<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>The World’s Desire</h1>
<h2 class="no-break">by H. Rider Haggard and Andrew Lang</h2>
<hr />
<h2>Contents</h2>
<table summary="" >
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#pref01">PREFACE</SPAN><br/><br/></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#book01"><b>BOOK I.</b></SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap01">CHAPTER I. THE SILENT ISLE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap02">CHAPTER II. THE VISION OF THE WORLD’S DESIRE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap03">CHAPTER III. THE SLAYING OF THE SIDONIANS</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap04">CHAPTER IV. THE BLOOD-RED SEA</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap05">CHAPTER V. MERIAMUN THE QUEEN</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap06">CHAPTER VI. THE STORY OF MERIAMUN</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap07">CHAPTER VII. THE QUEEN’S VISION</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap08">CHAPTER VIII. THE KA, THE BAI, AND THE KHOU</SPAN><br/><br/></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#book02"><b>BOOK II.</b></SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap09">CHAPTER I. THE PROPHETS OF THE APURA</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap10">CHAPTER II. THE NIGHT OF DREAD</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap11">CHAPTER III. THE BATHS OF BRONZE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap12">CHAPTER IV. THE QUEEN’S CHAMBER</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap13">CHAPTER V. THE CHAPEL PERILOUS</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap14">CHAPTER VI. THE WARDENS OF THE GATE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap15">CHAPTER VII. THE SHADOW IN THE SUNLIGHT</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap16">CHAPTER VIII. THE LOOSING OF THE SPIRIT OF REI</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap17">CHAPTER IX. THE WAKING OF THE SLEEPER</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap18">CHAPTER X. THE OATH OF THE WANDERER</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap19">CHAPTER XI. THE WAKING OF THE WANDERER</SPAN><br/><br/></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#book03"><b>BOOK III.</b></SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap20">CHAPTER I. THE VENGEANCE OF KURRI</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap21">CHAPTER II. THE COMING OF PHARAOH</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap22">CHAPTER III. THE BED OF TORMENT</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap23">CHAPTER IV. PHARAOH’S DREAM</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap24">CHAPTER V. THE VOICE OF THE DEAD</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap25">CHAPTER VI. THE BURNING OF THE SHRINE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap26">CHAPTER VII. THE LAST FIGHT OF ODYSSEUS, LAERTES’ SON</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap27">CHAPTER VIII. “TILL ODYSSEUS COMES!”</SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<h3>To<br/> W. B. RICHMOND, A.R.A.</h3>
<h2><SPAN name="pref01"></SPAN>PREFACE</h2>
<p>The period in which the story of <i>The World’s Desire</i> is cast, was a
period when, as Miss Braddon remarks of the age of the Plantagenets,
“anything might happen.” Recent discoveries, mainly by Dr.
Schliemann and Mr. Flinders Petrie, have shown that there really was much
intercourse between Heroic Greece, the Greece of the Achaeans, and the Egypt of
the Ramessids. This connection, rumoured of in Greek legends, is attested by
Egyptian relics found in the graves of Mycenae, and by very ancient Levantine
pottery, found in contemporary sites in Egypt. Homer himself shows us Odysseus
telling a feigned, but obviously not improbable, tale of an Achaean raid on
Egypt. Meanwhile the sojourn of the Israelites, with their Exodus from the land
of bondage, though not yet found to be recorded on the Egyptian monuments, was
probably part of the great contemporary stir among the peoples. These events,
which are only known through Hebrew texts, must have worn a very different
aspect in the eyes of Egyptians, and of pre-historic Achaean observers, hostile
in faith to the Children of Israel. The topic has since been treated in fiction
by Dr. Ebers, in his <i>Joshua</i>. In such a twilight age, fancy has free
play, but it is a curious fact that, in this romance, modern fancy has
accidentally coincided with that of ancient Greece.</p>
<p>Most of the novel was written, and the apparently “un-Greek”
marvels attributed to Helen had been put on paper, when a part of
Furtwängler’s recent great lexicon of Mythology appeared, with the
article on Helen. The authors of <i>The World’s Desire</i> read it with a
feeling akin to amazement. Their wildest inventions about the Daughter of the
Swan, it seemed, had parallels in the obscurer legends of Hellas. There
actually is a tradition, preserved by Eustathius, that Paris beguiled Helen by
magically putting on the aspect of Menelaus. There is a mediaeval parallel in
the story of Uther and Ygerne, mother of Arthur, and the classical case of Zeus
and Amphitryon is familiar. Again, the blood-dripping ruby of Helen, in the
tale, is mentioned by Servius in his commentary on Virgil (it was pointed out
to one of the authors by Mr. Mackail). But we did not know that the Star of the
story was actually called the “Star-stone” in ancient Greek fable.
The many voices of Helen are alluded to by Homer in the <i>Odyssey</i>: she was
also named <i>Echo</i>, in old tradition. To add that she could assume the
aspect of every man’s first love was easy. Goethe introduces the same
quality in the fair witch of his <i>Walpurgis Nacht</i>. A respectable portrait
of Meriamun’s secret counsellor exists, in pottery, in the British
Museum, though, as it chances, it was not discovered by us until after the
publication of this romance. The Laestrygonian of the Last Battle is introduced
as a pre-historic Norseman. Mr. Gladstone, we think, was perhaps the first to
point out that the Laestrygonians of the <i>Odyssey</i>, with their home on a
fiord in the Land of the Midnight Sun, were probably derived from
travellers’ tales of the North, borne with the amber along the immemorial
Sacred Way. The Magic of Meriamun is in accordance with Egyptian ideas; her
resuscitation of the dead woman, Hataska, has a singular parallel in Reginald
Scot’s <i>Discovery of Witchcraft</i> (1584), where the spell “by
the silence of the Night” is not without poetry. The general conception
of Helen as the World’s Desire, Ideal Beauty, has been dealt with by M.
Paul de St. Victor, and Mr. J. A. Symonds. For the rest, some details of
battle, and of wounds, which must seem very “un-Greek” to critics
ignorant of Greek literature, are borrowed from Homer.</p>
<p class="right">
H. R. H.<br/>
A. L.</p>
<h2>THE WORLD’S DESIRE</h2>
<p class="poem">
Come with us, ye whose hearts are set<br/>
On this, the Present to forget;<br/>
Come read the things whereof ye know<br/>
<i>They were not, and could not be so!</i><br/>
The murmur of the fallen creeds,<br/>
Like winds among wind-shaken reeds<br/>
Along the banks of holy Nile,<br/>
Shall echo in your ears the while;<br/>
The fables of the North and South<br/>
Shall mingle in a modern mouth;<br/>
The fancies of the West and East<br/>
Shall flock and flit about the feast<br/>
Like doves that cooled, with waving wing,<br/>
The banquets of the Cyprian king.<br/>
Old shapes of song that do not die<br/>
Shall haunt the halls of memory,<br/>
And though the Bow shall prelude clear<br/>
Shrill as the song of Gunnar’s spear,<br/>
There answer sobs from lute and lyre<br/>
That murmured of The World’s Desire.</p>
<hr />
<p class="poem">
There lives no man but he hath seen<br/>
The World’s Desire, the fairy queen.<br/>
None but hath seen her to his cost,<br/>
Not one but loves what he has lost.<br/>
None is there but hath heard her sing<br/>
Divinely through his wandering;<br/>
Not one but he has followed far<br/>
The portent of the Bleeding Star;<br/>
Not one but he hath chanced to wake,<br/>
Dreamed of the Star and found the Snake.<br/>
Yet, through his dreams, a wandering fire,<br/>
Still, still she flits, THE WORLD’S DESIRE!</p>
<h2><SPAN name="book01"></SPAN>BOOK I</h2>
<h2><SPAN name="chap01"></SPAN>CHAPTER I.<br/> THE SILENT ISLE</h2>
<p>Across the wide backs of the waves, beneath the mountains, and between the
islands, a ship came stealing from the dark into the dusk, and from the dusk
into the dawn. The ship had but one mast, one broad brown sail with a star
embroidered on it in gold; her stem and stern were built high, and curved like
a bird’s beak; her prow was painted scarlet, and she was driven by oars
as well as by the western wind.</p>
<p>A man stood alone on the half-deck at the bows, a man who looked always
forward, through the night, and the twilight, and the clear morning. He was of
no great stature, but broad-breasted and very wide-shouldered, with many signs
of strength. He had blue eyes, and dark curled locks falling beneath a red cap
such as sailors wear, and over a purple cloak, fastened with a brooch of gold.
There were threads of silver in his curls, and his beard was flecked with
white. His whole heart was following his eyes, watching first for the blaze of
the island beacons out of the darkness, and, later, for the smoke rising from
the far-off hills. But he watched in vain; there was neither light nor smoke on
the grey peak that lay clear against a field of yellow sky.</p>
<p>There was no smoke, no fire, no sound of voices, nor cry of birds. The isle was
deadly still.</p>
<p>As they neared the coast, and neither heard nor saw a sign of life, the
man’s face fell. The gladness went out of his eyes, his features grew
older with anxiety and doubt, and with longing for tidings of his home.</p>
<p>No man ever loved his home more than he, for this was Odysseus, the son of
Laertes—whom some call Ulysses—returned from his unsung second
wandering. The whole world has heard the tale of his first voyage, how he was
tossed for ten years on the sea after the taking of Troy, how he reached home
at last, alone and disguised as a beggar; how he found violence in his house,
how he slew his foes in his own hall, and won his wife again. But even in his
own country he was not permitted to rest, for there was a curse upon him and a
labour to be accomplished. He must wander again till he reached the land of men
who had never tasted salt, nor ever heard of the salt sea. There he must
sacrifice to the Sea-God, and then, at last, set his face homewards. Now he had
endured that curse, he had fulfilled the prophecy, he had angered, by
misadventure, the Goddess who was his friend, and after adventures that have
never yet been told, he had arrived within a bowshot of Ithaca.</p>
<p>He came from strange countries, from the Gates of the Sun and from White Rock,
from the Passing Place of Souls and the people of Dreams.</p>
<p>But he found his own isle more still and strange by far. The realm of Dreams
was not so dumb, the Gates of the Sun were not so still, as the shores of the
familiar island beneath the rising dawn.</p>
<p>This story, whereof the substance was set out long ago by Rei, the instructed
Egyptian priest, tells what he found there, and the tale of the last adventures
of Odysseus, Laertes’ son.</p>
<p>The ship ran on and won the well-known haven, sheltered from wind by two
headlands of sheer cliff. There she sailed straight in, till the leaves of the
broad olive tree at the head of the inlet were tangled in her cordage. Then the
Wanderer, without once looking back, or saying one word of farewell to his
crew, caught a bough of the olive tree with his hand, and swung himself ashore.
Here he kneeled, and kissed the earth, and, covering his head within his cloak,
he prayed that he might find his house at peace, his wife dear and true, and
his son worthy of him.</p>
<p>But not one word of his prayer was to be granted. The Gods give and take, but
on the earth the Gods cannot restore.</p>
<p>When he rose from his knees he glanced back across the waters, but there was
now no ship in the haven, nor any sign of a sail upon the seas.</p>
<p>And still the land was silent; not even the wild birds cried a welcome.</p>
<p>The sun was hardly up, men were scarce awake, the Wanderer said to himself; and
he set a stout heart to the steep path leading up the hill, over the wolds, and
across the ridge of rock that divides the two masses of the island. Up he
climbed, purposing, as of old, to seek the house of his faithful servant, the
swineherd, and learn from him the tidings of his home. On the brow of a hill he
stopped to rest, and looked down on the house of the servant. But the strong
oak palisade was broken, no smoke came from the hole in the thatched roof, and,
as he approached, the dogs did not run barking, as sheep-dogs do, at the
stranger. The very path to the house was overgrown, and dumb with grass; even a
dog’s keen ears could scarcely have heard a footstep.</p>
<p>The door of the swineherd’s hut was open, but all was dark within. The
spiders had woven a glittering web across the empty blackness, a sign that for
many days no man had entered. Then the Wanderer shouted twice, and thrice, but
the only answer was an echo from the hill. He went in, hoping to find food, or
perhaps a spark of fire sheltered under the dry leaves. But all was vacant and
cold as death.</p>
<p>The Wanderer came forth into the warm sunlight, set his face to the hill again,
and went on his way to the city of Ithaca.</p>
<p>He saw the sea from the hill-top glittering as of yore, but there were no brown
sails of fisher-boats on the sea. All the land that should now have waved with
the white corn was green with tangled weeds. Half-way down the rugged path was
a grove of alders, and the basin into which water flowed from the old fountain
of the Nymphs. But no maidens were there with their pitchers; the basin was
broken, and green with mould; the water slipped through the crevices and
hurried to the sea. There were no offerings of wayfarers, rags and pebbles, by
the well; and on the altar of the Nymphs the flame had long been cold. The very
ashes were covered with grass, and a branch of ivy had hidden the stone of
sacrifice.</p>
<p>On the Wanderer pressed with a heavy heart; now the high roof of his own hall
and the wide fenced courts were within his sight, and he hurried forward to
know the worst.</p>
<p>Too soon he saw that the roofs were smokeless, and all the court was deep in
weeds. Where the altar of Zeus had stood in the midst of the court there was
now no altar, but a great, grey mound, not of earth, but of white dust mixed
with black. Over this mound the coarse grass pricked up scantily, like thin
hair on a leprosy.</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer shuddered, for out of the grey mound peeped the charred black
bones of the dead. He drew near, and, lo! the whole heap was of nothing else
than the ashes of men and women. Death had been busy here: here many people had
perished of a pestilence. They had all been consumed on one funeral fire, while
they who laid them there must have fled, for there was no sign of living man.
The doors gaped open, and none entered, and none came forth. The house was
dead, like the people who had dwelt in it.</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer paused where once the old hound Argos had welcomed him and
had died in that welcome. There, unwelcomed, he stood, leaning on his staff.
Then a sudden ray of the sun fell on something that glittered in the heap, and
he touched it with the end of the staff that he had in his hand. It slid
jingling from the heap; it was the bone of a forearm, and that which glittered
on it was a half-molten ring of gold. On the gold lambda these characters were
engraved:</p>
<p class="center">
ΙΚΜΑΛΟΣ
ΜΕΠΟΙΣΕΝ.</p>
<p class="center">
(Icmalios made me.)</p>
<p>At the sight of the armlet the Wanderer fell on the earth, grovelling among the
ashes of the pyre, for he knew the gold ring which he had brought from Ephyre
long ago, for a gift to his wife Penelope. This was the bracelet of the bride
of his youth, and here, a mockery and a terror, were those kind arms in which
he had lain. Then his strength was shaken with sobbing, and his hands clutched
blindly before him, and he gathered dust and cast it upon his head till the
dark locks were defiled with the ashes of his dearest, and he longed to die.</p>
<p>There he lay, biting his hands for sorrow, and for wrath against God and Fate.
There he lay while the sun in the heavens smote him, and he knew it not; while
the wind of the sunset stirred in his hair, and he stirred not. He could not
even shed one tear, for this was the sorest of all the sorrows that he had
known on the waves of the sea, or on land among the wars of men.</p>
<p>The sun fell and the ways were darkened. Slowly the eastern sky grew silver
with the moon. A night-fowl’s voice was heard from afar, it drew nearer;
then through the shadow of the pyre the black wings fluttered into the light,
and the carrion bird fixed its talons and its beak on the Wanderer’s
neck. Then he moved at length, tossed up an arm, and caught the bird of
darkness by the neck, and broke it, and dashed it on the ground. His sick heart
was mad with the little sudden pain, and he clutched for the knife in his
girdle that he might slay himself, but he was unarmed. At last he rose,
muttering, and stood in the moonlight, like a lion in some ruinous palace of
forgotten kings. He was faint with hunger and weak with long lamenting, as he
stepped within his own doors. There he paused on that high threshold of stone
where once he had sat in the disguise of a beggar, that very threshold whence,
on another day, he had shot the shafts of doom among the wooers of his wife and
the wasters of his home. But now his wife was dead: all his voyaging was ended
here, and all his wars were vain. In the white light the house of his kingship
was no more than the ghost of a home, dreadful, unfamiliar, empty of warmth and
love and light. The tables were fallen here and there throughout the long hall;
mouldering bones, from the funeral feast, and shattered cups and dishes lay in
one confusion; the ivory chairs were broken, and on the walls the moonbeams
glistened now and again from points of steel and blades of bronze, though many
swords were dark with rust.</p>
<p>But there, in its gleaming case, lay one thing friendly and familiar. There lay
the Bow of Eurytus, the bow for which great Heracles had slain his own host in
his halls; the dreadful bow that no mortal man but the Wanderer could bend. He
was never used to carry this precious bow with him on shipboard, when he went
to the wars, but treasured it at home, the memorial of a dear friend foully
slain. So now, when the voices of dog, and slave, and child, and wife were
mute, there yet came out of the stillness a word of welcome to the Wanderer.
For this bow, which had thrilled in the grip of a god, and had scattered the
shafts of the vengeance of Heracles, was wondrously made and magical. A spirit
dwelt within it which knew of things to come, which boded the battle from afar,
and therefore always before the slaying of men the bow sang strangely through
the night. The voice of it was thin and shrill, a ringing and a singing of the
string and of the bow. While the Wanderer stood and looked on his weapon, hark!
the bow began to thrill! The sound was faint at first, a thin note, but as he
listened the voice of it in that silence grew clear, strong, angry and
triumphant. In his ears and to his heart it seemed that the wordless chant rang
thus:</p>
<p class="poem">
Keen and low<br/>
Doth the arrow sing<br/>
The Song of the Bow,<br/>
The sound of the string.<br/>
The shafts cry shrill:<br/>
Let us forth again,<br/>
Let us feed our fill<br/>
On the flesh of men.<br/>
Greedy and fleet<br/>
Do we fly from far,<br/>
Like the birds that meet<br/>
For the feast of war,<br/>
Till the air of fight<br/>
With our wings be stirred,<br/>
As it whirrs from the flight<br/>
Of the ravening bird.<br/>
Like the flakes that drift<br/>
On the snow-wind’s breath,<br/>
Many and swift,<br/>
And winged for death—<br/>
Greedy and fleet,<br/>
Do we speed from far,<br/>
Like the birds that meet<br/>
On the bridge of war.<br/>
Fleet as ghosts that wail,<br/>
When the dart strikes true,<br/>
Do the swift shafts hail,<br/>
Till they drink warm dew.<br/>
Keen and low<br/>
Do the grey shafts sing<br/>
The Song of the Bow,<br/>
The sound of the string.</p>
<p>This was the message of Death, and this was the first sound that had broken the
stillness of his home.</p>
<p>At the welcome of this music which spoke to his heart—this music he had
heard so many a time—the Wanderer knew that there was war at hand. He
knew that the wings of his arrows should be swift to fly, and their beaks of
bronze were whetted to drink the blood of men. He put out his hand and took the
bow, and tried the string, and it answered shrill as the song of the swallow.</p>
<p>Then at length, when he heard the bowstring twang to his touch, the fountains
of his sorrow were unsealed; tears came like soft rains on a frozen land, and
the Wanderer wept.</p>
<p>When he had his fill of weeping, he rose, for hunger drove him—hunger
that is of all things the most shameless, being stronger far than sorrow, or
love, or any other desire. The Wanderer found his way through the narrow door
behind the dais, and stumbling now and again over fallen fragments of the home
which he himself had built, he went to the inner, secret storehouse. Even
<i>he</i> could scarcely find the door, for saplings of trees had grown up
about it; yet he found it at last. Within the holy well the water was yet
babbling and shining in the moonlight over the silver sands; and here, too,
there was store of mouldering grain, for the house had been abundantly rich
when the great plague fell upon the people while he was far away. So he found
food to satisfy his hunger, after a sort, and next he gathered together out of
his treasure-chest the beautiful golden armour of unhappy Paris, son of Priam,
the false love of fair Helen. These arms had been taken at the sack of Troy,
and had lain long in the treasury of Menelaus in Sparta; but on a day he had
given them to Odysseus, the dearest of all his guests. The Wanderer clad
himself in this golden gear, and took the sword called “Euryalus’s
Gift,” a bronze blade with a silver hilt, and a sheath of ivory, which a
stranger had given him in a far-off land. Already the love of life had come
back to him, now that he had eaten and drunk, and had heard the Song of the
Bow, the Slayer of Men. He lived yet, and hope lived in him though his house
was desolate, and his wedded wife was dead, and there was none to give him
tidings of his one child, Telemachus. Even so life beat strong in his heart,
and his hands would keep his head if any sea-robbers had come to the city of
Ithaca and made their home there, like hawks in the forsaken nest of an eagle
of the sea. So he clad himself in his armour, and chose out two spears from a
stand of lances, and cleaned them, and girt about his shoulders a quiver full
of shafts, and took in hand his great bow, the Bow of Eurytus, which no other
man could bend.</p>
<p>Then he went forth from the ruined house into the moonlight, went forth for the
last time; for never again did the high roof echo to the footstep of its lord.
Long has the grass grown over it, and the sea-wind wailed!</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap02"></SPAN>CHAPTER II.<br/> THE VISION OF THE WORLD’S DESIRE</h2>
<p>The fragrant night was clear and still, the silence scarce broken by the
lapping of the waves, as the Wanderer went down from his fallen home to the
city on the sea, walking warily, and watching for any light from the houses of
the people. But they were all as dark as his own, many of them roofless and
ruined, for, after the plague, an earthquake had smitten the city. There were
gaping chasms in the road, here and there, and through rifts in the walls of
the houses the moon shone strangely, making ragged shadows. At last the
Wanderer reached the Temple of Athene, the Goddess of War; but the roof had
fallen in, the pillars were overset, and the scent of wild thyme growing in the
broken pavement rose where he walked. Yet, as he stood by the door of the fane,
where he had burned so many a sacrifice, at length he spied a light blazing
from the windows of a great chapel by the sea. It was the Temple of Aphrodite,
the Queen of Love, and from the open door a sweet savour of incense and a
golden blaze rushed forth till they were lost in the silver of the moonshine
and in the salt smell of the sea. Thither the Wanderer went slowly, for his
limbs were swaying with weariness, and he was half in a dream. Yet he hid
himself cunningly in the shadow of a long avenue of myrtles, for he guessed
that sea-robbers were keeping revel in the forsaken shrine. But he heard no
sound of singing and no tread of dancing feet within the fane of the Goddess of
Love; the sacred plot of the goddess and her chapels were silent. He hearkened
awhile, and watched, till at last he took courage, drew near the doors, and
entered the holy place. But in the tall, bronze braziers there were no faggots
burning, nor were there torches lighted in the hands of the golden men and
maids, the images that stand within the fane of Aphrodite. Yet, if he did not
dream, nor take moonlight for fire, the temple was bathed in showers of gold by
a splendour of flame. None might see its centre nor its fountain; it sprang
neither from the altar nor the statue of the goddess, but was everywhere
imminent, a glory not of this world, a fire untended and unlit. And the painted
walls with the stories of the loves of men and gods, and the carven pillars and
the beams, and the roof of green, were bright with flaming fire!</p>
<p>At this the Wanderer was afraid, knowing that an immortal was at hand; for the
comings and goings of the gods were attended, as he had seen, by this wonderful
light of unearthly fire. So he bowed his head, and hid his face as he sat by
the altar in the holiest of the holy shrine, and with his right hand he grasped
the horns of the altar. As he sat there, perchance he woke, and perchance he
slept. However it was, it seemed to him that soon there came a murmuring and a
whispering of the myrtle leaves and laurels, and a sound in the tops of the
pines, and then his face was fanned by a breath more cold than the wind that
wakes the dawn. At the touch of this breath the Wanderer shuddered, and the
hair on his flesh stood up, so cold was the strange wind.</p>
<p>There was silence; and he heard a voice, and he knew that it was the voice of
no mortal, but of a goddess. For the speech of goddesses was not strange in his
ears; he knew the clarion cry of Athene, the Queen of Wisdom and of War; and
the winning words of Circe, the Daughter of the Sun, and the sweet song of
Calypso’s voice as she wove with her golden shuttle at the loom. But now
the words came sweeter than the moaning of doves, more soft than sleep. So came
the golden voice, whether he woke or whether he dreamed.</p>
<p>“Odysseus, thou knowest me not, nor am I thy lady, nor hast thou ever
been my servant! Where is she, the Queen of the Air, Athene, and why comest
<i>thou</i> here as a suppliant at the knees of the daughter of Dione?”</p>
<p>He answered nothing, but he bowed his head in deeper sorrow.</p>
<p>The voice spake again:</p>
<p>“Behold, thy house is desolate; thy hearth is cold. The wild hare breeds
on thy hearthstone, and the night-bird roosts beneath thy roof-tree. Thou hast
neither child nor wife nor native land, and <i>she</i> hath forsaken
thee—thy Lady Athene. Many a time didst thou sacrifice to her the thighs
of kine and sheep, but didst thou ever give so much as a pair of dove to
<i>me</i>? Hath she left thee, as the Dawn forsook Tithonus, because there are
now threads of silver in the darkness of thy hair? Is the wise goddess fickle
as a nymph of the woodland or the wells? Doth she love a man only for the bloom
of his youth? Nay, I know not; but this I know, that on thee, Odysseus, old age
will soon be hastening—old age that is pitiless, and ruinous, and weary,
and weak—age that cometh on all men, and that is hateful to the Gods.
Therefore, Odysseus, ere yet it be too late, I would bow even thee to my will,
and hold thee for my thrall. For I am she who conquers all things living: Gods
and beasts and men. And hast thou thought that thou only shalt escape
Aphrodite? Thou that hast never loved as I would have men love; thou that hast
never obeyed me for an hour, nor ever known the joy and the sorrow that are
mine to give? For thou didst but endure the caresses of Circe, the Daughter of
the Sun, and thou wert aweary in the arms of Calypso, and the Sea King’s
daughter came never to her longing. As for her who is dead, thy dear wife
Penelope, thou didst love her with a loyal heart, but never with a heart of
fire. Nay, she was but thy companion, thy housewife, and the mother of thy
child. She was mingled with all the memories of the land thou lovest, and so
thou gavest her a little love. But she is dead; and thy child too is no more;
and thy very country is as the ashes of a forsaken hearth where once was a camp
of men. What have all thy wars and wanderings won for thee, all thy labours,
and all the adventures thou hast achieved? For what didst thou seek among the
living and the dead? Thou soughtest that which all men seek—thou
soughtest <i>The World’s Desire</i>. They find it not, nor hast thou
found it, Odysseus; and thy friends are dead; thy land is dead; nothing lives
but Hope. But the life that lies before thee is new, without a remnant of the
old days, except for the bitterness of longing and remembrance. Out of this new
life, and the unborn hours, wilt thou not give, what never before thou gavest,
one hour to me, to be my servant?”</p>
<p>The voice, as it seemed, grew softer and came nearer, till the Wanderer heard
it whisper in his very ear, and with the voice came a divine fragrance. The
breath of her who spoke seemed to touch his neck; the immortal tresses of the
Goddess were mingled with the dark curls of his hair.</p>
<p>The voice spake again:</p>
<p>“Nay, Odysseus, didst thou not once give me one little hour? Fear not,
for thou shalt not see me at this time, but lift thy head and look on The
World’s Desire!”</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer lifted his head, and he saw, as it were in a picture or in a
mirror of bronze, the vision of a girl. She was more than mortal tall, and
though still in the first flower of youth, and almost a child in years, she
seemed fair as a goddess, and so beautiful that Aphrodite herself may perchance
have envied this loveliness. She was slim and gracious as a young shoot of a
palm tree, and her eyes were fearless and innocent as a child’s. On her
head she bore a shining urn of bronze, as if she were bringing water from the
wells, and behind her was the foliage of a plane tree. Then the Wanderer knew
her, and saw her once again as he had seen her, when in his boyhood he had
journeyed to the Court of her father, King Tyndareus. For, as he entered
Sparta, and came down the hill Taygetus, and as his chariot wheels flashed
through the ford of Eurotas, he had met her there on her way from the river.
There, in his youth, his eyes had gazed on the loveliness of Helen, and his
heart had been filled with the desire of the fairest of women, and like all the
princes of Achaia he had sought her hand in marriage. But Helen was given to
another man, to Menelaus, Atreus’s son, of an evil house, that the knees
of many might be loosened in death, and that there might be a song in the ears
of men in after time.</p>
<p>As he beheld the vision of young Helen, the Wanderer too grew young again. But
as he gazed with the eyes and loved with the first love of a boy, she melted
like a mist, and out of the mist came another vision. He saw himself, disguised
as a beggar, beaten and bruised, yet seated in a long hall bright with gold,
while a woman bathed his feet, and anointed his head with oil. And the face of
the woman was the face of the maiden, and even more beautiful, but sad with
grief and with an ancient shame. Then he remembered how once he had stolen into
Troy town from the camp of the Achæans, and how he had crept in a
beggar’s rags within the house of Priam to spy upon the Trojans, and how
Helen, the fairest of women, had bathed him, and anointed him with oil, and
suffered him to go in peace, all for the memory of the love that was between
them of old. As he gazed, that picture faded and melted in the mist, and again
he bowed his head, and kneeled by the golden altar of the Goddess, crying:</p>
<p>“Where beneath the sunlight dwells the golden Helen?” For now he
had only one desire: to look on Helen again before he died.</p>
<p>Then the voice of the Goddess seemed to whisper in his ear:</p>
<p>“Did I not say truth, Odysseus? Wast not thou my servant for one hour,
and did not Love save thee in the city of the Trojans on that night when even
Wisdom was of no avail?”</p>
<p>He answered: “Yea, O Queen!”</p>
<p>“Behold then,” said the voice, “I would again have mercy and
be kind to thee, for if I aid thee not thou hast no more life left among men.
Home, and kindred, and native land thou hast none; and, but for me, thou must
devour thine own heart and be lonely till thou diest. Therefore I breathe into
thy heart a sweet forgetfulness of every sorrow, and I breathe love into thee
for her who was thy first love in the beginning of thy days.</p>
<p>“For Helen is living yet upon the earth. And I will send thee on the
quest of Helen, and thou shalt again take joy in war and wandering. Thou shalt
find her in a strange land, among a strange people, in a strife of gods and
men; and the wisest and bravest of man shall sleep at last in the arms of the
fairest of women. But learn this, Odysseus; thou must set thy heart on no other
woman, but only on Helen.</p>
<p>“And I give thee a sign to know her by in a land of magic, and among
women that deal in sorceries.</p>
<p>“<i>On the breast of Helen a jewel shines, a great star-stone, the gift I
gave her on her wedding-night when she was bride to Menelaus. From that stone
fall red drops like blood, and they drip on her vestment, and there vanish, and
do not stain it.</i></p>
<p>“By the Star of Love shalt thou know her; by the star shalt thou swear to
her; and if thou knowest not the portent of the Bleeding Star, or if thou
breakest that oath, never in this life, Odysseus, shalt thou win the golden
Helen! And thine own death shall come from the water—the swiftest
death—that the saying of the dead prophet may be fulfilled. Yet first
shalt thou lie in the arms of the golden Helen.”</p>
<p>The Wanderer answered:</p>
<p>“Queen, how may this be, for I am alone on a seagirt isle, and I have no
ship and no companions to speed me over the great gulf of the sea?”</p>
<p>Then the voice answered:</p>
<p>“Fear not! the gods can bring to pass even greater things than these. Go
from my house, and lie down to sleep in my holy ground, within the noise of the
wash of the waves. There sleep, and take thy rest! Thy strength shall come back
to thee, and before the setting of the new sun thou shalt be sailing on the
path to The World’s Desire. But first drink from the chalice on my altar.
Fare thee well!”</p>
<p>The voice died into silence, like the dying of music. The Wanderer awoke and
lifted his head, but the light had faded, and the temple was grey in the first
waking of the dawn. Yet there, on the altar where no cup had been, stood a deep
chalice of gold, full of red wine to the brim. This the Wanderer lifted and
drained—a draught of Nepenthe, the magic cup that puts trouble out of
mind. As he drank, a wave of sweet hope went over his heart, and buried far
below it the sorrow of remembrance, and the trouble of the past, and the
longing desire for loves that were no more.</p>
<p>With a light step he went forth like a younger man, taking the two spears in
his hand, and the bow upon his back, and he lay down beneath a great rock that
looked toward the deep, and there he slept.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap03"></SPAN>CHAPTER III.<br/> THE SLAYING OF THE SIDONIANS</h2>
<p>Morning broke in the East. A new day dawned upon the silent sea, and on the
world of light and sound. The sunrise topped the hill at last, and fell upon
the golden raiment of the Wanderer where he slept, making it blaze like living
fire. As the sun touched him, the prow of a black ship stole swiftly round the
headland, for the oarsmen drove her well with the oars. Any man who saw her
would have known her to be a vessel of the merchants of Sidon—the most
cunning people and the greediest of gain—for on her prow were two
big-headed shapes of dwarfs, with gaping mouths and knotted limbs. Such gods as
those were worshipped by the Sidonians. She was now returning from Albion, an
isle beyond the pillars of Heracles and the gates of the great sea, where much
store of tin is found; and she had rich merchandise on board. On the half-deck
beside the steersman was the captain, a thin, keen-eyed sailor, who looked
shoreward and saw the sun blaze on the golden armour of the Wanderer. They were
so far off that he could not see clearly what it was that glittered yellow, but
all that glittered yellow was a lure for him, and gold drew him on as iron
draws the hands of heroes. So he bade the helmsman steer straight in, for the
sea was deep below the rock, and there they all saw a man lying asleep in
golden armour. They whispered together, laughing silently, and then sprang
ashore, taking with them a rope of twisted ox-hide, a hawser of the ship, and a
strong cable of byblus, the papyrus plant. On these ropes they cast a loop and
a running knot, a lasso for throwing, so that they might capture the man in
safety from a distance. With these in their hands they crept up the cliff, for
their purpose was to noose the man in golden armour, and drag him on board
their vessel, and carry him to the mouth of the river of Egypt, and there sell
him for a slave to the King. For the Sidonians, who were greedy of everything,
loved nothing better than to catch free men and women, who might be purchased,
by mere force or guile, and then be sold again for gold and silver and cattle.
Many kings’ sons had thus been captured by them, and had seen the day of
slavery in Babylon, or Tyre, or Egyptian Thebes, and had died sadly, far from
the Argive land.</p>
<p>So the Sidonians went round warily, and, creeping in silence over the short
grass and thyme towards the Wanderer, were soon as near to him as a child could
throw a stone. Like shepherds who seek to net a sleeping lion, they came
cunningly; yet not so cunningly but that the Wanderer heard them through his
dreams, and turned and sat up, looking around him half awake. But as he woke
the noose fell about his neck and over his arms and they drew it hard, and
threw him on his back. Before they could touch him he was on his feet again,
crying his war-cry terribly, the cry that shook the towers of Ilium, and he
rushed upon them, clutching at his sword hilt. The men who were nearest him and
had hold of the rope let it fall from their hands and fled, but the others
swung behind him, and dragged with all their force. If his arms had been free
so that he might draw his sword, it would have gone ill with them, many as they
were, for the Sidonians have no stomach for sword blades; but his arms were
held in the noose. Yet they did not easily master him; but, as those who had
fled came back, and they all laid hands on the rope together, they overpowered
him by main force at last, and hauled him, step by step, till he stumbled on a
rock and fell. Then they rushed at him, and threw themselves all upon his body,
and bound him with ropes in cunning sailor knots. But the booty was dearly won,
and they did not all return alive; for he crushed one man with his knees till
the breath left him, and the thigh of another he broke with a blow of his foot.</p>
<p>But at last his strength was spent, and they had him like a bird in a snare;
so, by might and main, they bore him to their ship, and threw him down on the
fore-deck of the vessel. There they mocked him, though they were half afraid;
for even now he was terrible. Then they hauled up the sail again and sat down
to the oars. The wind blew fair for the mouth of the Nile and the slave-market
of Egypt. The wind was fair, and their hearts were light, for they had been
among the first of their people to deal with the wild tribes of the island
Albion, and had bought tin and gold for African sea shells and rude glass
beads from Egypt. And now, near the very end of their adventure, they had
caught a man whose armour and whose body were worth a king’s ransom. It
was a lucky voyage, they said, and the wind was fair!</p>
<p>The rest of the journey was long, but in well-known waters. They passed by
Cephalonia and the rock of Ægilips, and wooded Zacynthus, and Samê, and of all
those isles he was the lord, whom they were now selling into captivity. But he
lay still, breathing heavily, and he stirred but once—that was when they
neared Zacynthus. Then he strained his head round with a mighty strain, and he
saw the sun go down upon the heights of rocky Ithaca, for that last time of
all.</p>
<p>So the swift ship ran along the coast, slipping by forgotten towns. Past the
Echinean isles, and the Elian shore, and pleasant Eirene they sped, and it was
dusk ere they reached Dorion. Deep night had fallen when they ran by Pylos; and
the light of the fires in the hall of Pisistratus, the son of Nestor the Old,
shone out across the sandy sea-coast and the sea. But when they were come near
Malea, the southernmost point of land, where two seas meet, there the storm
snatched them, and drove them ever southwards, beyond Crete, towards the mouth
of the Nile. They scudded long before the storm-wind, losing their reckoning,
and rushing by island temples that showed like ghosts through the mist, and
past havens which they could not win. On they fled, and the men would gladly
have lightened the ship by casting the cargo overboard; but the captain watched
the hatches with a sword and two bronze-tipped spears in his hand. He would
sink or swim with the ship; he would go down with his treasure, or reach Sidon,
the City of Flowers, and build a white house among the palms by the waters of
Bostren, and never try the sea again.</p>
<p>So he swore; and he would not let them cast the Wanderer overboard, as they
desired, because he had brought bad luck. “He shall bring a good price in
Tanis,” cried the captain. And at last the storm abated, and the
Sidonians took heart, and were glad like men escaped from death; so they
sacrificed and poured forth wine before the dwarf-gods on the prow of their
vessel, and burned incense on their little altar. In their mirth, and to mock
the Wanderer, they hung his sword and his shield against the mast, and his
quiver and his bow they arrayed in the fashion of a trophy; and they mocked
him, believing that he knew no word of their speech. But he knew it well, as he
knew the speech of the people of Egypt; for he had seen the cities of many men,
and had spoken with captains and mercenaries from many a land in the great
wars.</p>
<p>The Sidonians, however, jibed and spoke freely before him, saying how they were
bound for the rich city of Tanis, on the banks of the River of Egypt, and how
the captain was minded to pay his toll to Pharaoh with the body and the armour
of the Wanderer. That he might seem the comelier, and a gift more fit for a
king, the sailors slackened his bonds a little, and brought him dried meat and
wine, and he ate till his strength returned to him. Then he entreated them by
signs to loosen the cord that bound his legs; for indeed his limbs were dead
through the strength of the bonds, and his armour was eating into his flesh. At
his prayer they took some pity of him and loosened his bonds again, and he lay
upon his back, moving his legs to and fro till his strength came back.</p>
<p>So they sailed southward ever, through smooth waters and past the islands that
lie like water-lilies in the midland sea. Many a strange sight they saw:
vessels bearing slaves, whose sighing might be heard above the sighing of wind
and water—young men and maidens of Ionia and Achaia, stolen by
slave-traders into bondage; now they would touch at the white havens of a
peaceful city; and again they would watch a smoke on the sea-line all day,
rising black into the heavens; but by nightfall the smoke would change to a
great roaring fire from the beacons of a beleaguered island town; the fire
would blaze on the masts of the ships of the besiegers, and show blood-red on
their sails, and glitter on the gilded shields that lined the bulwarks of their
ships. But the Sidonians sped on till, one night, they anchored off a little
isle that lies over against the mouth of the Nile. Beneath this isle they
moored the ship, and slept, most of them, ashore.</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer began to plot a way to escape, though the enterprise seemed
desperate enough. He was lying in the darkness of the hold, sleepless and sore
with his bonds, while his guard watched under an awning in the moonlight on the
deck. They dreamed so little of his escaping that they visited him only by
watches, now and again; and, as it chanced, the man whose turn it was to see
that all was well fell asleep. Many a thought went through the prisoner’s
mind, and now it seemed to him that the vision of the Goddess was only a vision
of sleep, which came, as they said, through the false Gates of Ivory, and not
through the Gates of Horn. So he was to live in slavery after all, a king no
longer, but a captive, toiling in the Egyptian mines of Sinai, or a soldier at
a palace gate, till he died. Thus he brooded, till out of the stillness came a
thin, faint, thrilling sound from the bow that hung against the mast over his
head, the bow that he never thought to string again. There was a noise of a
singing of the bow and of the string, and the wordless song shaped itself thus
in the heart of the Wanderer:</p>
<p class="poem">
Lo! the hour is nigh<br/>
And the time to smite,<br/>
When the foe shall fly<br/>
From the arrow’s flight!<br/>
Let the bronze bite deep!<br/>
Let the war-birds fly<br/>
Upon them that sleep<br/>
And are ripe to die!<br/>
Shrill and low<br/>
Do the grey shafts sing<br/>
The Song of the Bow,<br/>
The sound of the string!</p>
<p>Then the low music died into the silence, and the Wanderer knew that the next
sun would not set on the day of slavery, and that his revenge was near. His
bonds would be no barrier to his vengeance; they would break like burnt tow, he
knew, in the fire of his anger. Long since, in his old days of wandering,
Calypso, his love, had taught him in the summer leisure of her sea-girt isle
how to tie the knots that no man could untie, and to undo all the knots that
men can bind. He remembered this lesson in the night when the bow sang of war.
So he thought no more of sleeping, but cunningly and swiftly unknotted all the
cords and the bonds which bound him to a bar of iron in the hold. He might have
escaped now, perhaps, if he had stolen on deck without waking the guards, dived
thence and swam under water towards the island, where he might have hidden
himself in the bush. But he desired revenge no less than freedom, and had set
his heart on coming in a ship of his own, and with all the great treasure of
the Sidonians, before the Egyptian King.</p>
<p>With this in his mind, he did not throw off the cords, but let them lie on his
arms and legs and about his body, as if they were still tied fast. But he
fought against sleep, lest in moving when he woke he might reveal the trick,
and be bound again. So he lay and waited, and in the morning the sailors came
on board, and mocked at him again. In his mirth one of the men took a dish of
meat and of lentils, and set it a little out of the Wanderer’s reach as
he lay bound, and said in the Phoenician tongue:</p>
<p>“Mighty lord, art thou some god of Javan” (for so the Sidonians
called the Achæans), “and wilt thou deign to taste our sacrifice? Is not
the savour sweet in the nostrils of my lord? Why will he not put forth his hand
to touch our offering?”</p>
<p>Then the heart of Odysseus muttered sullenly within him, in wrath at the
insolence of the man. But he constrained himself and smiled, and said:</p>
<p>“Wilt thou not bring the mess a very little nearer, my friend, that I may
smell the sweet incense of the sacrifice?”</p>
<p>They were amazed when they heard him speak in their own tongue; but he who held
the dish brought it nearer, like a man that angers a dog, now offering the
meat, and now taking it away.</p>
<p>So soon as the man was within reach, the Wanderer sprang out, the loosened
bonds falling at his feet, and smote the sailor beneath the ear with his
clenched fist. The blow was so fierce, for all his anger went into it, that it
crushed the bone, and drove the man against the mast of the ship so that the
strong mast shook. Where he fell, there he lay, his feet kicking the floor of
the hold in his death-pain.</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer snatched from the mast his bow and his short sword, slung the
quiver about his shoulders, and ran on to the raised decking of the prow.</p>
<p>The bulwarks of the deck were high, and the vessel was narrow, and before the
sailors could stir for amazement the Wanderer had taken his stand behind the
little altar and the dwarf-gods. Here he stood with an arrow on the string, and
the bow drawn to his ear, looking about him terribly.</p>
<p>Now panic and dread came on the Sidonians when they saw him standing thus, and
one of the sailors cried:</p>
<p>“Alas! what god have we taken and bound? Our ship may not contain him.
Surely he is Resef Mikal, the God of the Bow, whom they of Javan call Apollo.
Nay, let us land him on the isle and come not to blows with him, but entreat
his mercy, lest he rouse the waves and the winds against us.”</p>
<p>But the captain of the ship of the Sidonians cried:</p>
<p>“Not so, ye knaves! Have at him, for he is no god, but a mortal man; and
his armour is worth many a yoke of oxen!”</p>
<p>Then he bade some of them climb the decking at the further end of the ship, and
throw spears at him thence; and he called others to bring up one of the long
spears and charge him with that. Now these were huge pikes, that were wielded
by five or six men at once, and no armour could withstand them; they were used
in the fights to drive back boarders, and to ward off attacks on ships which
were beached on shore in the sieges of towns.</p>
<p>The men whom the captain appointed little liked the task, for the long spears
were laid on tressels along the bulwarks, and to reach them and unship them it
was needful to come within range of the bow. But the sailors on the further
deck threw all their spears at once, while five men leaped on the deck where
the Wanderer stood. He loosed the bowstring and the shaft sped on its way;
again he drew and loosed, and now two of them had fallen beneath his arrows,
and one was struck by a chance blow from a spear thrown from the further deck,
and the other two leaped back into the hold.</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer shouted from the high decking of the prow in the speech of
the Sidonians:</p>
<p>“Ye dogs, ye have sailed on your latest seafaring, and never again shall
ye bring the hour of slavery on any man.”</p>
<p>So he cried, and the sailors gathered together in the hold, and took counsel
how they should deal with him. But meanwhile the bow was silent, and of those
on the hinder deck who were casting spears, one dropped and the others quickly
fled to their fellows below, for on the deck they had no cover.</p>
<p>The sun was now well risen, and shone on the Wanderer’s golden mail, as
he stood alone on the decking, with his bow drawn. The sun shone, there was
silence, the ship swung to her anchor; and still he waited, looking down, his
arrow pointing at the level of the deck to shoot at the first head which rose
above the planking. Suddenly there was a rush of men on to the further decking,
and certain of them tore the shields that lined the bulwarks from their pins,
and threw them down to those who were below, while others cast a shower of
spears at the Wanderer. Some of the spears he avoided; others leaped back from
his mail; others stood fast in the altar and in the bodies of the dwarf-gods;
while he answered with an arrow that did not miss its aim. But his eyes were
always watching most keenly the hatches nearest him, whence a gangway ran down
to the lower part of the ship, where the oarsmen sat; for only thence could
they make a rush on him. As he watched and drew an arrow from the quiver on his
shoulder, he felt, as it were, a shadow between him and the deck. He glanced up
quickly, and there, on the yard above his head, a man, who had climbed the mast
from behind, was creeping down to drop on him from above. Then the Wanderer
snatched a short spear and cast it at the man. The spear sped quicker than a
thought, and pinned his two hands to the yard so that he hung there helpless,
shrieking to his friends. But the arrows of the Wanderer kept raining on the
men who stood on the further deck, and presently some of them, too, leaped down
in terror, crying that he was a god and not a man, while others threw
themselves into the sea, and swam for the island.</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer himself waited no longer, seeing them all amazed, but he drew
his sword and leaped down among them with a cry like a sea-eagle swooping on
seamews in the crevice of a rock. To right and left he smote with the short
sword, making a havoc and sparing none, for the sword ravened in his hand. And
some fell over the benches and oars, but such of the sailors as could flee
rushed up the gangway into the further deck, and thence sprang overboard, while
those who had not the luck to flee fell where they stood, and scarcely struck a
blow. Only the captain of the ship, knowing that all was lost, turned and threw
a spear in the Wanderer’s face. But he watched the flash of the bronze
and stooped his head, so that the spear struck only the golden helm and pierced
it through, but scarcely grazed his head. Now the Wanderer sprang on the
Sidonian captain, and smote him with the flat of his sword so that he fell
senseless on the deck, and then he bound him hand and foot with cords as he
himself had been bound, and made him fast to the iron bar in the hold. Next he
gathered up the dead in his mighty arms, and set them against the bulwarks of
the fore-deck—harvesting the fruits of War. Above the deck the man who
had crept along the yard was hanging by his two hands which the spear had
pinned together to the yard.</p>
<p>“Art thou there, friend?” cried the Wanderer, mocking him.
“Hast thou chosen to stay with me rather than go with thy friends, or
seek new service? Nay, then, as thou art so staunch, abide there and keep a
good look-out for the river mouth and the market where thou shalt sell me for a
great price.” So he spoke, but the man was already dead of pain and fear.
