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<h2> CHAPTER VI. </h2>
<p>Hogla, the old slave’s granddaughter, had come to beseech Hosea to go with
her at once to her grandfather, who had suddenly broken down, and who
feeling the approach of death could not perish without having once more
seen and blessed him.</p>
<p>The warrior told her to wait and, after assuring himself that Ephraim was
sleeping quietly, ordered a trusty man to watch beside his bed and went
away with Hogla.</p>
<p>The girl walked before him, carrying a small lantern, and as its light
fell on her face and figure, he saw how unlovely she was, for the hard
toil of slavery had bowed the poor thing’s back before its time. Her voice
had the harsh accents frequently heard in the tones of women whose
strength has been pitilessly tasked; but her words were kind and tender,
and Hosea forgot her appearance when she told him that her lover had gone
with the departing tribes, yet she had remained with her grandparents
because she could not bring herself to leave the old couple alone. Because
she had no beauty no man had sought her for his wife till Assir came, who
did not care for her looks because he toiled industriously, like herself,
and expected her to add to his savings. He would gladly have stayed with
her, but his father had commanded him to go forth, so there was no choice
for them save to obey and part forever.</p>
<p>The words were simple and the accents harsh, yet they pierced the heart of
the man who was preparing to follow his own path in opposition to his
father’s will.</p>
<p>As they approached the harbor and Hosea saw the embankments, and the vast
fortified storehouses built by his own people, he remembered the ragged
laborers whom he had so often beheld crouching before the Egyptian
overseers or fighting savagely among themselves. He had heard, too, that
they shrunk from no lies, no fraud to escape their toil, and how difficult
was the task of compelling them to obey and fulfil their duty.</p>
<p>The most repulsive forms among these luckless hordes rose distinctly
before his vision, and the thought that it might henceforward be his
destiny to command such a wretched rabble seemed to him ignominy which the
lowest of his brave officers, the leader of but fifty men, would seek to
avoid. True, Pharaoh’s armies contained many a Hebrew mercenary who had
won renown for bravery and endurance; but these men were the sons of
owners of herds or people who had once been shepherds. The toiling slaves,
whose clay huts could be upset by a kick, formed the majority of those to
whom he was required to return.</p>
<p>Resolute in his purpose to remain loyal to the oath which bound him to the
Egyptian standard, yet moved to the very depths of his heart, he entered
the slave’s little hut, and his anger rose when he saw old Eliab sitting
up, mixing some wine and water with his own hands. So he had been summoned
from his nephew’s sick-bed, and robbed of his night’s rest, on a false
pretence, in order that a slave, in his eyes scarcely entitled to rank as
a man, might have his way. Here he himself experienced a specimen of the
selfish craft of which the Egyptians accused his people, and which
certainly did not attract him, Hosea, to them. But the anger of the just,
keen sighted-man quickly subsided at the sight of the girl’s unfeigned joy
in her grandfather’s speedy recovery. Besides he soon learned from the old
man’s aged wife that, shortly after Hogla’s departure, she remembered the
wine they had, and as soon as he swallowed the first draught her husband,
whom she had believed had one foot in the grave, grew better and better.
