The Greatest Historical Novels of Georg Ebers. Georg Ebers

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The Greatest Historical Novels of Georg Ebers - Georg Ebers


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that of those near to thee, sacrifice thy son’s honor.”

      “And my husband’s, and my own?” exclaimed Katuti. “How can you know what that is! Honor is a word that the slave may utter, but whose meaning he can never comprehend; you rub the weals that are raised on you by blows; to me every finger pointed at me in scorn makes a wound like an ashwood lance with a poisoned tip of brass. Oh ye holy Gods! who can help us?”

      The miserable woman pressed her hands over her eyes, as if to shut out the sight of her own disgrace. The dwarf looked at her compassionately, and said in a changed tone:

      “Dost thou remember the diamond which fell out of Nefert’s handsomest ring? We hunted for it, and could not find it. Next day, as I was going through the room, I trod on something hard; I stooped down and found the stone. What the noble organ of sight, the eye, overlooked, the callous despised sole of the foot found; and perhaps the small slave, Nemu, who knows nothing of honor, may succeed in finding a mode of escape which is not revealed to the lofty soul of his mistress!”

      “What are you thinking of?” asked Katuti.

      “Escape,” answered the dwarf. “Is it true that thy sister Setchem has visited thee, and that you are reconciled?”

      “She offered me her hand, and I took it?”

      “Then go to her. Men are never more helpful than after a reconciliation. The enmity they have driven out, seems to leave as it were a freshly-healed wound which must be touched with caution; and Setchem is of thy own blood, and kind-hearted.”

      “She is not rich,” replied Katuti. “Every palm in her garden comes from her husband, and belongs to her children.”

      “Paaker, too, was with you?”

      “Certainly only by the entreaty of his mother—he hates my son-in-law.”

      “I know it,” muttered the dwarf, “but if Nefert would ask him?”

      The widow drew herself up indignantly. She felt that she had allowed the dwarf too much freedom, and ordered him to leave her alone.

      Nemu kissed her robe and asked timidly:

      “Shall I forget that thou hast trusted me, or am I permitted to consider further as to thy son’s safety?” Katuti stood for a moment undecided, then she said:

      “You were clever enough to find what I carelessly dropped; perhaps some God may show you what I ought to do. Now leave me.”

      “Wilt thou want me early to-morrow?”

      “No.”

      “Then I will go to the Necropolis, and offer a sacrifice.”

      “Go!” said Katuti, and went towards the house with the fatal letter in her hand.

      Nemu stayed behind alone; he looked thoughtfully at the ground, murmuring to himself.

      “She must not lose her honor; not at present, or indeed all will be lost. What is this honor? We all come into the world without it, and most of us go to the grave without knowing it, and very good folks notwithstanding. Only a few who are rich and idle weave it in with the homely stuff of their souls, as the Kuschites do their hair with grease and oils, till it forms a cap of which, though it disfigures them, they are so proud that they would rather have their ears cut off than the monstrous thing. I see, I see—but before I open my mouth I will go to my mother. She knows more than twenty prophets.”

      CHAPTER XII.

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      Before the sun had risen the next morning, Nemu got himself ferried over the Nile, with the small white ass which Mena’s deceased father had given him many years before. He availed himself of the cool hour which precedes the rising of the sun for his ride through the Necropolis.

      Well acquainted as he was with every stock and stone, he avoided the high roads which led to the goal of his expedition, and trotted towards the hill which divides the valley of the royal tombs from the plain of the Nile.

      Before him opened a noble amphitheatre of lofty lime-stone peaks, the background of the stately terrace-temple which the proud ancestress of two kings of the fallen family, the great Hatasu, had erected to their memory, and to the Goddess Hathor.

      Nemu left the sanctuary to his left, and rode up the steep hill-path which was the nearest way from the plain to the valley of the tombs.

      Below him lay a bird’s eye view of the terrace-building of Hatasu, and before him, still slumbering in cool dawn, was the Necropolis with its houses and temples and colossal statues, the broad Nile glistening with white sails under the morning mist; and, in the distant east, rosy with the coming sun, stood Thebes and her gigantic temples.

      But the dwarf saw nothing of the glorious panorama that lay at his feet; absorbed in thought, and stooping over the neck of his ass, he let the panting beast climb and rest at its pleasure.

      When he had reached half the height of the hill, he perceived the sound of footsteps coming nearer and nearer to him.

      The vigorous walker had soon reached him, and bid him good morning, which he civilly returned.

      The hill-path was narrow, and when Nemu observed that the man who followed him was a priest, he drew up his donkey on a level spot, and said reverently:

      “Pass on, holy father; for thy two feet carry thee quicker than my four.”

      “A sufferer needs my help,” replied the leech Nebsecht, Pentaur’s friend, whom we have already seen in the House of Seti, and by the bed of the paraschites’ daughter; and he hastened on so as to gain on the slow pace of the rider.

      Then rose the glowing disk of the sun above the eastern horizon, and from the sanctuaries below the travellers rose up the pious many-voiced chant of praise.

      Nemu slipped off his ass, and assumed an attitude of prayer; the priest did the same; but while the dwarf devoutly fixed his eyes on the new birth of the Sun-God from the eastern range, the priest’s eyes wandered to the earth, and his raised hand fell to pick up a rare fossil shell which lay on the path.

      In a few minutes Nebsecht rose, and Nemu followed him.

      “It is a fine morning,” said the dwarf; “the holy fathers down there seem more cheerful to-day than usual.”

      The surgeon laughed assent. “Do you belong to the Necropolis?” he said. “Who here keeps dwarfs?”

      “No one,” answered the little man. “But I will ask thee a question. Who that lives here behind the hill is of so much importance, that a leech from the House of Seti sacrifices his night’s rest for him?”

      “The one I visit is mean, but the suffering is great,” answered Nebsecht.

      Nemu looked at him with admiration, and muttered, “That is noble, that is——” but he did not finish his speech; he struck his brow and exclaimed, “You are going, by the desire of the Princess Bent-Anat, to the child of the paraschites that was run over. I guessed as much. The food must have an excellent after-taste, if a gentleman rises so early to eat it. How is the poor child doing?”

      There was so much warmth in these last words that Nebsecht, who had thought the dwarf’s reproach uncalled for, answered in a friendly tone:

      “Not so badly; she may be saved.”

      “The Gods be praised!” exclaimed Nemu, while the priest passed on.

      Nebsecht went up and down the hillside at a redoubled pace, and had long taken his place by the couch of the wounded Uarda in the hovel of the paraschites, when Nemu drew near to the abode of his Mother Hekt, from whom Paaker had received the philter.

      The old woman sat before the door of her cave. Near her lay a board, fitted with cross pieces, between which a little boy was stretched


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