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<h2> CHAPTER XXIV. </h2>
<p>The prisoners of state who were being transported to the mines made slow
progress. Even the experienced captain of the guards had never had a more
toilsome trip or one more full of annoyances, obstacles, and mishaps.</p>
<p>One of his moles, Ephraim, had escaped; he had lost his faithful hounds,
and after his troop had been terrified and drenched by a storm such as
scarcely occurred in these desert regions once in five years, a second had
burst the next evening—the one which brought destruction on
Pharaoh’s army—and this had been still more violent and lasting.</p>
<p>The storm had delayed the march and, after the last cloud-burst, several
convicts and guards had been attacked by fever owing to their wet
night-quarters in the open air. The Egyptian asses, too, who were unused
to rain, had suffered and some of the best had been left on the road.</p>
<p>Finally they had been obliged to bury two dead prisoners, and place three
who were dangerously ill on the remaining asses; and the other prisoners
were laden with the stores hitherto carried by the beasts of burden. This
was the first time such a thing had happened during the leader’s service
of five and twenty years, and he expected severe reproofs.</p>
<p>All these things exerted a baneful influence on the disposition of the
man, who was usually reputed one of the kindest-hearted of his companions
in office; and Joshua, the accomplice of the bold lad whose flight was
associated with the other vexations, suffered most sorely from his
ill-humor.</p>
<p>Perhaps the irritated man would have dealt more gently with him, had he
complained like the man behind him, or burst into fierce oaths like his
yoke-mate, who made threatening allusions to the future when his
sister-in-law would be in high favor with Pharaoh and know how to repay
those who ill-treated her dear relative.</p>
<p>But Hosea had resolved to bear whatever the rude fellow and his mates
chose to inflict with the same equanimity that he endured the scorching
sun which, ever since he had served in the army, had tortured him during
many a march through the desert, and his steadfast, manly character helped
him keep this determination.</p>
<p>If the captain of the gang loaded him with extra heavy burdens, he
summoned all the strength of his muscles and tottered forward without a
word of complaint until his knees trembled under him; then the captain
would rush to him, throw several packages from his shoulders, and exclaim
that he understood his spite; he was only trying to be left on the road,
to get him into fresh difficulties; but he would not allow himself to be
robbed of the lives of the men who were needed in the mines.</p>
<p>Once the captain inflicted a wound that bled severely; but he instantly
made every effort to cure it, gave him wine to restore his strength, and
delayed the march half a day to permit him to rest.</p>
<p>He had not forgotten Prince Siptah’s promise of a rich reward to any one
who brought him tidings of Hosea’s death, but this was the very reason
that induced the honest-hearted man to watch carefully over his prisoner’s
life; for the consciousness of having violated his duty for the sake of
reaping any advantage would have robbed him of all pleasure in food and
drink, as well as of the sound sleep which were his greatest blessings.</p>
<p>So though the Hebrew prisoner was tortured, it was never beyond the limits
of the endurable, and he had the pleasure of rendering, by his own great
strength, many a service to his weaker companions.</p>
<p>He had commended his fate to the God who had summoned him to His service;
but he was well aware that he must not rest content with mere pious
confidence, and therefore thought by day and night of escape. But the
chain that bound him to his companions in suffering was too firmly forged,
and was so carefully examined and hammered every morning and evening, that
the attempt to escape would only have plunged him into greater misery.</p>
<p>The prisoners had at first marched through a hilly region, then climbed
upward, with a long mountain chain in view, and finally reached a desert
country from which truncated sandstone cones rose singly from the rocky
ground.</p>
<p>On the fifth evening they encamped near a large mountain which Nature
seemed to have piled up from flat layers of stone and, as the sun of the
sixth day rose, they turned into a side valley leading to the mines in the
province of Bech.</p>
<p>During the first few days they had been overtaken by a messenger from the
king’s silver-house; but on the other hand they had met several little
bands bearing to Egypt malachite, turquoise, and copper, as well as the
green glass made at the mines.</p>
<p>Among those whom they met at the entrance of the cross-valley into which
they turned on the last morning was a married couple on their way
homeward, after having received a pardon from the king. The captain of the
guards pointed them out to encourage his exhausted moles, but the
spectacle produced the opposite effect; for the tangled locks of the man,
who had scarcely passed his thirtieth year, were grey, his tall figure was
bowed and emaciated, and his naked back was covered with scars and
bleeding wales; the wife, who had shared his misery, was blind. She sat
cowering on an ass, in the dull torpor of insanity, and though the passing
of the convicts made a startling interruption to the silence of the
wilderness, and her hearing had remained keen, she paid no heed, but
continued to stare indifferently into vacancy.</p>
<p>The sight of the hapless pair placed Hosea’s own terrible future before
him as if in a mirror, and for the first time he groaned aloud and covered
his face with his hands.</p>
<p>The captain of the guards perceived this and, touched by the horror of the
man whose resolution had hitherto seemed peerless, called to him:</p>
<p>“They don’t all come home like that, no indeed!”</p>
<p>“Because they are even worse off,” he thought. “But the poor wights
needn’t know it beforehand. The next time I come this way I’ll ask for
Hosea; I shall want to know what has become of this bull of a man. The
strongest and the most resolute succumb the most quickly.”</p>
<p>Then, like a driver urging an unharnessed team forward, he swung the lash
over the prisoners, but without touching them, and pointing to a column of
smoke which rose behind a cliff at the right of the road, he exclaimed:</p>
<p>“There are the smelting furnaces! We shall reach our destination at noon.