Now he was mixing some more of God’s gift to strengthen himself
occasionally by a sip.</p>
<p>Here Eliab interrupted her to say that they owed this and many more
valuable things to the goodness of Nun, Hosea’s father, who had given
them, besides their little hut, wine, meal for bread, a milch cow, and
also an ass, so that he could often ride out into the fresh air. He had
likewise left them their granddaughter and some pieces of silver, so that
they could look forward without fear to the end of their days, especially
as they had behind the house a bit of ground, where Hogla meant to raise
radishes, onions, and leeks for their own table. But the best gift of all
was the written document making them and the girl free forever. Ay, Nun
was a true master and father to his people, and the blessing of Jehovah
had followed his gifts; for soon after the departure of the Hebrews, he
and his wife had been brought hither unmolested by the aid of Assir,
Hogla’s lover.</p>
<p>“We old people shall die here,” Eliab’s wife added. But Assir promised
Hogla that he would come back for her when she had discharged her filial
duties to the end.</p>
<p>Then, turning to her granddaughter, she said encouragingly: “And we cannot
live much longer now.”</p>
<p>Hogla raised her blue gown to wipe the tears from her eyes, exclaiming</p>
<p>“May it be a long, long time yet. I am young and can wait.”</p>
<p>Hosea heard the words, and again it seemed as though the poor, forsaken,
unlovely girl was giving him a lesson.</p>
<p>He had listened patiently to the freed slaves’ talk, but his time was
limited and he now asked whether Eliab had summoned him for any special
purpose.</p>
<p>“Ay,” he replied; “I was obliged to send, not only to still the yearning
of my old heart, but because my lord Nun commanded me to do so.”</p>
<p>“Thou hast attained a grand and noble manhood, and hast now become the
hope of Israel. Thy father promised the slaves and freedmen of his
household that after his death, thou wouldst be heir, lord and master. His
words were full of thy praise, and great rejoicing hailed his statement
that thou wouldst follow the departing Hebrews. And my lord deigned to
command me to tell thee, if thou should’st return ere his messenger
arrived, that Nun, thy father, expected his son. Whithersoever thy nation
may wander, thou art to follow. Toward sunrise, or at latest by the
noon-tide hour, the tribes will tarry to rest at Succoth. He will conceal
in the hollow sycamore that stands in front of Amminadab’s house a letter
which will inform thee whither they will next turn their steps. His
blessing and that of our God will attend thy every step.”</p>
<p>As Eliab uttered the last words, Hosea bowed his head as if inviting
invisible hands to be laid upon it. Then he thanked the old man and asked,
in subdued tones, whether all the Hebrews had willingly obeyed the summons
to leave house and lands.</p>
<p>His aged wife clasped her hands, exclaiming: “Oh no, my lord, certainly
not. What wailing and weeping filled the air before their departure! Many
refused to go, others fled, or sought some hiding-place. But all
resistance was futile. In the house of our neighbor Deuel—you know
him—his young wife had just given birth to their first son. How was
she to fare on the journey? She wept bitterly and her husband uttered
fierce curses, but it was all in vain. She was put in a cart with her
babe, and as the arrangements went on, both submitted like all the rest—even
Phineas who crept into a pigeon-house with his wife and five children, and
crooked grave-haunting Kusaja. Do you remember her? Adonai! She had seen
father, mother, husband, and three noble sons, all that the Lord had given
her to love, borne to the tomb. They lay side by side in our burying
ground, and every morning and evening she went there and, sitting on a log
of wood which she had rolled close to the gravestones, moved her lips
constantly, not in prayer—no, I have listened often when she did not
know I was near—no; she talked to the dead, as though they could
hear her in the sepulchre, and understand her words like those who walk
alive beneath the sun. She is near seventy, and for thrice seven years she
has gone by the name of grave-haunting Kusaja. It was in sooth a foolish
thing to do; yet perhaps that was why she found it all the harder to give
it up, and go she would not, but hid herself among the bushes. When
Ahieser, the overseer, dragged her out, her wailing made one’s heart sore,
yet when the time for departure came, the longing to go seized upon her
also, and she found it as hard to resist as the others.”</p>
<p>“What had happened to the poor creatures, what possessed them?” asked
Hosea, interrupting the old wife’s speech; for in imagination he again
