in front of the daïs, and would have cast
themselves down on the floor of the cave like the spectators, but She
stopped them.
“Nay,” she said in her softest voice, “stand; I pray you
stand. Perchance the time will soon be when ye shall grow weary of being
stretched out,” and she laughed melodiously.
I saw a cringe of terror run along the rank of the doomed wretches, and, wicked
villains as they were, I felt sorry for them. Some minutes, perhaps two or
three, passed before anything fresh occurred, during which She appeared
from the movement of her head—for, of course, we could not see her
eyes—to be slowly and carefully examining each delinquent. At last she
spoke, addressing herself to me in a quiet and deliberate tone.
“Dost thou, oh my guest, recognise these men?”
“Ay, oh Queen, nearly all of them,” I said, and I saw them glower
at me as I said it.
“Then tell to me, and this great company, the tale whereof I have
heard.”
Thus adjured, I, in as few words as I could, related the history of the
cannibal feast, and of the attempted torture of our poor servant. The narrative
was received in perfect silence, both by the accused and by the audience, and
also by She herself. When I had done, Ayesha called upon Billali by
name, and, lifting his head from the ground, but without rising, the old man
confirmed my story. No further evidence was taken.
“Ye have heard,” said She at length, in a cold, clear voice,
very different from her usual tones—indeed, it was one of the most
remarkable things about this extraordinary creature that her voice had the
power of suiting itself in a wonderful manner to the mood of the moment.
“What have ye to say, ye rebellious children, why vengeance should not be
done upon you?”
For some time there was no answer, but at last one of the men, a fine,
broad-chested fellow, well on in middle-life, with deep-graven features and an
eye like a hawk’s, spoke, and said that the orders that they had received
were not to harm the white men; nothing was said of their black servant, so,
egged on thereto by a woman who was now dead, they proceeded to try to hot-pot
him after the ancient and honourable custom of their country, with a view of
eating him in due course. As for their sudden attack upon ourselves, it was
made in an access of sudden fury, and they deeply regretted it. He ended by
humbly praying that they might be banished into the swamps, to live and die as
it might chance; but I saw it written on his face that he had but little hope
of mercy.
Then came a pause, and the most intense silence reigned over the whole scene,
which, illuminated as it was by the flicker of the lamps striking out broad
patterns of light and shadow upon the rocky walls, was as strange as any I ever
saw, even in that unholy land. Upon the ground before the daïs were stretched
scores of the corpselike forms of the spectators, till at last the long lines
of them were lost in the gloomy background. Before this outstretched audience
were the knots of evil-doers, trying to cover up their natural terrors with a
brave appearance of unconcern. On the right and left stood the silent guards,
robed in white and armed with great spears and daggers, and men and women mutes
watching with hard curious eyes. Then, seated in her barbaric chair above them
all, with myself at her feet, was the veiled white woman, whose loveliness and
awesome power seemed to visibly shine about her like a halo, or rather like the
glow from some unseen light. Never have I seen her veiled shape look more
terrible than it did in that space, while she gathered herself up for
vengeance.
At last it came.
“Dogs and serpents,” She began in a low voice that gradually
gathered power as she went on, till the place rang with it. “Eaters of
human flesh, two things have ye done. First, ye have attacked these strangers,
being white men, and would have slain their servant, and for that alone death
is your reward. But that is not all. Ye have dared to disobey me. Did I not
send my word unto you by Billali, my servant, and the father of your household?
Did I not bid you to hospitably entertain these strangers, whom now ye have
striven to slay, and whom, had not they been brave and strong beyond the
strength of men, ye would cruelly have murdered? Hath it not been taught to you
from childhood that the law of She is an ever fixed law, and that he who
breaketh it by so much as one jot or tittle shall perish? And is not my
lightest word a law? Have not your fathers taught you this, I say, whilst as
yet ye were but children? Do ye not know that as well might ye bid these great
caves to fall upon you, or the sun to cease its journeying, as to hope to turn
me from my courses, or make my word light or heavy, according to your minds?
Well do ye know it, ye Wicked Ones. But ye are all evil—evil to the
core—the wickedness bubbles up in you like a fountain in the spring-time.
Were it not for me, generations since had ye ceased to be, for of your own evil
way had ye destroyed each other. And now, because ye have done this thing,
because ye have striven to put these men, my guests, to death, and yet more
because ye have dared to disobey my word, this is the doom that I doom you to.
That ye be taken to the cave of torture,[1] and given over to the tormentors, and that
on the going down of to-morrow’s sun those of you who yet remain alive be
slain, even as ye would have slain the servant of this my guest.”
[1]
“The cave of torture.” I afterwards saw this dreadful place, also a
legacy from the prehistoric people who lived in Kôr. The only objects in the
cave itself were slabs of rock arranged in various positions to facilitate the
operations of the torturers. Many of these slabs, which were of a porous stone,
were stained quite dark with the blood of ancient victims that had soaked into
them. Also in the centre of the room was a place for a furnace, with a cavity
wherein to heat the historic pot. But the most dreadful thing about the cave
was that over each slab was a sculptured illustration of the appropriate
torture being applied. These sculptures were so awful that I will not harrow
the reader by attempting a description of them.—L. H. H.
She ceased, and a faint murmur of horror ran round the cave. As for the
victims, as soon as they realised the full hideousness of their doom, their
stoicism forsook them, and they flung themselves down upon the ground, and wept
and implored for mercy in a way that was dreadful to behold. I, too, turned to
Ayesha, and begged her to spare them, or at least to mete out their fate in
some less awful way. But she was hard as adamant about it.
“My Holly,” she said, again speaking in Greek, which, to tell the
truth, although I have always been considered a better scholar of the language
than most men, I found it rather difficult to follow, chiefly because of the
change in the fall of the accent. Ayesha, of course, talked with the accent of
her contemporaries, whereas we have only tradition and the modern accent to
guide us as to the exact pronunciation. “My Holly, it cannot be. Were I
to show mercy to those wolves, your lives would not be safe among this people
for a day. Thou knowest them not. They are tigers to lap blood, and even now
they hunger for your lives. How thinkest thou that I rule this people? I have
but a regiment of guards to do my bidding, therefore it is not by force. It is
by terror. My empire is of the imagination. Once in a generation mayhap I do as
I have done but now, and slay a score by torture. Believe not that I would be
cruel, or take vengeance on anything so low. What can it profit me to be
avenged on such as these? Those who live long, my Holly, have no passions, save
where they have interests. Though I may seem to slay in wrath, or because my
mood is crossed, it is not so. Thou hast seen how in the heavens the little
clouds blow this way and that without a cause, yet behind them is the great
wind sweeping on its path whither it listeth. So it is with me, oh Holly. My
moods and changes are the little clouds, and fitfully these seem to turn; but
behind them ever blows the great wind of my purpose. Nay, the men must die; and
die as I have said.” Then, suddenly turning to the captain of the
guard:—
“As my word is, so be it!”
XVI.
THE TOMBS OF KÔR
After the prisoners had been removed Ayesha waved her hand, and the spectators
turned round, and began to crawl off down the cave like a scattered flock of
sheep. When they were a fair distance from the daïs, however, they rose and
walked away, leaving the Queen and myself alone, with the exception of the
mutes and the few remaining guards, most of whom had departed with the doomed
men. Thinking this a good opportunity, I asked She to come and see Leo,
telling her of his serious condition; but she would not, saying that he
certainly would not die before the night, as people never died of that sort of
fever except at nightfall or dawn. Also she said that it would be better to let
the sickness spend its course as much as possible before she cured it.
Accordingly, I was rising to leave, when she bade me follow her, as she would
talk with me, and show me the wonders of the caves.
I was too much involved in the web of her fatal fascinations to say her no,
even if I had wished, which I did not. She rose from her chair, and, making
some signs to the mutes, descended from the daïs. Thereon four of the girls
took lamps, and ranged themselves two in front and two behind us, but the
others went away, as also did the guards.
“Now,” she said, “wouldst thou see some of the wonders of
this place, oh Holly? Look upon this great cave. Sawest thou ever the like? Yet
was it, and many more like it, hollowed by the hands of the dead race that once
lived here in the city on the plain. A great and wonderful people must they
have been, those men of Kôr, but, like the Egyptians, they thought more of the
dead than of the living. How many men, thinkest thou, working for how many
years, did it need to the hollowing out this cave and all the galleries
thereof?”
“Tens of thousands,” I answered.
“So, oh Holly. This people was an old people before the Egyptians were. A
little can I read of their inscriptions, having found the key thereto—and
see thou here, this was one of the last of the caves that they hollowed,”
and, turning to the rock behind her, she motioned the mutes to hold up the
lamps. Carven over the daïs was the figure of an old man seated in a chair,
with an ivory rod in his hand. It struck me at once that his features were
exceedingly like those of the man who was represented as being embalmed in the
chamber where we took our meals. Beneath the chair, which, by the way, was
shaped exactly like the one in which Ayesha had sat to give judgment, was a
short inscription in the extraordinary characters of which I have already
spoken, but which I do not remember sufficient of to illustrate. It looked more
like Chinese writing than any other that I am acquainted with. This inscription
Ayesha proceeded, with some difficulty and hesitation, to read aloud and
translate. It ran as follows:—
“In the year four thousand two hundred and fifty-nine from the founding
of the City of imperial Kôr was this cave (or burial place) completed by Tisno,
King of Kôr, the people thereof and their slaves having laboured thereat for
three generations, to be a tomb for their citizens of rank who shall come
after. May the blessings of the heaven above the heaven rest upon their work,
and make the sleep of Tisno, the mighty monarch, the likeness of whose features
is graven above, a sound and happy sleep till the day of awakening,[1] and also the sleep of his
servants, and of those of his race who, rising up after him, shall yet lay
their heads as low.”
[1]
This phrase is remarkable, as seeming to indicate a belief in a future
state.—Editor.
“Thou seest, oh Holly,” she said, “this people founded the
city, of which the ruins yet cumber the plain yonder, four thousand years
before this cave was finished. Yet, when first mine eyes beheld it two thousand
years ago, was it even as it is now. Judge, therefore, how old must that city
have been! And now, follow thou me, and I will show thee after what fashion
this great people fell when the time was come for it to fall,” and she
led the way down to the centre of the cave, stopping at a spot where a round
rock had been let into a kind of large manhole in the flooring, accurately
filling it just as the iron plates fill the spaces in the London pavements down
which the coals are thrown. “Thou seest,” she said. “Tell me,
what is it?”
“Nay, I know not,” I answered; whereon she crossed to the left-hand
side of the cave (looking towards the entrance) and signed to the mutes to hold
up the lamps. On the wall was something painted with a red pigment in similar
characters to those hewn beneath the sculpture of Tisno, King of Kôr. This
inscription she proceeded to translate to me, the pigment still being fresh
enough to show the form of the letters. It ran thus:
“I, Junis, a priest of the Great Temple of Kôr, write this upon the rock
of the burying-place in the year four thousand eight hundred and three from the
founding of Kôr. Kôr is fallen! No more shall the mighty feast in her halls, no
more shall she rule the world, and her navies go out to commerce with the
world. Kôr is fallen! and her mighty works and all the cities of Kôr, and all
the harbours that she built and the canals that she made, are for the wolf and
the owl and the wild swan, and the barbarian who comes after. Twenty and five
moons ago did a cloud settle upon Kôr, and the hundred cities of Kôr, and out
of the cloud came a pestilence that slew her people, old and young, one with
another, and spared not. One with another they turned black and died—the
young and the old, the rich and the poor, the man and the woman, the prince and
the slave. The pestilence slew and slew, and ceased not by day or by night, and
those who escaped from the pestilence were slain of the famine. No longer could
the bodies of the children of Kôr be preserved according to the ancient rites,
because of the number of the dead, therefore were they hurled into the great
pit beneath the cave, through the hole in the floor of the cave. Then, at last,
a remnant of this the great people, the light of the whole world, went down to
the coast and took ship and sailed northwards; and now am I, the Priest Junis,
who write this, the last man left alive of this great city of men, but whether
there be any yet left in the other cities I know not. This do I write in misery
of heart before I die, because Kôr the Imperial is no more, and because there
are none to worship in her temple, and all her palaces are empty, and her
princes and her captains and her traders and her fair women have passed off the
face of the earth.”
I gave a sigh of astonishment—the utter desolation depicted in this rude
scrawl was so overpowering. It was terrible to think of this solitary survivor
of a mighty people recording its fate before he too went down into darkness.
What must the old man have felt as, in ghastly terrifying solitude, by the
light of one lamp feebly illuminating a little space of gloom, he in a few
brief lines daubed the history of his nation’s death upon the cavern
wall? What a subject for the moralist, or the painter, or indeed for any one
who can think!
“Doth it not occur to thee, oh Holly,” said Ayesha, laying her hand
upon my shoulder, “that those men who sailed North may have been the
fathers of the first Egyptians?”
“Nay, I know not,” I said; “it seems that the world is very
old.”
“Old? Yes, it is old indeed. Time after time have nations, ay, and rich
and strong nations, learned in the arts, been and passed away and been
forgotten, so that no memory of them remains. This is but one of several; for
Time eats up the works of man, unless, indeed, he digs in caves like the people
of Kôr, and then mayhap the sea swallows them, or the earthquake shakes them
in. Who knows what hath been on the earth, or what shall be? There is no new
thing under the sun, as the wise Hebrew wrote long ago. Yet were not these
people utterly destroyed, as I think. Some few remained in the other cities,
for their cities were many. But the barbarians from the south, or perchance my
people, the Arabs, came down upon them, and took their women to wife, and the
race of the Amahagger that is now is a bastard brood of the mighty sons of Kôr,
and behold it dwelleth in the tombs with its fathers’ bones.[2] But I know not: who can
know? My arts cannot pierce so far into the blackness of Time’s night. A
great people were they. They conquered till none were left to conquer, and then
they dwelt at ease within their rocky mountain walls, with their man servants
and their maid servants, their minstrels, their sculptors, and their
concubines, and traded and quarrelled, and ate and hunted and slept and made
merry till their time came. But come, I will show thee the great pit beneath
the cave whereof the writing speaks. Never shall thine eyes witness such
another sight.”
[2]
The name of the race Ama-hagger would seem to indicate a curious mingling of
races such as might easily have occurred in the neighbourhood of the Zambesi.
The prefix “Ama” is common to the Zulu and kindred races, and
signifies “people,” while “hagger” is an Arabic word
meaning a stone. —Editor.
Accordingly I followed her to a side passage opening out of the main cave, then
down a great number of steps, and along an underground shaft which cannot have
been less than sixty feet beneath the surface of the rock, and was ventilated
by curious borings that ran upward, I know not where. Suddenly the passage
ended, and she halted and bade the mutes hold up the lamps, and, as she had
prophesied, I saw a scene such as I was not likely to see again. We were
standing in an enormous pit, or rather on the brink of it, for it went down
deeper—I do not know how much—than the level on which we stood, and
was edged in with a low wall of rock. So far as I could judge, this pit was
about the size of the space beneath the dome of St. Paul’s in London, and
when the lamps were held up I saw that it was nothing but one vast
charnel-house, being literally full of thousands of human skeletons, which lay
piled up in an enormous gleaming pyramid, formed by the slipping down of the
bodies at the apex as fresh ones were dropped in from above. Anything more
appalling than this jumbled mass of the remains of a departed race I cannot
imagine, and what made it even more dreadful was that in this dry air a
considerable number of the bodies had simply become desiccated with the skin
still on them, and now, fixed in every conceivable position, stared at us out
of the mountain of white bones, grotesquely horrible caricatures of humanity.
In my astonishment I uttered an ejaculation, and the echoes of my voice,
ringing in the vaulted space, disturbed a skull that had been accurately
balanced for many thousands of years near the apex of the pile. Down it came
with a run, bounding along merrily towards us, and of course bringing an
avalanche of other bones after it, till at last the whole pit rattled with
their movement, even as though the skeletons were getting up to greet us.
“Come,” I said, “I have seen enough. These are the bodies of
those who died of the great sickness, is it not so?” I added, as we
turned away.
“Yea. The people of Kôr ever embalmed their dead, as did the Egyptians,
but their art was greater than the art of the Egyptians, for, whereas the
Egyptians disembowelled and drew the brain, the people of Kôr injected fluid
into the veins, and thus reached every part. But stay, thou shalt see,”
and she halted at haphazard at one of the little doorways opening out of the
passage along which we were walking, and motioned to the mutes to light us in.
We entered into a small chamber similar to the one in which I had slept at our
first stopping-place, only instead of one there were two stone benches or beds
in it. On the benches lay figures covered with yellow linen,[3] on which a fine and impalpable dust had
gathered in the course of ages, but nothing like to the extent that one would
have anticipated, for in these deep-hewn caves there is no material to turn to
dust. About the bodies on the stone shelves and floor of the tomb were many
painted vases, but I saw very few ornaments or weapons in any of the vaults.
[3]
All the linen that the Amahagger wore was taken from the tombs, which accounted
for its yellow hue. It was well washed, however, and properly rebleached, it
acquired its former snowy whiteness, and was the softest and best linen I ever
saw.—L. H. H.
“Uplift the cloths, oh Holly,” said Ayesha, but when I put out my
hand to do so I drew it back again. It seemed like sacrilege, and, to speak the
truth, I was awed by the dread solemnity of the place, and of the presences
before us. Then, with a little laugh at my fears, she drew them herself, only
to discover other and yet finer cloths lying over the forms upon the stone
bench. These also she withdrew, and then for the first time for thousands upon
thousands of years did living eyes look upon the face of that chilly dead. It
was a woman; she might have been thirty-five years of age, or perhaps a little
less, and had certainly been beautiful. Even now her calm clear-cut features,
marked out with delicate eyebrows and long eyelashes which threw little lines
of the shadow of the lamplight upon the ivory face, were wonderfully beautiful.
There, robed in white, down which her blue-black hair was streaming, she slept
her last long sleep, and on her arm, its face pressed against her breast, there
lay a little babe. So sweet was the sight, although so awful, that—I
confess it without shame—I could scarcely withhold my tears. It took me
back across the dim gulf of ages to some happy home in dead Imperial Kôr, where
this winsome lady girt about with beauty had lived and died, and dying taken
her last-born with her to the tomb. There they were before us, mother and babe,
the white memories of a forgotten human history speaking more eloquently to the
heart than could any written record of their lives. Reverently I replaced the
grave-cloths, and, with a sigh that flowers so fair should, in the purpose of
the Everlasting, have only bloomed to be gathered to the grave, I turned to the
body on the opposite shelf, and gently unveiled it. It was that of a man in
advanced life, with a long grizzled beard, and also robed in white, probably
the husband of the lady, who, after surviving her many years, came at the last
to sleep once more for good and all beside her.
We left the place and entered others. It would be too long to describe the many
things I saw in them. Each one had its occupants, for the five hundred and odd
years that had elapsed between the completion of the cave and the destruction
of the race had evidently sufficed to fill these catacombs, numberless as they
were, and all appeared to have been undisturbed since the day when they were
placed there. I could fill a book with the description of them, but to do so
would only be to repeat what I have said, with variations.
Nearly all the bodies, so masterfully was the art with which they had been
treated, were as perfect as on the day of death thousands of years before.
Nothing came to injure them in the deep silence of the living rock: they were
beyond the reach of heat and cold and damp, and the aromatic drugs with which
they had been saturated were evidently practically everlasting in their effect.
Here and there, however, we saw an exception, and in these cases, although the
flesh looked sound enough externally, if one touched it it fell in, and
revealed the fact that the figure was but a pile of dust. This arose, Ayesha
told me, from these particular bodies having, either owing to haste in the
burial or other causes, been soaked in the preservative,[4] instead of its being injected into the
substance of the flesh.
[4]
Ayesha afterwards showed me the tree from the leaves of which this ancient
preservative was manufactured. It is a low bush-like tree, that to this day
grows in wonderful plenty upon the sides of the mountains, or rather upon the
slopes leading up to the rocky walls. The leaves are long and narrow, a vivid
green in colour, but turning a bright red in the autumn, and not unlike those
of a laurel in general appearance. They have little smell when green, but if
boiled the aromatic odour from them is so strong that one can hardly bear it.
The best mixture, however, was made from the roots, and among the people of Kôr
there was a law, which Ayesha showed me alluded to on some of the inscriptions,
to the effect that on pain of heavy penalties no one under a certain rank was
to be embalmed with the drugs prepared from the roots. The object and effect of
this was, of course, to preserve the trees from extermination. The sale of the
leaves and roots was a Government monopoly, and from it the Kings of Kôr
derived a large proportion of their private revenue.—L. H. H.
About the last tomb we visited I must, however, say one word, for its contents
spoke even more eloquently to the human sympathies than those of the first. It
had but two occupants, and they lay together on a single shelf. I withdrew the
grave-cloths and there, clasped heart to heart, were a young man and a blooming
girl. Her head rested on his arm, and his lips were pressed against her brow. I
opened the man’s linen robe, and there over his heart was a dagger-wound,
and beneath the woman’s fair breast was a like cruel stab, through which
her life had ebbed away. On the rock above was an inscription in three words.
Ayesha translated it. It was “Wedded in Death.”
What was the life-story of these two, who, of a truth, were beautiful in their
lives, and in their death were not divided?
I closed my eyelids, and imagination, taking up the thread of thought, shot its
swift shuttle back across the ages, weaving a picture on their blackness so
real and vivid in its details that I could almost for a moment think that I had
triumphed o’er the Past, and that my spirit’s eyes had pierced the
mystery of Time.
I seemed to see this fair girl form—the yellow hair streaming down her,
glittering against her garments snowy white, and the bosom that was whiter than
the robes, even dimming with its lustre her ornaments of burnished gold. I
seemed to see the great cave filled with warriors, bearded and clad in mail,
and, on the lighted daïs where Ayesha had given judgment, a man standing,
robed, and surrounded by the symbols of his priestly office. And up the cave
there came one clad in purple, and before him and behind him came minstrels and
fair maidens, chanting a wedding song. White stood the maid against the altar,
fairer than the fairest there—purer than a lily, and more cold than the
dew that glistens in its heart. But as the man drew near she shuddered. Then
out of the press and throng there sprang a dark-haired youth, and put his arms
about this long-forgotten maid, and kissed her pale face in which the blood
shot up like lights of the red dawn across the silent sky. And next there was
turmoil and uproar, and a flashing of swords, and they tore the youth from her
arms, and stabbed him, but with a cry she snatched the dagger from his belt,
and drove it into her snowy breast, home to the heart, and down she fell, and
then, with cries and wailing, and every sound of lamentation, the pageant
rolled away from the arena of my vision, and once more the past shut to its
book.
Let him who reads forgive the intrusion of a dream into a history of fact. But
it came so home to me—I saw it all so clear in a moment, as it were; and,
besides, who shall say what proportion of fact, past, present, or to come, may
lie in the imagination? What is imagination? Perhaps it is the shadow of the
intangible truth, perhaps it is the soul’s thought.
In an instant the whole thing had passed through my brain, and She was
addressing me.
“Behold the lot of man,” said the veiled Ayesha, as she drew the
winding sheets back over the dead lovers, speaking in a solemn, thrilling
voice, which accorded well with the dream that I had dreamed: “to the
tomb, and to the forgetfulness that hides the tomb, must we all come at last!
Ay, even I who live so long. Even for me, oh Holly, thousands upon thousands of
years hence; thousands of years after thou hast gone through the gate and been
lost in the mists, a day will dawn whereon I shall die, and be even as thou art
and these are. And then what will it avail that I have lived a little longer,
holding off death by the knowledge that I have wrung from Nature, since at last
I too must die? What is a span of ten thousand years, or ten times ten thousand
years, in the history of time? It is as naught—it is as the mists that
roll up in the sunlight; it fleeth away like an hour of sleep or a breath of
the Eternal Spirit. Behold the lot of man! Certainly it shall overtake us, and
we shall sleep. Certainly, too, we shall awake and live again, and again shall
sleep, and so on and on, through periods, spaces, and times, from æon unto æon,
till the world is dead, and the worlds beyond the world are dead, and naught
liveth but the Spirit that is Life. But for us twain and for these dead ones
shall the end of ends be Life, or shall it be Death? As yet Death is but
Life’s Night, but out of the night is the Morrow born again, and doth
again beget the Night. Only when Day and Night, and Life and Death, are ended
and swallowed up in that from which they came, what shall be our fate, oh
Holly? Who can see so far? Not even I!”
And then, with a sudden change of tone and manner—
“Hast thou seen enough, my stranger guest, or shall I show thee more of
the wonders of these tombs that are my palace halls? If thou wilt, I can lead
thee to where Tisno, the mightiest and most valorous King of Kôr, in whose day
these caves were ended, lies in a pomp that seems to mock at nothingness, and
bid the empty shadows of the past do homage to his sculptured vanity!”
“I have seen enough, oh Queen,” I answered. “My heart is
overwhelmed by the power of the present Death. Mortality is weak, and easily
broken down by a sense of the companionship that waits upon its end. Take me
hence, oh Ayesha!”
XVII.
THE BALANCE TURNS
In a few minutes, following the lamps of the mutes, which, held out from the
body as a bearer holds water in a vessel, had the appearance of floating down
the darkness by themselves, we came to a stair which led us to
She’s ante-room, the same that Billali had crept up upon on all
fours on the previous day. Here I would have bid the Queen adieu, but she would
not.
“Nay,” she said, “enter with me, oh Holly, for of a truth thy
conversation pleaseth me. Think, oh Holly: for two thousand years have I had
none to converse with save slaves and my own thoughts, and though of all this
thinking hath much wisdom come, and many secrets been made plain, yet am I
weary of my thoughts, and have come to loathe mine own society, for surely the
food that memory gives to eat is bitter to the taste, and it is only with the
teeth of hope that we can bear to bite it. Now, though thy thoughts are green
and tender, as becometh one so young, yet are they those of a thinking brain,
and in truth thou dost bring back to my mind certain of those old philosophers
with whom in days bygone I have disputed at Athens, and at Becca in Arabia, for
thou hast the same crabbed air and dusty look, as though thou hadst passed thy
days in reading ill-writ Greek, and been stained dark with the grime of
manuscripts. So draw the curtain, and sit here by my side, and we will eat
fruit, and talk of pleasant things. See, I will again unveil to thee. Thou hast
brought it on thyself, oh Holly; fairly have I warned thee—and thou shalt
call me beautiful as even those old philosophers were wont to do. Fie upon
them, forgetting their philosophy!”
And without more ado she stood up and shook the white wrappings from her, and
came forth shining and splendid like some glittering snake when she has cast
her slough; ay, and fixed her wonderful eyes upon me—more deadly than any
Basilisk’s—and pierced me through and through with their beauty,
and sent her light laugh ringing through the air like chimes of silver bells.
A new mood was on her, and the very colour of her mind seemed to change beneath
it. It was no longer torture-torn and hateful, as I had seen it when she was
cursing her dead rival by the leaping flames, no longer icily terrible as in
the judgment-hall, no longer rich, and sombre, and splendid, like a Tyrian
cloth, as in the dwellings of the dead. No, her mood now was that of Aphrodité
triumphing. Life—radiant, ecstatic, wonderful—seemed to flow from
her and around her. Softly she laughed and sighed, and swift her glances flew.
She shook her heavy tresses, and their perfume filled the place; she struck her
little sandalled foot upon the floor, and hummed a snatch of some old Greek
epithalamium. All the majesty was gone, or did but lurk and faintly flicker
through her laughing eyes, like lightning seen through sunlight. She had cast
off the terror of the leaping flame, the cold power of judgment that was even
now being done, and the wise sadness of the tombs—cast them off and put
them behind her, like the white shroud she wore, and now stood out the
incarnation of lovely tempting womanhood, made more perfect—and in a way
more spiritual—than ever woman was before.
“So, my Holly, sit there where thou canst see me. It is by thine own
wish, remember—again I say, blame me not if thou dost wear away thy
little span with such a sick pain at the heart that thou wouldst fain have died
before ever thy curious eyes were set upon me. There, sit so, and tell me, for
in truth I am inclined for praises—tell me, am I not beautiful? Nay,
speak not so hastily; consider well the point; take me feature by feature,
forgetting not my form, and my hands and feet, and my hair, and the whiteness
of my skin, and then tell me truly, hast thou ever known a woman who in aught,
ay, in one little portion of her beauty, in the curve of an eyelash even, or
the modelling of a shell-like ear, is justified to hold a light before my
loveliness? Now, my waist! Perchance thou thinkest it too large, but of a truth
it is not so; it is this golden snake that is too large, and doth not bind it
as it should. It is a wide snake, and knoweth that it is ill to tie in the
waist. But see, give me thy hands—so—now press them round me, and
there, with but a little force, thy fingers touch, oh Holly.”
I could bear it no longer. I am but a man, and she was more than a woman.
