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<h2> CHAPTER VIII. </h2>
<p>The men who stepped from the chariots were old acquaintances of Hosea.
They were the head chamberlain and one of the king’s chief scribes, come
to summon him to the Sublime Porte.</p>
<p>[Palace of the king. The name of Pharaoh means “the Sublime<br/>
Porte.”]<br/></p>
<p>No hesitation nor escape was possible, and Hosea, feeling more surprise
than anxiety, entered the second chariot with the chief scribe. Both
officials wore mourning robes, and instead of the white ostrich plume, the
insignia of office, black ones waved over the temples of both. The horses
and runners of the two-wheeled chariots were also decked with all the
emblems of the deepest woe. And yet the monarch’s messengers seemed
cheerful rather than depressed; for the eagle they were to bear to Pharaoh
was ready to obey his behest, and they had feared that they would find his
eyrie abandoned.</p>
<p>Swift as the wind the long-limbed bays of royal breed bore the light
vehicles over the uneven sandy road and the smooth highway toward the
palace.</p>
<p>Ephraim, with the curiosity of youth, had gone out of the tent to view a
scene so novel to his eyes. The soldiers were pleased by the Pharaoh’s
sending his own carriage for their commander, and the lad’s vanity was
flattered to see his uncle drive away in such state. But he was not
permitted the pleasure of watching him long; dense clouds of dust soon hid
the vehicles.</p>
<p>The scorching desert wind which, during the Spring months, so often blows
through the valley of the Nile, had risen, and though the bright blue sky
which had been visible by night and day was still cloudless, it was veiled
by a whitish mist.</p>
<p>The sun, a motionless ball, glared down on the heads of men like a blind
man’s eye. The burning heat it diffused seemed to have consumed its rays,
which to-day were invisible. The eye protected by the mist could gaze at
it undazzled, yet its scorching power was undiminished. The light breeze,
which usually fanned the brow in the morning, touched it now like the hot
breath of a ravening beast of prey. Loaded with the fine scorching sand
borne from the desert, it transformed the pleasure of breathing into a
painful torture. The air of an Egyptian March morning, which was wont to
be so balmy, now oppressed both man and beast, choking their lungs and
seeming to weigh upon them like a burden destroying all joy in life.</p>
<p>The higher the pale rayless globe mounted into the sky, the greyer became
the fog, the more densely and swiftly blew the sand-clouds from the
desert.</p>
<p>Ephraim was still standing in front of the tent, gazing at the spot where
Pharaoh’s chariots had disappeared. His knees trembled, but he attributed
it to the wind sent by Seth-Typhon, at whose blowing even the strongest
felt an invisible burden clinging to their feet.</p>
<p>Hosea had gone, but he might come back in a few hours, then he, Ephraim,
would be obliged to go with him to Succoth, and the bright dreams and
hopes which yesterday had bestowed and whose magical charms were
heightened by his fevered brain, would be lost to him forever.</p>
<p>During the night he had firmly resolved to enter Pharaoh’s army, that he
might remain near Tanis and Kasana; but though he had only half
comprehended Hosea’s message, he could plainly discern that he intended to
turn his back upon Egypt and his high position and meant to take Ephraim
with him, should he make his escape. So he must renounce his longing to
see Kasana once more. But this thought was unbearable and an inward voice
whispered that, having neither father nor mother, he was free to act
according to his own will. His guardian, his dead father’s brother, in
whose household he had grown up, had died not long before, and no new
guardian had been named because the lad was now past childhood. He was
destined at some future day to be one of the chiefs of his proud tribe and
until yesterday he had desired no better fate.</p>
<p>He had obeyed the impulse of his heart when, with the pride of a shepherd
prince, he had refused the priest’s suggestion that he should become one
of Pharaoh’s soldiers, but he now told himself that he had been childish
and foolish to reject a thing of which he was ignorant, nay, which had
ever been intentionally represented to him in a false and hateful light in
order to bind him more firmly to his own people.</p>
<p>The Egyptians had always been described as detestable enemies and