There will be no lack of fire to cook lentils, and doubtless you may have
a bit of mutton, too; for we celebrate to-day the birth of the good god,
the son of the sun; may life, health, and prosperity be his!”</p>
<p>For the next half-hour their road led between lofty cliffs through the dry
bed of a river, down which, after the last rains, a deep mountain torrent
had poured to the valley; but now only a few pools still remained.</p>
<p>After the melancholy procession had passed around a steep mountain whose
summit was crowned with a small Egyptian temple of Hathor and a number of
monuments, it approached a bend in the valley which led to the ravine
where the mines were located.</p>
<p>Flags, hoisted in honor of Pharaoh’s birth-day, were waving from tall
masts before the gates of the little temple on the mountain; and when loud
shouts, uproar, and clashing greeted the travellers in the valley of the
mines, which was wont to be so silent, the captain of the guards thought
that the prisoners’ greatest festival was being celebrated in an unusually
noisy way and communicated this conjecture to the other guards who had
paused to listen.</p>
<p>Then the party pressed forward without delay, but no one raised his head;
the noon-day sun blazed so fiercely, and the dazzling walls of the ravine
sent forth a reflected glow as fierce as if they were striving to surpass
the heat of the neighboring smelting furnaces.</p>
<p>Spite of the nearness of the goal the prisoners tottered forward as if
asleep, only one held his breath in the intensity of suspense.</p>
<p>As the battle-charger in the plough arches his neck, and expands his
nostrils, while his eyes flash fire, so Joshua’s bowed figure, spite of
the sack that burdened his shoulders, straightened itself, and his
sparkling eyes were turned toward the spot whence came the sounds the
captain of the guards had mistaken for the loud tumult of festal mirth.</p>
<p>He, Joshua, knew better. Never could he mistake the roar echoing there; it
was the war-cry of Egyptian soldiers, the blast of the trumpet summoning
the warriors, the clank of weapons, and the battle-shouts of hostile
hordes.</p>
<p>Ready for prompt action, he bent toward his yokemate, and whispered
imperiously:</p>
<p>“The hour of deliverance is at hand. Take heed, and obey me blindly.”</p>
<p>Strong excitement overpowered his companion also, and Hosea had scarcely
glanced into the side-valley ere he bade him hold himself in readiness.</p>
<p>The first look into the ravine had showed him, on the summit of a cliff, a
venerable face framed in snowy locks—his father’s. He would have
recognized him among thousands and at a far greater distance! But from the
beloved grey head he turned a swift glance at the guide, who had stopped
in speechless horror, and supposing that a mutiny had broken out among the
prisoners, with swift presence of mind shouted hoarsely to the other
guards:</p>
<p>“Keep behind the convicts and cut down every one who attempts to escape!”</p>
<p>But scarcely had his subordinates hurried to the end of the train, ere
Joshua whispered to his companion:</p>
<p>“At him!”</p>
<p>As he spoke the Hebrew, who, with his yoke-mate, headed the procession,
attacked the astonished leader, and ere he was aware of it, Joshua seized
his right arm, the other his left.</p>
<p>The strong man, whose powers were doubled by his rage, struggled furiously
to escape, but Joshua and his companion held him in an iron grasp.</p>
<p>A single rapid glance had showed the chief the path he must take to join
his people True, it led past a small band of Egyptian bow-men, who were
discharging their arrows at the Hebrews on the opposite cliff, but the
enemy would not venture to fire at him and his companion; for the powerful
figure of the captain of the guards, clearly recognizable by his dress and
weapons, shielded them both.</p>
<p>“Lift the chain with your right hand,” whispered Joshua, “I will hold our
living buckler. We must ascend the cliff crab-fashion.”</p>
<p>His companion obeyed, and as they advanced within bow-shot of the enemy—moving
sometimes backward, sometimes sideways—they held the Egyptian before
them and with the ringing shout: “The son of Nun is returning to his
father and to his people!” Joshua step by step drew nearer to the Hebrew
combatants.</p>
<p>Not one of the Egyptians who knew the captain of the prisoners’ guard had
ventured to send an arrow at the escaping prisoners. While the fettered