Then the Wanderer unbuckled his golden armour, which clanged upon the deck, and
drew fresh water from the hold to cleanse himself, for he was stained like a
lion that has devoured an ox. Next, with a golden comb he combed his long dark
curls, and he gathered his arrows out of the bodies of the dead, and out of the
thwarts and the sides of the ship, cleansed them, and laid them back in the
quiver. When all this was ended he put on his armour again; but strong as he
was, he could not tear the spear from the helm without breaking the gold; so he
snapped the shaft and put on the helmet with the point of the javelin still
fixed firm in the crest, as Fate would have it so, and this was the beginning
of his sorrows. Next he ate meat and bread, and drank wine, and poured forth
some of the wine before his gods. Lastly he dragged up the heavy stone with
which the ship was moored, a stone heavier far, they say, than two other men
could lift. He took the tiller in his hand; the steady north wind, the Etesian
wind, kept blowing in the sails, and he steered straight southward for the
mouths of the Nile.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap04"></SPAN>CHAPTER IV.<br/> THE BLOOD-RED SEA</h2>
<p>A hard fight it had been and a long, and the Wanderer was weary. He took the
tiller of the ship in his hand, and steered for the South and for the noonday
sun, which was now at his highest in the heavens. But suddenly the bright light
of the sky was darkened and the air was filled with the rush, and the murmur,
and the winnowing of innumerable wings. It was as if all the birds that have
their homes and seek their food in the great salt marsh of Cayster had risen
from the South and had flown over sea in one hour, for the heaven was darkened
with their flight, and loud with the call of cranes and the whistling cry of
the wild ducks. So dark was the thick mass of flying fowl, that a flight of
swans shone snowy against the black cloud of their wings. At the view of them
the Wanderer caught his bow eagerly into his hand and set an arrow on the
string, and, taking a careful aim at the white wedge of birds, he shot a wild
swan through the breast as it swept high over the mast. Then, with all the
speed of its rush, the wild white swan flashed down like lightning into the sea
behind the ship. The Wanderer watched its fall, when, lo! the water where the
dead swan fell splashed up as red as blood and all afoam! The long silver wings
and snowy plumage floated on the surface flecked with blood-red stains, and the
Wanderer marvelled as he bent over the bulwarks and gazed steadily upon the
sea. Then he saw that the wide sea round the ship was covered, as far as the
eye could reach, as it were with a blood-red scum. Hither and thither the red
stain was tossed like foam, yet beneath, where the deep wave divided, the
Wanderer saw that the streams of the sea were grey and green below the crimson
dye. As he watched he saw, too, that the red froth was drifted always onward
from the South and from the mouth of the River of Egypt, for behind the wake of
the ship it was most red of all, though he had not marked it when the battle
raged. But in front the colour grew thin, as if the stain that the river washed
down was all but spent. In his heart the Wanderer thought, as any man must have
deemed, that on the banks of the River of Egypt there had been some battle of
great nations, and that the War God had raged furiously, wherefore the holy
river as it ran forth stained all the sacred sea. Where war was, there was his
home, no other home had he now, and all the more eagerly he steered right on to
see what the Gods would send him. The flight of birds was over and past; it was
two hours after noon, the light was high in the heaven, when, as he gazed,
another shadow fell on him, for the sun in mid-heaven grew small, and red as
blood. Slowly a mist rose up over it from the South, a mist that was thin but
as black as night. Beyond, to the southward, there was a bank of cloud like a
mountain wall, steep, and polished, and black, tipped along the ragged crest
with fire, and opening ever and again with flashes of intolerable splendour,
while the bases were scrawled over with lightning like a written scroll. Never
had the Wanderer in all his voyaging on the sea and on the great River Oceanus
that girdles the earth, and severs the dead from the living men—never had
he beheld such a darkness. Presently he came as it were within the jaws of it,
dark as a wolf’s mouth, so dark that he might not see the corpses on the
deck, nor the mast, nor the dead man swinging from the yard, nor the captain of
the Phoenicians who groaned aloud below, praying to his gods. But in the wake
of the ship there was one break of clear blue sky on the horizon, in which the
little isle where he had slain the Sidonians might be discerned far off, as
bright and white as ivory.</p>
<p>Now, though he knew it not, the gates of his own world were closing behind the
Wanderer for ever. To the North, whence he came, lay the clear sky, and the
sunny capes and isles, and the airy mountains of the Argive lands, white with
the temples of familiar Gods. But in face of him, to the South, whither he
went, was a cloud of darkness and a land of darkness itself. There were things
to befall more marvellous than are told in any tale; there was to be a war of
the peoples, and of the Gods, the True Gods and the False, and there he should
find the last embraces of Love, the False Love and the True.</p>
<p>Foreboding somewhat of the perils that lay in front, the Wanderer was tempted
to shift his course and sail back to the sunlight. But he was one that had
never turned his hand from the plough, nor his foot from the path, and he
thought that now his path was fore-ordained. So he lashed the tiller with a
rope, and groped his way with his hands along the deck till he reached the
altar of the dwarf-gods, where the embers of the sacrifice still were glowing
faintly. Then with his sword he cut some spear-shafts and broken arrows into
white chips, and with them he filled a little brazier, and taking the seed of
fire from the altar set light to it from beneath. Presently the wood blazed up
through the noonday night, and the fire flickered and flared on the faces of
the dead men that lay about the deck, rolling to larboard and to starboard, as
the vessel lurched, and the flame shone red on the golden armour of the
Wanderer.</p>
<p>Of all his voyages this was the strangest seafaring, he cruising alone, with a
company of the dead, deep into a darkness without measure or bound, to a land
that might not be descried. Strange gusts of sudden wind blew him hither and
thither. The breeze would rise in a moment from any quarter, and die as
suddenly as it rose, and another wind would chase it over the chopping seas. He
knew not if he sailed South or North, he knew not how time passed, for there
was no sight of the sun. It was night without a dawn. Yet his heart was glad,
as if he had been a boy again, for the old sorrows were forgotten, so potent
was the draught of the chalice of the Goddess, and so keen was the delight of
battle.</p>
<p>“Endure, my heart,” he cried, as often he had cried before,
“a worse thing than this thou hast endured,” and he caught up a
lyre of the dead Sidonians, and sang:—</p>
<p class="poem">
Though the light of the sun be hidden,<br/>
Though his race be run,<br/>
Though we sail in a sea forbidden<br/>
To the golden sun:<br/>
Though we wander alone, unknowing,—<br/>
Oh, heart of mine,—<br/>
The path of the strange sea-going,<br/>
Of the blood-red brine;<br/>
Yet endure! We shall not be shaken<br/>
By things worse than these;<br/>
We have ‘scaped, when our friends were taken,<br/>
On the unsailed seas;<br/>
Worse deaths have we faced and fled from,<br/>
In the Cyclops’ den,<br/>
When the floor of his cave ran red from<br/>
The blood of men;<br/>
Worse griefs have we known undaunted,<br/>
Worse fates have fled;<br/>
When the Isle that our long love haunted<br/>
Lay waste and dead!</p>
<p>So he was chanting when he descried, faint and far off, a red glow cast up
along the darkness like sunset on the sky of the Under-world. For this light he
steered, and soon he saw two tall pillars of flame blazing beside each other,
with a narrow space of night between them. He helmed the ship towards these,
and when he came near them they were like two mighty mountains of wood burning
far into heaven, and each was lofty as the pyre that blazes over men slain in
some red war, and each pile roared and flared above a steep crag of smooth
black basalt, and between the burning mounds of fire lay the flame-flecked
water of a haven.</p>
<p>The ship neared the haven and the Wanderer saw, moving like fireflies through
the night, the lanterns in the prows of boats, and from one of the boats a
sailor hailed him in the speech of the people of Egypt, asking him if he
desired a pilot.</p>
<p>“Yea,” he shouted. The boat drew near, and the pilot came aboard, a
torch in his hand; but when his eyes fell on the dead men in the ship, and the
horror hanging from the yard, and the captain bound to the iron bar, and above
all, on the golden armour of the hero, and on the spear-point fast in his helm,
and on his terrible face, he shrank back in dread, as if the God Osiris
himself, in the Ship of Death, had reached the harbour. But the Wanderer bade
him have no fear, telling him that he came with much wealth and with a great
gift for the Pharaoh. The pilot, therefore, plucked up heart, and took the
helm, and between the two great hills of blazing fire the vessel glided into
the smooth waters of the River of Egypt, the flames glittering on the
Wanderer’s mail as he stood by the mast and chanted the Song of the Bow.</p>
<p>Then, by the counsel of the pilot, the vessel was steered up the river towards
the Temple of Heracles in Tanis, where there is a sanctuary for strangers, and
where no man may harm them. But first, the dead Sidonians were cast overboard
into the great river, for the dead bodies of men are an abomination to the
Egyptians. And as each body struck the water the Wanderer saw a hateful sight,
for the face of the river was lashed into foam by the sudden leaping and
rushing of huge four-footed fish, or so the Wanderer deemed them. The sound of
the heavy plunging of the great water-beasts, as they darted forth on the prey,
smiting at each other with their tails, and the gnashing of their jaws when
they bit too eagerly, and only harmed the air, and the leap of a greedy sharp
snout from the waves, even before the dead man cast from the ship had quite
touched the water—these things were horrible to see and hear through the
blackness and by the firelight. A River of Death it seemed, haunted by the
horrors that are said to prey upon the souls and bodies of the Dead. For the
first time the heart of the Wanderer died within him, at the horror of the
darkness and of this dread river and of the water-beasts that dwelt within it.
Then he remembered how the birds had fled in terror from this place, and he
bethought him of the blood-red sea.</p>
<p>When the dead men were all cast overboard and the river was once more still,
the Wanderer spoke, sick at heart, and inquired of the pilot why the sea had
run so red, and whether war was in the land, and why there was night over all
that country. The fellow answered that there was no war, but peace, yet the
land was strangely plagued with frogs and locusts and lice in all their coasts,
the sacred river Sihor running red for three whole days, and now, at last, for
this the third day, darkness over all the world. But as to the cause of these
curses the pilot knew nothing, being a plain man. Only the story went among the
people that the Gods were angry with Khem (as they call Egypt), which indeed
was easy to see, for those things could come only from the Gods. But why they
were angered the pilot knew not, still it was commonly thought that the Divine
Hathor, the Goddess of Love, was wroth because of the worship given in Tanis to
one they called THE STRANGE HATHOR, a goddess or a woman of wonderful beauty,
whose Temple was in Tanis. Concerning her the pilot said that many years ago,
some thirty years, she had first appeared in the country, coming none knew
whence, and had been worshipped in Tanis, and had again departed as
mysteriously as she came. But now she had once more chosen to appear visible to
men, strangely, and to dwell in her temple; and the men who beheld her could do
nothing but worship her for her beauty. Whether she was a mortal woman or a
goddess the pilot did not know, only he thought that she who dwells in
Atarhechis, Hathor of Khem, the Queen of Love, was angry with the strange
Hathor, and had sent the darkness and the plagues to punish them who worshipped
her. The people of the seaboard also murmured that it would be well to pray the
Strange Hathor to depart out of their coasts, if she were a goddess; and if she
were a woman to stone her with stones. But the people of Tanis vowed that they
would rather die, one and all, than do aught but adore the incomparable beauty
of their strange Goddess. Others again, held that two wizards, leaders of
certain slaves of a strange race, wanderers from the desert, settled in Tanis,
whom they called the Apura, caused all these sorrows by art-magic. As if,
forsooth, said the pilot, those barbarian slaves were more powerful than all
the priests of Egypt. But for his part, the pilot knew nothing, only that if
the Divine Hathor were angry with the people of Tanis it was hard that she must
plague all the land of Khem.</p>
<p>So the pilot murmured, and his tale was none of the shortest; but even as he
spoke the darkness grew less dark and the cloud lifted a little so that the
shores of the river might be seen in a green light like the light of Hades, and
presently the night was rolled up like a veil, and it was living noonday in the
land of Khem. Then all the noise of life broke forth in one moment, the kine
lowing, the wind swaying the feathery palms, the fish splashing in the stream,
men crying to each other from the river banks, and the voice of multitudes of
people in every red temple praising Ra, their great God, whose dwelling is the
Sun. The Wanderer, too, praised his own Gods, and gave thanks to Apollo, and to
Helios Hyperion, and to Aphrodite. And in the end the pilot brought the ship to
the quay of a great city, and there a crew of oarsmen was hired, and they sped
rejoicing in the sunlight, through a canal dug by the hands of men, to Tanis
and the Sanctuary of Heracles, the Safety of Strangers. There the ship was
moored, there the Wanderer rested, having a good welcome from the shaven
priests of the temple.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap05"></SPAN>CHAPTER V.<br/> MERIAMUN THE QUEEN</h2>
<p>Strange news flies fast. It was not long before the Pharaoh, who then was with
his Court in Tanis, the newly rebuilded city, heard how there had come to Khem
a man like a god, wearing golden armour, and cruising alone in a ship of the
dead. In these years the white barbarians of the sea and of the isles were wont
to land in Egypt, to ravage the fields, carry women captive, and fly again in
their ships. But not one of them had dared to sail in the armour of the
Aquaiusha, as the Egyptians named the Achæans, right up the river to the city
of Pharaoh. The King, therefore, was amazed at the story, and when he heard
that the stranger had taken sanctuary in the Temple of Heracles, he sent
instantly for his chief counsellor. This was his Master Builder, who bore a
high title in the land, an ancient priest named Rei. He had served through the
long reign of the King’s father, the divine Rameses the Second, and he
was beloved both of Meneptah and of Meriamun his Queen. Him the King charged to
visit the Sanctuary and bring the stranger before him. So Rei called for his
mule, and rode down to the Temple of Heracles beyond the walls.</p>
<p>When Rei came thither, a priest went before him and led him to the chamber
where the warrior chanced to be eating the lily bread of the land, and drinking
the wine of the Delta. He rose as Rei entered, and he was still clad in his
golden armour, for as yet he had not any change of raiment. Beside him, on a
bronze tripod, lay his helmet, the Achæan helmet, with its two horns and with
the bronze spear-point still fast in the gold.</p>
<p>The eyes of Rei the Priest fell on the helmet, and he gazed so strangely at it
that he scarcely heard the Wanderer’s salutation. At length he answered,
courteously, but always his eyes wandered back to the broken spear-point.</p>
<p>“Is this thine, my son?” he asked, taking it in his hand, while his
voice trembled.</p>
<p>“It is my own,” said the Wanderer, “though the spear-point in
it was lent me of late, in return for arrows not a few and certain
sword-strokes,” and he smiled.</p>
<p>The ancient priest bade the Temple servants retire, and as they went they heard
him murmuring a prayer.</p>
<p>“The Dead spoke truth,” he muttered, still gazing from the helmet
in his hand to the Wanderer; “ay, the Dead speak seldom, but they never
lie.”</p>
<p>“My son, thou hast eaten and drunk,” then said Rei the Priest and
Master Builder, “and may an old man ask whence thou camest, where is thy
native city, and who are thy parents?”</p>
<p>“I come from Alybas,” answered the Wanderer, for his own name was
too widely known, and he loved an artful tale. “I come from Alybas; I am
the son of Apheidas, son of Polypemon, and my own name is Eperitus.”</p>
<p>“And wherefore comest thou here alone in a ship of dead men, and with
more treasure than a king’s ransom?”</p>
<p>“It was men of Sidon who laboured and died for all that cargo,”
said the Wanderer; “they voyaged far for it, and toiled hard, but they
lost it in an hour. For they were not content with what they had, but made me a
prisoner as I lay asleep on the coast of Crete. But the Gods gave me the upper
hand of them, and I bring their captain, and much white metal and many swords
and cups and beautiful woven stuffs, as a gift to your King. And for thy
courtesy, come with me, and choose a gift for thyself.”</p>
<p>Then he led the old man to the treasure-chambers of the Temple, which was rich
in the offerings of many travellers, gold and turquoise and frankincense from
Sinai and Punt, great horns of carved ivory from the unknown East and South;
bowls and baths of silver from the Khita, who were the allies of Egypt. But
amidst all the wealth, the stranger’s cargo made a goodly show, and the
old priest’s eyes glittered as he looked at it.</p>
<p>“Take thy choice, I pray thee,” said the Wanderer, “the
spoils of foemen are the share of friends.”</p>
<p>The priest would have refused, but the Wanderer saw that he looked ever at a
bowl of transparent amber, from the far-off Northern seas, that was embossed
with curious figures of men and gods, and huge fishes, such as are unknown in
the Midland waters. The Wanderer put it into the hands of Rei.</p>
<p>“Thou shalt keep this,” he said, “and pledge me in wine from
it when I am gone, in memory of a friend and a guest.”</p>
<p>Rei took the bowl, and thanked him, holding it up to the light to admire the
golden colour.</p>
<p>“We are always children,” he said, smiling gravely. “See an
old child whom thou hast made happy with a toy. But we are men too soon again;
the King bids thee come with me before him. And, my son, if thou wouldst please
me more than by any gift, I pray thee pluck that spear-head from thy helmet
before thou comest into the presence of the Queen.”</p>
<p>“Pardon me,” said the Wanderer. “I would not harm my helmet
by tearing it roughly out, and I have no smith’s tools here. The
spear-point, my father, is a witness to the truth of my tale, and for one day
more, or two, I must wear it.”</p>
<p>Rei sighed, bowed his head, folded his hands, and prayed to his God Amen,
saying:</p>
<p>“O Amen, in whose hand is the end of a matter, lighten the burden of
these sorrows, and let the vision be easy of accomplishment, and I pray thee, O
Amen, let thy hand be light on thy daughter Meriamun, the Lady of Khem.”</p>
<p>Then the old man led the Wanderer out, and bade the priests make ready a
chariot for him; and so they went through Tanis to the Court of Meneptah.
Behind them followed the priests, carrying gifts that the Wanderer had chosen
from the treasures of the Sidonians, and the miserable captain of the Sidonians
was dragged along after them, bound to the hinder part of a chariot. Through
the gazing crowd they all passed on to the Hall of Audience, where, between the
great pillars, sat Pharaoh on his golden throne. Beside him, at his right hand,
was Meriamun, the beautiful Queen, who looked at the priests with weary eyes,
as if at a matter in which she had no concern. They came in and beat the earth
with their brows before the King. First came the officers, leading the captain
of the Sidonians for a gift to Pharaoh, and the King smiled graciously and
accepted the slave.</p>
<p>Then came others, bearing the cups of gold fashioned like the heads of lions
and rams, and the swords with pictures of wars and huntings echoed on their
blades in many-coloured gold, and the necklets of amber from the North, which
the Wanderer had chosen as gifts for Pharaoh’s Queen and Pharaoh. He had
silks, too, embroidered in gold, and needlework of Sidonian women, and all
these the Queen Meriamun touched to show her acceptance of them, and smiled
graciously and wearily. But the covetous Sidonian groaned, when he saw his
wealth departing from him, the gains for which he had hazarded his life in
unsailed seas. Lastly, Pharaoh bade them lead the Wanderer in before his
presence, and he came unhelmeted, in all his splendour, the goodliest man that
had ever been seen in Khem. He was of no great height, but very great of girth,
and of strength unmatched, and with the face of one who had seen what few have
seen and lived. The beauty of youth was gone from him, but his face had the
comeliness of a warrior tried on sea and land; the eyes were of a valour
invincible, and no woman could see him but she longed to be his love.</p>
<p>As he entered murmurs of amazement passed over all the company, and all eyes
were fixed on him, save only the weary and wandering eyes of the listless
Meriamun. But when she chanced to lift her face, and gaze on him, they who
watch the looks of kings and queens saw her turn grey as the dead, and clutch
with her hand at her side. Pharaoh himself saw this though he was not quick to
mark what passed, and he asked her if anything ailed her, but she
answered:—</p>
<p>“Nay, only methinks the air is sick with heat and perfume. Greet thou
this stranger.” But beneath her robe her fingers were fretting all the
while at the golden fringes of her throne.</p>
<p>“Welcome, thou Wanderer,” cried Pharaoh, in a deep and heavy voice,
“welcome! By what name art thou named, and where dwell thy people, and
what is thy native land?”</p>
<p>Bowing low before Pharaoh, the Wanderer answered, with a feigned tale, that his
name was Eperitus of Alybas, the son of Apheidas. The rest of the story, and
how he had been taken by the Sidonians, and how he had smitten them on the
seas, he told as he had told it to Rei. And he displayed his helmet with the
spear-point fast in it. But when she saw this Meriamun rose to her feet as if
she would be gone, and then fell back into her seat even paler than before.</p>
<p>“The Queen, help the Queen, she faints,” cried Rei the Priest,
whose eyes had never left her face. One of her ladies, a beautiful woman, ran
to her, knelt before her, and chafed her hands, till she came to herself, and
sat up with angry eyes.</p>
<p>“Let be!” she said, “and let the slave who tends the incense
be beaten on the feet. Nay, I will remain here, I will not to my chamber. Let
be!” and her lady drew back afraid.</p>
<p>Then Pharaoh bade men lead the Sidonian out, and slay him in the market-place
for his treachery; but the man, whose name was Kurri, threw himself at the feet
of the Wanderer, praying for his life. The Wanderer was merciful, when the rage
of battle was over, and his blood was cool.</p>
<p>“A boon, O Pharaoh Meneptah,” he cried. “Spare me this man!
He saved my own life when the crew would have cast me overboard. Let me pay my
debt.”</p>
<p>“Let him be spared, as thou wilt have it so,” spoke Pharaoh,
“but revenge dogs the feet of foolish mercy, and many debts are paid ere
all is done.”</p>
<p>Thus it chanced that Kurri was given to Meriamun to be her jeweller and to work
for her in gold and silver. To the Wanderer was allotted a chamber in the Royal
Palace, for the Pharaoh trusted that he would be a leader of his Guard, and
took great pleasure in his beauty and his strength.</p>
<p>As he left the Hall of Audience with Rei, the Queen Meriamun lifted her eyes
again, and looked on him long, and her ivory face flushed rosy, like the ivory
that the Sidonians dye red for the trappings of the horses of kings. But the
Wanderer marked both the sudden fear and the blush of Meriamun, and, beautiful
as she was, he liked it ill, and his heart foreboded evil. When he was alone
with Rei, therefore, he spoke to him of this, and prayed the old man to tell
him if he could guess at all the meaning of the Queen.</p>
<p>“For to me,” he said, “it was as if the Lady knew my face,
and even as if she feared it; but I never saw her like in all my wanderings.
Beautiful she is, and yet—but it is ill speaking in their own land of
kings and queens!”</p>
<p>At first, when the Wanderer spoke thus, Rei put it by, smiling. But the
Wanderer, seeing that he was troubled, and remembering how he had prayed him to
pluck the spear-point from his helmet, pressed him hard with questions. Thus,
partly out of weariness, and partly for love of him, and also because a secret
had long been burning in his heart, the old man took the Wanderer into his own
room in the Palace, and there he told him all the story of Meriamun the Queen.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap06"></SPAN>CHAPTER VI.<br/> THE STORY OF MERIAMUN</h2>
<p>Rei, the Priest of Amen, the Master Builder, began his story unwillingly
enough, and slowly, but soon he took pleasure in telling it as old men do, and
in sharing the burden of a secret.</p>
<p>“The Queen is fair,” he said; “thou hast seen no fairer in
all thy voyagings?”</p>
<p>“She is fair indeed,” answered the Wanderer. “I pray that she
be well-mated and happy on her throne?”</p>
<p>“That is what I will tell thee of, though my life may be the price of the
tale,” said Rei. “But a lighter heart is well worth an old
man’s cheap risk, and thou may’st help me and her, when thou
knowest all. Pharaoh Meneptah, her lord, the King, is the son of the divine
Rameses, the ever-living Pharaoh, child of the Sun, who dwelleth in
Osiris.”</p>
<p>“Thou meanest that he is dead?” asked the Wanderer.</p>
<p>“He dwelleth with Osiris,” said the Priest, “and the Queen
Meriamun was his daughter by another bed.”</p>
<p>“A brother wed a sister!” exclaimed the Wanderer.</p>
<p>“It is the custom of our Royal House, from the days of the Timeless
Kings, the children of Horus. An old custom.”</p>
<p>“The ways of his hosts are good in the eyes of a stranger,” said
the Wanderer, courteously.</p>
<p>“It is an old custom, and a sacred,” said Rei, “but women,
the custom-makers, are often custom-breakers. And of all women, Meriamun least
loves to be obedient, even to the dead. And yet she has obeyed, and it came
about thus. Her brother Meneptah—who now is Pharaoh—the Prince of
Kush while her divine father lived, had many half-sisters, but Meriamun was the
fairest of them all. She is beautiful, a Moon-child the common people called
her, and wise, and she does not know the face of fear. And thus it chanced that
she learned, what even our Royal women rarely learn, all the ancient secret
wisdom of this ancient land. Except Queen Taia of old, no woman has known what
Meriamun knows, what I have taught her—I and another counsellor.”</p>
<p>He paused here, and his mind seemed to turn on unhappy things.</p>
<p>“I have taught her from childhood,” he went on—“would
that I had been her only familiar—and, after her divine father and
mother, she loved me more than any, for she loved few. But of all whom she did
not love she loved her Royal brother least. He is slow of speech, and she is
quick. She is fearless and he has no heart for war. From her childhood she
scorned him, mocked him, and mastered him with her tongue. She even learned to
excel him in the chariot races—therefore it was that the King his father
made him but a General of the Foot Soldiers—and in guessing riddles,
which our people love, she delighted to conquer him. The victory was easy
enough, for the divine Prince is heavy-witted; but Meriamun was never tired of
girding at him. Plainly, even as a little child she grudged that he should come
to wield the scourge of power, and wear the double crown, while she should live
in idleness, and hunger for command.”</p>
<p>“It is strange, then, that of all his sisters, if one must be Queen, he
should have chosen her,” said the Wanderer.</p>
<p>“Strange, and it happened strangely. The Prince’s father, the
divine Rameses, had willed the marriage. The Prince hated it no less than
Meriamun, but the will of a father is the will of the Gods. In one sport the
divine Prince excelled, in the Game of Pieces, an old game in Khem. It is no
pastime for women, but even at this Meriamun was determined to master her
brother. She bade me carve her a new set of the pieces fashioned with the heads
of cats, and shaped from the hard wood of Azebi.[*] I carved them with my own
hands, and night by night she played with me, who have some name for skill at
the sport.</p>
<p class="footnote">
[*] Cyprus.</p>
<p>“One sunset it chanced that her brother came in from hunting the lion in
the Libyan hills. He was in an evil humour, for he had found no lions, and he
caused the huntsmen to be stretched out, and beaten with rods. Then he called
for wine, and drank deep at the Palace gate, and the deeper he drank the darker
grew his humour.</p>
<p>“He was going to his own Court in the Palace, striking with a whip at his
hounds, when he chanced to turn and see Meriamun. She was sitting where those
three great palm-trees are, and was playing at pieces with me in the cool of
the day. There she sat in the shadow, clad in white and purple, and with the
red gold of the snake of royalty in the blackness of her hair. There she sat as
beautiful as the Hathor, the Queen of Love; or as the Lady Isis when she played
at pieces in Amenti with the ancient King. Nay, an old man may say it, there
never was but one woman more fair than Meriamun, if a woman she be, she whom
our people call the <i>Strange Hathor</i>.”</p>
<p>Now the Wanderer bethought him of the tale of the pilot, but he said nothing,
and Rei went on.</p>
<p>“The Prince saw her, and his anger sought for something new to break
itself on. Up he came, and I rose before him, and bowed myself. But Meriamun
fell indolently back in her chair of ivory, and with a sweep of her slim hand
she disordered the pieces, and bade her waiting woman, the lady Hataska, gather
up the board, and carry all away. But Hataska’s eyes were secretly
watching the Prince.</p>
<p>“‘Greeting, Princess, our Royal sister,’ said Meneptah.
‘What art thou doing with these?’ and he pointed with his chariot
whip at the cat-headed pieces. ‘This is no woman’s game, these
pieces are not soft hearts of men to be moved on the board by love. This game
needs wit! Get thee to thy broidery, for there thou may’st excel.’</p>
<p>“‘Greeting, Prince, our Royal brother,’ said Meriamun.
‘I laugh to hear thee speak of a game that needs wit. Thy hunting has not
prospered, so get thee to the banquet board, for there, I hear, the Gods have
granted thee to excel.’</p>
<p>“‘It is little to say,’ answered the Prince, throwing himself
into a chair whence I had risen, ‘it is little to say, but at the game of
pieces I have enough wit to give thee a temple, a priest and five bowmen, and
yet win,’—for these, O Wanderer, are the names of some of the
pieces.</p>
<p>“‘I take the challenge,’ cried Meriamun, for now she had
brought him where she wanted; ‘but I will take no odds. Here is my wager.
I will play thee three games, and stake the sacred circlet upon my brow,
against the Royal uraeus on thine, and the winner shall wear both.’</p>
<p>“‘Nay, nay, Lady,’ I was bold to say, ‘this were too
high a stake.’</p>
<p>“‘High or low, I accept the wager,’ answered the Prince.
‘This sister of mine has mocked me too long. She shall find that her
woman’s wit cannot match me at my own game, and that my father’s
son, the Royal Prince of Kush and the Pharaoh who shall be, is more than the
equal of a girl. I hold thy wage, Meriamun!’</p>
<p>“‘Go then, Prince,’ she cried, ‘and after sunset meet
me in my antechamber. Bring a scribe to score the games; Rei shall be the
judge, and hold the stakes. But beware of the golden Cup of Pasht! Drain it not
to-night, lest I win a love-game, though we do not play for love!’</p>
<p>“The Prince went scowling away, and Meriamun laughed, but I foresaw
mischief. The stakes were too high, the match was too strange, but Meriamun
would not listen to me, for she was very wilful.</p>
<p>“The sun fell, and two hours after the Royal Prince of Kush came with his
scribe, and found Meriamun with the board of squares before her, in her
antechamber.</p>
<p>“He sat down without a word, then he asked, who should first take the
field.</p>
<p>“‘Wait,’ she said, ‘first let us set the stakes,’
and lifting from her brow the golden snake of royalty, she shook her soft hair
loose, and gave the coronet to me. ‘If I lose,’ she said,
‘never may I wear the uraeus crown.’</p>
<p>“‘That shalt thou never while I draw breath,’ answered the
Prince, as he too lifted the symbol of his royalty from his head and gave it to
me. There was a difference between the circlets, the coronet of Meriamun was
crowned with one crested snake, that of the divine Prince was crowned with
twain.</p>
<p>“‘Ay, Meneptah,’ she said, ‘but perchance Osiris, God
of the Dead, waits thee, for surely he loves those too great and good for
earth. Take thou the field and to the play.’ At her words of evil omen,
he frowned. But he took the field and readily, for he knew the game well.</p>
<p>“She moved in answer heedlessly enough, and afterwards she played at
random and carelessly, pushing the pieces about with little skill. And so he
won this first game quickly, and crying, ‘<i>Pharaoh is dead</i>,’
swept the pieces from the board. ‘See how I better thee,’ he went
on in mockery. ‘Thine is a woman’s game; all attack and no
defence.’</p>
<p>“‘Boast not yet, Meneptah,’ she said. ‘There are still
two sets to play. See, the board is set and I take the field.’</p>
<p>“This time the game went differently, for the Prince could scarce make a
prisoner of a single piece save of one temple and two bowmen only, and
presently it was the turn of Meriamun to cry ‘<i>Pharaoh is
dead</i>,’ and to sweep the pieces from the board. This time Meneptah did
not boast but scowled, while I set the board and the scribe wrote down the game
upon his tablets. Now it was the Prince’s turn to take the field.</p>
<p>“‘In the name of holy Thoth,’ he cried, ‘to whom I vow
great gifts of victory.’</p>
<p>“‘In the name of holy Pasht,’ she made answer, ‘to whom
I make daily prayer.’ For, being a maid, she swore by the Goddess of
Chastity, and being Meriamun, by the Goddess of Vengeance.</p>
<p>“‘’Tis fitting thou should’st vow by her of the
Cat’s Head,’ he said, sneering.</p>
<p>“‘Yes; very fitting,’ she answered, ‘for perchance
she’ll lend me her claws. Play thou, Prince Meneptah.’</p>
<p>“And he played, and so well that for a while the game went against her.
But at length, when they had struggled long, and Meriamun had lost the most of
her pieces, a light came into her face as though she had found what she sought.
And while the Prince called for wine and drank, she lay back in her chair and
looked upon the board. Then she moved so shrewdly and upon so deep a plan that
he fell into the trap that she had laid for him, and could never escape. In
vain he vowed gifts to the holy Thoth, and promised such a temple as there was
none in Khem.</p>
<p>“‘Thoth hears thee not; he is the God of lettered men,’ said
Meriamun, mocking him. Then he cursed and drank more wine.</p>
<p>“‘Fools seek wit in wine, but only wise men find it,’ quoth
she again. ‘Behold, Royal brother, <i>Pharaoh is dead</i>, and I have won
the match, and beaten thee at thine own game. Rei, my servant, give me that
circlet; nay, not my own, the double one, which the divine Prince wagered. So
set it on my brow, for it is mine, Meneptah. In this, as in all things else, I
have conquered thee.’</p>
<p>“And she rose, and standing full in the light of the lamps, the Royal
uraeus on her brow, she mocked him, bidding him come do homage to her who had
won his crown, and stretching forth her small hand for him to kiss it. And so
wondrous was her beauty that the divine Prince of Kush ceased to call upon the
evil Gods because of his ill fortune, and stood gazing on her.</p>
<p>“‘By Ptah, but thou art fair,’ he cried, ‘and I pardon
my father at last for willing thee to be my Queen!’</p>
<p>“‘But I will never pardon him,’ said Meriamun.</p>
<p>“Now the Prince had drunk much wine.</p>
<p>“‘Thou shalt be my Queen,’ he said, ‘and for earnest I
will kiss thee. This, at the least, being the strongest, I can do.’ And
ere she could escape him, he passed his arm about her and seized her by the
girdle, and kissed her on the lips and let her go.</p>
<p>“Meriamun grew white as the dead. By her side there hung a dagger.
Swiftly she drew it, and swiftly struck at his heart, so that had he not shrunk
from the steel surely he had been slain; and she cried as she struck,
‘Thus, Prince, I pay thy kisses back.’</p>
<p>“But as it chanced, she only pierced his arm, and before she could strike
again I had seized her by the hand.</p>
<p>“‘Thou serpent,’ said the Prince, pale with rage and fear.
‘I tell thee I will kiss thee yet, whether thou wilt or not, and thou
shalt pay for this.’</p>
<p>“But she laughed softly now that her anger was spent, and I led him forth
to seek a physician, who should bind up his wound. And when he was gone, I
returned, and spoke to her, wringing my hands.</p>
<p>“‘Oh, Royal Lady, what hast thou done? Thou knowest well that thy
divine father destines thee to wed the Prince of Kush whom but now thou didst
smite so fiercely.’</p>
<p>“‘Nay, Rei, I will none of him—the dull clod, who is called
the son of Pharaoh. Moreover, he is my half-brother, and it is not meet that I
should wed my brother. For nature cries aloud against the custom of the
land.’</p>
<p>“‘Nevertheless, Lady, it <i>is</i> the custom of thy Royal house,
and thy father’s will. Thus the Gods, thine ancestors, were wed; Isis to
Osiris. Thus great Thothmes and Amenemhat did and decreed, and all their
forefathers and all their seed. Oh, bethink thee—I speak it for thine
ear, for I love thee as mine own daughter—bethink thee, for thou canst
not escape, that Pharaoh’s bed is the step to Pharaoh’s throne.
Thou lovest power; here is the gate of power, and mayhap upon a time the master
of the gate shall be gone and thou shalt sit in the gate alone.’</p>
<p>“‘Ah, Rei, now thou speakest like the counsellor of those who would
be kings. Oh, did I not hate him with this hatred! And yet can I rule him. Why,
’twas no chance game that we played this night: the future lay upon the
board. See, his diadem is upon my brow! At first he won, for I chose that he
should win. Well, so mayhap it shall be; mayhap I shall give myself to
him—hating him the while. And then the next game; that shall be for life
and love and all things dear, and I shall win it, and mine shall be the uraeus
crest, and mine shall be the double crown of ancient Khem, and I shall rule
like Hatshepu, the great Queen of old, for I am strong, and to the strong is
victory.’</p>
<p>“‘Yes,’ I made answer, ‘but, Lady, see thou that the
Gods turn not thy strength to weakness; thou art too passionate to be all
strength, and in a woman’s heart passion is the door by which King Folly
enters. To-day thou hatest, beware, lest to-morrow thou should’st
love.’</p>
<p>“‘Love,’ she said, gazing scornfully; ‘Meriamun loves
not till she find a man worthy of her love.’</p>
<p>“‘Ay, and then——?’</p>
<p>“‘And then she loves to all destruction, and woe to them who cross
her path. Rei, farewell.’</p>
<p>“Then suddenly she spoke to me in another tongue, that few know save her
and me, and that none can read save her and me, a dead tongue of a dead people,
the people of that ancient City of the Rock, whence all our fathers came.[*]</p>
<p class="footnote">
[*] Probably the mysterious and indecipherable ancient books, which were
occasionally excavated in old Egypt, were written in this dead language of a
more ancient and now forgotten people. Such was the book discovered at Coptos,
in the sanctuary there, by a priest of the Goddess. “The whole earth was
dark, but the moon shone all about the Book.” A scribe of the period of
the Ramessids mentions another indecipherable ancient writing. “Thou
tellest me thou understandest no word of it, good or bad. There is, as it were,
a wall about it that none may climb. Thou art instructed, yet thou knowest it
not; this makes me afraid.” Birch, <i>Zeitschrift</i>, 1871, pp. 61-64.
<i>Papyrus Anastasi</i> I, pl. X. 1. 8, pl. X. 1. 4. Maspero, <i>Hist.
Anc.</i>, pp. 66-67.</p>
<p>“‘I go,’ she said, and I trembled as she spoke, for no man
speaks in this language when he has any good thought in his heart. ‘I go
to seek the counsel of That thou knowest,’ and she touched the golden
snake which she had won.</p>
<p>“Then I threw myself on the earth at her feet, and clasped her knees,
crying, ‘My daughter, my daughter, sin not this great sin. Nay, for all
the kingdom of the world, wake not That which sleepeth, nor warm again into
life That which is a-cold.’</p>
<p>“But she only nodded, and put me from her,”—and the old
man’s face grew pale as he spoke.</p>
<p>“What meant she?” said the Wanderer.</p>
<p>“Nay, wake not <i>thou</i> That which sleepeth, Wanderer,” he said,
at length. “My tongue is sealed. I tell thee more than I would tell
another. Do not ask,—but hark! They come again! Now may Ra and Pasht and
Amen curse them; may the red swine’s mouth of Set gnaw upon them in
Amenti; may the Fish of Sebek flesh his teeth of stone in them for ever, and
feed and feed again!”</p>
<p>“Why dost thou curse thus, Rei, and who are they that go by?” said
the Wanderer. “I hear their tramping and their song.”</p>
<p>Indeed there came a light noise of many shuffling feet, pattering outside the
Palace wall, and the words of a song rang out triumphantly:</p>
<p class="poem">
The Lord our God He doth sign and wonder,<br/>
Tokens He shows in the land of Khem,<br/>
He hath shattered the pride of the Kings asunder<br/>
And casteth His shoe o’er the Gods of them!<br/>
He hath brought forth frogs in their holy places,<br/>
He hath sprinkled the dust upon crown and hem,<br/>
He hath hated their kings and hath darkened their faces;<br/>
Wonders He works in the land of Khem.</p>
<p>“These are the accursed blaspheming conjurors and slaves, the
Apura,” said Rei, as the music and the tramping died away. “Their
magic is greater than the lore even of us who are instructed, for their leader
was one of ourselves, a shaven priest, and knows our wisdom. Never do they
march and sing thus but evil comes of it. Ere day dawn we shall have news of
them. May the Gods destroy them, they are gone for the hour. It were well if
Meriamun the Queen would let them go for ever, as they desire, to their death
in the desert, but she hardens the King’s heart.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap07"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII.<br/> THE QUEEN’S VISION</h2>
<p>There was silence without at last; the clamour and the tread of the Apura were
hushed in the distance, dying far away, and Rei grew calm, when he heard no
longer the wild song, and the clashing of the timbrels.</p>
<p>“I must tell thee, Eperitus,” he said, “how the matter ended
between the divine Prince and Meriamun. She bowed her pride before her father
and her brother: her father’s will was hers; she seemed to let her secret
sleep, and she set her own price on her hand. In everything she must be the
equal of Pharaoh—that was her price; and in all the temples and all the
cities she was to be solemnly proclaimed joint heir with him of the Upper and
Lower Land. The bargain was struck and the price was paid. After that night
over the game of pieces Meriamun was changed. Thenceforth she did not mock at
the Prince, she made herself gentle and submissive to his will.</p>
<p>“So the time drew on till at length in the beginning of the rising of the
waters came the day of her bridal. With a mighty pomp was Pharaoh’s
daughter wedded to Pharaoh’s son. But her hand was cold as she stood at
the altar, cold as the hand of one who sleeps in Osiris. Proudly and coldly she
sat in the golden chariot passing in and out the great gates of Tanis. Only
when she listened and heard the acclaiming thousands cry <i>Meriamun</i> so
loudly that the cry of <i>Meneptah</i> was lost in the echoes of her
name—then only did she smile.</p>
<p>“Cold, too, she sat in her white robes at the feast that Pharaoh made,
and she never looked at the husband by her side, though he looked kindly on
her.</p>
<p>“The feast was long, but it ended at last, and then came the music and
the singers, but Meriamun, making excuse, rose and went out, attended by her
ladies. And I also, weary and sad at heart, passed thence to my own chamber and
busied myself with the instruments of my art, for, stranger, I build the houses
of gods and kings.</p>
<p>“Presently, as I sat, there came a knocking at the door, and a woman
entered wrapped in a heavy cloak. She put aside the cloak, and before me was
Meriamun in all her bridal robes.</p>
<p>“‘Heed me not, Rei,’ she said, ‘I am yet free for an
hour; and I would watch thee at thy labour. Nay, it is my humour; gainsay me
not, for I love well to look on that wrinkled face of thine, scored by the
cunning chisel of thy knowledge and thy years. So from a child have I watched
thee tracing the shapes of mighty temples that shall endure when ourselves, and
perchance the very Gods we worship, have long since ceased to be. Ah, Rei, thou
wise man, thine is the better part, for thou buildest in cold enduring stone
and attirest thy walls as thy fancy bids thee. But I—I build in the dust
of human hearts, and my will is written in their dust. When I am dead, raise me
a tomb more beautiful than ever has been known, and write upon the portal,
<i>Here, in the last temple of her pride, dwells that tired builder, Meriamun,
the Queen</i>.’</p>
<p>“Thus she talked wildly in words with little reason.</p>
<p>“‘Nay, speak not so,’ I said, ‘for is it not thy bridal
night? What dost thou here at such a time?’</p>
<p>“‘What do I here? Surely I come to be a child again! See, Rei, in
all wide Khem there is no woman so shamed, so lost, so utterly undone as is
to-night the Royal Meriamun, whom thou lovest. I am lower than she who plies
the street for bread, for the loftier the spirit the greater is the fall. I am
sold into shame, and power is my price. Oh, cursed be the fate of woman who
only by her beauty can be great. Oh, cursed be that ancient Counsellor thou
wottest of, and cursed be I who wakened That which slept, and warmed That which
was a-cold in my breath and in my breast! And cursed be this sin to which he
led me! Spurn me, Rei; strike me on the cheek, spit upon me, on Meriamun, the
Royal harlot who sells herself to win a crown. Oh, I hate him, hate him, and I
will pay him in shame for shame—him, the clown in king’s attire.
See here,’—and from her robe she drew a white flower that was known
to her and me—‘twice to-day have I been minded with this deadly
blossom to make an end of me, and of all my shame, and all my empty greed of
glory. But this thought has held my hand: I, Meriamun, will live to look across
his grave and break his images, and beat out the writings of his name from
every temple wall in Khem, as they beat out the hated name of Hatshepu.
I——’ and suddenly she burst into a rain of tears; she who was
not wont to weep.</p>
<p>“‘Nay, touch me not,’ she said. ‘They were but tears of
anger. Meriamun is mistress of her Fate, not Fate of Meriamun. And now, my lord
awaits me, and I must be gone. Kiss me on the brow, old friend, whilst yet I am
the Meriamun thou knewest, and then kiss me no more for ever. At the least this
is well for thee, for when Meriamun is Queen of Khem thou shalt be first in all
the land, and stand on the footsteps of my throne. Farewell.’ And she
gathered up her raiment and cast her white flower of death in the flame of the
brazier, and was gone, leaving me yet sadder at heart. For now I knew that she
was not as other women are, but greater for good or evil.</p>
<p class="p2">
“On the morrow night I sat again at my task, and again there came a
knocking at the door, and again a woman entered and threw aside her wrappings.
It was Meriamun. She was pale and stern, and as I rose she waved me back.</p>
<p>“‘Has, then, the Prince—thy husband——’ I
stammered.</p>
<p>“‘Speak not to me of the Prince, Rei, my servant,’ she made
answer. ‘Yesterday I spoke to thee wildly, my mind was overwrought; let
it be forgotten—a wife am I, a happy wife’; and she smiled so
strangely that I shrunk back from her.</p>
<p>“‘Now to my errand. I have dreamed a dream, a troublous dream, and
thou art wise and instructed, therefore I pray thee interpret my vision. I
slept and dreamed of a man, and in my dream I loved him more than I can tell.
For my heart beat to his heart, and in the light of him I lived, and all my
soul was his, and I knew that I loved him for ever. And Pharaoh was my husband;
but, in my dream, I loved him not. Now there came a woman rising out of the
sea, more beautiful than I, with a beauty fairer and more changeful than the
dawn upon the mountains; and she, too, loved this godlike man, and he loved
her. Then we strove together for his love, matching beauty against beauty, and
wit against wit, and magic against magic. Now one conquered, and now the other;
but in the end the victory was mine, and I went arrayed as for a
marriage-bed—and I clasped a corpse.</p>
<p>“‘I woke, and again I slept, and saw myself wearing another garb,
and speaking another tongue. Before me was the man I loved, and there, too, was
the woman, wrapped about with beauty, and I was changed, and yet I was the very
Meriamun thou seest. And once more we struggled for the mastery and for this
man’s love, and in that day she conquered me.</p>
<p>“‘I slept, and again I woke, and in another land than Khem—a
strange land, and yet methought I knew it from long ago. There I dwelt among
the graves, and dark faces were about me, and I wore That thou knowest for a
girdle. And the tombs of the rock wherein we dwelt were scored with the
writings of a dead tongue—the tongue of that land whence our fathers
came. We were all changed, yet the same, and once more the woman and I
struggled for the mastery, and though I seemed to conquer, yet a sea of fire
came over me, and I woke and I slept again.</p>
<p>“‘Then confusion was piled upon confusion, nor can my memory hold
all that came to pass. For this game played itself afresh in lands, and lives,
and tongues without number. Only the last bout and the winner were not revealed
to me.</p>
<p>“‘And in my dream I cried aloud to the protecting Gods to escape
out of the dream, and I sought for light that I might see whence these things
were. Then, as in a vision, the Past opened up its gates. It seemed that upon a
time, thousand, thousand ages agone, I and this man of my dream had arisen from
nothingness and looked in each other’s eyes, and loved with a love
unspeakable, and vowed a vow that shall endure from time to time and world to
world. For we were not mortal then, but partook of the nature of the Gods,
being more fair and great than any of human kind, and our happiness was the
happiness of Heaven. But in our great joy we hearkened to the Voice of That
thou knowest, of that Thing, Rei, with which, against thy counsel, I have but
lately dealt. The kiss of our love awakened That which slept, the fire of our
love warmed That which was a-cold! We defied the holy Gods, worshipping them
not, but rather each the other, for we knew that as the Gods we were eternal.
And the Gods were angered against us and drew us up into their presence. And
while we trembled they spake as with a voice:</p>
<p>“‘“Ye twain who are one life, each completing each, because
with your kisses ye have wakened That which slept, and with the fire of your
love have warmed That which was a-cold: because ye have forgotten them that
gave you life and love and joy: hearken to your Doom!</p>
<p>“‘“From Two be ye made <i>Three</i>, and through all Time
strive ye to be Twain again. Pass from this Holy Place down to the Hell of
Earth, and though ye be immortal put on the garments of mortality. Pass on from
Life to Life, live and love and hate and seem to die: have acquaintance with
every lot, and in your blind forgetfulness, being one and being equal, work
each other’s woe according to the law of Earth, and for your love’s
sake sin and be shamed, perish and re-arise, appear to conquer and be
conquered, pursuing your threefold destiny, and, at the word of Fate, the
unaltering circle meets, and the veil of blindness falls from your eyes, and,
as a scroll, your folly is unrolled, and the hid purpose of your sorrow is
accomplished and once more ye are Twain and One.”</p>
<p>“‘Then, as we trembled, clinging each to each, again the great
Voice spoke:</p>
<p>“‘“Ye twain who are One—let That to which ye have
hearkened divide you and enfold you! Be ye Three!”</p>
<p>“‘And as the Voice spoke I was torn with agony, and strength went
out of me, and there, by him I loved, stood the woman of my dream crowned with
every glory and adorned with the Star. And we were three. And between him and
me, yet enfolding him and me, writhed that Thing thou wottest of. And he whom I
loved turned to look upon the fair woman, wondering, and she smiled and
stretched out her arm towards him as one who would take that which is her own,
and Rei, in that hour, though it was but in a dream, I knew the mortal pain of
jealousy, and awoke trembling. And now read thou this vision, Rei, thou who art
learned in the interpretation of dreams and in the ways of sleep.’</p>
<p>“‘Oh, Lady,’ I made answer, ‘this thing is too high for
me, I cannot interpret it; but where thou art, there may I be to help
thee.’</p>
<p>“‘I know thy love,’ she said, ‘but in thy words is
little light. So—so—let it pass! It was but a dream, and if indeed
it came from the Under World, why, it was from no helpful God, but rather from
Set, the Tormentor; or from Pasht, the Terrible, who throws the creeping shadow
of her doom upon the mirror of my sleep. For that which is decreed will surely
come to pass! I am blown like the dust by the breath of Fate; now to rest upon
the Temple’s loftiest tops, now to be trodden underfoot of slaves, and
now to be swallowed by the bitter deep, and in season thence rolled forth
again. I love not this lord of mine, who shall be Pharaoh, and never may
<i>he</i> come whom I shall love. ’Tis well that I love him not, for to
love is to be a slave. When the heart is cold then the hand is strong, and I am
fain to be the Queen leading Pharaoh by the beard, the first of all the ancient
land of Khem; for I was not born to serve. Nay, while I may, I rule, awaiting
the end of rule. Look forth, Rei, and see how the rays from Mother Isis’
throne flood all the courts and all the city’s streets and break in light
upon the water’s breast. So shall the Moon-child’s flame flood all
this land of Khem. What matters it, if ere the morn Isis must pass to her
dominion of the Dead, and the voice of Meriamun be hushed within a
sepulchre?’</p>
<p>“So she spoke and went thence, and on her face was no bride’s
smile, but rather such a gaze as that with which the great sphinx, Horemku,
looks out across the desert sands.”</p>
<p>“A strange Queen, Rei,” said the Wanderer, as he paused, “but
what have I to make in this tale of a bride and her mad dreams?”</p>
<p>“More than thou shalt desire,” said Rei; “but let us come to
the end, and thou shalt hear thy part in the Fate.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap08"></SPAN>CHAPTER VIII.<br/> THE KA, THE BAI, AND THE KHOU</h2>
<p>“The Divine Pharaoh Rameses died and was gathered to Osiris. With these
hands I closed his coffin and set him in his splendid tomb, where he shall rest
unharmed for ever till the day of the awakening. And Meriamun and Meneptah
reigned in Khem. But to Pharaoh she was very cold, though he did her will in
everything, and they had but one child, so that in a while he wearied of her
loveliness.</p>
<p>“But hers was the master-mind, and she ruled Pharaoh as she ruled all
else.</p>
<p>“For me, my lot was bettered; she talked much with me, and advanced me to
great dignity, so that I was the first Master Builder in Khem, and Commander of
the legion of Amen.</p>
<p>“Now it chanced that Meriamun made a feast, where she entertained Pharaoh
and Hataska sat beside him. She was the first lady about the Queen’s
person, a beautiful but insolent woman, who had gained Pharaoh’s favour
for the hour. Now wine worked so with the King that he toyed openly with the
lady Hataska’s hand, but Meriamun the Queen took no note, though Hataska,
who had also drunk of the warm wine of the Lower Land, grew insolent, as was
her wont. She quaffed deep from her cup of gold, and bade a slave bear it to
the Queen, crying, ‘Pledge me, my sister.’</p>
<p>“The meaning of her message was plain to all who heard; this waiting lady
openly declared herself wife to Pharaoh and an equal of the Queen. Now Meriamun
cared nothing for Pharaoh’s love, but for power she did care, and she
frowned, while a light shone in her dark eyes; yet she took the cup and touched
it with her lips.</p>
<p>“Presently she lifted her own cup in turn and toyed with it, then made
pretence to drink, and said softly to the King’s paramour, who had
pledged her:</p>
<p>“‘Pledge me in answer, Hataska, my servant, for soon, methinks,
thou shalt be greater than the Queen.’</p>
<p>“Now this foolish woman read her saying wrong, and took the golden cup
from the eunuch who bore it.</p>
<p>“With a little nod to the Queen, and a wave of her slim hand, Hataska
drank, and instantly, with a great cry, she fell dead across the board. Then,
while all the company sat in terror, neither daring to be silent nor to speak,
and while Meriamun smiled scornfully on the dark head lying low among the roses
on the board, Pharaoh leaped up, mad with wrath, and called to the guards to
seize the Queen. But she waved them back, and, speaking in a slow, cold voice,
she said:</p>
<p>“‘Dare not to touch Khem’s anointed Queen lest your fate be
as <i>her</i> fate. For thee, Meneptah, forget not thy marriage oath. What, am
I Queen, and shall thy wantons throw their insolence in my teeth and name me
their sister? Not so, for if my eyes be blind yet my ears are open. Peace, she
is rightly served—choose thou a lowlier mistress!’</p>
<p>“And Pharaoh made no answer, for he feared her with an ever-growing fear.
But she, sinking back in her seat of state, played with the gold kepher on her
breast, and watched them bear the body forth to the House of Osiris. One by one
all the company made obeisance and passed thence, glad to be gone, till at the
last there were left only Pharaoh and Meriamun the Queen, and myself—Rei
the Priest—for all were much afraid. Then Pharaoh spoke, looking neither
at her nor at me, and half in fear, half in anger.</p>
<p>“‘Thou hateful woman, accursed be the day when first I looked upon
thy beauty. Thou hast conquered me, but beware, for I am still Pharaoh and thy
Lord. Cross my purpose once again, and, by Him who sleeps at Philæ, I will
discrown thee and give thy body to the tormentors, and set thy soul loose to
follow her whom thou hast slain.’</p>
<p>“Then Meriamun answered proudly:</p>
<p>“‘Pharaoh, be warned: lift but one finger against my majesty and
thou art doomed. Thou canst not slay me, but I can over-match thee, and I swear
by the same oath! By Him who sleeps at Philæ, lift a hand against me, ay,
harbour one thought of treachery, and thou diest. Not lightly can I be
deceived, for I have messengers that thou canst not hear. Something, Royal
Meneptah, do I know of the magic of that Queen Taia who was before me. Now
listen—do this one thing and all shall be well. Go on thy path and leave
me to follow mine. Queen I am, Queen I will remain, and in all matters of the
State mine must be an equal voice though it is thine that speaks. And, for the
rest, we are apart henceforth, for thou fearest me, and Meneptah, I love not
thee, nor any man.’</p>
<p>“‘As thou hast spoken, so be it,’ quoth Pharaoh, for his
heart sank, and his fear came back upon him. ‘Evil was the day when first
we met, and this is the price of my desire. Henceforth we are apart in bed and
board, but in the council we are still one, for our ends are one. I know thy
power, Meriamun, thou gifted of the evil Gods; thou needest not fear that I
shall seek to slay thee, for a spear cast against the heavens returns on him
who threw it. Rei, my servant, thou art witness to our oaths; hear now their
undoing. Meriamun, the Queen of ancient Khem, thou art no more wife of mine.
Farewell.’</p>
<p>“And he went heavily and stricken with fear.</p>
<p>“‘Nay,’ she said, gazing after him, ‘no more am I
Meneptah’s wife, but still am I Khem’s dreaded Queen. Oh, thou old
priest, I am aweary. See what a lot is mine, who have all things but love, and
yet am sick of all! I longed for power, and power is mine, and what is power?
It is a rod wherewith we beat the air that straightway closes on the stroke.