Heaven knows what she was—I do not! But then and there I fell upon my
knees before her, and told her in a sad mixture of languages—for such
moments confuse the thoughts—that I worshipped her as never woman was
worshipped, and that I would give my immortal soul to marry her, which at that
time I certainly would have done, and so, indeed, would any other man, or all
the race of men rolled into one. For a moment she looked surprised, and then
she began to laugh, and clap her hands in glee.
“Oh, so soon, oh Holly!” she said. “I wondered how many
minutes it would need to bring thee to thy knees. I have not seen a man kneel
before me for so many days, and, believe me, to a woman’s heart the sight
is sweet, ay, wisdom and length of days take not from that dear pleasure which
is our sex’s only right.
“What wouldst thou?—what wouldst thou? Thou dost not know what thou
doest. Have I not told thee that I am not for thee? I love but one, and thou
art not the man. Ah Holly, for all thy wisdom—and in a way thou art
wise—thou art but a fool running after folly. Thou wouldst look into mine
eyes—thou wouldst kiss me! Well, if it pleaseth thee, look,”
and she bent herself towards me, and fixed her dark and thrilling orbs upon my
own; “ay, and kiss too, if thou wilt, for, thanks be given to the
scheme of things, kisses leave no marks, except upon the heart. But if thou
dost kiss, I tell thee of a surety wilt thou eat out thy breast with love of
me, and die!” and she bent yet further towards me till her soft hair
brushed my brow, and her fragrant breath played upon my face, and made me faint
and weak. Then of a sudden, even as I stretched out my hands to clasp, she
straightened herself, and a quick change passed over her. Reaching out her
hand, she held it over my head, and it seemed to me that something flowed from
it that chilled me back to common sense, and a knowledge of propriety and the
domestic virtues.
“Enough of this wanton folly,” she said with a touch of sternness.
“Listen, Holly. Thou art a good and honest man, and I fain would spare
thee; but, oh! it is so hard for woman to be merciful. I have said I am not for
thee, therefore let thy thoughts pass by me like an idle wind, and the dust of
thy imagination sink again into the depths—well, of despair, if thou
wilt. Thou dost not know me, Holly. Hadst thou seen me but ten hours past when
my passion seized me, thou hadst shrunk from me in fear and trembling. I am of
many moods, and, like the water in that vessel, I reflect many things; but they
pass, my Holly; they pass, and are forgotten. Only the water is the water
still, and I still am I, and that which maketh the water maketh it, and that
which maketh me maketh me, nor can my quality be altered. Therefore, pay no
heed to what I seem, seeing that thou canst not know what I am. If thou
troublest me again I will veil myself, and thou shalt behold my face no
more.”
I rose, and sank on the cushioned couch beside her, yet quivering with emotion,
though for a moment my mad passion had left me, as the leaves of a tree quiver
still, although the gust be gone that stirred them. I did not dare to tell her
that I had seen her in that deep and hellish mood, muttering
incantations to the fire in the tomb.
“So,” she went on, “now eat some fruit; believe me, it is the
only true food for man. Oh, tell me of the philosophy of that Hebrew Messiah,
who came after me, and who thou sayest doth now rule Rome, and Greece, and
Egypt, and the barbarians beyond. It must have been a strange philosophy that
He taught, for in my day the peoples would have naught of our philosophies.
Revel and lust and drink, blood and cold steel, and the shock of men gathered
in the battle—these were the canons of their creeds.”
I had recovered myself a little by now, and, feeling bitterly ashamed of the
weakness into which I had been betrayed, I did my best to expound to her the
doctrines of Christianity, to which, however, with the single exception of our
conception of Heaven and Hell, I found that she paid but scant attention, her
interest being all directed towards the Man who taught them. Also I told her
that among her own people, the Arabs, another prophet, one Mohammed, had arisen
and preached a new faith, to which many millions of mankind now adhered.
“Ah!” she said; “I see—two new religions! I have known
so many, and doubtless there have been many more since I knew aught beyond
these caves of Kôr. Mankind asks ever of the skies to vision out what lies
behind them. It is terror for the end, and but a subtler form of
selfishness—this it is that breeds religions. Mark, my Holly, each
religion claims the future for its followers; or, at least, the good thereof.
The evil is for those benighted ones who will have none of it; seeing the light
the true believers worship, as the fishes see the stars, but dimly. The
religions come and the religions pass, and the civilisations come and pass, and
naught endures but the world and human nature. Ah! if man would but see that
hope is from within and not from without—that he himself must work out
his own salvation! He is there, and within him is the breath of life and a
knowledge of good and evil as good and evil is to him. Thereon let him build
and stand erect, and not cast himself before the image of some unknown God,
modelled like his poor self, but with a bigger brain to think the evil thing,
and a longer arm to do it.”
I thought to myself, which shows how old such reasoning is, being, indeed, one
of the recurring qualities of theological discussion, that her argument sounded
very like some that I have heard in the nineteenth century, and in other places
than the caves of Kôr, and with which, by the way, I totally disagree, but I
did not care to try and discuss the question with her. To begin with, my mind
was too weary with all the emotions through which I had passed, and, in the
second place, I knew that I should get the worst of it. It is weary work enough
to argue with an ordinary materialist, who hurls statistics and whole strata of
geological facts at your head, whilst you can only buffet him with deductions
and instincts and the snowflakes of faith, that are, alas! so apt to melt in
the hot embers of our troubles. How little chance, then, should I have against
one whose brain was supernaturally sharpened, and who had two thousand years of
experience, besides all manner of knowledge of the secrets of Nature at her
command! Feeling that she would be more likely to convert me than I should to
convert her, I thought it best to leave the matter alone, and so sat silent.
Many a time since then have I bitterly regretted that I did so, for thereby I
lost the only opportunity I can remember having had of ascertaining what Ayesha
really believed, and what her “philosophy” was.
“Well, my Holly,” she continued, “and so those people of mine
have found a prophet, a false prophet thou sayest, for he is not thine own,
and, indeed, I doubt it not. Yet in my day was it otherwise, for then we Arabs
had many gods. Allât there was, and Saba, the Host of Heaven, Al Uzza, and
Manah the stony one, for whom the blood of victims flowed, and Wadd and Sawâ,
and Yaghûth the Lion of the dwellers in Yaman, and Yäûk the Horse of Morad, and
Nasr the Eagle of Hamyar; ay, and many more. Oh, the folly of it all, the shame
and the pitiful folly! Yet when I rose in wisdom and spoke thereof, surely they
would have slain me in the name of their outraged gods. Well, so hath it ever
been;—but, my Holly, art thou weary of me already, that thou dost sit so
silent? Or dost thou fear lest I should teach thee my philosophy?—for
know I have a philosophy. What would a teacher be without her own philosophy?
and if thou dost vex me overmuch beware! for I will have thee learn it, and
thou shalt be my disciple, and we twain will found a faith that shall swallow
up all others. Faithless man! And but half an hour since thou wast upon thy
knees—the posture does not suit thee, Holly—swearing that thou
didst love me. What shall we do?—Nay, I have it. I will come and see this
youth, the Lion, as the old man Billali calls him, who came with thee, and who
is so sick. The fever must have run its course by now, and if he is about to
die I will recover him. Fear not, my Holly, I shall use no magic. Have I not
told thee that there is no such thing as magic, though there is such a thing as
understanding and applying the forces which are in Nature? Go now, and
presently, when I have made the drug ready, I will follow thee.”[1]
[1]
Ayesha was a great chemist, indeed chemistry appears to have been her only
amusement and occupation. She had one of the caves fitted up as a laboratory,
and, although her appliances were necessarily rude, the results that she
attained were, as will become clear in the course of this narrative,
sufficiently surprising.—L. H. H.
Accordingly I went, only to find Job and Ustane in a great state of grief,
declaring that Leo was in the throes of death, and that they had been searching
for me everywhere. I rushed to the couch, and glanced at him: clearly he was
dying. He was senseless, and breathing heavily, but his lips were quivering,
and every now and again a little shudder ran down his frame. I knew enough of
doctoring to see that in another hour he would be beyond the reach of earthly
help—perhaps in another five minutes. How I cursed my selfishness and the
folly that had kept me lingering by Ayesha’s side while my dear boy lay
dying! Alas and alas! how easily the best of us are lighted down to evil by the
gleam of a woman’s eyes! What a wicked wretch was I! Actually, for the
last half-hour I had scarcely thought of Leo, and this, be it remembered, of
the man who for twenty years had been my dearest companion, and the chief
interest of my existence. And now, perhaps, it was too late!
I wrung my hands, and glanced round. Ustane was sitting by the couch, and in
her eyes burnt the dull light of despair. Job was blubbering—I am sorry I
cannot name his distress by any more delicate word—audibly in the corner.
Seeing my eye fixed upon him, he went outside to give way to his grief in the
passage. Obviously the only hope lay in Ayesha. She, and she
alone—unless, indeed, she was an imposter, which I could not
believe—could save him. I would go and implore her to come. As I started
to do so, however, Job came flying into the room, his hair literally standing
on end with terror.
“Oh, God help us, sir!” he ejaculated in a frightened whisper,
“here’s a corpse a-coming sliding down the passage!”
For a moment I was puzzled, but presently, of course, it struck me that he must
have seen Ayesha, wrapped in her grave-like garment, and been deceived by the
extraordinary undulating smoothness of her walk into a belief that she was a
white ghost gliding towards him. Indeed, at that very moment the question was
settled, for Ayesha herself was in the apartment, or rather cave. Job turned,
and saw her sheeted form, and then, with a convulsive howl of “Here it
comes!” sprang into a corner, and jammed his face against the wall, and
Ustane, guessing whose the dread presence must be, prostrated herself upon her
face.
“Thou comest in a good time, Ayesha,” I said, “for my boy
lies at the point of death.”
“So,” she said softly; “provided he be not dead, it is no
matter, for I can bring him back to life, my Holly. Is that man there thy
servant, and is that the method wherewith thy servants greet strangers in thy
country?”
“He is frightened of thy garb—it hath a death-like air,” I
answered.
She laughed.
“And the girl? Ah, I see now. It is she of whom thou didst speak to me.
Well, bid them both to leave us, and we will see to this sick Lion of thine. I
love not that underlings should perceive my wisdom.”
Thereon I told Ustane in Arabic and Job in English both to leave the room; an
order which the latter obeyed readily enough, and was glad to obey, for he
could not in any way subdue his fear. But it was otherwise with Ustane.
“What does She want?” she whispered, divided between her
fear of the terrible Queen and her anxiety to remain near Leo. “It is
surely the right of a wife to be near her husband when he dieth. Nay, I will
not go, my lord the Baboon.”
“Why doth not that woman leave us, my Holly?” asked Ayesha from the
other end of the cave, where she was engaged in carelessly examining some of
the sculptures on the wall.
“She is not willing to leave Leo,” I answered, not knowing what to
say. Ayesha wheeled round, and, pointing to the girl Ustane, said one word, and
one only, but it was quite enough, for the tone in which it was said meant
volumes.
“Go!”
And then Ustane crept past her on her hands and knees, and went.
“Thou seest, my Holly,” said Ayesha, with a little laugh, “it
was needful that I should give these people a lesson in obedience. That girl
went nigh to disobeying me, but then she did not learn this morn how I treat
the disobedient. Well, she has gone; and now let me see the youth,” and
she glided towards the couch on which Leo lay, with his face in the shadow and
turned towards the wall.
“He hath a noble shape,” she said, as she bent over him to look
upon his face.
Next second her tall and willowy form was staggering back across the room, as
though she had been shot or stabbed, staggering back till at last she struck
the cavern wall, and then there burst from her lips the most awful and
unearthly scream that I ever heard in all my life.
“What is it, Ayesha?” I cried. “Is he dead?”
She turned, and sprang towards me like a tigress.
“Thou dog!” she said, in her terrible whisper, which sounded like
the hiss of a snake, “why didst thou hide this from me?” And she
stretched out her arm, and I thought that she was about to slay me.
“What?” I ejaculated, in the most lively terror;
“what?”
“Ah!” she said, “perchance thou didst not know. Learn, my
Holly, learn: there lies—there lies my lost Kallikrates. Kallikrates, who
has come back to me at last, as I knew he would, as I knew he would;” and
she began to sob and to laugh, and generally to conduct herself like any other
lady who is a little upset, murmuring “Kallikrates, Kallikrates!”
“Nonsense,” thought I to myself, but I did not like to say it; and,
indeed, at that moment I was thinking of Leo’s life, having forgotten
everything else in that terrible anxiety. What I feared now was that he should
die while she was “carrying on.”
“Unless thou art able to help him, Ayesha,” I put in, by way of a
reminder, “thy Kallikrates will soon be far beyond thy calling. Surely he
dieth even now.”
“True,” she said, with a start. “Oh, why did I not come
before! I am unnerved—my hand trembles, even mine—and yet it is
very easy. Here, thou Holly, take this phial,” and she produced a tiny
jar of pottery from the folds of her garment, “and pour the liquid in it
down his throat. It will cure him if he be not dead. Swift, now! Swift! The man
dies!”
I glanced towards him; it was true enough, Leo was in his death-struggle. I saw
his poor face turning ashen, and heard the breath begin to rattle in his
throat. The phial was stoppered with a little piece of wood. I drew it with my
teeth, and a drop of the fluid within flew out upon my tongue. It had a sweet
flavour, and for a second made my head swim, and a mist gather before my eyes,
but happily the effect passed away as swiftly as it had arisen.
When I reached Leo’s side he was plainly expiring—his golden head
was slowly turning from side to side, and his mouth was slightly open. I called
to Ayesha to hold his head, and this she managed to do, though the woman was
quivering from head to foot, like an aspen-leaf or a startled horse. Then,
forcing the jaw a little more open, I poured the contents of the phial into his
mouth. Instantly a little vapour arose from it, as happens when one disturbs
nitric acid, and this sight did not increase my hopes, already faint enough, of
the efficacy of the treatment.
One thing, however, was certain, the death throes ceased—at first I
thought because he had got beyond them, and crossed the awful river. His face
turned to a livid pallor, and his heart-beats, which had been feeble enough
before, seemed to die away altogether—only the eyelid still twitched a
little. In my doubt I looked up at Ayesha, whose head-wrapping had slipped back
in her excitement when she went reeling across the room. She was still holding
Leo’s head, and, with a face as pale as his own, watching his countenance
with such an expression of agonised anxiety as I had never seen before. Clearly
she did not know if he would live or die. Five minutes slowly passed and I saw
that she was abandoning hope; her lovely oval face seemed to fall in and grow
visibly thinner beneath the pressure of a mental agony whose pencil drew black
lines about the hollows of her eyes. The coral faded even from her lips, till
they were as white as Leo’s face, and quivered pitifully. It was shocking
to see her: even in my own grief I felt for hers.
“Is it too late?” I gasped.
She hid her face in her hands, and made no answer, and I too turned away. But
as I did so I heard a deep-drawn breath, and looking down perceived a line of
colour creeping up Leo’s face, then another and another, and then, wonder
of wonders, the man we had thought dead turned over on his side.
“Thou seest,” I said in a whisper.
“I see,” she answered hoarsely. “He is saved. I thought we
were too late—another moment—one little moment more—and he
had been gone!” and she burst into an awful flood of tears, sobbing as
though her heart would break, and yet looking lovelier than ever as she did it.
At last she ceased.
“Forgive me, my Holly—forgive me for my weakness,” she said.
“Thou seest after all I am a very woman. Think—now think of it!
This morning didst thou speak of the place of torment appointed by this new
religion of thine. Hell or Hades thou didst call it—a place where the
vital essence lives and retains an individual memory, and where all the errors
and faults of judgment, and unsatisfied passions and the unsubstantial terrors
of the mind wherewith it hath at any time had to do, come to mock and haunt and
gibe and wring the heart for ever and for ever with the vision of its own
hopelessness. Thus, even thus, have I lived for full two thousand
years—for some six and sixty generations, as ye reckon time—in a
Hell, as thou callest it—tormented by the memory of a crime, tortured day
and night with an unfulfilled desire—without companionship, without
comfort, without death, and led on only down my dreary road by the marsh lights
of Hope, which, though they flickered here and there, and now glowed strong,
and now were not, yet, as my skill told me, would one day lead unto my
deliverer.
“And then—think of it still, oh Holly, for never shalt thou hear
such another tale, or see such another scene, nay, not even if I give thee ten
thousand years of life—and thou shalt have it in payment if thou
wilt—think: at last my deliverer came—he for whom I had watched and
waited through the generations—at the appointed time he came to seek me,
as I knew that he must come, for my wisdom could not err, though I knew not
when or how. Yet see how ignorant I was! See how small my knowledge, and how
faint my strength! For hours he lay there sick unto death, and I felt it
not—I who had waited for him for two thousand years—I knew it not.
And then at last I see him, and behold, my chance is gone but by a hair’s
breadth even before I have it, for he is in the very jaws of death, whence no
power of mine can draw him. And if he die, surely must the Hell be lived
through once more—once more must I face the weary centuries, and wait,
and wait till the time in its fulness shall bring my Beloved back to me. And
then thou gavest him the medicine, and that five minutes dragged long before I
knew if he would live or die, and I tell thee that all the sixty generations
that are gone were not so long as that five minutes. But they passed at length,
and still he showed no sign, and I knew that if the drug works not then, so far
as I have had knowledge, it works not at all. Then thought I that he was once
more dead, and all the tortures of all the years gathered themselves into a
single venomed spear, and pierced me through and through, because again I had
lost Kallikrates! And then, when all was done, behold! he sighed, behold! he
lived, and I knew that he would live, for none die on whom the drug takes hold.
Think of it now, my Holly—think of the wonder of it! He will sleep for
twelve hours and then the fever will have left him!”
She stopped, and laid her hand upon his golden head, and then bent down and
kissed his brow with a chastened abandonment of tenderness that would have been
beautiful to behold had not the sight cut me to the heart—for I was
jealous!
XVIII.
“GO, WOMAN!”
Then followed a silence of a minute or so, during which She appeared, if
one might judge from the almost angelic rapture of her face—for she
looked angelic sometimes—to be plunged into a happy ecstasy. Suddenly,
however, a new thought struck her, and her expression became the very reverse
of angelic.
“Almost had I forgotten,” she said, “that woman, Ustane. What
is she to Kallikrates—his servant, or——” and she
paused, and her voice trembled.
I shrugged my shoulders. “I understand that she is wed to him according
to the custom of the Amahagger,” I answered; “but I know
not.”
Her face grew dark as a thunder-cloud. Old as she was, Ayesha had not outlived
jealousy.
“Then there is an end,” she said; “she must die, even
now!”
“For what crime?” I asked, horrified. “She is guilty of
naught that thou art not guilty of thyself, oh Ayesha. She loves the man, and
he has been pleased to accept her love: where, then, is her sin?”
“Truly, oh Holly, thou art foolish,” she answered, almost
petulantly. “Where is her sin? Her sin is that she stands between me and
my desire. Well, I know that I can take him from her—for dwells there a
man upon this earth, oh Holly, who could resist me if I put out my strength?
Men are faithful for so long only as temptations pass them by. If the
temptation be but strong enough, then will the man yield, for every man, like
every rope, hath his breaking strain, and passion is to men what gold and power
are to women—the weight upon their weakness. Believe me, ill will it go
with mortal woman in that heaven of which thou speakest, if only the spirits be
more fair, for their lords will never turn to look upon them, and their Heaven
will become their Hell. For man can be bought with woman’s beauty, if it
be but beautiful enough; and woman’s beauty can be ever bought with gold,
if only there be gold enough. So was it in my day, and so it will be to the end
of time. The world is a great mart, my Holly, where all things are for sale to
him who bids the highest in the currency of our desires.”
These remarks, which were as cynical as might have been expected from a woman
of Ayesha’s age and experience, jarred upon me, and I answered, testily,
that in our heaven there was no marriage or giving in marriage.
“Else would it not be heaven, dost thou mean?” she put in.
“Fie on thee, Holly, to think so ill of us poor women! Is it, then,
marriage that marks the line between thy heaven and thy hell? but enough of
this. This is no time for disputing and the challenge of our wits. Why dost
thou always dispute? Art thou also a philosopher of these latter days? As for
this woman, she must die; for, though I can take her lover from her, yet, while
she lived, might he think tenderly of her, and that I cannot away with. No
other woman shall dwell in my Lord’s thoughts; my empire shall be all my
own. She hath had her day, let her be content; for better is an hour with love
than a century of loneliness—now the night shall swallow her.”
“Nay, nay,” I cried, “it would be a wicked crime; and from a
crime naught comes but what is evil. For thine own sake, do not this
deed.”
“Is it, then, a crime, oh foolish man, to put away that which stands
between us and our ends? Then is our life one long crime, my Holly, since day
by day we destroy that we may live, since in this world none save the strongest
can endure. Those who are weak must perish; the earth is to the strong, and the
fruits thereof. For every tree that grows a score shall wither, that the strong
one may take their share. We run to place and power over the dead bodies of
those who fail and fall; ay, we win the food we eat from out of the mouths of
starving babes. It is the scheme of things. Thou sayest, too, that a crime
breeds evil, but therein thou dost lack experience; for out of crimes come many
good things, and out of good grows much evil. The cruel rage of the tyrant may
prove a blessing to the thousands who come after him, and the sweetheartedness
of a holy man may make a nation slaves. Man doeth this, and doeth that from the
good or evil of his heart; but he knoweth not to what end his moral sense doth
prompt him; for when he striketh he is blind to where the blow shall fall, nor
can he count the airy threads that weave the web of circumstance. Good and
evil, love and hate, night and day, sweet and bitter, man and woman, heaven
above and the earth beneath—all these things are necessary, one to the
other, and who knows the end of each? I tell thee that there is a hand of fate
that twines them up to bear the burden of its purpose, and all things are
gathered in that great rope to which all things are needful. Therefore doth it
not become us to say this thing is evil and this good, or the dark is hateful
and the light lovely; for to other eyes than ours the evil may be the good and
the darkness more beautiful than the day, or all alike be fair. Hearest thou,
my Holly?”
I felt it was hopeless to argue against casuistry of this nature, which, if it
were carried to its logical conclusion, would absolutely destroy all morality,
as we understand it. But her talk gave me a fresh thrill of fear; for what may
not be possible to a being who, unconstrained by human law, is also absolutely
unshackled by a moral sense of right and wrong, which, however partial and
conventional it may be, is yet based, as our conscience tells us, upon the
great wall of individual responsibility that marks off mankind from the beasts?
But I was deeply anxious to save Ustane, whom I liked and respected, from the
dire fate that overshadowed her at the hands of her mighty rival. So I made one
more appeal.
“Ayesha,” I said, “thou art too subtle for me; but thou
thyself hast told me that each man should be a law unto himself, and follow the
teaching of his heart. Hath thy heart no mercy towards her whose place thou
wouldst take? Bethink thee—as thou sayest—though to me the thing is
incredible—he whom thou desirest has returned to thee after many ages,
and but now thou hast, as thou sayest also, wrung him from the jaws of death.
Wilt thou celebrate his coming by the murder of one who loved him, and whom
perchance he loved—one, at the least, who saved his life for thee when
the spears of thy slaves would have made an end thereof? Thou sayest also that
in past days thou didst grievously wrong this man, that with thine own hand
thou didst slay him because of the Egyptian Amenartas whom he loved.”
“How knowest thou that, oh stranger? How knowest thou that name? I spoke
it not to thee,” she broke in with a cry, catching at my arm.
“Perchance I dreamed it,” I answered; “strange dreams do
hover about these caves of Kôr. It seems that the dream was, indeed, a shadow
of the truth. What came to thee of thy mad crime?—two thousand years of
waiting, was it not? And now wouldst thou repeat the history? Say what thou
wilt, I tell thee that evil will come of it; for to him who doeth, at the
least, good breeds good and evil evil, even though in after days out of evil
cometh good. Offences must needs come; but woe to him by whom the offence
cometh. So said that Messiah of whom I spoke to thee, and it was truly said. If
thou slayest this innocent woman, I say unto thee that thou shalt be accursed,
and pluck no fruit from thine ancient tree of love. Also, what thinkest thou?
How will this man take thee red-handed from the slaughter of her who loved and
tended him?”
“As to that,” she answered, “I have already answered thee.
Had I slain thee as well as her, yet should he love me, Holly, because he could
not save himself therefrom any more than thou couldst save thyself from dying,
if by chance I slew thee, oh Holly. And yet maybe there is truth in what thou
dost say; for in some way it presseth on my mind. If it may be, I will spare
this woman; for have I not told thee that I am not cruel for the sake of
cruelty? I love not to see suffering, or to cause it. Let her come before
me—quick now, before my mood changes,” and she hastily covered her
face with its gauzy wrapping.
Well pleased to have succeeded even to this extent, I passed out into the
passage and called to Ustane, whose white garment I caught sight of some yards
away, huddled up against one of the earthenware lamps that were placed at
intervals along the tunnel. She rose, and ran towards me.
“Is my lord dead? Oh, say not he is dead,” she cried, lifting her
noble-looking face, all stained as it was with tears, up to me with an air of
infinite beseeching that went straight to my heart.
“Nay, he lives,” I answered. “She hath saved him.
Enter.”
She sighed deeply, entered, and fell upon her hands and knees, after the custom
of the Amahagger people, in the presence of the dread She.
“Stand,” said Ayesha, in her coldest voice, “and come
hither.”
Ustane obeyed, standing before her with bowed head.
Then came a pause, which Ayesha broke.
“Who is this man?” she said, pointing to the sleeping form of Leo.
“The man is my husband,” she answered in a low voice.
“Who gave him to thee for a husband?”
“I took him according to the custom of our country, oh She.”
“Thou hast done evil, woman, in taking this man, who is a stranger. He is
not a man of thine own race, and the custom fails. Listen: perchance thou didst
this thing through ignorance, therefore, woman, do I spare thee, otherwise
hadst thou died. Listen again. Go from hence back to thine own place, and never
dare to speak to or set thine eyes upon this man again. He is not for thee.
Listen a third time. If thou breakest this my law, that moment thou diest.
Go.”
But Ustane did not move.
“Go, woman!”
Then she looked up, and I saw that her face was torn with passion.
“Nay, oh She. I will not go,” she answered in a choked
voice: “the man is my husband, and I love him—I love him, and I
will not leave him. What right hast thou to command me to leave my
husband?”
I saw a little quiver pass down Ayesha’s frame, and shuddered myself,
fearing the worst.
“Be pitiful,” I said in Latin; “it is but Nature
working.”
“I am pitiful,” she answered coldly in the same language;
“had I not been pitiful she had been dead even now.” Then,
addressing Ustane: “Woman, I say to thee, go before I destroy thee where
thou art!”
“I will not go! He is mine—mine!” she cried in anguish.
“I took him, and I saved his life! Destroy me, then, if thou hast the
power! I will not give thee my husband—never—never!”
Ayesha made a movement so swift that I could scarcely follow it, but it seemed
to me that she lightly struck the poor girl upon the head with her hand. I
looked at Ustane, and then staggered back in horror, for there upon her hair,
right across her bronze-like tresses, were three finger-marks white as
snow. As for the girl herself, she had put her hands to her head, and was
looking dazed.
“Great heavens!” I said, perfectly aghast at this dreadful
manifestation of human power; but She did but laugh a little.
“Thou thinkest, poor ignorant fool,” she said to the bewildered
woman, “that I have not the power to slay. Stay, there lies a
mirror,” and she pointed to Leo’s round shaving-glass that had been
arranged by Job with other things upon his portmanteau; “give it to this
woman, my Holly, and let her see that which lies across her hair, and whether
or no I have power to slay.”
I picked up the glass, and held it before Ustane’s eyes. She gazed, then
felt at her hair, then gazed again, and then sank upon the ground with a sort
of sob.
“Now, wilt thou go, or must I strike a second time?” asked Ayesha,
in mockery. “Look, I have set my seal upon thee so that I may know thee
till thy hair is all as white as it. If I see thy face again, be sure, too,
that thy bones shall soon be whiter than my mark upon thy hair.”
Utterly awed and broken down, the poor creature rose, and, marked with that
awful mark, crept from the room, sobbing bitterly.
“Look not so frighted, my Holly,” said Ayesha, when she had gone.
“I tell thee I deal not in magic—there is no such thing. ‘Tis
only a force that thou dost not understand. I marked her to strike terror to
her heart, else must I have slain her. And now I will bid my servants to bear
my Lord Kallikrates to a chamber near mine own, that I may watch over him, and
be ready to greet him when he wakes; and thither, too, shalt thou come, my
Holly, and the white man, thy servant. But one thing remember at thy peril.
Naught shalt thou say to Kallikrates as to how this woman went, and as little
as may be of me. Now, I have warned thee!” and she slid away to give her
orders, leaving me more absolutely confounded than ever. Indeed, so bewildered
was I, and racked and torn with such a succession of various emotions, that I
began to think that I must be going mad. However, perhaps fortunately, I had
but little time to reflect, for presently the mutes arrived to carry the
sleeping Leo and our possessions across the central cave, so for a while all
was bustle. Our new rooms were situated immediately behind what we used to call
Ayesha’s boudoir—the curtained space where I had first seen her.