pair were ascending the cliff backward, Joshua heard his name shouted in
joyous accents, and directly after Ephraim, with a band of youthful
warriors, came rushing down the height toward him.</p>
<p>To his astonishment Joshua saw the huge shield, sword, or battle-axe of an
Egyptian heavily-armed soldier in the hands of each of these sons of his
people, but the shepherd’s sling and the bag of round stones also hung
from many girdles.</p>
<p>Ephraim led his companions and, before greeting his uncle, formed them
into two ranks like a double wall between Joshua and the hostile bow-men.</p>
<p>Then he gave himself up to the delight of meeting, and a second glad
greeting soon followed; for old Nun, protected by the tall Egyptian
shields which the sea had washed ashore, had been guided to the projecting
rock in whose shelter strong hands were filing the fetters from Joshua and
his companion, while Ephraim, with several others, bound the captain.</p>
<p>The unfortunate man had given up all attempt at resistance and submitted
to everything as if utterly crushed. He only asked permission to wipe his
eyes ere his arms were bound behind his back; for tear after tear was
falling on the grey beard of the warder who, outwitted and overpowered, no
longer felt capable of discharging the duties of his office.</p>
<p>Nun clasped to his heart with passionate fervor the rescued son whom he
had already mourned as lost. Then, releasing him, he stepped back and
never wearied of feasting his eyes on him and hearing him repeat that,
faithful to his God, he had consecrated himself to the service of his
people.</p>
<p>But it was for a brief period only that they gave themselves up to the
bliss of this happy meeting; the battle asserted its rights, and its
direction fell, as a matter of course, to Joshua.</p>
<p>He had learned with grateful joy, yet not wholly untinged with melancholy,
of the fate which had overtaken the brave army among whose leaders he had
long proudly numbered himself, and also heard that another body of armed
shepherds, under the command of Hur, Miriam’s husband, had attacked the
turquoise mines of Dophkah, which situated a little farther toward the
south, could be reached in a few hours. If they conquered, they were to
join the young followers of Ephraim before sunset.</p>
<p>The latter was burning with eagerness to rush upon the Egyptians, but the
more prudent Joshua, who had scanned the foe, though he did not doubt that
they must succumb to the fiery shepherds, who were far superior to them in
numbers, was anxious to shed as little blood as possible in this conflict,
which was waged on his account, so he bade Ephraim cut a palm from the
nearest tree, ordered a shield to be handed to him and then, waving the
branch as an omen of peace, yet cautiously protecting himself, advanced
alone to meet the foe.</p>
<p>The main body were drawn up in front of the mines and, familiar with the
signal which requested negotiations, asked their commander for an
interview.</p>
<p>The latter was ready to grant it, but first desired to know the contents
of a letter which had just been handed to him and must contain evil
tidings. This was evident from the messenger’s looks and the few words
which, though broken, were pregnant with meaning, that he had whispered to
his countryman.</p>
<p>While some of Pharaoh’s warriors offered refreshments to the exhausted,
dust-covered runner, and listened with every token of horror to the
tidings he hoarsely gasped, the commander of the troops read the letter.</p>
<p>His features darkened and, when he had finished, he clenched the papyrus
fiercely; for it had announced tidings no less momentous than the
destruction of the army, the death of Pharaoh Menephtah, and the
coronation of his oldest surviving son as Seti II., after the attempt of
Prince Siptah to seize the throne had been frustrated. The latter had fled
to the marshy region of the Delta, and Aarsu, the Syrian, after abandoning
him and supporting the new king, had been raised to the chief command of
all the mercenaries. Bai, the high-priest and chief-judge, had been
deprived of his rank and banished by Seti II. Siptah’s confederates had
been taken to the Ethiopian gold mines instead of to the copper mines. It
was also stated that many women belonging to the House of the Separated
had been strangled; and Siptah’s mother had undoubtedly met the same fate.