Yes, I tire of my loveless days and of this dull round of common things. Oh,
for one hour of love and in that hour to die! Oh that the future would lift its
veil and disclose the face of time to be! Say, Rei! Wilt thou be bold and dare
a deed?’ And she clasped me by the sleeve and whispered in my ear, in the
dead tongue known to her and me—‘Her I slew—thou
sawest——’</p>
<p>“‘Ay, Queen, I saw—what of her? ’Twas ill done.’</p>
<p>“‘Nay, ’twas rightly done and well done. But thou knowest she
is not yet cold, nor for a while will be, and I have the art to drag her spirit
back ere she be cold, from where she is, and to force knowledge from her
lips—for being an Osiris all the future is open to her in this
hour.’</p>
<p>“‘Nay, nay,’ I cried. ‘It is unholy—not lightly
may we disturb the dead, lest the Guardian Gods be moved to anger.’</p>
<p>“‘Yet will I do it, Rei. If thou dost fear, come not. But I go. I
am fain for knowledge, and thus only may I win it. If I die in the dread
endeavour, write this of Meriamun the Queen: That in seeking the
to-be—she found it!’</p>
<p>“‘Nay, Royal Lady,’ I answered, ‘thou shalt not go
alone. I too have some skill in magic, and perchance can ward evil from thee.
So, if indeed thou wilt dare this dreadful thing, behold now, as ever, I am thy
servant.’</p>
<p>“‘It is well. See, now, the body will this night be laid in the
sanctuary of the Temple of Osiris that is near the great gates, as is the
custom, to await the coming of the embalmers. Come ere she be colder than my
heart, come with me, Rei, to the house of the Lord of the Dead!’</p>
<p>“She passed to her chamber, wrapped herself about in a dark robe, and
hurried with me to the Temple doors, where we were challenged by the guards.</p>
<p>“‘Who passes? In the name of the Holy Osiris speak.’</p>
<p>“‘Rei, the Master Builder and the anointed Priest, and with him
another,’ I made answer. ‘Open.’</p>
<p>“‘Nay, I open not. There is one within who may not be
wakened.’</p>
<p>“‘Who, then, is within?’</p>
<p>“‘She whom the Queen slew.’</p>
<p>“‘The Queen sends one who would look on her she slew.’</p>
<p>“Then the priest gazed on the hooded form beside me and started back,
crying, ‘A token, noble Rei.’</p>
<p>“I held up the Royal signet, and, bowing, he opened. Being come within
the Temple I lit the tapers that had been prepared. Then by their feeble light
we passed through the outer hall till we came to the curtains that veil the
sanctuary of the Holy Place, and here I quenched the tapers; for no fire must
enter there, save that which burns upon the altar of the dead. But through the
curtains came rays of light.</p>
<p>“‘Open!’ said Meriamun, and I opened, and hand in hand we
passed in. On the altar that is in the place the flame burnt brightly. The
chamber is not wide and great, for this is the smallest of the temples of
Tanis, but yet so large that the light could not reach its walls nor pierce the
overhanging gloom, and by much gazing scarcely could we discover the outline of
the graven shapes of the Holy Gods that are upon the walls. But the light fell
clear upon the great statue of the Osiris that was seated behind the altar
fashioned in the black stone of Syene, wound about with the corpse-cloths,
wearing on his head the crown of the Upper Land, and holding in his hands the
crook of divinity and the awful scourge of punishment. The light shone all
about the white and dreadful shape that was placed upon his holy knees, the
naked shape of lost Hataska who this night had died at the hand of Meriamun.
There she bowed her head against the sacred breast, her long hair streaming
down on either side, her arms tied across her heart, and her eyes, whence the
hues of life had scarcely faded, widely staring at the darkness of the shrine.
For at Tanis to this day it is the custom for a night to place those of high
birth or office who die suddenly upon the knees of the statue of Osiris.</p>
<p>“‘See,’ I said to the Queen, speaking low, for the weight of
the haunted place sank into my heart, ‘see how she who scarce an hour ago
was but a lovely wanton hath by thine act been clad in majesty greater than all
the glory of the earth. Bethink thee, wilt thou dare indeed to summon back the
spirit to the body whence thou hast set it free? Not easily, O Queen, may it be
done for all thy magic, and if perchance she answereth thee, it may well be
that the terror of her words shall utterly o’erwhelm us.’</p>
<p>“‘Nay,’ she made answer, ‘I am instructed. I fear not.
I know by what name to call the Khou that hovers on the threshold of the Double
Hall of Truth, and how to send it back to its own place. I fear not, but if
perchance thou fearest, Rei, depart hence and leave me to the task
alone.’</p>
<p>“‘Nay,’ I said. ‘I also am instructed, and I go not.
But I say to thee that this is unholy.’</p>
<p>“Then Meriamun spoke no more—but lifting up her hands she held them
heavenwards, and so for a while she stood, her face fixed, as was the face of
dead Hataska. Then, as must be done, I drew the circle round us and round the
altar and the statue of Osiris, and that which sat upon his knee. With my staff
I drew it, and standing therein I said the holy words which should ward away
the evil things that come near in such an hour.</p>
<p>“Now Meriamun threw a certain powder into the flame upon the altar.
Thrice she threw the powder, and as she threw it a ball of flame rose from the
altar and floated away, each time that she threw did the ball of fire rise; and
this it was needful to do, for by fire only may the dead be manifest, and
therefore was a globe of fire given to each of the three shapes that together
make the threefold spirit of the dead. And when the three globes of fire had
melted into air, passing over the head of the statue of Osiris, thrice did
Meriamun cry aloud:</p>
<p>“‘<i>Hataska! Hataska! Hataska!</i></p>
<p>“‘By the dreadful Name I summon thee.</p>
<p>“‘I summon thee from the threshold of the Double Hall.</p>
<p>“‘I summon thee from the Gates of Judgment.</p>
<p>“‘I summon thee from the door of Doom.</p>
<p>“‘By the link of life and death that is between thee and me, I bid
thee come from where thou art and make answer to that which I shall ask of
thee.’</p>
<p>“She ceased, but no answer came. Still the cold Osiris smiled, and still
the body on his knee sat with open eyes gazing into nothingness.</p>
<p>“‘Not thus easily,’ I whispered, ‘may this dreadful
thing be done. Thou art instructed in the Word of Fear. If thou darest, let it
pass thy lips, or let us be gone.’</p>
<p>“‘Nay, it shall be spoken,’ she said—and thus she
wrought. Passing to the statue she hid her head within her cloak and with both
hands grasped the feet of the slain Hataska.</p>
<p>“Seeing this I also crouched upon the floor and hid my face, for it is
death to hear that Word with an uncovered face.</p>
<p>“Then in so soft a whisper that scarce had its breath stirred a feather
on her lips, Meriamun spoke the Word of Fear which may not be written, whose
sound has power to pass all space and open the ears of the dead who dwell in
Amenti. Softly she said it, for in a shout of thunder it was caught up and
echoed from her lips, and down the eternal halls it seemed to rush on the feet
of storm and the wings of wind, so that the roof rocked and the deep
foundations of the Temple quivered like a wind-stirred tree.</p>
<p>“‘Unveil, ye mortals!’ cried a dreadful voice, ‘and
look upon the sight of fear that ye have dared to summon.’</p>
<p>“And I rose and cast my cloak from about my face and gazed, then sank
down in terror. For round about the circle that I had drawn pressed all the
multitude of the dead; countless as the desert sands they pressed, gazing with
awful eyes upon us twain. And the fire that was on the altar died away, but yet
was there light, for it shone from those dead eyes, and in the eyes of lost
Hataska there was light.</p>
<p>“And ever the faces changed, never for one beat of time did they cease to
change. For as we gazed upon a face it would melt, even to the eyes, and round
these same eyes again would gather but no more the same. And like the sloping
sides of pyramids were the faces set about us from the ground to the Temple
roof—and on us were fixed their glowing eyes.</p>
<p>“And I, Rei, being instructed, knew that to suffer myself to be overcome
with terror was death, as it was death to pass without the circle. So in my
heart I called upon Osiris, Lord of the Dead, to protect us, and even as I
named the ineffable name, lo! all the thousand thousand faces bent themselves
in adoration and then, turning, looked each upon the other even as though each
spake to each, and changed, and swiftly changed.</p>
<p>“‘Meriamun,’ I said, gathering up my strength, ‘fear
not, but beware!’</p>
<p>“‘Nay, wherefore should I fear,’ she answered, ‘because
the veil of sense is torn, and for an hour we see those who are ever about our
path and whose eyes watch our most secret thought continually? I fear
not.’ And she stepped boldly, even to the edge of the circle, and cried:</p>
<p>“‘All hail, ye Sahus, spirits of the awful dead, among whom I also
shall be numbered.’</p>
<p>“And as she came the changing faces shrunk away, leaving a space before
her. And in the space there grew two arms, mighty and black, that stretched
themselves towards her, until there was not the length of three grains of wheat
betwixt the clutching fingers and her breast.</p>
<p>“But Meriamun only laughed and drew back a space.</p>
<p>“‘Not so, thou Enemy,’ she said, ‘this circle thou
may’st not break; it is too strong for thee. But to the work. Hataska,
once again by the link of life and death I summon thee—and this time thou
must come, thou who wast a wanton and now art “greater than the
Queen.”’</p>
<p>“And as she spoke, from the dead form of the woman on Osiris’ knee
there issued forth another form and stood before us, as a snake issues from its
slough. And as was the dead Hataska so was this form, feature for feature, look
for look, and limb for limb. But still the corpse rested upon Osiris’
knee, for this was but the <i>Ka</i> that stood before us.</p>
<p>“And thus spoke the voice of Hataska in the lips of the Ka:</p>
<p>“‘What wouldest thou with me who am no more of thy company, O thou
by whose hand my body did perish? Why troublest thou me?’</p>
<p>“And Meriamun made answer: ‘I would this of thee, that thou
shouldest declare unto me the future, even in the presence of this great
company. Speak, I command thee.’</p>
<p>“And the Ka said: ‘Nay, Meriamun, that I cannot do, for I am but
the Ka—the Dweller in the Tomb, the guardian of what was Hataska whom
thou didst slay, whom I must watch through all the days of death till
resurrection is. Of the future I know naught; seek thou that which
knows.’</p>
<p>“‘Stand thou on one side,’ quoth the Queen, and the Dweller
in the Tomb obeyed.</p>
<p>“Then once more she called upon Hataska and there came a sound of rushing
wings. And behold, on the head of the statue of Osiris sat a great bird,
feathered as it were with gold. But the bird had the head of a woman, and the
face was fashioned as the face of Hataska. And thus it spoke, that was the
<i>Bai</i>:</p>
<p>“‘What wouldest thou with me, Meriamun, who am no more of thy
company? Why dost thou draw me from the Under World, thou by whose hand my body
did perish?’</p>
<p>“And Meriamun said: ‘This I would of thee, that thou shouldest
declare unto me the future. Speak, I command thee.’</p>
<p>“And the Bai said: ‘Nay, Meriamun, that I cannot do. I am but the
Bai of her who was Hataska, and I fly from Death to Life and Life to Death,
till the hour of awakening is. Of the future I know naught; seek thou that
which knows.’</p>
<p>“‘Rest thou where thou art,’ quoth the Queen, and there it
rested, awful to see.</p>
<p>“Then once more Meriamun called upon Hataska, bidding her hear the
summons where she was.</p>
<p>“And behold the eyes of the Dead One that was upon the knee of Osiris
glowed, and glowed the eyes of the Dweller in the Tomb, and of the winged
Messenger who sat above. And then there was a sound as the sound of wind, and
from above, cleaving the darkness, descended a Tongue of Flame and rested on
the brow of the dead Hataska. And the eyes of all the thousand thousand spirits
turned and gazed upon the Tongue of Flame. And then dead Hataska
spoke—though her lips moved not, yet she spoke. And this she said:</p>
<p>“‘What wouldest thou with me, Meriamun, who am no more of thy
company? Why dost thou dare to trouble me, thou by whose hand my body did
perish, drawing me from the threshold of the Double Hall of Truth, back to the
Over World?’</p>
<p>“And Meriamun the Queen said, ‘Oh, thou <i>Khou</i>, for this
purpose have I called thee. I am aweary of my days and I fain would learn the
future. The future fain would I learn, but the forked tongue of That which
sleeps tells me no word, and the lips of That which is a-cold are dumb! Tell
me, then, thou, I charge thee by the word that has power to open the lips of
the dead, thou who in all things art instructed, what shall be the burden of my
days?’</p>
<p>“And the dread Khou made answer: ‘Love shall be the burden of thy
days, and Death shall be the burden of thy love. Behold one draws near from out
the North whom thou hast loved, whom thou shalt love from life to life, till
all things are accomplished. Bethink thee of a dream that thou dreamedst as
thou didst lie on Pharaoh’s bed, and read its riddle. Meriamun, thou art
great and thy name is known upon the earth, and in Amenti is thy name known.
High is thy fate, and through blood and sorrow shalt thou find it. I have
spoken, let me hence.’</p>
<p>“‘It is well,’ the Queen made answer: ‘But not yet
mayest thou go hence. First I command thee, by the word of dread and by the
link of life and death, declare unto me if here upon the earth and in this life
I shall possess him whom I shall love?’</p>
<p>“‘In sin and craft and sorrow, Meriamun, thou shalt possess him; in
shame and jealous agony he shall be taken from thee by one who is stronger than
thou, though thou art strong; by one more beautiful than thou, though thou art
beautiful; and ruin thou shalt give him for his guerdon, and ruin of the heart
shalt thou harvest for thy portion. But for this time she shall escape thee,
whose footsteps march with thine, and with his who shall be thine and hers.
Nevertheless, in a day to come thou shalt pay her back measure for measure, and
evil for evil. I have spoken. Let me hence.’</p>
<p>“‘Not yet, O Khou—not yet. I have still to learn. Show me the
face of her who is mine enemy, and the face of him who is my love.’</p>
<p>“‘Thrice mayest thou speak to me, O thou greatly daring,’
answered the dread Khou, ‘and thrice I may make reply, and then farewell
till I meet thee on the threshold of the hall whence thou hast drawn me. Look
now on the face of that Hataska whom thou slewest.’</p>
<p>“And we looked, and behold the face of dead Hataska changed, and changed
the face of the Double, the <i>Ka</i> that stood on one side, and the face of
the great bird, the <i>Bai</i>, that spread his wings about the head of Osiris.
And they grew beautiful, yes, most exceeding beautiful so that it cannot be
told, and the beauty was that of a woman asleep. Then lo, there hung above
Hataska, as it were, the shadow of one who was watching her sleeping. And his
face we saw not, O thou Wanderer, it was hidden by the visor of a golden
two-horned helm, and in that helm stood fast <i>the bronze point of a broken
spear</i>! But he was clad in the armour of the people of the Northern Sea, the
Aquaiusha, and his hair fell dark about his shoulders like the petals of the
hyacinth flower.</p>
<p>“‘Behold thine enemy and behold thy love! Farewell,’ said the
dread Khou, speaking through dead Hataska’s lips, and as the words died
the beauty faded and the Tongue of Flame shot upwards and was lost, and once
more the eyes of the thousand thousand dead turned and looked upon each other,
even as though their lips whispered each to each.</p>
<p>“But for a while Meriamun stood silent, as one amazed. Then, awaking, she
waved her hand and cried, ‘Begone, thou <i>Bai</i>! Begone, thou
<i>Ka</i>!’</p>
<p>“And the great bird whereof the face was as the face of Hataska spread
his golden wings and passed away to his own place, and the Ka that was in the
semblance of Hataska drew near to the dead one’s knees, and passed back
into her from whom she came. And all the thousand thousand faces melted though
the fiery eyes still gazed upon us.</p>
<p>“Then Meriamun covered her head and once more spoke the awful Word, and I
also covered up my head. But, as must be done, this second time she called the
Word aloud, and yet though she called it loud, it came but as a tiny whisper
from her lips. Nevertheless, at the sound of it, once more was the Temple
shaken as by a storm.</p>
<p>“Then Meriamun unveiled, and behold, again the fire burned upon the
altar, and on the knees of the Osiris sat Hataska, cold and still in death, and
round them was emptiness and silence.</p>
<p>“‘Now that all is done, I greatly fear for that which has been, and
that which shall be. Lead me hence, O Rei, son of Pames, for I can no
more.’</p>
<p>“And so with a heavy heart I led her forth, who of all sorceresses is the
very greatest. Behold, thou Wanderer, wherefore the Queen was troubled at the
coming of the man in the armour of the North, in whose two-horned golden helm
stands fast the point of a broken spear.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="book02"></SPAN>BOOK II</h2>
<h2><SPAN name="chap09"></SPAN>CHAPTER I.<br/> THE PROPHETS OF THE APURA</h2>
<p>“These things are not without the Gods,” said the Wanderer, who was
called Eperitus, when he had heard all the tale of Rei the Priest, son of
Pames, the Head Architect, the Commander of the Legion of Amen. Then he sat
silent for a while, and at last raised his eyes and looked upon the old man.</p>
<p>“Thou hast told a strange tale, Rei. Over many a sea have I wandered, and
in many a land I have sojourned. I have seen the ways of many peoples, and have
heard the voices of the immortal Gods. Dreams have come to me and marvels have
compassed me about. It has been laid upon me to go down into Hades, that land
which thou namest Amenti, and to look on the tribes of the Dead; but never till
now have I known so strange a thing. For mark thou, when first I beheld this
fair Queen of thine I thought she looked upon me strangely, as one who knew my
face. And now, Rei, if thou speakest truth, <i>she</i> deems that she has met
me in the ways of night and magic. Say, then, who was the man of the vision of
the Queen, the man with dark and curling locks, clad in golden armour after the
fashion of the Achæans whom ye name the Aquaiusha, wearing on his head a golden
helm, wherein was fixed a broken spear?”</p>
<p>“Before me sits such a man,” said Rei, “or perchance it is a
God that my eyes behold.”</p>
<p>“No God am I,” quoth the Wanderer, smiling, “though the
Sidonians deemed me nothing less when the black bow twanged and the swift
shafts flew. Read me the riddle, thou that art instructed.”</p>
<p>Now the aged Priest looked upon the ground, then turned his eyes upward, and
with muttering lips prayed to Thoth, the God of Wisdom. And when he had made an
end of prayer he spoke.</p>
<p>“<i>Thou</i> art the man,” he said. “Out of the sea thou hast
come to bring the doom of love on the Lady Meriamun and on thyself the doom of
death. This I knew, but of the rest I know nothing. Now, I pray thee, oh thou
who comest in the armour of the North, thou whose face is clothed in beauty,
and who art of all men the mightiest and hast of all men the sweetest and most
guileful tongue, go back, go back into the sea whence thou camest, and the
lands whence thou hast wandered.”</p>
<p>“Not thus easily may men escape their doom,” quoth the Wanderer.
“My death may come, as come it must; but know this, Rei, I do not seek
the love of Meriamun.”</p>
<p>“Then it well may chance that thou shalt find it, for ever those who seek
love lose, and those who seek not find.”</p>
<p>“I am come to seek another love,” said the Wanderer, “and I
seek her till I die.”</p>
<p>“Then I pray the Gods that thou mayest find her, and that Khem may thus
be saved from sorrow. But here in Egypt there is no woman so fair as Meriamun,
and thou must seek farther as quickly as may be. And now, Eperitus, behold I
must away to do service in the Temple of the Holy Amen, for I am his High
Priest. But I am commanded by Pharaoh first to bring thee to the feast at the
Palace.”</p>
<p>Then he led the Wanderer from his chamber and brought him by a side entrance to
the great Palace of the Pharaoh at Tanis, near the Temple of Ptah. And first he
took him to a chamber that had been made ready for him in the Palace, a
beautiful chamber, richly painted with beast-headed Gods and furnished with
ivory chairs, and couches of ebony and silver, and with a gilded bed.</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer went into the shining baths, and dark-eyed girls bathed him
and anointed him with fragrant oil, and crowned him with lotus flowers. When
they had bathed him they bade him lay aside his golden armour and his bow and
the quiver full of arrows, but this the Wanderer would not do, for as he laid
the black bow down it thrilled with a thin sound of war. So Rei led him, armed
as he was, to a certain antechamber, and there he left him, saying that he
would return again when the feast was done. Trumpets blared as the Wanderer
waited, drums rolled, and through the wide thrown curtains swept the lovely
Meriamun and the divine Pharaoh Meneptah, with many lords and ladies of the
Court, all crowned with roses and with lotus blooms.</p>
<p>The Queen was decked in Royal attire, her shining limbs were veiled in
broidered silk; about her shoulders was a purple robe, and round her neck and
arms were rings of well-wrought gold. She was stately and splendid to see, with
pale brows and beautiful disdainful eyes where dreams seemed to sleep beneath
the shadow of her eyelashes. On she swept in all her state and pride of beauty,
and behind her came the Pharaoh. He was a tall man, but ill-made and
heavy-browed, and to the Wanderer it seemed that he was heavy-hearted too, and
that care and terror of evil to come were always in his mind.</p>
<p>Meriamun looked up swiftly.</p>
<p>“Greeting, Stranger,” she said. “Thou comest in warlike guise
to grace our feast.”</p>
<p>“Methought, Royal Lady,” he made answer, “that anon when I
would have laid it by, this bow of mine sang to me of present war. Therefore I
am come armed—even to thy feast.”</p>
<p>“Has thy bow such foresight, Eperitus?” said the Queen. “I
have heard but once of such a weapon, and that in a minstrel’s tale. He
came to our Court with his lyre from the Northern Sea, and he sang of the Bow
of Odysseus.”</p>
<p>“Minstrel or not, thou does well to come armed, Wanderer,” said the
Pharaoh; “for if thy bow sings, my own heart mutters much to me of war to
be.”</p>
<p>“Follow me, Wanderer, however it fall out,” said the Queen.</p>
<p>So he followed her and the Pharaoh till they came to a splendid hall, carven
round with images of fighting and feasting. Here, on the painted walls, Rameses
Miamun drove the thousands of the Khita before his single valour; here men
hunted wild-fowl through the marshes with a great cat for their hound. Never
had the Wanderer beheld such a hall since he supped with the Sea King of the
fairy isle. On the daïs, raised above the rest, sat the Pharaoh, and by him sat
Meriamun the Queen, and by the Queen sat the Wanderer in the golden armour of
Paris, and he leaned the black bow against his ivory chair.</p>
<p>Now the feast went on and men ate and drank. The Queen spoke little, but she
watched the Wanderer beneath the lids of her deep-fringed eyes.</p>
<p>Suddenly, as they feasted and grew merry, the doors at the end of the chamber
were thrown wide, the Guards fell back in fear, and behold, at the end of the
hall, stood two men. Their faces were tawny, dry, wasted with desert wandering;
their noses were hooked like eagles’ beaks, and their eyes were yellow as
the eyes of lions. They were clad in rough skins of beasts, girdled about their
waists with leathern thongs, and fiercely they lifted their naked arms, and
waved their wands of cedar. Both men were old, one was white-bearded, the other
was shaven smooth like the priests of Egypt. As they lifted the rods on high
the Guards shrank like beaten hounds, and all the guests hid their faces, save
Meriamun and the Wanderer alone. Even Pharaoh dared not look on them, but he
murmured angrily in his beard:</p>
<p>“By the name of Osiris,” he said, “here be those Soothsayers
of the Apura once again. Now Death waits on those who let them pass the
doors.”</p>
<p>Then one of the two men, he who was shaven like a priest, cried with a great
voice:</p>
<p>“<i>Pharaoh! Pharaoh! Pharaoh!</i> Hearken to the word of Jahveh. Wilt
thou let the people go?”</p>
<p>“I will not let them go,” he answered.</p>
<p>“<i>Pharaoh! Pharaoh! Pharaoh!</i> Hearken to the word of Jahveh. If thou
wilt not let the people go, then shall all the firstborn of Khem, of the Prince
and the slave, of the ox and the ass, be smitten of Jahveh. Wilt thou let the
people go?”</p>
<p>Now Pharaoh hearkened, and those who were at the feast rose and cried with a
loud voice:</p>
<p>“O Pharaoh, let the people go! Great woes are fallen upon Khem because of
the Apura. O Pharaoh, let the people go!”</p>
<p>Now Pharaoh’s heart was softened and he was minded to let them go, but
Meriamun turned to him and said:</p>
<p>“Thou shalt not let the people go. It is not these slaves, nor the God of
these slaves, who bring the plagues on Khem, but it is that strange Goddess,
the False Hathor, who dwells here in the city of Tanis. Be not so
fearful—ever hadst thou a coward heart. Drive the False Hathor thence if
thou wilt, but hold these slaves to their bondage. I still have cities that
must be built, and yon slaves shall build them.”</p>
<p>Then the Pharaoh cried: “Hence! I bid you. Hence, and to-morrow shall
your people be laden with a double burden and their backs shall be red with
stripes. I will not let the people go!”</p>
<p>Then the two men cried aloud, and pointing upward with their staffs they
vanished from the hall, and none dared to lay hands on them, but those who sat
at the feast murmured much.</p>
<p>Now the Wanderer marvelled why Pharaoh did not command the Guards to cut down
these unbidden guests, who spoiled his festival. The Queen Meriamun saw the
wonder in his eyes and turned to him.</p>
<p>“Know thou, Eperitus,” she said, “that great plagues have
come of late on this land of ours—plagues of lice and frogs and flies and
darkness, and the changing of pure waters to blood. And these things our Lord
the Pharaoh deems have been brought upon us by the curse of yonder magicians,
conjurers and priests among certain slaves who work in the land at the building
of our cities. But I know well that the curses come on us from Hathor, the Lady
of Love, because of that woman who hath set herself up here in Tanis, and is
worshipped as the Hathor.”</p>
<p>“Why then, O Queen,” said the Wanderer, “is this false
Goddess suffered to abide in your fair city? for, as I know well, the immortal
Gods are ever angered with those who turn from their worship to bow before
strange altars.”</p>
<p>“Why is she suffered? Nay, ask of Pharaoh my Lord. Methinks it is because
her beauty is more than the beauty of women, so the men say who have looked on
it, but I have not seen it, for only those men see it who go to worship at her
shrine, and then from afar. It is not meet that the Queen of all the Lands
should worship at the shrine of a strange woman, come—like thyself,
Eperitus—from none knows where: if indeed she be a woman and not a fiend
from the Under World. But if thou wouldest learn more, ask my Lord the Pharaoh,
for he knows the Shrine of the False Hathor, and he knows who guard it, and
what is it that bars the way.”</p>
<p>Now the Wanderer turned to Pharaoh saying: “O Pharaoh, may I know the
truth of this mystery?”</p>
<p>Then Meneptah looked up, and there was doubt and trouble on his heavy face.</p>
<p>“I will tell thee readily, thou Wanderer, for perchance such a man as
thou, who hast travelled in many lands and seen the faces of many Gods, may
understand the tale, and may help me. In the days of my father, the holy
Rameses Miamun, the keepers of the Temple of the Divine Hathor awoke, and lo!
in the Sanctuary of the temple was a woman in the garb of the Aquaiusha, who
was Beauty’s self. But when they looked upon her, none could tell the
semblance of her beauty, for to one she seemed dark and to the other fair, and
to each man of them she showed a diverse loveliness. She smiled upon them, and
sang most sweetly, and love entered their hearts, so that it seemed to each man
that she only was his Heart’s Desire. But when any man would have come
nearer and embraced her, there was that about her which drove him back, and if
he strove again, behold, he fell down dead. So at last they subdued their
hearts, and desired her no more, but worshipped her as the Hathor come to
earth, and made offerings of food and drink to her, and prayers. So three years
passed, and at the end of the third year the keepers of the temple looked and
the Hathor was gone. Nothing remained of her but a memory. Yet there were some
who said that this memory was dearer than all else that the world has to give.</p>
<p>“Twenty more seasons went by, and I sat upon the throne of my father, and
was Lord of the Double Crown. And, on a day, a messenger came running and
cried:</p>
<p>“‘Now is Hathor come back to Khem, now is Hathor come back to Khem,
and, as of old, none may draw near her beauty!’ Then I went to see, and
lo! before the Temple of Hathor a great multitude was gathered, and there on
the pylon brow stood the Hathor’s self shining with changeful beauty like
the Dawn. And as of old she sang sweet songs, and, to each man who heard, her
voice was the voice of his own beloved, living and lost to him, or dead and
lost. Now every man has such a grave in his heart as that whence Hathor seems
to rise in changeful beauty. Month by month she sings thus, one day in every
month, and many a man has sought to win her and her favour, but in the doorways
are they who meet him and press him back; and if he still struggles on, there
comes a clang of swords and he falls dead, but no wound is found on him. And,
Wanderer, this is truth, for I myself have striven and have been pressed back
by that which guards her. But I alone of men who have looked on her and heard
her, strove not a second time, and so saved myself alive.”</p>
<p>“Thou alone of men lovest life more than the World’s Desire!”
said the Queen. “Thou hast ever sickened for the love of this strange
Witch, but thy life thou lovest even better than her beauty, and thou dost not
dare attempt again the adventure of her embrace. Know, Eperitus, that this
sorrow is come upon the land, that all men love yonder witch and rave of her,
and to each she wears a different face and sings in another voice. When she
stands upon the pylon tower, then thou wilt see the madness with which she has
smitten them. For they will weep and pray and tear their hair. Then they will
rush through the temple courts and up to the temple doors, and be thrust back
again by that which guards her. But some will yet strive madly on, and thou
wilt hear the clash of arms and they will fall dead before thee. Accursed is
the land, I tell thee, Wanderer; because of that Phantom it is accursed. For it
is she who brings these woes on Khem; from her, not from our slaves and their
mad conjurers, come plagues, I say, and all evil things. And till a man be
found who may pass her guard, and come face to face with the witch and slay
her, plagues and woes and evil things shall be the daily bread of Khem.
Perchance, Wanderer, thou art such a man,” and she looked on him
strangely. “Yet if so, this is my counsel, that thou go not up against
her, lest thou also be bewitched, and a great man be lost to us.”</p>
<p>Now the Wanderer turned the matter over in his heart and made answer:</p>
<p>“Perchance, Lady, my strength and the favour of the Gods might serve me
in such a quest. But methinks that this woman is meeter for words of love and
the kisses of men than to be slain with the sharp sword, if, indeed, she be not
of the number of the immortals.”</p>
<p>Now Meriamun flushed and frowned.</p>
<p>“It is not fitting so to talk before me,” she said. “Of this
be sure, that if the Witch may be come at, she shall be slain and given to
Osiris for a bride.”</p>
<p>Now the Wanderer saw that the Lady Meriamun was jealous of the beauty and
renown and love of her who dwelt in the temple, and was called the Strange
Hathor, and he held his peace, for he knew when to be silent.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap10"></SPAN>CHAPTER II.<br/> THE NIGHT OF DREAD</h2>
<p>The feast dragged slowly on, for Fear was of the company. The men and women
were silent, and when they drank, it was as if one had poured a little oil on a
dying fire. Life flamed up in them for a moment, their laughter came like the
crackling of thorns, and then they were silent again. Meanwhile the Wanderer
drank little, waiting to see what should come. But the Queen was watching him
whom already her heart desired, and she only of all the company had pleasure in
this banquet. Suddenly a side-door opened behind the daïs, there was a stir in
the hall, each guest turning his head fearfully, for all expected some evil
tidings. But it was only the entrance of those who bear about in the feasts of
Egypt an effigy of the Dead, the likeness of a mummy carved in wood, and who
cry: “Drink, O King, and be glad, thou shalt soon be even as he! Drink,
and be glad.” The stiff, swathed figure, with its folded hands and gilded
face, was brought before the Pharaoh, and Meneptah, who had sat long in sullen
brooding silence, started when he looked on it. Then he broke into an angry
laugh.</p>
<p>“We have little need of thee to-night,” he cried, as he saluted the
symbol of Osiris. “Death is near enough, we want not thy silent
preaching. Death, Death is near!”</p>
<p>He fell back in his gilded chair, and let the cup drop from his hand, gnawing
at his beard.</p>
<p>“Art thou a man?” spoke Meriamun, in a low clear voice; “are
you men, and yet afraid of what comes to all? Is it only to-night that we first
hear the name of Death? Remember the great Men-kau-ra, remember the old Pharaoh
who built the Pyramid of Hir. He was just and kind, and he feared the Gods, and
for his reward they showed him Death, coming on him in six short years. Did he
scowl and tremble, like all of you to-night, who are scared by the threats of
slaves? Nay, he outwitted the Gods, he made night into day, he lived out twice
his years, with revel and love and wine in the lamp-lit groves of persea trees.
Come, my guests, let us be merry, if it be but for an hour. Drink, and be
brave!”</p>
<p>“For once thou speakest well,” said the King. “Drink and
forget; the Gods who give Death give wine,” and his angry eyes ranged
through the hall, to seek some occasion of mirth and scorn.</p>
<p>“Thou Wanderer!” he said, suddenly. “Thou drinkest not: I
have watched thee as the cups go round; what, man, thou comest from the North,
the sun of thy pale land has not heat enough to foster the vine. Thou seemest
cold, and a drinker of water; why wilt thou be cold before thine hour? Come,
pledge me in the red wine of Khem. Bring forth the cup of Pasht!” he
cried to them who waited, “bring forth the cup of Pasht, the King
drinks!”</p>
<p>Then the chief butler of Pharaoh went to the treasure-house, and came again,
bearing a huge golden cup, fashioned in the form of a lion’s head, and
holding twelve measures of wine. It was an ancient cup, sacred to Pasht, and a
gift of the Rutennu to Thothmes, the greatest of that name.</p>
<p>“Fill it full of unmixed wine!” cried the King. “Dost thou
grow pale at the sight of the cup, thou Wanderer from the North? I pledge thee,
pledge thou me!”</p>
<p>“Nay, King,” said the Wanderer, “I have tasted wine of
Ismarus before to-day, and I have drunk with a wild host, the one-eyed Man
Eater!” For his heart was angered by the King, and he forgot his wisdom,
but the Queen marked the saying.</p>
<p>“Then pledge me in the cup of Pasht!” quoth the King.</p>
<p>“I pray thee, pardon me,” said the Wanderer, “for wine makes
wise men foolish and strong men weak, and to-night methinks we shall need our
wits and our strength.”</p>
<p>“Craven!” cried the King, “give me the bowl. I drink to thy
better courage, Wanderer,” and lifting the great golden cup, he stood up
and drank it, and then dropped staggering into his chair, his head fallen on
his breast.</p>
<p>“I may not refuse a King’s challenge, though it is ill to contend
with our hosts,” said the Wanderer, turning somewhat pale, for he was in
anger. “Give me the bowl!”</p>
<p>He took the cup, and held it high; then pouring a little forth to his Gods, he
said, in a clear voice, for he was stirred to anger beyond his wont:</p>
<p>“<i>I drink to the Strange Hathor!</i>”</p>
<p>He spoke, and drained the mighty cup, and set it down on the board, and even as
he laid down the cup, and as the Queen looked at him with eyes of wrath, there
came from the bow beside his seat a faint shrill sound, a ringing and a singing
of the bow, a noise of running strings and a sound as of rushing arrows.</p>
<p>The warrior heard it, and his eyes burned with the light of battle, for he knew
well that the swift shafts should soon fly to the hearts of the doomed. Pharaoh
awoke and heard it, and heard it the Lady Meriamun the Queen, and she looked on
the Wanderer astonished, and looked on the bow that sang.</p>
<p>“The minstrel’s tale was true! This is none other but the Bow of
Odysseus, the sacker of cities,” said Meriamun. “Hearken thou,
Eperitus, thy great bow sings aloud. How comes it that thy bow sings?”</p>
<p>“For this cause, Queen,” said the Wanderer; “because birds
gather on the Bridge of War. Soon shall shafts be flying and ghosts go down to
doom. Summon thy Guards, I bid thee, for foes are near.”</p>
<p>Terror conquered the drunkenness of Pharaoh; he bade the Guards who stood
behind his chair summon all their company. They went forth, and a great hush
fell again upon the Hall of Banquets and upon those who sat at meat therein.
The silence grew deadly still, like air before the thunder, and men’s
hearts sank within them, and turned to water in their breasts. Only Odysseus
wondered and thought on the battle to be, though whence the foe might come he
knew not, and Meriamun sat erect in her ivory chair and looked down the
glorious hall.</p>
<p>Deeper grew the silence and deeper yet, and more and more the cloud of fear
gathered in the hearts of men. Then suddenly through all the hall there was a
rush like the rush of mighty wings. The deep foundations of the Palace rocked,
and to the sight of men the roof above seemed to burst asunder, and lo! above
them, against the distance of the sky, there swept a shape of Fear, and the
stars shone through its raiment.</p>
<p>Then the roof closed in again, and for a moment’s space once more there
was silence, whilst men looked with white faces, each on each, and even the
stout heart of the Wanderer stood still.</p>
<p>Then suddenly all down the hall, from this place and from that, men rose up and
with one great cry fell down dead, this one across the board, and that one
across the floor. The Wanderer grasped his bow and counted. From among those
who sat at meat twenty and one had fallen dead. Yet those who lived sat gazing
emptily, for so stricken with fear were they that scarce did each one know if
it was he himself who lay dead or his brother who had sat by his side.</p>
<p>But Meriamun looked down the hall with cold eyes, for she feared neither Death
nor Life, nor God nor man.</p>
<p>And while she looked and while the Wanderer counted, there rose a faint
murmuring sound from the city without, a sound that grew and grew, the thunder
of myriad feet that run before the death of kings. Then the doors burst asunder
and a woman sped through them in her night robes, and in her arms she bore the
naked body of a boy.</p>
<p>“Pharaoh!” she cried, “Pharaoh, and thou, O Queen, look upon
thy son—thy firstborn son—dead is thy son, O Pharaoh! Dead is thy
son, O Queen! In my arms he died suddenly as I lulled him to his rest,”
and she laid the body of the child down on the board among the vessels of gold,
among the garlands of lotus flowers and the beakers of rose-red wine.</p>
<p>Then Pharaoh rose and rent his purple robes and wept aloud. Meriamun rose too,
and lifting the body of her son clasped it to her breast, and her eyes were
terrible with wrath and grief, but she wept not.</p>
<p>“See now the curse that this evil woman, this False Hathor, hath brought
upon us,” she said.</p>
<p>But the very guests sprang up crying, “It is not the Hathor whom we
worship, it is not the Holy Hathor, it is the Gods of those dark Apura whom
thou, O Queen, wilt not let go. On thy head and the head of Pharaoh be
it,” and even as they cried the murmur without grew to a shriek of woe, a
shriek so wild and terrible that the Palace walls rang. Again that shriek rose,
and yet a third time, never was such a cry heard in Egypt. And now for the
first time in all his days the face of the Wanderer grew white with fear, and
in fear of heart he prayed for succour to his Goddess—to Aphrodite, the
daughter of Dione.</p>
<p>Again the doors behind them burst open and the Guards flocked in—mighty
men of many foreign lands; but now their faces were wan, their eyes stared
wide, and their jaws hung down. But at the sound of the clanging of their
harness the strength of the Wanderer came back to him again, for the Gods and
their vengeance he feared, but not the sword of man. And now once more the bow
sang aloud. He grasped it, he bent it with his mighty knee, and strung it,
crying:</p>
<p>“Awake, Pharaoh, awake! Foes draw on. Say, be these all the men?”</p>
<p>Then the Captain answered, “These be all of the Guard who are left living
in the Palace. The rest are stark, smitten by the angry Gods.”</p>
<p>Now as the Captain spake, one came running up the hall, heeding neither the
dead nor the living. It was the old priest Rei, the Commander of the Legion of
Amen, who had been the Wanderer’s guide, and his looks were wild with
fear.</p>
<p>“Hearken, Pharaoh!” he cried, “thy people lie dead by
thousands in the streets—the houses are full of dead. In the Temples of
Ptah and Amen many of the priests have fallen dead also.”</p>
<p>“Hast thou more to tell, old man?” cried the Queen.</p>
<p>“The tale has not all been told, O Queen. The soldiers are mad with fear
and with the sight of death, and slay their captains; barely have I escaped
from those in my command of the Legion of Amen. For they swear that this death
has been brought upon the land because the Pharaoh will not let the Apura go.
Hither, then, they come to slay the Pharaoh, and thee also, O Queen, and with
them come many thousands of people, catching up such arms as lie to their
hands.”</p>
<p>Now Pharaoh sank down groaning, but the Queen spake to the Wanderer:</p>
<p>“Anon thy weapon sang of war, Eperitus; now war is at the gates.”</p>
<p>“Little I fear the rush of battle and the blows men deal in anger,
Lady,” he made answer, “though a man may fear the Gods without
shame. Ho, Guards! close up, close up round me! Look not so pale-faced now
death from the Gods is done with, and we have but to fear the sword of
men.”</p>
<p>So great was his mien and so glorious his face as he cried thus, and one by one
drew his long arrows forth and laid them on the board, that the trembling
Guards took heart, and to the number of fifty and one ranged themselves on the
edge of the daïs in a double line. Then they also made ready their bows and
loosened the arrows in their quivers.</p>
<p>Now from without there came a roar of men, and anon, while those of the house
of Pharaoh, and of the guests and nobles, who sat at the feast and yet lived,
fled behind the soldiers, the brazen doors were burst in with mighty blows, and
through them a great armed multitude surged along the hall. There came soldiers
broken from their ranks. There came the embalmers of the Dead; their hands were
overfull of work to-night, but they left their work undone; Death had smitten
some even of these, and their fellows did not shrink back from them now. There
came the smith, black from the forge, and the scribe bowed with endless
writing; and the dyer with his purple hands, and the fisher from the stream;
and the stunted weaver from the loom, and the leper from the Temple gates. They
were mad with lust of life, a starveling life that the King had taxed, when he
let not the Apura go. They were mad with fear of death; their women followed
them with dead children in their arms. They smote down the golden furnishings,
they tore the silken hangings, they cast the empty cups of the feast at the
faces of trembling ladies, and cried aloud for the blood of the King.</p>
<p>“Where is Pharaoh?” they yelled, “show us Pharaoh and the
Queen Meriamun, that we may slay them. Dead are our first born, they lie in
heaps as the fish lay when Sihor ran red with blood. Dead are they because of
the curse that has been brought upon us by the prophets of the Apura, whom
Pharaoh, and Pharaoh’s Queen, yet hold in Khem.”</p>
<p>Now as they cried they saw Pharaoh Meneptah cowering behind the double line of
Guards, and they saw the Queen Meriamun who cowered not, but stood silent above
the din. Then she thrust her way through the Guards, and yet holding the body
of the child to her breast, she stood before them with eyes that flashed more
brightly than the uraeus crown upon her brow.</p>
<p>“Back!” she cried, “back! It is not Pharaoh, it is not I, who
have brought this death upon you. For we too have death here!” and she
held up the body of her dead son. “It is that False Hathor whom ye
worship, that Witch of many a voice and many a face who turns your hearts faint
with love. For her sake ye endure these woes, on her head is all this death.
Go, tear her temple stone from stone, and rend her beauty limb from limb and be
avenged and free the land from curses.”</p>
<p>A moment the people stood and hearkened, muttering as stands the lion that is
about to spring, while those who pressed without cried: “Forward!
Forward! Slay them! Slay them!” Then as with one voice they screamed:</p>
<p>“The Hathor we love, but you we hate, for ye have brought these woes upon
us, and ye shall die.”</p>
<p>They cried, they brawled, they cast footstools and stones at the Guards, and
then a certain tall man among them drew a bow. Straight at the Queen’s
fair breast he aimed his arrow, and swift and true it sped towards her. She saw
the light gleam upon its shining barb, and then she did what no woman but
Meriamun would have done, no, not to save herself from death—she held out
the naked body of her son as a warrior holds a shield. The arrow struck through
and through it, piercing the tender flesh, aye, and pricked her breast beyond,
so that she let the dead boy fall.</p>
<p>The Wanderer saw it and wondered at the horror of the deed, for he had seen no
such deed in all his days. Then shouting aloud the terrible war-cry of the
Achæans he leapt upon the board before him, and as he leapt his golden armour
clanged.</p>
<p>Glancing around, he fixed an arrow to the string and drew to his ear that great
bow which none but he might so much as bend. Then as he loosed, the string sang
like a swallow, and the shaft screamed through the air. Down the glorious hall
it sped, and full on the breast of him who had lifted bow against the Queen the
bitter arrow struck, nor might his harness avail to stay it. Through the body
of him it passed and with blood-red feathers flew on, and smote another who
stood behind him so that his knees also were loosened, and together they fell
dead upon the floor.</p>
<p>Now while the people stared and wondered, again the bowstring sang like a
swallow, again the arrow screamed in its flight, and he who stood before it got
his death, for the shield he bore was pinned to his breast.</p>
<p>Then wonder turned to rage; the multitude rolled forward, and from either side
the air grew dark with arrows. For the Guards at the sight of the shooting of
the Wanderer found heart and fought well and manfully. Boldly also the slayers
came on, and behind them pressed many a hundred men. The Wanderer’s
golden helm flashed steadily, a beacon in the storm. Black smoke burst out in
the hall, the hangings flamed and tossed in a wind from the open door. The
lights were struck from the hands of the golden images, arrows stood thick in
the tables and the rafters, a spear pierced through the golden cup of Pasht.
But out of the darkness and smoke and dust, and the cry of battle, and through
the rushing of the rain of spears, sang the swallow string of the black bow of
Eurytus, and the long shafts shrieked as they sped on them who were ripe to
die. In vain did the arrows of the slayers smite upon that golden harness. They
were but as hail upon the temple roofs, but as driving snow upon the wild
stag’s horns. They struck, they rattled, and down they dropped like snow,
or bounded back and lay upon the board.</p>
<p>The swallow string sang, the black bow twanged, and the bitter arrows shrieked
as they flew.</p>
<p>Now the Wanderer’s shafts were spent, and he judged that their case was
desperate. For out of the doors of the hall that were behind them, and from the
chambers of the women, armed men burst in also, taking them on the flank and
rear. But the Wanderer was old in war, and without a match in all its ways. The
Captain of the Guard was slain with a spear stroke, and the Wanderer took his
place, calling to the men, such of them as were left alive, to form a circle on
the daïs, and within the circle he set those of the house of Pharaoh and the
women who were at the feast. And to Pharaoh he cast a slain man’s sword,
bidding him strike for life and throne if he never struck before; but the heart
was out of Pharaoh because of the death of his son, and the wine about his
wits, and the terrors he had seen. Then Meriamun the Queen snatched the sword
from his trembling hand and stood holding it to guard her life. For she
disdained to crouch upon the ground as did the other women, but stood upright
behind the Wanderer, and heeded not the spears and arrows that dealt death on
every hand. But Pharaoh stood, his face buried in his hands.</p>
<p>Now the slayers came on, shouting and clambering upon the daïs. Then the
Wanderer rushed on them with sword drawn, and shield on high, and so swift he
smote that men might not guard, for they saw, as it were, three blades aloft at
once, and the silver-hafted sword bit deep, the gift of Phæacian Euryalus long
ago. The Guards also smote and thrust; it was for their lives they fought, and
back rolled the tide of foes, leaving a swathe of dead. So a second time they
came on, and a second time were rolled back.</p>
<p>Now of the defenders few were left unhurt, and their strength was well-nigh
spent. But the Wanderer cheered them with great words, though his heart grew
fearful for the end; and Meriamun the Queen also bade them to be of good
courage, and if need were, to die like men. Then once again the wave of War
rolled in upon them, and the strife grew fierce and desperate. The iron hedge
of spears was well-nigh broken, and now the Wanderer, doing such deeds as had
not been known in Khem, stood alone between Meriamun the Queen and the swords
that thirsted for her life and the life of Pharaoh. Then of a sudden, from far
down the great hall of banquets, there came a loud cry that shrilled above the
clash of swords, the groans of men, and all the din of battle.</p>
<p>“<i>Pharaoh! Pharaoh! Pharaoh!</i>” rose a voice. “Now wilt
thou let the people go?”</p>
<p>Then he who smote stayed his hand and he who guarded dropped his shield. The
battle ceased and all turned to look. There at the end of the hall, among the
dead and dying, there stood the two ancient men of the Apura, and in their
hands were cedar rods.</p>
<p>“It is the Wizards—the Wizards of the Apura,” men cried, and
shrunk this way and that, thinking no more on war.</p>
<p>The ancient men drew nigh. They took no heed of the dying or the dead: on they
walked, through blood and wine and fallen tables and scattered arms, till they
stood before the Pharaoh.</p>
<p>“<i>Pharaoh! Pharaoh! Pharaoh!</i>” they cried again. “Dead
are the first-born of Khem at the hand of Jahveh. Wilt thou let the people
go?”</p>
<p>Then Pharaoh lifted his face and cried:</p>
<p>“Get you gone—you and all that is yours. Get you gone swiftly, and
let Khem see your face no more.”</p>
<p>The people heard, and the living left the hall, and silence fell on the city,
and on the dead who died of the sword, and the dead who died of the pestilence.
Silence fell, and sleep, and the Gods’ best gift—forgetfulness.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap11"></SPAN>CHAPTER III.<br/> THE BATHS OF BRONZE</h2>
<p>Even out of this night of dread the morning rose, and with it came Rei, bearing
a message from the King. But he did not find the Wanderer in his chamber. The
Palace eunuchs said that he had risen and had asked for Kurri, the Captain of
the Sidonians, who was now the Queen’s Jeweller. Thither Rei went, for
Kurri was lodged with the servants in a court of the Royal House, and as the
old man came he heard the sound of hammers beating on metal. There, in the
shadow which the Palace wall cast into a little court, there was the Wanderer;
no longer in his golden mail, but with bare arms, and dressed in such a light
smock as the workmen of Khem were wont to wear.</p>
<p>The Wanderer was bending over a small brazier, whence a flame and a light blue
smoke arose and melted into the morning light. In his hand he held a small
hammer, and he had a little anvil by him, on which lay one of the golden
shoulder-plates of his armour. The other pieces were heaped beside the brazier.
Kurri, the Sidonian, stood beside him, with graving tools in his hands.</p>
<p>“Hail to thee, Eperitus,” cried Rei, calling him by the name he had
chosen to give himself. “What makest thou here with fire and
anvil?”</p>
<p>“I am but furbishing up my armour,” said the Wanderer, smiling.
“It has more than one dint from the fight in the hall;” and he
pointed to his shield, which was deeply scarred across the blazon of the White
Bull, the cognizance of dead Paris, Priam’s son. “Sidonian, blow up
the fire.”</p>
<p>Kurri crouched on his hams and blew the blaze to a white heat with a pair of
leathern bellows, while the Wanderer fitted the plates and hammered at them on
the anvil, making the jointures smooth and strong, talking meanwhile with Rei.</p>
<p>“Strange work for a prince, as thou must be in Alybas, whence thou
comest,” quoth Rei, leaning on his long rod of cedar, headed with an
apple of bluestone. “In our country chiefs do not labour with their
hands.”</p>
<p>“Different lands, different ways,” answered Eperitus. “In my
country men wed not their sisters as your kings do, though, indeed, it comes
into my mind that once I met such brides in my wanderings in the isle of the
King of the Winds.”</p>
<p>For the thought of the Æolian isle, where King Æolus gave him all the winds in
a bag, came into his memory.</p>
<p>“My hands can serve me in every need,” he went on. “Mowing
the deep green grass in spring, or driving oxen, or cutting a clean furrow with
the plough in heavy soil, or building houses and ships, or doing smith’s
work with gold and bronze and grey iron—they are all one to me.”</p>
<p>“Or the work of war,” said Rei. “For there I have seen thee
labour. Now, listen, thou Wanderer, the King Meneptah and the Queen Meriamun
send me to thee with this scroll of their will,” and he drew forth a roll
of papyrus, bound with golden threads, and held it on his forehead, bowing, as
if he prayed.</p>
<p>“What is that roll of thine?” said the Wanderer, who was hammering
at the bronze spear-point, that stood fast in his helm.</p>
<p>Rei undid the golden threads and opened the scroll, which he gave into the
Wanderer’s hand.</p>
<p>“Gods! What have we here?” said the Wanderer. “Here are
pictures, tiny and cunningly drawn, serpents in red, and little figures of men
sitting or standing, axes and snakes and birds and beetles! My father, what
tokens are these?” and he gave the scroll back to Rei.</p>
<p>“The King has made his Chief Scribe write to thee, naming thee Captain of
the Legion of Pasht, the Guard of the Royal House, for last night the Captain
was slain. He gives thee a high title, and he promises thee houses, lands, and
a city of the South to furnish thee with wine, and a city of the North to
furnish thee with corn, if thou wilt be his servant.”</p>
<p>“Never have I served any man,” said the Wanderer, flushing red,
“though I went near to being sold and to knowing the day of slavery. The
King does me too much honour.”</p>
<p>“Thou wouldest fain begone from Khem?” asked the old man, eagerly.</p>
<p>“I would fain find her I came to seek, wherever she may be,” said
the Wanderer. “Here or otherwhere.”</p>
<p>“Then, what answer shall I carry to the King?”</p>
<p>“Time brings thought,” said the Wanderer; “I would see the
city if thou wilt guide me. Many cities have I seen, but none so great as this.