Where she herself slept I did not then know, but it was somewhere quite close.
That night I passed in Leo’s room, but he slept through it like the dead,
never once stirring. I also slept fairly well, as, indeed, I needed to do, but
my sleep was full of dreams of all the horrors and wonders I had undergone.
Chiefly, however, I was haunted by that frightful piece of diablerie by
which Ayesha left her finger-marks upon her rival’s hair. There was
something so terrible about her swift, snake-like movement, and the
instantaneous blanching of that threefold line, that, if the results to Ustane
had been much more tremendous, I doubt if they would have impressed me so
deeply. To this day I often dream of that awful scene, and see the weeping
woman, bereaved, and marked like Cain, cast a last look at her lover, and creep
from the presence of her dread Queen.
Another dream that troubled me originated in the huge pyramid of bones. I
dreamed that they all stood up and marched past me in thousands and tens of
thousands—in squadrons, companies, and armies—with the sunlight
shining through their hollow ribs. On they rushed across the plain to Kôr,
their imperial home; I saw the drawbridges fall before them, and heard their
bones clank through the brazen gates. On they went, up the splendid streets, on
past fountains, palaces, and temples such as the eye of man never saw. But
there was no man to greet them in the market-place, and no woman’s face
appeared at the windows—only a bodiless voice went before them, calling:
“Fallen is Imperial Kôr!—fallen!—fallen!
fallen!” On, right through the city, marched those gleaming
phalanxes, and the rattle of their bony tread echoed through the silent air as
they pressed grimly on. They passed through the city and clomb the wall, and
marched along the great roadway that was made upon the wall, till at length
they once more reached the drawbridge. Then, as the sun was sinking, they
returned again towards their sepulchre, and luridly his light shone in the
sockets of their empty eyes, throwing gigantic shadows of their bones, that
stretched away, and crept and crept like huge spiders’ legs as their
armies wound across the plain. Then they came to the cave, and once more one by
one flung themselves in unending files through the hole into the pit of bones,
and I awoke, shuddering, to see She, who had evidently been standing
between my couch and Leo’s, glide like a shadow from the room.
After this I slept again, soundly this time, till morning, when I awoke much
refreshed, and got up. At last the hour drew near at which, according to
Ayesha, Leo was to awake, and with it came She herself, as usual,
veiled.
“Thou shalt see, oh Holly,” she said; “presently shall he
awake in his right mind, the fever having left him.”
Hardly were the words out of her mouth, when Leo turned round and stretched out
his arms, yawned, opened his eyes, and, perceiving a female form bending over
him, threw his arms round her and kissed her, mistaking her, perhaps, for
Ustane. At any rate, he said, in Arabic, “Hullo, Ustane, why have you
tied your head up like that? Have you got the toothache?” and then, in
English, “I say, I’m awfully hungry. Why, Job, you old son of a
gun, where the deuce have we got to now—eh?”
“I am sure I wish I knew, Mr. Leo,” said Job, edging suspiciously
past Ayesha, whom he still regarded with the utmost disgust and horror, being
by no means sure that she was not an animated corpse; “but you
mustn’t talk, Mr. Leo, you’ve been very ill, and given us a great
deal of hanxiety, and, if this lady,” looking at Ayesha, “would be
so kind as to move, I’ll bring you your soup.”
This turned Leo’s attention to the “lady,” who was standing
by in perfect silence. “Hullo!” he said; “that is not
Ustane—where is Ustane?”
Then, for the first time, Ayesha spoke to him, and her first words were a lie.
“She has gone from hence upon a visit,” she said; “and,
behold, in her place am I here as thine handmaiden.”
Ayesha’s silver notes seemed to puzzle Leo’s half-awakened
intellect, as also did her corpse-like wrappings. However, he said nothing at
the time, but drank off his soup greedily enough, and then turned over and
slept again till the evening. When he woke for the second time he saw me, and
began to question me as to what had happened, but I had to put him off as best
I could till the morrow, when he awoke almost miraculously better. Then I told
him something of his illness and of my doings, but as Ayesha was present I
could not tell him much except that she was the Queen of the country, and well
disposed towards us, and that it was her pleasure to go veiled; for, though of
course I spoke in English, I was afraid that she might understand what we were
saying from the expression of our faces, and besides, I remembered her warning.
On the following day Leo got up almost entirely recovered. The flesh wound in
his side was healed, and his constitution, naturally a vigorous one, had shaken
off the exhaustion consequent on his terrible fever with a rapidity that I can
only attribute to the effects of the wonderful drug which Ayesha had given to
him, and also to the fact that his illness had been too short to reduce him
very much. With his returning health came back full recollection of all his
adventures up to the time when he had lost consciousness in the marsh, and of
course of Ustane also, to whom I had discovered he had grown considerably
attached. Indeed, he overwhelmed me with questions about the poor girl, which I
did not dare to answer, for after Leo’s first awakening She had
sent for me, and again warned me solemnly that I was to reveal nothing of the
story to him, delicately hinting that if I did it would be the worse for me.
She also, for the second time, cautioned me not to tell Leo anything more than
I was obliged about herself, saying that she would reveal herself to him in her
own time.
Indeed, her whole manner changed. After all that I had seen I had expected that
she would take the earliest opportunity of claiming the man she believed to be
her old-world lover, but this, for some reason of her own, which was at the
time quite inscrutable to me, she did not do. All that she did was to attend to
his wants quietly, and with a humility which was in striking contrast with her
former imperious bearing, addressing him always in a tone of something very
like respect, and keeping him with her as much as possible. Of course his
curiosity was as much excited about this mysterious woman as my own had been,
and he was particularly anxious to see her face, which I had, without entering
into particulars, told him was as lovely as her form and voice. This in itself
was enough to raise the expectations of any young man to a dangerous pitch,
and, had it not been that he had not as yet completely shaken off the effects
of illness, and was much troubled in his mind about Ustane, of whose affection
and brave devotion he spoke in touching terms, I have no doubt that he would
have entered into her plans, and fallen in love with her by anticipation. As it
was, however, he was simply wildly curious, and also, like myself, considerably
awed, for, though no hint had been given to him by Ayesha of her extraordinary
age, he not unnaturally came to identify her with the woman spoken of on the
potsherd. At last, quite driven into a corner by his continual questions, which
he showered on me while he was dressing on this third morning, I referred him
to Ayesha, saying, with perfect truth, that I did not know where Ustane was.
Accordingly, after Leo had eaten a hearty breakfast, we adjourned into
She’s presence, for her mutes had orders to admit us at all hours.
She was, as usual, seated in what, for want of a better term, we called her
boudoir, and on the curtains being drawn she rose from her couch and,
stretching out both hands, came forward to greet us, or rather Leo; for I, as
may be imagined, was now quite left in the cold. It was a pretty sight to see
her veiled form gliding towards the sturdy young Englishman, dressed in his
grey flannel suit; for, though he is half a Greek in blood, Leo is, with the
exception of his hair, one of the most English-looking men I ever saw. He has
nothing of the subtle form or slippery manner of the modern Greek about him,
though I presume that he got his remarkable personal beauty from his foreign
mother, whose portrait he resembles not a little. He is very tall and
big-chested, and yet not awkward, as so many big men are, and his head is set
upon him in such a fashion as to give him a proud and vigorous air, which was
well translated in his Amahagger name of the “Lion.”
“Greeting to thee, my young stranger lord,” she said in her softest
voice. “Right glad am I to see thee upon thy feet. Believe me, had I not
saved thee at the last, never wouldst thou have stood upon those feet again.
But the danger is done, and it shall be my care”—and she flung a
world of meaning into the words—“that it doth return no
more.”
Leo bowed to her, and then, in his best Arabic, thanked her for all her
kindness and courtesy in caring for one unknown to her.
“Nay,” she answered softly, “ill could the world spare such a
man. Beauty is too rare upon it. Give me no thanks, who am made happy by thy
coming.”
“Humph! old fellow,” said Leo aside to me in English, “the
lady is very civil. We seem to have tumbled into clover. I hope that you have
made the most of your opportunities. By Jove! what a pair of arms she has
got!”
I nudged him in the ribs to make him keep quiet, for I caught sight of a gleam
from Ayesha’s veiled eyes, which were regarding me curiously.
“I trust,” went on Ayesha, “that my servants have attended
well upon thee; if there can be comfort in this poor place, be sure it waits on
thee. Is there aught that I can do for thee more?”
“Yes, oh She,” answered Leo hastily, “I would fain
know whither the young lady who was looking after me has gone to.”
“Ah,” said Ayesha: “the girl—yes, I saw her. Nay, I
know not; she said that she would go, I know not whither. Perchance she will
return, perchance not. It is wearisome waiting on the sick, and these savage
women are fickle.”
Leo looked both sulky and distressed at this intelligence.
“It’s very odd,” he said to me in English; and then,
addressing She, “I cannot understand,” he said; “the
young lady and I—well—in short, we had a regard for each
other.”
Ayesha laughed a little very musically, and then turned the subject.
XIX.
“GIVE ME A BLACK GOAT!”
The conversation after this was of such a desultory order that I do not quite
recollect it. For some reason, perhaps from a desire to keep her identity and
character in reserve, Ayesha did not talk freely, as she usually did.
Presently, however, she informed Leo that she had arranged a dance that night
for our amusement. I was astonished to hear this, as I fancied that the
Amahagger were much too gloomy a folk to indulge in any such frivolity; but, as
will presently more clearly appear, it turned out that an Amahagger dance has
little in common with such fantastic festivities in other countries, savage or
civilised. Then, as we were about to withdraw, she suggested that Leo might
like to see some of the wonders of the caves, and as he gladly assented thither
we departed, accompanied by Job and Billali. To describe our visit would only
be to repeat a great deal of what I have already said. The tombs we entered
were indeed different, for the whole rock was a honeycomb of sepulchres,[1] but the contents were
nearly always similar. Afterwards we visited the pyramid of bones that had
haunted my dreams on the previous night, and from thence went down a long
passage to one of the great vaults occupied by the bodies of the poorer
citizens of Imperial Kôr. These bodies were not nearly so well preserved as
were those of the wealthier classes. Many of them had no linen covering on
them, also they were buried from five hundred to one thousand in a single large
vault, the corpses in some instances being thickly piled one upon another, like
a heap of slain.
[1]
For a long while it puzzled me to know what could have been done with the
enormous quantities of rock that must have been dug out of these vast caves;
but I afterwards discovered that it was for the most part built into the walls
and palaces of Kôr, and also used to line the reservoirs and sewers.—L.
H. H.
Leo was of course intensely interested in this stupendous and unequalled sight,
which was, indeed, enough to awake all the imagination a man had in him into
the most active life. But to poor Job it did not prove attractive. His
nerves—already seriously shaken by what he had undergone since we had
arrived in this terrible country—were, as may be imagined, still further
disturbed by the spectacle of these masses of departed humanity, whereof the
forms still remained perfect before his eyes, though their voices were for ever
lost in the eternal silence of the tomb. Nor was he comforted when old Billali,
by way of soothing his evident agitation, informed him that he should not be
frightened of these dead things, as he would soon be like them himself.
“There’s a nice thing to say of a man, sir,” he ejaculated,
when I translated this little remark; “but there, what can one expect of
an old man-eating savage? Not but what I dare say he’s right,” and
Job sighed.
When we had finished inspecting the caves, we returned and had our meal, for it
was now past four in the afternoon, and we all—especially
Leo—needed some food and rest. At six o’clock we, together with
Job, waited on Ayesha, who set to work to terrify our poor servant still
further by showing him pictures on the pool of water in the font-like vessel.
She learnt from me that he was one of seventeen children, and then bid him
think of all his brothers and sisters, or as many of them as he could, gathered
together in his father’s cottage. Then she told him to look in the water,
and there, reflected from its stilly surface, was that dead scene of many years
gone by, as it was recalled to our retainer’s brain. Some of the faces
were clear enough, but some were mere blurs and splotches, or with one feature
grossly exaggerated; the fact being that, in these instances, Job had been
unable to recall the exact appearances of the individuals, or remembered them
only by a peculiarity of his tribe, and the water could only reflect what he
saw with his mind’s eye. For it must be remembered that
She’s power in this matter was strictly limited; she could
apparently, except in very rare instances, only photograph upon the water what
was actually in the mind of some one present, and then only by his will. But,
if she was personally acquainted with a locality, she could, as in the case of
ourselves and the whale-boat, throw its reflection upon the water, and also, it
seems, the reflection of anything extraneous that was passing there at the
time. This power, however, did not extend to the minds of others. For instance,
she could show me the interior of my college chapel, as I remembered it, but
not as it was at the moment of reflection; for, where other people were
concerned, her art was strictly limited to the facts or memories present to
their consciousness at the moment. So much was this so that when we
tried, for her amusement, to show her pictures of noted buildings, such as St.
Paul’s or the Houses of Parliament, the result was most imperfect; for,
of course, though we had a good general idea of their appearance, we could not
recall all the architectural details, and therefore the minutiæ necessary to a
perfect reflection were wanting. But Job could not be got to understand this,
and, so far from accepting a natural explanation of the matter, which was after
all, though strange enough in all conscience, nothing more than an instance of
glorified and perfected telepathy, he set the whole thing down as a
manifestation of the blackest magic. I shall never forget the howl of terror
which he uttered when he saw the more or less perfect portraits of his
long-scattered brethren staring at him from the quiet water, or the merry peal
of laughter with which Ayesha greeted his consternation. As for Leo, he did not
altogether like it either, but ran his fingers through his yellow curls, and
remarked that it gave him the creeps.
After about an hour of this amusement, in the latter part of which Job did
not participate, the mutes by signs indicated that Billali was waiting
for an audience. Accordingly he was told to “crawl up,” which he
did as awkwardly as usual, and announced that the dance was ready to begin if
She and the white strangers would be pleased to attend. Shortly
afterwards we all rose, and, Ayesha having thrown a dark cloak (the same, by
the way, that she had worn when I saw her cursing by the fire) over her white
wrappings, we started. The dance was to be held in the open air, on the smooth
rocky plateau in front of the great cave, and thither we made our way. About
fifteen paces from the mouth of the cave we found three chairs placed, and here
we sat and waited, for as yet no dancers were to be seen. The night was almost,
but not quite, dark, the moon not having risen as yet, which made us wonder how
we should be able to see the dancing.
“Thou wilt presently understand,” said Ayesha, with a little laugh,
when Leo asked her; and we certainly did. Scarcely were the words out of her
mouth when from every point we saw dark forms rushing up, each bearing with him
what we at first took to be an enormous flaming torch. Whatever they were, they
were burning furiously, for the flames stood out a yard or more behind each
bearer. On they came, fifty or more of them, carrying their flaming burdens and
looking like so many devils from hell. Leo was the first to discover what these
burdens were.
“Great heaven!” he said, “they are corpses on fire!”
I stared and stared again—he was perfectly right—the torches that
were to light our entertainment were human mummies from the caves!
On rushed the bearers of the flaming corpses, and, meeting at a spot about
twenty paces in front of us, built their ghastly burdens crossways into a huge
bonfire. Heavens! how they roared and flared! No tar barrel could have burnt as
those mummies did. Nor was this all. Suddenly I saw one great fellow seize a
flaming human arm that had fallen from its parent frame, and rush off into the
darkness. Presently he stopped, and a tall streak of fire shot up into the air,
illumining the gloom, and also the lamp from which it sprang. That lamp was the
mummy of a woman tied to a stout stake let into the rock, and he had fired her
hair. On he went a few paces and touched a second, then a third, and a fourth,
till at last we were surrounded on all three sides by a great ring of bodies
flaring furiously, the material with which they were preserved having rendered
them so inflammable that the flames would literally spout out of the ears and
mouth in tongues of fire a foot or more in length.
Nero illuminated his gardens with live Christians soaked in tar, and we were
now treated to a similar spectacle, probably for the first time since his day,
only happily our lamps were not living ones.
But, although this element of horror was fortunately wanting, to describe the
awful and hideous grandeur of the spectacle thus presented to us is, I feel, so
absolutely beyond my poor powers that I scarcely dare attempt it. To begin
with, it appealed to the moral as well as the physical susceptibilities. There
was something very terrible, and yet very fascinating, about the employment of
the remote dead to illumine the orgies of the living; in itself the thing was a
satire, both on the living and the dead. Cæsar’s dust—or is it
Alexander’s?—may stop a bunghole, but the functions of these dead
Cæsars of the past was to light up a savage fetish dance. To such base uses may
we come, of so little account may we be in the minds of the eager multitudes
that we shall breed, many of whom, so far from revering our memory, will live
to curse us for begetting them into such a world of woe.
Then there was the physical side of the spectacle, and a weird and splendid one
it was. Those old citizens of Kôr burnt as, to judge from their sculptures and
inscriptions, they had lived, very fast, and with the utmost liberality. What
is more, there were plenty of them. As soon as ever a mummy had burnt down to
the ankles, which it did in about twenty minutes, the feet were kicked away,
and another one put in its place. The bonfire was kept going on the same
generous scale, and its flames shot up, with a hiss and a crackle, twenty or
thirty feet into the air, throwing great flashes of light far out into the
gloom, through which the dark forms of the Amahagger flitted to and fro like
devils replenishing the infernal fires. We all stood and stared
aghast—shocked, and yet fascinated at so strange a spectacle, and half
expecting to see the spirits those flaming forms had once enclosed come
creeping from the shadows to work vengeance on their desecrators.
“I promised thee a strange sight, my Holly,” laughed Ayesha, whose
nerves alone did not seem to be affected; “and, behold, I have not failed
thee. Also, it hath its lesson. Trust not to the future, for who knows what the
future may bring! Therefore, live for the day, and endeavour not to escape the
dust which seems to be man’s end. What thinkest thou those long-forgotten
nobles and ladies would have felt had they known that they should one day flare
to light the dance or boil the pot of savages? But see, here come the dancers;
a merry crew—are they not? The stage is lit—now for the
play.”
As she spoke, we perceived two lines of figures, one male and the other female,
to the number of about a hundred, each advancing round the human bonfire,
arrayed only in the usual leopard and buck skins. They formed up, in perfect
silence, in two lines, facing each other between us and the fire, and then the
dance—a sort of infernal and fiendish cancan—began. To describe it
is quite impossible, but, though there was a good deal of tossing of legs and
double-shuffling, it seemed to our untutored minds to be more of a play than a
dance, and, as usual with this dreadful people, whose minds seem to have taken
their colour from the caves in which they live, and whose jokes and amusements
are drawn from the inexhaustible stores of preserved mortality with which they
share their homes, the subject appeared to be a most ghastly one. I know that
it represented an attempted murder first of all, and then the burial alive of
the victim and his struggling from the grave; each act of the abominable drama,
which was carried on in perfect silence, being rounded off and finished with a
furious and most revolting dance round the supposed victim, who writhed upon
the ground in the red light of the bonfire.
Presently, however, this pleasing piece was interrupted. Suddenly there was a
slight commotion, and a large powerful woman, whom I had noted as one of the
most vigorous of the dancers, came, made mad and drunken with unholy
excitement, bounding and staggering towards us, shrieking out as she
came:—
“I want a Black Goat, I must have a Black Goat, bring me a Black
Goat!” and down she fell upon the rocky floor foaming and writhing, and
shrieking for a Black Goat, about as hideous a spectacle as can well be
conceived.
Instantly most of the dancers came up and got round her, though some still
continued their capers in the background.
“She has got a Devil,” called out one of them. “Run and get a
black goat. There, Devil, keep quiet! keep quiet! You shall have the goat
presently. They have gone to fetch it, Devil.”
“I want a Black Goat, I must have a Black Goat!” shrieked the
foaming rolling creature again.
“All right, Devil, the goat will be here presently; keep quiet,
there’s a good Devil!”
And so on till the goat, taken from a neighbouring kraal, did at last arrive,
being dragged bleating on to the scene by its horns.
“Is it a Black One, is it a Black One?” shrieked the possessed.
“Yes, yes, Devil, as black as night;” then aside, “keep it
behind thee, don’t let the Devil see that it has got a white spot on its
rump and another on its belly. In one minute, Devil. There, cut his throat
quick. Where is the saucer?”
“The Goat! the Goat! the Goat! Give me the blood of my black goat! I must
have it, don’t you see I must have it? Oh! oh! oh! give me the blood of
the goat.”
At this moment a terrified bah! announced that the poor goat had been
sacrificed, and the next minute a woman ran up with a saucer full of blood.
This the possessed creature, who was then raving and foaming her wildest,
seized and drank, and was instantly recovered, and without a trace of
hysteria, or fits, or being possessed, or whatever dreadful thing it was she
was suffering from. She stretched her arms, smiled faintly, and walked quietly
back to the dancers, who presently withdrew in a double line as they had come,
leaving the space between us and the bonfire deserted.
I thought that the entertainment was now over, and, feeling rather queer, was
about to ask She if we could rise, when suddenly what at first I took to
be a baboon came hopping round the fire, and was instantly met upon the other
side by a lion, or rather a human being dressed in a lion’s skin. Then
came a goat, then a man wrapped in an ox’s hide, with the horns wobbling
about in a ludicrous way. After him followed a blesbok, then an impala, then a
koodoo, then more goats, and many other animals, including a girl sewn up in
the shining scaly hide of a boa-constrictor, several yards of which trailed
along the ground behind her. When all the beasts had collected they began to
dance about in a lumbering, unnatural fashion, and to imitate the sounds
produced by the respective animals they represented, till the whole air was
alive with roars and bleating and the hissing of snakes. This went on for a
long time, till, getting tired of the pantomime, I asked Ayesha if there would
be any objection to Leo and myself walking round to inspect the human torches,
and, as she had nothing to say against it, we started, striking round to the
left. After looking at one or two of the flaming bodies, we were about to
return, thoroughly disgusted with the grotesque weirdness of the spectacle,
when our attention was attracted by one of the dancers, a particularly active
leopard, that had separated itself from its fellow-beasts, and was whisking
about in our immediate neighbourhood, but gradually drawing into a spot where
the shadow was darkest, equidistant between two of the flaming mummies. Drawn
by curiosity, we followed it, when suddenly it darted past us into the shadows
beyond, and as it did so erected itself and whispered, “Come,” in a
voice that we both recognised as that of Ustane. Without waiting to consult me
Leo turned and followed her into the outer darkness, and I, feeling sick enough
at heart, went after them. The leopard crawled on for about fifty paces—a
sufficient distance to be quite beyond the light of the fire and
torches—and then Leo came up with it, or, rather, with Ustane.
“Oh, my lord,” I heard her whisper, “so I have found thee!
Listen. I am in peril of my life from
‘She-who-must-be-obeyed.’ Surely the Baboon has told thee
how she drove me from thee? I love thee, my lord, and thou art mine according
to the custom of the country. I saved thy life! My Lion, wilt thou cast me off
now?”
“Of course not,” ejaculated Leo; “I have been wondering
whither thou hadst gone. Let us go and explain matters to the Queen.”
“Nay, nay, she would slay us. Thou knowest not her power—the Baboon
there, he knoweth, for he saw. Nay, there is but one way: if thou wilt cleave
to me, thou must flee with me across the marshes even now, and then perchance
we may escape.”
“For Heaven’s sake, Leo,” I began, but she broke in—
“Nay, listen not to him. Swift—be swift—death is in the air
we breathe. Even now, mayhap, She heareth us,” and without more
ado she proceeded to back her arguments by throwing herself into his arms. As
she did so the leopard’s head slipped from her hair, and I saw the three
white finger-marks upon it, gleaming faintly in the starlight. Once more
realising the desperate nature of the position, I was about to interpose, for I
knew that Leo was not too strong-minded where women were concerned,
when—oh! horror!—I heard a little silvery laugh behind me. I turned
round, and there was She herself, and with her Billali and two male
mutes. I gasped and nearly sank to the ground, for I knew that such a situation
must result in some dreadful tragedy, of which it seemed exceedingly probable
to me that I should be the first victim. As for Ustane, she untwined her arms
and covered her eyes with her hands, while Leo, not knowing the full terror of
the position, merely covered up, and looked as foolish as a man caught in such
a trap would naturally do.
XX.
TRIUMPH
Then followed a moment of the most painful silence that I ever endured. It was
broken by Ayesha, who addressed herself to Leo.
“Nay, now, my lord and guest,” she said in her softest tones, which
yet had the ring of steel about them, “look not so bashful. Surely the
sight was a pretty one—the leopard and the lion!”
“Oh, hang it all!” said Leo in English.
“And thou, Ustane,” she went on, “surely I should have passed
thee by, had not the light fallen on the white across thy hair,” and she
pointed to the bright edge of the rising moon which was now appearing above the
horizon. “Well! well! the dance is done—see, the tapers have burnt
down, and all things end in silence and in ashes. So thou thoughtest it a fit
time for love, Ustane, my servant—and I, dreaming not that I could be
disobeyed, thought thee already far away.”
“Play not with me,” moaned the wretched woman; “slay me, and
let there be an end.”
“Nay, why? It is not well to go so swift from the hot lips of love down
to the cold mouth of the grave,” and she made a motion to the mutes, who
instantly stepped up and caught the girl by either arm. With an oath Leo sprang
upon the nearest, and hurled him to the ground, and then stood over him with
his face set, and his fist ready.
Again Ayesha laughed. “It was well thrown, my guest; thou hast a strong
arm for one who so late was sick. But now out of thy courtesy I pray thee let
that man live and do my bidding. He shall not harm the girl; the night air
grows chill, and I would welcome her in mine own place. Surely she whom thou
dost favour shall be favoured of me also.”
I took Leo by the arm, and pulled him from the prostrate mute, and he, half
bewildered, obeyed the pressure. Then we all set out for the cave across the
plateau, where a pile of white human ashes was all that remained of the fire
that had lit the dancing, for the dancers had vanished.
In due course we gained Ayesha’s boudoir—all too soon, it seemed to
me, having a sad presage of what was to come lying heavy on my heart.
Ayesha seated herself upon her cushions, and, having dismissed Job and Billali,
by signs bade the mutes tend the lamps and retire—all save one girl, who
was her favourite personal attendant. We three remained standing, the
unfortunate Ustane a little to the left of the rest of us.
“Now, oh Holly,” Ayesha began, “how came it that thou who
didst hear my words bidding this evil-doer”—and she pointed to
Ustane—“to go hence—thou at whose prayer I did weakly spare
her life—how came it, I say, that thou wast a sharer in what I saw
to-night? Answer, and for thine own sake, I say, speak all the truth, for I am
not minded to hear lies upon this matter!”
“It was by accident, oh Queen,” I answered. “I knew naught of
it.”
“I do believe thee, oh Holly,” she answered coldly, “and well
it is for thee that I do—then does the whole guilt rest upon her.”
“I do not find any guilt therein,” broke in Leo. “She is not
another man’s wife, and it appears that she has married me according to
the custom of this awful place, so who is the worse? Any way, madam,” he
went on, “whatever she has done I have done too, so if she is to be
punished let me be punished also; and I tell thee,” he went on, working
himself up into a fury, “that if thou biddest one of those deaf and dumb
villains to touch her again I will tear him to pieces!” And he looked as
though he meant it.
Ayesha listened in icy silence, and made no remark. When he had finished,
however, she addressed Ustane.
“Hast thou aught to say, woman? Thou silly straw, thou feather, who didst
think to float towards thy passion’s petty ends, even against the great
wind of my will! Tell me, for I fain would understand. Why didst thou this
thing?”
And then I think I saw the most tremendous exhibition of moral courage and
intrepidity that it is possible to conceive. For the poor doomed girl, knowing
what she had to expect at the hands of her terrible Queen, knowing, too, from
bitter experience, how great was her adversary’s power, yet gathered
herself together, and out of the very depths of her despair drew materials to
defy her.
“I did it, oh She,” she answered, drawing herself up to the
full of her stately height, and throwing back the panther skin from her head,
“because my love is stronger than the grave. I did it because my life
without this man whom my heart chose would be but a living death. Therefore did
I risk my life, and, now that I know that it is forfeit to thine anger, yet am
I glad that I did risk it, and pay it away in the risking, ay, because he
embraced me once, and told me that he loved me yet.”
Here Ayesha half rose from her couch, and then sank down again.
“I have no magic,” went on Ustane, her rich voice ringing strong
and full, “and I am not a Queen, nor do I live for ever, but a
woman’s heart is heavy to sink through waters, however deep, oh Queen!
and a woman’s eyes are quick to see—even through thy veil, oh
Queen!
“Listen: I know it, thou dost love this man thyself, and therefore
wouldst thou destroy me who stand across thy path. Ay, I die—I die, and
go into the darkness, nor know I whither I go. But this I know. There is a
light shining in my breast, and by that light, as by a lamp, I see the truth,
and the future that I shall not share unroll itself before me like a scroll.