beheld the people he must lead, if he valued his father’s blessing as the
most priceless boon the world could offer, and beheld them in all their
wretchedness.</p>
<p>The startled dame, fearing that she had offended her master’s first-born
son, the great and powerful chieftain, stammered:</p>
<p>“What possessed them, my lord? Ah, well—I am but a poor lowly
slave-woman; yet, my lord, had you but seen it.... ”</p>
<p>“Well, even then?” interrupted the warrior in harsh, impatient tones, for
this was the first time he had ever found himself compelled to act against
his desires and belief.</p>
<p>Eliab tried to come to the assistance of the terrified woman, saying
timidly,</p>
<p>“Ah, my lord, no tongue can relate, no human mind can picture it. It came
from the Almighty and, if I could describe how great was its influence on
the souls of the people....”</p>
<p>“Try,” Hosea broke in, “but my time is brief. So they were compelled to
depart, and set forth reluctantly on their wanderings. Even the Egyptians
have long known that they obeyed the bidding of Moses and Aaron as the
sheep follow the shepherd. Have those who brought the terrible pestilence
on so many guiltless human beings also wrought the miracle of blinding the
minds of you and of your wife?”</p>
<p>The old man stretched out his hands to the soldier, and answered in a
troubled voice and a tone of the most humble entreaty:</p>
<p>“Oh, my lord, you are my master’s first-born son, the greatest and
loftiest of your race, if it is your pleasure you can trample me into the
dust like a beetle, yet I must lift up my voice and say: ‘You have heard
false tales!’ You were away in foreign lands when mighty things were done
in our midst, and far from Zoan,—[The Hebrew name for Tanis]—as
I hear, when the exodus took place. Any son of our people who witnessed it
would rather his tongue should wither than mock at the marvels the Lord
permitted him to behold. Ah, if you had patience to suffer me to tell the
tale....”</p>
<p>“Speak on!” cried Hosea, astonished at the old man’s solemn fervor. Eliab
thanked him with an ardent glance, exclaiming:</p>
<p>“Oh, would that Aaron, or Eleasar, or my lord your father were here in my
stead, or would that Jehovah would bestow on me the might of their
eloquence! But be it as it is! True, I imagine I can again see and hear
everything as though it were happening once more before my eyes, but how
am I to describe it? How can such things be given in words? Yet, with
God’s assistance, I will try.”</p>
<p>Here he paused and Hosea, noticing that the old man’s hands and lips were
trembling, gave him the cup of wine, and Eliab gratefully quaffed it to
the dregs. Then, half-closing his eyes, he began his story and his
wrinkled features grew sharper as he went on:</p>
<p>“My wife has already told you what occurred after the people learned the
command that had been issued. We, too, were among those who lost courage
and murmured. But last night, all who belonged to the household of Nun—and
also the shepherds, the slaves, and the poor—were summoned to a
feast, and there was abundance of roast lamb, fresh, unleavened bread, and
wine, more than usual at the harvest festival, which began that night, and
which you, my lord, have often attended in your boyhood. We sat rejoicing,
and our lord, your father, comforted us, and told us of the God of our
fathers and the wonders He had wrought for them. It was now His will that
we should go forth from this land where we had suffered contempt and
bondage. This was no sacrifice like that of Abraham when, at the command
of the Most High, he had whetted his knife to shed the blood of his son
Isaac, though it would be hard for many of us to quit a home that had
grown dear to us and forego many a familiar custom. But it will be a great
happiness for us all. For, he said, we were not to journey forth to an
unknown country, but to a beautiful region which God Himself had set apart
for us. He had promised us, instead of this place of bondage, a new and
delightful home where we should dwell free men, amid fruitful fields and
rich pastures, which would supply food to every man and his family and
make all hearts rejoice. Just as laborers must work hard to earn high
wages, we must endure a brief period of want and suffering to gain for
ourselves and for our children the beautiful new home which the Lord had
promised. God’s own land it must be, for it was a gift of the Most High.</p>
<p>“Having spoken thus, he blessed us all and promised that thou, too,
wouldst shake the dust from off thy feet, and join us to fight for our
cause with a strong arm as a trained soldier and a dutiful son.</p>
<p>“Shouts of joy rang forth and, when we assembled in the market-place and