As we walk I will consider my answer to your King.”</p>
<p>He had been working at his helm as he spoke, for the rest of his armour was now
mended. He had drawn out the sharp spear-head of bronze, and was balancing it
in his hand and trying its edge.</p>
<p>“A good blade,” he said; “better was never hammered. It went
near to doing its work, Sidonian,” and he turned to Kurri as he spoke.
“Two things of thine I had: thy life and thy spear-point. Thy life I gave
thee, thy spear-point thou didst lend me. Here, take it again,” and he
tossed the spear-head to the Queen’s Jeweller.</p>
<p>“I thank thee, lord,” answered the Sidonian, thrusting it in his
girdle; but he muttered between his teeth, “The gifts of enemies are
gifts of evil.”</p>
<p>The Wanderer did on his mail, set the helmet on his head, and spoke to Rei.
“Come forth, friend, and show me thy city.”</p>
<p>But Rei was watching the smile on the face of the Sidonian, and he deemed it
cruel and crafty and warlike, like the laugh of the Sardana of the sea. He said
nought, but called a guard of soldiers, and with the Wanderer he passed the
Palace gates and went out into the city.</p>
<p>The sight was strange, and it was not thus that the old man, who loved his
land, would have had the Wanderer see it.</p>
<p>From all the wealthy houses, and from many of the poorer sort, rang the wail of
the women mourners as they sang their dirges for the dead.</p>
<p>But in the meaner quarters many a hovel was marked with three smears of blood,
dashed on each pillar of the door and on the lintel; and the sound that came
from these dwellings was the cry of mirth and festival. There were two peoples;
one laughed, one lamented. And in and out of the houses marked with the
splashes of blood women were ever going with empty hands, or coming with hands
full of jewels, of gold, of silver rings, of cups, and purple stuffs. Empty
they went out, laden they came in, dark men and women with keen black eyes and
the features of birds of prey. They went, they came, they clamoured with
delight among the mourning of the men and women of Khem, and none laid a hand
on them, none refused them.</p>
<p>One tall fellow snatched at the staff of Rei.</p>
<p>“Lend me thy staff, old man,” he said, sneering; “lend me thy
jewelled staff for my journey. I do but borrow it; when Yakûb comes from the
desert thou shalt have it again.”</p>
<p>But the Wanderer turned on the fellow with such a glance that he fell back.</p>
<p>“I have seen <i>thee</i> before,” he said, and he laughed over his
shoulder as he went; “I saw thee last night at the feast, and heard thy
great bow sing. Thou art not of the folk of Khem. They are a gentle folk, and
Yakûb wins favour in their sight.”</p>
<p>“What passes now in this haunted land of thine, old man?” said the
Wanderer, “for of all the sights that I have seen, this is the strangest.
None lifts a hand to save his goods from the thief.”</p>
<p>Rei the Priest groaned aloud.</p>
<p>“Evil days have come upon Khem,” he said. “The Apura spoil
the people of Khem ere they fly into the Wilderness.”</p>
<p>Even as he spoke there came a great lady weeping, for her husband was dead, and
her son and her brother, all were gone in the breath of the pestilence. She was
of the Royal House, and richly decked with gold and jewels, and the slaves who
fanned her, as she went to the Temple of Ptah to worship, wore gold chains upon
their necks. Two women of the Apura saw her and ran to her, crying:</p>
<p>“Lend to us those golden ornaments thou wearest.”</p>
<p>Then, without a word, she took her gold bracelets and chains and rings, and let
them all fall in a heap at her feet. The women of the Apura took them all and
mocked her, crying:</p>
<p>“Where now is thy husband and thy son and thy brother, thou who art of
Pharaoh’s house? Now thou payest us for the labour of our hands and for
the bricks that we made without straw, gathering leaves and rushes in the sun.
Now thou payest for the stick in the hand of the overseers. Where now is thy
husband and thy son and thy brother?” and they went still mocking, and
left the lady weeping.</p>
<p>But of all sights the Wanderer held this strangest, and many such there were to
see. At first he would have taken back the spoil and given it to those who wore
it, but Rei the Priest prayed him to forbear, lest the curse should strike them
also. So they pressed on through the tumult, ever seeing new sights of greed
and death and sorrow. Here a mother wept over her babe, here a bride over her
husband—that night the groom of her and of death. Here the fierce-faced
Apura, clamouring like gulls, tore the silver trinkets from the children of
those of the baser sort, or the sacred amulets from the mummies of those who
were laid out for burial, and here a water-carrier wailed over the carcass of
the ass that won him his livelihood.</p>
<p>At length, passing through the crowd, they came to a temple that stood near to
the Temple of the God Ptah. The pylons of this temple faced towards the houses
of the city, but the inner courts were built against the walls of Tanis and
looked out across the face of the water. Though not one of the largest temples,
it was very strong and beautiful in its shape. It was built of the black stone
of Syene, and all the polished face of the stone was graven with images of the
Holy Hathor. Here she wore a cow’s head, and here the face of a woman,
but she always bore in her hands the lotus-headed staff and the holy token of
life, and her neck was encircled with the collar of the gods.</p>
<p>“Here dwells that Strange Hathor to whom thou didst drink last night,
Eperitus,” said Rei the Priest. “It was a wild pledge to drink
before the Queen, who swears that she brings these woes on Khem. Though,
indeed, she is guiltless of this, with all the blood on her beautiful head. The
Apura and their apostate sorcerer, whom we ourselves instructed, bring the
plagues on us.”</p>
<p>“Does the Hathor manifest herself this day?” asked the Wanderer.</p>
<p>“That we will ask of the priests, Eperitus. Follow thou me.”</p>
<p>Now they passed down the avenue of sphinxes within the wall of brick, into the
garden plot of the Goddess, and so on through the gates of the outer tower. A
priest who watched there threw them wide at the sign that was given of Rei, the
Master-Builder, the beloved of Pharaoh, and they came to the outer court.
Before the second tower they halted, and Rei showed to the Wanderer that place
upon the pylon roof where the Hathor was wont to stand and sing till the
hearers’ hearts were melted like wax. Here they knocked once more, and
were admitted to the Hall of Assembly where the priests were gathered, throwing
dust upon their heads and mourning those among them who had died with the
Firstborn. When they saw Rei, the instructed, the Prophet of Amen, and the
Wanderer clad in golden armour who was with him, they ceased from their
mourning, and an ancient priest of their number came forward, and, greeting
Rei, asked him of his errand. Then Rei took the Wanderer by the hand and made
him known to the priest, and told him of those deeds that he had done, and how
he had saved the life of Pharaoh and of those of the Royal House who sat at the
feast with Pharaoh.</p>
<p>“But when will the Lady Hathor sing upon her tower top?” said Rei,
“for the Stranger desires to see her and hear her.”</p>
<p>The temple priest bowed before the Wanderer, and answered gravely:</p>
<p>“On the third morn from now the Holy Hathor shows herself upon the
temple’s top,” he said; “but thou, mighty lord, who art risen
from the sea, hearken to my warning, and if, indeed, thou art no god, dare not
to look upon her beauty. If thou dost look, then thy fate shall be as the fate
of those who have looked before, and have loved and have died for the sake of
the Hathor.”</p>
<p>“No god am I,” said the Wanderer, laughing, “yet, perchance,
I shall dare to look, and dare to face whatever it be that guards her, if my
heart bids me see her nearer.”</p>
<p>“Then there shall be an end of thee and thy wanderings,” said the
priest. “Now follow me, and I will show thee those men who last sought to
win the Hathor.”</p>
<p>He took him by the hand and led him through passages hewn in the walls till
they came to a deep and gloomy cell, where the golden armour of the Wanderer
shone like a lamp at eve. The cell was built against the city wall, and
scarcely a thread of light came into the chink between roof and wall. All about
the chamber were baths fashioned of bronze, and in the baths lay dusky shapes
of dark-skinned men of Egypt. There they lay, and in the faint light their
limbs were being anointed by some sad-faced attendants, as folk were anointed
by merry girls in the shining baths of the Wanderer’s home. When Rei and
Eperitus came near, the sad-faced bath-men shrank away in shame, as dogs shrink
from their evil meat at night when a traveller goes past.</p>
<p>Marvelling at the strange sight, the bathers and the bathed, the Wanderer
looked more closely, and his stout heart sank within him. For all these were
dead who lay in the baths of bronze, and it was not water that flowed about
their limbs, but evil-smelling natron.</p>
<p>“Here lie those,” said the priest, “who last strove to come
near the Holy Hathor, and to pass into the shrine of the temple where night and
day she sits and sings and weaves with her golden shuttle. Here they lie, the
half of a score. One by one they rushed to embrace her, and one by one they
were smitten down. Here they are being attired for the tomb, for we give them
all rich burial.”</p>
<p>“Truly,” quoth the Wanderer, “I left the world of Light
behind me when I looked on the blood-red sea and sailed into the black gloom
off Pharos. More evil sights have I seen in this haunted land than in all the
cities where I have wandered, and on all the seas that I have sailed.”</p>
<p>“Then be warned,” said the priest, “for if thou dost follow
where they went, and desire what they desired, thou too shalt lie in yonder
bath, and be washed of yonder waters. For whatever be false, this is true, that
he who seeks love ofttimes finds doom. But here he finds it most
speedily.”</p>
<p>The Wanderer looked again at the dead and at their ministers, and he shuddered
till his harness rattled. He feared not the face of Death in war, or on the
sea, but this was a new thing. Little he loved the sight of the brazen baths
and those who lay there. The light of the sun and the breath of air seemed good
to him, and he stepped quickly from the chamber, while the priest smiled to
himself. But when he reached the outer air, his heart came back to him, and he
began to ask again about the Hathor—where she dwelt, and what it was that
slew her lovers.</p>
<p>“I will show thee,” answered the priest, and brought him through
the Hall of Assembly to a certain narrow way that led to a court. In the centre
of the court stood the holy shrine of the Hathor. It was a great chamber, built
of alabaster, lighted from the roof alone, and shut in with brazen doors,
before which hung curtains of Tyrian web. From the roof of the shrine a
stairway ran overhead to the roof of the temple and so to the inner pylon
tower.</p>
<p>“Yonder, Stranger, the holy Goddess dwells within the Alabaster
Shrine,” said the priest. “By that stair she passes to the temple
roof, and thence to the pylon top. There by the curtains, once in every day, we
place food, and it is drawn into the sanctuary, how we know not, for none of us
have set foot there, nor seen the Hathor face to face. Now, when the Goddess
has stood upon the pylon and sung to the multitude below, she passes back to
the shrine. Then the brazen outer doors of the temple court are thrown wide and
the doomed rush on madly, one by one, towards the drawn curtains. But before
they pass the curtains they are thrust back, yet they strive to pass. Then we
hear a sound of the clashing of weapons and the men fall dead without a word,
while the song of the Hathor swells from within.”</p>
<p>“And who are her swordsmen?” said the Wanderer.</p>
<p>“That we know not, Stranger; no man has lived to tell. Come, draw near to
the door of the shrine and hearken, maybe thou wilt hear the Hathor singing.
Have no fear; thou needst not approach the guarded space.”</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer drew near with a doubting heart, but Rei the Priest stood
afar off, though the temple priests came close enough. At the curtains they
stopped and listened. Then from within the shrine there came a sound of singing
wild and sweet and shrill, and the voice of it stirred the Wanderer strangely,
bringing to his mind memories of that Ithaca of which he was Lord and which he
should see no more; of the happy days of youth, and of the God-built walls of
windy Ilios. But he could not have told why he thought on these things, nor why
his heart was thus strangely stirred within him.</p>
<p>“Hearken! the Hathor sings as she weaves the doom of men,” said the
priest, and as he spoke the singing ended.</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer took counsel with himself whether he should then and there
burst the doors and take his fortune, or whether he should forbear for that
while. But in the end he determined to forbear and see with his own eyes what
befell those who strove to win the way.</p>
<p>So he drew back, wondering much; and, bidding farewell to the aged priest, he
went with Rei, the Master Builder, through the town of Tanis, where the Apura
were still spoiling the people of Khem, and he came to the Palace where he was
lodged. Here he turned over in his mind how he might see the strange woman of
the temple, and yet escape the baths of bronze. There he sat and thought till
at length the night drew on, and one came to summon him to sup with Pharaoh in
the Hall. Then he rose up and went, and meeting Pharaoh and Meriamun the Queen
in the outer chamber, passed in after them to the Hall, and on to the daïs
which he had held against the rabble, for the place was clear of dead, and,
save for certain stains upon the marble floor that might not be washed away,
and for some few arrows that yet were fixed high up in the walls or in the
lofty roof, there was nothing to tell of the great fray that had been fought
but one day gone.</p>
<p>Heavy was the face of Pharaoh, and the few who sat with him were sad enough
because of the death of so many whom they loved, and the shame and sorrow that
had fallen upon Khem. But there were no tears for her one child in the eyes of
Meriamun the Queen. Anger, not grief, tore her heart because Pharaoh had let
the Apura go. For ever as they sat at the sad feast there came a sound of the
tramping feet of armies, and of lowing cattle, and songs of triumph, sung by
ten thousand voices, and thus they sang the song of the Apura:—</p>
<p class="poem">
A lamp for our feet the Lord hath litten,<br/>
Signs hath He shown in the Land of Khem.<br/>
The Kings of the Nations our Lord hath smitten,<br/>
His shoe hath He cast o’er the Gods of them.<br/>
He hath made Him a mock of the heifer of Isis,<br/>
He hath broken the chariot reins of Ra,<br/>
On Yakûb He cries, and His folk arises,<br/>
And the knees of the Nation are loosed in awe.<br/>
<br/>
He gives us their goods for a spoil to gather,<br/>
Jewels of silver, and vessels of gold;<br/>
For Yahveh of old is our Friend and Father,<br/>
And cherisheth Yakûb He chose of old.<br/>
The Gods of the Peoples our Lord hath chidden,<br/>
Their courts hath He filled with His creeping things;<br/>
The light of the face of the Sun he hath hidden,<br/>
And broken the scourge in the hands of kings.<br/>
<br/>
He hath chastened His people with stripes and scourges,<br/>
Our backs hath He burdened with grievous weights,<br/>
But His children shall rise as a sea that surges,<br/>
And flood the fields of the men He hates.<br/>
The Kings of the Nations our Lord hath smitten,<br/>
His shoe hath He cast o’er the Gods of them,<br/>
But a lamp for our feet the Lord hath litten,<br/>
Wonders hath he wrought in the Land of Khem.</p>
<p>Thus they sang, and the singing was so wild that the Wanderer craved leave to
go and stand at the Palace gate, lest the Apura should rush in and spoil the
treasure-chamber.</p>
<p>The King nodded, but Meriamun rose, and went with the Wanderer as he took his
bow and passed to the great gates.</p>
<p>There they stood in the shadow of the gates, and this is what they beheld. A
great light of many torches was flaring along the roadway in front. Then came a
body of men, rudely armed with pikes, and the torchlight shone on the glitter
of bronze and on the gold helms of which they had spoiled the soldiers of Khem.
Next came a troop of wild women, dancing, and beating timbrels, and singing the
triumphant hymn of scorn.</p>
<p>Next, with a space between, tramped eight strong black-bearded men, bearing on
their shoulders a great gilded coffin, covered with carven and painted signs.</p>
<p>“It is the body of their Prophet, who brought them hither out of their
land of hunger,” whispered Meriamun. “Slaves, ye shall hunger yet
in the wilderness, and clamour for the flesh-pots of Khem!”</p>
<p>Then she cried in a loud voice, for her passion overcame her, and she
prophesied to those who bare the coffin, “Not one soul of you that lives
shall see the land where your conjurer is leading you! Ye shall thirst, ye
shall hunger, ye shall call on the Gods of Khem, and they shall not hear you;
ye shall die, and your bones shall whiten the wilderness. Farewell! Set go with
you. Farewell!”</p>
<p>So she cried and pointed down the way, and so fierce was her gaze, and so awful
were her words, that the people of the Apura trembled and the women ceased to
sing.</p>
<p>The Wanderer watched the Queen and marvelled. “Never had woman such a
hardy heart,” he mused; “and it were ill to cross her in love or
war!”</p>
<p>“They will sing no more at my gates,” murmured Meriamun, with a
smile. “Come, Wanderer; they await us,” and she gave him her hand
that he might lead her.</p>
<p>So they went back to the banquet hall.</p>
<p>They hearkened as they sat till far in the night, and still the Apura passed,
countless as the sands of the sea. At length all were gone, and the sound of
their feet died away in the distance. Then Meriamun the Queen turned to Pharaoh
and spake bitterly:</p>
<p>“Thou art a coward, Meneptah, ay, a coward and a slave at heart. In thy
fear of the curse that the False Hathor hath laid on us, she whom thou dost
worship, to thy shame, thou hast let these slaves go. Otherwise had our father
dealt with them, great Rameses Miamun, the hammer of the Khita. Now they are
gone hissing curses on the land that bare them, and robbing those who nursed
them up while they were yet a little people, as a mother nurses her
child.”</p>
<p>“What then might I do?” said Pharaoh.</p>
<p>“There is nought to do: all is done,” answered Meriamun.</p>
<p>“What is thy counsel, Wanderer?”</p>
<p>“It is ill for a stranger to offer counsel,” said the Wanderer.</p>
<p>“Nay, speak,” cried the Queen.</p>
<p>“I know not the Gods of this land,” he answered. “If these
people be favoured of the Gods, I say sit still. But if not,” then said
the Wanderer, wise in war, “let Pharaoh gather his host, follow after the
people, take them unawares, and smite them utterly. It is no hard task, they
are so mixed a multitude and cumbered with much baggage!”</p>
<p>This was to speak as the Queen loved to hear. Now she clapped her hands and
cried:</p>
<p>“Listen, listen to good counsel, Pharaoh.”</p>
<p>And now that the Apura were gone, his fear of them went also, and as he drank
wine Pharaoh grew bold, till at last he sprang to his feet and swore by Amen,
by Osiris, by Ptah, and by his father—great Rameses—that he would
follow after the Apura and smite them. And instantly he sent forth messengers
to summon the captains of his host in the Hall of Assembly.</p>
<p>Thither the captains came, and their plans were made and messengers hurried
forth to the governors of other great cities, bidding them send troops to join
the host of Pharaoh on its march.</p>
<p>Now Pharaoh turned to the Wanderer and said:</p>
<p>“Thou hast not yet answered my message that Rei carried to thee this
morning. Wilt thou take service with me and be a captain in this war?”</p>
<p>The Wanderer little liked the name of service, but his warlike heart was
stirred within him, for he loved the delight of battle. But before he could
answer yea or nay, Meriamun the Queen, who was not minded that he should leave
her, spoke hastily:</p>
<p>“This is my counsel, Meneptah, that the Lord Eperitus should abide here
in Tanis and be the Captain of my Guard while thou art gone to smite the Apura.
For I may not be here unguarded in these troublous times, and if I know he
watches over me, he who is so mighty a man, then I shall walk safely and sleep
in peace.”</p>
<p>Now the Wanderer bethought him of his desire to look upon the Hathor, for to
see new things and try new adventures was always his delight. So he answered
that if it were pleasing to Pharaoh and the Queen he would willingly stay and
command the Guard. And Pharaoh said that it should be so.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap12"></SPAN>CHAPTER IV.<br/> THE QUEEN’S CHAMBER</h2>
<p>At midday on the morrow Pharaoh and the host of Pharaoh marched in pomp from
Tanis, taking the road that runs across the desert country towards the Red Sea
of Weeds, the way that the Apura had gone. The Wanderer went with the army for
an hour’s journey and more, in a chariot driven by Rei the Priest, for
Rei did not march with the host. The number of the soldiers of Pharaoh amazed
the Achæan, accustomed to the levies of barren isles and scattered tribes. But
he said nothing of his wonder to Rei or any man, lest it should be thought that
he came from among a little people. He even made as if he held the army
lightly, and asked the priest if this was all the strength of Pharaoh! Then Rei
told him that it was but a fourth part, for none of the mercenaries and none of
the soldiers from the Upper Land marched with the King in pursuit of the Apura.</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer knew that he was come among a greater people than he had ever
encountered yet, on land or sea. So he went with them till the roads divided,
and there he drove his chariot to the chariot of Pharaoh and bade him farewell.
Pharaoh called to him to mount his own chariot, and spake thus to him:</p>
<p>“Swear to me, thou Wanderer, who namest thyself Eperitus, though of what
country thou art and what was thy father’s house none know, swear to me
that thou wilt guard Meriamun the Queen faithfully, and wilt work no woe upon
me nor open my house while I am afar. Great thou art and beautiful to look on,
ay, and strong enough beyond the strength of men, yet my heart misdoubts me of
thee. For methinks thou art a crafty man, and that evil will come upon me
through thee.”</p>
<p>“If this be thy mind, Pharaoh,” said the Wanderer, “leave me
not in guard of the Queen. And yet methinks I did not befriend thee so ill two
nights gone, when the rabble would have put thee and all thy house to the sword
because of the death of the firstborn.”</p>
<p>Now Pharaoh looked on him long and doubtfully, then stretched out his hand. The
Wanderer took it, and swore by his own Gods, by Zeus, by Aphrodite, and Athene,
and Apollo, that he would be true to the trust.</p>
<p>“I believe thee, Wanderer,” said Pharaoh. “Know this, if thou
keepest thine oath thou shalt have great rewards, and thou shalt be second to
none in the land of Khem, but if thou failest, then thou shalt die
miserably.”</p>
<p>“I ask no fee,” answered the Wanderer, “and I fear no death,
for in one way only shall I die, and that is known to me. Yet I will keep my
oath.” And he bowed before Pharaoh, and leaping from his chariot entered
again into the chariot of Rei.</p>
<p>Now, as he drove back through the host the soldiers called to him, saying:</p>
<p>“Leave us not, Wanderer.” For he looked so glorious in his golden
armour that it seemed to them as though a god departed from their ranks.</p>
<p>His heart was with them, for he loved war, and he did not love the Apura. But
he drove on, as so it must be, and came to the Palace at sundown.</p>
<p>That night he sat at the feast by the side of Meriamun the Queen. And when the
feast was done she bade him follow her into her chamber where she sat when she
would be alone. It was a fragrant chamber, dimly lighted with sweet-scented
lamps, furnished with couches of ivory and gold, while all the walls told
painted stories of strange gods and kings, and of their loves and wars. The
Queen sank back upon the embroidered cushions of a couch and bade the wise
Odysseus to sit guard over against her, so near that her robes swept his golden
greaves. This he did somewhat against his will, though he was no hater of fair
women. But his heart misdoubted the dark-eyed Queen, and he looked upon her
guardedly, for she was strangely fair to see, the fairest of all mortal women
whom he had known, save the Golden Helen.</p>
<p>“Wanderer, we owe thee great thanks, and I would gladly know to whom we
are in debt for the prices of our lives,” she said. “Tell me of thy
birth, of thy father’s house, and of the lands that thou hast seen and
the wars wherein thou hast fought. Tell me also of the sack of Ilios, and how
thou camest by thy golden mail. The unhappy Paris wore such arms as these, if
the minstrel of the North sang truth.”</p>
<p>Now, the Wanderer would gladly have cursed this minstrel of the North and his
songs.</p>
<p>“Minstrels will be lying, Lady,” he said, “and they gather
old tales wherever they go. Paris may have worn my arms, or another man. I
bought them from a chapman in Crete, and asked nothing of their first master.
As for Ilios, I fought there in my youth, and served the Cretan Idomeneus, but
I got little booty. To the King the wealth and women, to us the sword-strokes.
Such is the appearance of war.”</p>
<p>Meriamun listened to his tale, which he set forth roughly, as if he were some
blunt, grumbling swordsman, and darkly she looked on him while she hearkened,
and darkly she smiled as she looked.</p>
<p>“A strange story, Eperitus, a strange story truly. Now tell me thus. How
camest thou by yonder great bow, the bow of the swallow string? If my minstrel
spoke truly, it was once the Bow of Eurytus of OEchalia.”</p>
<p>Now the Wanderer glanced round him like a man taken in ambush, who sees on
every hand the sword of foes shine up into the sunlight.</p>
<p>“The bow, Lady?” he answered readily enough. “I got it
strangely. I was cruising with a cargo of iron on the western coast and landed
on an isle, methinks the pilot called it Ithaca. There we found nothing but
death; a pestilence had been in the land, but in a ruined hall this bow was
lying, and I made prize of it. A good bow!”</p>
<p>“A strange story, truly—a very strange story,” quoth Meriamun
the Queen. “By chance thou didst buy the armour of Paris, by chance thou
didst find the bow of Eurytus, that bow, methinks, with which the god-like
Odysseus slew the wooers in his halls. Knowest thou, Eperitus, that when thou
stoodest yonder on the board in the Place of Banquets, when the great bow
twanged and the long shafts hailed down on the hall and loosened the knees of
many, not a little was I put in mind of the song of the slaying of the wooers
at the hands of Odysseus. The fame of Odysseus has wandered far—ay, even
to Khem.” And she looked straight at him.</p>
<p>The Wanderer darkened his face and put the matter by. He had heard something of
that tale, he said, but deemed it a minstrel’s feigning. One man could
not fight a hundred, as the story went.</p>
<p>The Queen half rose from the couch where she lay curled up like a glittering
snake. Like a snake she rose and watched him with her melancholy eyes.</p>
<p>“Strange, indeed—most strange that Odysseus, Laertes’ son,
Odysseus of Ithaca, should not know the tale of the slaying of the wooers by
Odysseus’ self. Strange, indeed, thou Eperitus, who art Odysseus.”</p>
<p>Now the neck of the Wanderer was in the noose, and well he knew it: yet he kept
his counsel, and looked upon her vacantly.</p>
<p>“Men say that this Odysseus wandered years ago into the North, and that
this time he will not come again. I saw him in the wars, and he was a taller
man than I,” said the Wanderer.</p>
<p>“I have always heard,” said the Queen, “that Odysseus was
double-tongued and crafty as a fox. Look me in the eyes, thou Wanderer, look me
in the eyes, and I will show thee whether or not thou art Odysseus,” and
she leaned forward so that her hair well-nigh swept his brow, and gazed deep
into his eyes.</p>
<p>Now the Wanderer was ashamed to drop his eyes before a woman’s, and he
could not rise and go; so he must needs gaze, and as he gazed his head grew
strangely light and the blood quivered in his veins, and then seemed to stop.</p>
<p>“Now turn, thou Wanderer,” said the voice of the Queen, and to him
it sounded far away, as if there was a wall between them, “and tell me
what thou seest.”</p>
<p>So he turned and looked towards the dark end of the chamber. But presently
through the darkness stole a faint light, like the first grey light of the
dawn, and now he saw a shape, like the shape of a great horse of wood, and
behind the horse were black square towers of huge stones, and gates, and walls,
and houses. Now he saw a door open in the side of the horse, and the helmeted
head of a man look out wearily. As he looked a great white star slid down the
sky so that the light of it rested on the face of the man, and that face was
his own! Then he remembered how he had looked forth from the belly of the
wooden horse as it stood within the walls of Ilios, and thus the star had
seemed to fall upon the doomed city, an omen of the end of Troy.</p>
<p>“Look again,” said the voice of Meriamun from far away.</p>
<p>So once more he looked into the darkness, and there he saw the mouth of a cave,
and beneath two palms in front of it sat a man and a woman. The yellow moon
rose and its light fell upon a sleeping sea, upon tall trees, upon the cave,
and the two who sat there. The woman was lovely, with braided hair, and clad in
a shining robe, and her eyes were dim with tears that she might never shed: for
she was a Goddess, Calypso, the daughter of Atlas. Then in the vision the man
looked up, and his face was weary, and worn and sick for home, but it was his
own face.</p>
<p>Then he remembered how he had sat thus at the side of Calypso of the braided
tresses, on that last night of all his nights in her wave-girt isle, the centre
of the seas.</p>
<p>“Look once more,” said the voice of Meriamun the Queen.</p>
<p>Again he looked into the darkness. There before him grew the ruins of his own
hall in Ithaca, and in the courtyard before the hall was a heap of ashes, and
the charred bones of men. Before the heap lay the figure of one lost in sorrow,
for his limbs writhed upon the ground. Anon the man lifted his face, and
behold! the Wanderer knew that it was his own face.</p>
<p>Then of a sudden the gloom passed away from the chamber, and once more his
blood surged through his veins, and there before him sat Meriamun the Queen,
smiling darkly.</p>
<p>“Strange sights hast thou seen, is it not so, Wanderer?” she said.</p>
<p>“Yea, Queen, the most strange of sights. Tell me of thy courtesy how thou
didst conjure them before my eyes.”</p>
<p>“By the magic that I have, Eperitus, I above all wizards who dwell in
Khem, the magic whereby I can read all the past of those—I love,”
and again she looked upon him; “ay, and call it forth from the storehouse
of dead time and make it live again. Say, whose face was it that thou didst
look upon—was it not the face of Odysseus of Ithaca, Laertes’ son,
and was not that face thine?”</p>
<p>Now the Wanderer saw that there was no escape. Therefore he spoke the truth,
not because he loved it, but because he must.</p>
<p>“The face of Odysseus of Ithaca it was that I saw before me, Lady, and
that face is mine. I avow myself to be Odysseus, Laertes’ son, and no
other man.”</p>
<p>The Queen laughed aloud. “Great must be my strength of magic,” she
said, “for it can strip the guile from the subtlest of men. Henceforth,
Odysseus, thou wilt know that the eyes of Meriamun the Queen see far. Now tell
me truly: what camest thou hither to seek?”</p>
<p>The Wanderer took swift counsel with himself. Remembering that dream of
Meriamun of which Rei the Priest had told him, and which she knew not that he
had learned, the dream that showed her the vision of one whom she must love,
and remembering the word of the dead Hataska, he grew afraid. For he saw well
by the token of the spear point that he was the man of her dream, and that she
knew it. But he could not accept her love, both because of his oath to Pharaoh
and because of her whom Aphrodite had shown to him in Ithaca, her whom alone he
must seek, the Heart’s Desire, the Golden Helen.</p>
<p>The strait was desperate, between a broken oath and a woman scorned. But he
feared his oath, and the anger of Zeus, the God of hosts and guests. So he
sought safety beneath the wings of truth.</p>
<p>“Lady,” he said, “I will tell thee all! I came to Ithaca from
the white north, where a curse had driven me; I came and found my halls
desolate, and my people dead, and the very ashes of my wife. But in a dream of
the night I saw the Goddess whom I have worshipped little, Aphrodite of Idalia,
whom in this land ye name Hathor, and she bade me go forth and do her will. And
for reward she promised me that I should find one who waited me to be my
deathless love.”</p>
<p>Meriamun heard him so far, but no further, for of this she made sure, that
<i>she</i> was the woman whom Aphrodite had promised to the Wanderer. Ere he
might speak another word she glided to him like a snake, and like a snake
curled herself about him. Then she spoke so low that he rather knew her thought
than heard her words:</p>
<p>“Was it indeed so, Odysseus? Did the Goddess indeed send thee to seek me
out? Know, then, that not to thee alone did she speak. I also looked for thee.
I also waited the coming of one whom I should love. Oh, heavy have been the
days, and empty was my heart, and sorely through the years have I longed for
him who should be brought to me. And now at length it is done, now at length I
see him whom in my dream I saw,” and she lifted her lips to the lips of
the Wanderer, and her heart, and her eyes, and her lips said
“Love.”</p>
<p>But it was not for nothing that he bore a stout and patient heart, and a brain
unclouded by danger or by love. He had never been in a strait like this; caught
with bonds that no sword could cut, and in toils that no skill could undo. On
one side were love and pleasure—on the other a broken oath, and the loss
for ever of the Heart’s Desire. For to love another woman, as he had been
warned, was to lose Helen. But again, if he scorned the Queen—nay, for
all his hardihood he dared not tell her that she was not the woman of his
vision, the woman he came to seek. Yet even now his cold courage and his
cunning did not fail him.</p>
<p>“Lady,” he said, “we both have dreamed. But if thou didst
dream thou wert my love, thou didst wake to find thyself the wife of Pharaoh.
And Pharaoh is my host and hath my oath.”</p>
<p>“I woke to find myself the wife of Pharaoh,” she echoed, wearily,
and her arms uncurled from his neck and she sank back on the couch. “I am
Pharaoh’s wife in word, but not in deed. Pharaoh is nothing to me, thou
Wanderer—nought save a name.”</p>
<p>“Yet is my oath much to me, Queen Meriamun—my oath and the
hospitable hearth,” the Wanderer made answer. “I swore to Meneptah
to hold thee from all ill, and there’s an end.”</p>
<p>“And if Pharaoh comes back no more, what then Odysseus?”</p>
<p>“Then will we talk again. And now, Lady, thy safety calls me to visit thy
Guard.” And without more words he rose and went.</p>
<p>The Queen looked after him.</p>
<p>“A strange man,” she said in her heart, “who builds a barrier
with his oath betwixt himself and her he loves and has wandered so far to win!
Yet methinks I honour him the more. Pharaoh Meneptah, my husband, eat, drink,
and be merry, for this I promise thee—short shall be thy days.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap13"></SPAN>CHAPTER V.<br/> THE CHAPEL PERILOUS</h2>
<p>“Swift as a bird or a thought,” says the old harper of the Northern
Sea. The Wanderer’s thoughts in the morning were swift as night birds,
flying back and brooding over the things he had seen and the words he had heard
in the Queen’s chamber. Again he stood between this woman and the oath
which, of all oaths, was the worst to break. And, indeed, he was little tempted
to break it, for though Meriamun was beautiful and wise, he feared her love and
he feared her magic art no less than he feared her vengeance if she were
scorned. Delay seemed the only course. Let him wait till the King returned, and
it would go hard but he found some cause for leaving the city of Tanis, and
seeking through new adventures the World’s Desire. The mysterious river
lay yonder. He would ascend the river of which so many tales were told. It
flowed from the land of the blameless <i>Æthiopians</i>, the most just of men,
at whose tables the very Gods sat as guests. There, perchance, far up the
sacred stream, in a land where no wrong ever came, there, if the Fates
permitted, he might find the Golden Helen.</p>
<p>If the Fates permitted: but all the adventure was of the Fates, who had shown
him to Meriamun in a dream.</p>
<p>He turned it long in his mind and found little light. It seemed that as he had
drifted through darkness across a blood-red sea to the shores of Khem, so he
should wade through blood to that shore of Fate which the Gods appointed.</p>
<p>Yet after a while he shook sorrow from him, arose, bathed, anointed himself,
combed his dark locks, and girded on his golden armour. For now he remembered
that this was the day when the Strange Hathor should stand upon the pylon of
the temple and call the people to her, and he was minded to look upon her, and
if need be to do battle with that which guarded her.</p>
<p>So he prayed to Aphrodite that she would help him, and he poured out wine to
her and waited; he waited, but no answer came to his prayer. Yet as he turned
away it chanced that he saw his countenance in the wide golden cup whence he
had poured, and it seemed to him that it had grown more fair and lost the stamp
of years, and that his face was smooth and young as the face of that Odysseus
who, many years ago, had sailed in the black ships and looked back on the
smoking ruins of windy Troy. In this he saw the hand of the Goddess, and knew
that if she might not be manifest in this land of strange Gods, yet she was
with him. And, knowing this, his heart grew light as the heart of a boy from
whom sorrow is yet a long way off, and who has not dreamed of death.</p>
<p>Then he ate and drank, and when he had put from him the desire of food he arose
and girded on the sword, Euryalus’s gift, but the black bow he left in
its case. Now he was ready and about to set forth when Rei the Priest entered
the chamber.</p>
<p>“Whither goest thou, Eperitus?” asked Rei, the instructed Priest.
“And what is it that has made thy face so fair, as though many years had
been lifted from thy back?”</p>
<p>“’Tis but sweet sleep, Rei,” said the Wanderer. “Deeply
I slept last night, and the weariness of my wanderings fell from me, and now I
am as I was before I sailed across the blood-red sea into the night.”</p>
<p>“Sell thou the secret of this sleep to the ladies of Khem,”
answered the aged priest, smiling, “and little shalt thou lack of wealth
for all thy days.”</p>
<p>Thus he spake as though he believed the Wanderer, but in his heart he knew that
the thing was of the Gods.</p>
<p>The Wanderer answered:</p>
<p>“I go up to the Temple of the Hathor, for thou dost remember it is to-day
that she stands upon the pylon brow and calls the people to her. Comest thou
also, Rei?”</p>
<p>“Nay, nay, I come not, Eperitus. I am old indeed, but yet the blood
creeps through these withered veins, and, perchance, if I came and looked, the
madness would seize me also, and I too should rush to my slaying. There is a
way in which a man may listen to the voice of the Hathor, and that is to have
his eyes blindfolded, as many do. But even then he will tear the bandage from
his eyes, and look, and die with the others. Oh, go not up, Eperitus—I
pray thee go not up. I love thee—I know not why—and am little
minded to see thee dead. Though, perchance,” he added, as though to
himself, “it would be well for those I serve if thou wert dead, thou
Wanderer, with the eyes of Fate.”</p>
<p>“Have no fear, Rei,” said the Wanderer, “as it is doomed so
shall I die and not otherwise. Never shall it be told,” he murmured in
his heart, “that he who stood in arms against Scylla, the Horror of the
Rock, turned back from any form of fear or from any shape of Love.”</p>
<p>Then Rei wrung his hands and went nigh to weeping, for to him it seemed a
pitiful thing that so goodly a man and so great a hero should thus be done to
death. But the Wanderer passed out through the city, and Rei went with him for
a certain distance. At length they came to the road set on either side with
sphinxes, that leads from the outer wall of brick to the garden of the Temple
of Hathor, and down this road hurried a multitude of men of all races and of
every age. Here the prince was borne along in his litter; here the young noble
travelled in his chariot. Here came the slave bespattered with the mud of the
fields; here the cripple limped upon his crutches; and here was the blind man
led by a hound. And with each man came women: the wife of the man, or his
mother, or his sisters, or she to whom he was vowed in marriage. Weeping they
came, and with soft words and clinging arms they strove to hold back him whom
they loved.</p>
<p>“Oh, my son! my son!” cried a woman, “hearken to thy
mother’s voice. Go not up to look upon the Goddess, for if thou dost look
then shalt thou die, and thou alone art left alive to me. Two brothers of thine
I bore, and behold, both are dead; and wilt thou die also, and leave me, who am
old, alone and desolate? Be not mad, my son, thou art the dearest of all; ever
have I loved thee and tended thee. Come back, I pray—come back.”</p>
<p>But her son heard not and heeded not, pressing on toward the Gates of the
Heart’s Desire.</p>
<p>“Oh, my husband, my husband!” cried another, young, of gentle
birth, and fair, who bare a babe on her left arm and with the right clutched
her lord’s broidered robe. “Oh, my husband, have I not loved thee
and been kind to thee, and wilt thou still go up to look upon the deadly glory
of the Hathor? They say she wears the beauty of the Dead. Lovest thou me not
better than her who died five years agone, Merisa the daughter of Rois, though
thou didst love her first? See, here is thy babe, thy babe, but one week born.
Even from my bed of pain have I risen and followed after thee down these weary
roads, and I am like to lose my life for it. Here is thy babe, let it plead
with thee. Let me die if so it must be, but go not thou up to thy death. It is
no Goddess whom thou wilt see, but an evil spirit loosed from the under-world,
and that shall be thy doom. Oh, if I please thee not, take thou another wife
and I will make her welcome, only go not up to thy death!”</p>
<p>But the man fixed his eyes upon the pylon tops, heeding her not, and at length
she sank upon the road, and there with the babe would have been crushed by the
chariots, had not the Wanderer borne her to one side of the way.</p>
<p>Now, of all sights this was the most dreadful, for on every side rose the
prayers and lamentations of women, and still the multitude of men pressed on
unheeding.</p>
<p>“Now thou seest the power of Love, and how if a woman be but beautiful
enough she may drag all men to ruin,” said Rei the Priest.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said the Wanderer; “a strange sight, truly. Much blood
hath this Hathor of thine upon her hands.”</p>
<p>“And yet thou wilt give her thine, Wanderer.”</p>
<p>“That I am not minded to do,” he answered; “yet I will look
upon her face, so speak no more of it.”</p>
<p>Now they were come to the space before the bronze gates of the pylon of the
outer court, and there the multitude gathered to the number of many hundreds.
Presently, as they watched, a priest came to the gates, that same priest who
had shown the Wanderer the bodies in the baths of bronze. He looked through the
bars and cried aloud:</p>
<p>“Whoso would enter into the court and look upon the Holy Hathor let him
draw nigh. Know ye this, all men, the Hathor is to him who can win her. But if
he pass not, then shall he die and be buried within the temple, nor shall he
ever look upon the sun again. Of this ye are warned. Since the Hathor came
again to Khem, of men seven hundred and three have gone to win her, and of
bodies seven hundred and two lie within the vaults, for of all these men
Pharaoh Meneptah alone hath gone back living. Yet there is place for more!
Enter, ye who would look upon the Hathor!”</p>
<p>Now there arose a mighty wailing from the women. They clung madly about the
necks of those who were dear to them, and some clung not in vain. For the
hearts of many failed them at the last, and they shrank from entering in. But a
few of those who had already looked upon the Hathor from afar, perchance a
score in all, struck the women from them and rushed up to the gates.</p>
<p>“Surely thou wilt not enter in?” quoth Rei, clinging to the arm of
the Wanderer. “Oh, turn thy back on death and come back with me. I pray
thee turn.”</p>
<p>“Nay,” said the Wanderer, “I will go in.”</p>
<p>Then Rei the Priest threw dust upon his head, wept aloud, and turned and fled,
never stopping till he came to the Palace, where sat Meriamun the Queen.</p>
<p>Now the priest unbarred a wicket in the gates of bronze, and one by one those
who were stricken of the madness entered in. For all of these had seen the
Hathor many times from afar without the wall, and now they could no more
withstand their longing. And as they entered two other priests took them by the
hand and bound their eyes with cloths, so that unless they willed it they might
not see the glory of the Hathor, but only hear the sweetness of her voice. But
two there were who would not be blindfolded, and of these one was that man
whose wife had fainted by the way, and the other was a man sightless from his
youth. For although he might not see the beauty of the Goddess, this man was
made mad by the sweetness of her voice. Now, when all had entered in, save the
Wanderer, there was a stir in the crowd, and a man rushed up. He was
travel-stained, he had a black beard, black eyes, and a nose hooked like a
vulture’s beak.</p>
<p>“Hold!” he cried. “Hold! Shut not the gates! Night and day
have I journeyed from the host of the Apura who fly into the wilderness. Night
and day have I journeyed, leaving wife and flocks and children and the Promise
of the Land, that I may once more look upon the beauty of the Hathor. Shut not
the gates!”</p>
<p>“Pass in,” said the priest, “pass in, so shall we be rid of
one of those whom Khem nurtured up to rob her.”</p>
<p>He entered; then, as the priest was about to bar the wicket, the Wanderer
strode forward, and his golden armour clashed beneath the portal.</p>
<p>“Wouldst thou indeed enter to thy doom, thou mighty lord?” asked
the priest, for he knew him well again.</p>
<p>“Ay, I enter; but perchance not to my doom,” answered the Wanderer.
Then he passed in and the brazen gate was shut behind him.</p>
<p>Now the two priests came forward to bind his eyes, but this he would not
endure.</p>
<p>“Not so,” he said; “I am come here to see what may be
seen.”</p>
<p>“Go to, thou madman, go to! and die the death,” they answered, and
led all the men to the centre of the courtyard whence they might see the pylon
top. Then the priests also covered up their eyes and cast themselves at length
upon the ground; so for a while they lay, and all was silence within and
without the court, for they waited the coming of the Hathor. The Wanderer
glanced through the bars of bronze at the multitude gathered there. Silent they
stood with upturned eyes, even the women had ceased from weeping and stood in
silence. He looked at those beside him. Their bandaged faces were lifted and
they stared towards the pylon top as though their vision pierced the cloths.
The blind man, too, stared upward, and his pale lips moved, but no sound came
from them. Now at the foot of the pylon lay a little rim of shadow. Thinner and
thinner it grew as the moments crept on towards the perfect noon. Now there was
but a line, and now the line was gone, for the sun’s red disc burned high
in the blue heaven straight above the pylon brow. Then suddenly and from afar
there came a faint sweet sound of singing, and at the first note of the sound a
great sigh went up through the quiet air, from all the multitude without. Those
who were near the Wanderer sighed also, and their lips and fingers twitched,
and he himself sighed, though he knew not why.</p>
<p>Nearer came the sweet sound of singing, and stronger it swelled, till presently
those without the temple gate who were on higher ground caught sight of her who
sang. Then a hoarse roar went up from every throat, and madness took them. On
they rushed, dashing themselves against the gates of bronze and the steep walls
on either side, and beat upon them madly with their fists and brows, and
climbed on each other’s shoulders, gnawing at the bars with their teeth,
crying to be let in. But the women threw their arms about them and screamed
curses on her whose beauty brought all men to madness.</p>
<p>So it went for a while, till presently the Wanderer looked up, and lo! upon the
pylon’s brow stood the woman’s self, and at her coming all were
once more silent. She was tall and straight, clad in clinging white, but on her
breast there glowed a blood-red ruby stone, fashioned like a star, and from it
fell red drops that stained for one moment the whiteness of her robes, and then
the robe was white again. Her golden hair was tossed this way and that, and
shone in the sunlight, her arms and neck were bare, and she held one hand
before her eyes as though to hide the brightness of her beauty. For, indeed,
she could not be called beautiful but Beauty itself.</p>
<p>And they who had not loved saw in her that first love whom no man has ever won,
and they who had loved saw that first love whom every man has lost. And all
about her rolled a glory—like the glory of the dying day. Sweetly she
sang a song of promise, and her voice was the voice of each man’s desire,
and the heart of the Wanderer thrilled in answer to it as thrills a harp
smitten by a cunning hand; and thus she sang:</p>
<p class="poem">
Whom hast thou longed for most,<br/>
True love of mine?<br/>
Whom hast thou loved and lost?<br/>
Lo, she is thine!<br/>
<br/>
She that another wed<br/>
Breaks from her vow;<br/>
She that hath long been dead<br/>
Wakes for thee now.<br/>
<br/>
Dreams haunt the hapless bed,<br/>
Ghosts haunt the night,<br/>
Life crowns her living head,<br/>
Love and Delight.<br/>
<br/>
Nay, not a dream nor ghost,<br/>
Nay, but Divine,<br/>
She that was loved and lost<br/>
Waits to be thine!</p>
<p>She ceased, and a moan of desire went up from all who heard.</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer saw that those beside him tore at the bandages about their
brows and rent them loose. Only the priests who lay upon the ground stirred
not, though they also moaned.</p>
<p>And now again she sang, still holding her hand before her face:</p>
<p class="poem">
Ye that seek me, ye that sue me,<br/>
Ye that flock beneath my tower,<br/>
Ye would win me, would undo me,<br/>
I must perish in an hour,<br/>
Dead before the Love that slew me, clasped the<br/>
Bride and crushed the flower.<br/>
<br/>
Hear the word and mark the warning,<br/>
Beauty lives but in your sight,<br/>
Beauty fades from all men’s scorning<br/>
In the watches of the night,<br/>
Beauty wanes before the morning, and<br/>
Love dies in his delight.</p>
<p>She ceased, and once more there was silence. Then suddenly she bent forward
across the pylon brow so far that it seemed that she must fall, and stretching
out her arms as though to clasp those beneath, showed all the glory of her
loveliness.</p>
<p>The Wanderer looked, then dropped his eyes as one who has seen the brightness
of the noonday sun. In the darkness of his mind the world was lost, and he
could think of naught save the clamour of the people, which fretted his ears.
They were all crying, and none were listening.</p>
<p>“See! see!” shouted one. “Look at her hair; it is dark as the
raven’s wing, and her eyes—they are dark as night. Oh, my love! my
love!”</p>
<p>“See! see!” cried another, “were ever skies so blue as those
eyes of hers, was ever foam so white as those white arms?”</p>
<p>“Even so she looked whom once I wed many summers gone,” murmured a
third, “even so when first I drew her veil. Hers was that gentle smile
breaking like ripples on the water, hers that curling hair, hers that
child-like grace.”</p>
<p>“Was ever woman so queenly made?” said a fourth. “Look now on
the brow of pride, look on the deep, dark eyes of storm, the arched lips, and
the imperial air. Ah, here indeed is a Goddess meet for worship.”</p>
<p>“Not so I see her,” cried a fifth, that man who had come from the
host of the Apura. “Pale she is and fair, tall indeed, but delicately
shaped, brown is her hair, and brown are her great eyes like the eyes of a
stag, and ah, sadly she looks upon me, looking for my love.”</p>
<p>“My eyes are opened,” screamed the blind man at the
Wanderer’s side. “My eyes are opened, and I see the pylon tower and
the splendid sun. Love hath touched me on the eyes and they are opened. But lo!
not one shape hath she but many shapes. Oh, she is Beauty’s self, and no
tongue may tell her glory. Let me die! let me die, for my eyes are opened. I
have looked on Beauty’s self! I know what all the world journeys on to
seek, and why we die and what we go to find in death.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap14"></SPAN>CHAPTER VI.<br/> THE WARDENS OF THE GATE</h2>
<p>The clamour swelled or sank, and the men called or cried the names of many
women, some dead, some lost. Others were mute, silent in the presence of the
World’s Desire, silent as when we see lost faces in a dream. The Wanderer
had looked once and then cast down his eyes and stood with his face hidden in
his hands. He alone waited and strove to think; the rest were abandoned to the
bewilderment of their passions and their amaze.</p>
<p>What was it that he had seen? That which he had sought his whole life long;
sought by sea and land, not knowing what he sought. For this he had wandered
with a hungry heart, and now was the hunger of his heart to be appeased?
Between him and her was the unknown barrier and the invisible Death. Was he to
pass the unmarked boundary, to force those guarded gates and achieve where all
had failed? Had a magic deceived his eyes? Did he look but on a picture and a
vision that some art could call again from the haunted place of Memory?</p>
<p>He sighed and looked again. Lo! in his charmed sight a fair girl seemed to
stand upon the pylon brow, and on her head she bore a shining urn of bronze.</p>
<p>He knew her now. He had seen her thus at the court of King Tyndareus as he
drove in his chariot through the ford of Eurotas; thus he had seen her also in
the dream on the Silent Isle.</p>
<p>Again he sighed and again he looked. Now in his charmed sight a woman sat,
whose face was the face of the girl, grown more lovely far, but sad with grief
and touched with shame.</p>
<p>He saw her and he knew her. So he had seen her in Troy towers when he stole
thither in a beggar’s guise from the camp of the Achæans. So he had seen
her when she saved his life in Ilios.</p>
<p>Again he sighed and again he looked, and now he saw the Golden Helen.</p>
<p>She stood upon the pylon’s brow. She stood with arms outstretched, with
eyes upturned, and on her shining face there was a smile like the infinite
smile of the dawn. Oh, now indeed he knew the shape that was Beauty’s
self—the innocent Spirit of Love sent on earth by the undying Gods to be
the doom and the delight of men; to draw them through the ways of strife to the
unknown end.</p>
<p>Awhile the Golden Helen stood thus looking up and out to the worlds beyond; to
the peace beyond the strife, to the goal beyond the grave. Thus she stood while
men scarce dared to breathe, summoning all to come and take that which upon the
earth is guarded so invincibly.</p>
<p>Then once more she sang, and as she sang, slowly drew herself away, till at
length nothing was left of the vision of her save the sweetness of her dying
song.</p>
<p class="poem">
Who wins his Love shall lose her,<br/>
Who loses her shall gain,<br/>
For still the spirit woos her,<br/>
A soul without a stain;<br/>
And Memory still pursues her<br/>
With longings not in vain!<br/>
<br/>
He loses her who gains her,<br/>
Who watches day by day<br/>
The dust of time that stains her,<br/>
The griefs that leave her grey,<br/>
The flesh that yet enchains her<br/>
Whose grace hath passed away!<br/>
<br/>
Oh, happier he who gains not<br/>
The Love some seem to gain:<br/>
The joy that custom stains not<br/>
Shall still with him remain,<br/>
The loveliness that wanes not,<br/>
The love that ne’er can wane.<br/>
<br/>
In dreams she grows not older<br/>
The lands of Dream among,<br/>
Though all the world wax colder,<br/>
Though all the songs be sung,<br/>
In dreams doth he behold her<br/>
Still fair and kind and young.</p>
<p>Now the silence died away, and again madness came upon those who had listened
and looked. The men without the wall once more hurled themselves against the
gates, while the women clung to them, shrieking curses on the beauty of the
Hathor, for the song meant nothing to these women, and their arms were about
those whom they loved and who won them their bread. But most of the men who
were in the outer court rushed up to the inner gates within which stood the
alabaster shrine of the Hathor. Some flung themselves upon the ground and
clutched at it, as in dreams men fling themselves down to be saved from falling
into a pit that has no bottom. Yet as in such an evil slumber the dreamer is
drawn inch by inch to the mouth of the pit by an unseen hand, so these wretched
men were dragged along the ground by the might of their own desire. In vain
they set their feet against the stones to hold themselves from going, for they
thrust forward yet more fiercely with their hands, and thus little by little
drew near the inner gates writhing forwards yet moving backwards like a wounded
snake dragged along by a rope. For of those who thus entered the outer court
and looked upon the Hathor, few might go back alive.</p>
<p>Now the priests drew the cloths from their eyes, and rising, flung wide the
second gates, and there, but a little way off, the veil of the shrine wavered
as if in a wind. For now the doors beyond the veil were thrown open, as might
be seen when the wind swayed its Tyrian web, and through the curtain came the
sound of the same sweet singing.</p>
<p>“Draw near! Draw near!” cried the ancient priest. “Let him
who would win the Hathor draw near!”</p>
<p>Now at first the Wanderer was minded to rush on. But his desire had not wholly
overcome him, nor had his wisdom left him. He took counsel with his heart and
waited to let the others go, and to see how it fared with them.</p>
<p>The worshippers were now hurrying back and now darting onwards, as fear and
longing seized them, till the man who was blind drew near, led by the hand of a
priest, for his hound might not enter the second court of the temple.</p>
<p>“Do ye fear?” he cried. “Cowards, I fear not. It is better to
look upon the glory of the Hathor and die than to live and never see her more.
