登陆注册
25634200000040

第40章

And now everybody has gone: the colonnades are empty and the noise of the dynamos has ceased. Midday approaches with its torpor. The whole temple seems to be ablaze with rays, and I watch the clear-cut shadows cast by this forest of stone gradually shortening on the ground. The sun, which just now shone, all smiles and gaiety, upon the quay of the new town amid the uproar of the stall-keepers, the donkey drivers and the cosmopolitan passengers, casts here a sullen, impassive and consuming fire. And meanwhile the shadows shorten--and just as they do every day, beneath this sky which is never overcast, just as they have done for five and thirty centuries, these columns, these friezes and this temple itself, like a mysterious and solemn sundial, record patiently on the ground the slow passing of the hours. Verily for us, the ephemerae of thought, this unbroken continuity of the sun of Egypt has more of melancholy even than the changing, overcast skies of our climate.

And now, at last, the temple is restored to solitude and all noise in the neighbourhood has ceased.

An avenue bordered by very high columns, of which the capitals are in the form of the full-blown flowers of the papyrus, leads me to a place shut in and almost terrible, where is massed an assembly of colossi.

Two, who, if they were standing, would be quite ten yards in height, are seated on thrones on either side of the entrance. The others, ranged on the three sides of the courtyard, stand upright behind colonnades, but look as if they were about to issue thence and to stride rapidly towards me. Some broken and battered, have lost their faces and preserve only their intimidating attitude. Those that remain intact--white faces beneath their Sphinx's headgear--open their eyes wide and smile.

This was formerly the principal entrance, and the office of these colossi was to welcome the multitudes. But now the gates of honour flanked by obelisks of red granite, are obstructed by a litter of enormous ruins. And the courtyard has become a place voluntarily closed, where nothing of the outside world is any longer to be seen.

In moments of silence, one can abstract oneself from all the neighbouring modern things, and forget the hour, the day, the century even, in the midst of these gigantic figures, whose smile disdains the flight of ages. The granites within which we are immured--and in such terrible company--shut out everything save the point of an old neighbouring minaret which shows now against the blue of the sky: a humble graft of Islam which grew here amongst the ruins some centuries ago, when the ruins themselves had already subsisted for three thousand years--a little mosque built on a mass of debris, which it new protects with its inviolability. How many treasures and relics and documents are hidden and guarded by this mosque of the peristyle! For none would dare to dig in the ground within its sacred walls.

Gradually the silence of the temple becomes profound. And if the shortened shadows betray the hour of noon, there is nothing to tell to what millennium that hour belongs. The silences and middays like to this, which have passed before the eyes of these giants ambushed in their colonnades--who could count them?

High above us, lost in the incandescent blue, soar the birds of prey--and they were there in the times of the Pharaohs, displaying in the air identical plumages, uttering the same cries. The beasts and plants, in the course of time, have varied less than men, and remain unchanged in the smallest details.

Each of the colossi around me--standing there proudly with one leg advanced as if for a march, heavy and sure, which nothing should withstand--grasps passionately in his clenched fist, at the end of the muscular arm, a kind of buckled cross, which in Egypt was the symbol of eternal life. And this is what the decision of their movement symbolises: confident all of them in this poor bauble which they hold in their hand, they cross with a triumphant step the threshold of death. . . . "Eternal Life"--the thought of immortality--how the human soul has been obsessed by it, particularly in the periods marked by its greatest strivings! The tame submission to the belief that the rottenness of the grave is the end of all is characteristic of ages of decadence and mediocrity.

The three similar giants, little damaged in the course of their long existence, who align the eastern side of this courtyard strewn with blocks, represent, as indeed do all the others, that same Ramses II., whose effigy was multiplied so extravagantly at Thebes and Memphis.

But these three have preserved a powerful and impetuous life. They might have been carved and polished yesterday. Between the monstrous reddish pillars, they look like white apparitions issuing from their embrasure of columns and advancing together like soldiers at manoeuvres. The sun at this moment falls perpendicularly on their heads and strange headgear, details their everlasting smile, and then sheds itself on their shoulders and their naked torso, exaggerating their athletic muscles. Each holding in his hand the symbolical cross, the three giants rush forward with a formidable stride, heads raised, smiling, in a radiant march into eternity.

Oh! this midday sun, that now pours down upon the white faces of these giants, and displaces ever so slowly the shadows cast upon their breasts by their chins and Osiridean beards. To think how often in the midst of this same silence, this same ray has fallen thus, fallen from the same changeless sky, to occupy itself in this same tranquil play!

Yes, I think that the fogs and rains of our winters, upon these stupendous ruins, would be less sad and less terrible than the calm of this eternal sunshine.