found that all the bondmen had escaped from the overseers, many gained
fresh courage. Then Aaron stepped into our midst, stood upon the
auctioneer’s bench, and told us with his own lips all that we had heard
from my master Nun at the festival. The words he uttered sounded sometimes
like pealing thunder, and anon like the sweet melody of lutes, and every
one felt that the Lord our God Himself was speaking through him; for even
the most rebellious were so deeply moved that they no longer complained
and murmured. And when he finally announced to the throng that no erring
mortal, but the Lord our God Himself would be our leader, and described
the wonders of the land whose gates He would open unto us, and where we
might live, trammelled by no bondage, as free and happy men, owing no
obedience to any ruler save the God of our fathers and those whom we
ourselves chose for our leaders, every man present felt as though he were
drunk with sweet wine, and, instead of faring forth across a barren
wilderness to an unknown goal, was on the way to a great festal banquet,
prepared by the Most High Himself. Even those who had not heard Aaron’s
words were inspired with wondrous faith; men and women behaved even more
joyously and noisily than usual at the harvest festival, for every heart
was overflowing with genuine gratitude.</p>
<p>“The old people caught the universal spirit! Your grandfather Elishama,
bowed by the weight of his hundred years, who, as you know, has long sat
bent and silent in his corner, straightened his drooping form, and with
sparkling eyes poured forth a flood of eloquent words. The spirit of the
Lord had descended upon him and upon us all. I myself felt as though the
vigor of youth had returned to mind and body, and when I passed the
throngs who were preparing to set forth, I saw the young mother Elisheba
in her litter. Her face was as radiant as on her marriage morn, and she
was pressing her nursling to her breast, and rejoicing over his happy fate
in growing up in freedom in the Promised Land. Her spouse, Deuel, who had
poured forth such bitter imprecations, now waved his staff, kissed his
wife and child with tears of joy, and shouted with delight like a vintager
at the harvest season, when jars and wine skins are too few to hold the
blessing. Old grave-haunting Kusaja, who had been dragged away from the
sepulchre of her kindred, was sitting in a cart with other infirm folk,
waving her veil and joining in the hymn of praise Elkanah and Abiasaph,
the sons of Korah, had begun. So they went forth; we who were left behind
fell into each other’s arms, uncertain whether the tears we shed streamed
from our eyes for grief or for sheer joy at seeing the throng of our loved
ones so full of hope and gladness.</p>
<p>“So it came to pass.</p>
<p>“As soon as the pitch torches borne at the head of the procession, which
seemed to me to shine more brightly than the lamps lighted by the
Egyptians on the gates of the temple of the great goddess Neith, had
vanished in the darkness, we set out, that we might not delay Assir too
long, and while passing through the streets, which resounded with the
wailing of the citizens, we softly sang the hymn of the sons of Korah, and
great joy and peace filled our hearts, for we knew that the Lord our God
would defend and guide His people.”</p>
<p>The old man paused, but his wife and Hogla, who had listened with
sparkling eyes, leaned one on the other and, without any prompting, began
the hymn of praise of the sons of Korah, the old woman’s faint voice
mingling with touching fervor with the tones of the girl, whose harsh
notes thrilled with the loftiest enthusiasm.</p>
<p>Hosea felt that it would be criminal to interrupt the outpouring of these
earnest hearts, but Eliab soon stopped them and gazed with evident anxiety
into the stern face of his lord’s first-born son.</p>
<p>Had Hosea understood him?</p>
<p>Did this warrior, who served under Pharaoh’s banner, realize how entirely
the Lord God Himself had ruled the souls of his people at their departure.</p>
<p>Had the life among the Egyptians so estranged him from his people and his
God, rendered him so degenerate, that he would bid defiance to the wishes
and commands of his own father?</p>
<p>Was the man on whom the Hebrews’ highest hopes were fixed a renegade,
forever lost to his people?</p>
<p>He received no verbal answer to these mute questions, but when Hosea
grasped his callous right hand in both his own and pressed it as he would
have clasped a friend’s, when he bade him farewell with tearful eyes,
murmuring: “You shall hear from me!” he felt that he knew enough and,
overwhelmed with passionate delight, he pressed kiss after kiss upon the
warrior’s arms and clothing.</p>
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