Set my face straight, ye priests, set my face straight, at the worst I can but
die.”</p>
<p>So they led him as near the curtains as they dared to go and set his face
straight. Then with a great cry he rushed on. But he was caught and whirled
about like a leaf in a wind, so that he fell. He rose and again rushed on,
again to be whirled back. A third time he rose and rushed on, smiting with his
blind man’s staff. The blow fell, and stayed in mid-air, and there came a
hollow sound as of a smitten shield, and the staff that dealt the blow was
shattered. Then there was a noise like the noise of clashing swords, and the
man instantly sank down dead, though the Wanderer could see no wound upon him.</p>
<p>“Draw near! Draw near!” cried the priest again. “This one is
fallen. Let him who would win the Hathor draw near!”</p>
<p>Then the man who had fled from the host of the Apura rushed forward, crying on
the Lion of his tribe. Back he was hurled, and back again, but at the third
time once more there came the sound of clashing swords, and he too fell dead.</p>
<p>“Draw near! Draw near!” cried the priest. “Another has
fallen! Let him who would win the Hathor draw near!”</p>
<p>And now man after man rushed on, to be first hurled back and then slain of the
clashing swords. And at length all were slain save the Wanderer alone.</p>
<p>Then the priest spake:</p>
<p>“Wilt thou indeed rush on to doom, thou glorious man? Thou hast seen the
fate of many. Be warned and turn away.”</p>
<p>“Never did I turn from man or ghost,” said the Wanderer, and
drawing his short sword he came near, warily covering his head with his broad
shield, while the priests stood back to see him die. Now, the Wanderer had
marked that none were touched till they stood at the very threshold of the
doorway. Therefore he uttered a prayer to Aphrodite and came on slowly till his
feet were within a bow’s length of the threshold, and there he stood and
listened. Now he could hear the very words of the song that the Hathor sang as
she wove at her loom. So dread and sweet it was that for a while he thought no
more on the Guardians of the Gate, nor of how he might win the way, nor of
aught save the song. For she was singing shrill and clear in his own dear
tongue, the tongue of the Achæans:</p>
<p class="poem">
Paint with threads of gold and scarlet, paint the battles fought for me,<br/>
All the wars for Argive Helen; storm and sack by land or sea;<br/>
All the tale of loves and sorrows that have been and are to be.<br/>
<br/>
Paint her lips that like a cup have pledged the lips of heroes all,<br/>
Paint her golden hair unwhitened while the many winters fall,<br/>
Paint the beauty that is mistress of the wide world and its thrall!<br/>
<br/>
Paint the storms of ships and chariots, rain of arrows flying far,<br/>
Paint the waves of Warfare leaping up at Beauty like a star,<br/>
Like a star that pale and trembling hangs above the waves of War.<br/>
<br/>
Paint the ancient Ilios fallen; paint the flames that scaled the sky,<br/>
When the foe was in the fortress, when the trumpet and the cry<br/>
Rang of men in their last onset, men whose hour had dawned to die.<br/>
<br/>
Woe for me once loved of all men, me that never yet have known<br/>
How to love the hearts that loved me. Woe for woe, who hear the moan<br/>
Of my lovers’ ghosts that perished in their cities overthrown.<br/>
<br/>
Is there not, of Gods or mortals, oh, ye Gods, is there not one—<br/>
One whose heart shall mate with my heart, one to love ere all be done,<br/>
All the tales of wars that shall be for my love beneath the sun?</p>
<p>Now the song died away, and the Wanderer once more bethought him of the Wardens
of the Gate and of the battle which he must fight. But as he braced himself to
rush on against the unseen foe the music of the singing swelled forth again,
and whether he willed it or willed it not, so sweet was its magic that there he
must wait till the song was done. And now stronger and more gladly rang the
sweet shrill voice, like the voice of one who has made moan through the
livelong winter night, and now sees the chariot of the dawn climbing the
eastern sky. And thus the Hathor sang:</p>
<p class="poem">
Ah, within my heart a hunger for the love unfelt, unknown,<br/>
Stirs at length, and wakes and murmurs as a child that wakes to moan,<br/>
Left to sleep within some silent house of strangers and alone.<br/>
<br/>
So my heart awakes, and waking, moans with hunger and with cold,<br/>
Cries in pain of dim remembrance for the joy that was of old;<br/>
For the love that was, that shall be, half forgot and half foretold.<br/>
<br/>
Have I dreamed it or remembered? In another world was I,<br/>
Lived and loved in alien seasons, moved beneath a golden sky,<br/>
In a golden clime where never came the strife of men that die.<br/>
<br/>
But the Gods themselves were jealous, for our bliss was over great,<br/>
And they brought on us division, and the horror of their Hate,<br/>
And they set the Snake between us, and the twining coils of Fate.<br/>
<br/>
And they said, “Go forth and seek each other’s face, and only
find<br/>
Shadows of that face ye long for, dreams of days left far behind,<br/>
Love the shadows and be loved with loves that waver as the wind.”</p>
<p>Once more the sweet singing died away, but as the Wanderer grasped his sword
and fixed the broad shield upon his arm he remembered the dream of Meriamun the
Queen, which had been told him by Rei the Priest. For in that dream twain who
had sinned were made three, and through many deaths and lives must seek each
other’s face. And now it seemed that the burden of the song was the
burden of the dream.</p>
<p>Then he thought no more on dreams, or songs, or omens, but only on the deadly
foe that stood before him wrapped in darkness, and on Helen, in whose arms he
yet should lie, for so the Goddess had sworn to him in sea-girt Ithaca. He
spoke no word, he named no God, but sprang forward as a lion springs from his
bed of reeds; and, lo! his buckler clashed against shields that barred the way,
and invisible arms seized him to hurl him back. But no weakling was the
Wanderer, thus to be pushed aside by magic, but the stoutest man left alive in
the whole world now that Aias, Telamon’s son, was dead. The priests
wondered as they saw how he gave back never a step, for all the might of the
Wardens of the Gate, but lifted his short sword and hewed down so terribly that
fire leapt from the air where the short sword fell, the good short sword of
Euryalus the Phæacian. Then came the clashing of the swords, and from all the
golden armour that once the god-like Paris wore, ay, from buckler, helm, and
greaves, and breastplate the sparks streamed up as they stream from the anvil
of the smith when he smites great blows on swords made white with fire.</p>
<p>Swift as hail fell the blows of the unseen blades upon the golden armour, but
he who wore it took no harm, nor was it so much as marked with the dint of the
swords. So while the priests wondered at this miracle the viewless Wardens of
the Gate smote at the Wanderer, and the Wanderer smote at them again. Then of a
sudden he knew this, that they who barred the path were gone, for no more blows
fell, and his sword only cut the air.</p>
<p>Then he rushed on and passed behind the veil and stood within the shrine.</p>
<p>But as the curtains swung behind him the singing rose again upon the air, and
he might not move, but stood fixed with his eyes gazing where, far up, a loom
was set within the shrine. For the sound of the singing came from behind the
great web gleaming in the loom, the sound of the song of Helen as she heard the
swords clash and the ringing of the harness of those whose knees were loosened
in death. It was thus she sang:</p>
<p class="poem">
Clamour of iron on iron, and shrieking of steel upon steel,<br/>
Hark how they echo again!<br/>
Life with the dead is at war, and the mortals are shaken and reel,<br/>
The living are slain by the slain!<br/>
<br/>
Clamour of iron on iron; like music that chimes with a song,<br/>
So with my life doth it chime,<br/>
And my footsteps must fall in the dance of Erinnys, a revel of wrong,<br/>
Till the day of the passing of Time!<br/>
<br/>
Ghosts of the dead that have loved me, your love has been vanquished of
death,<br/>
But unvanquished of death is your hate;<br/>
Say, is there none that may woo me and win me of all that draw breath,<br/>
Not one but is envied of Fate?</p>
<p>Now the song died, and the Wanderer looked up, and before him stood three
shadows of mighty men clad in armour. He gazed upon them, and he knew the
blazons painted on their shields; he knew them for heroes long
dead—Pirithous, Theseus, and Aias.</p>
<p>They looked upon him, and then cried with one voice:</p>
<p>“Hail to thee, Odysseus of Ithaca, son of Laertes!”</p>
<p>“Hail to thee,” cried the Wanderer, “Theseus, Ægeus’
son! Once before didst thou go down into the House of Hades, and alive thou
camest forth again. Hast thou crossed yet again the stream of Ocean, and dost
thou live in the sunlight? For of old I sought thee and found thee not in the
House of Hades?”</p>
<p>The semblance of Theseus answered: “In the House of Hades I abide this
day, and in the fields of asphodel. But that thou seest is a shadow, sent forth
by Queen Persephone, to be the guard of the beauty of Helen.”</p>
<p>“Hail to thee, Pirithous, Ixion’s son,” cried the Wanderer
again. “Hast thou yet won the dread Persephone to be thy love? And why
doth Hades give his rival holiday to wander in the sunlight, for of old I
sought thee, and found thee not in the House of Hades.”</p>
<p>Then the semblance of Pirithous answered:</p>
<p>“In the House of Hades I dwell this day, and that thou seest is but a
shadow which goes with the shadow of the hero Theseus. For where he is am I,
and where he goes I go, and our very shadows are not sundered; but we guard the
beauty of Helen.”</p>
<p>“Hail to thee, Aias, Telamon’s son,” cried the Wanderer.
“Hast thou not forgotten thy wrath against me, for the sake of those
accursed arms that I won from thee, the arms of Achilles, son of Peleus? For of
old in the House of Hades I spoke to thee, but thou wouldst not answer one
word, so heavy was thine anger.”</p>
<p>Then the semblance of Aias made answer: “With iron upon iron, and the
stroke of bronze on bronze, would I answer thee, if I were yet a living man and
looked upon the sunlight. But I smite with a shadowy spear and slay none but
men foredoomed, and I am the shade of Aias who dwells in Hades. Yet the Queen
Persephone sent me forth to be the guard of the beauty of Helen.”</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer spake.</p>
<p>“Tell me, ye shadows of the sons of heroes, is the way closed, and do the
Gods forbid it, or may I that am yet a living man pass forward and gaze on that
ye guard, on the beauty of Helen?”</p>
<p>Then each of the three nodded with his head, and smote once upon his shield,
saying:</p>
<p>“Pass by, but look not back upon us, till thou hast seen thy
desire.”</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer went by, into the innermost chamber of the alabaster shrine.</p>
<p>Now when the shadows had spoken thus, they grew dim and vanished, and the
Wanderer, as they had commanded, drew slowly up on the alabaster shrine, till
at length he stood on the hither side of the web upon the loom. It was a great
web, wide and high, and hid all the innermost recesses of the shrine. Here he
waited, not knowing how he should break in upon the Hathor.</p>
<p>As he stood wondering thus his buckler slipped from his loosened hand and
clashed upon the marble floor, and as it clashed the voice of the Hathor took
up the broken song; and thus she sang ever more sweetly:—</p>
<p class="poem">
Ghosts of the dead that have loved me, your love has been vanquished by
Death,<br/>
But unvanquished by Death is your Hate;<br/>
Say, is there none that may woo me and win me of all that draw breath,<br/>
Not one but is envied of Fate?<br/>
<br/>
None that may pass you unwounded, unscathed of invisible spears—<br/>
By the splendour of Zeus there is one,<br/>
And he comes, and my spirit is touched as Demeter is touched by the tears<br/>
Of the Spring and the kiss of the sun.<br/>
<br/>
For he comes, and my heart that was chill as a lake in the season of snow,<br/>
Is molten, and glows as with fire.<br/>
And the Love that I knew not is born and he laughs in my heart, and I know<br/>
The name and the flame of Desire.<br/>
<br/>
As a flame I am kindled, a flame that is blown by a wind from the North,<br/>
By a wind that is deadly with cold,<br/>
And the hope that awoke in me faints, for the Love that is born shall go
forth<br/>
To my Love, and shall die as of old!</p>
<p>Now the song sobbed itself away, but the heart of the Wanderer echoed to its
sweetness as a lyre moans and thrills when the hand of the striker is lifted
from the strings.</p>
<p>For a while he stood thus, hidden by the web upon the loom, while his limbs
shook like the leaves of the tall poplar, and his face turned white as turn the
poplar leaves. Then desire overcame him, and a longing he could not master, to
look upon the face of her who sang, and he seized the web upon the loom, and
rent it with a great rending noise, so that it fell down on either side of him,
and the gold coils rippled at his feet.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap15"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII.<br/> THE SHADOW IN THE SUNLIGHT</h2>
<p>The torn web fell—the last veil of the Strange Hathor. It fell, and all
its unravelled threads of glittering gold and scarlet rippled and coiled about
the Wanderer’s feet, and about the pillars of the loom.</p>
<p>The web was torn, the veil was rent, the labour was lost, the pictured story of
loves and wars was all undone.</p>
<p>But there, white in the silvery dusk of the alabaster shrine, there was the
visible Helen, the bride and the daughter of Mystery, the World’s Desire!</p>
<p>There shone that fabled loveliness of which no story was too strange, of which
all miracles seemed true. There, her hands folded on her lap, her head
bowed—there sat she whose voice was the echo of all sweet voices, she
whose shape was the mirror of all fair forms, she whose changeful beauty, so
they said, was the child of the changeful moon.</p>
<p>Helen sat in a chair of ivory, gleaming even through the sunshine of her
outspread hair. She was clothed in soft folds of white; on her breast gleamed
the Starstone, the red stone of the sea-deeps that melts in the sunshine, but
that melted not on the breast of Helen. Moment by moment the red drops from the
ruby heart of the star fell on her snowy raiment, fell and vanished,—fell
and vanished,—and left no stain.</p>
<p>The Wanderer looked on her face, but the beauty and the terror of it, as she
raised it, were more than he could bear, and he stood like those who saw the
terror and the beauty of that face which changes men to stone.</p>
<p>For the lovely eyes of Helen stared wide, her lips, yet quivering with the last
notes of song, were wide open in fear. She seemed like one who walks alone, and
suddenly, in the noonday light, meets the hated dead; encountering the ghost of
an enemy come back to earth with the instant summons of doom.</p>
<p>For a moment the sight of her terror made even the Wanderer afraid. What was
the horror she beheld in this haunted shrine, where was none save themselves
alone? What was with them in the shrine?</p>
<p>Then he saw that her eyes were fixed on his golden armour which Paris once had
worn, on the golden shield with the blazon of the White Bull, on the golden
helm, whose visor was down so that it quite hid his eyes and his face—and
then at last her voice broke from her:</p>
<p>“<i>Paris! Paris! Paris!</i> Has Death lost hold of thee? Hast thou come
to drag me back to thee and to shame? Paris, dead Paris! Who gave thee courage
to pass the shadows of men whom on earth thou hadst not dared to face in
war?”</p>
<p>Then she wrung her hands, and laughed aloud with the empty laugh of fear.</p>
<p>A thought came into that crafty mind of the Wanderer’s, and he answered
her, not in his own voice, but in the smooth, soft, mocking voice of the
traitor, Paris, whom he had heard forswear himself in the oath before Ilios.</p>
<p>“So, lady, thou hast not yet forgiven Paris? Thou weavest the ancient
web, thou singest the ancient songs—art thou still unkind as of
old?”</p>
<p>“Why art thou come back to taunt me?” she said, and now she spoke
as if an old familiar fear and horror were laying hold of her and mastering her
again, after long freedom. “Was it not enough to betray me in the
semblance of my wedded lord? Why dost thou mock?”</p>
<p>“In love all arts are fair,” he answered in the voice of Paris.
“Many have loved thee, Lady, and they are all dead for thy sake, and no
love but mine has been more strong than death. There is none to blame us now,
and none to hinder. Troy is down, the heroes are white dust; only Love lives
yet. Wilt thou not learn, Lady, how a shadow can love?”</p>
<p>She had listened with her head bowed, but now she leaped up with blazing eyes
and face of fire.</p>
<p>“Begone!” she said, “the heroes are dead for my sake, and to
my shame, but the shame is living yet. Begone! Never in life or death shall my
lips touch the false lips that lied away my honour, and the false face that
wore the favour of my lord’s.”</p>
<p>For it was by shape-shifting and magic art, as poets tell, that Paris first
beguiled Fair Helen.</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer spoke again with the sweet, smooth voice of Paris, son of
Priam.</p>
<p>“As I passed up the shrine where thy glory dwells, Helen, I heard thee
sing. And thou didst sing of the waking of thy heart, of the arising of Love
within thy soul, and of the coming of one for whom thou dost wait, whom thou
didst love long since and shalt love for ever more. And as thou sangest, I
came, I Paris, who was thy love, and who am thy love, and who alone of ghosts
and men shall be thy love again. Wilt thou still bid me go?”</p>
<p>“I sang,” she answered, “yes, as the Gods put it in my heart
so I sang—for indeed it seemed to me that one came who was my love of
old, and whom alone I must love, alone for ever. But thou wast not in my heart,
thou false Paris! Nay, I will tell thee, and with the name will scare thee back
to Hell. He was in my heart whom once as a maid I saw driving in his chariot
through the ford of Eurotas while I bore water from the well. He was in my
heart whom once I saw in Troy, when he crept thither clad in beggar’s
guise. Ay, Paris, I will name him by his name, for though he is long dead, yet
him alone methinks I loved from the very first, and him alone I shall love till
my deathlessness is done—Odysseus, son of Laertes, Odysseus of Ithaca, he
was named among men, and Odysseus was in my heart as I sang and in my heart he
shall ever be, though the Gods in their wrath have given me to others, to my
shame, and against my will.”</p>
<p>Now when the Wanderer heard her speak, and heard his own name upon her lips,
and knew that the Golden Helen loved him alone, it seemed to him as though his
heart would burst his harness. No word could he find in his heart to speak, but
he raised the visor of his helm.</p>
<p>She looked—she saw and knew him for Odysseus—even Odysseus of
Ithaca. Then in turn she hid her eyes with her hands, and speaking through them
said:</p>
<p>“Oh, Paris! ever wast thou false, but, ghost or man, of all thy shames
this is the shamefullest. Thou hast taken the likeness of a hero dead, and thou
hast heard me speak such words of him as Helen never spoke before. Fie on thee,
Paris! fie on thee! who wouldest trick me into shame as once before thou didst
trick me in the shape of Menelaus, who was my lord. Now I will call on Zeus to
blast thee with his bolts. Nay, not on Zeus will I call, but on Odysseus’
self. <i>Odysseus! Odysseus!</i> Come thou from the shades and smite this
Paris, this trickster, who even in death finds ways to mock thee.”</p>
<p>She ceased, and with eyes upturned and arms outstretched murmured,
“Odysseus! Odysseus! Come.”</p>
<p>Slowly the Wanderer drew near to the glory of the Golden Helen—slowly,
slowly he came, till his dark eyes looked into her eyes of blue. Then at last
he found his voice and spake.</p>
<p>“Helen! Argive Helen!” he said, “I am no shadow come up from
Hell to torment thee, and of Trojan Paris I know nothing. For I am Odysseus,
Odysseus of Ithaca, a living man beneath the sunlight. Hither am I come to see
thee, hither I am come to win thee to my heart. For yonder in Ithaca Aphrodite
visited me in a dream, and bade me wander out upon the seas till at length I
found thee, Helen, and saw the Red Star blaze upon thy breast. And I have
wandered, and I have dared, and I have heard thy song, and rent the web of
Fate, and I have seen the Star, and lo! at last, at last! I find thee. Well I
saw thou knewest the arms of Paris, who was thy husband, and to try thee I
spoke with the voice of Paris, as of old thou didst feign the voices of our
wives when we lay in the wooden horse within the walls of Troy. Thus I drew the
sweetness of thy love from thy secret breast, as the sun draws out the
sweetness of the flowers. But now I declare myself to be Odysseus, clad in the
mail of Paris—Odysseus come on this last journey to be thy love and
lord.” And he ceased.</p>
<p>She trembled and looked at him doubtfully, but at last she spoke:</p>
<p>“Well do I remember,” she said, “that when I washed the limbs
of Odysseus, in the halls of Ilios, I marked a great white scar beneath his
knee. If indeed thou art Odysseus, and not a phantom from the Gods, show me
that great scar.”</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer smiled, and, resting his buckler against the pillar of the
loom, drew off his golden greave, and there was the scar that the boar dealt
with his tusk on the Parnassian hill when Odysseus was a boy.</p>
<p>“Look, Lady,” he said; “is this the scar that once thine eyes
looked on in the halls of Troy?”</p>
<p>“Yea,” she said, “it is the very scar, and now I know that
thou art no ghost and no lying shape, but Odysseus’ self, come to be my
love and lord,” and she looked most sweetly in his eyes.</p>
<p>Now the Wanderer wavered no more, but put out his arms to gather her to his
heart. Now the Red Star was hidden on his breast, now the red drops dripped
from the Star upon his mail, and the face of her who is the World’s
Desire grew soft in the shadow of his helm, while her eyes were melted to tears
beneath his kiss. The Gods send all lovers like joy!</p>
<p>Softly she sighed, softly drew back from his arms, and her lips were opened to
speak when a change came over her face. The kind eyes were full of fear again,
as she gazed where, through the window of the shrine of alabaster, the sunlight
flickered in gold upon the chapel floor. What was that which flickered in the
sunlight? or was it only the dance of the motes in the beam? There was no
shadow cast in the sunshine; why did she gaze as if she saw another watching
this meeting of their loves? However it chanced, she mastered her fear; there
was even a smile on her lips and mirth in her eyes as she turned and spoke
again.</p>
<p>“Odysseus, thou art indeed the cunningest of men. Thou hast stolen my
secret by thy craft; who save thee would dream of craft in such an hour? For
when I thought thee Paris, and thy face was hidden by thy helm, I called on
Odysseus in my terror, as a child cries to a mother. Methinks I have ever held
him dear; always I have found him ready at need, though the Gods have willed
that till this hour my love might not be known, nay, not to my own heart; so I
called on Odysseus, and those words were wrung from me to scare false Paris
back to his own place. But the words that should have driven Paris down to Hell
drew Odysseus to my breast. And now it is done, and I will not go back upon my
words, for we have kissed our kiss of troth, before the immortal Gods have we
kissed, and those ghosts who guard the way to Helen, and whom thou alone
couldst pass, as it was fated, are witnesses to our oath. And now the ghosts
depart, for no more need they guard the beauty of Helen. It is given to thee to
have and keep, and now is Helen once more a very woman, for at thy kiss the
curse was broken. Ah, friend! since my lord died in pleasant Lacedæmon, what
things have I seen and suffered by the Gods’ decree! But two things I
will tell thee, Odysseus, and thou shalt read them as thou mayest. Though never
before in thy life-days did thy lips touch mine, yet I know that not now for
the first time we kiss. And this I know also, for the Gods have set it in my
heart, that though our love shall be short, and little joy shall we have one of
another, yet death shall not end it. For, Odysseus, I am a daughter of the
Gods, and though I sleep and forget that which has been in my sleep, and though
my shape change as but now it seemed to change in the eyes of those ripe to
die, yet I die not. And for thee, though thou art mortal, death shall be but as
the short summer nights that mark off day from day. For thou shalt live again,
Odysseus, as thou hast lived before, and life by life we shall meet and love
till the end is come.”</p>
<p>As the Wanderer listened he thought once more of that dream of Meriamun the
Queen, which the priest Rei had told him. But he said nothing of it to Helen;
for about the Queen and her words to him it seemed wisest not to speak.</p>
<p>“It will be well to live, Lady, if life by life I find thee for a
love.”</p>
<p>“Life by life thou shalt find me, Odysseus, in this shape or in that
shalt thou find me—for beauty has many forms, and love has many
names—but thou shalt ever find me but to lose me again. I tell thee that
as but now thou wonnest thy way through the ranks of those who watch me, the
cloud lifted from my mind, and I remembered, and I foresaw, and I knew why I,
the loved of many, might never love in turn. I knew then, Odysseus, that I am
but the instrument of the Gods, who use me for their ends. And I knew that I
loved thee, and thee only, but with a love that began before the birth-bed, and
shall not be consumed by the funeral flame.”</p>
<p>“So be it, Lady,” said the Wanderer, “for this I know, that
never have I loved woman or Goddess as I love thee, who art henceforth as the
heart in my breast, that without which I may not live.”</p>
<p>“Now speak on,” she said, “for such words as these are like
music in my ears.”</p>
<p>“Ay, I will speak on. Short shall be our love, thou sayest, Lady, and my
own heart tells me that it is born to be brief of days. I know that now I go on
my last voyaging, and that death comes upon me from the water, the swiftest
death that may be. This then I would dare to ask: When shall we twain be one?
For if the hours of life be short, let us love while we may.”</p>
<p>Now Helen’s golden hair fell before her eyes like the bride’s veil,
and she was silent for a time. Then she spoke:</p>
<p>“Not now, and not while I dwell in this holy place may we be wed,
Odysseus, for so should we call down upon us the hate of Gods and men. Tell me,
then, where thou dwellest in the city, and I will come to thee. Nay, it is not
meet. Hearken, Odysseus. To-morrow, one hour before the midnight, see that thou
dost stand without the pylon gates of this my temple; then I will pass out to
thee as well I may, and thou shalt know me by the jewel, the Star-stone on my
breast that shines through the darkness, and by that alone, and lead me whither
thou wilt. For then thou shalt be my lord, and I will be thy wife. And
thereafter, as the Gods show us, so will we go. For know, it is in my mind to
fly this land of Khem, where month by month the Gods have made the people die
for me. So till then, farewell, Odysseus, my love, found after many
days.”</p>
<p>“It is well, Lady,” answered the Wanderer. “To-morrow night I
meet thee without the pylon gates. I also am minded to fly this land of
witchcraft and of horror, but I may scarce depart till Pharaoh return again.
For he has gone down to battle and left me to guard his palace.”</p>
<p>“Of that we will talk hereafter. Go now! Go swiftly, for here we may not
talk more of earthly love,” said the Golden Helen.</p>
<p>Then he took her hand and kissed it and passed from before her glory as a man
amazed.</p>
<p>But in his foolish wisdom he spoke no word to her of Meriamun the Queen.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap16"></SPAN>CHAPTER VIII.<br/> THE LOOSING OF THE SPIRIT OF REI</h2>
<p>Rei the Priest had fled with what speed he might from the Gates of Death, those
gates that guarded the loveliness of Helen and opened only upon men doomed to
die. The old man was heavy at heart, for he loved the Wanderer. Among the dark
children of Khem he had seen none like this Achæan, none so goodly, so strong,
and so well versed in all arts of war. He remembered how this man had saved the
life of her he loved above all women—of Meriamun, the moon-child, the
fairest queen who had sat upon the throne of Egypt, the fairest and the most
learned, save Taia only. He bethought him of the Wanderer’s beauty as he
stood upon the board while the long shafts hailed down the hall. Then he
recalled the vision of Meriamun, which she had told him long years ago, and the
shadow in a golden helm which watched the changed Hataska. The more he thought,
the more he was perplexed and lost in wonder. What did the Gods intend? Of one
thing he was sure: the leaders of the host of dreams had mocked Meriamun. The
man of her vision would never be her love: he had gone to meet his doom at the
door of the Chapel Perilous.</p>
<p>So Rei hasted on, stumbling in his speed, till he came to the Palace and passed
through its halls towards his chamber. At the entrance of her own place he met
Meriamun the Queen. There she stood in the doorway like a picture in its
sculptured frame, nor could any sight be more beautiful than she was, clad in
her Royal robes, and crowned with the golden snakes. Her black hair lay soft
and deep on her, and her eyes looked strangely forth from beneath the ivory of
her brow.</p>
<p>He bowed low before her and would have passed on, but she stayed him.</p>
<p>“Whither goest thou, Rei?” she asked, “and why is thy face so
sad?”</p>
<p>“I go about my business, Queen,” he answered, “and I am sad
because no tidings come of Pharaoh, nor of how it has fared with him and the
host of the Apura.”</p>
<p>“Perchance thou speakest truth, and yet not all the truth,” she
answered. “Enter, I would have speech with thee.”</p>
<p>So he entered, and at her command seated himself before her in the very seat
where the Wanderer had sat. Now, as he sat thus, of a sudden Meriamun the Queen
slid to her knees before him, and tears were in her eyes and her breast was
shaken with sobs. And while he wondered, thinking that she wept at last for her
son who was dead among the firstborn, she hid her face in her hands upon his
knees, and trembled.</p>
<p>“What ails thee, Queen, my fosterling?” he said. But she only took
his hand, and laid her own in it, and the old priest’s eyes were dim with
tears. So she sat for awhile, and then she looked up, but still she did not
find words. And he caressed the beautiful Imperial head, that no man had seen
bowed before. “What is it, my daughter?” he said, and she answered
at last:</p>
<p>“Hear me, old friend, who art my only friend—for if I speak not my
heart will surely burst; or if it break not, my brain will burn and I shall be
no more a Queen but a living darkness, where vapours creep, and wandering
lights shine faintly on the ruin of my mind. Mindest thou that hour—it
was the night after the hateful night that saw me Pharaoh’s
wife—when I crept to thee and told thee the vision that had come upon my
soul, had come to mock me even at Pharaoh’s side?”</p>
<p>“I mind it well,” said Rei; “it was a strange vision, nor
might my wisdom interpret it.”</p>
<p>“And mindest thou what I told thee of the man of my vision—the
glorious man whom I must love, he who was clad in golden armour and wore a
golden helm wherein a spear-point of bronze stood fast?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I mind it,” said Rei.</p>
<p>“And how is that man named?” she asked, whispering and staring on
him with wide eyes. “Is he not named Eperitus, the Wanderer? And hath he
not come hither, the spear-point in his helm? And is not the hand of Fate upon
me, Meriamun? Hearken, Rei, hearken! I love him as it was fated I should love.
When first I looked on him as he came up the Hall of Audience in his glory, I
knew him. I knew him for that man who shares the curse laid aforetime on him,
and on the woman, and on me, when, in an unknown place, twain became three and
were doomed to strive from life to life and work each other’s woe upon
the earth. I knew him, Rei, though he knew me not, and I say that my soul shook
at the echo of his step, and my heart blossomed as the black earth blossoms
when after flood Sihor seeks his banks again. A glory came upon me, Rei, and I
looked back through all the mists of time and knew him for my love, and I
looked forward into the depths of time to be and knew him for my love. Then I
looked on the present hour, and naught could I see but darkness, and naught
could I hear but the groans of dying men, and a shrill sound as of a woman
singing.”</p>
<p>“An ill tale, Queen,” said Rei.</p>
<p>“Ay, an ill tale, Rei, but half untold. Hearken again, I will tell thee
all. Madness hath entered into me from the Hathor of Atarhechis, the Queen of
Desire. I am mad with love, even I who never loved. Oh, Rei! Rei! I would win
this man. Nay, look not so sternly on me, it is Fate that drives me on. Last
night I spoke to him and discovered to him the name he hides from us, his own
name, Odysseus, Laertes’ son, Odysseus of Ithaca. Ay, thou startest, but
so it is. I learned it by my magic, and wrung the truth even from the guile of
the most crafty of men. But it seemed to me that he turned from me, though this
much I won from him, that he had journeyed from far to seek me, the Bride that
the Gods have promised him.”</p>
<p>The priest leaped up from his seat. “Lady!” he cried, “Lady!
whom I serve and whom I have loved from a child, thy brain is sick, and not thy
heart. Thou canst not love him. Dost thou not remember that thou art Queen of
Khem and Pharaoh’s wife? Wilt thou throw thy honour in the mire to be
trampled by a wandering stranger?”</p>
<p>“Ay,” she answered, “I am Queen of Khem and Pharaoh’s
wife, but never Pharaoh’s love. Honour! Why dost thou prate to me of
honour? Like Nile in flood, my love hath burst the bulwark of my honour, and I
mark not where custom set it. For all around the waters seethe and foam, and on
them, like a broken lily, floats the wreck of my lost honour. Talk not to me of
honour, Rei, teach me rather how I may win my hero to my arms.”</p>
<p>“Thou art mad indeed,” he groaned; “nevertheless—I had
forgotten—this must needs end in words and tears. Meriamun, I bring thee
tidings. He whom thou desireth is lost to thee for ever—to thee and all
the world.”</p>
<p>She heard, then sprang from the couch and stood over him like a lioness over a
smitten stag, her fierce and lovely face alive with rage and fear.</p>
<p>“Is he dead?” she hissed in his ear. “Dead! and I knew it
not? Then thou hast murdered him, and thus I avenge his murder.”</p>
<p>With the word she snatched a dagger from her girdle—that same dagger with
which she had once struck at Meneptah her brother, when he would have kissed
her—and high it flashed above Rei the Priest.</p>
<p>“Nay,” she went on, letting the knife fall; “after another
fashion shalt thou die—more slowly, Rei, yes, more slowly. Thou knowest
the torment of the palm-tree? By that thou shalt die!” She paused, and
stood above him with quivering limbs, and breast that heaved, and eyes that
flashed like stars.</p>
<p>“Stay! stay!” he cried. “It is not I who have slain this
Wanderer, if he indeed is dead, but his own folly. For he is gone up to look
upon the Strange Hathor, and those who look upon the Hathor do battle with the
Unseen Swords, and those who do battle with the Unseen Swords must lie in the
baths of bronze and seek the Under World.”</p>
<p>The face of Meriamun grew white at this word, as the alabaster of the walls,
and she cried aloud with a great cry. Then she sank upon the couch, pressing
her hand to her brow and moaning:</p>
<p>“How may I save him? How may I save him from that accursed witch? Alas!
It is too late—but at least I will know his end, ay, and hear of the
beauty of her who slays him. Rei,” she whispered, not in the speech of
Khem, but in the dead tongue of a dead people, “be not wrath with me. Oh,
have pity on my weakness. Thou knowest of the Putting-forth of the
Spirit—is it not so?”</p>
<p>“I am instructed,” he answered, in the same speech;
“’twas I who taught thee this art, I, and that Ancient Evil which
is thine.”</p>
<p>“True—it was thou, Rei. Thou hast ever loved me, so thou swearest,
and many a deed of dread have we dared together. Lend me thy Spirit, Rei, that
I may send it forth to the Temple of the False Hathor, and learn what passes in
the temple, and of the death of him—whom I must love.”</p>
<p>“An ill deed, Meriamun, and a fearful,” he answered, “for
there shall my Spirit meet them who watch the gates, and who knows what may
chance when the bodiless one that yet hath earthly life meets the bodiless ones
who live no more on earth?”</p>
<p>“Yet wilt thou dare it, Rei, for love of me, as being instructed thou
alone canst do,” she pleaded.</p>
<p>“Never have I refused thee aught, Meriamun, nor will I say thee nay. This
only I ask of thee—that if my Spirit comes back no more, thou wilt bury
me in that tomb which I have made ready by Thebes, and if it may be, by thy
strength of magic wring me from the power of the strange Wardens. I am
prepared—thou knowest the spell—say it.”</p>
<p>He sank back in the carven couch, and looked upwards. Then Meriamun drew near
to him, gazed into his eyes and whispered in his ear in that dead tongue she
knew. And as she whispered the face of Rei grew like the face of one dead. She
drew back and spoke aloud:</p>
<p>“Art thou loosed, Spirit of Rei?”</p>
<p>Then the lips of Rei answered her, saying: “I am loosed, Meriamun.
Whither shall I go?”</p>
<p>“To the court of the Temple of Hathor, that is before the shrine.”</p>
<p>“It is done, Meriamun.”</p>
<p>“What seest thou?”</p>
<p>“I see a man clad in golden armour. He stands with buckler raised before
the doorway of the shrine, and before him are the ghosts of heroes dead, though
he may not see them with the eyes of the flesh. From within the shrine there
comes a sound of singing, and he listens to the singing.”</p>
<p>“What does he hear?”</p>
<p>Then the loosed Spirit of Rei the Priest told Meriamun the Queen all the words
of the song that Helen sang. And when she heard and knew that it was Argive
Helen who sat in the halls of Hathor, the heart of the Queen grew faint within
her, and her knees trembled. Yet more did she tremble when she learned those
words that rang like the words she herself had heard in her vision long
ago—telling of bliss that had been, of the hate of the Gods, and of the
unending Quest.</p>
<p>Now the song ended, and the Wanderer went up against the ghosts, and the Spirit
of Rei, speaking with the lips of Rei, told all that befell, while Meriamun
hearkened with open ears—ay, and cried aloud with joy when the Wanderer
forced his path through the invisible swords.</p>
<p>Then once more the sweet voice rang and the loosed Spirit of Rei told the words
she sang, and to Meriamun they seemed fateful. Then he told her all the talk
that passed between the Wanderer and the ghosts.</p>
<p>Now the ghosts being gone she bade the Spirit of Rei follow the Wanderer up the
sanctuary, and from the loosed Spirit she heard how he rent the web, and of all
the words of Helen and of the craft of him who feigned to be Paris. Then the
web was torn and the eyes of the Spirit of Rei looked on the beauty of her who
was behind it.</p>
<p>“Tell me of the face of the False Hathor?” said the Queen.</p>
<p>And the Spirit of Rei answered: “Her face is that beauty which gathered
like a mask upon the face of dead Hataska, and upon the face of the Bai, and
the face of the Ka, when thou spakest with the spirit of her thou hadst
slain.”</p>
<p>Now Meriamun groaned aloud, for she knew that doom was on her. Last of all, she
heard the telling of the loves of Odysseus and of Helen, her undying foe, of
their kiss, of their betrothal, and of that marriage which should be on the
morrow night. Meriamun the Queen said never a word, but when all was done and
the Wanderer had left the shrine again, she whispered in the ear of Rei the
Priest, and drew back his Spirit to him so that he awoke as a man awakes from
sleep.</p>
<p>He awoke and saw the Queen sitting over against him with a face white as the
face of the dead, and about her deep eyes were lines of black.</p>
<p>“Hast thou heard, Meriamun?” he asked.</p>
<p>“I have heard,” she answered.</p>
<p>“What dreadful thing hast thou heard?” he asked again, for he knew
naught of that which his Spirit had seen.</p>
<p>“I have heard things that may not be told,” she said, “but
this I will tell thee. He of whom we spoke hath passed the ghosts, he hath met
with the False Hathor—that accursed woman—and he returns here all
unharmed. Now go, Rei!”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap17"></SPAN>CHAPTER IX.<br/> THE WAKING OF THE SLEEPER</h2>
<p>Rei departed, wondering and heavy at heart, and Meriamun the Queen passed into
her bed-chamber, and there she bade the eunuchs suffer none to enter, made fast
the doors, and threw herself down upon the bed, hiding her face in its woven
cushions. Thus she lay for many hours as one dead—till the darkness of
the evening gathered in the chamber. But though she moved not, yet in her heart
there burned a fire, now white with heat as the breath of her passion fanned
it, and now waning black and dull as the tears fell from her eyes. For now she
knew all—that the long foreboding, sometimes dreaded, sometimes desired,
and again, like a dream, half forgotten, was indeed being fulfilled. She knew
of the devouring love that must eat her life away, knew that even in the grave
she should find no rest. And her foe was no longer a face beheld in a vision,
but a living woman, the fairest and most favoured, Helen of Troy, Argive Helen,
the False Hathor, the torch that fired great cities, the centre of all desire,
whose life was the daily doom of men.</p>
<p>Meriamun was beautiful, but her beauty paled before the face of Helen, as a
fire is slain by the sun. Magic she had also, more than any who were on the
earth; but what would her spells avail against the magic of those changing
eyes? And it was Helen whom the Wanderer came to seek, for <i>her</i> he had
travelled the wide lands and sailed the seas. But when he told her of one whom
he desired, one whom he sought, she had deemed that she herself was that one,
ay, and had told him all.</p>
<p>At that thought she laughed out, in the madness of her anger and her shame. And
he had smiled and spoken of Pharaoh her lord—and the while he spoke he
had thought not on her but of the Golden Helen. Now this at least she swore,
that if he might not be hers, never should he be Helen’s. She would see
him dead ere that hour, ay, and herself, and if it might be, Helen would she
see dead also.</p>
<p>To what counsel should she turn? On the morrow night these two meet; on the
morrow night they would fly together. Then on the morrow must the Wanderer be
slain. How should he be slain and leave no tale of murder? By poison he might
die, and Kurri the Sidonian should be charged to give the cup. And then she
would slay Kurri, saying that he had poisoned the Wanderer because of his hate
and the loss of his goods and freedom; and yet how could she slay her love? If
once she slew him then she, too, must die and seek her joy in the kingdom that
Osiris rules, and there she might find little gladness.</p>
<p>What, then, should she do? No answer came into her heart. There was one that
must answer in her soul.</p>
<p>Now she rose from the bed and stood for awhile staring into the dark. Then she
groped her way to a place where there was a carven chest of olive-wood and
ivory, and drawing a key from her girdle she opened the chest. Within were
jewels, mirrors, and unguents in jars of alabaster—ay, and poisons of
deadly bane; but she touched none of these. Thrusting her hand deep into the
chest, she drew forth a casket of dark metal that the people deemed unholy, a
casket made of “Typhon’s Bone,” for so they call grey iron.
She pressed a secret spring. It opened, and feeling within she found a smaller
casket. Lifting it to her lips she whispered over it words of no living speech,
and in the heavy and scented dark a low flame flickered and trembled on her
lips, as she murmured in the tongue of a dead people. Then slowly the lid
opened of itself, like a living mouth that opens, and as it opened, a gleam of
light stole up from the box into the dusk of the chamber.</p>
<p>Now Meriamun looked, and shuddered as she looked. Yet she put her hand into the
box, and muttering “Come forth—come forth, thou Ancient
Evil,” drew somewhat to her and held it out from her on the palm of her
hand. Behold, it glowed in the dusk of the chamber as a live ember glows among
the ashes of the hearth. Red it glowed and green, and white, and livid blue,
and its shape, as it lay upon her hand, was the shape of a coiling snake, cut,
as it were, in opal and in emerald.</p>
<p>For awhile she gazed upon it, shuddering, as one in doubt.</p>
<p>“Minded I am to let thee sleep, thou Horror,” she murmured.
“Twice have I looked on thee, and I would look no more. Nay, I will dare
it, thou gift of the old wisdom, thou frozen fire, thou sleeping Sin, thou
living Death of the ancient city, for thou alone hast wisdom.”</p>
<p>Thereon she unclasped the bosom of her robe and laid the gleaming toy, that
seemed a snake of stone, upon her ivory breast, though she trembled at its icy
touch, for it was more cold than death. With both her hands she clasped a
pillar of the chamber, and so stood, and she was shaken with throes like the
pangs of childbirth. Thus she endured awhile till that which was a-cold grew
warm, watching its brightness that shone through her silken dress as the flame
of a lamp shines through an alabaster vase. So she stood for an hour, then
swiftly put off all her robes and ornaments of gold, and loosing the dark
masses of her hair let it fall round her like a veil. Now she bent her head
down to her breast, and breathed on that which lay upon her breast, for the
Ancient Evil can live only in the breath of human kind. Thrice she breathed
upon it, thrice she whispered, “<i>Awake! Awake! Awake!</i>”</p>
<p>And the first time that she breathed the Thing stirred and sparkled. The second
time that she breathed it undid its shining folds and reared its head to hers.
The third time that she breathed it slid from her bosom to the floor, then
coiled itself about her feet and slowly grew as grows the magician’s
magic tree.</p>
<p>Greater it grew and greater yet, and as it grew it shone like a torch in a
tomb, and wound itself about the body of Meriamun, wrapping her in its fiery
folds till it reached her middle. Then it reared its head on high, and from its
eyes there flowed a light like the light of a flame, and lo! its face was the
face of a fair woman—it was the face of Meriamun!</p>
<p>Now face looked on face, and eyes glared into eyes. Still as a white statue of
the Gods stood Meriamun the Queen, and all about her form and in and out of her
dark hair twined the flaming snake.</p>
<p>At length the Evil spoke—spoke with a human voice, with the voice of
Meriamun, but in the dead speech of a dead people:</p>
<p>“Tell me my name,” it said.</p>
<p>“<i>Sin</i> is thy name,” answered Meriamun the Queen.</p>
<p>“Tell me whence I come,” it said again.</p>
<p>“From the evil that is in me,” answered Meriamun.</p>
<p>“Tell me whither I go.”</p>
<p>“Where I go there thou goest, for I have warmed thee in my breast and
thou art twined about my heart.”</p>
<p>Then the Snake lifted up its human head and laughed horribly.</p>
<p>“Well art thou instructed,” it said. “So I love thee as thou
lovest me,” and it bent itself and kissed her on the lips. “I am
that Ancient Evil, that Life which endures out of the first death; I am that
Death which abides in the living life. I am that which brought on thee the woe
that is in division from the Heart’s Desire, and the name thereof is
<i>Hell</i>. From Life to Life thou hast found me at thy hand, now in this
shape, now in that. I taught thee the magic which thou knowest; I showed thee
how to win the Throne! Now, what wilt thou of me, Meriamun, my Mother, my
Sister, and my Child? From Life to Life I have been with thee: ever thou
mightest have put me from thee, ever thou fliest to the wisdom which I have,
and ever from thee I draw my strength, for though without me thou mightest
live, without thee I must die. Say now, what is it?—tell me, and I will
name my price. No more will I ask than must be, for—ah!—I am glad
to wake and live again; glad to grip thy soul within these shining folds, to be
fair with thy beauty!—to be foul with thy sin!”</p>
<p>“Lay thy lips against my ear and thine ear against my lips,” said
Meriamun the Queen, “and I will say what it is that I will of thee, thou
Ancient Evil.”</p>
<p>So the human-headed Evil laid its ear against the lips of Meriamun, and
Meriamun laid her lips against its ear, and they whispered each to each. There
in the darkness they whispered, while the witch-light glittered down the grey
snake’s shining folds, beamed in its eyes, and shone through the
Queen’s dark hair and on her snowy breast.</p>
<p>At length the tale was told, and the Snake lifted its woman’s head high
in the air and again it laughed.</p>
<p>“He seeks the Good,” it said, “and he shall find the Ill! He
looks for Light, and in Darkness shall he wander! To Love he turns, in Lust he
shall be lost! He would win the Golden Helen, whom he has sought through many a
way, whom he has followed o’er many a sea, but first shall he find thee,
Meriamun, and through thee Death! For he shall swear by the Snake who should
have sworn by the Star. Far hath he wandered—further shall he wander yet,
for thy sin shall be his sin! Darkness shall wear the face of Light—Evil
shall shine like Good. I will give him to thee, Meriamun, but, hearken to my
price. No more must I be laid cold in the gloom while thou walkest in the
sunshine—nay, I must be twined about thy body. Fear not, fear not, I
shall seem but a jewel in the eyes of men, a girdle fashioned cunningly for the
body of a queen. But with thee henceforth I must ever go—and when thou
diest, with thee must I die, and with thee pass where thou dost pass—with
thee to sleep, with thee to awake again—and so, on and on, till in the
end I win or thou winnest, or she wins who is our foe!”</p>
<p>“I give thee thy price,” said Meriamun the Queen.</p>
<p>“So once before thou didst give it,” answered the Evil; “ay,
far, far away, beneath a golden sky and in another clime. Happy wast thou then
with him thou dost desire, but I twined myself about thy heart and of twain
came three and all the sorrow that has been. So woman thou hast worked, so
woman it is ordained. For thou art she in whom all woes are gathered, in whom
all love is fulfilled. And I have dragged thy glory down, woman, and I have
loosed thee from thy gentleness, and set it free upon the earth, and Beauty is
she named. By beauty doth <i>she</i> work who is the Golden Helen, and for her
beauty’s sake, that all men strive to win, are wars and woes, are hopes
and prayers, and longings without end. But by Evil dost <i>thou</i> work who
art divorced from Innocence, and evil shalt thou ever bring on him whom thou
desireth. A riddle! A riddle! Read it who may—read it if thou canst, thou
who art named Meriamun the Queen, but who art less than Queen and more. Who art
thou? Who is she they named the Helen? Who is that Wanderer who seeks her from
afar, and who, who am <i>I</i>? A riddle! a riddle! that thou mayst not read.
Yet is the answer written on earth and sky and sea, and in the hearts of men.</p>
<p>“Now hearken! To-morrow night thou shalt take me and twine me about thy
body, doing as I bid thee, and behold! for a while thy shape shall wear the
shape of the Golden Helen, and thy face shall be as her face, and thine eyes as
her eyes, and thy voice as her voice. Then I leave the rest to thee, for as
Helen’s self thou shalt beguile the Wanderer, and once, if once only, be
a wife to him whom thou desireth. Naught can I tell thee of the future, I who
am but a counsellor, but hereafter it may be that woes will come, woes and wars
and death. But what matter these when thou hast had thy desire, when he hath
sinned, and hath sworn by the Snake who should have sworn by the Star, and when
he is bound to thee by ties that may not be loosed? Choose, Meriamun, choose!
Put my counsel from thee and to-morrow this man thou lovest shall be lost to
thee, lost in the arms of Helen; and alone for many years shalt thou bear the
burden of thy lonely love. Take it, and he shall at least be thine, let come
what may come. Think on it and choose!”</p>
<p>Thus spake the Ancient Evil, tempting her who was named Meriamun, while she
hearkened to the tempting.</p>
<p>“I have chosen,” she said; “I will wear the shape of Helen,
and be a wife to him I love, and then let ruin fall. Sleep, thou Ancient Evil.
Sleep, for no more may I endure thy face of fear that is my face, nor the light
of those flaming eyes that are my eyes made mad.”</p>
<p>Again the Thing reared its human head and laughed out in triumph. Then slowly
it unloosed its gleaming coils: slowly it slid to the earth and shrank and
withered like a flaming scroll, till at length it seemed once more but a
shining jewel of opal and of amethyst.</p>
<hr />
<p>The Wanderer, when he left the inner secret shrine, saw no more the guardian of
the gates, nor heard the clash of the swords unseen, for the Gods had given the
beauty of Helen to Odysseus of Ithaca, as it was foretold.</p>
<p>Without the curtains the priests of the temple were gathered
wondering—little could they understand how it came to pass that the hero
who was called Eperitus had vanished through the curtains and had not been
smitten down by the unseen swords. And when they saw him come forth glorious
and unharmed they cried aloud with fear.</p>
<p>But he laughed and said, “Fear not. Victory is to him whom the Gods
appoint. I have done battle with the wardens of the shrine, and passed them,
and methinks that they are gone. I have looked upon the Hathor also, and more
than that seek ye not to know. Now give me food, for I am weary.”</p>
<p>So they bowed before him, and leading him thence to their chamber of banquets
gave him of their best, and watched him while he ate and drank and put from him
the desire of food.</p>
<p>Then he rose and went from the temple, and again the priests bowed before him.
Moreover, they gave him freedom of the temple, and keys whereby all the doors
might be opened, though little, as they thought, had he any need of keys.</p>
<p>Now the Wanderer, walking gladly and light of heart, came to his own lodging in
the courts of the Palace. At the door of the lodging stood Rei the Priest, who,
when he saw him, ran to him and embraced him, so glad was he that the Wanderer
had escaped alive.</p>
<p>“Little did I think to look upon thee again, Eperitus,” he said.
