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"Our working people are terribly oppressed by the great," whispered Pentuer.
"Devotion has decreased," added Mefres.
"There are many who sigh for a foreign war," began Herhor. "I have seen this long time that we cannot carry on one, unless ten years hence--"
"Then will ye conclude a treaty with a.s.syria?" inquired the Chaldean.
"Amon, who knows my heart," answered Herhor, "knows how repugnant that treaty is to me. It is not so long since those vile a.s.syrians paid us tribute. But if thou, holy father, and the highest college say that the fates are against us, we must make the treaty."
"We must indeed," added Mefres.
"In that case inform the priests in Babylon of your decision, and they will arrange that King a.s.sar shall send an emba.s.sy to Egypt. This treaty, believe me, is of great advantage; without war ye will increase your possessions. Indeed our priesthood have given deep thought to this question."
"May all blessings fall on you, wealth, power, and wisdom," said Mefres. "Yes, we must raise our priestly order, and do thou, holy Beroes, a.s.sist us."
"There is need, above all, to a.s.suage the suffering of the people,"
put in Pentuer.
"The priests! the people!" said Herhor, as if to himself. "Above all, it is needful in this case to restrain those who wish war. It is true that his holiness the pharaoh is with me, and I think I have gained influence over the heir,--may he live through eternity! But Nitager, to whom war is as water to a fish; but the leaders of our mercenary forces, who only in war have significance; but our aristocracy, who think that war will pay Phnician debts and give them property--"
"Meanwhile earth-tillers are fainting beneath an avalanche of labor, and public workmen are revolting against demands of overseers," added Pentuer.
"He is always expressing his thought!" said Herhor, in meditation.
"Think thou, Pentuer, of earth-tillers and laborers; thou, Mefres, of the priests. I know not what ye will effect, but I swear that if my own son favored war I would bind and destroy him."
"Act in this way," said Beroes,--"let him carry on war who wishes, but not in those regions where he can meet a.s.syria."
With this the session ended. The Chaldean put his scarf on his shoulder and the veil on his face; Mefres and Herhor, one on each side of him, and behind him Pentuer, all turned toward the altar.
When Beroes had crossed his hands on his breast, he whispered, and again subterranean disturbance set in, and they heard as it were a distant uproar, which astonished the a.s.sistants.
"Baralanensis, Baldachiensis, Paumachiae," said the seer, aloud, "I summon thee to witness our stipulations and support our wishes."
The sound of trumpets was heard so distinctly that Mefres bowed to the earth, Herhor looked around in astonishment, while Pentuer knelt, fell to trembling, and covered his ears.
The purple curtain at the altar shook, and its folds took such a form as if a man were behind who wished to pa.s.s through it.
"Be witnesses," cried the Chaldean, in a changed voice, "ye powers above and ye powers beneath! And cursed be he who observes not this treaty or betrays its secret."
"Cursed!" repeated some voice.
"And destroyed!"
"And destroyed."
"In this visible and in that invisible life. By the ineffable name of Jehovah, at the sound of which the earth trembles, the sea draws back, fire quenches, and the elements of nature become evident."
A real tempest rose in the cave. The sound of trumpets was mingled with voices, as it were, of distant thunders.
The curtain of the altar rose almost horizontally, and behind it, amid glittering lightning, appeared wonderful creatures, half human, half plant and animal, crowded and mingled together.
Suddenly all was silent, and Beroes rose slowly in the air, higher than the heads of the priests there attending.
At eight o'clock next morning Phut of Harran returned to the Phnician inn "Under the s.h.i.+p" to which his bags and casket stolen by thieves had been returned safely. A few minutes later came Asarhadon's confidential servant, whom the innkeeper took to the cellar and examined briefly,--
"Well?"
"I was all night on the square where the temple of Set is," answered the servant. "At ten in the evening out of the garden which lies about four places farther than the house of the 'Green Star,' came three priests. One of them, with black beard and hair, turned his steps through the square toward the temple of Set. I ran after him, but mist fell, and he vanished from my eyes. Whether he returned to the 'Green Star' or when, I know not."
The innkeeper, when he had heard this account, struck his forehead and muttered to himself,--
"So my man from Harran, if he dresses as a priest and goes to a temple, must be a priest; and if he wears beard and hair, he must be a Chaldean priest. But if he meets priests here in secret, there must be some rogue's tricks. I will not tell the police, for I might be caught. But I will inform some great man from Sidon, for there may be profit in this, if not for me, for our people."
Soon the other messenger returned. Asarhadon went down to the cellar with this one also, and heard the following narrative,--
"I stood all night in front of the 'Green Star.' The man of Harran was there; he got drunk and raised such shouts that the policeman warned the doorkeeper."
"Did he?" inquired the innkeeper. "The man of Harran was at the 'Green Star' all night, and thou didst see him?"
"Not only I, but the policeman."
Asarhadon brought down the first servant, and commanded each to repeat his story. They repeated the stories faithfully, with the utmost conviction. It appeared then that Phut of Harran had remained all night at the "Green Star" without leaving the place for a moment; at the same time he went to the temple of Set, and did not return from it.
"Oh," muttered Asarhadon, "in all this there is some very great villany. I must inform the elders of the Phnician society, as quickly as possible, that this. .h.i.tt.i.te knows how to be in two places at once. I shall also beg him to move out of my inn. I do not take people who have two forms,--one their own, the other in supply. For a man of that kind is a great criminal, a wizard, or a conspirator."
Asarhadon was afraid of such things; so he secured himself against enchantment by prayers to all the G.o.ds which adorned his inn. Then he hurried to the city, where he notified the elder of the Phnician society and the elder of the guild of thieves of what had happened.
Then, returning home, he summoned the decurion of police, and informed him that Phut might be a dangerous person. Finally he asked the man of Harran to leave the inn, to which he brought no profit, nothing but loss and suspicion.
Phut agreed to the proposition willingly, and informed the innkeeper that he intended to sail for Thebes that same evening.
"May thou never return!" thought the hospitable host. "May thou rot in the quarries, or fall into the river to be eaten by crocodiles."
CHAPTER XXI
Prince Rameses began his journey in the most beautiful season of the year, during the month Phamenoth (end of December and beginning of January). The river had fallen to half its height, laying bare new strips of land day by day. From Thebes many barges with wheat were sailing down toward the sea; in Lower Egypt clover and beans had been harvested. Orange and pomegranate trees were covered with blossoms; in the fields earth-tillers had sown lupines, flax, barley, and had planted various beans, cuc.u.mbers, and other garden products.
Escorted to the landing of Memphis by priests, the highest dignitaries of the state, the guards of his holiness the pharaoh, the heir entered a gilded barge about ten in the morning. Under the bridge, on which were costly tents, twenty soldiers worked the oars, at the mast and at both ends of the boat the best naval engineers had taken their places.
Some looked after the sails, others commanded the rowers, while still others steered the vessel.
Rameses had invited to his boat the most worthy high priest Mefres and the holy father Mentezufis, who were to be with him on the journey and in governing. The prince had invited also the worthy nomarch of Memphis, who conducted him to the boundary of his province.
Some hundreds of yards in front of the viceroy sailed the beautiful boat of the worthy Otoes, nomarch of Aa, a province adjoining the capital. Behind the prince came countless barges occupied by the court, by priests, by officials and officers.