Every soldier who could be spared from the mines was to set off at once
for Tanis, where veterans were needed for the new legions.</p>
<p>This news exerted a powerful influence; for after Joshua had told the
commander that he was aware of the destruction of the Egyptian army and
expected reinforcements which had been sent to capture Dophkah to arrive
within a few hours, the Egyptian changed his imperious tone and endeavored
merely to obtain favorable conditions for retreat. He was but too well
aware of the weakness of the garrison of the turquoise mines and knew that
he could expect no aid from home. Besides, the mediator inspired him with
confidence; therefore, after many evasions and threats, he expressed
himself satisfied with the assurance that the garrison, accompanied by the
beasts of burden and necessary provisions, should be allowed to depart
unharmed. This, however, was not to be done until after they had laid down
their arms and showed the Hebrews all the galleries where the prisoners
were at work.</p>
<p>The young Hebrews, who twice outnumbered the Egyptians, at once set about
disarming them; and many an old warrior’s eyes grew dim, many a man broke
his lance or snapped his arrows amid execrations and curses, while some
grey-beards who had formerly served under Joshua and recognized him,
raised their clenched fists and upbraided him as a traitor.</p>
<p>The dregs of the army were sent for this duty in the wilderness and most
of the men bore in their faces the impress of corruption and brutality.
Those in authority on the Nile knew how to choose soldiers whose duty it
was to exercise pitiless severity against the defenceless.</p>
<p>At last the mines were opened and Joshua himself seized a lamp and pressed
forward into the hot galleries where the naked prisoners of state, loaded
with fetters, were hewing the copper ore from the walls.</p>
<p>Already he could hear in the distance the picks, whose heads were shaped
like a swallow’s tail, bite the hard rock. Then he distinguished the
piteous wails of tortured men and women; for cruel overseers had followed
them into the mine and were urging the slow to greater haste.</p>
<p>To-day, Pharaoh’s birthday, they had been driven to the temple of Hathor
on the summit of the neighboring height, to pray for the king who had
plunged them into the deepest misery, and they would have been released
from labor until the next morning, had not the unexpected attack induced
the commander to force them back into the mines. Therefore to-day the
women, who were usually obliged merely to crush and sift the ores needed
to make glass and dyes, were compelled to labor in the galleries.</p>
<p>When the convicts heard Joshua’s shouts and footsteps, which echoed from
the bare cliffs, they were afraid that some fresh misfortune was
impending, and wailing and lamentations arose in all directions. But the
deliverer soon reached the first convicts, and the glad tidings that he
had come to save them from their misery speedily extended to the inmost
depths of the mines.</p>
<p>Wild exultation filled the galleries which were wont to witness only
sorrowful moans and burning tears; yet loud cries for help, piteous
wailings, groans, and the death-rattle reached Joshua’s ear; for a
hot-blooded man had rushed upon the overseer most hated and felled him
with his pick-axe. His example quickly inflamed the others’ thirst for
vengeance and, ere it could be prevented, the same fate overtook the other
officials. But they had defended themselves and the corpse of many a
prisoner strewed the ground beside their tormentors.</p>
<p>Obeying Joshua’s call, the liberated multitude at last emerged into the
light of day. Savage and fierce were the outcries which blended in
sinister discord with the rattling of the chains they dragged after them.