When first I knew my lord,” and she pointed to Leo, “I knew also
that death would be the bridal gift he gave me—it rushed upon me of a
sudden, but I turned not back, being ready to pay the price, and, behold, death
is here! And now, even as I knew that, so do I, standing on the steps of doom,
know that thou shalt not reap the profit of thy crime. Mine he is, and, though
thy beauty shine like a sun among the stars, mine shall he remain for thee.
Never here in this life shall he look thee in the eyes and call thee spouse.
Thou too art doomed, I see”—and her voice rang like the cry of an
inspired prophetess; “ah, I see——”
Then came an answering cry of mingled rage and terror. I turned my head. Ayesha
had risen, and was standing with her outstretched hand pointing at Ustane, who
had suddenly stopped speaking. I gazed at the poor woman, and as I gazed there
came upon her face that same woeful, fixed expression of terror that I had seen
once before when she had broken out into her wild chant. Her eyes grew large,
her nostrils dilated, and her lips blanched.
Ayesha said nothing, she made no sound, she only drew herself up, stretched out
her arm, and, her tall veiled frame quivering like an aspen leaf, appeared to
look fixedly at her victim. Even as she did so Ustane put her hands to her
head, uttered one piercing scream, turned round twice, and then fell backwards
with a thud—prone upon the floor. Both Leo and myself rushed to
her—she was stone dead—blasted into death by some mysterious
electric agency or overwhelming will-force whereof the dread She had
command.
For a moment Leo did not quite realise what had happened. But, when he did, his
face was awful to see. With a savage oath he rose from beside the corpse, and,
turning, literally sprang at Ayesha. But she was watching, and, seeing him
come, stretched out her hand again, and he went staggering back towards me, and
would have fallen, had I not caught him. Afterwards he told me that he felt as
though he had suddenly received a violent blow in the chest, and, what is more,
utterly cowed, as if all the manhood had been taken out of him.
Then Ayesha spoke. “Forgive me, my guest,” she said softly,
addressing him, “if I have shocked thee with my justice.”
“Forgive thee, thou fiend,” roared poor Leo, wringing his hands in
his rage and grief. “Forgive thee, thou murderess! By Heaven, I will kill
thee if I can!”
“Nay, nay,” she answered in the same soft voice, “thou dost
not understand—the time has come for thee to learn. Thou art my
love, my Kallikrates, my Beautiful, my Strong! For two thousand years,
Kallikrates, have I waited for thee, and now at length thou hast come
back to me; and as for this woman,” pointing to the corpse, “she
stood between me and thee, and therefore have I laid her in the dust,
Kallikrates.”
“It is an accursed lie!” said Leo. “My name is not
Kallikrates! I am Leo Vincey; my ancestor was Kallikrates—at least, I
believe he was.”
“Ah, thou sayest it—thine ancestor was Kallikrates, and thou, even
thou, art Kallikrates reborn, come back—and mine own dear lord!”
“I am not Kallikrates, and, as for being thy lord, or having aught to do
with thee, I had sooner be the lord of a fiend from hell, for she would be
better than thou.”
“Sayest thou so—sayest thou so, Kallikrates? Nay, but thou hast not
seen me for so long a time that no memory remains. Yet am I very fair,
Kallikrates!”
“I hate thee, murderess, and I have no wish to see thee. What is it to me
how fair thou art? I hate thee, I say.”
“Yet within a very little space shalt thou creep to my knee, and swear
that thou dost love me,” answered Ayesha, with a sweet, mocking laugh.
“Come, there is no time like the present time, here before this dead girl
who loved thee, let us put it to the proof.
“Look now on me, Kallikrates!” and with a sudden motion she shook
her gauzy covering from her, and stood forth in her low kirtle and her snaky
zone, in her glorious radiant beauty and her imperial grace, rising from her
wrappings, as it were, like Venus from the wave, or Galatea from her marble, or
a beatified spirit from the tomb. She stood forth, and fixed her deep and
glowing eyes upon Leo’s eyes, and I saw his clenched fists unclasp, and
his set and quivering features relax beneath her gaze. I saw his wonder and
astonishment grow into admiration, and then into fascination, and the more he
struggled the more I saw the power of her dread beauty fasten on him and take
possession of his senses, drugging them, and drawing the heart out of him. Did
I not know the process? Had not I, who was twice his age, gone through it
myself? Was I not going through it afresh even then, although her sweet and
passionate gaze was not for me? Yes, alas, I was! Alas, that I should have to
confess that at that very moment I was rent by mad and furious jealousy. I
could have flown at him, shame upon me! The woman had confounded and almost
destroyed my moral sense, as she was bound to confound all who looked upon her
superhuman loveliness. But—I do not quite know how—I got the better
of myself, and once more turned to see the climax of the tragedy.
“Oh, great Heaven!” gasped Leo, “art thou a woman?”
“A woman in truth—in very truth—and thine own spouse,
Kallikrates!” she answered, stretching out her rounded ivory arms towards
him, and smiling, ah, so sweetly!
He looked and looked, and slowly I perceived that he was drawing nearer to her.
Suddenly his eye fell upon the corpse of poor Ustane, and he shuddered and
stopped.
“How can I?” he said hoarsely. “Thou art a murderess; she
loved me.”
Observe, he was already forgetting that he had loved her.
“It is naught,” she murmured, and her voice sounded sweet as the
night-wind passing through the trees. “It is naught at all. If I have
sinned, let my beauty answer for my sin. If I have sinned, it is for love of
thee: let my sin, therefore, be put away and forgotten;” and once more
she stretched out her arms and whispered “Come,” and then in
another few seconds it was all over.
I saw him struggle—I saw him even turn to fly; but her eyes drew him more
strongly than iron bonds, and the magic of her beauty and concentrated will and
passion entered into him and overpowered him—ay, even there, in the
presence of the body of the woman who had loved him well enough to die for him.
It sounds horrible and wicked enough, but he should not be too greatly blamed,
and be sure his sin will find him out. The temptress who drew him into evil was
more than human, and her beauty was greater than the loveliness of the
daughters of men.
I looked up again and now her perfect form lay in his arms, and her lips were
pressed against his own; and thus, with the corpse of his dead love for an
altar, did Leo Vincey plight his troth to her red-handed murderess—plight
it for ever and a day. For those who sell themselves into a like dominion,
paying down the price of their own honour, and throwing their soul into the
balance to sink the scale to the level of their lusts, can hope for no
deliverance here or hereafter. As they have sown, so shall they reap and reap,
even when the poppy flowers of passion have withered in their hands, and their
harvest is but bitter tares, garnered in satiety.
Suddenly, with a snake-like motion, she seemed to slip from his embrace, and
then again broke out into her low laugh of triumphant mockery.
“Did I not tell thee that within a little space thou wouldst creep to my
knee, oh Kallikrates? And surely the space has not been a great one!”
Leo groaned in shame and misery; for though he was overcome and stricken down,
he was not so lost as to be unaware of the depth of the degradation to which he
had sunk. On the contrary, his better nature rose up in arms against his fallen
self, as I saw clearly enough later on.
Ayesha laughed again, and then quickly veiled herself, and made a sign to the
girl mute, who had been watching the whole scene with curious startled eyes.
The girl left, and presently returned, followed by two male mutes, to whom the
Queen made another sign. Thereon they all three seized the body of poor Ustane
by the arms, and dragged it heavily down the cavern and away through the
curtains at the end. Leo watched it for a little while, and then covered his
eyes with his hand, and it too, to my excited fancy, seemed to watch us as it
went.
“There passes the dead past,” said Ayesha, solemnly, as the
curtains shook and fell back into their places, when the ghastly procession had
vanished behind them. And then, with one of those extraordinary transitions of
which I have already spoken, she again threw off her veil, and broke out, after
the ancient and poetic fashion of the dwellers in Arabia,[1] into a pæan of triumph or epithalamium,
which, wild and beautiful as it was, is exceedingly difficult to render into
English, and ought by rights to be sung to the music of a cantata, rather than
written and read. It was divided into two parts—one descriptive or
definitive, and the other personal; and, as nearly as I can remember, ran as
follows:—
[1]
Among the ancient Arabians the power of poetic declamation, either in verse or
prose, was held in the highest honour and esteem, and he who excelled in it was
known as “Khâteb,” or Orator. Every year a general assembly was
held at which the rival poets repeated their compositions, when those poems
which were judged to be the best were, so soon as the knowledge and the art of
writing became general, inscribed on silk in letters of gold, and publicly
exhibited, being known as “Al Modhahabât,” or golden verses. In the
poem given above by Mr. Holly, Ayesha evidently followed the traditional poetic
manner of her people, which was to embody their thoughts in a series of
somewhat disconnected sentences, each remarkable for its beauty and the grace
of its expression. —Editor.
Love is like a flower in the desert.
It is like the aloe of Arabia that blooms but once and dies; it blooms in the
salt emptiness of Life, and the brightness of its beauty is set upon the waste
as a star is set upon a storm.
It hath the sun above that is the Spirit, and above it blows the air of its
divinity.
At the echoing of a step, Love blooms, I say; I say Love blooms, and bends her
beauty down to him who passeth by.
He plucketh it, yea, he plucketh the red cup that is full of honey, and beareth
it away; away across the desert, away till the flower be withered, away till
the desert be done.
There is only one perfect flower in the wilderness of Life.
That flower is Love!
There is only one fixed star in the midsts of our wandering.
That star is Love!
There is only one hope in our despairing night.
That hope is Love!
All else is false. All else is shadow moving upon water. All else is wind and
vanity.
Who shall say what is the weight or the measure of Love?
It is born of the flesh, it dwelleth in the spirit. From each doth it draw its
comfort.
For beauty it is as a star.
Many are its shapes, but all are beautiful, and none know where the star rose,
or the horizon where it shall set.
Then, turning to Leo, and laying her hand upon his shoulder, she went on in a
fuller and more triumphant tone, speaking in balanced sentences that gradually
grew and swelled from idealised prose into pure and majestic verse:—
Long have I loved thee, oh, my love; yet has my love not lessened.
Long have I waited for thee, and behold my reward is at hand—is here!
Far away I saw thee once, and thou wast taken from me.
Then in a grave sowed I the seed of patience, and shone upon it with the sun of
hope, and watered it with tears of repentance, and breathed on it with the
breath of my knowledge. And now, lo! it hath sprung up, and borne fruit. Lo!
out of the grave hath it sprung. Yea, from among the dry bones and ashes of the
dead.
I have waited and my reward is with me.
I have overcome Death, and Death brought back to me him that was dead.
Therefore do I rejoice, for fair is the future.
Green are the paths that we shall tread across the everlasting meadows.
The hour is at hand. Night hath fled away into the valleys.
The dawn kisseth the mountain tops.
Soft shall we live, my love, and easy shall we go.
Crowned shall we be with the diadem of Kings.
Worshipping and wonder struck all peoples of the world, Blinded shall fall
before our beauty and might.
From time unto times shall our greatness thunder on, Rolling like a chariot
through the dust of endless days.
Laughing shall we speed in our victory and pomp, Laughing like the Daylight as
he leaps along the hills.
Onward, still triumphant to a triumph ever new!
Onward, in our power to a power unattained!
Onward, never weary, clad with splendour for a robe!
Till accomplished be our fate, and the night is rushing down.
She paused in her strange and most thrilling allegorical chant, of which I am,
unfortunately, only able to give the burden, and that feebly enough, and then
said—
“Perchance thou dost not believe my word, Kallikrates—perchance
thou thinkest that I do delude thee, and that I have not lived these many
years, and that thou hast not been born again to me. Nay, look not so—put
away that pale cast of doubt, for oh be sure herein can error find no foothold!
Sooner shall the suns forget their course and the swallow miss her nest, than
my soul shall swear a lie and be led astray from thee, Kallikrates. Blind me,
take away mine eyes, and let the darkness utterly fence me in, and still mine
ears would catch the tone of thy unforgotten voice, striking more loud against
the portals of my sense than can the call of brazen-throated
clarions:—stop up mine hearing also, and let a thousand touch me on the
brow, and I would name thee out of all:—yea, rob me of every sense, and
see me stand deaf and blind, and dumb, and with nerves that cannot weigh the
value of a touch, yet would my spirit leap within me like a quickening child
and cry unto my heart, behold Kallikrates! behold, thou watcher, the watches of
thy night are ended! behold thou who seekest in the night season, thy morning
Star ariseth.”
She paused awhile and then continued, “But stay, if thy heart is yet
hardened against the mighty truth and thou dost require a further pledge of
that which thou dost find too deep to understand, even now shall it be given to
thee, and to thee also, oh my Holly. Bear each one of you a lamp, and follow
after me whither I shall lead you.”
Without stopping to think—indeed, speaking for myself, I had almost
abandoned the function in circumstances under which to think seemed to be
absolutely useless, since thought fell hourly helpless against a black wall of
wonder—we took the lamps and followed her. Going to the end of her
“boudoir,” she raised a curtain and revealed a little stair of the
sort that is so common in these dim caves of Kôr. As we hurried down the stair
I observed that the steps were worn in the centre to such an extent that some
of them had been reduced from seven and a half inches, at which I guessed their
original height, to about three and a half. Now, all the other steps that I had
seen in the caves were practically unworn, as was to be expected, seeing that
the only traffic which ever passed upon them was that of those who bore a fresh
burden to the tomb. Therefore this fact struck my notice with that curious
force with which little things do strike us when our minds are absolutely
overwhelmed by a sudden rush of powerful sensations; beaten flat, as it were,
like a sea beneath the first burst of a hurricane, so that every little object
on the surface starts into an unnatural prominence.
At the bottom of the staircase I stood and stared at the worn steps, and
Ayesha, turning, saw me.
“Wonderest thou whose are the feet that have worn away the rock, my
Holly?” she asked. “They are mine—even mine own light feet! I
can remember when those stairs were fresh and level, but for two thousand years
and more have I gone down hither day by day, and see, my sandals have worn out
the solid rock!”
I made no answer, but I do not think that anything that I had heard or seen
brought home to my limited understanding so clear a sense of this being’s
overwhelming antiquity as that hard rock hollowed out by her soft white feet.
How many hundreds of thousands of times must she have passed up and down that
stair to bring about such a result?
The stair led to a tunnel, and a few paces down the tunnel was one of the usual
curtain-hung doorways, a glance at which told me that it was the same where I
had been a witness of that terrible scene by the leaping flame. I recognised
the pattern of the curtain, and the sight of it brought the whole event vividly
before my eyes, and made me tremble even at its memory. Ayesha entered the tomb
(for it was a tomb), and we followed her—I, for one, rejoicing that the
mystery of the place was about to be cleared up, and yet afraid to face its
solution.
XXI.
THE DEAD AND LIVING MEET
“See now the place where I have slept for these two thousand
years,” said Ayesha, taking the lamp from Leo’s hand and holding it
above her head. Its rays fell upon a little hollow in the floor, where I had
seen the leaping flame, but the fire was out now. They fell upon the white form
stretched there beneath its wrappings upon its bed of stone, upon the fretted
carving of the tomb, and upon another shelf of stone opposite the one on which
the body lay, and separated from it by the breadth of the cave.
“Here,” went on Ayesha, laying her hand upon the
rock—“here have I slept night by night for all these generations,
with but a cloak to cover me. It did not become me that I should lie soft when
my spouse yonder,” and she pointed to the rigid form, “lay stiff in
death. Here night by night have I slept in his cold company—till, thou
seest, this thick slab, like the stairs down which we passed, has worn thin
with the tossing of my form—so faithful have I been to thee even in thy
space of sleep, Kallikrates. And now, mine own, thou shalt see a wonderful
thing—living, thou shalt behold thyself dead—for well have I tended
thee during all these years, Kallikrates. Art thou prepared?”
We made no answer, but gazed at each other with frightened eyes, the whole
scene was so dreadful and so solemn. Ayesha advanced, and laid her hand upon
the corner of the shroud, and once more spoke.
“Be not affrighted,” she said; “though the thing seem
wonderful to thee—all we who live have thus lived before; nor is the very
shape that holds us a stranger to the sun! Only we know it not, because memory
writes no record, and earth hath gathered in the earth she lent us, for none
have saved our glory from the grave. But I, by my arts and by the arts of those
dead men of Kôr which I have learned, have held thee back, oh Kallikrates, from
the dust, that the waxen stamp of beauty on thy face should ever rest before
mine eye. ‘Twas a mask that memory might fill, serving to fashion out thy
presence from the past, and give it strength to wander in the habitations of my
thought, clad in a mummery of life that stayed my appetite with visions of dead
days.
“Behold now, let the Dead and Living meet! Across the gulf of Time they
still are one. Time hath no power against Identity, though sleep the merciful
hath blotted out the tablets of our mind, and with oblivion sealed the sorrows
that else would hound us from life to life, stuffing the brain with gathered
griefs till it burst in the madness of uttermost despair. Still are they one,
for the wrappings of our sleep shall roll away as thunder-clouds before the
wind; the frozen voice of the past shall melt in music like mountain snows
beneath the sun; and the weeping and the laughter of the lost hours shall be
heard once more most sweetly echoing up the cliffs of immeasurable time.
“Ay, the sleep shall roll away, and the voices shall be heard, when down
the completed chain, whereof our each existence is a link, the lightning of the
Spirit hath passed to work out the purpose of our being; quickening and fusing
those separated days of life, and shaping them to a staff whereon we may safely
lean as we wend to our appointed fate.
“Therefore, have no fear, Kallikrates, when thou—living, and but
lately born—shalt look upon thine own departed self, who breathed and
died so long ago. I do but turn one page in thy Book of Being, and show thee
what is writ thereon.
“Behold!”
With a sudden motion she drew the shroud from the cold form, and let the
lamplight play upon it. I looked, and then shrank back terrified; since, say
what she might in explanation, the sight was an uncanny one—for her
explanations were beyond the grasp of our finite minds, and when they were
stripped from the mists of vague esoteric philosophy, and brought into conflict
with the cold and horrifying fact, did not do much to break its force. For
there, stretched upon the stone bier before us, robed in white and perfectly
preserved, was what appeared to be the body of Leo Vincey. I stared from Leo,
standing there alive, to Leo lying there dead, and could see no
difference; except, perhaps, that the body on the bier looked older. Feature
for feature they were the same, even down to the crop of little golden curls,
which was Leo’s most uncommon beauty. It even seemed to me, as I looked,
that the expression on the dead man’s face resembled that which I had
sometimes seen upon Leo’s when he was plunged into profound sleep. I can
only sum up the closeness of the resemblance by saying that I never saw twins
so exactly similar as that dead and living pair.
I turned to see what effect was produced upon Leo by the sight of his dead
self, and found it to be one of partial stupefaction. He stood for two or three
minutes staring, and said nothing, and when at last he spoke it was only to
ejaculate—
“Cover it up, and take me away.”
“Nay, wait, Kallikrates,” said Ayesha, who, standing with the lamp
raised above her head, flooding with its light her own rich beauty and the cold
wonder of the death-clothed form upon the bier, resembled an inspired Sibyl
rather than a woman, as she rolled out her majestic sentences with a grandeur
and a freedom of utterance which I am, alas! quite unable to reproduce.
“Wait, I would show thee something, that no tittle of my crime may be
hidden from thee. Do thou, oh Holly, open the garment on the breast of the dead
Kallikrates, for perchance my lord may fear to touch it himself.”
I obeyed with trembling hands. It seemed a desecration and an unhallowed thing
to touch that sleeping image of the live man by my side. Presently his broad
chest was bare, and there upon it, right over the heart, was a wound, evidently
inflicted with a spear.
“Thou seest, Kallikrates,” she said. “Know then that it was
I who slew thee: in the Place of Life I gave thee death. I slew
thee because of the Egyptian Amenartas, whom thou didst love, for by her wiles
she held thy heart, and her I could not smite as but now I smote that woman,
for she was too strong for me. In my haste and bitter anger I slew thee, and
now for all these days have I lamented thee, and waited for thy coming. And
thou hast come, and none can stand between thee and me, and of a truth now for
death I will give thee life—not life eternal, for that none can give, but
life and youth that shall endure for thousands upon thousands of years, and
with it pomp, and power, and wealth, and all things that are good and
beautiful, such as have been to no man before thee, nor shall be to any man who
comes after. And now one thing more, and thou shalt rest and make ready for the
day of thy new birth. Thou seest this body, which was thine own. For all these
centuries it hath been my cold comfort and my companion, but now I need it no
more, for I have thy living presence, and it can but serve to stir up memories
of that which I would fain forget. Let it therefore go back to the dust from
which I held it.
“Behold! I have prepared against this happy hour!” And going to the
other shelf or stone ledge, which she said had served her for a bed, she took
from it a large vitrified double-handed vase, the mouth of which was tied up
with a bladder. This she loosed, and then, having bent down and gently kissed
the white forehead of the dead man, she undid the vase, and sprinkled its
contents carefully over the form, taking, I observed, the greatest precautions
against any drop of them touching us or herself, and then poured out what
remained of the liquid upon the chest and head. Instantly a dense vapour arose,
and the cave was filled with choking fumes that prevented us from seeing
anything while the deadly acid (for I presume it was some tremendous
preparation of that sort) did its work. From the spot where the body lay came a
fierce fizzing and cracking sound, which ceased, however, before the fumes had
cleared away. At last they were all gone, except a little cloud that still hung
over the corpse. In a couple of minutes more this too had vanished, and,
wonderful as it may seem, it is a fact that on the stone bench that had
supported the mortal remains of the ancient Kallikrates for so many centuries
there was now nothing to be seen but a few handfuls of smoking white powder.
The acid had utterly destroyed the body, and even in places eaten into the
stone. Ayesha stooped down, and, taking a handful of this powder in her grasp,
threw it into the air, saying at the same time, in a voice of calm
solemnity—
“Dust to dust!—the past to the past!—the dead to the
dead!—Kallikrates is dead, and is born again!”
The ashes floated noiselessly to the rocky floor, and we stood in awed silence
and watched them fall, too overcome for words.
“Now leave me,” she said, “and sleep if ye may. I must watch
and think, for to-morrow night we go hence, and the time is long since I trod
the path that we must follow.”
Accordingly we bowed, and left her.
As we passed to our own apartment I peeped into Job’s sleeping place, to
see how he fared, for he had gone away just before our interview with the
murdered Ustane, quite prostrated by the terrors of the Amahagger festivity. He
was sleeping soundly, good honest fellow that he was, and I rejoiced to think
that his nerves, which, like those of most uneducated people, were far from
strong, had been spared the closing scenes of this dreadful day. Then we
entered our own chamber, and here at last poor Leo, who, ever since he had
looked upon that frozen image of his living self, had been in a state not far
removed from stupefaction, burst out into a torrent of grief. Now that he was
no longer in the presence of the dread She, his sense of the awfulness
of all that had happened, and more especially of the wicked murder of Ustane,
who was bound to him by ties so close, broke upon him like a storm, and lashed
him into an agony of remorse and terror which was painful to witness. He cursed
himself—he cursed the hour when we had first seen the writing on the
sherd, which was being so mysteriously verified, and bitterly he cursed his own
weakness. Ayesha he dared not curse—who dared speak evil of such a woman,
whose consciousness, for aught we knew, was watching us at the very moment?
“What am I to do, old fellow?” he groaned, resting his head against
my shoulder in the extremity of his grief. “I let her be killed—not
that I could help that, but within five minutes I was kissing her murderess
over her body. I am a degraded brute, but I cannot resist that” (and here
his voice sank)—“that awful sorceress. I know I shall do it again
to-morrow; I know that I am in her power for always; if I never saw her again I
should never think of anybody else during all my life; I must follow her as a
needle follows a magnet; I would not go away now if I could; I could not leave
her, my legs would not carry me, but my mind is still clear enough, and in my
mind I hate her—at least, I think so. It is all so horrible; and
that—that body! What can I make of it? It was I! I am sold into
bondage, old fellow, and she will take my soul as the price of herself!”
Then, for the first time, I told him that I was in a but very little better
position; and I am bound to say that, notwithstanding his own infatuation, he
had the decency to sympathise with me. Perhaps he did not think it worth while
being jealous, realising that he had no cause so far as the lady was concerned.
I went on to suggest that we should try to run away, but we soon rejected the
project as futile, and, to be perfectly honest, I do not believe that either of
us would really have left Ayesha even if some superior power had suddenly
offered to convey us from these gloomy caves and set us down in Cambridge. We
could no more have left her than a moth can leave the light that destroys it.
We were like confirmed opium-eaters: in our moments of reason we well knew the
deadly nature of our pursuit, but we certainly were not prepared to abandon its
terrible delights.
No man who once had seen She unveiled, and heard the music of her voice,
and drunk in the bitter wisdom of her words, would willingly give up the sight
for a whole sea of placid joys. How much more, then, was this likely to be so
when, as in Leo’s case, to put myself out of the question, this
extraordinary creature declared her utter and absolute devotion, and gave what
appeared to be proofs of its having lasted for some two thousand years?
No doubt she was a wicked person, and no doubt she had murdered Ustane when she
stood in her path, but then she was very faithful, and by a law of nature man
is apt to think but lightly of a woman’s crimes, especially if that woman
be beautiful, and the crime be committed for the love of him.
And then, for the rest, when had such a chance ever come to a man before as
that which now lay in Leo’s hand? True, in uniting himself to this dread
woman, he would place his life under the influence of a mysterious creature of
evil tendencies,[1] but
then that would be likely enough to happen to him in any ordinary marriage. On
the other hand, however, no ordinary marriage could bring him such awful
beauty—for awful is the only word that can describe it—such divine
devotion, such wisdom, and command over the secrets of nature, and the place
and power that they must win, or, lastly, the royal crown of unending youth, if
indeed she could give that. No, on the whole, it is not wonderful that, though
Leo was plunged in bitter shame and grief, such as any gentleman would have
felt under the circumstances, he was not ready to entertain the idea of running
away from his extraordinary fortune.
[1]
After some months of consideration of this statement I am bound to confess that
I am not quite satisfied of its truth. It is perfectly true that Ayesha
committed a murder, but I shrewdly suspect that, were we endowed with the same
absolute power, and if we had the same tremendous interest at stake, we would
be very apt to do likewise under parallel circumstances. Also, it must be
remembered that she looked on it as an execution for disobedience under a
system which made the slightest disobedience punishable by death. Putting aside
this question of the murder, her evil-doing resolves itself into the expression
of views and the acknowledgment of motives which are contrary to our preaching
if not to our practice. Now at first sight this might be fairly taken as a
proof of an evil nature, but when we come to consider the great antiquity of
the individual it becomes doubtful if it was anything more than the natural
cynicism which arises from age and bitter experience, and the possession of
extraordinary powers of observation. It is a well known fact that very often,
putting the period of boyhood out of the question, the older we grow the more
cynical and hardened we get; indeed many of us are only saved by timely death
from utter moral petrifaction if not moral corruption. No one will deny that a
young man is on the average better than an old one, for he is without that
experience of the order of things that in certain thoughtful dispositions can
hardly fail to produce cynicism, and that disregard of acknowledged methods and
established custom which we call evil. Now the oldest man upon the earth was
but a babe compared to Ayesha, and the wisest man upon the earth was not
one-third as wise. And the fruit of her wisdom was this, that there was but one
thing worth living for, and that was Love in its highest sense, and to gain
that good thing she was not prepared to stop at trifles. This is really the sum
of her evil doings, and it must be remembered, on the other hand, that,
whatever may be thought of them, she had some virtues developed to a degree
very uncommon in either sex—constancy, for instance.—L. H. H.
My own opinion is that he would have been mad if he had done so. But then I
confess that my statement on the matter must be accepted with qualifications. I
am in love with Ayesha myself to this day, and I would rather have been the
object of her affection for one short week than that of any other woman in the
world for a whole lifetime. And let me add that, if anybody who doubts this
statement, and thinks me foolish for making it, could have seen Ayesha draw her
veil and flash out in beauty on his gaze, his view would exactly coincide with
my own. Of course, I am speaking of any man. We never had the advantage
of a lady’s opinion of Ayesha, but I think it quite possible that she
would have regarded the Queen with dislike, would have expressed her
disapproval in some more or less pointed manner, and ultimately have got
herself blasted.
For two hours or more Leo and I sat with shaken nerves and frightened eyes, and
talked over the miraculous events through which we were passing. It seemed like
a dream or a fairy tale, instead of the solemn, sober fact. Who would have
believed that the writing on the potsherd was not only true, but that we should
live to verify its truth, and that we two seekers should find her who was
sought, patiently awaiting our coming in the tombs of Kôr? Who would have
thought that in the person of Leo this mysterious woman should, as she
believed, discover the being whom she awaited from century to century, and
whose former earthly habitation she had till this very night preserved? But so
it was. In the face of all we had seen it was difficult for us as ordinary
reasoning men any longer to doubt its truth, and therefore at last, with humble
hearts and a deep sense of the impotence of human knowledge, and the insolence
of its assumption that denies that to be possible which it has no experience
of, we laid ourselves down to sleep, leaving our fates in the hands of that
watching Providence which had thus chosen to allow us to draw the veil of human
ignorance, and reveal to us for good or evil some glimpse of the possibilities
of life.
