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[Ill.u.s.tration: THE FERTILE VALLEY.]
In ancient Egypt, every village recognized the authority of the Village-Elders, who were old men and possessed greater experience than the young ones. These Elders selected a strong man to command their soldiers in case of war and to tell them what to do when there was a flood. They gave him a t.i.tle which distinguished him from the others.
They called him a King or a prince and obeyed his orders for their own common benefit.
Therefore in the oldest days of Egyptian history, we find the following division among the people:
The majority are peasants.
All of them are equally rich and equally poor.
They are ruled by a powerful man who is the commander-in-chief of their armies and who appoints their judges and causes roads to be built for the common benefit and comfort.
He also is the chief of the police force and catches the thieves.
In return for these valuable services he receives a certain amount of everybody's money which is called a tax. The greater part of these taxes, however, do not belong to the King personally. They are money entrusted to him to be used for the common good.
But after a short while a new cla.s.s of people, neither peasants nor king, begins to develop. This new cla.s.s, commonly called the n.o.bles, stands between the ruler and his subjects.
Since those early days it has made its appearance in the history of every country and it has played a great role in the development of every nation.
I must try and explain to you how this cla.s.s of n.o.bles developed out of the most commonplace circ.u.mstances of everyday life and why it has maintained itself to this very day, against every form of opposition.
To make my story quite clear, I have drawn a picture.
It shows you five Egyptian farms. The original owners of these farms had moved into Egypt years and years ago. Each had taken a piece of unoccupied land and had settled down upon it to raise grain and cows and pigs and do whatever was necessary to keep themselves and their children alive. Apparently they had the same chance in life.
How then did it happen that one became the ruler of his neighbors and got hold of all their fields and barns without breaking a single law?
[Ill.u.s.tration: THE ORIGINS OF THE FEUDAL SYSTEM.]
One day after the harvest, Mr. Fish (you see his name in hieroglyphics on the map) sent his boat loaded with grain to the town of Memphis to sell the cargo to the inhabitants of central Egypt. It happened to have been a good year for the farmer and Fish got a great deal of money for his wheat. After ten days the boat returned to the homestead and the captain handed the money which he had received to his employer.
A few weeks later, Mr. Sparrow, whose farm was next to that of Fish, sent his wheat to the nearest market. Poor Sparrow had not been very lucky for the last few years. But he hoped to make up for his recent losses by a profitable sale of his grain. Therefore he had waited until the price of wheat in Memphis should have gone a little higher.
That morning a rumor had reached the village of a famine in the island of Crete. As a result the grain in the Egyptian markets had greatly increased in value.
Sparrow hoped to profit through this unexpected turn of the market and he bade his skipper to hurry.
The skipper handled the rudder of his craft so clumsily that the boat struck a rock and sank, drowning the mate who was caught under the sail.
Sparrow not only lost all his grain and his s.h.i.+p but he was also forced to pay the widow of his drowned mate ten pieces of gold to make up for the loss of her husband.
These disasters occurred at the very moment when Sparrow could not afford another loss.
Winter was near and he had no money to buy cloaks for his children. He had put off buying new hoes and spades for such a long time that the old ones were completely worn out. He had no seeds for his fields. He was in a desperate plight.
He did not like his neighbor, Mr. Fish, any too well but there was no way out. He must go and humbly he must ask for the loan of a small sum of money.
He called on Fish. The latter said that he would gladly let him have whatever he needed but could Sparrow put up any sort of guaranty?
Sparrow said, "Yes." He would offer his own farm as a pledge of good faith.
Unfortunately Fish knew all about that farm. It had belonged to the Sparrow family for many generations. But the Father of the present owner had allowed himself to be terribly cheated by a Phoenician trader who had sold him a couple of "Phrygian Oxen" (n.o.body knew what the name meant) which were said to be of a very fine breed, which needed little food and performed twice as much labor as the common Egyptian oxen. The old farmer had believed the solemn words of the impostor. He had bought the wonderful beasts, greatly envied by all his neighbors.
They had not proved a success.
They were very stupid and very slow and exceedingly lazy and within three weeks they had died from a mysterious disease.
The old farmer was so angry that he suffered a stroke and the management of his estate was left to the son, who worked hard but without much result.
The loss of his grain and his vessel were the last straw.
Young Sparrow must either starve or ask his neighbor to help him with a loan.
Fish who was familiar with the lives of all his neighbors (he was that kind of person, not because he loved gossip but one never knew how such information might come in handy) and who knew to a penny the state of affairs in the Sparrow household, felt strong enough to insist upon certain terms. Sparrow could have all the money he needed upon the following condition. He must promise to work for Fish six weeks of every year and he must allow him free access to his grounds at all times.
Sparrow did not like these terms, but the days were growing shorter and winter was coming on fast and his family were without food.
He was forced to accept and from that time on, he and his sons and daughters were no longer quite as free as they had been before.
They did not exactly become the servants or the slaves of their neighbor, but they were dependent upon his kindness for their own livelihood. When they met Fish in the road they stepped aside and said "Good morning, sir." And he answered them--or not--as the case might be.
He now owned a great deal of water-front, twice as much as before.
He had more land and more laborers and he could raise more grain than in the past years. The nearby villagers talked of the new house he was building and in a general way, he was regarded as a man of growing wealth and importance.
Late that summer an unheard-of-thing happened.
It rained.
The oldest inhabitants could not remember such a thing, but it rained hard and steadily for two whole days. A little brook, the existence of which everybody had forgotten, was suddenly turned into a wild torrent.
In the middle of the night it came thundering down from the mountains and destroyed the harvest of the farmer who occupied the rocky ground at the foot of the hills. His name was Cup and he too had inherited his land from a hundred other Cups who had gone before. The damage was almost irreparable. Cup needed new seed grain and he needed it at once.
He had heard Sparrow's story. He too hated to ask a favor of Fish who was known far and wide as a shrewd dealer. But in the end, he found his way to the Fishs' homestead and humbly begged for the loan of a few bushels of wheat. He got them but not until he had agreed to work two whole months of each year on the farm of Fish.
Fish was now doing very well. His new house was ready and he thought the time had come to establish himself as the head of a household.
Just across the way, there lived a farmer who had a young daughter. The name of this farmer was Knife. He was a happy-go-lucky person and he could not give his child a large dowry.
Fish called on Knife and told him that he did not care for money. He was rich and he was willing to take the daughter without a single penny.
Knife, however, must promise to leave his land to his son-in-law in case he died.
This was done.
The will was duly drawn up before a notary, the wedding took place and Fish now possessed (or was about to possess) the greater part of four farms.
It is true there was a fifth farm situated right in between the others.
But its owner, by the name of Sickle, could not carry his wheat to the market without crossing the lands over which Fish held sway. Besides, Sickle was not very energetic and he willingly hired himself out to Fish on condition that he and his old wife be given a room and food and clothes for the rest of their days. They had no children and this settlement a.s.sured them a peaceful old age. When Sickle died, a distant nephew appeared who claimed a right to his uncle's farm. Fish had the dogs turned loose on him and the fellow was never seen again.