“Had it not been for that which the Queen——” and he
bethought himself and stayed his speech.</p>
<p>“Nevertheless, here I am unhurt, of ghost or men,” the Wanderer
answered, laughing, as he passed into the lodging. “But what of the
Queen?”</p>
<p>“Naught, Eperitus, naught, save that she was grieved when she learned
that thou hadst gone up to the Temple of the Hathor, there, as she thought, to
perish. Hearken, thou Eperitus, I know not if thou art God or man, but oaths
are binding both on men and Gods, and thou didst swear an oath to
Pharaoh—is it not so?”</p>
<p>“Ay, Rei. I swore an oath that I would guard the Queen well till Pharaoh
came again.”</p>
<p>“Art thou minded to keep that oath, Eperitus?” asked Rei, looking
on him strangely. “Art thou minded to guard the fair fame of
Pharaoh’s Queen, that is more precious than her life? Methinks thou dost
understand my meaning, Eperitus?”</p>
<p>“Perchance I understand,” answered the Wanderer. “Know, Rei,
that I am so minded.”</p>
<p>Then Rei spake again, darkly. “Methinks some sickness hath smitten
Meriamun the Queen, and she craves thee for her physician. Now things come
about as they were foreshown in the portent of that vision whereof I spoke to
thee. But if thou dost break thy oath to him whose salt thou eatest, then,
Eperitus, God or man, thou art a dastard.”</p>
<p>“Have I not said that I have no mind so to break mine oath?” he
answered, then sank his head upon his breast and communed with his crafty heart
while Rei watched him. Presently he lifted up his head and spoke:</p>
<p>“Rei,” he said, “I am minded to tell thee a strange story and
a true, for this I see, that our will runs one way, and thou canst help me,
and, in helping me, thyself and Pharaoh to whom I swore an oath, and her whose
honour thou holdest dear. But this I warn thee, Rei, that if thou dost betray
me, not thine age, not thy office, nor the friendship thou hast shown me, shall
save thee.”</p>
<p>“Speak on, Odysseus, Laertes’ son, Odysseus of Ithaca,” said
Rei; “may my life be forfeit if I betray thy counsel, if it harm not
those I serve.”</p>
<p>Now the Wanderer started to his feet, crying:</p>
<p>“How knowest thou that name?”</p>
<p>“I know it,” said Rei, “and I tell thee that I know it, thou
most crafty of men, to show this, that with me thy guile will not avail
thee.” For he would not tell him that he had it from the lips of the
Queen.</p>
<p>“Thou hast heard a name that has been in the mouths of many,” said
the Wanderer; “perchance it is mine, perchance it is the name of another.
It matters not. Now know this: I fear this Queen of thine. Hither I came to
seek a woman, but the Queen I came not to seek. Yet I have not come in vain,
for yonder, Rei, yonder, in the Temple of the Hathor, I found her on whose
quest I came, and who awaited me there well guarded till I should come to take
her. On the morrow night I go forth to the temple, and there, by the gates of
the temple, I shall find her whom all men desire, but who loves me alone among
men, for so it has been fated of the Gods. Thence I bring her hither that here
we may be wed. Now this is my mind: if thou wilt aid me with a ship and men,
that at the first light of dawn we should flee this land of thine, and that
thou shouldest keep my going secret for awhile till I have gained the sea. True
it is that I swore to guard the Queen till Pharaoh come again; but as thou
knowest, things are so that I can best guard her by my flight, and if Pharaoh
thinks ill of me—so it must be. Moreover I ask thee to meet me by the
pylon of the Temple of Hathor to-morrow at one hour before midnight. There will
we talk with her who is called the Hathor, and prepare our flight, and thence
thou shalt go to that ship which thou hast made ready.”</p>
<p>Now Rei thought for awhile and answered:</p>
<p>“Somewhat I fear to look upon this Goddess, yet I will dare it. Tell me,
then, how shall I know her at the temple’s gate?”</p>
<p>“Thou shalt know her, Rei, by the red star which burns upon her breast.
But fear not, for I will be there. Say, wilt thou make the ship ready?”</p>
<p>“The ship shall be ready, Eperitus, and though I love thee well, I say
this, that I would it rode the waves which roll around the shores of Khem and
thou wert with it, and with thee she who is called the Hathor, that Goddess
whom thou desirest.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap18"></SPAN>CHAPTER X.<br/> THE OATH OF THE WANDERER</h2>
<p>That night the Wanderer saw not Meriamun, but on the morrow she sent a
messenger to him, bidding him to her feast that night. He had little heart to
go, but a Queen’s courtesy is a command, and he went at sundown. Rei also
went to the feast, and as he went, meeting the Wanderer in the ante-chamber, he
whispered to him that all things were made ready, that a good ship waited him
in the harbour, the very ship that he had captured from the Sidonians, and that
he, Rei, would be with him by the pylon gate of the temple one hour before
midnight.</p>
<p>Presently, as he whispered, the doors were flung wide and Meriamun the Queen
passed in, followed by eunuchs and waiting-women. She was royally arrayed, her
face was pale and cold, but her great eyes glowed in it. Low the Wanderer bowed
before her. She bent her head in answer, then gave him her hand, and he led her
to the feast. They sat there side by side, but the Queen spoke little, and that
little of Pharaoh and the host of the Apura, from whom no tidings came.</p>
<p>When at length the feast was done, Meriamun bade the Wanderer to her private
chamber, and thither he went for awhile, though sorely against his will. But
Rei came not in with them, and thus he was left alone with the Queen, for she
dismissed the waiting ladies.</p>
<p>When they had gone there was silence for a space, but ever the Wanderer felt
the eyes of Meriamun watching him as though they would read his heart.</p>
<p>“I am weary,” she said, at length. “Tell me of the
wanderings, Odysseus of Ithaca—nay, tell me of the siege of Ilios and of
the sinful Helen, who brought all these woes about. Ay, and tell me how thou
didst creep from the leaguer of the Achæans, and, wrapped in a beggar’s
weeds, seek speech of this evil Helen, now justly slain of the angry
Gods.”</p>
<p>“Justly slain is she indeed,” answered the crafty Wanderer.
“An ill thing is it, truly, that the lives of so many heroes should be
lost because of the beauty of a faithless woman. I had it in my own heart to
slay her when I spoke with her in Troy town, but the Gods held my hand.”</p>
<p>“Was it so, indeed?” said the Queen, smiling darkly.
“Doubtless if she yet lived, and thou sawest her, thou wouldst slay her.
Is it not so, Odysseus?”</p>
<p>“She lives no more, O Queen!” he answered.</p>
<p>“Nay, she lives no more, Odysseus. Now tell me; yesterday thou wentest up
to the Temple of the Hathor; tell me what thou didst see in the temple.”</p>
<p>“I saw a fair woman, or, perchance, an immortal Goddess, stand upon the
pylon brow, and as she stood and sang those who looked were bereft of reason.
And thereafter some tried to pass the ghosts who guarded the woman, and were
slain of invisible swords. It was a strange sight to see.”</p>
<p>“A strange sight, surely. But thou didst not lose thy craft, Odysseus,
nor try to break through the ghosts?”</p>
<p>“Nay, Meriamun. In my youth I looked upon the beauty of Argive Helen, who
was fairer than she who stood upon the pylon tower. None who have looked upon
the Helen would seek to win the Hathor.”</p>
<p>“But, perchance, those who have looked upon the Hathor may seek to win
the Helen,” she answered slowly, and he knew not what to say, for he felt
the power of her magic on him.</p>
<p>So for awhile they spoke, and Meriamun, knowing all, wondered much at the guile
of the Wanderer, but she showed no wonder in her face. At length he rose and,
bowing before her, said that he must visit the guard that watched the Palace
gates. She looked upon him strangely and bade him go. Then he went, and right
glad he was thus to be free of her.</p>
<p>But when the curtains had swung behind him, Meriamun the Queen sprang to her
feet, and a dreadful light of daring burned in her eyes. She clapped her hands,
and bade those who came to her seek their rest, as she would also, for she was
weary and needed none to wait upon her. So the women went, leaving her alone,
and she passed into her sleeping chamber.</p>
<p>“Now must the bride deck herself for the bridal,” she said, and
straightway, pausing not, drew forth the Ancient Evil from its hiding-place and
warmed it on her breast, breathing the breath of life into its nostrils. Now,
as before, it grew and wound itself about her, and whispered in her ear,
bidding her clothe herself in bridal white and clasp the Evil around her; then
think upon the beauty she had seen gather on the face of dead Hataska in the
Temple of Osiris, and on the face of the Bai, and the face of the Ka. She did
its command, fearing nothing, for her heart was alight with love, and torn with
jealous hate, and little did she reck of the sorrows which her sin should bring
forth. So she bathed herself in perfumes, shook out her shining hair, and clad
herself in white attire. Then she looked upon her beauty in the mirror of
silver, and cried in the bitterness of her heart to the Evil that lay beside
her like a snake asleep.</p>
<p>“Ah, am I not fair enow to win him whom I love? Say, thou Evil, must I
indeed steal the beauty of another to win him whom I love?”</p>
<p>“This must thou do,” said the Evil, “or lose him in
Helen’s arms. For though thou art fair, yet is she Beauty’s self,
and her gentleness he loves, and not thy pride. Choose, choose swiftly for
presently the Wanderer goes forth to win the Golden Helen.”</p>
<p>Then she doubted no more, but lifting the shining Evil, held it to her. With a
dreadful laugh it twined itself about her, and lo! it shrank to the shape of a
girdling, double-headed snake of gold, with eyes of ruby flame. And as it
shrank Meriamun the Queen thought on the beauty she had seen upon the face of
the dead Hataska, on the face of the Bai, and the face of the Ka, and all the
while she watched her beauty in the mirror. And as she watched, behold, her
face grew as the face of death, ashen and hollow, then slowly burned into life
again—but all her loveliness was changed. Changed were her dark locks to
locks of gold, changed were her deep eyes to eyes of blue, changed was the
glory of her pride to the sweetness of the Helen’s smile. Fairest among
women had been her form, now it was fairer yet, and now—now she was
Beauty’s self, and like to swoon at the dream of her own loveliness.</p>
<p>“So, ah, so must the Hathor seem,” she said, and lo! her voice rang
strangely in her ears. For the voice, too, was changed, it was more soft than
the whispering of wind-stirred reeds; it was more sweet than the murmuring of
bees at noon.</p>
<p>Now she must go forth, and fearful at her own loveliness and heavy with her
sin, yet glad with a strange joy, she passes from her chamber and glides like a
starbeam through the still halls of her Palace. The white light of the moon
creeps into them and falls upon the faces of the dreadful Gods, on the awful
smile of sphinxes, and the pictures of her forefathers, kings and queens who
long were dead. And as she goes she seems to hear them whisper each to each of
the dreadful sin that she has sinned, and of the sorrow that shall be. But she
does not heed, and never stays her foot. For her heart is alight as with a
flame, and she will win the Wanderer to her arms—the Wanderer sought
through many lives, found after many deaths.</p>
<p class="p2">
Now the Wanderer is in his chamber, waiting for the hour to set forth to find
the Golden Helen. His heart is alight, and strange dreams of the past go before
his eyes, and strange visions of long love to be. His heart burns like a lamp
in the blackness, and by that light he sees all the days of his life that have
been, and all the wars that he has won, and all the seas that he has sailed.
And now he knows that these things are dreams indeed, illusions of the sense,
for there is but one thing true in the life of men, and that is Love; there is
but one thing perfect, the beauty which is Love’s robe; there is but one
thing which all men seek and are born to find at last, the heart of the Golden
Helen, the World’s Desire, that is peace and joy and rest.</p>
<p>He binds his armour on him, for foes may lurk in darkness, and takes the Bow of
Eurytus, and the grey bolts of death; for perchance the fight is not yet done,
he must cleave his way to joy. Then he combs his locks and sets the golden helm
upon them, and, praying to the Gods who hear not, he passes from his chamber.</p>
<p>Now the chamber opened into a great hall of pillars. As was his custom when he
went alone by night, the Wanderer glanced warily down the dusky hall, but he
might see little because of the shadows. Nevertheless, the moonlight poured
into the centre of the hall from the clerestories in the roof, and lay there
shining white as water beneath black banks of reeds. Again the Wanderer glanced
with keen, quick eyes, for there was a sense in his heart that he was no more
alone in the hall, though whether it were man or ghost, or, perchance, one of
the immortal Gods who looked on him, he might not tell. Now it seemed to him
that he saw a shape of white moving far away in the shadow. Then he grasped the
black bow and laid hand upon his quiver so that the shafts rattled.</p>
<p>Now it would seem that the shape in the shadow heard the rattling of the
shafts, or perchance saw the moonlight gleam upon the Wanderer’s golden
harness—at the least, it drew near till it came to the edge of the pool
of light. There it paused as a bather pauses ere she steps into the fountain.
The Wanderer paused also, wondering what the shape might be. Half was he minded
to try it with an arrow from the bow, but he held his hand and watched.</p>
<p>And as he watched, the white shape glided into the space of moonlight, and he
saw that it was the form of a woman draped in white, and that about her shone a
gleaming girdle, and in the girdle gems which sparkled like the eyes of a
snake. Tall was the shape and lovely as a statue of Aphrodite; but who or what
it was he might not tell, for the head was bent and the face hidden.</p>
<p>Awhile the shape stood thus, and as it stood, the Wanderer passed towards it,
marvelling much, till he also stood in the pool of moonlight that shimmered on
his golden mail. Then suddenly the shape lifted its face so that the light fell
full on it, and stretched out its arms towards him, and lo! the face was the
face of the Argive Helen—of her whom he went forth to seek. He looked
upon its beauty, he looked upon the eyes of blue, upon the golden hair, upon
the shining arms; then slowly, very slowly, and in silence—for he could
find no words—the Wanderer drew near.</p>
<p>She did not move nor speak. So still she stood that scarce she seemed to
breathe. Only the shining eyes of her snake-girdle glittered like living
things. Again he stopped fearfully, for he held that this was surely a mocking
ghost which stood before him, but still she neither moved nor spoke.</p>
<p>Then at length he found his tongue and spoke:</p>
<p>“Lady,” he whispered, “is it indeed thou, is it Argive Helen
whom I look upon, or is it, perchance, a ghost sent by Queen Persephone from
the House of Hades to make a mock of me?”</p>
<p>Now the voice of Helen answered him in sweet tones and low:</p>
<p>“Did I not tell thee, Odysseus of Ithaca, did I not tell thee, yesterday
in the halls of Hathor, after thou hadst overcome the ghosts, that to-night we
should be wed? Wherefore, then, dost thou deem me of the number of the
bodiless?”</p>
<p>The Wanderer hearkened. The voice was the voice of Helen, the eyes were the
eyes of Helen, and yet his heart feared guile.</p>
<p>“So did Argive Helen tell me of a truth, Lady, but this she said, that I
should find her by the pylon of the temple, and lead her thence to be my bride.
Thither I go but now to seek her. But if thou art Helen, how comest thou to
these Palace halls? And where, Lady, is that Red Star which should gleam upon
thy breast, that Star which weeps out the blood of men?”</p>
<p>“No more doth the red dew fall from the Star that was set upon my breast,
Odysseus, for now that thou hast won me men die no more for my beauty’s
sake. Gone is the Star of War; and see, Wisdom rings me round, the symbol of
the Deathless Snake that signifies love eternal. Thou dost ask how I came
hither, I, who am immortal and a daughter of the Gods? Seek not to know,
Odysseus, for where Fate puts it in my mind to be, there do the Gods bear me.
Wouldst thou, then, that I leave thee, Odysseus?”</p>
<p>“Last of all things do I desire this,” he answered, for now his
wisdom went a-wandering; now he forgot the words of Aphrodite, warning him that
the Helen might be known by one thing only, the Red Star on her breast, whence
falls the blood of men; and he no more doubted but that she was the Golden
Helen.</p>
<p>Then she who wore the Helen’s shape stretched out her arms and smiled so
sweetly that the Wanderer knew nothing any more, save that she drew him to her.</p>
<p>Slowly she glided before him, ever smiling, and where she went he followed, as
men follow beauty in a dream. She led him through halls and corridors, past the
sculptured statues of the Gods, past man-headed sphinxes, and pictures of
long-dead kings.</p>
<p>And as she goes, once more it seems to her that she hears them whisper each to
each the horror of her sin and the sorrow that shall be. But naught she heeds
who ever leads him on, and naught he hears who ever follows after, till at
length, though he knows it not, they stand in the bed-chamber of the Queen, and
by Pharaoh’s golden bed.</p>
<p>Then once more she speaks:</p>
<p>“Odysseus of Ithaca, whom I have loved from the beginning, and whom I
shall love till all deaths are done, before thee stands that Loveliness which
the Gods predestined to thy arms. Now take thou thy Bride; but first lay thy
hand upon this golden Snake, that rings me round, the new bridal gift of the
Gods, and swear thy marriage oath, which may not be broken. Swear thus,
Odysseus: ‘I love thee, Woman or Immortal, and thee alone, and by
whatever name thou art called, and in whatever shape thou goest, to thee I will
cleave, and to thee alone, till the day of the passing of Time. I will forgive
thy sins, I will soothe thy sorrows, I will suffer none to come betwixt thee
and me. This I swear to thee, Woman or Immortal, who dost stand before me. I
swear it to thee, Woman, for now and for ever, for here and hereafter, in
whatever shape thou goest on the earth, by whatever name thou art known among
men.’</p>
<p>“Swear thou thus, Odysseus of Ithaca, Laertes’ son, or leave me and
go thy ways!”</p>
<p>“Great is the oath,” quoth the Wanderer; for though now he feared
no guile, yet his crafty heart liked it ill.</p>
<p>“Choose, and choose swiftly,” she answered. “Swear the oath,
or leave me and never see me more!”</p>
<p>“Leave thee I will not, and cannot if I would,” he said.
“Lady, I swear!” And he laid his hand upon the Snake that ringed
her round, and swore the dreadful oath. Yea, he forgot the words of the
Goddess, and the words of Helen, and he swore by the Snake who should have
sworn by the Star. By the immortal Gods he swore it, by the Symbol of the
Snake, and by the Beauty of his Bride. And as he swore the eyes of the Serpent
sparkled, and the eyes of her who wore the beauty of Helen shone, and faintly
the black bow of Eurytus thrilled, forboding Death and War.</p>
<p>But little the Wanderer thought on guile or War or Death, for the kiss of her
whom he deemed the Golden Helen was on his lips, and he went up into the golden
bed of Meriamun.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap19"></SPAN>CHAPTER XI.<br/> THE WAKING OF THE WANDERER</h2>
<p>Now Rei the Priest, as had been appointed, went to the pylon gate of the Temple
of Hathor. Awhile he stood looking for the Wanderer, but though the hour had
come, the Wanderer came not. Then the Priest went to the pylon and stood in the
shadow of the gate. As he stood there a wicket in the gate opened, and there
passed out a veiled figure of a woman upon whose breast burned a red jewel that
shone in the night like a star. The woman waited awhile, looking down the
moonlit road between the black rows of sphinxes, but the road lay white and
empty, and she turned and hid herself in the shadow of the pylon, where Rei
could see nothing of her except the red star that gleamed upon her breast.</p>
<p>Now a great fear came upon the old man, for he knew that he looked upon the
strange and deadly Hathor. Perchance he too would perish like the rest who had
looked on her to their ruin. He thought of flight, but he did not dare to fly.
Then he too stared down the road seeking for the Wanderer, but no shadow
crossed the moonlight. Thus things went for awhile, and still the Hathor stood
silently in the shadow, and still the blood-red star shone upon her breast. And
so it came to pass that the World’s Desire must wait at the tryst like
some forsaken village maid.</p>
<p>While Rei the Priest crouched thus against the pylon wall, praying for the
coming of him who came not, suddenly a voice spoke to him in tones sweeter than
a lute.</p>
<p>“Who art thou that hidest in the shadow?” said the voice.</p>
<p>He knew that it was the Hathor who spoke, and so afraid was he that he could
not answer.</p>
<p>Then the voice spoke again:</p>
<p>“Oh, thou most crafty of men, why doth it please thee to come hither to
seek me in the guise of an aged priest. Once, Odysseus, I saw thee in
beggar’s weeds, and knew thee in the midst of thy foes. Shall I not know
thee again in peace beneath thy folded garb and thy robes of white?”</p>
<p>Rei heard and knew that he could hide himself no longer. Therefore he came
forward trembling, and knelt before her, saying:</p>
<p>“Oh, mighty Queen, I am not that man whom thou didst name, nor am I hid
in any wrappings of disguise. Nay, I do avow myself to be named Rei the Chief
Architect of Pharaoh, the Commander of the Legion of Amen, the chief of the
Treasury of Amen, and a man of repute in this land of Khem. Now, if indeed thou
art the Goddess of this temple, as I judge by that red jewel which burns upon
thy breast, I pray thee be merciful to thy servant and smite me not in thy
wrath, for not by my own will am I here, but by the command of that hero whom
thou hast named, and for whose coming I await. Be merciful therefore, and hold
thy hand.”</p>
<p>“Fear not thou, Rei,” said the sweet voice. “Little am I
minded to harm thee, or any man, for though many men have gone down the path of
darkness because of me, who am a doom to men, not by my will has it been, but
by the will of the immortal Gods, who use me to their ends. Rise thou, Rei, and
tell me why thou art come hither, and where is he whom I have named?”</p>
<p>Then Rei rose, and looking up saw the light of the Helen’s eyes shining
on him through her veil. But there was no anger in them, they shone mildly as
stars in an evening sky, and his heart was comforted.</p>
<p>“I know not where the Wanderer is, O thou Immortal,” he said.
“This I know only, that he bade me meet him here at one hour before
midnight, and so I came.”</p>
<p>“Perchance he too will come anon,” said the sweet voice; “but
why did he, whom thou namest the Wanderer, bid thee meet him here?”</p>
<p>“For this reason, O Hathor. He told me that this night he should be wed
to thee, and was minded thereafter to fly from Khem with thee. Therefore he
bade me come, who am a friend to him, to talk with thee and him as to how thy
flight should go, and yet he comes not.”</p>
<p>Now as Rei spake, he turned his face upward, and the Golden Helen looked upon
it.</p>
<p>“Hearken, Rei,” she said; “but yesterday, after I had stood
upon the pylon tower as the Gods decreed, and sang to those who were ripe to
die, I went to my shrine and wove my web while the doomed men fell beneath the
swords of them who were set to guard my beauty, but who now are gone. And as I
wove, one passed the Ghosts and rent the web and stood before me. It was he
whom I await to-night, and after awhile I knew him for Odysseus of Ithaca,
Laertes’ son. But as I looked on him and spake with him, behold, I saw a
spirit watching us, though he might not see it, a spirit whose face I knew not,
for no such man have I known in my life days. Know then, Rei, that the face of
the spirit was <i>thy</i> face, and its robes <i>thy</i> robes.”</p>
<p>Then once more Rei trembled in his fear.</p>
<p>“Now, Rei, I bid thee tell me, and speak the truth, lest evil come on
thee, not at my hands indeed, for I would harm none, but at the hands of those
Immortals who are akin to me. What did thy spirit yonder, in my sacred shrine?
How didst thou dare to enter and look upon my beauty and hearken to my
words?”</p>
<p>“Oh, great Queen,” said Rei, “I will tell thee the truth, and
I pray thee let not the wrath of the Gods fall upon me. Not of my own will did
my spirit enter into thy Holy Place, nor do I know aught of what it saw
therein, seeing that no memory of it remains in me. Nay, it was sent of her
whom I serve, who is the mistress of all magic, and to her it made report, but
what it said I know not.”</p>
<p>“And whom dost thou serve, Rei? And why did she send thy spirit forth to
spy on me?”</p>
<p>“I serve Meriamun the Queen, and she sent my spirit forth to learn what
befell the Wanderer when he went up against the Ghosts.”</p>
<p>“And yet he said naught to me of this Meriamun. Say, Rei, is she
fair?”</p>
<p>“Of all women who live upon the earth she is the very fairest.”</p>
<p>“Of <i>all</i>, sayest thou, Rei? Look now, and say if Meriamun, whom
thou dost serve, is fairer than Argive Helen, whom thou dost name the
Hathor?” and she lifted her veil so that he saw the face that was
beneath.</p>
<p>Now when he heard that name, and looked upon the glory of her who is
Beauty’s self, Rei shrank back till he went nigh to falling on the earth.</p>
<p>“Nay,” he said, covering his eyes with his hand; “nay thou
art fairer than she.”</p>
<p>“Then tell me,” she said, letting fall her veil again, “and
for thine own sake tell me true, why would Meriamun the Queen, whom thou
servest, know the fate of him who came up against the Ghosts?”</p>
<p>“Wouldst thou know, Daughter of Amen?” answered Rei; “then I
will tell thee, for through thee alone she whom I serve and love can be saved
from shame. Meriamun doth also love the man whom thou wouldst wed.”</p>
<p>Now when the Golden Helen heard these words, she pressed her hand against her
bosom.</p>
<p>“So I feared,” she said, “even so. She loves him, and he
comes not. Ah! if it be so! Now, Rei, I am tempted to pay this Queen of thine
in her own craft, and send thy spirit forth to spy on her. Nay, that I will not
do, for never shall Helen work by shameful guile or magic. Nay—but we
will hence, Rei, we will go to the Palace where my rival dwells, there to learn
the truth. Fear not, I will bring no ill on thee, nor on her whom thou servest.
Lead me to the Palace, Rei. Lead me swiftly.”</p>
<p>Now the Wanderer slept in the arms of Meriamun, who wore the shape of Argive
Helen. His golden harness was piled by the golden bed, and by the bed stood the
black bow of Eurytus. The night drew on towards the dawning, when of a sudden
the Bow awoke and sang, and thus it sang:</p>
<p class="poem">
“Wake! wake! though the arms of thy Love are about thee, yet dearer by
far<br/>
Than her kiss is the sound of the fight;<br/>
And more sweet than her voice is the cry of the trumpet, and goodlier far<br/>
Than her arms is the battle’s delight:<br/>
And what eyes are so bright as the sheen of the bronze when the sword is
aloft,<br/>
What breast is so fair as the shield?<br/>
Or what garland of roses is dear as the helm, and what sleep is so soft<br/>
As the sleep of slain men on the field?”</p>
<p>Lo! the Snake that was twined about the form of her who wore the shape of Helen
heard the magic song. It awoke, it arose. It twisted itself about the body of
the Wanderer and the body of her who wore the shape of Helen, knitting them
together in the bond of sin. It grew, and lifting its woman’s head on
high, it sang in answer. And thus it sang of doom:</p>
<p class="poem">
“Sleep! be at rest for an hour; as in death men believe they shall
rest,<br/>
But they wake! And thou too shalt awake!<br/>
In the dark of the grave do they stir; but about them, on arms and on
breast,<br/>
Are the toils and the coils of the Snake:<br/>
By the tree where the first lovers lay, did I watch as I watch where he
lies,<br/>
Love laid on the bosom of Lust!”</p>
<p>Then the great bow answered the Snake, and it sang:</p>
<p class="poem">
“Of the tree where the first lovers sinned was I shapen; I bid thee
arise,<br/>
Thou Slayer that soon shall be dust.”</p>
<p>And the Snake sang reply:</p>
<p class="poem">
“Be thou silent, my Daughter of Death, be thou silent nor wake him from
sleep,<br/>
With the song and the sound of thy breath.”</p>
<p>The Bow heard the song of the Snake. The Death heard the song of the Sin, and
again its thin music thrilled upon the air. For thus it sang:</p>
<p class="poem">
“Be thou silent, my Mother of Sin, for this watch it is given me to
keep<br/>
O’er the sleep of the dealer of Death!”</p>
<p>Then the Snake sang:</p>
<p class="poem">
“Hush, hush, thou art young, and thou camest to birth when the making was
done<br/>
Of the world: I am older therein!”</p>
<p>And the Bow answered:</p>
<p class="poem">
“But without me thy strength were as weakness, the prize of thy strength
were unwon.<br/>
I am <i>Death</i>, and thy Daughter, O Sin!”</p>
<p>Now the song of the Snake and the song of the Bow sunk through the depths of
sleep till they reached the Wanderer’s ears. He sighed, he stretched out
his mighty arms, he opened his eyes, and lo! they looked upon the eyes that
bent above him, eyes of flame that lit the face of a woman—the face of
Meriamun that wavered on a serpent’s neck and suddenly was gone. He cried
aloud with fear, and sprang from the couch. The faint light of the dawning
crept through the casements and fell upon the bed. The faint light of the
dawning fell upon the golden bed of Pharaoh’s Queen, it gleamed upon the
golden armour that was piled by the bed, and on the polished surface of the
great black bow. It shone upon the face of her who lay in the bed.</p>
<p>Then he remembered. Surely he had slept with the Golden Helen, who was his
bride, and surely he had dreamed an evil dream, a dream of a snake that wore
the face of Pharaoh’s Queen. Yea, there lay the Golden Helen, won at
last—the Golden Helen now made a wife to him. Now he mocked his own
fears, and now he bent to wake her with a kiss. Faintly the new-born light
crept and gathered on her face; ah! how beautiful she was in sleep. Nay, what
was this? Whose face was this beneath his own? Not so had Helen looked in the
shrine of her temple, when he tore the web. Not so had Helen seemed yonder in
the pillared hall when she stood in the moonlit space—not so had she
seemed when he sware the great oath to love her, and her alone. Whose beauty
was it then that now he saw? By the Immortal Gods, it was the beauty of
Meriamun; it was the glory of the Pharaoh’s Queen!</p>
<p>He stared upon her lovely sleeping face, while terror shook his soul. How could
this be? What then had he done?</p>
<p>Then light broke upon him. He looked around the chamber—there on the
walls were the graven images of the Gods of Khem, there above the bed the names
of Meneptah and Meriamun were written side by side in the sacred signs of Khem.
Not with the Golden Helen had he slept, but with the wife of Pharaoh! To her he
had sworn the oath, and she had worn the Helen’s shape—and now the
spell was broken.</p>
<p>He stood amazed, and as he stood, again the great bow thrilled, warning him of
Death to come. Then his strength came back to him, and he seized his armour and
girt it about him piece by piece till he lifted the golden helm. It slipped
from his hand; with a crash it fell upon the marble floor. With a crash it
fell, and she who slept in the bed awoke with a cry, and sprang from the bed,
her dark hair streaming down, her night-gear held to her by the golden snake
with gemmy eyes that she must ever wear. But he caught his sword in his hand,
and threw down the ivory sheath.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="book03"></SPAN>BOOK III</h2>
<h2><SPAN name="chap20"></SPAN>CHAPTER I.<br/> THE VENGEANCE OF KURRI</h2>
<p>The Wanderer and Pharaoh’s Queen stood face to face in the twilight of
the chamber. They stood in silence, while bitter anger and burning shame poured
into his heart and shone from his eyes. But the face of Meriamun was cold as
the dead, and on it was a smile such as the carven sphinxes wear. Only her
breast heaved tumultuously as though in triumph, and her limbs quivered like a
shaken reed. At length she spoke.</p>
<p>“Why lookest thou so strangely on me, my Lord and Love; and why hast thou
girded thy harness on thy back? Scarcely doth glorious Ra creep from the breast
of Nout, and wouldest thou leave thy bridal bed, Odysseus?”</p>
<p>Still he spoke no word, but looked on her with burning eyes. Then she stretched
out her arms and came towards him lover-like. And now he found his tongue
again.</p>
<p>“Get thee from me!” he said, in a voice low and terrible to hear;
“get thee from me. Dare not to touch me, thou, who art a harlot and a
witch, lest I forget my manhood and strike thee dead before me.”</p>
<p>“That thou canst not do, Odysseus,” she answered soft, “for
whatever else I be I am thy wife, and thou art bound to me for ever. What was
the oath which thou didst swear not five short hours ago?”</p>
<p>“I swore an oath indeed, but not to thee, Meriamun. I swore an oath to
Argive Helen, whom I love, and I wake to find thee sleeping at my side, thee
whom I hate.”</p>
<p>“Nay,” she said, “to me thou didst swear the oath, Odysseus,
for thou, of men the most guileful, hast at length been over-mastered in guile.
To me, ‘Woman or Immortal,’ thou didst swear ‘for now and for
ever, for here and hereafter, <i>in whatever shape thou goest on the earth, by
whatever name thou art known among men</i>.’ Oh, be not wroth, my lord,
but hearken. What matters the shape in which thou seest me? At the least am I
not fair? And what is beauty but a casket that hides the gem within? ’Tis
my love which thou hast won, my love that is immortal, and not the flesh that
perishes. For I have loved thee, ay, and thou hast loved me from of old and in
other lives than this, and I tell thee that we shall love again and yet again
when thou art no more Odysseus of Ithaca, and when I am no more Meriamun, a
Queen of Khem, but while we walk in other forms upon the world and are named by
other names. I am thy doom, thou Wanderer, and wherever thou dost wander
through the fields of Life and Death I shall be at thy side. For I am She of
whom thou art, and thou art He of whom I am, and though the Gods have severed
us, yet must we float together down the river of our lives till we find that
sea of which the Spirit knows. Therefore put me not from thee and raise not my
wrath against thee, for if I used my magic to bring thee to my arms, yet they
are thy home.” And once more she came towards him.</p>
<p>Now the Wanderer drew an arrow from his quiver, and set the notch against his
breast and the keen barb towards the breast of Meriamun.</p>
<p>“Draw on,” he said. “Thus will I take thee to my arms again.
Hearken, Meriamun the witch—Meriamun the harlot: Pharaoh’s wife and
Queen of Khem. To thee I swore an oath indeed, and perchance because I suffered
thy guile to overcome my wisdom, because I swore upon That which circles thee
about, and not by the Red Star which gleams upon the Helen’s breast, it
may be that I shall lose her whom I love. So indeed the Queen of Heaven told
me, yonder in sea-girt Ithaca, though to my sorrow I forgot her words. But if I
lose her or if I win, know this, that I love her and her only, and I hate thee
like the gates of hell. For thou hast tricked me with thy magic, thou hast
stolen the shape of Beauty’s self and dared to wear it, thou hast drawn a
dreadful oath from me, and I have taken thee to wife. And more, thou art the
Queen of Khem, thou art Pharaoh’s wife, whom I swore to guard; but thou
hast brought the last shame upon me, for now I am a man dishonoured, and I have
sinned against the hospitable hearth, and the God of guests and hosts. And
therefore I will do this. I will call together the guard of which I am chief,
and tell them all thy shame, ay, and all my sorrow. I will shout it in the
streets, I will publish it from the temple tops, and when Pharaoh comes again I
will call it into his ear, till he and all who live in Khem know thee for what
thou art, and see thee in thy naked shame.”</p>
<p>She hearkened, and her face grew terrible to see. A moment she stood as though
in thought, one hand pressed to her brow and one upon her breast. Then she
spoke.</p>
<p>“Is that thy last word, Wanderer?”</p>
<p>“It is my last word, Queen,” he answered, and turned to go.</p>
<p>Then with the hand that rested on her breast she rent her night robes and tore
her perfumed hair. Past him she rushed towards the door, and as she ran sent
scream on scream echoing up the painted walls.</p>
<p>The curtains shook, the doors were burst asunder, and through them poured
guards, eunuchs, and waiting-women.</p>
<p>“Help,” she cried, pointing to the Wanderer. “Help, help! oh,
save mine honour from this evil man, this foreign thief whom Pharaoh set to
guard me, and who guards me thus. This coward who dares to creep upon
me—the Queen of Khem—even as I slept in Pharaoh’s bed!”
and she cast herself upon the floor and threw her hair about her, and lay there
groaning and weeping as though in the last agony of shame.</p>
<p>Now when the guards saw how the thing was, a great cry of rage and shame went
up from them, and they rushed upon the Wanderer like wolves upon a stag at bay.
But he leapt backwards to the side of the bed, and even as he leapt he set the
arrow in his hand upon the string of the great black bow. Then he drew it to
his ear. The bow-string sang, the arrow rushed forth, and he who stood before
it got his death. Again the bow-string sang, again the arrow rushed, and lo!
another man was sped. A third time he drew the bow and the soul of a third went
down the ways of hell. Now they rolled back from him as the waters roll from a
rock, for none dares face the shafts of death. They shot at him with spears and
arrows from behind the shelter of the pillars, but none of these might harm
him, for some fell from his mail and some he caught upon his buckler.</p>
<p>Now among those who had run thither at the sound of the cries of Meriamun was
that same Kurri, the miserable captain of the Sidonians, whose life the
Wanderer had spared, and whom he had given to the Queen to be her jeweller. And
when Kurri saw the Wanderer’s plight, he thought in his greedy heart of
those treasures that he had lost, and of how he who had been a captain and a
rich merchant of Sidon was now nothing but a slave.</p>
<p>Then a great desire came upon him to work the Wanderer ill, if so he might. Now
all round the edge of the chamber were shadows, for the light was yet faint,
and Kurri crept into the shadows, carrying a long spear in his hand, and that
spear was hafted into the bronze point which had stood in the Wanderer’s
helm. Little did the Wanderer glance his way, for he watched the lances and
arrows that flew towards him from the portal, so the end of it was that the
Sidonian passed round the chamber unseen and climbed into the golden bed of
Pharaoh on the further side of the bed. Now the Wanderer stood with his back to
the bed and a spear’s length from it, and in the silken hangings were
fixed spears and arrows. Kurri’s first thought was to stab him in the
back, but this he did not; first, because he feared lest he should fail to
pierce the golden harness and the Wanderer should turn and slay him; and again
because he hoped that the Wanderer would be put to death by torment, and he was
fain to have a hand in it, for after the fashion of the Sidonians he was
skilled in the tormenting of men. Therefore he waited till presently the
Wanderer let fall his buckler and drew the bow. But ere the arrow reached his
ear Kurri had stretched out his spear from between the hangings and touched the
string with the keen bronze, so that it burst asunder and the grey shaft fell
upon the marble floor. Then, as the Wanderer cast down the bow and turned with
a cry to spring on him who had cut the cord, for his eye had caught the sheen
of the outstretched spear, Kurri lifted the covering of the purple web which
lay upon the bed and deftly cast it over the hero’s head so that he was
inmeshed. Thereon the soldiers and the eunuchs took heart, seeing what had been
done, and ere ever the Wanderer could clear himself from the covering and draw
his sword, they rushed upon him. Cumbered as he was, they might not easily
overcome him, but in the end they bore him down and held him fast, so that he
could not stir so much as a finger. Then one cried aloud to Meriamun:</p>
<p>“The Lion is trapped, O Queen! Say, shall we slay him?”</p>
<p>But Meriamun, who had watched the fray through cover of her hands, shuddered
and made answer:</p>
<p>“Nay, but lock his tongue with a gag, strip his armour from him, and bind
him with fetters of bronze, and make him fast to the dungeon walls with great
chains of bronze. There shall he bide till Pharaoh come again; for against
Pharaoh’s honour he hath sinned and shamefully broken that oath he swore
to him, and therefore shall Pharaoh make him die in such fashion as seems good
to him.”</p>
<p>Now when Kurri heard these words, and saw the Wanderer’s sorry plight, he
bent over him and said:</p>
<p>“It was I, Kurri the Sidonian, who cut the cord of thy great bow,
Eperitus; with the spear-point that thou gavest back to me I cut it, I, whose
folk thou didst slay and madest me a slave. And I will crave this boon of
Pharaoh, that mine shall be the hand to torment thee night and day till at last
thou diest, cursing the day that thou wast born.”</p>
<p>The Wanderer looked upon him and answered: “There thou liest, thou
Sidonian dog, for this is written in thy face, that thou thyself shalt die
within an hour and that strangely.”</p>
<p>Then Kurri shrank back scowling. But no more words might Odysseus speak, for at
once they forced his jaws apart and gagged him with a gag of iron; and
thereafter, stripping his harness from him, they bound him with fetters as the
Queen had commanded.</p>
<p>Now while they dealt thus with the Wanderer, Meriamun passed into another
chamber and swiftly threw robes upon her to hide her disarray, clasping them
round her with the golden girdle which now she must always wear. But her long
hair she left unbound, nor did she wash the stain of tears from her face, for
she was minded to seem shamed and woe-begone in the eyes of all men till
Pharaoh came again.</p>
<p class="p2">
Rei and the Golden Helen passed through the streets of the city till they came
to the Palace gates. And here they must wait till the dawn, for Rei, thinking
to come thither with the Wanderer, who was Captain of the Guard, had not
learned the word of entry.</p>
<p>“Easy would it be for me to win my way through those great gates,”
said the Helen to Rei at her side, “but it is my counsel that we wait
awhile. Perchance he whom we seek will come forth.”</p>
<p>So they entered the porch of the Temple of Osiris that looked towards the
gates, and there they waited till the dawn gathered in the eastern sky. The
Helen spoke no word, but Rei, watching her, knew that she was troubled at
heart, though he might not see her face because of the veil she wore; for from
time to time she sighed and the Red Star rose and fell upon her breast.</p>
<p>At length the first arrow of the dawn fell upon the temple porch and she spoke.</p>
<p>“Now let us enter,” she said; “my heart forebodes evil
indeed; but much of evil I have known, and where the Gods drive me there I must
go.”</p>
<p>They came to the gates, and the man who watched them opened to the priest Rei
and the veiled woman who went with him, though he marvelled at the beauty of
the woman’s shape.</p>
<p>“Where are thy fellow-guards?” Rei asked of the soldier.</p>
<p>“I know not,” he answered, “but anon a great tumult rose in
the Palace, and the Captain of the Gate went thither, leaving me only to guard
the gate.”</p>
<p>“Hast thou seen the Lord Eperitus?” Rei asked again.</p>
<p>“Nay, I have not seen him since supper-time last night, nor has he
visited the guard as is his wont.”</p>
<p>Rei passed on wondering, and with him went Helen. As they trod the Palace they
saw folk flying towards the hall of banquets that is near the Queen’s
chambers. Some bore arms in their hands and some bore none, but all fled east
towards the hall of banquets, whence came a sound of shouting. Now they drew
near the hall, and there at the further end, where the doors are that lead to
the Queen’s chambers, a great crowd was gathered.</p>
<p>“Hide thee, lady—hide thee,” said Rei to her who went with
him, “for methinks that death is afoot here. See, here hangs a curtain,
stand thou behind it while I learn what this tumult means.”</p>
<p>She stepped behind the curtain that hung between the pillars as Rei bade her,
for now Helen’s gentle breast was full of fears, and she was as one
dazed. Even as she stepped one came flying down the hall who was of the
servants of Rei the Priest.</p>
<p>“Stay thou,” Rei cried to him, “and tell me what happens
yonder.”</p>
<p>“Ill deeds, Lord,” said the servant. “Eperitus the Wanderer,
whom Pharaoh made Captain of his Guard when he went forth to slay the rebel
Apura—Eperitus hath laid hands on the Queen whom he was set to guard. But
she fled from him, and her cries awoke the guard, and they fell upon him in
Pharaoh’s very chamber. Some he slew with shafts from the great black
bow, but Kurri the Sidonian cut the string of the bow, and the Wanderer was
borne down by many men. Now they have bound him and drag him to the dungeons,
there to await judgment from the lips of Pharaoh. See, they bring him. I must
begone on my errand to the keeper of the dungeons.”</p>
<p>The Golden Helen heard the shameful tale, and such sorrow took her that had she
been mortal she had surely died. This then was the man whom she had chosen to
love, this was he whom last night she should have wed. Once more the Gods had
made a mock of her. So had it ever been, so should it ever be. Loveless she had
lived all her life days, now she had learned to love once and for
ever—and this was the fruit of it! She clasped the curtain lest she
should sink to the earth, and hearing a sound looked forth. A multitude of men
came down the hall. Before them walked ten soldiers bearing a litter on their
shoulders. In the litter lay a man gagged and fettered with fetters of bronze
so that he might not stir, and they bore him as men bear a stag from the chase
or a wild bull to the sacrifice. It was the Wanderer’s self, the Wanderer
overcome at last, and he seemed so mighty even in his bonds, and his eyes shone
with so fierce a light, that the crowd shrank from him as though in fear. Thus
did Helen see her Love and Lord again as they bore him dishonoured to his
dungeon cell. She saw, and a moan and a cry burst from her heart. A moan for
her own woe and a cry for the shame and faithlessness of him whom she must
love.</p>
<p>“Oh, how fallen art thou, Odysseus, who wast of men the very
first,” she cried.</p>
<p>He heard it and knew the voice of her who cried, and he gazed around. The great
veins swelled upon his neck and forehead, and he struggled so fiercely that he
fell from the litter to the ground. But he might not rise because of the
fetters, nor speak because of the gag, so they lifted him again and bore him
thence.</p>
<p>And after him went all the multitude save Rei alone. For Rei was fallen in
shame and grief because of the tale that he had heard and of the deed of
darkness that the man he loved had done. For not yet did he remember and learn
to doubt. So he stood hiding his eyes in his hand, and as he stood Helen came
forth and touched him on the shoulder, saying:</p>
<p>“Lead me hence, old man. Lead me back to my temple. My Love is lost
indeed, but there where I found it I will abide till the Gods make their will
clear to me.”</p>
<p>He bowed, saying no word, and following Helen stepped into the centre of the
hall. There he stopped, indeed, for down it came the Queen, her hair streaming,
all her robes disordered, and her face stained with tears. She was alone save
for Kurri the Sidonian, who followed her, and she walked wildly as one
distraught who knows not where she goes nor why. Helen saw her also.</p>
<p>“Who is this royal lady that draws near?” she asked of Rei.</p>
<p>“It is Meriamun the Queen; she whom the Wanderer hath brought to
shame.”</p>
<p>“Stay then, I would speak with her.”</p>
<p>“Nay, nay,” cried Rei. “She loves thee not, Lady, and will
slay thee.”</p>
<p>“That cannot be,” Helen answered.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap21"></SPAN>CHAPTER II.<br/> THE COMING OF PHARAOH</h2>
<p>Presently, as she walked, Meriamun saw Rei the Priest and the veiled woman at
his side, and she saw on the woman’s breast a red jewel that burnt and
glowed like a heart of fire. Then like fire burned the heart of Meriamun, for
she knew that this was Argive Helen who stood before her, Helen whose shape she
had stolen like a thief and with the mind of a thief.</p>
<p>“Say,” she cried to Rei, who bowed before her, “say, who is
this woman?”</p>
<p>Rei looked at the Queen with terrified eyes, and spake in a voice of warning.</p>
<p>“This is that Goddess who dwells in the Temple of Hathor,” he said.
“Let her pass in peace, O Queen.”</p>
<p>“In peace she shall pass indeed,” answered Meriamun. “What
saidest thou, old dotard? That Goddess! Nay, no Goddess have we here, but an
evil-working witch, who hath brought woes unnumbered upon Khem. Because of her,
men die month by month till the vaults of the Temple of Hathor are full of her
slain. Because of her it was that curse upon curse fell on the land—the
curse of water turned to blood, of hail and of terrible darkness, ay, and the
curse of the death of the firstborn among whom my own son died. And thou hast
dared, Rei, to bring this witch here to my Palace halls! By Amen if I had not
loved thee always thy life should pay the price. And thou,” and she
stretched her hand towards the Helen, “thou hast dared to come. It is
well, no more shalt thou bring evil upon Khem. Hearken, slave,” and she
turned to Kurri the Sidonian; “draw that knife of thine and plunge it to
the hilt in the breast of yonder woman. So shalt thou win freedom and all thy
goods shall be given thee again.”</p>
<p>Then for the first time Helen spake:</p>
<p>“I charge thee, Lady,” she said in slow soft tones, “bid not
thy servant do this deed, for though I have little will to bring evil upon men,
yet I may not lightly be affronted.”</p>
<p>Now Kurri hung back doubtfully fingering his dagger.</p>
<p>“Draw, knave, draw!” cried Meriamun, “and do my bidding, or
presently thou shalt be slain with this same knife.”</p>
<p>When the Sidonian heard these words he cried aloud with fear, for he well knew
that as the Queen said so it would be done to him. Instantly he drew the great
knife and rushed upon the veiled woman. But as he came, Helen lifted her veil
so that her eyes fell upon his eyes, and the brightness of their beauty was
revealed to him; and when he saw her loveliness he stopped suddenly as one who
is transfixed of a spear. Then madness came upon him, and with a cry he lifted
the knife, and plunging it, not into her heart, but into his own, fell down
dead.</p>
<p>This then was the miserable end of Kurri the Sidonian, slain by the sight of
the Beauty.</p>
<p>“Thou seest, Lady,” said Helen, turning from the dead Sidonian,
“no man may harm me.”</p>
<p>For a moment the Queen stood astonished, while Rei the Priest muttered prayers
to the protecting Gods. Then she cried:</p>
<p>“Begone, thou living curse, begone! Wherefore art thou come here to work
more woe in this house of woe and death?”</p>
<p>“Fear not,” answered the Helen, “presently I will begone and
trouble thee no more. Thou askest why I am come hither. I came to see him who
was my love, and whom but last night I should have wed, but whom the Gods have
brought to shame unspeakable, Odysseus of Ithaca, Odysseus, Laertes’ son.
For this cause I came, and I have stayed to look upon the face of her whose
beauty had power to drive the thought of me from the heart of Odysseus, and
bring him, who of all men was the greatest hero and the foremost left alive, to
do a dastard deed and make his mighty name a byword and a scorn. Knowest thou,
Meriamun, that I find the matter strange, since if all else be false, yet is
this true, that among women the fairest are the most strong. Thou art fair
indeed, Meriamun, but judge if thou art more fair than Argive Helen,” and
she drew the veil from her face so that the splendour of her beauty shone out
upon the Queen’s dark loveliness. Thus for awhile they stood each facing
each, and to Rei it seemed as though the spirits of Death and Life looked one
on another, as though the darkness and the daylight stood in woman’s
shape before him.</p>
<p>“Thou art fair indeed,” said the Queen, “but in this, witch,
has thy beauty failed to hold him whom thou wouldst wed from the most shameless
sin. Little methinks can that man have loved thee who crept upon me like a
thief to snatch my honour from me.”</p>
<p>Then Helen bethought her of what Rei had said, that Meriamun loved the
Wanderer, and she spoke again:</p>
<p>“Now it comes into my heart, Egyptian, that true and false are mixed in
this tale of thine. Hard it is to believe that Odysseus of Ithaca could work
such a coward deed as this, or, unbidden, seek to clasp thee to his heart.
Moreover, I read in thine eyes that thou thyself dost love the man whom thou
namest dastard. Nay, hold thy peace, look not so wildly on me whom thou canst
not harm, but hearken. Whether thy tale be true or false I know not, who use no
magic and learn those things only that the Gods reveal to me. But this at the
least is true, that Odysseus, whom I should have wed, has looked on thee with
eyes of love, even in that hour when I waited to be made his wife. Therefore
the love that but two days agone bloomed in my heart, dies and withers; or if
it does not, at least I cast it from me and tread its flowers beneath my feet.