XXII.
JOB HAS A PRESENTIMENT
It was nine o’clock on the following morning when Job, who still looked
scared and frightened, came in to call me, and at the same time breathe his
gratitude at finding us alive in our beds, which it appeared was more than he
had expected. When I told him of the awful end of poor Ustane he was even more
grateful at our survival, and much shocked, though Ustane had been no favourite
of his, or he of hers, for the matter of that. She called him “pig”
in bastard Arabic, and he called her “hussy” in good English, but
these amenities were forgotten in the face of the catastrophe that had
overwhelmed her at the hands of her Queen.
“I don’t want to say anything as mayn’t be agreeable,
sir,” said Job, when he had finished exclaiming at my tale, “but
it’s my opinion that that there She is the old gentleman himself,
or perhaps his wife, if he has one, which I suppose he has, for he
couldn’t be so wicked all by himself. The Witch of Endor was a fool to
her, sir: bless you, she would make no more of raising every gentleman in the
Bible out of these here beastly tombs than I should of growing cress on an old
flannel. It’s a country of devils, this is, sir, and she’s the
master one of the lot; and if ever we get out of it it will be more than I
expect to do. I don’t see no way out of it. That witch isn’t likely
to let a fine young man like Mr. Leo go.”
“Come,” I said, “at any rate she saved his life.”
“Yes, and she’ll take his soul to pay for it. She’ll make him
a witch, like herself. I say it’s wicked to have anything to do with
those sort of people. Last night, sir, I lay awake and read in my little Bible
that my poor old mother gave me about what is going to happen to sorceresses
and them sort, till my hair stood on end. Lord, how the old lady would stare if
she saw where her Job had got to!”
“Yes, it’s a queer country, and a queer people too, Job,” I
answered, with a sigh, for, though I am not superstitious like Job, I admit to
a natural shrinking (which will not bear investigation) from the things that
are above Nature.
“You are right, sir,” he answered, “and if you won’t
think me very foolish, I should like to say something to you now that Mr. Leo
is out of the way”—(Leo had got up early and gone for a
stroll)—“and that is that I know it is the last country as ever I
shall see in this world. I had a dream last night, and I dreamed that I saw my
old father with a kind of night-shirt on him, something like these folks wear
when they want to be in particular full-dress, and a bit of that feathery grass
in his hand, which he may have gathered on the way, for I saw lots of it
yesterday about three hundred yards from the mouth of this beastly cave.
“’Job,’ he said to me, solemn like, and yet with a kind of
satisfaction shining through him, more like a Methody parson when he has sold a
neighbour a marked horse for a sound one and cleared twenty pounds by the job
than anything I can think on—’Job, time’s up, Job; but I
never did expect to have to come and hunt you out in this ‘ere place,
Job. Such ado as I have had to nose you up; it wasn’t friendly to give
your poor old father such a run, let alone that a wonderful lot of bad
characters hail from this place Kôr.’”
“Regular cautions,” I suggested.
“Yes, sir—of course, sir, that’s just what he said they
was—’cautions, downright scorchers’—sir, and I’m
sure I don’t doubt it, seeing what I know of them, and their hot-potting
ways,” went on Job sadly. “Anyway, he was sure that time was up,
and went away saying that we should see more than we cared for of each other
soon, and I suppose he was a-thinking of the fact that father and I never could
hit it off together for longer nor three days, and I daresay that things will
be similar when we meet again.”
“Surely,” I said, “you don’t think that you are going
to die because you dreamed you saw your old father; if one dies because one
dreams of one’s father, what happens to a man who dreams of his
mother-in-law?”
“Ah, sir, you’re laughing at me,” said Job; “but, you
see, you didn’t know my old father. If it had been anybody else—my
Aunt Mary, for instance, who never made much of a job—I should not have
thought so much of it; but my father was that idle, which he shouldn’t
have been with seventeen children, that he would never have put himself out to
come here just to see the place. No, sir; I know that he meant business. Well,
sir, I can’t help it; I suppose every man must go some time or other,
though it is a hard thing to die in a place like this, where Christian burial
isn’t to be had for its weight in gold. I’ve tried to be a good
man, sir, and do my duty honest, and if it wasn’t for the supercilus kind
of way in which father carried on last night—a sort of sniffing at me as
it were, as though he hadn’t no opinion of my references and
testimonials—I should feel easy enough in my mind. Any way, sir,
I’ve been a good servant to you and Mr. Leo, bless him!—why, it
seems but the other day that I used to lead him about the streets with a penny
whip;—and if ever you get out of this place—which, as father
didn’t allude to you, perhaps you may—I hope you will think kindly
of my whitened bones, and never have anything more to do with Greek writing on
flower-pots, sir, if I may make so bold as to say so.”
“Come, come, Job,” I said seriously, “this is all nonsense,
you know. You mustn’t be silly enough to go getting such ideas into your
head. We’ve lived through some queer things, and I hope that we may go on
doing so.”
“No, sir,” answered Job, in a tone of conviction that jarred on me
unpleasantly, “it isn’t nonsense. I’m a doomed man, and I
feel it, and a wonderful uncomfortable feeling it is, sir, for one can’t
help wondering how it’s going to come about. If you are eating your
dinner you think of poison and it goes against your stomach, and if you are
walking along these dark rabbit-burrows you think of knives, and Lord,
don’t you just shiver about the back! I ain’t particular, sir,
provided it’s sharp, like that poor girl, who, now that she’s gone,
I am sorry to have spoke hard on, though I don’t approve of her morals in
getting married, which I consider too quick to be decent. Still, sir,”
and poor Job turned a shade paler as he said it, “I do hope it
won’t be that hot-pot game.”
“Nonsense,” I broke in angrily, “nonsense!”
“Very well, sir,” said Job, “it isn’t my place to
differ from you, sir, but if you happen to be going anywhere, sir, I should be
obliged if you could manage to take me with you, seeing that I shall be glad to
have a friendly face to look at when the time comes, just to help one through,
as it were. And now, sir, I’ll be getting the breakfast,” and he
went, leaving me in a very uncomfortable state of mind. I was deeply attached
to old Job, who was one of the best and honestest men I have ever had to do
with in any class of life, and really more of a friend than a servant, and the
mere idea of anything happening to him brought a lump into my throat. Beneath
all his ludicrous talk I could see that he himself was quite convinced that
something was going to happen, and though in most cases these convictions turn
out to be utter moonshine—and this particular one especially was to be
amply accounted for by the gloomy and unaccustomed surroundings in which its
victim was placed—still it did more or less carry a chill to my heart, as
any dread that is obviously a genuine object of belief is apt to do, however
absurd the belief may be. Presently the breakfast arrived, and with it Leo, who
had been taking a walk outside the cave—to clear his mind, he
said—and very glad I was to see both, for they gave me a respite from my
gloomy thoughts. After breakfast we went for another walk, and watched some of
the Amahagger sowing a plot of ground with the grain from which they make their
beer. This they did in scriptural fashion—a man with a bag made of
goat’s hide fastened round his waist walking up and down the plot and
scattering the seed as he went. It was a positive relief to see one of these
dreadful people do anything so homely and pleasant as sow a field, perhaps
because it seemed to link them, as it were, with the rest of humanity.
As we were returning Billali met us, and informed us that it was
She’s pleasure that we should wait upon her, and accordingly we
entered her presence, not without trepidation, for Ayesha was certainly an
exception to the rule. Familiarity with her might and did breed passion and
wonder and horror, but it certainly did not breed contempt.
We were as usual shown in by the mutes, and after these had retired Ayesha
unveiled, and once more bade Leo embrace her, which, notwithstanding his
heart-searchings of the previous night, he did with more alacrity and fervour
than in strictness courtesy required.
She laid her white hand on his head, and looked him fondly in the eyes.
“Dost thou wonder, my Kallikrates,” she said, “when thou
shalt call me all thine own, and when we shall of a truth be for one another
and to one another? I will tell thee. First, must thou be even as I am, not
immortal indeed, for that I am not, but so cased and hardened against the
attacks of Time that his arrows shall glance from the armour of thy vigorous
life as the sunbeams glance from water. As yet I may not mate with thee, for
thou and I are different, and the very brightness of my being would burn thee
up, and perchance destroy thee. Thou couldst not even endure to look upon me
for too long a time lest thine eyes should ache, and thy senses swim, and
therefore” (with a little nod) “shall I presently veil myself
again.” (This by the way she did not do.) “No: listen, thou shalt
not be tried beyond endurance, for this very evening, an hour before the sun
goes down, shall we start hence, and by to-morrow’s dark, if all goes
well, and the road is not lost to me, which I pray it may not be, shall we
stand in the place of Life, and thou shalt bathe in the fire, and come forth
glorified, as no man ever was before thee, and then, Kallikrates, shalt thou
call me wife, and I will call thee husband.”
Leo muttered something in answer to this astonishing statement, I do not know
what, and she laughed a little at his confusion, and went on.
“And thou, too, oh Holly; on thee also will I confer this boon, and then
of a truth shalt thou be evergreen, and this will I do—well, because thou
hast pleased me, Holly, for thou art not altogether a fool, like most of the
sons of men, and because, though thou hast a school of philosophy as full of
nonsense as those of the old days, yet hast thou not forgotten how to turn a
pretty phrase about a lady’s eyes.”
“Hulloa, old fellow!” whispered Leo, with a return of his old
cheerfulness, “have you been paying compliments? I should never have
thought it of you!”
“I thank thee, oh Ayesha,” I replied, with as much dignity as I
could command, “but if there be such a place as thou dost describe, and
if in this strange place there may be found a fiery virtue that can hold off
Death when he comes to pluck us by the hand, yet would I none of it. For me, oh
Ayesha, the world has not proved so soft a nest that I would lie in it for
ever. A stony-hearted mother is our earth, and stones are the bread she gives
her children for their daily food. Stones to eat and bitter water for their
thirst, and stripes for tender nurture. Who would endure this for many lives?
Who would so load up his back with memories of lost hours and loves, and of his
neighbour’s sorrows that he cannot lessen, and wisdom that brings not
consolation? Hard is it to die, because our delicate flesh doth shrink back
from the worm it will not feel, and from that unknown which the winding-sheet
doth curtain from our view. But harder still, to my fancy, would it be to live
on, green in the leaf and fair, but dead and rotten at the core, and feel that
other secret worm of recollection gnawing ever at the heart.”
“Bethink thee, Holly,” she said; “yet doth long life and
strength and beauty beyond measure mean power and all things that are dear to
man.”
“And what, oh Queen,” I answered, “are those things that are
dear to man? Are they not bubbles? Is not ambition but an endless ladder by
which no height is ever climbed till the last unreachable rung is mounted? For
height leads on to height, and there is no resting-place upon them, and rung
doth grow upon rung, and there is no limit to the number. Doth not wealth
satiate, and become nauseous, and no longer serve to satisfy or pleasure, or to
buy an hour’s peace of mind? And is there any end to wisdom that we may
hope to reach it? Rather, the more we learn, shall we not thereby be able only
to better compass out our ignorance? Did we live ten thousand years could we
hope to solve the secrets of the suns, and of the space beyond the suns, and of
the Hand that hung them in the heavens? Would not our wisdom be but as a
gnawing hunger calling our consciousness day by day to a knowledge of the empty
craving of our souls? Would it not be but as a light in one of these great
caverns, that, though bright it burn, and brighter yet, doth but the more serve
to show the depths of the gloom around it? And what good thing is there beyond
that we may gain by length of days?”
“Nay, my Holly, there is love—love which makes all things
beautiful, and doth breathe divinity into the very dust we tread. With love
shall life roll gloriously on from year to year, like the voice of some great
music that hath power to hold the hearer’s heart poised on eagles’
wings above the sordid shame and folly of the earth.”
“It may be so,” I answered; “but if the loved one prove a
broken reed to pierce us, or if the love be loved in vain—what then?
Shall a man grave his sorrows upon a stone when he hath but need to write them
on the water? Nay, oh She, I will live my day, and grow old with my
generation, and die my appointed death, and be forgotten. For I do hope for an
immortality to which the little span that perchance thou canst confer will be
but as a finger’s length laid against the measure of the great world;
and, mark this! the immortality to which I look, and which my faith doth
promise me, shall be free from the bonds that here must tie my spirit down.
For, while the flesh endures, sorrow and evil and the scorpion whips of sin
must endure also; but when the flesh hath fallen from us, then shall the spirit
shine forth clad in the brightness of eternal good, and for its common air
shall breathe so rare an ether of most noble thoughts that the highest
aspiration of our manhood, or the purest incense of a maiden’s prayer,
would prove too earthly gross to float therein.”
“Thou lookest high,” answered Ayesha, with a little laugh,
“and speakest clearly as a trumpet and with no uncertain sound. And yet
methinks that but now didst thou talk of ‘that Unknown’ from which
the winding-sheet doth curtain us. But perchance, thou seest with the eye of
Faith, gazing on that brightness, that is to be, through the painted-glass of
thy imagination. Strange are the pictures of the future that mankind can thus
draw with this brush of faith and this many-coloured pigment of imagination!
Strange, too, that no one of them doth agree with another! I could tell
thee—but there, what is the use? why rob a fool of his bauble? Let it
pass, and I pray, oh Holly, that when thou dost feel old age creeping slowly
toward thyself, and the confusion of senility making havoc in thy brain, thou
mayest not bitterly regret that thou didst cast away the imperial boon I would
have given to thee. But so it hath ever been; man can never be content with
that which his hand can pluck. If a lamp be in his reach to light him through
the darkness, he must needs cast it down because it is no star. Happiness
danceth ever apace before him, like the marsh-fires in the swamps, and he must
catch the fire, and he must hold the star! Beauty is naught to him, because
there are lips more honey-sweet; and wealth is naught, because others can weigh
him down with heavier shekels; and fame is naught, because there have been
greater men than he. Thyself thou saidst it, and I turn thy words against thee.
Well, thou dreamest that thou shalt pluck the star. I believe it not, and I
think thee a fool, my Holly, to throw away the lamp.”
I made no answer, for I could not—especially before Leo—tell her
that since I had seen her face I knew that it would always be before my eyes,
and that I had no wish to prolong an existence which must always be haunted and
tortured by her memory, and by the last bitterness of unsatisfied love. But so
it was, and so, alas, is it to this hour!
“And now,” went on She, changing her tone and the subject
together, “tell me, my Kallikrates, for as yet I know it not, how came ye
to seek me here? Yesternight thou didst say that Kallikrates—him whom
thou sawest—was thine ancestor. How was it? Tell me—thou dost not
speak overmuch!”
Thus adjured, Leo told her the wonderful story of the casket and of the
potsherd that, written on by his ancestress, the Egyptian Amenartas, had been
the means of guiding us to her. Ayesha listened intently, and, when he had
finished, spoke to me.
“Did I not tell thee one day, when we did talk of good and evil, oh
Holly—it was when my beloved lay so ill—that out of good came evil,
and out of evil good—that they who sowed knew not what the crop should
be, nor he who struck where the blow should fall? See, now: this Egyptian
Amenartas, this royal child of the Nile who hated me, and whom even now I hate,
for in a way she did prevail against me—see, now, she herself hath been
the very means to bring her lover to mine arms! For her sake I slew him, and
now, behold, through her he hath come back to me! She would have done me evil,
and sowed her seeds that I might reap tares, and behold she hath given me more
than all the world can give, and there is a strange square for thee to fit into
thy circle of good and evil, oh Holly!
“And so,” she went on, after a pause—“and so she bade
her son destroy me if he might, because I slew his father. And thou, my
Kallikrates, art the father, and in a sense thou art likewise the son; and
wouldst thou avenge thy wrong, and the wrong of that far-off mother of thine,
upon me, oh Kallikrates? See,” and she slid to her knees, and drew the
white corsage still farther down her ivory bosom—“see, here beats
my heart, and there by thy side is a knife, heavy, and long, and sharp, the
very knife to slay an erring woman with. Take it now, and be avenged. Strike,
and strike home!—so shalt thou be satisfied, Kallikrates, and go through
life a happy man, because thou hast paid back the wrong, and obeyed the mandate
of the past.”
He looked at her, and then stretched out his hand and lifted her to her feet.
“Rise, Ayesha,” he said sadly; “well thou knowest that I
cannot strike thee, no, not even for the sake of her whom thou slewest but last
night. I am in thy power, and a very slave to thee. How can I kill
thee?—sooner should I slay myself.”
“Almost dost thou begin to love me, Kallikrates,” she answered,
smiling. “And now tell me of thy country—’tis a great people,
is it not? with an empire like that of Rome! Surely thou wouldst return
thither, and it is well, for I mean not that thou shouldst dwell in these caves
of Kôr. Nay, when once thou art even as I am, we will go hence—fear not
but that I shall find a path—and then shall we journey to this England of
thine, and live as it becometh us to live. Two thousand years have I waited for
the day when I should see the last of these hateful caves and this
gloomy-visaged folk, and now it is at hand, and my heart bounds up to meet it
like a child’s towards its holiday. For thou shalt rule this
England——”
“But we have a queen already,” broke in Leo, hastily.
“It is naught, it is naught,” said Ayesha; “she can be
overthrown.”
At this we both broke out into an exclamation of dismay, and explained that we
should as soon think of overthrowing ourselves.
“But here is a strange thing,” said Ayesha, in astonishment;
“a queen whom her people love! Surely the world must have changed since I
dwelt in Kôr.”
Again we explained that it was the character of monarchs that had changed, and
that the one under whom we lived was venerated and beloved by all
right-thinking people in her vast realms. Also, we told her that real power in
our country rested in the hands of the people, and that we were in fact ruled
by the votes of the lower and least educated classes of the community.
“Ah,” she said, “a democracy—then surely there is a
tyrant, for I have long since seen that democracies, having no clear will of
their own, in the end set up a tyrant, and worship him.”
“Yes,” I said, “we have our tyrants.”
“Well,” she answered resignedly, “we can at any rate destroy
these tyrants, and Kallikrates shall rule the land.”
I instantly informed Ayesha that in England “blasting” was not an
amusement that could be indulged in with impunity, and that any such attempt
would meet with the consideration of the law and probably end upon a scaffold.
“The law,” she laughed with scorn—“the law! Canst thou
not understand, oh Holly, that I am above the law, and so shall my Kallikrates
be also? All human law will be to us as the north wind to a mountain. Does the
wind bend the mountain, or the mountain the wind?”
“And now leave me, I pray thee, and thou too, my own Kallikrates, for I
would get me ready against our journey, and so must ye both, and your servant
also. But bring no great quantity of things with thee, for I trust that we
shall be but three days gone. Then shall we return hither, and I will make a
plan whereby we can bid farewell for ever to these sepulchres of Kôr. Yea,
surely thou mayst kiss my hand!”
So we went, I, for one, meditating deeply on the awful nature of the problem
that now opened out before us. The terrible She had evidently made up
her mind to go to England, and it made me absolutely shudder to think what
would be the result of her arrival there. What her powers were I knew, and I
could not doubt but that she would exercise them to the full. It might be
possible to control her for a while, but her proud, ambitious spirit would be
certain to break loose and avenge itself for the long centuries of its
solitude. She would, if necessary, and if the power of her beauty did not
unaided prove equal to the occasion, blast her way to any end she set before
her, and, as she could not die, and for aught I knew could not even be
killed,[1] what was there
to stop her? In the end she would, I had little doubt, assume absolute rule
over the British dominions, and probably over the whole earth, and, though I
was sure that she would speedily make ours the most glorious and prosperous
empire that the world has ever seen, it would be at the cost of a terrible
sacrifice of life.
[1]
I regret to say that I was never able to ascertain if She was
invulnerable against the ordinary accidents of life. Presumably this was so,
else some misadventure would have been sure to put an end to her in the course
of so many centuries. True, she offered to let Leo slay her, but very probably
this was only an experiment to try his temper and mental attitude towards her.
Ayesha never gave way to impulse without some valid object.—L. H. H.
The whole thing sounded like a dream or some extraordinary invention of a
speculative brain, and yet it was a fact—a wonderful fact—of which
the whole world would soon be called on to take notice. What was the meaning of
it all? After much thinking I could only conclude that this marvellous
creature, whose passion had kept her for so many centuries chained as it were,
and comparatively harmless, was now about to be used by Providence as a means
to change the order of the world, and possibly, by the building up of a power
that could no more be rebelled against or questioned than the decrees of Fate,
to change it materially for the better.
XXIII.
THE TEMPLE OF TRUTH
Our preparations did not take us very long. We put a change of clothing apiece
and some spare boots into my Gladstone bag, also we took our revolvers and an
express rifle each, together with a good supply of ammunition, a precaution to
which, under Providence, we subsequently owed our lives over and over again.
The rest of our gear, together with our heavy rifles, we left behind us.
A few minutes before the appointed time we once more attended in Ayesha’s
boudoir, and found her also ready, her dark cloak thrown over her
winding-sheetlike wrappings.
“Are ye prepared for the great venture?” she said.
“We are,” I answered, “though for my part, Ayesha, I have no
faith in it.”
“Ah, my Holly,” she said, “thou art of a truth like those old
Jews—of whom the memory vexes me so sorely—unbelieving, and hard to
accept that which they have not known. But thou shalt see; for unless my mirror
beyond lies,” and she pointed to the font of crystal water, “the
path is yet open as it was of old time. And now let us start upon the new life
which shall end—who knoweth where?”
“Ah,” I echoed, “who knoweth where?” and we passed down
into the great central cave, and out into the light of day. At the mouth of the
cave we found a single litter with six bearers, all of them mutes, waiting, and
with them I was relieved to see our old friend Billali, for whom I had
conceived a sort of affection. It appeared that, for reasons not necessary to
explain at length, Ayesha had thought it best that, with the exception of
herself, we should proceed on foot, and this we were nothing loth to do, after
our long confinement in these caves, which, however suitable they might be for
sarcophagi—a singularly inappropriate word, by the way, for these
particular tombs, which certainly did not consume the bodies given to their
keeping—were depressing habitations for breathing mortals like ourselves.
Either by accident or by the orders of She, the space in front of the
cave where we had beheld that awful dance was perfectly clear of spectators.
Not a soul was to be seen, and consequently I do not believe that our departure
was known to anybody, except perhaps the mutes who waited on She, and
they were, of course, in the habit of keeping what they saw to themselves.
In a few minutes’ time we were stepping out sharply across the great
cultivated plain or lake bed, framed like a vast emerald in its setting of
frowning cliff, and had another opportunity of wondering at the extraordinary
nature of the site chosen by these old people of Kôr for their capital, and at
the marvellous amount of labour, ingenuity, and engineering skill that must
have been brought into requisition by the founders of the city to drain so huge
a sheet of water, and to keep it clear of subsequent accumulations. It is,
indeed, so far as my experience goes, an unequalled instance of what man can do
in the face of nature, for in my opinion such achievements as the Suez Canal or
even the Mont Cenis Tunnel do not approach this ancient undertaking in
magnitude and grandeur of conception.
When we had been walking for about half an hour, enjoying ourselves exceedingly
in the delightful cool which about this time of the day always appeared to
descend upon the great plain of Kôr, and which in some degree atoned for the
want of any land or sea breeze—for all wind was kept off by the rocky
mountain wall—we began to get a clear view of what Billali had informed
us were the ruins of the great city. And even from that distance we could see
how wonderful those ruins were, a fact which with every step we took became
more evident. The town was not very large if compared to Babylon or Thebes, or
other cities of remote antiquity; perhaps its outer wall contained some twelve
square miles of ground, or a little more. Nor had the walls, so far as we could
judge when we reached them, been very high, probably not more than forty feet,
which was about their present height where they had not through the sinking of
the ground, or some such cause, fallen into ruin. The reason of this, no doubt,
was that the people of Kôr, being protected from any outside attack by far more
tremendous ramparts than any that the hand of man could rear, only required
them for show and to guard against civil discord. But on the other hand they
were as broad as they were high, built entirely of dressed stone, hewn, no
doubt, from the vast caves, and surrounded by a great moat about sixty feet in
width, some reaches of which were still filled with water. About ten minutes
before the sun finally sank we reached this moat, and passed down and through
it, clambering across what evidently were the piled-up fragments of a great
bridge in order to do so, and then with some little difficulty over the slope
of the wall to its summit. I wish that it lay within the power of my pen to
give some idea of the grandeur of the sight that then met our view. There, all
bathed in the red glow of the sinking sun, were miles upon miles of
ruins—columns, temples, shrines, and the palaces of kings, varied with
patches of green bush. Of course, the roofs of these buildings had long since
fallen into decay and vanished, but owing to the extreme massiveness of the
style of building, and to the hardness and durability of the rock employed,
most of the party walls and great columns still remained standing.[1]
[1]
In connection with the extraordinary state of preservation of these ruins after
so vast a lapse of time— at least six thousand years—it must be
remembered that Kôr was not burnt or destroyed by an enemy or an earthquake,
but deserted, owing to the action of a terrible plague. Consequently the houses
were left unharmed; also the climate of the plain is remarkably fine and dry,
and there is very little rain or wind; as a result of which these relics have
only to contend against the unaided action of time, that works but slowly upon
such massive blocks of masonry. —L. H. H.
Straight before us stretched away what had evidently been the main thoroughfare
of the city, for it was very wide, wider than the Thames Embankment, and
regular, being, as we afterwards discovered, paved, or rather built, throughout
of blocks of dressed stone, such as were employed in the walls, it was but
little overgrown even now with grass and shrubs that could get no depth of soil
to live in. What had been the parks and gardens, on the contrary, were now
dense jungle. Indeed, it was easy even from a distance to trace the course of
the various roads by the burnt-up appearance of the scanty grass that grew upon
them. On either side of this great thoroughfare were vast blocks of ruins, each
block, generally speaking, being separated from its neighbour by a space of
what had once, I suppose, been garden-ground, but was now dense and tangled
bush. They were all built of the same coloured stone, and most of them had
pillars, which was as much as we could make out in the fading light as we
passed swiftly up the main road, that I believe I am right in saying no living
foot had pressed for thousands of years.[2]
[2]
Billali told me that the Amahagger believe that the site of the city is
haunted, and could not be persuaded to enter it upon any consideration. Indeed,
I could see that he himself did not at all like doing so, and was only consoled
by the reflection that he was under the direct protection of She. It
struck Leo and myself as very curious that a people which has no objection to
living amongst the dead, with whom their familiarity has perhaps bred contempt,
and even using their bodies for purposes of fuel, should be terrified at
approaching the habitations that these very departed had occupied when alive.
After all, however, it is only a savage inconsistency.—L. H. H.
Presently we came to an enormous pile, which we rightly took to be a temple
covering at least eight acres of ground, and apparently arranged in a series of
courts, each one enclosing another of smaller size, on the principle of a
Chinese nest of boxes, the courts being separated one from the other by rows of
huge columns. And, while I think of it, I may as well state a remarkable thing
about the shape of these columns, which resembled none that I have ever seen or
heard of, being fashioned with a kind of waist at the centre, and swelling out
above and below. At first we thought that this shape was meant to roughly
symbolise or suggest the female form, as was a common habit amongst the ancient
religious architects of many creeds. On the following day, however, as we went
up the slopes of the mountain, we discovered a large quantity of the most
stately looking palms, of which the trunks grew exactly in this shape, and I
have now no doubt but that the first designer of those columns drew his
inspiration from the graceful bends of those very palms, or rather of their
ancestors, which then, some eight or ten thousand years ago, as now, beautified
the slopes of the mountain that had once formed the shores of the volcanic
lake.
At the façade of this huge temple, which, I should imagine, is almost as
large as that of El-Karnac, at Thebes, some of the largest columns, which I
measured, being between eighteen to twenty feet in diameter at the base, by
about seventy feet in height, our little procession was halted, and Ayesha
descended from her litter.
“There was a spot here, Kallikrates,” she said to Leo, who had run
up to help her down, “where one might sleep. Two thousand years ago did
thou and I and that Egyptian asp rest therein, but since then have I not set
foot here, nor any man, and perchance it has fallen,” and, followed by
the rest of us, she passed up a vast flight of broken and ruined steps into the
outer court, and looked round into the gloom. Presently she seemed to
recollect, and, walking a few paces along the wall to the left, halted.
“It is here,” she said, and at the same time beckoned to the two
mutes, who were loaded with provisions and our little belongings, to advance.
One of them came forward, and, producing a lamp, lit it from his brazier (for
the Amahagger when on a journey nearly always carried with them a little
lighted brazier, from which to provide fire). The tinder of this brazier was
made of broken fragments of mummy carefully damped, and, if the admixture of
moisture was properly managed, this unholy compound would smoulder away for
hours.[3] As soon as the
lamp was lit we entered the place before which Ayesha had halted. It turned out
to be a chamber hollowed in the thickness of the wall, and, from the fact of
there still being a massive stone table in it, I should think that it had
probably served as a living-room, perhaps for one of the door-keepers of the
great temple.