Even the most fearless among the Hebrews shrank in horror as they beheld
the throng of hapless sufferers in the full radiance of the sunlight; for
the dazzled, reddened eyes of the unfortunate sufferers,—many of
whom had formerly enjoyed in their own homes or at the king’s court every
earthly blessing; who had been tender mothers and fathers, rejoiced in
doing good, and shared all the blessings of the civilization of a richly
gifted people,—these dazzled eyes which at first glittered through
tears caused by the swift transition from the darkness of the mines to the
glare of the noon-day sun, soon sparkled as fiercely and greedily as those
of starving owls.</p>
<p>At first, overwhelmed by the singular change in their destiny, they
struggled for composure and did not resist the Hebrews, who, at Joshua’s
signal, began to file the fetters from their ankles; but when they
perceived the disarmed soldiers and overseers who, guarded by Ephraim and
his companions, were ranged at the base of a cliff, a strange excitement
overpowered them. Amid shrieks and yells which no name can designate, no
words describe, they broke from those who were trying to remove their
fetters and, though no glance or word had been exchanged between them,
obeyed the same terrible impulse, and unheeding the chains that burdened
them, rushed upon the defenceless Egyptians. Before the Hebrews could
prevent it, each threw himself upon the one who had inflicted the worst
suffering upon him; and here might be seen an emaciated man clutching the
throat of his stronger foe, yonder a band of nude women horribly
disfigured by want and neglect, rush upon the man who had most rudely
insulted, beaten, and abused them, and with teeth and nails wreak upon him
their long repressed fury.</p>
<p>It seemed as though the flood-tide of hate had burst its dam and,
unfettered, was demanding its victims.</p>
<p>There was a horrible scene of attack and defence, a ferocious, bloody
conflict on foot and amid the red sand of the desert, shrieks, yells, and
howls pierced the ear; nay, it was difficult to distinguish individuals in
this motley confusion of men and women, animated on the one side by the
wildest passion, a yearning for vengeance amounting to blood-thirstiness,
and on the other by the dread of death and the necessity for self-defence.</p>
<p>Only a few of the prisoners had succeeded in controlling themselves; but
they, too, shouted irritating words to their fellows, reviled the
Egyptians in violent excitement, and shook their clenched fists at the
disarmed foe.</p>
<p>The fury with which the liberated serfs rushed upon their tormentors was
as unprecedented as the cruelties they had suffered.</p>
<p>But Joshua had deprived the Egyptians of their weapons, and they were
therefore under his protection.</p>
<p>So he commanded his men to separate the combatants, if possible without
bloodshed; but the task was no easy one, and many new and horrible deeds
were committed. At last, however, it was accomplished, and they now
perceived how terribly rage had increased the strength of the exhausted
and feeble sufferers; for though no weapons had been used in the conflict
a number of corpses strewed the spot, and most of the guards were bleeding
from terrible wounds.</p>
<p>After quiet had been restored, Joshua asked the wounded commander for the
list of prisoners, but he pointed to the clerk of the mines, whom none of
the convicts had assailed. He had been their physician and treated them
kindly-an elderly man, he had himself undergone sore trials and, knowing
the pain of suffering, was ready to alleviate the pangs of others.</p>
<p>He willingly read aloud the names of the prisoners, among which were
several Hebrew ones, and after each individual had responded, many
declared themselves ready to join the wandering tribes.</p>
<p>When the disarmed soldiers and guards at last set out on their way home,
the captain of the band that had escorted Joshua and his companions left
the other Egyptians, and with drooping head and embarrassed mien
approached old Nun and his son, and begged permission to go with them; for
he could expect no favor at home and there was no God in Egypt so mighty
as theirs. It had not escaped his notice that Hosea, who had once been a
chief in the Egyptian service, had raised his hands in the sorest straits
to this God, and never had he witnessed the same degree of resolution that
he possessed. Now he also knew that this same mighty God had buried
Pharaoh’s powerful army in the sea to save His people. Such a God was
acceptable to his heart, and he desired nothing better than to remain
henceforward with those who served Him.</p>
<p>Joshua willingly allowed him to join the Hebrews. Then it appeared that
there were fifteen of the latter among the liberated prisoners and, to
Ephraim’s special delight, Reuben, the husband of poor melancholy Milcah,
who clung so closely to Miriam. His reserved, laconic disposition had
stood him in good stead, and the arduous forced labor seemed to have
inflicted little injury on his robust frame.</p>
<p>The exultation of victory, the joy of success, had taken full possession
of Ephraim and his youthful band; but when the sun set and there was still
no sign of Hur and his band, Nun and his followers were seized with
anxiety.</p>
<p>Ephraim had already proposed to go with some of his companions in quest of
tidings, when a messenger announced that Hur’s men had lost courage at the
sight of the well-fortified Egyptian citadel. Their leader, it is true,
had urged them to the assault, but his band had shrunk from the peril and,
unless Nun and his men brought aid, they would return with their mission
unfulfilled.</p>
<p>It was therefore resolved to go to the assistance of the timorous. With
joyous confidence they marched forward and, during the journey through the
cool night, Ephraim and Nun described to Joshua how they had found Kasana