For this doom the Gods have laid upon me, who am of all women the most hapless,
to live beloved but loveless through many years, and at the last to love and be
betrayed. And now I go hence back to my temple shrine; but fear not, Meriamun,
not for long shall I trouble thee or Khem, and men shall die no more because of
my beauty, for I shall presently pass hence whither the Gods appoint; and this
I say to thee—deal gently with that man who has betrayed my faith, for
whatever he did was done for the love of thee. It is no mean thing to have won
the heart of Odysseus of Ithaca out of the hand of Argive Helen. Fare thee
well, Meriamun, who wouldst have slain me. May the Gods grant thee better days
and more of joy than is given to Helen, who would look upon thy face no
more.”</p>
<p>Thus she spake, and letting her veil fall turned to go. For awhile the Queen
stood shamed to silence by these gentle words, that fell like dew upon the
fires of her hate. But ere Helen had passed the length of a spear her fury
burned up again. What, should she let this strange woman go—this woman
who alone of all that breathed was more beautiful than she, by the aid of whose
stolen beauty she alone had won her love, and for whose sake she had endured
such bitter words of scorn? Nay, while Helen yet lived she could find nor joy
nor sleep. But were Helen dead, then perchance all might yet be well, and the
Wanderer yet be hers, for when the best is gone men turn them to the better.</p>
<p>“Close the gates and bar them,” she cried to the men, who now
streamed back into the hall; and they ran to do her bidding, so that before
Helen reached the Palace doors, they had been shut and the gates of bronze
beyond had clashed like the shields of men.</p>
<p>Now Helen drew near the doors.</p>
<p>“Stay yon witch,” cried the Queen to those who guarded them, and in
wonder they poised their spears to bar the way to Helen. But she only lifted
her veil and looked upon them. Then their arms fell from their hands and they
stood amazed at the sight of beauty.</p>
<p>“Open, I beseech you,” said the Helen gently, and straightway they
opened the doors and she passed through, followed by those who guarded them, by
the Queen, and by Rei. But one man there was who did not see her beauty, and he
strove in vain to hold back the doors and to clasp Helen as she passed.</p>
<p>Now she drew near to the gates—</p>
<p>“Shoot the witch!” cried Meriamun the Queen; “if she pass the
gates, by my royal word I swear that ye shall die every man of you. Shoot her
with arrows.”</p>
<p>Then three men drew their bows mightily. The string of the bow of one burst,
and the bow was shattered, and the arrow of the second slipped as he drew it,
and passing downwards pierced his foot; and the shaft of the third swerved ere
it struck the breast of Helen, and sunk into the heart of that soldier who was
next to the Queen, so that he fell down dead. It was the same man who had
striven to hold to the doors and clasp the Helen.</p>
<p>Then Helen turned and spoke:</p>
<p>“Bid not thy guard to shoot again, Meriamun, lest the arrow find
<i>thy</i> heart, for, know this, no man may harm me;” and once more she
lifted her veil, and speaking to those at the gates said: “Open, I
beseech you, and let the Hathor pass.”</p>
<p>Now their weapons fell from their hands, and they looked upon her beauty, and
they too made haste to open the gates. The great gates clanged upon their
sockets and rolled back. She passed through them, and all who were there
followed after her. But when they looked, lo! she had mingled with the people
who went to and fro and was gone.</p>
<p>Then Meriamun grew white with rage because Helen whom she hated had escaped
her, and turning to those men who had opened the doors and those who had given
passage of the gates, who yet stood looking on each other with dazed eyes, she
doomed them to die.</p>
<p>But Rei, kneeling before her, prayed for their lives:</p>
<p>“Ill will come of it, O Queen!” he said, “as ill came to
yonder Sidonian and to the soldier at thy feet, for none may work evil on this
Goddess, or those who befriended the Goddess. Slay them not, O Queen, lest ill
tidings follow on the deed!”</p>
<p>Then the Queen turned on him madly:</p>
<p>“Hearken thou, Rei!” she said; “speak thus again, and though
I have loved thee and thou hast been the chief of the servants of Pharaoh, this
I swear, that thou shalt die the first. Already the count is long between thee
and me, for it was thou who didst bring yon accursed witch to my Palace. Now
thou hast heard, and of this be sure, as I have spoken so I will do. Get thee
gone—get thee from my sight, I say, lest I slay thee now. I take back thy
honours, I strip thee of thy offices, I gather thy wealth into my treasury. Go
forth a beggar, and let me see thy face no more!”</p>
<p>Then Rei held his peace and fled, for it were better to stand before a lioness
robbed of her whelps than before Meriamun in her rage. Thereon the gates were
shut again, and the captain of the gates was dragged before the place where the
Queen stood, and asking no mercy and taking little heed, for still his soul was
filled with the beauty of Helen as a cup with wine, he suffered death, for his
head was straightway smitten from him.</p>
<p>Rei, watching from afar, groaned aloud, then turned and left the Palace, but
the Queen called to the soldiers to slay on. Even as she called there came a
cry of woe without the Palace gates. Men looked each on each. Again the cry
rose and a voice without called, “Pharaoh is come again! Pharaoh is come
again!” and there rose a sound of knocking at the gates.</p>
<p>Now for that while Meriamun thought no more of slaying the men, but bade them
open the gates. They opened, and a man entered clad in raiment stained with
travel. His eyes were wild, his hair was dishevelled, and scarce could his face
be known for the face of Pharaoh Meneptah, it was so marred with grief and
fear.</p>
<p>Pharaoh looked on the Queen—he looked upon the dead who lay at her feet,
then laughed aloud:</p>
<p>“What!” he cried, “more dead! Is there then no end to Death
and the number of his slain? Nay, here he doth work but feebly. Perchance his
arm grows weary. Come, where are <i>thy</i> dead, Queen? Bring forth thy
dead!”</p>
<p>“What hath chanced, Meneptah, that thou speakest thus madly?” asked
the Queen. “She whom they name the Hathor hath passed here, and these,
and another who lies yonder, do but mark her path. Speak!”</p>
<p>“Ay, I will speak, Queen. I have a merry tale to tell. Thou sayest that
the Hathor hath passed here and these mark her footsteps. Well, I can cap thy
story. He whom the Apura name Jahveh hath passed yonder by the Sea of Weeds,
and there lie many, lie to mark His footsteps.”</p>
<p>“Thy host! Where is thy host?” cried the Queen. “At the least
some are left.”</p>
<p>“Yes, Queen, <i>all</i> are left—all—all—save myself
alone. They drift to and fro in the Sea of Weeds—they lie by tens of
thousands on its banks; the gulls tear their eyes, the lion of the desert rends
their flesh; they lie unburied, their breath sighs in the sea gales, their
blood sinks into the salt sands, and Osiris numbers them in the hosts of hell.
Hearken! I came upon the tribes of the Apura by the banks of the Sea of Weeds.
I came at eve, but I might not fall upon them because of a veil of darkness
that spread between my armies and the hosts of the Apura. All night long
through the veil of darkness, and through the shrieking of a great gale, I
heard a sound as of the passing of a mighty people—the clangour of their
arms, the voices of captains, the stamp of beasts, and the grinding of wheels.
The morning came, and lo! before me the waters of the sea were built up as a
wall on the right hand and the left, and between the walls of water was dry
land, and the Apura passed between the walls. Then I cried to my captains to
arise and follow swiftly, and they did my bidding. But the chariot wheels drew
heavily in the sand, so that before all my host had entered between the waters,
the Apura had passed the sea. Then of a sudden, as last of all I passed down
into the path of the ocean bed, the great wind ceased, and as it ceased, lo!
the walls of water that were on either side of the sea path fell together with
noise like the noise of thunder. I turned my chariot wheels, and fled back, but
my soldiers, my chariots, and my horses were swallowed; once more they were
seen again on the crest of the black waves like a gleam of light upon a cloud,
once a great cry arose to the heaven; then all was done and all was still, and
of my hosts I alone was left alive of men.”</p>
<p>So Pharaoh spoke, and a great groan rose from those who hearkened. Only
Meriamun spoke:</p>
<p>“So shall things go with us while that False Hathor dwells in
Khem.”</p>
<p>Now as she spoke thus, again there came a sound of knocking at the gates and a
cry of “Open—a messenger! a messenger!”</p>
<p>“Open!” said Meriamun, “though his tidings be ill, scarce can
they match these that have been told.”</p>
<p>The gates were opened, and one came through them. His eyes stared wide in fear,
so dry was his throat with haste and with the sand, that he stood speechless
before them all.</p>
<p>“Give him wine,” cried Meriamun, and wine was brought. Then he
drank, and he fell upon his knees before the Queen, for he knew not Pharaoh.</p>
<p>“Thy tidings!” she cried. “Be swift with thy tidings.”</p>
<p>“Let the Queen pardon me,” he said. “Let her not be wrath.
These are my tidings. A mighty host marches towards the city of On, a host
gathered from all lands of the peoples of the North, from the lands of the
Tulisha, of the Shakalishu, of the Liku, and of the Shairdana. They march
swiftly and raven, they lay the country waste, naught is left behind them save
the smoke of burning towns, the flight of vultures, and the corpses of
men.”</p>
<p>“Hast done?” said Meriamun.</p>
<p>“Nay, O Queen! A great fleet sails with them up the eastern mouth of
Sihor, and in it are twelve thousand chosen warriors of the Aquaiusha, the sons
of those men who sacked Troy town.”</p>
<p>And now a great groan went up to heaven from the lips of those who hearkened.
Only Meriamun spoke thus:</p>
<p>“And yet the Apura are gone, for whose sake, ye say, came the plagues.
They are fled, but the curse remains, and so shall things ever be with us while
yon False Hathor dwells in Khem.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap22"></SPAN>CHAPTER III.<br/> THE BED OF TORMENT</h2>
<p>It was nightfall, and Pharaoh sat at meat and Meriamun sat by him. The heart of
Pharaoh was very heavy. He thought of that great army which now washed to and
fro on the waters of the Sea of Weeds, of whose number he alone had lived to
tell the tale. He thought also of the host of the Apura, who made a mock of him
in the desert. But most of all he brooded on the tidings that the messenger had
brought, tidings of the march of the barbarians and of the fleet of the
Aquaiusha that sailed on the eastern stream of Sihor. All that day he had sat
in his council chamber, and sent forth messengers east and north and south,
bidding them gather the mercenaries from every town and in every city, men to
make war against the foe, for here, in his white-walled city of Tanis, there
were left but five thousand soldiers. And now, wearied with toil and war, he
sat at meat, and as he sat bethought him of the man whom he had left to guard
the Queen.</p>
<p>“Where, then, is that great Wanderer, he who wore the golden
harness?” he asked presently.</p>
<p>“I have a tale to tell thee of the man,” Meriamun answered slowly,
“a tale which I have not told because of all the evil tidings that beat
about our ears like sand in a desert wind.”</p>
<p>“Tell on,” said Pharaoh.</p>
<p>Then she bent towards him, whispering in his ear.</p>
<p>As she whispered, the face of Pharaoh grew black as the night, and ere all the
tale was done he sprang to his feet.</p>
<p>“By Amen and by Ptah!” he cried, “here at least we have a foe
whom we may conquer. Thou and I, Meriamun, my sister and my queen, are set as
far each from each as the sky is set from the temple top, and little of love is
there between us. Yet I will wipe away this blot upon thy honour, which also is
a blot upon my own. Sleepless shall this Wanderer lie to-night, and sorry shall
he go to-morrow, but to-morrow night he shall sleep indeed.”</p>
<p>Thereupon he clapped his hands, summoning the guard, and bade them pass to the
dungeon where the Wanderer lay, and lead him thence to the place of punishment.
He bade them also call the tormentors to make ready the instruments of their
craft, and await him in the place of punishment.</p>
<p>Then he sat for awhile, drinking sullenly, till one came to tell him that all
was prepared. Then Pharaoh rose.</p>
<p>“Comest thou with me?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Nay,” said Meriamun, “I would not look upon the man again;
and this I charge thee. Go not down to him this night. Let him be found upon
the bed of torment, and let the tormentors give him food and wine, for so he
shall die more hardly. Then let them light the fires at his head and at his
feet and leave him till the dawn alone in the place of torment. So he shall die
a hundred deaths ere ever his death begins.”</p>
<p>“As thou wilt,” answered Pharaoh. “Mete out thine own
punishment. To-morrow when I have slept I will look upon his torment.”
And he spoke to his servants as she desired.</p>
<p class="p2">
The Wanderer lay on the bed of torment in the place of torment. They had taken
the gag from his mouth, and given him food and wine as Pharaoh commanded. He
ate and drank and his strength came back to him. Then they made fast his
fetters, lit the braziers at his head and foot, and left him with mocking
words.</p>
<p>He lay upon the bed of stone and groaned in the bitterness of his heart. Here
then was the end of his wanderings, and this was the breast of the Golden Helen
in whose arms Aphrodite had sworn that he should lie. Oh, that he were free
again and stood face to face with his foes, his harness on his back! Nay, it
might not be, no mortal strength could burst these fetters, not even the
strength of Odysseus, Laertes’ son. Where now were those Gods whom he had
served? Should he never again hear the clarion cry of Pallas? Why then had he
turned him from Pallas and worshipped at the shrine of the false Idalian Queen?
Thus it was that she kept her oaths; thus she repaid her votary.</p>
<p>So he thought in the bitterness of his heart as he lay with closed eyes upon
the bed of torment whence there was no escape, and groaned: “Would,
Aphrodite, that I had never served thee, even for one little hour, then had my
lot gone otherwise.”</p>
<p>Now he opened his eyes, and lo! a great glory rolled about the place of
torment, and as he wondered at the glory, a voice spoke from its
midst—the voice of the Idalian Aphrodite:</p>
<p>“Blame me not, Odysseus,” said the heavenly voice; “blame me
not because thou art come to this pass. Thyself, son of Laertes, art to blame.
What did I tell thee? Was it not that thou shouldst know the Golden Helen by
the Red Star on her breast, the jewel whence fall the red drops fast, and by
the Star alone? And did she not tell thee, also, that thou shouldst know her by
the Star? Yet when one came to thee wearing no Star but girdled with a Snake,
my words were all forgotten, thy desires led thee whither thou wouldst not go.
Thou wast blinded by desire and couldst not discern the False from the True.
Beauty has many shapes, now it is that of Helen, now that of Meriamun, each
sees it as he desires it. But the Star is yet the Star, and the Snake is yet
the Snake, and he who, bewildered of his lusts, swears by the Snake when he
should have sworn by the Star, shall have the Snake for guerdon.”</p>
<p>She ceased, and the Wanderer spoke, groaning bitterly:</p>
<p>“I have sinned, O Queen!” he said. “Is there then no
forgiveness for my sin?”</p>
<p>“Yea, there is forgiveness, Odysseus, but first there is punishment. This
is thy fate. Never now, in this space of life, shalt thou be the lord of the
Golden Helen. For thou hast sworn by the Snake, and his thou art, nor mayest
thou reach the Star. Yet it still shines on. Through the mists of death it
shall shine for thee, and when thou wakest again, behold, thine eyes shall see
it fitfully.</p>
<p>“And now, this for thy comfort. Here thou shalt not die, nor by torment,
for thy death shall come to thee from the water as the dead seer foretold, but
ere thou diest, once more thou shalt look upon the Golden Helen, and hear her
words of love and know her kiss, though thine she shall not be. And learn that
a great host marches upon the land of Khem, and with it sails a fleet of thine
own people, the Achæans. Go down and meet them and take what comes, where the
swords shine that smote Troy. And this fate is laid upon thee, that thou shalt
do battle against thy own people, even against the sons of them by whose side
thou didst fight beneath the walls of Ilios, and in that battle thou shalt find
thy death, and in thy death, thou Wanderer, thou shalt find that which all men
seek, the breast of the immortal Helen. For though here on earth she seems to
live eternally, it is but the shadow of her beauty that men see—each as
he desires it. In the halls of Death she dwells, and in the garden of Queen
Persephone, and there she shall be won, for there no more is beauty guarded of
Those that stand between men and joy, and there no more shall the Snake seem as
the Star, and Sin have power to sever those that are one. Now make thy heart
strong, Odysseus, and so do as thy wisdom tells thee. Farewell!”</p>
<p>Thus the Goddess spoke from the cloud of glory, and lo! she was gone. But the
heart of the Wanderer was filled with joy because he knew that the Helen was
not lost to him for ever, and he no more feared the death of shame.</p>
<hr />
<p>Now it was midnight, and Pharaoh slept. But Meriamun the Queen slept not. She
rose from her bed, she wrapped herself in a dark cloak that hid her face, and
taking a lamp in her hand, glided through the empty halls till she came to a
secret stair down which she passed. There was a gate at the foot of the stair,
and a guard slept by it. She pushed him with her foot.</p>
<p>He awoke and sprang towards her, but she held a signet before his eyes, an old
ring of great Queen Taia, whereon a Hathor worshipped the sun. Then he bowed
and opened the gate. She swept on through many passages, deep into the bowels
of the earth, till she came to the door of a little chamber where a light
shone. Men talked in the chamber, and she listened to their talk. They spoke
much and laughed gleefully. Then she entered the doorway and looked upon them.
They were six in number, evil-eyed men of Ethiopia, and seated in a circle. In
the centre of the circle lay the waxen image of a man, and they were cutting it
with knives and searing it with needles of iron and pincers made red-hot, and
many instruments strange and dreadful to look upon. For these were the
tormentors, and they spoke of those pains that to-morrow they should wreak upon
the Wanderer, and practised them.</p>
<p>But Meriamun, who loved him, shivered as she looked, and muttered thus beneath
her breath:</p>
<p>“This I promise you, black ministers of death, that in the same fashion
ye shall die ere another night be sped.”</p>
<p>Then she passed into the chamber, holding the signet on high, and the
tormentors fell upon their faces before her majesty. She passed between them,
and as she went she stamped with her sandalled foot upon the waxen image and
brake it. On the further side of the chamber was another passage, and this she
followed till she reached a door of stone that stood ajar. Here she paused
awhile, for from within the chamber there came a sound of singing, and the
voice was the Wanderer’s voice, and thus he sang:</p>
<p class="poem">
“Endure, my heart: not long shalt thou endure<br/>
The shame, the smart;<br/>
The good and ill are done; the end is sure;<br/>
Endure, my heart!<br/>
There stand two vessels by the golden throne<br/>
Of Zeus on high,<br/>
From these he scatters mirth and scatters moan,<br/>
To men that die.<br/>
And thou of many joys hast had thy share,<br/>
Thy perfect part;<br/>
Battle and love, and evil things and fair;<br/>
Endure, my heart!<br/>
Fight one last greatest battle under shield,<br/>
Wage that war well:<br/>
Then seek thy fellows in the shadowy field<br/>
Of asphodel,<br/>
There is the knightly Hector; there the men<br/>
Who fought for Troy;<br/>
Shall we not fight our battles o’er again?<br/>
Were that not joy?<br/>
Though no sun shines beyond the dusky west,<br/>
Thy perfect part<br/>
There shalt thou have of the unbroken rest;<br/>
Endure, my heart!”</p>
<p>Meriamun heard and wondered at this man’s hardihood, and the greatness of
his heart who could sing thus as he lay upon the bed of torment. Now she pushed
the door open silently and passed in. The place where she stood was dreadful.
It was shaped as a lofty vault, and all the walls were painted with the
torments of those who pass down to Set after living wickedly on earth. In the
walls were great rings of bronze, and chains and fetters of bronze, wherein the
bones of men yet hung. In the centre of the vault there was a bed of stone on
which the Wanderer was fastened with fetters. He was naked, save only for a
waistcloth, and at his head and feet burned polished braziers that gave light
to the vault, and shone upon the instruments of torment. Beyond the further
braziers grinned the gate of Sekhet, that is shaped like a woman, and the
chains wherein the victim is set for the last torment by fire, were hanging
from the roof.</p>
<p>Meriamun passed stealthily behind the head of the Wanderer, who might not see
her because of the straitness of his bonds. Yet it seemed to her that he heard
somewhat, for he ceased from singing and turned his ear to hearken. She stood
awhile in silence looking on him she loved, who of all living men was the
goodliest by far. Then at length he spoke craftily:</p>
<p>“Who art thou?” he said. “If thou art of the number of the
tormentors, begin thy work. I fear thee not, and no groan shall thy worst
torture wring from these lips of mine. But I tell thee this, that ere I be
three days dead, the Gods shall avenge me terribly, both on thee and those who
sent thee. With fire and with sword they shall avenge me, for a great host
gathers and draws nigh, a host of many nations gathered out of all lands, ay,
and a fleet manned with the sons of my own people, of the Achæans terrible in
war. They rush on like ravening wolves, and the land is black before them, but
the land shall be stamped red behind their feet. Soon they shall give this city
to the flames, the smoke of it shall go up to heaven, and the fires shall be
quenched at last in the blood of its children—ay, in thy blood, thou who
dost look on me.”</p>
<p>Hearing these words Meriamun bent forward to look on the face of the speaker
and to see what was written there; and as she moved, her cloak slipped apart,
showing the Snake’s head with the eyes of flame that was set about her as
a girdle. Fiercely they gleamed, and the semblance of them was shown faintly on
the polished surface of the brazier wherein the fire burned at the
Wanderer’s feet. He saw it, and now he knew who stood behind him.</p>
<p>“Say, Meriamun the Queen—Pharaoh’s dishonoured wife,”
he said, “say, wherefore art thou come to look upon thy work? Nay, stand
not behind me, stand where I may see thee. Fear not, I am strongly bound, nor
may I lift a hand against thee.”</p>
<p>Then Meriamun, still speaking no word, but wondering much because he knew her
ere his eyes fell upon her, passed round the bed of torment, and throwing down
her cloak stood before him in her dark and royal loveliness.</p>
<p>He looked upon her beauty, then spoke again:</p>
<p>“Say, wherefore art thou come hither, Meriamun? Surely, with my ears I
heard thee swear that I had wronged thee. Wouldst thou then look on him who
wronged thee, or art thou come, perchance, to watch my torments, while thy
slaves tear limb from limb, and quench yon fires with my blood? Oh, thou evil
woman, thou hast worked woe on me indeed, and perchance canst work more woe now
that I lie helpless here. But this I tell thee, that thy torments shall
outnumber mine as the stars outnumber the earth. For here, and hereafter, thou
shalt be parched with such a thirst of love as never may be quenched, and in
many another land, and in many another time, thou shalt endure thine agony
afresh. Again, and yet again, thou shalt clasp and conquer; again, and yet
again, thou shalt let slip, and in the moment of triumph lose. By the
Snake’s head I swore my troth to thee, I, who should have sworn by the
Star; and this I tell thee, Meriamun, that as the Star shall shine and be my
beacon through the ages, so through the ages shall the Snake encircle thee and
be thy doom!”</p>
<p>“Hold!” said Meriamun, “pour no more bitter words upon me,
who am distraught of love, and was maddened by thy scorn. Wouldst thou know
then why I am come hither? For this cause I am come, to save thee from thy
doom. Hearken, the time is short. It is true—though how thou knowest it I
may not guess—it is true that the barbarians march on Khem, and with them
sails a fleet laden with the warriors of thine own people. This also is true,
Pharaoh has returned alone: and all his host is swallowed in the Sea of Weeds.
And I, foolish that I am, I would save thee, Odysseus, thus: I will put it in
the heart of Pharaoh to pardon thy great offence, and send thee forward against
the foe; yes, I can do it. But this thou shalt swear to me, to be true to
Pharaoh, and smite the barbarian host.”</p>
<p>“That I will swear,” said the Wanderer, “ay, and keep the
oath, though it is hard to do battle on my kin. Is that all thy message,
Meriamun?”</p>
<p>“Not all, Odysseus. One more thing must thou swear, or if thou swearest
it not, here thou shalt surely die. Know this, she who in Khem is named the
Hathor, but who perchance has other names, hath put thee from her because last
night thou wast wed to me.”</p>
<p>“It may well be so,” said the Wanderer.</p>
<p>“She hath put thee from her, and thou—thou art bound to me by that
which cannot be undone, and by an oath that may not be broken; in whatever
shape I walk, or by whatever name I am known among men, still thou art bound to
me, as I am bound to thee. This then thou shalt swear, that thou wilt tell
naught of last night’s tale to Pharaoh.”</p>
<p>“That I swear,” said the Wanderer.</p>
<p>“Also that if Pharaoh be gathered to Osiris, and it should chance that
she who is named the Hathor pass with him to the Underworld, then that thou,
Odysseus, wilt wed me, Meriamun, and be faithful to me for thy life
days.”</p>
<p>Now the crafty Odysseus took counsel with his heart, and bethought him of the
words of the Goddess. He saw that it was in the mind of Meriamun to slay
Pharaoh and the Helen. But he cared nothing for the fate of Pharaoh, and knew
well that Helen might not be harmed, and that though she change eternally,
wearing now this shape, and now that, yet she dies only when the race of men is
dead—then to be gathered to the number of the Gods. This he knew also,
that now he must go forth on his last wandering, for Death should come upon him
from the water. Therefore he answered readily:</p>
<p>“That oath I swear also, Meriamun, and if I break it may I perish in
shame and for ever.”</p>
<p>Now Meriamun heard, and knelt beside him, looking upon him with eyes of love.</p>
<p>“It is well, Odysseus: perchance ere long I shall claim thy oath. Oh,
think not so ill of me: if I have sinned, I have sinned from love of thee. Long
years ago, Odysseus, thy shadow fell upon my heart and I clasped its emptiness.
Now thou art come, and I, who pursued a shadow from sleep to sleep and dream to
dream, saw thee a living man, and loved thee to my ruin. Then I tamed my pride
and came to win thee to my heart, and the Gods set another shape upon
me—so thou sayest—and in that shape, the shape of her thou seekest,
thou didst make me wife to thee. Perchance she and I are <i>one</i>, Odysseus.
At the least, not so readily had <i>I</i> forsaken thee. Oh, when thou didst
stand in thy might holding those dogs at bay till the Sidonian knave cut thy
bowstring——”</p>
<p>“What of him? Tell me, what of Kurri? This would I ask thee, Queen, that
he be laid where I lie, and die the death to which I am doomed.”</p>
<p>“Gladly would I give thee the boon,” she answered, “but thou
askest too late. The False Hathor looked upon him, and he slew himself. Now I
will away—the night wanes and Pharaoh must dream dreams ere dawn. Fare
thee well, Odysseus. Thy bed is hard to-night, but soft is the couch of kings
that waits thee,” and she went forth from him.</p>
<p>“Ay, Meriamun,” said the Wanderer, looking after her. “Hard
is my bed to-night, and soft is the couch of the kings of Men that waits me in
the realms of Queen Persephone. But it is not thou who shalt share it. Hard is
my bed to-night, harder shall thine be through all the nights of death that are
to come when the Erinnyes work their will on folk forsworn.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap23"></SPAN>CHAPTER IV.<br/> PHARAOH’S DREAM</h2>
<p>Pharaoh slept heavily in his place, for he was wearied with grief and toil. But
Meriamun passed into the chamber, and standing at the foot of the golden bed,
lifted up her hands and by her art called visions down on Pharaoh, false dreams
through the Ivory Gate. So Pharaoh dreamed, and thus his vision went:—</p>
<p>He dreamed that he slept in his bed, and that the statue of Ptah, the Creator,
descended from the pedestal by the temple gate and came to him, towering over
him like a giant. Then he dreamed that he awoke, and prostrating himself before
the God, asked the meaning of his coming. Thereon the God spoke to him:—</p>
<p>“Meneptah, my son, whom I love, hearken unto me. The Nine-bow barbarians
overrun the ancient land of Khem; nine nations march up against Khem and lay it
waste. Hearken unto me, my son, and I will give thee victory. Awake, awake from
sloth, and I will give thee victory. Thou shalt hew down the Nine-bow
barbarians as a countryman hews a rotting palm; they shall fall, and thou shalt
spoil them. But hearken unto me, my son, thou shalt not thyself go up against
them. Low in thy dungeon there lies a mighty chief, skilled in the warfare of
the barbarians, a Wanderer who hath wandered far. Thou shalt release him from
his bonds and set him over thy armies, and of the sin that he has sinned thou
shalt take no heed. Awake, awake, Meneptah; with this bow which I give thee
shalt thou smite the Nine-bow barbarians.”</p>
<p>Then Meriamun laid the bow of the Wanderer, even the black bow of Eurytus, on
the bed beside Pharaoh, and passed thence to her own chamber, and the deceitful
dream too passed away.</p>
<p class="p2">
Early in the morning, a waiting-woman came to the Queen saying that Pharaoh
would speak with her. She went into the ante-chamber and found him there, and
in his hand was the black bow of Eurytus.</p>
<p>“Dost thou know this weapon?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Yea, I know it,” she answered; “and thou shouldst know it
also, for surely it saved us from the fury of the people on the night of the
death of the first-born. It is the bow of the Wanderer, who lies in the place
of torment, and waits his doom because of the wrong he would have wrought upon
me.”</p>
<p>“If he hath wronged thee, yet it is he who shall save Khem from the
barbarians,” said Pharaoh. “Listen now to the dream that I have
dreamed,” and he told her all the vision.</p>
<p>“It is indeed evil that he who would have wrought such wickedness upon me
should go forth honoured, the first of the host of Pharaoh,” quoth
Meriamun. “Yet as the God hath spoken, so let it be. Send now and bid
them loose the man from the place of torment, and put his armour on him and
bring him before thee.”</p>
<p>So Pharaoh went out, and the Wanderer was loosed from his bed of stone and
clothed again in his golden harness, and came forth glorious to see, and stood
before Pharaoh. But no arms were given him. Then Pharaoh told him all his
dream, and why he caused him to be released from the grip of the tormentors.
The Wanderer hearkened in silence, saying no word.</p>
<p>“Now choose, thou Wanderer,” said Pharaoh: “choose if thou
wilt be borne back to the bed of torment, there to die beneath the hands of the
tormentors, or if thou wilt go forth as the captain of my host to do battle
with the Nine-bow barbarians who waste the land of Khem. It seems there is
little faith in thine oaths, therefore I ask no more oaths from thee. But this
I swear, that if thou art false to my trust, I will yet find means to bring
thee back to that chamber whence thou wast led but now.”</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer spoke:—</p>
<p>“Of that charge, Pharaoh, which is laid against me I will say nothing,
though perchance if I stood upon my trial for the sin that is laid against me,
I might find words to say. Thou askest no oath from me, and no oath I swear,
yet I tell thee that if thou givest me ten thousand soldiers and a hundred
chariots, I will smite these foes of thine so that they shall come no more to
Khem, ay, though they be of my own people, yet will I smite them, and if I
fail, then may those who go with me slay me and send me down to Hades.”</p>
<p>Thus he spoke, and as he spoke he searched the hall with his eyes. For he
desired to see Rei the Priest, and charge him with a message to Helen. But he
sought him in vain, for Rei had fled, and was in hiding from the anger of
Meriamun.</p>
<p>Then Pharaoh bade his officers take the Wanderer, and set him in a chariot and
bear him to the city of On, where Pharaoh’s host was gathering. Their
charge was to watch him night and day with uplifted swords, and if he so much
as turned his face from the foe towards Tanis, then they should slay him. But
when the host of Pharaoh marched from On to do battle on the foe, then they
should give the Wanderer his own sword and the great black bow, and obey him in
everything. But if he turned his back upon the foe, then they should slay him;
or if the host of Pharaoh were driven back by the foe, then they should slay
him.</p>
<p>The Wanderer heard, and smiled as a wolf smiles, but spoke no word. Thereon the
great officers of Pharaoh took him and led him forth. They set him in a
chariot, and with the chariot went a thousand horsemen; and soon Meriamun,
watching from the walls of Tanis, saw the long line of desert dust that marked
the passing of the Wanderer from the city which he should see no more.</p>
<p>The Wanderer also looked back on Tanis with a heavy heart. There, far away, he
could see the shrine of Hathor gleaming like crystal above the tawny flood of
waters. And he must go down to death, leaving no word for Her who sat in the
shrine and deemed him faithless and forsworn. Evil was the lot that the Gods
had laid upon him, and bitter was his guerdon.</p>
<p>His thoughts were sad enough while the chariot rolled towards the city of On,
where the host of Pharaoh was gathering, and the thunder of the feet of horses
echoed in his ears, when, as he pondered, it chanced that he looked up. There,
on a knoll of sand before him, a bow-shot from the chariot, stood a camel, and
on the camel a man sat as though he waited the coming of the host. Idly the
Wanderer wondered who this might be, and, as he wondered, the man urged the
camel towards the chariot, and, halting before it cried “Hold!” in
a loud voice.</p>
<p>“Who art thou?” cried the captain of the chariot, “who darest
cry ‘hold’ to the host of Pharaoh?”</p>
<p>“I am one who have tidings of the barbarians,” the man made answer
from the camel.</p>
<p>The Wanderer looked on him. He was wondrous little, withered and old; moreover,
his skin was black as though with the heat of the sun, and his clothing was as
a beggar’s rags, though the trappings of the camel were of purple leather
and bossed with silver. Again the Wanderer looked; he knew him not, and yet
there was that in his face which seemed familiar.</p>
<p>Now the captain of the chariot bade the driver halt the horses, and cried,
“Draw near and tell thy tidings.”</p>
<p>“To none will I tell my tidings save to him who shall lead the host of
Pharaoh. Let him come down from the chariot and speak with me.”</p>
<p>“That may not be,” said the captain, for he was charged that the
Wanderer should have speech with none.</p>
<p>“As thou wilt,” answered the aged man upon the camel; “go
then, go to thy doom! thou art not the first who hath turned aside a messenger
from the Gods.”</p>
<p>“I am minded to bid the soldiers shoot thee with arrows,” cried the
captain in anger.</p>
<p>“So shall my wisdom sink in the sand with my blood, and be lost with my
breath. Shoot on, thou fool.”</p>
<p>Now the captain was perplexed, for from the aspect of the man he deemed that he
was sent by the Gods. He looked at the Wanderer, who took but little heed, or
so it seemed. But in his crafty heart he knew that this was the best way to win
speech with the man upon the camel. Then the captain took counsel with the
captain of the horsemen, and in the end they said to the Wanderer:</p>
<p>“Descend from the chariot, lord, and walk twelve paces forward, and there
hold speech with the man. But if thou go one pace further, then we will shoot
thee and the man with arrows.” And this he cried out also to him who sat
upon the camel.</p>
<p>Then the man on the camel descended and walked twelve paces forward, and the
Wanderer descended also from the chariot and walked twelve paces forward, but
as one who heeds little what he does. Now the two stood face to face, but out
of earshot of the host, who watched them with arrows set upon the strings.</p>
<p>“Greetings, Odysseus of Ithaca, son of Laertes,” he said who was
clothed in the beggar’s weeds.</p>
<p>The Wanderer looked upon him hard, and knew him through his disguise.</p>
<p>“Greeting, Rei the Priest, Commander of the Legion of Amen, Chief of the
Treasury of Amen.”</p>
<p>“Rei the Priest I am indeed,” he answered, “the rest I am no
more, for Meriamun the Queen has stripped me of my wealth and offices, because
of thee, thou Wanderer, and the Immortal whose love thou hast won, and by whom
thou hast dealt so ill. Hearken! I learned by arts known to me of the dream of
Pharaoh, and of thy sending forth to do battle with the barbarians. Then I
disguised myself as thou seest, and took the swiftest camel in Tanis, and am
come hither by another way to meet thee. Now I would ask thee one thing. How
came it that thou didst play the Immortal false that night? Knowest thou that
she waited for thee there by the pylon gate? Ay, there I found her and led her
to the Palace, and for that I am stripped of my rank and goods by Meriamun, and
now the Lady of Beauty is returned to her shrine, grieving bitterly for thy
faithlessness; though how she passed thither I know not.”</p>
<p>“Methought I heard her voice as those knaves bore me to my
dungeon,” said the Wanderer. “And she deemed me faithless! Say,
Rei, dost thou know the magic of Meriamun? Dost thou know how she won me to
herself in the shape of Argive Helen?”</p>
<p>And then, in as few words as might be, he told Rei how he had been led away by
the magic of Meriamun, how he who should have sworn by the Star had sworn by
the Snake.</p>
<p>When Rei heard that the Wanderer had sworn by the Snake, he shuddered.
“Now I know all,” he said. “Fear not, thou Wanderer, not on
thee shall all the evil fall, nor on that Immortal whom thou dost love; the
Snake that beguiled thee shall avenge thee also.”</p>
<p>“Rei,” the Wanderer said, “one thing I charge thee. I know
that I go down to my death. Therefore I pray thee seek out her whom thou namest
the Hathor and tell her all the tale of how I was betrayed. So shall I die
happily. Tell her also that I crave her forgiveness and that I love her and her
only.”</p>
<p>“This I will do if I may,” Rei answered. “And now the
soldiers murmur and I must be gone. Listen, the might of the Nine-bow
barbarians rolls up the eastern branch of Sihor. But one day’s march from
On the mountains run down to the edge of the river, and those mountains are
pierced by a rocky pass through which the foe will surely come. Set thou thy
ambush there, Wanderer, there at Prosopis—so shalt thou smite them.
Farewell. I will seek out the Hathor if in any way I can come at her, and tell
her all. But of this I warn thee, the hour is big with Fate, and soon will
spawn a monstrous birth. Strange visions of doom and death passed before mine
eyes as I slept last night. Farewell!”</p>
<p>Then he went back to the camel and climbed it, and passing round the army
vanished swiftly in a cloud of dust.</p>
<p>The Wanderer also went back to the host, where the captains murmured because of
the halt, and mounted his chariot. But he would tell nothing of what the man
had said to him, save that he was surely a messenger from the Under-world to
instruct him in the waging of the war.</p>
<p>Then the chariot and the horsemen passed on again, till they came to the city
of On, and found the host of Pharaoh gathering in the great walled space that
is before the Temple of Ra. And there they pitched their camp hard by the great
obelisks that stand at the inner gate, which Rei the architect fashioned by
Thebes, and the divine Rameses Miamun set up to the glory of Ra for ever.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap24"></SPAN>CHAPTER V.<br/> THE VOICE OF THE DEAD</h2>
<p>When Meriamun the Queen had watched the chariot of the Wanderer till it was
lost in the dust of the desert, she passed down from the Palace roof to the
solitude of her chamber.</p>
<p>Here she sat in her chamber till the darkness gathered, as the evil thoughts
gathered in her heart, that was rent with love of him whom she had won but to
lose. Things had gone ill with her, to little purpose she had sinned after such
a fashion as may not be forgiven. Yet there was hope. He had sworn that he
would wed her when Pharaoh was dead, and when Argive Helen had followed Pharaoh
to the Shades. Should she shrink then from the deed of blood? Nay, from evil to
evil she would go. She laid her hand upon the double-headed snake that wound
her about, and spake into the gloom:</p>
<p>“Osiris waits thee, Meneptah—Osiris waits thee! The Shades of those
who have died for thy love, Helen, are gathering at the gates. It shall be
done. Pharaoh, thou diest to-night. To-morrow night, thou Goddess Helen, shall
all thy tale be told. <i>Man</i> may not harm thee indeed, but shall fire
refuse to kiss thy loveliness? Are there no <i>women’s</i> hands to light
thy funeral pile?”</p>
<p>Then she rose, and calling her ladies, was attired in her most splendid robes,
and caused the uraeus crown to be set upon her head, the snake circlet of power
on her brow, the snake girdle of wisdom at her heart. And now she hid somewhat
in her breast, and passed to the ante-chamber, where the Princes gathered for
the feast.</p>
<p>Pharaoh looked up and saw her loveliness. So glorious she seemed in her royal
beauty that his heart forgot its woes, and once again he loved her as he had
done in years gone by, when she conquered him at the Game of Pieces, and he had
cast his arms about her and she stabbed him.</p>
<p>She saw the look of love grow on his heavy face, and all her gathered hate rose
in her breast, though she smiled gently with her lips and spake him fair.</p>
<p>They sat at the feast and Pharaoh drank. And ever as he drank she smiled upon
him with her dark eyes and spake him words of gentlest meaning, till at length
there was nothing he desired more than that they should be at one again.</p>
<p>Now the feast was done. They sat in the ante-chamber, for all were gone save
Meneptah and Meriamun. Then he came to her and took her hand, looking into her
eyes, nor did she say him nay.</p>
<p>There was a lute lying on a golden table, and there too, as it chanced, was a
board for the Game of Pieces, with the dice, and the pieces themselves wrought
in gold.</p>
<p>Pharaoh took up the gold king from the board and toyed with it in his hand.
“Meriamun,” he said, “for these five years we have been
apart, thou and I. Thy love I have lost, as a game is lost for one false move,
or one throw of the dice; and our child is dead and our armies are scattered,
and the barbarians come like flies when Sihor stirs within his banks. Love only
is left to us, Meriamun.”</p>
<p>She looked at him not unkindly, as if sorrow and wrong had softened her heart
also, but she did not speak.</p>
<p>“Can dead Love waken, Meriamun, and can angry Love forgive?”</p>
<p>She had lifted the lute and her fingers touched listlessly on the cords.</p>
<p>“Nay, I know not,” she said; “who knows? How did Pentaur sing
of Love’s renewal, Pentaur the glorious minstrel of our father, Rameses
Miamun?”</p>
<p>He laid the gold king on the board, and began listlessly to cast the dice. He
threw the “Hathor” as it chanced, the lucky cast, two sixes, and a
thought of better fortune came to him.</p>
<p>“How did the song run, Meriamun? It is many a year since I heard thee
sing.”</p>
<p>She touched the lute lowly and sweetly, and then she sang. Her thoughts were of
the Wanderer, but the King deemed that she thought of himself.</p>
<p class="poem">
O joy of Love’s renewing,<br/>
Could Love be born again;<br/>
Relenting for thy rueing,<br/>
And pitying my pain:<br/>
O joy of Love’s awaking,<br/>
Could Love arise from sleep,<br/>
Forgiving our forsaking<br/>
The fields we would not reap!<br/>
<br/>
Fleet, fleet we fly, pursuing<br/>
The Love that fled amain,<br/>
But will he list our wooing,<br/>
Or call we but in vain?<br/>
Ah! vain is all our wooing,<br/>
And all our prayers are vain,<br/>
Love listeth not our suing,<br/>
Love will not wake again.</p>
<p>“Will he not waken again?” said Pharaoh. “If two pray
together, will Love refuse their prayer?”</p>
<p>“It might be so,” she said, “if two prayed together; for if
they prayed, he would have heard already!”</p>
<p>“Meriamun,” said the Pharaoh eagerly, for he thought her heart was
moved by pity and sorrow, “once thou didst win my crown at the Pieces,
wilt thou play me for thy love?”</p>
<p>She thought for one moment, and then she said:</p>
<p>“Yes, I will play thee, my Lord, but my hand has lost its cunning, and it
may well be that Meriamun shall lose again, as she has lost all. Let me set the
Pieces, and bring wine for my lord.”</p>
<p>She set the Pieces, and crossing the room, she lifted a great cup of wine, and
put it by Pharaoh’s hand. But he was so intent on the game that he did
not drink.</p>
<p>He took the field, he moved, she replied, and so the game went between them, in
the dark fragrant chamber where the lamp burned, and the Queen’s eyes
shone in the night. This way and that went the game, till she lost, and he
swept the board.</p>
<p>Then in triumph he drained the poisoned cup of wine, and cried, “Pharaoh
is dead!”</p>
<p>“Pharaoh is dead!” answered Meriamun, gazing into his eyes.</p>
<p>“What is that look in thine eyes, Meriamun, what is that look in thine
eyes?”</p>
<p>And the King grew pale as the dead, for he had seen that look before—when
Meriamun slew Hataska.</p>
<p>“Pharaoh is dead!” she shrilled in the tone of women who wail the
dirges. “Pharaoh, great Pharaoh is dead! Ere a man may count a hundred
thy days are numbered. Strange! but to-morrow, Meneptah, shalt thou sit where
Hataska sat, dead on the knees of Death, an Osirian in the lap of the Osiris.
Die, Pharaoh, die! But while thy diest, hearken. There is one I love, the
Wanderer who leads thy hosts. His love I stole by arts known to me, and because
I stole it he would have shamed me, and I accused him falsely in the ears of
men. But he comes again, and, so sure as thou shalt sit on the knees of Osiris,
so surely shall he sit upon thy throne, Pharaoh. For Pharaoh is dead!”</p>
<p>He heard. He gathered his last strength. He rose and staggered towards her,
striking at the air. Slowly she drew away, while he followed her, awful to see.
At length he stood still, he threw up his hands, and fell dead.</p>
<p>Then Meriamun drew near and looked at him strangely.</p>
<p>“Behold the end of Pharaoh,” she said. “That then was a king,
upon whose breath the lives of peoples hung like a poised feather. Well, let
him go! Earth can spare him, and Death is but the richer by a weary fool.
’Tis done, and well done! Would that to-morrow’s task were also
done—and that Helen lay as Pharaoh lies. So—rinse the cup—and
now to sleep—if sleep will come. Ah, where hath sleep flown of late?
To-morrow they’ll find him dead. Well, what of it? So do kings ofttimes
die. There, I will be going; never were his eyes so large and so
unlovely!”</p>
<p class="p2">
Now the light of morning gathered again on all the temple tops, and men rose
from sleep to go about their labours. Meriamun watched it grow as she lay
sleepless in her golden bed, waiting for the cry that presently should ring
along the Palace walls. Hark! What was that? The sound of swinging doors, the
rush of running feet. And now it came—long and shrill it rose.</p>
<p>“Pharaoh is dead! Awake! Awake, ye sleepers! Awake! awake! and look upon
that which has come about. Pharaoh is dead! Pharaoh is dead!”</p>
<p>Then Meriamun arose, and followed by the ladies, rushed from her chamber.</p>
<p>“Who dreams so evilly?” she said. “Who dreams and cries aloud
in his haunted sleep?”</p>
<p>“O Queen, it is no dream,” said one. “Pass into the
ante-chamber and see. There lies Pharaoh dead, and with no wound upon him to
tell the manner of his end.”</p>
<p>Then Meriamun cried aloud with a great cry, and threw her hair about her face,
while tears fell from her dark eyes. She passed into the chamber, and there,
fallen on his back and cold, lay Pharaoh in his royal robes. Awhile the Queen
looked upon him as one who is dumb with grief. Then she lifted up her voice and
cried:</p>
<p>“Still is the curse heavy upon Khem and the people of Khem. Pharaoh lies
dead; yea, he is dead who has no wound, and this I say, that he is slain of the
witchcraft of her whom men name the Hathor. Oh, my Lord, my Lord!” and
kneeling, she laid her hand upon his breast; “by this dead heart of thine
I swear that I will wreak thy murder on her who wrought it. Lift him up! Lift
up this poor clay, that was the first of kings. Clothe him in the robes of
death, and set him on the knees of Osiris in the Temple of Osiris. Then go
forth through the city and call out this, the Queen’s command; call it
from street to street. This is the Queen’s command, that ‘every
woman in Tanis who has lost son, or husband, or brother, or kin or lover,
through the witchcraft of the False Hathor, or by the plagues that she hath
wrought on Khem, or in the war with the Apura, whom she caused to fly from
Khem, do meet me at sundown in the Temple of Osiris before the face of the God
and of dead Pharaoh’s Majesty.’”</p>
<p>So they took Meneptah the Osirian, and wrapping him in the robes of death, bore
him to the knees of Osiris, where he should sit a day and a night. And the
messengers of Meriamun went forth summoning the women of the city to meet her
at sunset in the Temple of Osiris. Moreover, Meriamun sent out slaves by tens
and by twenties to the number of two thousand, bidding them gather up all the
wood that was in Tanis, and all the oil and the bitumen, and bundles of reeds
by hundreds such as are used for the thatching of houses, and lay them in piles
and stacks in a certain courtyard near the Temple of Hathor. This they did, and
so the day wore on, while the women wailed about the streets because of the
death of Pharaoh.</p>
<p class="p2">
Now it chanced that the camel of Rei the Priest fell down from weariness as it
journeyed swiftly back to Tanis. But Rei sped forward on foot, and came to the
gates of Tanis, sorely wearied, towards the evening of that day. When he heard
the wailing of the women, he asked of a passer-by what new evil had fallen upon
Khem, and learned the death of Pharaoh. Then Rei knew by whose hand Pharaoh was
dead, and grieved at heart, because she whom he had served and
loved—Meriamun the moon-child—was a murderess. At first he was
minded to go up before the Queen and put her to an open shame, and then take
his death at her hands; but when he heard that Meriamun had summoned all the
women of Tanis to meet her in the Temple of Osiris, he had another thought.
Hurrying to that place where he hid in the city, he ate and drank. Then he put
off his beggar’s rags, and robed himself afresh, and over all drew the
garment of an aged crone, for this was told him, that no man should be suffered
to enter the Temple. Now the day was dying, and already the western sky was
red, and he hurried forth and mingled with the stream of women who passed
towards the Temple gates.</p>
<p>“Who then slew Pharaoh?” asked one; “and why does the Queen
summon us to meet her?”</p>
<p>“Pharaoh is slain by the witchcraft of the False Hathor,” answered
another; “and the Queen summons us that we may take counsel how to be rid
of the Hathor.”</p>
<p>“Tell not of the accursed Hathor,” said a third; “my husband
and my brother are dead at her hands, and my son died in the death of the
first-born that she called down on Khem. Ah, if I could but see her rent limb
from limb I should seek Osiris happily.”</p>
<p>“Some there be,” quoth a fourth, “who say that not the
Hathor, but the Gods of those Apura brought the woes on Khem, and some that
Pharaoh was slain by the Queen’s own hand, because of the love she bears
to that great Wanderer who came here a while ago.”</p>
<p>“Thou fool,” answered the first; “how can the Queen love one
who would have wrought outrage on her?”</p>
<p>“Such things have been,” said the fourth woman; “perchance he
wrought no outrage, perchance she beguiled him as women may. Yes, yes, such
things have been. I am old, and I have seen such things.”</p>
<p>“Yea, thou art old,” said the first. “Thou hast no child, no
husband, no father, no lover, and no brother. Thou hast lost none who are dear
to thee through the magic of the Hathor. Speak one more such slander on the
Queen, and we will fall upon thee and tear thy lying tongue from its
roots.”</p>
<p>“Hush,” said the second woman, “here are the Temple gates. By
Isis did any ever see such a multitude of women, and never a man to cheer them,
a dreary sight, indeed! Come, push on, push on or we shall find no place. Yea,
thou soldier—we are women, all women, have no fear. No need to bare our
breasts, look at our eyes blind with weeping over the dead. Push on! push
on!”</p>
<p>So they passed by the guards and into the gates of the Temple, and with them
went Rei unheeded. Already it was well-nigh filled with women. Although the sun
was not yet dead, torches were set about to lighten the gloom, and by them Rei
saw that the curtains before the Shrine were drawn. Presently the Temple was
full to overflowing, the doors were shut and barred, and a voice from behind
the veil cried:</p>
<p>“<i>Silence!</i>”</p>
<p>Then all the multitude of women were silent, and the light of the torches
flared strangely upon their shifting upturned faces, as fires flare over the
white sea-foam. Now the curtains of the Shrine of Osiris were drawn aside
slowly, and the light that burned upon the altar streamed out between them. It
fell upon the foremost ranks of women, it fell upon the polished statue of the
Osiris. On the knees of Osiris sat the body of Pharaoh Meneptah, his head
resting against the breast of the God. Pharaoh was wrapped about with winding
clothes like the marble statue of the God, and in his cold hands were bound the
crook, the sceptre, and the scourge, as the crook, the sceptre, and the scourge
were placed in the hands of the effigy of the God. As was the statue of the
God, so was the body of Pharaoh that sat upon his knees, and cold and awful was
the face of Osiris, and cold and awful was the face of Meneptah the Osirian.</p>
<p>At the side, and somewhat in front of the statue of the God, a throne was
placed of blackest marble, and on the throne sat Meriamun the Queen. She was
glorious to look on. She wore the royal robes of Khem, the double-crown of Khem
fashioned of gold, and wreathed with the uraeus snakes, was set upon her head;
in her hand was the crystal cross of Life, and between her mantle’s
purple folds gleamed the eyes of her snake girdle. She sat awhile in silence
speaking no word, and all the women wondered at her glory and at dead
Pharaoh’s awfulness. Then at length she spoke, low indeed, but so clearly
that every word reached the limits of the Temple hall.</p>
<p>“Women of Tanis, hear me, the Queen. Let each search the face of each,
and if there be any man among your multitude, let him be dragged forth and torn
limb from limb, for in this matter no man may hear our counsels, lest following
his madness he betray them.”</p>
<p>Now every woman looked upon her neighbour, and she who was next to Rei looked
hard upon him so that he trembled for his life. But he crouched into the shadow
and stared back on her boldly as though he doubted if she were indeed a woman,
and said no word. When all had looked, and no man had been found, Meriamun
spoke again.</p>
<p>“Hearken, women of Tanis, hearken to your sister and your Queen. Woe upon
woe is fallen on the head of Khem. Plague upon plague hath smitten the ancient
land. Our first-born are dead, our slaves have spoiled us and fled away, our
hosts have been swallowed in the Sea of Weeds, and barbarians swarm along our
shores like locusts. Is it not so, women of Tanis?”</p>
<p>“It is so, O Queen,” they answered, as with one voice.</p>
<p>“A strange evil hath fallen on the head of Khem. A false Goddess is come
to dwell within the land; her sorceries are great in the land. Month by month
men go up to look upon her deadly beauty, and month by month they are slain of
her sorceries. She takes the husband from his marriage bed; she draws the lover
from her who waits to be a bride; the slave flies to her from the household of
his lord; the priests flock to her from the altars of the Gods—ay, the
very priests of Isis flock forsworn from the altars of Isis. All look upon her
witch-beauty, and to each she shows an altered loveliness, and to all she gives
one guerdon—Death! Is it not so, women of Tanis?”</p>
<p>“Alas! alas! it is so, O Queen,” answered the women as with one
voice.</p>
<p>“Woes are fallen on you and Khem, my sisters, but on me most of all are
woes fallen. My people have been slain, my land—the land I love—has
been laid waste with plagues; my child, the only one, is dead in the great
death; hands have been laid on me, the Queen of Khem. Think on it, ye who are
women! My slaves are fled, my armies have been swallowed in the sea; and last,
O my sisters, my consort, my beloved lord, mighty Pharaoh, son of great Rameses
Miamun, hath been taken from me! Look! look! ye who are wives, look on him who
was your King and my most beloved lord. There he sits, and all my tears and all
my prayers may not summon one single answering sigh from that stilled heart.