[3]
After all we are not much in advance of the Amahagger in these matters.
“Mummy,” that is pounded ancient Egyptian, is, I believe, a pigment
much used by artists, and especially by those of them who direct their talents
to the reproduction of the works of the old masters.—Editor.
Here we stopped, and after cleaning the place out and making it as comfortable
as circumstances and the darkness would permit, we ate some cold meat, at least
Leo, Job and I did, for Ayesha, as I think I have said elsewhere, never touched
anything except cakes of flour, fruit and water. While we were still eating,
the moon, which was at her full, rose above the mountain-wall, and began to
flood the place with silver.
“Wot ye why I have brought you here to-night, my Holly?” said
Ayesha, leaning her head upon her hand and watching the great orb as she rose,
like some heavenly queen, above the solemn pillars of the temple. “I
brought you—nay, it is strange, but knowest thou, Kallikrates, that thou
liest at this moment upon the very spot where thy dead body lay when I bore
thee back to those caves of Kôr so many years ago? It all returns to my mind
now. I can see it, and horrible is it to my sight!” and she shuddered.
Here Leo jumped up and hastily changed his seat. However the reminiscence might
affect Ayesha, it clearly had few charms for him.
“I brought you,” went on Ayesha presently, “that ye might
look upon the most wonderful sight that ever the eye of man beheld—the
full moon shining over ruined Kôr. When ye have done your eating—I would
that I could teach you to eat naught but fruit, Kallikrates, but that will come
after thou hast laved in the fire. Once I, too, ate flesh like a brute beast.
When ye have done we will go out, and I will show you this great temple and the
God whom men once worshipped therein.”
Of course we got up at once, and started. And here again my pen fails me. To
give a string of measurements and details of the various courts of the temple
would only be wearisome, supposing that I had them, and yet I know not how I am
to describe what we saw, magnificent as it was even in its ruin, almost beyond
the power of realisation. Court upon dim court, row upon row of mighty
pillars—some of them (especially at the gateways) sculptured from
pedestal to capital—space upon space of empty chambers that spoke more
eloquently to the imagination than any crowded streets. And over all, the dead
silence of the dead, the sense of utter loneliness, and the brooding spirit of
the Past! How beautiful it was, and yet how drear! We did not dare to speak
aloud. Ayesha herself was awed in the presence of an antiquity compared to
which even her length of days was but a little thing; we only whispered, and
our whispers seemed to run from column to column, till they were lost in the
quiet air. Bright fell the moonlight on pillar and court and shattered wall,
hiding all their rents and imperfections in its silver garment, and clothing
their hoar majesty with the peculiar glory of the night. It was a wonderful
sight to see the full moon looking down on the ruined fane of Kôr. It was a
wonderful thing to think for how many thousands of years the dead orb above and
the dead city below had gazed thus upon each other, and in the utter solitude
of space poured forth each to each the tale of their lost life and
long-departed glory. The white light fell, and minute by minute the quiet
shadows crept across the grass-grown courts like the spirits of old priests
haunting the habitations of their worship—the white light fell, and the
long shadows grew till the beauty and grandeur of each scene and the untamed
majesty of its present Death seemed to sink into our very souls, and speak more
loudly than the shouts of armies concerning the pomp and splendour that the
grave had swallowed, and even memory had forgotten.
“Come,” said Ayesha, after we had gazed and gazed, I know not for
how long, “and I will show you the stony flower of Loveliness and
Wonder’s very crown, if yet it stands to mock time with its beauty and
fill the heart of man with longing for that which is behind the veil,”
and, without waiting for an answer, she led us through two more pillared courts
into the inner shrine of the old fane.
And there, in the centre of the inmost court, that might have been some fifty
yards square, or a little more, we stood face to face with what is perhaps the
grandest allegorical work of Art that the genius of her children has ever given
to the world. For in the exact centre of the court, placed upon a thick square
slab of rock, was a huge round ball of dark stone, some twenty feet in
diameter, and standing on the ball was a colossal winged figure of a beauty so
entrancing and divine that when I first gazed upon it, illuminated and shadowed
as it was by the soft light of the moon, my breath stood still, and for an
instant my heart ceased its beating.
The statue was hewn from marble so pure and white that even now, after all
those ages, it shone as the moonbeams danced upon it, and its height was, I
should say, a trifle over twenty feet. It was the winged figure of a woman of
such marvellous loveliness and delicacy of form that the size seemed rather to
add to than to detract from its so human and yet more spiritual beauty. She was
bending forward and poising herself upon her half-spread wings as though to
preserve her balance as she leant. Her arms were outstretched like those of
some woman about to embrace one she dearly loved, while her whole attitude gave
an impression of the tenderest beseeching. Her perfect and most gracious form
was naked, save—and here came the extraordinary thing—the face,
which was thinly veiled, so that we could only trace the marking of her
features. A gauzy veil was thrown round and about the head, and of its two ends
one fell down across her left breast, which was outlined beneath it, and one,
now broken, streamed away upon the air behind her.
“Who is she?” I asked, as soon as I could take my eyes off the
statue.
“Canst thou not guess, oh Holly?” answered Ayesha. “Where
then is thy imagination? It is Truth standing on the World, and calling to its
children to unveil her face. See what is writ upon the pedestal. Without doubt
it is taken from the book of Scriptures of these men of Kôr,” and she led
the way to the foot of the statue, where an inscription of the usual
Chinese-looking hieroglyphics was so deeply graven as to be still quite
legible, at least to Ayesha. According to her translation it ran thus:—
“Is there no man that will draw my veil and look upon my face, for it is
very fair? Unto him who draws my veil shall I be, and peace will I give him,
and sweet children of knowledge and good works.”
And a voice cried, “Though all those who seek after thee desire thee,
behold! Virgin art thou, and Virgin shalt thou go till Time be done. No man is
there born of woman who may draw thy veil and live, nor shall be. By Death only
can thy veil be drawn, oh Truth!”
And Truth stretched out her arms and wept, because those who sought her might
not find her, nor look upon her face to face.
“Thou seest,” said Ayesha, when she had finished translating,
“Truth was the Goddess of the people of old Kôr, and to her they built
their shrines, and her they sought; knowing that they should never find, still
sought they.”
“And so,” I added sadly, “do men seek to this very hour, but
they find out; and, as this Scripture saith, nor shall they; for in Death only
is Truth found.”
Then with one more look at this veiled and spiritualised loveliness—which
was so perfect and so pure that one might almost fancy that the light of a
living spirit shone through the marble prison to lead man on to high and
ethereal thoughts—this poet’s dream of beauty frozen into stone,
which I shall never forget while I live, we turned and went back through the
vast moonlit courts to the spot whence we had started. I never saw the statue
again, which I the more regret, because on the great ball of stone representing
the World whereon the figure stood, lines were drawn, that probably, had there
been light enough, we should have discovered to be a map of the Universe as it
was known to the people of Kôr. It is at any rate suggestive of some scientific
knowledge that these long-dead worshippers of Truth had recognised the fact
that the globe is round.
XXIV.
WALKING THE PLANK
Next day the mutes woke us before the dawn; and by the time that we had got the
sleep out of our eyes, and gone through a perfunctory wash at a spring which
still welled up into the remains of a marble basin in the centre of the North
quadrangle of the vast outer court, we found She standing by the litter
ready to start, while old Billali and the two bearer mutes were busy collecting
the baggage. As usual, Ayesha was veiled like the marble Truth (by the way, I
wonder if she originally got the idea of covering up her beauty from that
statue?). I noticed, however, that she seemed very depressed, and had none of
that proud and buoyant bearing which would have betrayed her among a thousand
women of the same stature, even if they had been veiled like herself. She
looked up as we came—for her head was bowed—and greeted us. Leo
asked her how she had slept.
“Ill, my Kallikrates,” she answered, “ill. This night have
strange and hideous dreams come creeping through my brain, and I know not what
they may portend. Almost do I feel as though some evil overshadowed me; and yet
how can evil touch me? I wonder,” she went on with a sudden outbreak of
womanly tenderness, “I wonder if, should aught happen to me, so that I
slept awhile and left thee waking, thou wouldst think gently of me? I wonder,
my Kallikrates, if thou wouldst tarry till I came again, as for so many
centuries I have tarried for thy coming?”
Then, without waiting for an answer, she went on: “Come, let us be
setting forth, for we have far to go, and before another day is born in yonder
blue should we stand in the place of Life.”
In five minutes we were once more on our way through the vast ruined city,
which loomed at us on either side in the grey dawning in a way that was at once
grand and oppressive. Just as the first ray of the rising sun shot like a
golden arrow athwart this storied desolation we gained the further gateway of
the outer wall, and having given one more glance at the hoar and pillared
majesty through which we had journeyed, and (with the exception of Job, for
whom ruins had no charms) breathed a sigh of regret that we had not had more
time to explore it, passed through the great moat, and on to the plain beyond.
As the sun rose so did Ayesha’s spirits, till by breakfast-time they had
regained their normal level, and she laughingly set down her previous
depression to the associations of the spot where she had slept.
“These barbarians swear that Kôr is haunted,” she said, “and
of a truth I do believe their saying, for never did I know so ill a night save
one. I remember it now. It was on that very spot when thou didst lie dead at my
feet, Kallikrates. Never will I visit it again; it is a place of evil
omen.”
After a very brief halt for breakfast we pressed on with such good will that by
two o’clock in the afternoon we were at the foot of the vast wall of rock
that formed the lip of the volcano, and which at this point towered up
precipitously above us for fifteen hundred or two thousand feet. Here we
halted, certainly not to my astonishment, for I did not see how it was possible
that we should go any farther.
“Now,” said Ayesha, as she descended from her litter, “doth
our labour but commence, for here do we part with these men, and henceforward
must we bear ourselves;” and then, addressing Billali, “do thou and
these slaves remain here, and abide our coming. By to-morrow at the midday
shall we be with thee—if not, wait.”
Billali bowed humbly, and said that her august bidding should be obeyed if they
stopped there till they grew old.
“And this man, oh Holly,” said She, pointing to Job;
“best is it that he should tarry also, for if his heart be not high and
his courage great, perchance some evil might overtake him. Also, the secrets of
the place whither we go are not fit for common eyes.”
I translated this to Job, who instantly and earnestly entreated me, almost with
tears in his eyes, not to leave him behind. He said he was sure that he could
see nothing worse than he had already seen, and that he was terrified to death
at the idea of being left alone with those “dumb folk,” who, he
thought, would probably take the opportunity to hot-pot him.
I translated what he said to Ayesha, who shrugged her shoulders, and answered,
“Well, let him come, it is naught to me; on his own head be it, and he
will serve to bear the lamp and this,” and she pointed to a narrow plank,
some sixteen feet in length, which had been bound above the long bearing-pole
of her hammock, as I had thought to make curtains spread out better, but, as it
now appeared, for some unknown purpose connected with our extraordinary
undertaking.
Accordingly, the plank, which, though tough, was very light, was given to Job
to carry, and also one of the lamps. I slung the other on to my back, together
with a spare jar of oil, while Leo loaded himself with the provisions and some
water in a kid’s skin. When this was done She bade Billali and the
six bearer mutes to retreat behind a grove of flowering magnolias about a
hundred yards away, and remain there under pain of death till we had vanished.
They bowed humbly, and went, and, as he departed, old Billali gave me a
friendly shake of the hand, and whispered that he had rather that it was I than
he who was going on this wonderful expedition with
“She-who-must-be-obeyed,” and upon my word I felt inclined
to agree with him. In another minute they were gone, and then, having briefly
asked us if we were ready, Ayesha turned, and gazed up the towering cliff.
“Goodness me, Leo,” I said, “surely we are not going to climb
that precipice!”
Leo shrugged his shoulders, being in a condition of half-fascinated,
half-expectant mystification, and as he did so, Ayesha with a sudden move began
to climb the cliff, and of course we had to follow her. It was perfectly
marvellous to see the ease and grace with which she sprang from rock to rock,
and swung herself along the ledges. The ascent was not, however, so difficult
as it seemed, although there were one or two nasty places where it did not do
to look behind you, the fact being that the rock still sloped here, and was not
absolutely precipitous as it was higher up. In this way we, with no great
labour, mounted to the height of some fifty feet above our last standing-place,
the only really troublesome thing to manage being Job’s board, and in
doing so drew some fifty or sixty paces to the left of our starting-point, for
we went up like a crab, sideways. Presently we reached a ledge, narrow enough
at first, but which widened as we followed it, and moreover sloped inwards like
the petal of a flower, so that as we followed it we gradually got into a kind
of rut or fold of rock, that grew deeper and deeper, till at last it resembled
a Devonshire lane in stone, and hid us perfectly from the gaze of anybody on
the slope below, if there had been anybody to gaze. This lane (which appeared
to be a natural formation) continued for some fifty or sixty paces, and then
suddenly ended in a cave, also natural, running at right angles to it. I am
sure it was a natural cave, and not hollowed by the hand of man, because of its
irregular and contorted shape and course, which gave it the appearance of
having been blown bodily in the mountain by some frightful eruption of gas
following the line of the least resistance. All the caves hollowed by the
ancients of Kôr, on the contrary, were cut out with the most perfect regularity
and symmetry. At the mouth of this cave Ayesha halted, and bade us light the
two lamps, which I did, giving one to her and keeping the other myself. Then,
taking the lead, she advanced down the cavern, picking her way with great care,
as indeed it was necessary to do, for the floor was most irregular—strewn
with boulders like the bed of a stream, and in some places pitted with deep
holes, in which it would have been easy to break one’s leg.
This cavern we pursued for twenty minutes or more, it being, so far as I could
form a judgment—owing to its numerous twists and turns no easy
task—about a quarter of a mile long.
At last, however, we halted at its farther end, and whilst I was still trying
to pierce the gloom a great gust of air came tearing down it, and extinguished
both the lamps.
Ayesha called to us, and we crept up to her, for she was a little in front, and
were rewarded with a view that was positively appalling in its gloom and
grandeur. Before us was a mighty chasm in the black rock, jagged and torn and
splintered through it in a far past age by some awful convulsion of Nature, as
though it had been cleft by stroke upon stroke of the lightning. This chasm,
which was bounded by a precipice on the hither, and presumably, though we could
not see it, on the farther side also, may have measured any width across, but
from its darkness I do not think it can have been very broad. It was impossible
to make out much of its outline, or how far it ran, for the simple reason that
the point where we were standing was so far from the upper surface of the
cliff, at least fifteen hundred or two thousand feet, that only a very dim
light struggled down to us from above. The mouth of the cavern that we had been
following gave on to a most curious and tremendous spur of rock, which jutted
out in mid air into the gulf before us, for a distance of some fifty yards,
coming to a sharp point at its termination, and resembling nothing that I can
think of so much as the spur upon the leg of a cock in shape. This huge spur
was attached only to the parent precipice at its base, which was, of course,
enormous, just as the cock’s spur is attached to its leg. Otherwise it
was utterly unsupported.
“Here must we pass,” said Ayesha. “Be careful lest giddiness
overcome you, or the wind sweep you into the gulf beneath, for of a truth it
hath no bottom;” and, without giving us any further time to get scared,
she started walking along the spur, leaving us to follow her as best we might.
I was next to her, then came Job, painfully dragging his plank, while Leo
brought up the rear. It was a wonderful sight to see this intrepid woman
gliding fearlessly along that dreadful place. For my part, when I had gone but
a very few yards, what between the pressure of the air and the awful sense of
the consequences that a slip would entail, I found it necessary to go down on
my hands and knees and crawl, and so did the other two.
But Ayesha never condescended to this. On she went, leaning her body against
the gusts of wind, and never seeming to lose her head or her balance.
In a few minutes we had crossed some twenty paces of this awful bridge, which
got narrower at every step, and then all of a sudden a great gust came tearing
along the gorge. I saw Ayesha lean herself against it, but the strong draught
got under her dark cloak, and tore it from her, and away it went down the wind
flapping like a wounded bird. It was dreadful to see it go, till it was lost in
the blackness. I clung to the saddle of rock, and looked round, while, like a
living thing, the great spur vibrated with a humming sound beneath us. The
sight was a truly awesome one. There we were poised in the gloom between earth
and heaven. Beneath us were hundreds upon hundreds of feet of emptiness that
gradually grew darker, till at last it was absolutely black, and at what depth
it ended is more than I can guess. Above was space upon space of giddy air, and
far, far away a line of blue sky. And down this vast gulf upon which we were
pinnacled the great draught dashed and roared, driving clouds and misty wreaths
of vapour before it, till we were nearly blinded, and utterly confused.
The whole position was so tremendous and so absolutely unearthly, that I
believe it actually lulled our sense of terror, but to this hour I often see it
in my dreams, and at its mere phantasy wake up covered with cold sweat.
“On! on!” cried the white form before us, for now the cloak had
gone, She was robed in white, and looked more like a spirit riding down
the gale than a woman; “On, or ye will fall and be dashed to pieces. Keep
your eyes fixed upon the ground, and closely hug the rock.”
We obeyed her, and crept painfully along the quivering path, against which the
wind shrieked and wailed as it shook it, causing it to murmur like a vast
tuning-fork. On we went, I do not know for how long, only gazing round now and
again, when it was absolutely necessary, until at last we saw that we were on
the very tip of the spur, a slab of rock, little larger than an ordinary table,
that throbbed and jumped like any over-engined steamer. There we lay, clinging
to the ground, and looked about us, while Ayesha stood leaning out against the
wind, down which her long hair streamed, and, absolutely heedless of the
hideous depth that yawned beneath, pointed before her. Then we saw why the
narrow plank had been provided, which Job and I had painfully dragged along
between us. Before us was an empty space, on the other side of which was
something, as yet we could not see what, for here—either owing to the
shadow of the opposite cliff, or from some other cause—the gloom was that
of night.
“We must wait awhile,” called Ayesha; “soon there will be
light.”
At the moment I could not imagine what she meant. How could more light than
there was ever come to this dreadful spot? While I was still wondering,
suddenly, like a great sword of flame, a beam from the setting sun pierced the
Stygian gloom, and smote upon the point of rock whereon we lay, illumining
Ayesha’s lovely form with an unearthly splendour. I only wish I could
describe the wild and marvellous beauty of that sword of fire, laid across the
darkness and rushing mist-wreaths of the gulf. How it got there I do not to
this moment know, but I presume that there was some cleft or hole in the
opposing cliff, through which it pierced when the setting orb was in a direct
line therewith. All I can say is, that the effect was the most wonderful that I
ever saw. Right through the heart of the darkness that flaming sword was
stabbed, and where it lay there was the most surpassingly vivid light, so vivid
that even at a distance we could see the grain of the rock, while, outside of
it—yes, within a few inches of its keen edge—was naught but
clustering shadows.
And now, by this ray of light, for which She had been waiting, and timed
our arrival to meet, knowing that at this season for thousands of years it had
always struck thus at sunset, we saw what was before us. Within eleven or
twelve feet of the very tip of the tongue-like rock whereon we stood there
arose, presumably from the far bottom of the gulf, a sugarloaf-shaped cone, of
which the summit was exactly opposite to us. But had there been a summit only
it would not have helped us much, for the nearest point of its circumference
was some forty feet from where we were. On the lip of this summit, however,
which was circular and hollow, rested a tremendous flat boulder, something like
a glacier stone—perhaps it was one, for all I know to the
contrary—and the end of this boulder approached to within twelve feet or
so of us. This huge rock was nothing more or less than a gigantic
rocking-stone, accurately balanced upon the edge of the cone or miniature
crater, like a half-crown on the rim of a wine-glass; for, in the fierce light
that played upon it and us, we could see it oscillating in the gusts of wind.
“Quick!” said Ayesha; “the plank—we must cross while
the light endures; presently it will be gone.”
“Oh, Lord, sir!” groaned Job, “surely she don’t mean us
to walk across that there place on that there thing,” as in obedience to
my direction he pushed the long board towards me.
“That’s it, Job,” I halloaed in ghastly merriment, though the
idea of walking the plank was no pleasanter to me than to him.
I pushed the board on to Ayesha, who deftly ran it across the gulf so that one
end of it rested on the rocking-stone, the other remaining on the extremity of
the trembling spur. Then placing her foot upon it to prevent it from being
blown away, she turned to me.
“Since I was last here, oh Holly,” she called, “the support
of the moving stone hath lessened somewhat, so that I am not certain if it will
bear our weight or no. Therefore will I cross the first, because no harm will
come unto me,” and, without further ado, she trod lightly but firmly
across the frail bridge, and in another second was standing safe upon the
heaving stone.
“It is safe,” she called. “See, hold thou the plank! I will
stand on the farther side of the stone so that it may not overbalance with your
greater weights. Now, come, oh Holly, for presently the light will fail
us.”
I struggled to my knees, and if ever I felt terrified in my life it was then,
and I am not ashamed to say that I hesitated and hung back.
“Surely thou art not afraid,” this strange creature called in a
lull of the gale, from where she stood poised like a bird on the highest point
of the rocking-stone. “Make way then for Kallikrates.”
This settled me; it is better to fall down a precipice and die than be laughed
at by such a woman; so I clenched my teeth, and in another instant I was on
that horrible, narrow, bending plank, with bottomless space beneath and around
me. I have always hated a great height, but never before did I realise the full
horrors of which such a position is capable. Oh, the sickening sensation of
that yielding board resting on the two moving supports. I grew dizzy, and
thought that I must fall; my spine crept; it seemed to me that I was
falling, and my delight at finding myself sprawling upon that stone, which rose
and fell beneath me like a boat in a swell, cannot be expressed in words. All I
know is that briefly, but earnestly enough, I thanked Providence for preserving
me so far.
Then came Leo’s turn, and though he looked rather queer, he came across
like a rope-dancer. Ayesha stretched out her hand to clasp his own, and I heard
her say, “Bravely done, my love—bravely done! The old Greek spirit
lives in thee yet!”
And now only poor Job remained on the farther side of the gulf. He crept up to
the plank, and yelled out, “I can’t do it, sir. I shall fall into
that beastly place.”
“You must,” I remember saying with inappropriate
facetiousness—“you must, Job, it’s as easy as catching
flies.” I suppose that I must have said it to satisfy my conscience,
because although the expression conveys a wonderful idea of facility, as a
matter of fact I know no more difficult operation in the whole world than
catching flies—that is, in warm weather, unless, indeed, it is catching
mosquitoes.
“I can’t, sir—I can’t, indeed.”
“Let the man come, or let him stop and perish there. See, the light is
dying! In a moment it will be gone!” said Ayesha.
I looked. She was right. The sun was passing below the level of the hole or
cleft in the precipice through which the ray reached us.
“If you stop there, Job, you will die alone,” I called; “the
light is going.”
“Come, be a man, Job,” roared Leo; “it’s quite
easy.”
Thus adjured, the miserable Job, with a most awful yell, precipitated himself
face downwards on the plank—he did not dare, small blame to him, to try
to walk it, and commenced to draw himself across in little jerks, his poor legs
hanging down on either side into the nothingness beneath.
His violent jerks at the frail board made the great stone, which was only
balanced on a few inches of rock, oscillate in a most dreadful manner, and, to
make matters worse, when he was half-way across the flying ray of lurid light
suddenly went out, just as though a lamp had been extinguished in a curtained
room, leaving the whole howling wilderness of air black with darkness.
“Come on, Job, for God’s sake!” I shouted in an agony of
fear, while the stone, gathering motion with every swing, rocked so violently
that it was difficult to hang on to it. It was a truly awful position.
“Lord have mercy on me!” cried poor Job from the darkness.
“Oh, the plank’s slipping!” and I heard a violent struggle,
and thought that he was gone.
But at that moment his outstretched hand, clasping in agony at the air, met my
own, and I hauled—ah, how I did haul, putting out all the strength that
it has pleased Providence to give me in such abundance—and to my joy in
another minute Job was gasping on the rock beside me. But the plank! I felt it
slip, and heard it knock against a projecting knob of rock, and it was gone.
“Great heavens!” I exclaimed. “How are we going to get
back?”
“I don’t know,” answered Leo, out of the gloom.
“’Sufficient to the day is the evil thereof,’ I am thankful
enough to be here.”
But Ayesha merely called to me to take her hand and creep after her.
XXV.
THE SPIRIT OF LIFE
I did as I was bid, and in fear and trembling felt myself guided over the edge
of the stone. I sprawled my legs out, but could touch nothing.
“I am going to fall!” I gasped.
“Nay, let thyself go, and trust to me,” answered Ayesha.
Now, if the position is considered, it will be easily understood that this was
a greater demand upon my confidence than was justified by my knowledge of
Ayesha’s character. For all I knew she might be in the very act of
consigning me to a horrible doom. But in life we sometimes have to lay our
faith upon strange altars, and so it was now.
“Let thyself go!” she cried, and, having no choice, I did.
I felt myself slide a pace or two down the sloping surface of the rock, and
then pass into the air, and the thought flashed through my brain that I was
lost. But no! In another instant my feet struck against a rocky floor, and I
felt that I was standing upon something solid, and out of reach of the wind,
which I could hear singing away overhead. As I stood there thanking Heaven for
these small mercies, there was a slip and a scuffle, and down came Leo
alongside of me.
“Hulloa, old fellow!” he called out, “are you there? This is
getting interesting, is it not?”
Just then, with a terrific yell, Job arrived right on the top of us, knocking
us both down. By the time we had struggled to our feet again Ayesha was
standing among us, and bidding us light the lamps, which fortunately remained
uninjured, as also did the spare jar of oil.
I got out my box of wax matches, and they struck as merrily, there, in that
awful place, as they could have done in a London drawing-room.
In a couple of minutes both the lamps were alight and revealed a curious scene.
We were huddled together in a rocky chamber, some ten feet square, and scared
enough we looked; that is, except Ayesha, who was standing calmly with her arms
folded, and waiting for the lamps to burn up. The chamber appeared to be partly
natural, and partly hollowed out of the top of the cone. The roof of the
natural part was formed of the swinging stone, and that of the back part of the
chamber, which sloped downwards, was hewn from the live rock. For the rest, the
place was warm and dry—a perfect haven of rest compared to the giddy
pinnacle above, and the quivering spur that shot out to meet it in mid-air.
“So!” said She, “safely have we come, though once I
feared that the rocking stone would fall with you, and precipitate you into the
bottomless depths beneath, for I do believe that the cleft goeth down to the
very womb of the world. The rock whereon the stone resteth hath crumbled
beneath the swinging weight. And now that he,” nodding towards Job, who
was sitting on the floor, feebly wiping his forehead with a red cotton
pocket-handkerchief, “whom they rightly call the ‘Pig,’ for
as a pig is he stupid, hath let fall the plank, it will not be easy to return
across the gulf, and to that end must I make a plan. But now rest a while, and
look upon this place. What think ye that it is?”
“We know not,” I answered.
“Wouldst thou believe, oh Holly, that once a man did choose this airy
nest for a daily habitation, and did here endure for many years; leaving it
only but one day in every twelve to seek food and water and oil that the people
brought, more than he could carry, and laid as an offering in the mouth of the
tunnel through which we passed hither?”
We looked up wonderingly, and she continued—
“Yet so it was. There was a man—Noot, he named himself—who,
though he lived in the latter days, had of the wisdom of the sons of Kôr. A
hermit was he, and a philosopher, and greatly skilled in the secrets of Nature,
and he it was who discovered the Fire that I shall show you, which is
Nature’s blood and life, and also that he who bathed therein, and
breathed thereof, should live while Nature lives. But like unto thee, oh Holly,
this man, Noot, would not turn his knowledge to account. ‘Ill,’ he
said, ‘was it for man to live, for man was born to die.’ Therefore
did he tell his secret to none, and therefore did he come and live here, where
the seeker after Life must pass, and was revered of the Amahagger of the day as
holy, and a hermit. And when first I came to this country—knowest thou
how I came, Kallikrates? Another time I will tell thee, for it is a strange
tale—I heard of this philosopher, and waited for him when he came to
fetch his food, and returned with him hither, though greatly did I fear to
tread the gulf. Then did I beguile him with my beauty and my wit, and flatter
him with my tongue, so that he led me down and showed me the Fire, and told me
the secrets of the Fire, but he would not suffer me to step therein, and,
fearing lest he should slay me, I refrained, knowing that the man was very old,
and soon would die. And I returned, having learned from him all that he knew of
the wonderful Spirit of the World, and that was much, for the man was wise and
very ancient, and by purity and abstinence, and the contemplations of his
innocent mind, had worn thin the veil between that which we see and the great
invisible truths, the whisper of whose wings at times we hear as they sweep
through the gross air of the world. Then—it was but a very few days
after, I met thee, my Kallikrates, who hadst wandered hither with the beautiful
Egyptian Amenartas, and I learned to love for the first and last time, once and
for ever, so that it entered into my mind to come hither with thee, and receive
the gift of Life for thee and me. Therefore came we, with that Egyptian who
would not be left behind, and, behold, we found the old man Noot lying but
newly dead. There he lay, and his white beard covered him like a
garment,” and she pointed to a spot near where I was sitting; “but
surely he hath long since crumbled into dust, and the wind hath borne his ashes
hence.”