and how she had died. What she had desired to communicate to the man she
loved was now made known to him, and the warrior listened with deep
emotion and remained silent and thoughtful until they reached Dophkah, the
valley of the turquoise mines, from whose center rose the fortress which
contained the prisoners.</p>
<p>Hur and his men had remained concealed in a side-valley, and after Joshua
had divided the Hebrew force into several bodies and assigned to each a
certain task, he gave at dawn the signal for the assault.</p>
<p>After a brief struggle the little garrison was overpowered and the
fortress taken. The disarmed Egyptians, like their companions at the
copper mines, were sent home. The prisoners were released and the lepers,
whose quarters were in a side-valley beyond the mines—among them
were those who at Joshua’s bidding had been brought here—were
allowed to follow the conquerors at a certain distance.</p>
<p>What Hur, Miriam’s husband, could not accomplish, Joshua had done, and ere
the young soldiers departed with Ephraim, old Nun assembled them to offer
thanks to the Lord. The men under Hur’s command also joined in the prayer
and wherever Joshua appeared Ephraim’s companions greeted him with cheers.</p>
<p>“Hail to our chief!” often rang on the air, as they marched forward: “Hail
to him whom the Most High Himself has chosen for His sword! We will gladly
follow him; for through him God leads us to victory.”</p>
<p>Hur’s men also joined in these shouts, and he did not forbid them; nay,
after the storming of the fortress, he had thanked Joshua and expressed
his pleasure in his liberation.</p>
<p>At the departure, the younger man had stepped back to let the older one
precede him; but Hur had entreated grey-haired Nun, who was greatly his
senior, to take the head of the procession, though after the deliverance
of the people on the shore of the Red Sea he had himself been appointed by
Moses and the elders to the chief command of the Hebrew soldiers.</p>
<p>The road led first through a level mountain valley, then it crossed the
pass known as the “Sword-point “, which was the only means of
communication between the mines and the Red Sea.</p>
<p>The rocky landscape was wild and desolate, and the path to be climbed
steep. Joshua’s old father, who had grown up on the flat plains of Goshen
and was unaccustomed to climbing mountains, was borne amid the joyous
acclamations of the others, in the arms of his son and grandson, to the
summit of the pass; but Miriam’s husband who, at the head of his men,
followed the division of Ephraim’s companions, heard the shouts of the
youths yet moved with drooping head and eyes bent on the ground.</p>
<p>At the summit they were to rest and wait for the people who were to be led
through the wilderness of Sin to Dophkah.</p>
<p>The victors gazed from the top of the pass in search of the travellers;
but as yet no sign of them appeared. But when they looked back along the
mountain path whence they had come a different spectacle presented itself,
a scene so grand, so marvellous, that it attracted every eye as though by
a magic spell; for at their feet lay a circular valley, surrounded by
lofty cliffs, mountain ridges, peaks, and summits, which here white as
chalk, yonder raven-black, here grey and brown, yonder red and green,
appeared to grow upward from the sand toward the azure sky of the
wilderness, steeped in dazzling light, and unshadowed by the tiniest
cloudlet.</p>
<p>All that the eye beheld was naked and bare, silent and lifeless. On the
slopes of the many-colored rocks, which surrounded the sandy valley, grew
no blade of grass nor smallest plant. Neither bird, worm, nor beetle
stirred in these silent tracts, hostile to all life. Here the eye
discerned no cultivation,—nothing that recalled human existence. God
seemed to have created for Himself alone these vast tracts which were of
service to no living creature. Whoever penetrated into this wilderness
entered a spot which the Most High had perchance chosen for a place of
rest and retreat, like the silent, inaccessible Holy of Holies of the
temple.</p>
<p>The young men had gazed mutely at the wonderful scene at their feet. Now
they prepared to encamp and showed themselves diligent in serving old Nun,
whom they sincerely loved. Resting among them under a hastily erected
canopy he related, with sparkling eyes, the deeds his son had performed.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Joshua and Hur were still standing at the top of the pass, the
former gazing silently down into the dreary, rocky valley, which
overarched by the blue dome of the sky, surrounded by the mountain pillars
and columns from God’s own workshop, opened before him as the mightiest of
temples.</p>
<p>The old man had long gazed gloomily at the ground, but he suddenly
interrupted the silence and said:</p>
<p>“In Succoth I erected a heap of stones and called upon the Lord to be a
witness between us. But in this spot, amid this silence, it seems to me
that without memorial or sign we are sure of His presence.” Here he drew
his figure to a greater height and continued: “And I now raise mine eyes
to Thee, Adonai, and address my humble words to Thee, Jehovah, Thou God of
Abraham and of our fathers, that Thou mayst a second time be a witness
between me and this man whom Thou Thyself didst summon to Thy service,
that he might be Thy sword.”</p>
<p>He had uttered these words with eyes and hands uplifted, then turning to
the other, he said with solemn earnestness:</p>
<p>“So I ask thee Hosea, son of Nun, dost thou remember the vow which thou
and I made before the stones in Succoth?”</p>
<p>“I do,” was the reply. “And in sore disaster and great peril I perceived
what the Most High desired of me, and am resolved to devote to Him all the
strength of body and soul with which He has endowed me, to Him alone, and
to His people, who are also mine. Henceforward I will be called Joshua...