The curse hath fallen on him also. He too hath been smitten silently with
everlasting silence. Look! look! ye who are wives, and weep with me, ye who are
left widowed.”</p>
<p>Now the women looked, and a great groan went up from all that multitude, while
Meriamun hid her face with the hollow of her hand. Then again she spoke.</p>
<p>“I have besought the Gods, my sisters; I have dared to call down the
majesty of the Gods, who speak through the lips of the dead, and I have learnt
whence these woes come. And this I have won by my prayers, that ye who suffer
as I suffer shall learn whence they come, not from my mortal lips, indeed, but
from the lips of the dead that speak with the voice of the Gods.”</p>
<p>Then, while the women trembled, she turned to the body of Pharaoh, which was
set upon the knees of Osiris, and spoke to it.</p>
<p>“Dead Pharaoh! great Osirian, ruling in the Underworld, hearken to me
now! Hearken to me now, thou Osiris, Lord of the West, first of the hosts of
Death. Hearken to me, Osiris, and be manifest through the lips of him who was
great on earth. Speak through his cold lips, speak with mortal accents, that
these people may hear and understand. By the spirit that is in me, who am yet a
dweller on the earth, I charge thee speak. Who is the source of the woes of
Khem? Say, Lord of the dead, who are the living evermore?”</p>
<p>Now the flame on the altar died away, and dreadful silence fell upon the
Temple, gloom fell upon the Shrine, and through the gloom the golden crown of
Meriamun, and the cold statue of the Osiris, and the white face of dead
Meneptah gleamed faint and ghost-like.</p>
<p>Then suddenly the flame of the altar flared as flares the summer lightning. It
flared full on the face of the dead, and lo! the lips of the dead moved, and
from them came the sound of mortal speech. They spake in awful accents, and
thus they spoke:</p>
<p>“<i>She who was the curse of Achæans, she who was the doom of Ilios; she
who sits in the Temple of Hathor, the Fate of man, who may not be harmed of
Man, she calls down the wrath of the Gods on Khem. It is spoken!</i>”</p>
<p>The echo of the awful words died away in the silence. Then fear took hold of
the multitude of women because of the words of the Dead, and some fell upon
their faces, and some covered their eyes with their hands.</p>
<p>“Arise, my sisters!” cried the voice of Meriamun. “Ye have
heard not from my lips, but from the lips of the dead. Arise, and let us forth
to the Temple of the Hathor. Ye have heard who is the fountain of our woes; let
us forth and seal it at its source for ever. Of men she may not be harmed who
is the fate of men, from men we ask no help, for all men are her slaves, and
for her beauty’s sake all men forsake us. But we will play the part of
men. Our women’s milk shall freeze within our breasts, we will dip our
tender hands in blood, ay, scourged by a thousand wrongs we will forget our
gentleness, and tear this foul fairness from its home. We will burn the
Hathor’s Shrine with fire, her priests shall perish at the altar, and the
beauty of the false Goddess shall melt like wax in the furnace of our hate.
Say, will ye follow me, my sisters, and wreak our shames upon the Shameful One,
our woes upon the Spring of Woe, our dead upon their murderess?”</p>
<p>She ceased, and then from every woman’s throat within the great Temple
there went up a cry of rage, fierce and shrill.</p>
<p>“We will, Meriamun, we will!” they screamed. “To the Hathor!
Lead us to the Hathor’s Shrine! Bring fire! Bring fire! Lead us to the
Hathor’s Shrine!”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap25"></SPAN>CHAPTER VI.<br/> THE BURNING OF THE SHRINE</h2>
<p>Rei the Priest saw and heard. Then turning, he stole away through the maddened
throng of women and fled with what speed he might from the Temple. His heart
was filled with fear and shame, for he knew full well that Pharaoh was dead,
not at the hand of Hathor, but at the hand of Meriamun the Queen, whom he had
loved. He knew well that dead Meneptah spake not with the voice of the dread
Gods, but with the voice of the magic of Meriamun, who, of all women that have
been since the days of Taia, was the most skilled in evil magic, the lore of
the Snake. He knew also that Meriamun would slay Helen for the same cause
wherefore she had slain Pharaoh, that she might win the Wanderer to her arms.
While Helen lived he was not to be won away.</p>
<p>Now Rei was a righteous man, loving the Gods and good, and hating evil, and his
heart burned because of the wickedness of the woman that once he cherished.
This he swore that he would do, if time were left to him. He would warn the
Helen so that she might fly the fire if so she willed, ay, and would tell her
all the wickedness of Meriamun her foe.</p>
<p>His old feet stumbled over each other as he fled till he came to the gates of
the Temple of the Hathor, and knocked upon the gates.</p>
<p>“What wouldst thou, old crone?” asked the priest who sat in the
gates.</p>
<p>“I would be led to the presence of the Hathor,” he answered.</p>
<p>“No woman hath passed up to look upon the Hathor,” said the priest.
“That women do not seek.”</p>
<p>Then Rei made a secret sign, and wondering greatly that a woman should have the
inner wisdom, the priest let him pass.</p>
<p>He came to the second gates.</p>
<p>“What wouldst thou?” said the priest who sat in the gates.</p>
<p>“I would go up into the presence of the Hathor.”</p>
<p>“No woman hath willed to look upon the Hathor,” said the priest.</p>
<p>Then again Rei made the secret sign, but still the priest wavered.</p>
<p>“Let me pass, thou foolish warden,” said Rei. “I am a
messenger from the Gods.”</p>
<p>“If thou art a mortal messenger, woman, thou goest to thy doom,”
said the priest.</p>
<p>“On my head be it,” answered Rei, and the priest let him pass
wondering.</p>
<p>Now he stood before the doors of the Alabaster Shrine that glowed with the
light within. Still Rei paused not, only uttering a prayer that he might be
saved from the unseen swords; he lifted the latch of bronze, and entered
fearfully. But none fell upon him, nor was he smitten of invisible spears.
Before him swung the curtains of Tyrian web, but no sound of singing came from
behind the curtains. All was silence in the Shrine. He passed between the
curtains and looked up the Sanctuary. It was lit with many hanging lamps, and
by their light he saw the Goddess Helen, seated between the pillars of her
loom. But she wove no more at the loom. The web of fate was rent by the
Wanderer’s hands, and lay on either side, a shining cloth of gold. The
Goddess Helen sat songless in her lonely Shrine, and on her breast gleamed the
Red Star of light that wept the blood of men. Her head rested on her hand, and
her heavenly eyes of blue gazed emptily down the empty Shrine.</p>
<p>Rei drew near trembling, though she seemed to see him not at all, and at last
flung himself upon the earth before her. Now at length she saw him, and spoke
in her voice of music.</p>
<p>“Who art thou that dares to break in upon my sorrow?” she said
wonderingly. “Art thou indeed a woman come to look on one who by the will
of the Gods is each woman’s deadliest foe?”</p>
<p>Then Rei raised himself saying:</p>
<p>“No woman am I, immortal Lady. I am Rei, that aged priest who met thee
two nights gone by the pylon gates, and led thee to the Palace of Pharaoh. And
I have dared to seek thy Shrine to tell thee that thou art in danger at the
hands of Meriamun the Queen, and also to give thee a certain message with which
I am charged by him who is named the Wanderer.”</p>
<p>Now Helen looked upon him wonderingly and spoke:</p>
<p>“Didst thou not but now name me immortal, Rei? How then can I be in
danger, who am immortal, and not to be harmed of men? Death hath no part in me.
Speak not to me of dangers, who, alas! can never die till everything is done;
but tell me of that faithless Wanderer, whom I must love with all the womanhood
that shuts my spirit in, and all my spirit that is clothed in womanhood. For,
Rei, the Gods, withholding Death, have in wrath cursed me with love to torment
my deathlessness. Oh, when I saw him standing where now thou standest, my soul
knew its other part, and I learned that the curse I give to others had fallen
on myself and him.”</p>
<p>“Yet was this Wanderer not altogether faithless to thee, Lady,”
said Rei. “Listen, and I will tell thee all.”</p>
<p>“Speak on,” she said. “Oh, speak, and speak swiftly.”</p>
<p>Then Rei told Helen all that tale which the Wanderer had charged him to deliver
in her ear, and keep no word back. He told her how Meriamun had beguiled
Eperitus in her shape; how he had fallen in the snare and sworn by the Snake,
he who should have sworn by the Star. He told her how the Wanderer had learned
the truth, and learning it, had cursed the witch who wronged him; how he had
been overcome by the guards and borne to the bed of torment; how he had been
freed by the craft of Meriamun; and how he had gone forth to lead the host of
Khem. All this he told her swiftly, hiding naught, while she listened with
eager ears.</p>
<p>“Truly,” she said, when all was told, “truly thou art a happy
messenger. Now I forgive him all. Yet has he sworn by the Snake who should have
sworn by the Star, and because of his fault never in this space of life shall
Helen call him Lord. Yet will we follow him, Rei. Hark! what is that? Again it
comes, that long shrill cry as of ghosts broke loose from Hades.”</p>
<p>“It is the Queen,” quoth Rei; “the Queen who with all women
of Tanis comes hither to burn thee in thy Shrine. She hath slain Pharaoh, and
now she would slay thee also, and so win the Wanderer to her arms. Fly, Lady!
Fly!”</p>
<p>“Nay, I fly not,” said Helen. “Let her come. But do thou,
Rei, pass through the Temple gates and mingle with the crowd. There thou shalt
await my coming, and when I come, draw near, fearing nothing; and together we
will pass down the path of the Wanderer in such fashion as I shall show thee.
Go! go swiftly, and bid those who minister to me pass out with thee.”</p>
<p>Then Rei turned and fled. Without the doors of the Shrine many priests were
gathered.</p>
<p>“Fly! the women of Tanis are upon you!” he cried. “I charge
ye to fly!”</p>
<p>“This old crone is mad,” quoth one. “We watch the Hathor,
and, come all the women of the world, we fly not.”</p>
<p>“Ye are mad indeed,” said Rei, and sped on.</p>
<p>He passed the gates, the gates clashed behind him. He won the outer space, and
hiding in the shadows of the Temple walls, looked forth. The night was dark,
but from every side a thousand lights poured down towards the Shrine. On they
came like lanterns on the waters of Sihor at the night of the feast of
lanterns. Now he could see their host. It was the host of the women of Tanis,
and every woman bore a lighted torch. They came by tens, by hundreds, and by
thousands, and before them was Meriamun, seated in a golden chariot, and with
them were asses, oxen, and camels, laden with bitumen, wood, and reeds. Now
they gained the gates, and now they crashed them in with battering trees of
palm. The gates fell, the women poured through them. At their head went
Meriamun the Queen. Bidding certain of them stay by her chariot she passed
through, and standing at the inner gates called aloud to the priests to throw
them wide.</p>
<p>“Who art thou who darest come up with fire against the holy Temple of the
Hathor?” asked the guardian of the gates.</p>
<p>“I am Meriamun, the Queen of Khem,” she answered, “come with
the women of Tanis to slay the Witch thou guardest. Throw the gates wide, or
die with the Witch.”</p>
<p>“If indeed thou art the Queen,” answered the priest, “here
there sits a greater Queen than thou. Go back! Go back, Meriamun, who art not
afraid to offer violence to the immortal Gods. Go back! lest the curse smite
thee.”</p>
<p>“Draw on! draw on! ye women,” cried Meriamun; “draw on, smite
down the gates, and tear these wicked ones limb from limb.”</p>
<p>Then the women screamed aloud and battered on the gates with trees, so that
they fell. They fell and the women rushed in madly. They seized the priests of
Hathor and tore them limb from limb as dogs tear a wolf. Now the Shrine stood
before them.</p>
<p>“Touch not the doors,” cried Meriamun. “Bring fire and burn
the Shrine with her who dwells therein. Touch not the doors, look not in the
Witch’s face, but burn her where she is with fire.”</p>
<p>Then the women brought the reeds and the wood, and piled them around the Shrine
to twice the height of a man. They brought ladders also, and piled the fuel
upon the roof of the Shrine till all was covered. And they poured pitch over
the fuel, and then at the word of Meriamun they cast torches on the pitch and
drew back screaming. For a moment the torches smouldered, then suddenly on
every side great tongues of flame leapt up to heaven. Now the Shrine was
wrapped in fire, and yet they cast fuel on it till none might draw near because
of the heat. Now it burned as a furnace burns, and now the fire reached the
fuel on the roof. It caught, and the Shrine was but a sheet of raging flame
that lit the white-walled city, and the broad face of the waters, as the sun
lights the lands. The alabaster walls of the Shrine turned whiter yet with
heat: they cracked and split till the fabric tottered to its fall.</p>
<p>“Now there is surely an end of the Witch,” cried Meriamun, and the
women screamed an answer to her.</p>
<p>But even as they screamed a great tongue of flame shot out through the molten
doors, ten fathoms length and more, it shot like a spear of fire. Full in its
path stood a group of the burners. It struck them, it licked them up, and lo!
they fell in blackened heaps upon the ground.</p>
<p>Rei looked down the path of the flame. There, in the doorway whence it had
issued, stood the Golden Hathor, wrapped round with fire, and the molten metal
of the doors crept about her feet. There she stood in the heart of the fire,
but there was no stain of fire on her, nor on her white robes, nor on her
streaming hair; and even through the glow of the furnace he saw the light of
the Red Star at her breast. The flame licked her form and face, it wrapped
itself around her, and curled through the masses of her hair. But still she
stood unharmed, while the burners shrank back amazed, all save Meriamun the
Queen. And as she stood she sang wild and sweet, and the sound of her singing
came through the roar of the flames and reached the ears of the women, who,
forgetting their rage, clung to one another in fear. Thus she sang—of
that Beauty which men seek in all women, and never find, and of the eternal war
for her sake between the women and the men, which is the great war of the
world. And thus her song ended:</p>
<p class="poem">
“Will ye bring flame to burn my Shrine<br/>
Who am myself a flame,<br/>
Bring death to tame this charm of mine<br/>
That death can never tame?<br/>
Will ye bring fire to harm my head<br/>
Who am myself a fire,<br/>
Bring vengeance for your Lovers dead<br/>
Upon the World’s Desire?<br/>
<br/>
Nay, women while the earth endures,<br/>
Your loves are not your own.<br/>
They love you not, these loves of yours,<br/>
<i>Helen</i> they love alone!<br/>
My face they seek in every face,<br/>
Mine eyes in yours they see,<br/>
They do but kneel to you a space,<br/>
And rise and follow <i>me!</i>”</p>
<p>Then, still singing, she stepped forward from the Shrine, and as she went the
walls fell in, and the roof crashed down upon the ruin and the flames shot up
into the very sky. Helen heeded it not. She looked not back, but out to the
gates beyond. She glanced not at the fierce blackened faces of the women, nor
on the face of Meriamun, who stood before her, but slowly passed towards the
gates. Nor did she go alone, for with her came a canopy of fire, hedging her
round with flame that burned from nothing. The women saw the wonder and fell
down in their fear, covering their eyes. Meriamun alone fell not, but she too
must cover her eyes because of the glory of Helen and the fierceness of the
flame that wrapped her round.</p>
<p>Now Helen ceased singing, but moved slowly through the courts till she came to
the outer gates. Here by the gates was the chariot of Meriamun. Then Helen
called aloud, and the Queen, who followed, heard her words:</p>
<p>“Rei,” she cried, “draw nigh and have no fear. Draw nigh that
I may pass with thee down that path the Wanderer treads. Draw nigh, and let us
swiftly hence, for the hero’s last battle is at hand, and I would greet
him ere he die.”</p>
<p>Rei heard her and drew near trembling, tearing from him the woman’s weeds
he wore, and showing the priest’s garb beneath. And as he came the fire
that wrapped her glory round left her, and passed upward like a cloak of flame.
She stretched out her hand to him, saying:</p>
<p>“Lead me to yonder chariot, Rei, and let us hence.”</p>
<p>Then he led her to the chariot, while those who stood by fled in fear. She
mounted the chariot, and he set himself beside her. Then he grasped the reins
and called to the horses, and they bounded forward and were lost in the night.</p>
<p>But Meriamun cried in her wrath:</p>
<p>“The Witch is gone, gone with my own servant whom she hath led astray.
Bring chariots, and let horsemen come with the chariots, for where she passes
there I will follow, ay, to the end of the world and the coast of Death.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap26"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII.<br/> THE LAST FIGHT OF ODYSSEUS, LAERTES’ SON</h2>
<p>Now the host of Pharaoh marched forth from On, to do battle with the Nine-bow
barbarians. And before the host marched, the Captains came to the Wanderer,
according to the command of Pharaoh, and placing their hands in his, swore to
do his bidding on the march and in the battle. They brought him the great black
bow of Eurytus, and his keen sword of bronze, Euryalus’ gift, and many a
sheaf of arrows, and his heart rejoiced when he saw the goodly weapon. He took
the bow and tried it, and as he drew the string, once again and for the last
time it sang shrilly of death to be. The Captains heard the Song of the Bow,
though what it said the Wanderer knew alone, for to their ears it came but as a
faint, keen cry, like the cry of one who drowns in the water far from the
kindly earth. But they marvelled much at the wonder, and said one to another
that this man was no mortal, but a God come from the Under-world.</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer mounted the chariot of bronze that had been made ready for
him, and gave the word to march.</p>
<p>All night the host marched swiftly, and at day-break they camped beneath the
shelter of a long, low hill. But at the sunrise the Wanderer left the host,
climbed the hill with certain of the Captains, and looked forth. Before him was
a great pass in the mountains, ten furlongs or more in length, and through it
ran the road. The sides of the mountain sloped down to the road, and were
strewn with rocks split by the sun, polished by the sand, and covered over with
bush that grew sparsely, like the hair on the limbs of a man. To the left of
the mountains lay the river Sihor, but none might pass between the mountain and
the river. The Wanderer descended from the hill, and while the soldiers ate,
drove swiftly in his chariot to the further end of the pass and looked forth
again. Here the river curved to the left, leaving a wide plain, and on the
plain he saw the host of the Nine-bow barbarians, the mightiest host that ever
his eyes had looked upon. They were encamped by nations, and of each nation
there was twenty thousand men, and beyond the glittering camp of the barbarians
he saw the curved ships of the Achæans. They were drawn up on the beach of the
great river, as many a year ago he had seen them drawn up on the shore that is
by Ilios. He looked upon plain and pass, on mountain and river, and measured
the number of the foe. Then his heart was filled with the lust of battle, and
his warlike cunning awoke. For of all leaders he was the most skilled in the
craft of battle, and he desired that this, his last war, should be the greatest
war of all.</p>
<p>Turning his horses’ heads, he galloped back to the host of Pharaoh and
mustered them in battle array. It was but a little number as against the number
of the barbarians—twelve thousand spearmen, nine thousand archers, two
thousand horsemen, and three hundred chariots. The Wanderer passed up and down
their ranks, bidding them be of good courage, for this day they should sweep
the barbarians from the land.</p>
<p>As he spoke a hawk flew down from the right, and fell on a heron, and slew it
in mid-air. The host shouted, for the hawk is the Holy Bird of Ra, and the
Wanderer, too, rejoiced in the omen. “Look, men,” he cried;
“the Bird of Ra has slain the wandering thief from the waters. And so
shall ye smite the spoilers from the sea.”</p>
<p>Then he held counsel with Captains, and certain trusty men were sent out to the
camp of the barbarians. And they were charged to give an ill report of the host
of Pharaoh, and to say that such of it as remained awaited the barbarian onset
behind the shelter of the hill on the further side of the pass.</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer summoned the Captains of the archers, and bade them hide all
their force among the rocks and thorns on either side of the mountain pass, and
there to wait till he drew the hosts of the foe into the pass. And with the
archers he sent a part of the spearmen, but the chariots he hid beneath the
shelter of the hill on the hither side of the pass.</p>
<p>Now, when the ambush was set, and all were gone save the horsemen only, his
spies came in and told him that the host of the barbarians marched from their
camp, but that the Achæans marched not, but stopped by the river to guard the
camp and ships. Then the Wanderer bade the horsemen ride through the pass and
stand in the plain beyond, and there await the foe. But when the hosts of the
barbarians charged them, they must reel before the charge, and at length fly
headlong down the pass as though in fear. And he himself would lead the flight
in his chariot, and where he led there they should follow.</p>
<p>So the horsemen rode through the pass and formed their squadrons on the plain
beyond. Now the foe drew nigh, and a glorious sight it was to see the midday
sun sparkling on their countless spears. Of horsemen they had no great number,
but there were many chariots and swordsmen, and spearmen, and slingers beyond
count. They came on by nations, and in the centre of the host of each nation
sat the king of the nation in a glorious chariot, with girls and eunuchs,
holding fans to fan him with and awnings of silk to hide him from the sun.</p>
<p>Now the Wanderer hung back behind the squadrons of horsemen as though in fear.
But presently he sent messengers bidding the Captains of the squadrons to
charge the first nation, and fight for a while but feebly, and then when they
saw him turn his horses and gallop through the pass, to follow after him as
though in doubt, but in such fashion as to draw the foe upon their heels.</p>
<p>This the Captains of the mercenaries did. Once they charged and were beaten
back, then they charged again, but the men made as though they feared the
onset. Now the foe came hard after them, and the Wanderer turned his chariot
and fled through the pass, followed slowly by the horsemen. And when the hosts
of the barbarians saw them turn, they set up a mighty shout of laughter that
rent the skies, and charged after them.</p>
<p>But the Wanderer looked back and laughed also. Now he was through the pass
followed by the horsemen, and after them swept the hosts of the barbarians,
like a river that has burst its banks. Still the Wanderer held his hand till
the whole pass was choked with the thousands of the foe, ay, until the half of
the first of the nations had passed into the narrow plain that lay between the
hill and the mouth of the pass. Then, driving apace up the hill, he stood in
his chariot and gave the signal. Lifting his golden shield on high he flashed
it thrice, and all the horsemen shouted aloud. At the first flash, behold, from
behind every rock and bush of the mountain sides arose the helms of armed men.
At the second flash there came a rattling sound of shaken quivers, and at the
third flash of the golden shield, the air was darkened with the flight of
arrows. As the sea-birds on a lonely isle awake at the cry of the sailor, and
wheel by thousands from their lofty cliffs, so at the third flash of the
Wanderer’s shield the arrows of his hidden host rushed downward on the
foe, rattling like hail upon the harness. For awhile they kept their ranks, and
pressed on over the bodies of those that fell. But soon the horses in the
chariots, maddened with wounds, plunged this way and that, breaking their
companies and trampling the soldiers down. Now some strove to fly forward, and
some were fain to fly back, and many an empty chariot was dragged this way and
that, but ever the pitiless rain of shafts poured down, and men fell by
thousands beneath the gale of death. Now the mighty host of the Nine-bows
rolled back, thinned and shattered, towards the plain, and now the Wanderer
cried the word of onset to the horsemen and to the chariots that drew from
behind the shelter of the hill, and following after him they charged down upon
those barbarians who had passed the ambush, singing the song of Pentaur as they
charged. Among those nigh the mouth of the pass was the king of the nation of
the Libu, a great man, black and terrible to see. The Wanderer drew his bow,
the arrow rushed forth and pierced the king, and he fell dead in his chariot.
Then those of his host who passed the ambush turned to fly, but the chariot of
the Wanderer dashed into them, and after the chariot came the horsemen, and
after the horsemen the chariots of Pharaoh.</p>
<p>Now all who were left of the broken host rolled back, mad with fear, while the
spearmen of Pharaoh galled them as hunters gall a flying bull, and the horsemen
of Pharaoh trampled them beneath their feet. Red slaughter raged all down the
pass, helms, banners, arrow-points shone and fell in the stream of the tide of
war, but at length the stony way was clear save for the dead alone. Beyond the
pass the plain was black with flying men, and the fragments of the broken
nations were mixed together as clay and sand are mixed of the potter. Where now
were the hosts of the Nine-bow barbarians? Where now were their glory and their
pride?</p>
<p>The Wanderer gathered his footmen and his chariots and set them in array again
but the horsemen he sent out to smite the flying nations and wait his coming by
the camp; for there were mustering those who were left of the nations,
perchance twenty thousand men, and before their ships were ranged the dense
ranks of the Achæans, shield to shield, every man in his place.</p>
<p>The Wanderer led his host slowly across the sandy plain, till at length he
halted it two bow-shots from the camp of the barbarians. The camp was shaped
like a bow, and the river Sihor formed its string, and round it was a deep
ditch and beyond the ditch a wall of clay. Moreover, within the camp and nearer
to the shore there was a second ditch and wall, and behind it were the beaks of
the ships and the host of Aquaiusha, even of his own dear people the Achæans.
There were the old blazons, and the spears that had fought below Troy town.
There were the two lions of Mycenæ, the Centaur of the son of Polypaetas, son
of Pirithous; there were the Swan of Lacedæmon, and the Bull of the Kings of
Crete, the Rose of Rhodes, the Serpent of Athens, and many another knightly
bearing of old friends and kindred dear. And now they were the blazons of
foemen, and the Wanderer warred for a strange king, and for his own hand,
beneath the wings of the Hawk of the Legion of Ra.</p>
<p>The Wanderer sent heralds forward, calling to those barbarians who swarmed
behind the wall to surrender to the host of Pharaoh, but this, being entrenched
by the river Sihor, they would in nowise do. For they were mad because of their
slaughtered thousands, and moreover they knew that it is better to die than to
live as slaves. This they saw also, that their host was still as strong as the
host of Pharaoh, which was without the wall, and weary with the heat and stress
of battle and the toil of marching through the desert sands. Now the Captains
of the host of Pharaoh came to the Wanderer, praying him that he would do no
more battle on that day, because the men were weary, and the horses neighed for
food and water.</p>
<p>But he answered them: “I swore to Pharaoh that I would utterly smite the
people of the Nine-bows and drive them down to death, so that the coasts of
Khem may be free of them. Here I may not camp the host, without food or pasture
for the horses, and if I go back, the foe will gather heart and come on, and
with them the fleet of the Achæans, and no more shall we lure them into ambush,
for therein they have learned a lesson. Nay, get you to your companies. I will
go up against the camp.”</p>
<p>Then they bowed and went, for having seen his deeds and his skill and craft in
war, they held him the first of Captains, and dared not say him nay.</p>
<p>So the Wanderer divided his host into three parts, set it in order of battle,
and moved up against the camp. But he himself went with the centre part against
the gate of the camp, for here there was an earthen way for chariots, if but
the great gates might be passed. And at a word the threefold host rushed on to
the charge. But those within the walls shot them with spears and arrows, so
that many were slain, and they were rolled back from the wall as a wave is
rolled from the cliff. Again the Wanderer bade them charge on the right and
left, bearing the dead before them as shields, and hurling corpses into the
ditch to fill it. But he himself hung back awhile with the middle army,
watching how the battle went, and waiting till the foe at the gate should be
drawn away.</p>
<p>Now the mercenaries of Pharaoh forced a passage on the right and thither went
many of the barbarians who watched the gate, that they might drive them back.</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer bade men take out the poles of chariots and follow him and
beat down the gates with the poles. This with much toil and loss they did, for
the archers poured their arrows on the assailants of the gate. Now at length
the gates were down, and the Wanderer rushed through them with his chariot. But
even as he passed the mercenaries of Pharaoh were driven out from the camp on
the right, and those who led the left attack fled also. The soldiers who should
have followed the Wanderer saw and wavered a little moment, and while they
wavered the companies of the barbarians poured into the gateway and held it so
that none might pass. Now the Wanderer was left alone within the camp, and back
he might not go. But fear came not nigh him, nay, the joy of battle filled his
mighty heart. He cast his shield upon the brazen floor of the chariot, and
cried aloud to the charioteer, as he loosened the long grey shafts in his
quiver.</p>
<p>“Drive on, thou charioteer! Drive on! The jackals leave the lion in the
toils. Drive on! Drive on! and win a glorious death, for thus should Odysseus
die.”</p>
<p>So the charioteer, praying to his Gods, lashed the horses with his scourge, and
they sprang forward madly among the foe. And as they rushed, the great bow rang
and sang the swallow string—rung the bow and sung the string, and the
lean shaft drank the blood of a leader of men. Again the string sang, again the
shaft sped forth, and a barbarian king fell from his chariot as a diver plunges
into the sea, and his teeth bit the sand.</p>
<p>“Dive deep, thou sea-thief!” cried the Wanderer, “thou mayest
find treasures there! Drive on, thou charioteer, so should lions die while
jackals watch.”</p>
<p>Now the barbarians looked on the Wanderer and were amazed. For ever his chariot
rushed to and fro, across the mustering ground of the camp, and ever his grey
shafts carried death before them, and ever the foemen’s arrows fell
blunted from his golden harness. They looked on him amazed, they cried aloud
that this was the God of War come down to do battle for Khem, that it was Sutek
the Splendid, that it was Baal in his strength; they fled amain before his
glory and his might. For the Wanderer raged among them like great Rameses
Miamun among the tribes of the Khita; like Monthu, the Lord of Battles, and lo!
they fled before him, their knees gave way, their hearts were turned to water,
he drove them as a herdsman drives the yearling calves.</p>
<p>But now at length a stone from a sling smote the charioteer who directed the
chariot, and sunk in between his eyes, so that he fell down dead from the
chariot. Then the reins flew wide, and the horses rushed this way and that,
having no master. And now a spear pierced the heart of the horse on the right,
so that he fell, and the pole of the chariot snapped in two. Then the
barbarians took heart and turned, and some of them set on to seize the body of
the charioteer, and spoil his arms. But the Wanderer leaped down and bestrode
the corpse with shield up and spear aloft.</p>
<p>Now among the press of the barbarians there was a stir, as of one thrusting his
way through them to the front. And above the plumes of their helmets and the
tossing of their shields the Wanderer saw the golden head, unhelmeted, of a
man, taller than the tallest there from the shoulders upwards. Unhelmeted he
came and unshielded, with no body armour. His flesh was very fair and white,
and on it were figures pricked in blue, figures of men and horses, snakes and
sea-beasts. The skin of a white bear was buckled above his shoulder with a
golden clasp, fashioned in the semblance of a boar. His eyes were blue, fierce
and shining, and in his hand he held for a weapon the trunk of a young
pine-tree, in which was hafted a weighty axe-head of rough unpolished stone.</p>
<p>“Give way!” he cried. “Give place, ye dusky dwarfs, and let a
man see this champion!”</p>
<p>So the barbarians made a circle about the Wanderer and the giant, and stood
silently to watch a great fight.</p>
<p>“Who art thou?” said the mighty man disdainfully, “and
whence? Where is thy city, and thy parents who begat thee?”</p>
<p>“Now I will avow that men call me Odysseus, Sacker of Cities,
Laertes’ son, a Prince of the Achæans,” said the Wanderer.
“And who art thou, I pray thee, and where is thy native place, for city,
I wot, thou hast none?”</p>
<p>Then the mighty man, swinging his great stone axe in a rhythmic motion, began
to chant a rude lay, and this was the manner of the singing—</p>
<p class="poem">
“Laestrygons men<br/>
And Cimmerians call us<br/>
Born of the land<br/>
Of the sunless winter,<br/>
Born of the land<br/>
Of the nightless summer:<br/>
Cityless, we,<br/>
Beneath dark pine boughs,<br/>
By the sea abiding<br/>
Sail o’er the swan’s bath.<br/>
<i>Wolf</i> am I hight,<br/>
The son of Signy,<br/>
Son of the were-wolf.<br/>
Southwards I sailed,<br/>
Sailed with the amber,<br/>
Sailed with the foam-wealth.<br/>
Among strange peoples,<br/>
Winning me wave-flame,[*]<br/>
Winning me war-fame,<br/>
Winning me women.<br/>
Soon shall I slay thee,<br/>
Sacker of Cities!”<br/>
<br/>
[*] Gold.</p>
<p>With that, and with a cry, he rushed on the Wanderer, his great axe swung
aloft, to fell him at a blow.</p>
<p>But while the giant had been singing, the Wanderer had shifted his place a
little, so that the red blaze of the setting sun was in his face. And as the
mighty man came on, the Wanderer lifted up his golden shield and caught the
sunlight on it, and flashed it full in the giant’s eyes, so that he was
dazzled, and could not see to strike. Then the Wanderer smote at his naked
right arm, and struck it on the joint of the elbow; with all his force he
smote, and the short sword of Euryalus bit deep, and the arm fell, with the axe
in the hand-grip. But so terrible was the stroke that bronze might not abide
it, and the blade was shattered from the ivory handle.</p>
<p>“Didst thou feel aught, thou Man-eater?” cried Odysseus, jeering,
for he knew from the song of the giant that he was face to face with a wanderer
from an evil race, that of old had smitten his ships and devoured his
men—the Laestrygons of the land of the Midnight Sun, the Man-eaters.</p>
<p>But the giant caught up his club of pine-tree in his left hand, the severed
right arm still clinging to it. And he gnawed on the handle of the stone axe
with his teeth, and bit the very stone, and his lips foamed, for a fury came
upon him. Roaring aloud, suddenly he smote at the Wanderer’s head, and
beat down his shield, and crushed his golden helm so that he fell on one knee,
and all was darkness around him. But his hands lit on a great stone, for the
place where they fought was the holy place of an ancient temple, old and ruined
before King Mena’s day. He grasped the stone with both hands; it was the
basalt head of a fallen statue of a God or a man, of a king long nameless, or
of a forgotten God. With a mighty strain the Wanderer lifted it as he rose, it
was a weight of a chariot’s burden, and poising it, he hurled it straight
at the breast of the Laestrygon, who had drawn back, whirling his axe, before
he smote another blow. But ere ever the stroke fell, the huge stone struck him
full and broke in his breast bone, and he staggered long, and fell like a tree,
and the black blood came up through his bearded lips, and his life left him.</p>
<p>Then the multitude of the barbarians that stood gazing at the fray drew yet
further back in fear, and the Wanderer laughed like a God at that old score
paid, and at the last great stroke of the hands of the City-sacker, Odysseus.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap27"></SPAN>CHAPTER VIII.<br/> “TILL ODYSSEUS COMES!”</h2>
<p>The Wanderer laughed like a God, though he deemed that the end was near, and
the foes within the camp and the friends without looked on him and wondered.</p>
<p>“Slay him!” cried the foes within, speaking in many tongues.
“Slay him!” they cried, and yet they feared the task, but circled
round like hounds about a mighty boar at bay.</p>
<p>“Spare him!” shouted the host of the Achæans, watching the fray
from far, as they stood behind their inner wall, for as yet they had not
mingled in the battle but stayed by their ships to guard them.</p>
<p>“Rescue!” cried the Captains of Pharaoh without, but none came on
to force the way.</p>
<p>Then of a sudden, as Fate hung upon the turn, a great cry of fear and wonder
rose from the ranks of Pharaoh’s host beyond the wall. It swelled and
swelled till at length the cry took the sound of a name—the sound of the
name of <i>Hathor</i>.</p>
<p>“The Hathor! the Hathor! See, the Hathor comes!”</p>
<p>The Wanderer turned his head and looked swiftly. A golden chariot sped down the
slope of sand towards the gate of the camp. The milk-white horses were stained
with sweat and splashed with blood. They thundered on towards the gate down the
way that was red with blood, as the horses of the dawn rush through the
blood-red sky. A little man, withered and old, drove the chariot, leaning
forward as he drove, and by his side stood the Golden Helen. The Red Star
blazed upon her breast, her hair and filmy robes floated on the wind.</p>
<p>She looked up and forth. Now she saw him, Odysseus of Ithaca, her love, alone,
beset with foes, and a cry broke from her. She tore away the veil that hid her
face, and her beauty flashed out upon the sight of men as the moon flashes from
the evening mists. She pointed to the gate, she stretched out her arms towards
the host of Pharaoh, bidding them look upon her and follow her. Then a shout
went up from the host, and they rushed onwards in the path of the chariot, for
where the Helen leads there men must follow through Life to Death, through War
to Peace.</p>
<p>On the chariot rushed to the camp, and after it the host of Pharaoh followed.
The holders of the gate saw the beauty of her who rode in the chariot; they
cried aloud in many tongues that the Goddess of Love had come to save the God
of War. They fled this way and that, or stood drunken with the sight of beauty,
and were dashed down by the horses and crushed of the chariot wheels. Now she
had passed the gates, and after her poured the host of Pharaoh. Now Rei reined
up the horses by the broken chariot of the Wanderer, and now the Wanderer, with
a shout of joy, had sprung into the chariot of Helen.</p>
<p>“And art thou come to be with me in my last battle?” he whispered
in her ear. “Art thou indeed that Argive Helen whom I love, or am I drunk
with the blood of men and blind with the sheen of spears, and is this the
vision of a man doomed to die?”</p>
<p>“It is no vision, Odysseus, for I am Helen’s self,” she
answered gently. “I have learned all the truth, and knowing thy fault,
count it but a little thing. Yet because thou didst forget the words of the
immortal Goddess, who, being my foe now and for ever, set this cunning snare
for thee, the doom is on thee, that Helen shall not be thine in this space of
life. For thou fightest in thy last battle, Odysseus. On! see thy hosts clamour
to be led, and there the foe hangs black as storm and shoots out the lightning
of his spears. On, Odysseus, on! that the doom may be accomplished, and the
word of the Ghost fulfilled!”</p>
<p>Then the Wanderer turned and called to the Captains, and the Captains called to
the soldiers and set them in array, and following the blood-red Star they
rolled down upon the gathered foe as the tide rolls upon the rocks when the
breath of the gale is strong; and as the waters leap and gather till the rocks
are lost in the surge, so the host of Pharaoh leapt upon the foe and swallowed
them up. And ever in the forefront of the war blazed the Red Star on
Helen’s breast, and ever the sound of her singing pierced the din of
death.</p>
<p>Now the host of the Nine-bow barbarians was utterly destroyed, and the host of
Pharaoh came up against the wall that was set about the camp of the Achæans to
guard their ships, and at its head came the golden chariot wherein were the
Wanderer and Helen. The Captains of the Achæans looked wondering from their
wall, watching the slaughter of their allies.</p>
<p>“Now, who is this?” cried a Captain, “who is this clad in
golden armour fashioned like our own, who leads the host of Pharaoh to
victory?”</p>
<p>Then a certain aged leader of men looked forth and answered:</p>
<p>“Such armour I have known indeed, and such a man once wore it. The armour
is fashioned like the armour of Paris, Priam’s son—Paris of Ilios;
but Paris hath long been dead.”</p>
<p>“And who is she,” cried the Captain, “she on whose breast a
Red Star burns, who rides in the chariot of him with the golden armour, whose
shape is the shape of Beauty, and who sings aloud while men go down to
death?”</p>
<p>Then the aged leader of men looked forth again and answered:</p>
<p>“Such a one have I known, indeed; so she was wont to sing, and hers was
such a shape of beauty, and such a Star shone ever on her breast. Helen of
Ilios—Argive Helen it was who wore it—Helen, because of whose
loveliness the world grew dark with death; but long is Helen dead.”</p>
<p>Now the Wanderer glanced from his chariot and saw the crests of the Achæans and
the devices on the shields of men with whose fathers he had fought beneath the
walls of Ilios. He saw and his heart was stirred within him, so that he wept
there in the chariot.</p>
<p>“Alas! for the fate that is on me,” he cried, “that I must
make my last battle in the service of a stranger against my own people and the
children of my own dear friends.”</p>
<p>“Weep not, Odysseus,” said Helen, “for Fate drives thee
on—Fate that is cruel and changeless, and heeds not the loves or hates of
men. Weep not, Odysseus, but go on up against the Achæans, for from among them
thy death comes.”</p>
<p>So the Wanderer went on, sick at heart, shooting no shafts and striking no
blow, and after him came the remnant of the host of Pharaoh. Then he halted the
host, and at his bidding Rei drove slowly down the wall seeking a place to
storm it, and as he drove they shot at the chariot from the wall with spears
and slings and arrows. But not yet was the Wanderer doomed. He took no hurt,
nor did any hurt come to Rei nor to the horses that drew the chariot, and as
for Helen, the shafts of Death knew her and turned aside. Now while they drove
thus Rei told the Wanderer of the death of Pharaoh, of the burning of the
Temple of Hathor, and of the flight of Helen. The Wanderer hearkened and said
but one thing, for in all this he saw the hand of Fate.</p>
<p>“It is time to make an end, Rei, for soon will Meriamun be seeking us,
and methinks that I have left a trail that she can follow,” and he nodded
at the piled-up dead that stretched further than the eye could reach.</p>
<p>Now they were come over against that spot in the wall where stood the aged
Captain of the Achæans, who had likened the armour of the Wanderer to the
armour of Paris, and the beauty of her at his side to the beauty of Argive
Helen.</p>
<p>The Captain loosed his bow at the chariot, and leaning forward watched the
flight of the shaft. It rushed straight at Helen’s breast, then of a
sudden turned aside, harming her not. And as he marvelled she lifted her face
and looked towards him. Then he saw and knew her for that Helen whom he had
seen while he served with Cretan Idomeneus in the Argive ships, when the
leaguer was done and the smoke went up from burning Ilios.</p>
<p>Again he looked, and lo! on the Wanderer’s golden shield he saw the White
Bull, the device of Paris, son of Priam, as ofttimes he had seen it glitter on
the walls of Troy. Then great fear took him, and he lifted up his hands and
cried aloud:</p>
<p>“Fly, ye Achæans! Fly! Back to your curved ships and away from this
accursed land. For yonder in the chariot stands Argive Helen, who is long dead,
and with her Paris, son of Priam, come to wreak the woes of Ilios on the sons
of those who wasted her. Fly, ere the curse smite you.”</p>
<p>Then a great cry of fear rose from the host of the Achæans, as company called
to company that the ghosts of Paris of Ilios and Argive Helen led the armies of
Pharaoh on to victory. A moment they gazed as frightened sheep gaze upon the
creeping wolves, then turning from the wall, they rushed headlong to their
ships.</p>
<p>Behind them came the soldiers of Pharaoh, storming the walls and tearing at
their flanks as wolves tear the flying sheep. Then the Achæans turned at bay,
and a mighty fray raged round the ships, and the knees of many were loosened.
And of the ships, some were burned and some were left upon the bank. But a
remnant of them were pushed off into the deep water, and hung there on their
oars waiting for the end of the fray.</p>
<p>Now the sun was gone down, so that men could scarce see to slay each other. The
Wanderer stood his chariot on the bank, watching the battle, for he was weary,
and had little mind to swell the slaughter of the people of his own land.</p>
<p>Now the last ship was pushed off, and at length the great battle was done. But
among those on the ship was a man still young, and the goodliest and mightiest
among all the host of the Achæans. By his own strength and valour he had held
the Egyptians back while his comrades ran the curved ship down the beach, and
the Wanderer, looking on him, deemed him their hardiest warrior and most worthy
of the Achæans.</p>
<p>He stood upon the poop of the ship, and saw the light from the burning vessels
gleam on the Wanderer’s golden helm. Then of a sudden he drew a mighty
bow and loosed an arrow charged with death.</p>
<p>“This gift to the Ghost of Paris from Telegonus, son of Circe and of
Odysseus, who was Paris’ foe,” he cried with a loud voice.</p>
<p>And as he cried it, and as the fateful words struck on the ears of Odysseus and
the ears of Helen, the shaft, pointed by the Gods, rushed on. It rushed on, it
smote the Wanderer with a deadly wound where the golden body-plate of his
harness joined the taslets, and pierced him through. Then he knew that his fate
was accomplished, and that death came upon him from the water, as the ghost of
Tiresias in Hades had foretold. In his pain, for the last time of all, he let
fall his shield and the black bow of Eurytus. With one hand he clasped the rail
of the chariot and the other he threw about the neck of the Golden Helen, who
bent beneath his weight like a lily before the storm. Then he also cried aloud
in answer:</p>
<p>“Oh, Telegonus, son of Circe, what wickedness hast thou wrought before
the awful Gods that this curse should have been laid upon thee to slay him who
begat thee? Hearken, thou son of Circe, I am not Paris, I am Odysseus of
Ithaca, who begat thee, and thou hast brought my death upon me from the water,
as the Ghost foretold.”</p>
<p>When Telegonus heard these words, and knew that he had slain his father, the
famed Odysseus, whom he had sought the whole world through, he would have cast
himself into the river, there to drown, but those with him held him by
strength, and the stream took the curved ship and floated it away. And thus for
the first and last time did the Gods give it to Telegonus to look upon the face
and hear the voice of his father, Odysseus.</p>
<p>But when the Achæans knew that it was the lost Odysseus who had led the host of
Pharaoh against the armies of the Nine Nations, they wondered no more at the
skill of the ambush and the greatness of the victory of Pharaoh.</p>
<p class="p2">
Now the chariots of Meriamun were pursuing, and they splashed through the blood
of men in the pass, and rolled over the bodies of men in the plain beyond the
pass. They came to the camps and found them peopled with dead, and lit with the
lamps of the blazing ships of the Aquaiusha. Then Meriamun cried aloud:</p>
<p>“Surely Pharaoh grew wise before he died, for there is but one man on the
earth who with so small a force could have won so great a fray. He hath saved
the crown of Khem, and by Osiris he shall wear it.”</p>
<p>Now the chariots of Meriamun had passed the camp of the barbarians, and were
come to the inner camp of the Achæans, and the soldiers shouted as she came
driving furiously.</p>
<p>The Wanderer lay dying on the ground, there by the river-bank, and the light of
the burning ships flamed on his golden armour, and on the Star at Helen’s
breast.</p>
<p>“Why do the soldiers shout?” he asked, lifting his head from
Helen’s breast.</p>
<p>“They shout because Meriamun the Queen is come,” Rei answered.</p>
<p>“Let her come,” said the Wanderer.</p>
<p>Now Meriamun sprang from her chariot and walked, through the soldiers who made
way, bowing before her royalty, to where the Wanderer lay, and stood speechless
looking on him.</p>
<p>But the Wanderer lifting his head spake faintly:</p>
<p>“Hail! O Queen!” he said, “I have accomplished the charge
that Pharaoh laid upon me. The host of the Nine-bow barbarians is utterly
destroyed, the fleet of the Aquaiusha is burned, or fled, the land of Khem is
free from foes. Where is Pharaoh, that I may make report to him ere I
die?”</p>
<p>“Pharaoh is dead, Odysseus,” she answered. “Oh, live on! live
on! and thyself thou shalt be Pharaoh.”</p>
<p>“Ay, Meriamun the Queen,” answered the Wanderer, “I know all.
The Pharaoh is dead! Thou didst slay Pharaoh, thinking thus to win me for thy
Lord, me, who am won of Death. Heavily shall the blood of Pharaoh lie upon thee
in that land whither I go, Meriamun, and whither thou must follow swiftly. Thou
didst slay Pharaoh, and Helen, who through thy guile is lost to me, thou
wouldst have slain also, but thou couldst not harm her immortality. And now I
die, and this is the end of all these Loves and Wars and Wanderings. My death
has come upon me from the water.”</p>
<p>Meriamun stood speechless, for her heart was torn in two, so that in her grief
she forgot even her rage against Helen and Rei the Priest.</p>
<p>Then Helen spoke. “Thou diest indeed, Odysseus, yet it is but for a
little time, for thou shalt come again and find me waiting.”</p>
<p>“Ay, Odysseus,” said the Queen, “and I also will come again,
and thou shalt love me then. Oh, now the future opens, and I know the things
that are to be. Beneath the Wings of Truth shall we meet again,
Odysseus.”</p>
<p>“There shall we meet again, Odysseus, and there thou shalt draw the Veil
of Truth,” said the Helen.</p>
<p>“Yea,” quoth the dying Wanderer; “there or otherwhere shall
we meet again, and there and otherwhere love and hate shall lose and win, and
die to arise again. But not yet is the struggle ended that began in other
worlds than this, and shall endure till evil is lost in good, and darkness
swallowed up in light. Bethink thee, Meriamun, of that vision of thy bridal
night, and read its riddle. Lo! I will answer it with my last breath as the
Gods have given me wisdom. When we three are once more twain, then shall our
sin be purged and peace be won, and the veil be drawn from the face of Truth.
Oh, Helen, fare thee well! I have sinned against thee, I have sworn by the
Snake who should have sworn by the Star, and therefore I have lost thee.”</p>
<p>“Thou hast but lost to find again beyond the Gateways of the West,”
she answered low.</p>
<p>Then she bent down, and taking him in her arms, kissed him, whispering in his
ear, and the blood of men that fell ever from the Star upon her breast, dropped
like dew upon his brow, and vanished as it dropped.</p>
<p>And as she whispered of joy to be, and things too holy to be written, the face
of the Wanderer grew bright, like the face of a God.</p>
<p>Then suddenly his head fell back, and he was dead, dead upon the heart of the
World’s Desire. For thus was fulfilled the oath of Idalian Aphrodite, and
thus at the last did Odysseus lie in the arms of the Golden Helen.</p>
<p class="p2">
Now Meriamun clasped her breast, and her lips turned white with pain. But Helen
rose, and standing at the Wanderer’s head looked on Meriamun, who stood
at his feet.</p>
<p>“My sister,” said Helen to the Queen; “see now the end of
all. He whom we loved is lost to us, and what hast thou gained? Nay, look not
so fiercely on me. I may not be harmed of thee, as thou hast seen, and thou
mayest not be harmed of me, who would harm none, though ever thou wilt hate me
who hate thee not, and till thou learnest to love me, Sin shall be thy portion
and Bitterness thy comfort.”</p>
<p>But Meriamun spoke no word.</p>
<p>Then Helen beckoned to Rei and spake to him, and Rei went weeping to do her
bidding.</p>
<p>Presently he returned again, and with him were soldiers bearing torches. The
soldiers lifted up the body of the Wanderer, and bore it to a mighty pyre that
was built up of the wealth of the barbarians, of chariots, spears, and the oars
of ships, of wondrous fabrics, and costly furniture. And they laid the Wanderer
on the pyre, and on his breast they laid the black bow of Eurytus.</p>
<p>Then Helen spoke to Rei once more, and Rei took a torch and fired the pyre so
that smoke and flame burst from it. And all the while Meriamun stood by as one
who dreams.</p>
<p>Now the great pyre was a mass of flame, and the golden armour of the Wanderer
shone through the flame, and the black bow twisted and crumbled in the heat.
Then of a sudden Meriamun gave a great cry, and tearing the snake girdle from
her middle hurled it on the flames.</p>
<p>“From fire thou camest, thou Ancient Evil,” she said in a dead
tongue; “to fire get thee back again, false counsellor.”</p>
<p>But Rei the Priest called aloud in the same tongue:</p>
<p>“An ill deed thou hast done, O Queen, for thou hast taken the Snake to
thy bosom, and where the Snake passes there thou must follow.”</p>
<p>Even as he spoke the face of Meriamun grew fixed, and she was drawn slowly
towards the fire, as though by invisible hands. Now she stood on its very
brink, and now with one loud wail she plunged into it and cast herself at
length on the body of the Wanderer.</p>
<p>And as she lay there on the body, behold the Snake awoke in the fire. It awoke,
it grew, it twined itself about the body of Meriamun and the body of the
Wanderer, and lifting its head, it laughed.</p>
<p>Then the fire fell in, and the Wanderer and Meriamun the Queen, and the Snake
that wrapped them round, vanished in the heart of the flames.</p>
<p>For awhile the Golden Helen stood still, looking on the dying fire. Then she
let her veil fall, and turning, wandered forth into the desert and the night,
singing as she passed.</p>
<p>And so she goes, wandering, wandering, till Odysseus comes again.</p>
<p class="p2">
Now this is the tale that I, Rei the Priest, have been bidden to set forth
before I lay me down to sleep in my splendid tomb that I have made ready by
Thebes. Let every man read it as he will, and every woman as the Gods have
given her wit.</p>
<p class="center">
THE END</p>
<p class="center">
PALINODE</p>
<p class="poem">
Thou that of old didst blind Stesichorus,<br/>
If e’er, sweet Helen, such a thing befell,<br/>
We pray thee of thy grace, be good to us,<br/>
Though little in our tale accordeth well<br/>
With that thine ancient minstrel had to tell,<br/>
Who saw, with sightless eyes grown luminous,<br/>
These Ilian sorrows, and who heard the swell<br/>
Of ocean round the world ring thunderous,<br/>
And thy voice break when knightly Hector fell!<br/>
<br/>
And thou who all these many years hast borne<br/>
To see the great webs of the weaving torn<br/>
By puny hands of dull, o’er-learned men,<br/>
Homer, forgive us that thy hero’s star<br/>
Once more above sea waves and waves of war,<br/>
Must rise, must triumph, and must set again!</p>
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