Here I put out my hand and felt in the dust, and presently my fingers touched
something. It was a human tooth, very yellow, but sound. I held it up and
showed it to Ayesha, who laughed.
“Yes,” she said, “it is his without a doubt. Behold what
remaineth of Noot, and the wisdom of Noot—one little tooth! And yet that
man had all life at his command, and for his conscience’ sake would have
none of it. Well, he lay there newly dead, and we descended whither I shall
lead you, and then, gathering up all my courage, and courting death that I
might perchance win so glorious a crown of life, I stepped into the flames, and
behold! life such as ye can never know until ye feel it also, flowed into me,
and I came forth undying, and lovely beyond imagining. Then did I stretch out
mine arms to thee, Kallikrates, and bid thee take thine immortal bride, and
behold, as I spoke, thou, blinded by my beauty, didst turn from me, and throw
thine arms about the neck of Amenartas. And then a great fury filled me, and
made me mad, and I seized the javelin that thou didst bear, and stabbed thee,
so that there, at my very feet, in the place of Life, thou didst groan and go
down into death. I knew not then that I had strength to slay with mine eyes and
by the power of my will, therefore in my madness slew I with the javelin.[1]
[1]
It will be observed that Ayesha’s account of the death of Kallikrates
differs materially from that written on the potsherd by Amenartas. The writing
on the sherd says, “Then in her rage did she smite him by her
magic, and he died.” We never ascertained which was the correct
version, but it will be remembered that the body of Kallikrates had a spear-
wound in the breast, which seems conclusive, unless, indeed, it was inflicted
after death. Another thing that we never ascertained was how the two
women—She and the Egyptian Amenartas—were able to bear the
corpse of the man they both loved across the dread gulf and along the shaking
spur. What a spectacle the two distracted creatures must have presented in
their grief and loveliness as they toiled along that awful place with the dead
man between them! Probably however the passage was easier then.—L. H. H.
“And when thou wast dead, ah! I wept, because I was undying and thou wast
dead. I wept there in the place of Life so that had I been mortal any more my
heart had surely broken. And she, the swart Egyptian—she cursed me by her
gods. By Osiris did she curse me and by Isis, by Nephthys and by Anubis, by
Sekhet, the cat-headed, and by Set, calling down evil on me, evil and
everlasting desolation. Ah! I can see her dark face now lowering o’er me
like a storm, but she could not hurt me, and I—I know not if I could hurt
her. I did not try; it was naught to me then; so together we bore thee hence.
And afterwards I sent her—the Egyptian—away through the swamps, and
it seems that she lived to bear a son and to write the tale that should lead
thee, her husband, back to me, her rival and thy murderess.
“Such is the tale, my love, and now is the hour at hand that shall set a
crown upon it. Like all things on the earth, it is compounded of evil and of
good—more of evil than of good, perchance; and writ in letters of blood.
It is the truth; naught have I hidden from thee, Kallikrates. And now one thing
before the final moment of thy trial. We go down into the presence of Death,
for Life and Death are very near together, and—who knoweth?—that
might happen which should separate us for another space of waiting. I am but a
woman, and no prophetess, and I cannot read the future. But this I
know—for I learned it from the lips of the wise man Noot—that my
life is but prolonged and made more bright. It cannot live for aye. Therefore,
before we go, tell me, oh Kallikrates, that of a truth thou dost forgive me,
and dost love me from thy heart. See, Kallikrates: much evil have I
done—perchance it was evil but two nights ago to strike that girl who
loved thee cold in death—but she disobeyed me and angered me, prophesying
misfortune to me, and I smote. Be careful when power comes to thee also, lest
thou too shouldst smite in thine anger or thy jealousy, for unconquerable
strength is a sore weapon in the hands of erring man. Yea, I have
sinned—out of the bitterness born of a great love have I sinned—but
yet do I know the good from the evil, nor is my heart altogether hardened. Thy
love, Kallikrates, shall be the gate of my redemption, even as aforetime my
passion was the path down which I ran to evil. For deep love unsatisfied is the
hell of noble hearts and a portion of the accursed, but love that is mirrored
back more perfect from the soul of our desired doth fashion wings to lift us
above ourselves, and make us what we might be. Therefore, Kallikrates, take me
by the hand, and lift my veil with no more fear than though I were some peasant
girl, and not the wisest and most beauteous woman in this wide world, and look
me in the eyes, and tell me that thou dost forgive me with all thine heart, and
that will all thine heart thou dost worship me.”
She paused, and the strange tenderness in her voice seemed to hover round us
like a memory. I know that the sound of it moved me more even than her words,
it was so very human—so very womanly. Leo, too, was strangely touched.
Hitherto he had been fascinated against his better judgment, something as a
bird is fascinated by a snake, but now I think that all this passed away, and
he realised that he really loved this strange and glorious creature, as, alas!
I loved her also. At any rate, I saw his eyes fill with tears, and he stepped
swiftly to her and undid the gauzy veil, and then took her by the hand, and,
gazing into her deep eyes, said aloud—
“Ayesha, I love thee with all my heart, and so far as forgiveness is
possible I forgive thee the death of Ustane. For the rest, it is between thee
and thy Maker; I know naught of it. I only know that I love thee as I never
loved before, and that I will cleave to thee to the end.”
“Now,” answered Ayesha, with proud humility—“now when
my lord doth speak thus royally and give with so free a hand, it cannot become
me to lag behind in words, and be beggared of my generosity. Behold!” and
she took his hand and placed it upon her shapely head, and then bent herself
slowly down till one knee for an instant touched the
ground—“Behold! in token of submission do I bow me to my lord!
Behold!” and she kissed him on the lips, “in token of my wifely
love do I kiss my lord. Behold!” and she laid her hand upon his heart,
“by the sin I sinned, by my lonely centuries of waiting wherewith it was
wiped out, by the great love wherewith I love, and by the Spirit—the
Eternal Thing that doth beget all life, from whom it ebbs, to whom it doth
return again—I swear:—
“I swear, even in this most holy hour of completed Womanhood, that I will
abandon Evil and cherish Good. I swear that I will be ever guided by thy voice
in the straightest path of Duty. I swear that I will eschew Ambition, and
through all my length of endless days set Wisdom over me as a guiding star to
lead me unto Truth and a knowledge of the Right. I swear also that I will
honour and will cherish thee, Kallikrates, who hast been swept by the wave of
time back into my arms, ay, till the very end, come it soon or late. I
swear—nay, I will swear no more, for what are words? Yet shalt thou learn
that Ayesha hath no false tongue.
“So I have sworn, and thou, my Holly, art witness to my oath. Here, too,
are we wed, my husband, with the gloom for bridal canopy—wed till the end
of all things; here do we write our marriage vows upon the rushing winds which
shall bear them up to heaven, and round and continually round this rolling
world.
“And for a bridal gift I crown thee with my beauty’s starry crown,
and enduring life, and wisdom without measure, and wealth that none can count.
Behold! the great ones of the earth shall creep about thy feet, and its fair
women shall cover up their eyes because of the shining glory of thy
countenance, and its wise ones shall be abased before thee. Thou shalt read the
hearts of men as an open writing, and hither and thither shalt thou lead them
as thy pleasure listeth. Like that old Sphinx of Egypt shalt thou sit aloft
from age to age, and ever shall they cry to thee to solve the riddle of thy
greatness that doth not pass away, and ever shalt thou mock them with thy
silence!
“Behold! once more I kiss thee, and by that kiss I give to thee dominion
over sea and earth, over the peasant in his hovel, over the monarch in his
palace halls, and cities crowned with towers, and those who breathe therein.
Where’er the sun shakes out his spears, and the lonesome waters mirror up
the moon, where’er storms roll, and Heaven’s painted bows arch in
the sky—from the pure North clad in snows, across the middle spaces of
the world, to where the amorous South, lying like a bride upon her blue couch
of seas, breathes in sighs made sweet with the odour of myrtles—there
shall thy power pass and thy dominion find a home. Nor sickness, nor
icy-fingered fear, nor sorrow, and pale waste of form and mind hovering ever
o’er humanity, shall so much as shadow thee with the shadow of their
wings. As a God shalt thou be, holding good and evil in the hollow of thy hand,
and I, even I, I humble myself before thee. Such is the power of Love, and such
is the bridal gift I give unto thee, Kallikrates, my Lord and Lord of All.
“And now it is done; now for thee I loose my virgin zone; and come storm,
come shine, come good, come evil, come life, come death, it never, never can be
undone. For, of a truth, that which is, is, and, being done, is done for aye,
and cannot be altered. I have said—Let us hence, that all things may be
accomplished in their order;” and, taking one of the lamps, she advanced
towards the end of the chamber that was roofed in by the swaying stone, where
she halted.
We followed her, and perceived that in the wall of the cone there was a stair,
or, to be more accurate, that some projecting knobs of rock had been so shaped
as to form a good imitation of a stair. Down this Ayesha began to climb,
springing from step to step, like a chamois, and after her we followed with
less grace. When we had descended some fifteen or sixteen steps we found that
they ended in a tremendous rocky slope, running first outwards and then
inwards—like the slope of an inverted cone, or tunnel. The slope was very
steep, and often precipitous, but it was nowhere impassable, and by the light
of the lamps we went down it with no great difficulty, though it was gloomy
work enough travelling on thus, no one of us knew whither, into the dead heart
of a volcano. As we went, however, I took the precaution of noting our route as
well as I could; and this was not so very difficult, owing to the extraordinary
and most fantastic shape of the rocks that were strewn about, many of which in
that dim light looked more like the grim faces carven upon mediæval gargoyles
than ordinary boulders.
For a long time we travelled on thus, half an hour I should say, till, after we
had descended for many hundreds of feet, I perceived that we were reaching the
point of the inverted cone. In another minute we were there, and found that at
the very apex of the funnel was a passage, so low and narrow that we had to
stoop as we crept along it in Indian file. After some fifty yards of this
creeping, the passage suddenly widened into a cave, so huge that we could see
neither the roof nor the sides. We only knew that it was a cave by the echo of
our tread and the perfect quiet of the heavy air. On we went for many minutes
in absolute awed silence, like lost souls in the depths of Hades,
Ayesha’s white and ghost-like form flitting in front of us, till once
more the place ended in a passage which opened into a second cavern much
smaller than the first. Indeed, we could clearly make out the arch and stony
banks of this second cave, and, from their rent and jagged appearance,
discovered that, like the first long passage down which we had passed through
the cliff before we reached the quivering spur, it had, to all appearance, been
torn in the bowels of the rock by the terrific force of some explosive gas. At
length this cave ended in a third passage, through which gleamed a faint glow
of light.
I heard Ayesha give a sigh of relief as this light dawned upon us.
“It is well,” she said; “prepare to enter the very womb of
the Earth, wherein she doth conceive the Life that ye see brought forth in man
and beast—ay, and in every tree and flower.”
Swiftly she sped along, and after her we stumbled as best we might, our hearts
filled like a cup with mingled dread and curiosity. What were we about to see?
We passed down the tunnel; stronger and stronger the light beamed, reaching us
in great flashes like the rays from a lighthouse, as one by one they are thrown
wide upon the darkness of the waters. Nor was this all, for with the flashes
came a soul-shaking sound like that of thunder and of crashing trees. Now we
were through it, and—oh heavens!
We stood in a third cavern, some fifty feet in length by perhaps as great a
height, and thirty wide. It was carpeted with fine white sand, and its walls
had been worn smooth by the action of I know not what. The cavern was not dark
like the others, it was filled with a soft glow of rose-coloured light, more
beautiful to look on than anything that can be conceived. But at first we saw
no flashes, and heard no more of the thunderous sound. Presently, however, as
we stood in amaze, gazing at the marvellous sight, and wondering whence the
rosy radiance flowed, a dread and beautiful thing happened. Across the far end
of the cavern, with a grinding and crashing noise—a noise so dreadful and
awe-inspiring that we all trembled, and Job actually sank to his
knees—there flamed out an awful cloud or pillar of fire, like a rainbow
many-coloured, and like the lightning bright. For a space, perhaps forty
seconds, it flamed and roared thus, turning slowly round and round, and then by
degrees the terrible noise ceased, and with the fire it passed away—I
know not where—leaving behind it the same rosy glow that we had first
seen.
“Draw near, draw near!” cried Ayesha, with a voice of thrilling
exultation. “Behold the very Fountain and Heart of Life as it beats in
the bosom of the great world. Behold the substance from which all things draw
their energy, the bright Spirit of the Globe, without which it cannot live, but
must grow cold and dead as the dead moon. Draw near, and wash you in the living
flames, and take their virtue into your poor frames in all its virgin
strength—not as it now feebly glows within your bosoms, filtered thereto
through all the fine strainers of a thousand intermediate lives, but as it is
here in the very fount and seat of earthly Being.”
We followed her through the rosy glow up to the head of the cave, till at last
we stood before the spot where the great pulse beat and the great flame passed.
And as we went we became sensible of a wild and splendid exhilaration, of a
glorious sense of such a fierce intensity of Life that the most buoyant moments
of our strength seemed flat and tame and feeble beside it. It was the mere
effluvium of the flame, the subtle ether that it cast off as it passed, working
on us, and making us feel strong as giants and swift as eagles.
We reached the head of the cave, and gazed at each other in the glorious glow,
and laughed aloud—even Job laughed, and he had not laughed for a
week—in the lightness of our hearts and the divine intoxication of our
brains. I know that I felt as though all the varied genius of which the human
intellect is capable had descended upon me. I could have spoken in blank verse
of Shakesperian beauty, all sorts of great ideas flashed through my mind; it
was as though the bonds of my flesh had been loosened and left the spirit free
to soar to the empyrean of its native power. The sensations that poured in upon
me are indescribable. I seemed to live more keenly, to reach to a higher joy,
and sip the goblet of a subtler thought than ever it had been my lot to do
before. I was another and most glorified self, and all the avenues of the
Possible were for a space laid open to the footsteps of the Real.
Then, suddenly, whilst I rejoiced in this splendid vigour of a new-found self,
from far, far away there came a dreadful muttering noise, that grew and grew to
a crash and a roar, which combined in itself all that is terrible and yet
splendid in the possibilities of sound. Nearer it came, and nearer yet, till it
was close upon us, rolling down like all the thunder-wheels of heaven behind
the horses of the lightning. On it came, and with it came the glorious blinding
cloud of many-coloured light, and stood before us for a space, turning, as it
seemed to us, slowly round and round, and then, accompanied by its attendant
pomp of sound, passed away I know not whither.
So astonishing was the wondrous sight that one and all of us, save She,
who stood up and stretched her hands towards the fire, sank down before it, and
hid our faces in the sand.
When it was gone, Ayesha spoke.
“Now, Kallikrates,” she said, “the mighty moment is at hand.
When the great flame comes again thou must stand in it. First throw aside thy
garments, for it will burn them, though thee it will not hurt. Thou must stand
in the flame while thy senses will endure, and when it embraces thee suck the
fire down into thy very heart, and let it leap and play around thy every part,
so that thou lose no moiety of its virtue. Hearest thou me, Kallikrates?”
“I hear thee, Ayesha,” answered Leo, “but, of a truth—I
am no coward—but I doubt me of that raging flame. How know I that it will
not utterly destroy me, so that I lose myself and lose thee also? Nevertheless
will I do it,” he added.
Ayesha thought for a minute, and then said—
“It is not wonderful that thou shouldst doubt. Tell me, Kallikrates: if
thou seest me stand in the flame and come forth unharmed, wilt thou enter
also?”
“Yes,” he answered, “I will enter even if it slay me. I have
said that I will enter now.”
“And that will I also,” I cried.
“What, my Holly!” she laughed aloud; “methought that thou
wouldst naught of length of days. Why, how is this?”
“Nay, I know not,” I answered, “but there is that in my heart
that calleth me to taste of the flame and live.”
“It is well,” she said. “Thou art not altogether lost in
folly. See now, I will for the second time bathe me in this living bath. Fain
would I add to my beauty and my length of days if that be possible. If it be
not possible, at the least it cannot harm me.
“Also,” she continued, after a momentary pause, “is there
another and a deeper cause why I would once again dip me in the flame. When
first I tasted of its virtue full was my heart of passion and of hatred of that
Egyptian Amenartas, and therefore, despite my strivings to be rid thereof, have
passion and hatred been stamped upon my soul from that sad hour to this. But
now it is otherwise. Now is my mood a happy mood, and filled am I with the
purest part of thought, and so would I ever be. Therefore, Kallikrates, will I
once more wash and make me pure and clean, and yet more fit for thee. Therefore
also, when thou dost in turn stand in the fire, empty all thy heart of evil,
and let soft contentment hold the balance of thy mind. Shake loose thy
spirit’s wings, and take thy stand upon the utter verge of holy
contemplation; ay, dream upon thy mother’s kiss, and turn thee towards
the vision of the highest good that hath ever swept on silver wings across the
silence of thy dreams. For from the germ of what thou art in that dread moment
shall grow the fruit of what thou shalt be for all unreckoned time.
“Now prepare thee, prepare! even as though thy last hour were at hand,
and thou wast to cross to the Land of Shadows, and not through the Gates of
Glory into the realms of Life made beautiful. Prepare, I say!”
XXVI.
WHAT WE SAW
Then came a few moments’ pause, during which Ayesha seemed to be
gathering up her strength for the fiery trial, while we clung to each other,
and waited in utter silence.
At last, from far far away, came the first murmur of sound, that grew and grew
till it began to crash and bellow in the distance. As she heard it, Ayesha
swiftly threw off her gauzy wrapping, loosened the golden snake from her
kirtle, and then, shaking her lovely hair about her like a garment, beneath its
cover slipped the kirtle off and replaced the snaky belt around her and outside
the masses of her falling hair. There she stood before us as Eve might have
stood before Adam, clad in nothing but her abundant locks, held round her by
the golden band; and no words of mine can tell how sweet she looked—and
yet how divine. Nearer and nearer came the thunder-wheels of fire, and as they
came she pushed one ivory arm through the dark masses of her hair and flung it
round Leo’s neck.
“Oh, my love, my love!” she murmured, “wilt thou ever know
how I have loved thee?” and she kissed him on the forehead, and then went
and stood in the pathway of the flame of Life.
There was, I remember, to my mind something very touching about her words and
that embrace upon the forehead. It was like a mother’s kiss, and seemed
to convey a benediction with it.
On came the crashing, rolling noise, and the sound of it was as the sound of a
forest being swept flat by a mighty wind, and then tossed up like so much
grass, and thundered down a mountain-side. Nearer and nearer it came; now
flashes of light, forerunners of the revolving pillar of flame, were passing
like arrows through the rosy air; and now the edge of the pillar itself
appeared. Ayesha turned towards it, and stretched out her arms to greet it. On
it came very slowly, and lapped her round with flame. I saw the fire run up her
form. I saw her lift it with both hands as though it were water, and pour it
over her head. I even saw her open her mouth and draw it down into her lungs,
and a dread and wonderful sight it was.
Then she paused, and stretched out her arms, and stood there quite still, with
a heavenly smile upon her face, as though she were the very Spirit of the
Flame.
The mysterious fire played up and down her dark and rolling locks, twining and
twisting itself through and around them like threads of golden lace; it gleamed
upon her ivory breast and shoulder, from which the hair had slipped aside; it
slid along her pillared throat and delicate features, and seemed to find a home
in the glorious eyes that shone and shone, more brightly even than the
spiritual essence.
Oh, how beautiful she looked there in the flame! No angel out of heaven could
have worn a greater loveliness. Even now my heart faints before the
recollection of it, as she stood and smiled at our awed faces, and I would give
half my remaining time upon this earth to see her once like that again.
But suddenly—more suddenly than I can describe—a kind of change
came over her face, a change which I could not define or explain, but none the
less a change. The smile vanished, and in its place there came a dry, hard
look; the rounded face seemed to grow pinched, as though some great anxiety
were leaving its impress upon it. The glorious eyes, too, lost their light,
and, as I thought, the form its perfect shape and erectness.
I rubbed my eyes, thinking that I was the victim of some hallucination, or that
the refraction from the intense light produced an optical delusion; and, as I
did so, the flaming pillar slowly twisted and thundered off whithersoever it
passes to in the bowels of the great earth, leaving Ayesha standing where it
had been.
As soon as it was gone, she stepped forward to Leo’s side—it seemed
to me that there was no spring in her step—and stretched out her hand to
lay it on his shoulder. I gazed at her arm. Where was its wonderful roundness
and beauty? It was getting thin and angular. And her face—by
Heaven!—her face was growing old before my eyes! I suppose that
Leo saw it also; certainly he recoiled a step or two.
“What is it, my Kallikrates?” she said, and her voice—what
was the matter with those deep and thrilling notes? They were quite high and
cracked.
“Why, what is it—what is it?” she said confusedly. “I
feel dazed. Surely the quality of the fire hath not altered. Can the principle
of Life alter? Tell me, Kallikrates, is there aught wrong with my eyes? I see
not clear,” and she put her hand to her head and touched her
hair—and oh, horror of horrors!—it all fell upon the floor.
“Oh, look!—look!—look!” shrieked Job, in a
shrill falsetto of terror, his eyes nearly dropping out of his head, and foam
upon his lips. “Look!—look!—look! she’s
shrivelling up! she’s turning into a monkey!” and down he fell upon
the ground, foaming and gnashing in a fit.
True enough—I faint even as I write it in the living presence of that
terrible recollection—she was shrivelling up; the golden snake
that had encircled her gracious form slipped over her hips and to the ground;
smaller and smaller she grew; her skin changed colour, and in place of the
perfect whiteness of its lustre it turned dirty brown and yellow, like an old
piece of withered parchment. She felt at her head: the delicate hand was
nothing but a claw now, a human talon like that of a badly-preserved Egyptian
mummy, and then she seemed to realise what kind of change was passing over her,
and she shrieked—ah, she shrieked!—she rolled upon the floor and
shrieked!
Smaller she grew, and smaller yet, till she was no larger than a monkey. Now
the skin was puckered into a million wrinkles, and on the shapeless face was
the stamp of unutterable age. I never saw anything like it; nobody ever saw
anything like the frightful age that was graven on that fearful countenance, no
bigger now than that of a two-months’ child, though the skull remained
the same size, or nearly so, and let all men pray they never may, if they wish
to keep their reason.
At last she lay still, or only feebly moving. She, who but two minutes before
had gazed upon us the loveliest, noblest, most splendid woman the world has
ever seen, she lay still before us, near the masses of her own dark hair, no
larger than a big monkey, and hideous—ah, too hideous for words. And yet,
think of this—at that very moment I thought of it—it was the
same woman!
She was dying: we saw it, and thanked God—for while she lived she could
feel, and what must she have felt? She raised herself upon her bony hands, and
blindly gazed around her, swaying her head slowly from side to side as a
tortoise does. She could not see, for her whitish eyes were covered with a
horny film. Oh, the horrible pathos of the sight! But she could still speak.
“Kallikrates,” she said in husky, trembling notes. “Forget me
not, Kallikrates. Have pity on my shame; I shall come again, and shall once
more be beautiful, I swear it—it is true!
Oh—h—h—” and she fell upon her face, and was
still.
On the very spot where more than twenty centuries before she had slain
Kallikrates the priest, she herself fell down and died.
I know not how long we remained thus. Many hours, I suppose. When at last I
opened my eyes, the other two were still outstretched upon the floor. The rosy
light yet beamed like a celestial dawn, and the thunder-wheels of the Spirit of
Life yet rolled upon their accustomed track, for as I awoke the great pillar
was passing away. There, too, lay the hideous little monkey frame, covered with
crinkled yellow parchment, that once had been the glorious She. Alas! it
was no hideous dream—it was an awful and unparalleled fact!
What had happened to bring this shocking change about? Had the nature of the
life-giving Fire changed? Did it, perhaps, from time to time send forth an
essence of Death instead of an essence of Life? Or was it that the frame once
charged with its marvellous virtue could bear no more, so that were the process
repeated—it mattered not at what lapse of time—the two
impregnations neutralised each other, and left the body on which they acted as
it was before it ever came into contact with the very essence of Life? This,
and this alone, would account for the sudden and terrible ageing of Ayesha, as
the whole length of her two thousand years took effect upon her. I have not the
slightest doubt myself but that the frame now lying before me was just what the
frame of a woman would be if by any extraordinary means life could be preserved
in her till she at length died at the age of two-and-twenty centuries.
But who can tell what had happened? There was the fact. Often since that awful
hour I have reflected that it requires no great imagination to see the finger
of Providence in the matter. Ayesha locked up in her living tomb waiting from
age to age for the coming of her lover worked but a small change in the order
of the World. But Ayesha strong and happy in her love, clothed in immortal
youth and goddess beauty, and the wisdom of the centuries, would have
revolutionised society, and even perchance have changed the destiny of Mankind.
Thus she opposed herself against the eternal law, and, strong though she was,
by it was swept back to nothingness—swept back with shame and hideous
mockery!
For some minutes I lay faintly turning these terrors over in my mind, while my
physical strength came back to me, which it quickly did in that buoyant
atmosphere. Then I bethought me of the others, and staggered to my feet, to see
if I could arouse them. But first I took up Ayesha’s kirtle and the gauzy
scarf with which she had been wont to hide her dazzling loveliness from the
eyes of men, and, averting my head so that I might not look upon it, covered up
that dreadful relic of the glorious dead, that shocking epitome of human beauty
and human life. I did this hurriedly, fearing lest Leo should recover, and see
it again.
Then, stepping over the perfumed masses of dark hair that lay upon the sand, I
stooped down by Job, who was lying upon his face, and turned him over. As I did
so his arm fell back in a way that I did not like, and which sent a chill
through me, and I glanced sharply at him. One look was enough. Our old and
faithful servant was dead. His nerves, already shattered by all he had seen and
undergone, had utterly broken down beneath this last dire sight, and he had
died of terror, or in a fit brought on by terror. I had only to look at his
face to see it.
It was another blow; but perhaps it may help people to understand how
overwhelmingly awful was the experience through which we had passed—we
did not feel it much at the time. It seemed quite natural that the poor fellow
should be dead. When Leo came to himself, which he did with a groan and
trembling of the limbs about ten minutes afterwards, and I told him that Job
was dead, he merely said, “Oh!” And, mind you, this was from
no heartlessness, for he and Job were much attached to each other; and he often
talks of him now with the deepest regret and affection. It was only that his
nerves would bear no more. A harp can give out but a certain quantity of sound,
however heavily it is smitten.
Well, I set myself to recovering Leo, who, to my infinite relief, I found was
not dead, but only fainting, and in the end I succeeded, as I have said, and he
sat up; and then I saw another dreadful thing. When we entered that awful place
his curling hair had been of the ruddiest gold, now it was turning grey, and by
the time we reached the outer air it was snow white. Besides, he looked twenty
years older.
“What is to be done, old fellow?” he said in a hollow, dead sort of
voice, when his mind had cleared a little, and a recollection of what had
happened forced itself upon it.
“Try and get out, I suppose,” I answered; “that is, unless
you would like to go in there,” and I pointed to the column of fire that
was once more rolling by.
“I would go in if I were sure that it would kill me,” he said with
a little laugh. “It was my cursed hesitation that did this. If I had not
been doubtful she might never have tried to show me the road. But I am not
sure. The fire might have the opposite effect upon me. It might make me
immortal; and, old fellow, I have not the patience to wait a couple of thousand
years for her to come back again as she did for me. I had rather die when my
hour comes—and I should fancy that it isn’t far off
either—and go my ways to look for her. Do you go in if you like.”
But I merely shook my head, my excitement was as dead as ditch-water, and my
distaste for the prolongation of my mortal span had come back upon me more
strongly than ever. Besides, we neither of us knew what the effects of the fire
might be. The result upon She had not been of an encouraging nature, and
of the exact causes that produced that result we were, of course, ignorant.
“Well, my boy,” I said, “we cannot stop here till we go the
way of those two,” and I pointed to the little heap under the white
garment and to the stiffening corpse of poor Job. “If we are going we had
better go. But, by the way, I expect that the lamps have burnt out,” and
I took one up and looked at it, and sure enough it had.
“There is some more oil in the vase,” said Leo
indifferently—“if it is not broken, at least.”
I examined the vessel in question—it was intact. With a trembling hand I
filled the lamps—luckily there was still some of the linen wick unburnt.
Then I lit them with one of our wax matches. While I did so we heard the pillar
of fire approaching once more as it went on its never-ending journey, if,
indeed, it was the same pillar that passed and repassed in a circle.
“Let’s see it come once more,” said Leo; “we shall
never look upon its like again in this world.”