nor will I seek service with the Egyptians or any foreign king; for the
Lord our God through the lips of thy wife bestowed this name upon me.”</p>
<p>Then Hur, with solemn earnestness, broke in: “That is what I expected to
hear and as, in this place also, the Most High is a witness between me and
thee and hears this conversation, let the vow I made in His presence be
here fulfilled. The heads of the tribes and Moses, the servant of the
Lord, appointed me to the command of the fighting-men of our people. But
now thou dost call thyself Joshua, and hast vowed to serve no other than
the Lord our God. I am well aware thou canst accomplish far greater things
as commander of an army than I, who have grown grey in driving herds, or
than any other Hebrew, by whatever name he is known, so I will fulfil the
vow sworn at Succoth. I will ask Moses, the servant of the Lord, and the
elders to confide to thee the office of commander. In their hands will I
place the decision and, because I feel that the Most High beholds my
heart, let me confess that I have thought of thee with secret rancor. Yet,
for the welfare of the people, I will forget what lies between us and
offer thee my hand.”</p>
<p>With these words he held out his hand to Joshua and the latter, grasping
it, replied with generous candor:</p>
<p>“Thy words are manly and mine shall be also. For the sake of the people
and the cause we both serve, I will accept thy offer. Yet since thou hast
summoned the Most High as a witness and He hears me, I, too, will not
withhold one iota of the truth. The Lord Himself has summoned me to the
office of commander of the fighting-men which thou dost desire to commit
to me. It was done through Miriam, thy wife, and is my due. Yet I
recognize thy willingness to yield thy dignity to me as a praiseworthy
deed, since I know how hard it is for a man to resign power, especially in
favor of a younger one whom he does not love. Thou hast done this, and I
am grateful. I, too, have thought of thee with secret rancor; for through
thee I lost another possession harder for a man to renounce than office:
the love of woman.”</p>
<p>The hot blood mounted into Hur’s cheeks, as he exclaimed:</p>
<p>“Miriam! I did not force her into marriage; nay I did not even purchase
her, according to the custom of our fathers, with the bridal dowry—she
became my wife of her own free will.”</p>
<p>“I know it,” replied Joshua quietly, “yet there was one man who had
yearned to make her his longer and more ardently than thou, and the fire
of jealousy burned fiercely in his heart. But have no anxiety; for wert
thou now to give her a letter of divorce and lead her to me that I might
open my arms and tent to receive her, I would exclaim:</p>
<p>“Why hast thou done this thing to thyself and to me? For a short time ago
I learned what woman’s love is, and that I was mistaken when I believed
Miriam shared the ardor of my heart. Besides, during the march with
fetters on my feet, in the heaviest misfortune, I vowed to devote all the
strength and energy of soul and body to the welfare of our people. Nor
shall the love of woman turn me from the great duty I have taken upon
myself. As for thy wife, I shall treat her as a stranger unless, as a
prophetess, she summons me to announce a new message from the Lord.”</p>
<p>With these words he held out his hand to his companion and, as Hur grasped
it, loud voices were heard from the fighting-men, for messengers were
climbing the mountain, who, shouting and beckoning, pointed to the vast
cloud of dust that preceded the march of the tribes.</p>
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