oppressors, yet how enchanting everything seemed in the house of the first
Egyptian warrior he had entered.</p>
<p>And Kasana!</p>
<p>What must she think of him, if he left Tanis without a word of greeting,
of farewell. Must it not grieve and wound him to remain in her memory a
clumsy peasant shepherd? Nay, it would be positively dishonest not to
return the costly raiment she had lent him. Gratitude was reckoned among
the Hebrews also as the first duty of noble hearts. He would be worthy of
hate his whole life long, if he did not seek her once more!</p>
<p>But there was need of haste. When Hosea returned, he must find him ready
for departure.</p>
<p>He at once began to bind his sandals on his feet, but he did it slowly,
and could not understand why the task seemed so hard to-day.</p>
<p>He passed through the camp unmolested. The pylons and obelisks before the
temples, which appeared to quiver in the heated air, marked the direction
he was to pursue, and he soon reached the broad road which led to the
market-place—a panting merchant whose ass was bearing skins of wine
to the troops, told him the way.</p>
<p>Dense clouds of dust lay on the road and whirled around him, the sun beat
fiercely down on his bare head, his wound began to ache again, the fine
sand which filled the air entered his eyes and mouth and stung his face
and bare limbs like burning needles. He was tortured by thirst and was
often compelled to stop, his feet grew so heavy. At last he reached a well
dug for travelers by a pious Egyptian, and though it was adorned with the
image of a god and Miriam had taught him that this was an abomination from
which he should turn aside, he drank again and again, thinking he had
never tasted aught so refreshing.</p>
<p>The fear of losing consciousness, as he had done the day before, passed
away and, though his feet were still heavy, he walked rapidly toward the
alluring goal. But soon his strength again deserted him, the sweat poured
from his brow, his wound began to throb and beat, and he felt as though
his skull was compressed by an iron circle. His keen eyes, too, failed,
for the objects he tried to see blended with the dust of the road, the
horizon reeled up and down before his eyes, and he felt as though the hard
pavement had turned to a yielding bog under his feet.</p>
<p>Yet he took little heed of all these things, for never before had such
bright visions filled his mind. His thoughts grew marvellously vivid, and
image after image rose before the wide eyes of his soul, not at his own
behest, but as if summoned by a secret will outside of his consciousness.
Now he fancied that he was lying at Kasana’s feet, resting his head on her
lap while he gazed upward into her lovely face—anon he saw Hosea
standing before him in his glittering armor, as he had beheld him a short
time ago, only his garb was still more gorgeous and, instead of the dim
light in the tent, a ruddy glow like that of fire surrounded him. Then the
finest oxen and rams in his herds passed before him and sentences from the
messages he had learned darted through his mind; nay he sometimes imagined
that they were being shouted to him aloud. But ere he could grasp their
import, some new dazzling vision or loud rushing noise seemed to fill his
mental eye and ear.</p>
<p>He pressed onward, staggering like a drunken man, with drops of sweat
standing on his brow and with parched mouth. Sometimes he unconsciously
raised his hand to wipe the dust from his burning eyes, but he cared
little that he saw very indistinctly what was passing around him, for
there could be nothing more beautiful than what he beheld with his inward
vision.</p>
<p>True, he was often aware that he was suffering intensely, and he longed to
throw himself exhausted on the ground, but a strange sense of happiness
sustained him. At last he was seized with the delusion that his head was
swelling and growing till it attained the size of the head of the colossus
he had seen the day before in front of a temple gate, then it rose to the
height of the palm-trees by the road-side, and finally it reached the mist
shrouding the firmament, then far above it. Then it suddenly seemed as
though this head of his was as large as the whole world, and he pressed
his hands on his temples to clasp his brow; for his neck and shoulders
were too weak to support the weight of so enormous a head and, mastered by
this strange delusion, he shrieked aloud, his shaking knees gave way, and
he fell unconscious in the dust.</p>
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