It seemed a bit of idle curiosity, but somehow I shared it, and so we waited
till, turning slowly round upon its own axis, it had flamed and thundered by;
and I remember wondering for how many thousands of years this same phenomenon
had been taking place in the bowels of the earth, and for how many more
thousands it would continue to take place. I wondered also if any mortal eyes
would ever again mark its passage, or any mortal ears be thrilled and
fascinated by the swelling volume of its majestic sound. I do not think that
they will. I believe that we are the last human beings who will ever see that
unearthly sight. Presently it had gone, and we too turned to go.
But before we did so we each took Job’s cold hand in ours and shook it.
It was a rather ghastly ceremony, but it was the only means in our power of
showing our respect to the faithful dead and of celebrating his obsequies. The
heap beneath the white garment we did not uncover. We had no wish to look upon
that terrible sight again. But we went to the pile of rippling hair that had
fallen from her in the agony of that hideous change which was worse than a
thousand natural deaths, and each of us drew from it a shining lock, and these
locks we still have, the sole memento that is left to us of Ayesha as we knew
her in the fulness of her grace and glory. Leo pressed the perfumed hair to his
lips.
“She called to me not to forget her,” he said hoarsely; “and
swore that we should meet again. By Heaven! I never will forget her. Here I
swear that if we live to get out of this, I will not for all my days have
anything to say to another living woman, and that wherever I go I will wait for
her as faithfully as she waited for me.”
“Yes,” I thought to myself, “if she comes back as beautiful
as we knew her. But supposing she came back like that!”[1]
[1]
What a terrifying reflection it is, by the way, that nearly all our deep love
for women who are not our kindred depends—at any rate, in the first
instance—upon their personal appearance. If we lost them, and found them
again dreadful to look on, though otherwise they were the very same, should we
still love them? —L. H. H.
Well, and then we went. We went, and left those two in the presence of the very
well and spring of Life, but gathered to the cold company of Death. How lonely
they looked as they lay there, and how ill assorted! That little heap had been
for two thousand years the wisest, loveliest, proudest creature—I can
hardly call her woman—in the whole universe. She had been wicked, too, in
her way; but, alas! such is the frailty of the human heart, her wickedness had
not detracted from her charm. Indeed, I am by no means certain that it did not
add to it. It was after all of a grand order, there was nothing mean or small
about Ayesha.
And poor Job too! His presentiment had come true, and there was an end of him.
Well, he has a strange burial-place—no Norfolk hind ever had a stranger,
or ever will; and it is something to lie in the same sepulchre as the poor
remains of the imperial She.
We looked our last upon them and the indescribable rosy glow in which they lay,
and then with hearts far too heavy for words we left them, and crept thence
broken-down men—so broken down that we even renounced the chance of
practically immortal life, because all that made life valuable had gone from
us, and we knew even then that to prolong our days indefinitely would only be
to prolong our sufferings. For we felt—yes, both of us—that having
once looked Ayesha in the eyes, we could not forget her for ever and ever while
memory and identity remained. We both loved her now and for all time, she was
stamped and carven on our hearts, and no other woman or interest could ever
raze that splendid die. And I—there lies the sting—I had and have
no right to think thus of her. As she told me, I was naught to her, and never
shall be through the unfathomed depths of Time, unless, indeed, conditions
alter, and a day comes at last when two men may love one woman, and all three
be happy in the fact. It is the only hope of my broken-heartedness, and a
rather faint one. Beyond it I have nothing. I have paid down this heavy price,
all that I am worth here and hereafter, and that is my sole reward. With Leo it
is different, and often and often I bitterly envy him his happy lot, for if
She was right, and her wisdom and knowledge did not fail her at the
last, which, arguing from the precedent of her own case, I think most unlikely,
he has some future to look forward to. But I have none, and yet—mark the
folly and the weakness of the human heart, and let him who is wise learn wisdom
from it—yet I would not have it otherwise. I mean that I am content to
give what I have given and must always give, and take in payment those crumbs
that fall from my mistress’s table, the memory of a few kind words, the
hope one day in the far undreamed future of a sweet smile or two of
recognition, a little gentle friendship, and a little show of thanks for my
devotion to her—and Leo.
If that does not constitute true love, I do not know what does, and all I have
to say is that it is a very bad state of affairs for a man on the wrong side of
middle age to fall into.
XXVII.
WE LEAP
We passed through the caves without trouble, but when we came to the slope of
the inverted cone two difficulties stared us in the face. The first of these
was the laborious nature of the ascent, and the next the extreme difficulty of
finding our way. Indeed, had it not been for the mental notes that I had
fortunately taken of the shape of various rocks, I am sure that we never should
have managed it at all, but have wandered about in the dreadful womb of the
volcano—for I suppose it must once have been something of the
sort—until we died of exhaustion and despair. As it was we went wrong
several times, and once nearly fell into a huge crack or crevasse. It was
terrible work creeping about in the dense gloom and awful stillness from
boulder to boulder, and examining it by the feeble light of the lamps to see if
I could recognise its shape. We rarely spoke, our hearts were too heavy for
speech, we simply stumbled about, falling sometimes and cutting ourselves, in a
rather dogged sort of way. The fact was that our spirits were utterly crushed,
and we did not greatly care what happened to us. Only we felt bound to try and
save our lives whilst we could, and indeed a natural instinct prompted us to
it. So for some three or four hours, I should think—I cannot tell exactly
how long, for we had no watch left that would go—we blundered on. During
the last two hours we were completely lost, and I began to fear that we had got
into the funnel of some subsidiary cone, when at last I suddenly recognised a
very large rock which we had passed in descending but a little way from the
top. It is a marvel that I should have recognised it, and, indeed, we had
already passed it going at right angles to the proper path, when something
about it struck me, and I turned back and examined it in an idle sort of way,
and, as it happened, this proved our salvation.
After this we gained the rocky natural stair without much further trouble, and
in due course found ourselves back in the little chamber where the benighted
Noot had lived and died.
But now a fresh terror stared us in the face. It will be remembered that owing
to Job’s fear and awkwardness, the plank upon which we had crossed from
the huge spur to the rocking-stone had been whirled off into the tremendous
gulf below.
How were we to cross without the plank?
There was only one answer—we must try and jump it, or else stop
there till we starved. The distance in itself was not so very great, between
eleven and twelve feet I should think, and I have seen Leo jump over twenty
when he was a young fellow at college; but then, think of the conditions. Two
weary, worn-out men, one of them on the wrong side of forty, a rocking-stone to
take off from, a trembling point of rock some few feet across to land upon, and
a bottomless gulf to be cleared in a raging gale! It was bad enough, God knows,
but when I pointed out these things to Leo, he put the whole matter in a
nutshell, by replying that, merciless as the choice was, we must choose between
the certainty of a lingering death in the chamber and the risk of a swift one
in the air. Of course, there was no arguing against this, but one thing was
clear, we could not attempt that leap in the dark; the only thing to do was to
wait for the ray of light which pierced through the gulf at sunset. How near to
or how far from sunset we might be, neither of us had the faintest notion; all
we did know was, that when at last the light came it would not endure more than
a couple of minutes at the outside, so that we must be prepared to meet it.
Accordingly, we made up our minds to creep on to the top of the rocking-stone
and lie there in readiness. We were the more easily reconciled to this course
by the fact that our lamps were once more nearly exhausted—indeed, one
had gone out bodily, and the other was jumping up and down as the flame of a
lamp does when the oil is done. So, by the aid of its dying light, we hastened
to crawl out of the little chamber and clamber up the side of the great stone.
As we did so the light went out.
The difference in our position was a sufficiently remarkable one. Below, in the
little chamber, we had only heard the roaring of the gale overhead—here,
lying on our faces on the swinging stone, we were exposed to its full force and
fury, as the great draught drew first from this direction and then from that,
howling against the mighty precipice and through the rocky cliffs like ten
thousand despairing souls. We lay there hour after hour in terror and misery of
mind so deep that I will not attempt to describe it, and listened to the wild
storm-voices of that Tartarus, as, set to the deep undertone of the spur
opposite against which the wind hummed like some awful harp, they called to
each other from precipice to precipice. No nightmare dreamed by man, no wild
invention of the romancer, can ever equal the living horror of that place, and
the weird crying of those voices of the night, as we clung like shipwrecked
mariners to a raft, and tossed on the black, unfathomed wilderness of air.
Fortunately the temperature was not a low one; indeed, the wind was warm, or we
should have perished. So we clung and listened, and while we were stretched out
upon the rock a thing happened which was so curious and suggestive in itself,
though doubtless a mere coincidence, that, if anything, it added to, rather
than deducted from, the burden on our nerves.
It will be remembered that when Ayesha was standing on the spur, before we
crossed to the stone, the wind tore her cloak from her, and whirled it away
into the darkness of the gulf, we could not see whither. Well—I hardly
like to tell the story; it is so strange. As we lay there upon the
rocking-stone, this very cloak came floating out of the black space, like a
memory from the dead, and fell on Leo—so that it covered him nearly from
head to foot. We could not at first make out what it was, but soon discovered
by its feel, and then poor Leo, for the first time, gave way, and I heard him
sobbing there upon the stone. No doubt the cloak had been caught upon some
pinnacle of the cliff, and was thence blown hither by a chance gust; but still,
it was a most curious and touching incident.
Shortly after this, suddenly, without the slightest previous warning, the great
red knife of light came stabbing the darkness through and through—struck
the swaying stone on which we were, and rested its sharp point upon the spur
opposite.
“Now for it,” said Leo, “now or never.”
We rose and stretched ourselves, and looked at the cloud-wreaths stained the
colour of blood by that red ray as they tore through the sickening depths
beneath, and then at the empty space between the swaying stone and the
quivering rock, and, in our hearts, despaired, and prepared for death. Surely
we could not clear it—desperate though we were.
“Who is to go first?” said I.
“Do you, old fellow,” answered Leo. “I will sit upon the
other side of the stone to steady it. You must take as much run as you can, and
jump high; and God have mercy on us, say I.”
I acquiesced with a nod, and then I did a thing I had never done since Leo was
a little boy. I turned and put my arm round him, and kissed him on the
forehead. It sounds rather French, but as a fact I was taking my last farewell
of a man whom I could not have loved more if he had been my own son twice over.
“Good-bye, my boy,” I said, “I hope that we shall meet again,
wherever it is that we go to.”
The fact was I did not expect to live another two minutes.
Next I retreated to the far side of the rock, and waited till one of the
chopping gusts of wind got behind me, and then I ran the length of the huge
stone, some three or four and thirty feet, and sprang wildly out into the dizzy
air. Oh! the sickening terrors that I felt as I launched myself at that little
point of rock, and the horrible sense of despair that shot through my brain as
I realised that I had jumped short! but so it was, my feet never touched
the point, they went down into space, only my hands and body came in contact
with it. I gripped at it with a yell, but one hand slipped, and I swung right
round, holding by the other, so that I faced the stone from which I had sprung.
Wildly I stretched up with my left hand, and this time managed to grasp a knob
of rock, and there I hung in the fierce red light, with thousands of feet of
empty air beneath me. My hands were holding to either side of the under part of
the spur, so that its point was touching my head. Therefore, even if I could
have found the strength, I could not pull myself up. The most that I could do
would be to hang for about a minute, and then drop down, down into the
bottomless pit. If any man can imagine a more hideous position, let him speak!
All I know is that the torture of that half-minute nearly turned my brain.
I heard Leo give a cry, and then suddenly saw him in mid air springing up and
out like a chamois. It was a splendid leap that he took under the influence of
his terror and despair, clearing the horrible gulf as if it were nothing, and,
landing well on to the rocky point, he threw himself upon his face, to prevent
his pitching off into the depths. I felt the spur above me shake beneath the
shock of his impact, and as it did so I saw the huge rocking-stone, that had
been violently depressed by him as he sprang, fly back when relieved of his
weight till, for the first time during all these centuries, it got beyond its
balance, fell with a most awful crash right into the rocky chamber which had
once served the philosopher Noot for a hermitage, and, I have no doubt, for
ever sealed the passage that leads to the Place of Life with some hundreds of
tons of rock.
All this happened in a second, and curiously enough, notwithstanding my
terrible position, I noted it involuntarily, as it were. I even remember
thinking that no human being would go down that dread path again.
Next instant I felt Leo seize me by the right wrist with both hands. By lying
flat on the point of rock he could just reach me.
“You must let go and swing yourself clear,” he said in a calm and
collected voice, “and then I will try and pull you up, or we will both go
together. Are you ready?”
By way of answer I let go, first with my left hand and then with the right,
and, as a consequence, swayed out clear of the overshadowing rock, my weight
hanging upon Leo’s arms. It was a dreadful moment. He was a very powerful
man, I knew, but would his strength be equal to lifting me up till I could get
a hold on the top of the spur, when owing to his position he had so little
purchase?
For a few seconds I swung to and fro, while he gathered himself for the effort,
and then I heard his sinews cracking above me, and felt myself lifted up as
though I were a little child, till I got my left arm round the rock, and my
chest was resting on it. The rest was easy; in two or three more seconds I was
up, and we were lying panting side by side, trembling like leaves, and with the
cold perspiration of terror pouring from our skins.
And then, as before, the light went out like a lamp.
For some half-hour we lay thus without speaking a word, and then at length
began to creep along the great spur as best we might in the dense gloom. As we
drew towards the face of the cliff, however, from which the spur sprang out
like a spike from a wall, the light increased, though only a very little, for
it was night overhead. After that the gusts of wind decreased, and we got along
rather better, and at last reached the mouth of the first cave or tunnel. But
now a fresh trouble stared as in the face: our oil was gone, and the lamps
were, no doubt, crushed to powder beneath the fallen rocking-stone. We were
even without a drop of water to stay our thirst, for we had drunk the last in
the chamber of Noot. How were we to see to make our way through this last
boulder-strewn tunnel?
Clearly all that we could do was to trust to our sense of feeling, and attempt
the passage in the dark, so in we crept, fearing that if we delayed to do so
our exhaustion would overcome us, and we should probably lie down and die where
we were.
Oh, the horrors of that last tunnel! The place was strewn with rocks, and we
fell over them, and knocked ourselves up against them till we were bleeding
from a score of wounds. Our only guide was the side of the cavern, which we
kept touching, and so bewildered did we grow in the darkness that we were
several times seized with the terrifying thought that we had turned, and were
travelling the wrong way. On we went, feebly, and still more feebly, for hour
after hour, stopping every few minutes to rest, for our strength was spent.
Once we fell asleep, and, I think, must have slept for some hours, for, when we
woke, our limbs were quite stiff, and the blood from our blows and scratches
had caked, and was hard and dry upon our skin. Then we dragged ourselves on
again, till at last, when despair was entering into our hearts, we once more
saw the light of day, and found ourselves outside the tunnel in the rocky fold
on the outer surface of the cliff that, it will be remembered, led into it.
It was early morning—that we could tell by the feel of the sweet air and
the look of the blessed sky, which we had never hoped to see again. It was, so
near as we knew, an hour after sunset when we entered the tunnel, so it
followed that it had taken us the entire night to crawl through that dreadful
place.
“One more effort, Leo,” I gasped, “and we shall reach the
slope where Billali is, if he hasn’t gone. Come, don’t give
way,” for he had cast himself upon his face. He rose, and, leaning on
each other, we got down that fifty feet or so of cliff—somehow, I have
not the least notion how. I only remember that we found ourselves lying in a
heap at the bottom, and then once more began to drag ourselves along on our
hands and knees towards the grove where She had told Billali to wait her
re-arrival, for we could not walk another foot. We had not gone fifty yards in
this fashion when suddenly one of the mutes emerged from the trees on our left,
through which, I presume, he had been taking a morning stroll, and came running
up to see what sort of strange animals we were. He stared, and stared, and then
held up his hands in horror, and nearly fell to the ground. Next, he started
off as hard as he could for the grove some two hundred yards away. No wonder
that he was horrified at our appearance, for we must have been a shocking
sight. To begin, Leo, with his golden curls turned a snowy white, his clothes
nearly rent from his body, his worn face and his hands a mass of bruises, cuts,
and blood-encrusted filth, was a sufficiently alarming spectacle, as he
painfully dragged himself along the ground, and I have no doubt that I was
little better to look on. I know that two days afterwards when I inspected my
face in some water I scarcely recognised myself. I have never been famous for
beauty, but there was something beside ugliness stamped upon my features that I
have never got rid of until this day, something resembling that wild look with
which a startled person wakes from deep sleep more than anything else that I
can think of. And really it is not to be wondered at. What I do wonder at is
that we escaped at all with our reason.
Presently, to my intense relief, I saw old Billali hurrying towards us, and
even then I could scarcely help smiling at the expression of consternation on
his dignified countenance.
“Oh, my Baboon! my Baboon!” he cried, “my dear son, is it
indeed thee and the Lion? Why, his mane that was ripe as corn is white like the
snow. Whence come ye? and where is the Pig, and where too
She-who-must-be-obeyed?”
“Dead, both dead,” I answered; “but ask no questions; help
us, and give us food and water, or we too shall die before thine eyes. Seest
thou not that our tongues are black for want of water? How, then, can we
talk?”
“Dead!” he gasped. “Impossible. She who never
dies—dead, how can it be?” and then, perceiving, I think, that his
face was being watched by the mutes who had come running up, he checked
himself, and motioned to them to carry us to the camp, which they did.
Fortunately when we arrived some broth was boiling on the fire, and with this
Billali fed us, for we were too weak to feed ourselves, thereby I firmly
believe saving us from death by exhaustion. Then he bade the mutes wash the
blood and grime from us with wet cloths, and after that we were laid down upon
piles of aromatic grass, and instantly fell into the dead sleep of absolute
exhaustion of mind and body.
XXVIII.
OVER THE MOUNTAIN
The next thing I recollect is a feeling of the most dreadful stiffness, and a
sort of vague idea passing through my half-awakened brain that I was a carpet
that had just been beaten. I opened my eyes, and the first thing they fell on
was the venerable countenance of our old friend Billali, who was seated by the
side of the improvised bed upon which I was sleeping, and thoughtfully stroking
his long beard. The sight of him at once brought back to my mind a recollection
of all that we had recently passed through, which was accentuated by the vision
of poor Leo lying opposite to me, his face knocked almost to a jelly, and his
beautiful crowd of curls turned from yellow to white,[1] and I shut my eyes again and groaned.
[1]
Curiously enough, Leo’s hair has lately been to some extent regaining its
colour—that is to say, it is now a yellowish grey, and I am not without
hopes that it will in time come quite right.—L. H. H.
“Thou hast slept long, my Baboon,” said old Billali.
“How long, my father?” I asked.
“A round of the sun and a round of the moon, a day and a night hast thou
slept, and the Lion also. See, he sleepeth yet.”
“Blessed is sleep,” I answered, “for it swallows up
recollection.”
“Tell me,” he said, “what hath befallen you, and what is this
strange story of the death of Her who dieth not. Bethink thee, my son: if this
be true, then is thy danger and the danger of the Lion very great—nay,
almost is the pot red wherewith ye shall be potted, and the stomachs of those
who shall eat ye are already hungry for the feast. Knowest thou not that these
Amahagger, my children, these dwellers in the caves, hate ye? They hate ye as
strangers, they hate ye more because of their brethren whom She put to
the torment for your sake. Assuredly, if once they learn that there is naught
to fear from Hiya, from the terrible One-who-must-be-obeyed, they will slay ye
by the pot. But let me hear thy tale, my poor Baboon.”
Thus adjured, I set to work and told him—not everything, indeed, for I
did not think it desirable to do so, but sufficient for my purpose, which was
to make him understand that She was really no more, having fallen into
some fire, and, as I put it—for the real thing would have been
incomprehensible to him—been burnt up. I also told him some of the
horrors we had undergone in effecting our escape, and these produced a great
impression on him. But I clearly saw that he did not believe in the report of
Ayesha’s death. He believed indeed that we thought that she was dead, but
his explanation was that it had suited her to disappear for a while. Once, he
said, in his father’s time, she had done so for twelve years, and there
was a tradition in the country that many centuries back no one had seen her for
a whole generation, when she suddenly reappeared, and destroyed a woman who had
assumed the position of Queen. I said nothing to this, but only shook my head
sadly. Alas! I knew too well that Ayesha would appear no more, or at any rate
that Billali would never see her again.
“And now,” concluded Billali, “what wouldst thou do, my
Baboon?”
“Nay,” I said, “I know not, my father. Can we not escape from
this country?”
He shook his head.
“It is very difficult. By Kôr ye cannot pass, for ye would be seen, and
as soon as those fierce ones found that ye were alone, well,” and he
smiled significantly, and made a movement as though he were placing a hat on
his head. “But there is a way over the cliff whereof I once spake to
thee, where they drive the cattle out to pasture. Then beyond the pastures are
three days’ journey through the marshes, and after that I know not, but I
have heard that seven days’ journey from thence is a mighty river, which
floweth to the black water. If ye could come thither, perchance ye might
escape, but how can ye come thither?”
“Billali,” I said, “once, thou knowest, I did save thy life.
Now pay back the debt, my father, and save me mine and my friend’s, the
Lion’s. It shall be a pleasant thing for thee to think of when thine hour
comes, and something to set in the scale against the evil doing of thy days, if
perchance thou hast done any evil. Also, if thou be right, and if She
doth but hide herself, surely when she comes again she shall reward
thee.”
“My son the Baboon,” answered the old man, “think not that I
have an ungrateful heart. Well do I remember how thou didst rescue me when
those dogs stood by to see me drown. Measure for measure will I give thee, and
if thou canst be saved, surely I will save thee. Listen: by dawn to-morrow be
prepared, for litters shall be here to bear ye away across the mountains, and
through the marshes beyond. This will I do, saying that it is the word of
She that it be done, and he who obeyeth not the word of She food
is he for the hyænas. Then when ye have crossed the marshes, ye must strike
with your own hands, so that perchance, if good fortune go with you, ye may
live to come to that black water whereof ye told me. And now, see, the Lion
wakes, and ye must eat the food I have made ready for you.”
Leo’s condition when once he was fairly aroused proved not to be so bad
as might have been expected from his appearance, and we both of us managed to
eat a hearty meal, which indeed we needed sadly enough. After this we limped
down to the spring and bathed, and then came back and slept again till evening,
when we once more ate enough for five. Billali was away all that day, no doubt
making arrangements about litters and bearers, for we were awakened in the
middle of the night by the arrival of a considerable number of men in the
little camp.
At dawn the old man himself appeared, and told us that he had by using
She’s dreadful name, though with some difficulty, succeeded in
getting the necessary men and two guides to conduct us across the swamps, and
that he urged us to start at once, at the same time announcing his intention of
accompanying us so as to protect us against treachery. I was much touched by
this act of kindness on the part of that wily old barbarian towards two utterly
defenceless strangers. A three—or in his case, for he would have to
return, six—days’ journey through those deadly swamps was no light
undertaking for a man of his age, but he consented to do it cheerfully in order
to promote our safety. It shows that even among those dreadful
Amahagger—who are certainly with their gloom and their devilish and
ferocious rites by far the most terrible savages that I ever heard
of—there are people with kindly hearts. Of course, self-interest may have
had something to do with it. He may have thought that She would suddenly
reappear and demand an account of us at his hands, but still, allowing for all
deductions, it was a great deal more than we could expect under the
circumstances, and I can only say that I shall for as long as I live cherish a
most affectionate remembrance of my nominal parent, old Billali.
Accordingly, after swallowing some food, we started in the litters, feeling, so
far as our bodies went, wonderfully like our old selves after our long rest and
sleep. I must leave the condition of our minds to the imagination.
Then came a terrible pull up the cliff. Sometimes the ascent was more natural,
more often it was a zig-zag roadway cut, no doubt, in the first instance by the
old inhabitants of Kôr. The Amahagger say they drive their spare cattle over it
once a year to pasture outside; all I know is that those cattle must be
uncommonly active on their feet. Of course the litters were useless here, so we
had to walk.
By midday, however, we reached the great flat top of that mighty wall of rock,
and grand enough the view was from it, with the plain of Kôr, in the centre of
which we could clearly make out the pillared ruins of the Temple of Truth to
the one side, and the boundless and melancholy marsh on the other. This wall of
rock, which had no doubt once formed the lip of the crater, was about a mile
and a half thick, and still covered with clinker. Nothing grew there, and the
only thing to relieve our eyes were occasional pools of rain-water (for rain
had lately fallen) wherever there was a little hollow. Over the flat crest of
this mighty rampart we went, and then came the descent, which, if not so
difficult a matter as the getting up, was still sufficiently break-neck, and
took us till sunset. That night, however, we camped in safety upon the mighty
slopes that rolled away to the marsh beneath.
On the following morning, about eleven o’clock, began our dreary journey
across those awful seas of swamps which I have already described.
For three whole days, through stench and mire, and the all-prevailing flavour
of fear, did our bearers struggle along, till at length we came to open rolling
ground quite uncultivated, and mostly treeless, but covered with game of all
sorts, which lies beyond that most desolate, and without guides utterly
impracticable, district. And here on the following morning we bade farewell,
not without some regret, to old Billali, who stroked his white beard and
solemnly blessed us.
“Farewell, my son the Baboon,” he said, “and farewell to thee
too, oh Lion. I can do no more to help you. But if ever ye come to your
country, be advised, and venture no more into lands that ye know not, lest ye
come back no more, but leave your white bones to mark the limit of your
journeyings. Farewell once more; often shall I think of you, nor wilt thou
forget me, my Baboon, for though thy face is ugly thy heart is true.” And
then he turned and went, and with him went the tall and sullen-looking bearers,
and that was the last that we saw of the Amahagger. We watched them winding
away with the empty litters like a procession bearing dead men from a battle,
till the mists from the marsh gathered round them and hid them, and then, left
utterly desolate in the vast wilderness, we turned and gazed round us and at
each other.
Three weeks or so before four men had entered the marshes of Kôr, and now two
of us were dead, and the other two had gone through adventures and experiences
so strange and terrible that death himself hath not a more fearful countenance.
Three weeks—and only three weeks! Truly time should be measured by
events, and not by the lapse of hours. It seemed like thirty years since we saw
the last of our whale-boat.
“We must strike out for the Zambesi, Leo,” I said, “but God
knows if we shall ever get there.”
Leo nodded. He had become very silent of late, and we started with nothing but
the clothes we stood in, a compass, our revolvers and express rifles, and about
two hundred rounds of ammunition, and so ended the history of our visit to the
ancient ruins of mighty and imperial Kôr.
As for the adventures that subsequently befell us, strange and varied as they
were, I have, after deliberation, determined not to record them here. In these
pages I have only tried to give a short and clear account of an occurrence
which I believe to be unprecedented, and this I have done, not with a view to
immediate publication, but merely to put on paper while they are yet fresh in
our memories the details of our journey and its result, which will, I believe,
prove interesting to the world if ever we determine to make them public. This,
as at present advised, we do not intend should be done during our joint lives.
For the rest, it is of no public interest, resembling as it does the experience
of more than one Central African traveller. Suffice it to say, that we did,
after incredible hardships and privations, reach the Zambesi, which proved to
be about a hundred and seventy miles south of where Billali left us. There we
were for six months imprisoned by a savage tribe, who believed us to be
supernatural beings, chiefly on account of Leo’s youthful face and
snow-white hair. From these people we ultimately escaped, and, crossing the
Zambesi, wandered off southwards, where, when on the point of starvation, we
were sufficiently fortunate to fall in with a half-caste Portuguese
elephant-hunter who had followed a troop of elephants farther inland than he
had ever been before. This man treated us most hospitably, and ultimately
through his assistance we, after innumerable sufferings and adventures, reached
Delagoa Bay, more than eighteen months from the time when we emerged from the
marshes of Kôr, and the very next day managed to catch one of the steamboats
that run round the Cape to England. Our journey home was a prosperous one, and
we set our foot on the quay at Southampton exactly two years from the date of
our departure upon our wild and seemingly ridiculous quest, and I now write
these last words with Leo leaning over my shoulder in my old room in my
college, the very same into which some two-and-twenty years ago my poor friend
Vincey came stumbling on the memorable night of his death, bearing the iron
chest with him.
And that is the end of this history so far as it concerns science and the
outside world. What its end will be as regards Leo and myself is more than I
can guess at. But we feel that is not reached yet. A story that began more than
two thousand years ago may stretch a long way into the dim and distant future.
Is Leo really a reincarnation of the ancient Kallikrates of whom the
inscription tells? Or was Ayesha deceived by some strange hereditary
resemblance? The reader must form his own opinion on this as on many other
matters. I have mine, which is that she made no such mistake.
Often I sit alone at night, staring with the eyes of the mind into the
blackness of unborn time, and wondering in what shape and form the great drama
will be finally developed, and where the scene of its next act will be laid.
And when that final development ultimately occurs, as I have no doubt it
must and will occur, in obedience to a fate that never swerves and a purpose
that cannot be altered, what will be the part played therein by that beautiful
Egyptian Amenartas, the Princess of the royal race of the Pharaohs, for the
love of whom the Priest Kallikrates broke his vows to Isis, and, pursued by the
inexorable vengeance of the outraged Goddess, fled down the coast of Libya to
meet his doom at Kôr?
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