*****

Suddenly a ridiculous noise begins to make the air tremble; the dynamos of the Agencies have been put in motion, and ladies in green spectacles arrive, a charming throng, with guidebooks and cameras. The tourists, in short, are come out of their hotels, at the same hour as the flies awake. And the midday peace of Luxor has come to an end.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 九龙神骑士

    九龙神骑士

    龙神之后裔,大陆之王者,不败少年的龙骑士之路!
  • 至尊公主

    至尊公主

    旧朝司马“高辛”之女,被诸王之皇“东皇太一”封为宁公主,也是皇太子“东皇痕”的太子妃。
  • 你给的不是我要的明天

    你给的不是我要的明天

    你那么阳光,那么帅气,你的笑容那么迷人!暗恋你3年,你却一直把我当哥们,你的身边总是有无数的女人。一场车祸,我挣扎于死亡的边缘,我以为没有人来拯救我了,而你却邪魅如撒旦般出现在我面前,在我耳边耳鬓厮磨道:“亲爱的,我喜欢你,即使和你一起下地狱,我也愿意。”
  • 大大事

    大大事

    《大大事》是已出版图书《小小爱》的姊妹篇,两位80后作家用文字和图片绘制了她们生活的点点滴滴的小事,那些在大人世界里微小到看不见的事儿,在孩子们的眼睛里,可都是天大的大事儿!《大大事》中的每一句话都是一个很小但精确的生活瞬间,按春夏秋冬分为四类,有如一个小孩子的日记图画本。它有点小任性、小拧巴和十足的童稚,配合盆景儿的图画作品,(采用拼贴,粘土,PS,手工插画,多媒体等的融合之作)展现那个难以捕捉的瞬间——天真,童趣,稚拙,艳丽。
  • 这么说你就被灭了

    这么说你就被灭了

    《这么说你就被灭了》这不是一本万用灵丹,更不是职场百科全书。这是一本有关于职场真话的书,在这里,与所有想褪去“幼稚”外衣的读者共勉。换下职业生涯中“幼儿“的开裆裤,一起成长成熟。作者刘同根据10年工作亲身所遇实例,精心归纳总结并整理出职场细节百分百攻略。这不是一本帮你指点大方向的道理书,而是帮你寻找出职场中的“小细节”对症下药的职场“实用工具书”。书中运用了大量网络新汇词语,使之更具有时代感语并贴近生活,文中言语诙谐、幽默,形式方便,不像是枯燥无味教学课本,不会有老师给你头头是道的传授理论,本书更像是一位老友在跟讲述自己所经历的小坎坷,小经验。本书版式新颖,书中用微博观众及粉丝的提问互动形式来吸引你的眼球。
  • 异族觉醒:不做废柴小姐

    异族觉醒:不做废柴小姐

    他,贵为风族的一族之长,与她青梅竹马,却阴错阳差娶了别的女子……他,孤傲独行,长年深居千鸟峰,偶然间三番两次救了她的性命,只因她与自己深爱的女子相貌相似?他,腹黑冷俊的七皇子,视她为争夺皇位与权势的一枚棋子,然而却没想到自己也有动了真情的时候……他文武双全,温文尔雅。却在未见过她的真面貌之时就爱上了她,为她抗旨,为她抛弃了荣华富贵,哪怕她的心里暂时没有他……她,是水族二小姐,被众人视为废柴草包,任何一个有些武力的人都可以欺辱她。一次偶然发现自己是冰族后人,自身灵力解封,高手间的对决才刚刚开始……
  • 再无轮回

    再无轮回

    不论爱恨情仇,是非对错,结局已成定。一个家族,一个家庭,谁也不能舍。众人皆说我是拆穿了阴谋,也结束了此间世界的未来,也如同吾姓独孤。。。。。问我若再有一次我还会不会如此?我说我独孤若不甘心!!天道若再有一次我还是会如此!!
  • 娑婆劫之艳冠天下

    娑婆劫之艳冠天下

    他一袭白衣,艳冠天下,离荒大陆从来没有比他更好看的男子,他的美令男人痴迷,令女人疯狂,他清冷高傲,从不掌握天下,天下却因他而变动,两国皇帝为他掀起战火,争为男宠。她一身红裙,纵使再美,在他面前也只会失了颜色,她事事以护他为主,不是他无能,只是这些俗事交给她来做就好了,他只要每日继续弹琴煮茶就好。为了他,她什么都做了,逼宫夺位争天下,甚至嫁他人为妃。他一出生,万花俱谢,三月飞雪,天下人说他太美,万花都自惭形愧,羞于再开,太多不可思议的事在那天发生,人人视他为不祥之人。“他们都说会永远陪在我身边,可到头来,始终陪在我身边的只她一人而已。而事实上,我也只要她一人陪,你们太过自作多情!”长的太美是他的错?两国皇上争他为男宠是他的错?天下因他动乱是他的错?既然如此,毁了这脸如何?
  • 睡妃

    睡妃

    他曾视她如珍宝,可她却背叛了他们之间的海誓山盟,投入了他皇兄的怀抱。五年后,一场宫变,他夺取了皇位,迫她侍寝,他发誓,当年他她给他的耻辱,他要她加倍的偿还。当所有的爱意转变为满腔的仇恨,她从高贵的妃子沦为了他的侍寝囚奴……
  • TFBOYS之遇见了一生

    TFBOYS之遇见了一生

    当十年之约终于来临,TFBOYS又会遇到什么?不停地分分合合,他们最终到底能否和自己心爱的女孩在一起?已经出道并且也大红大紫的刘志宏又会怎样?由一个女孩认识的哥们又能否收获圆满的爱情?答案就在书中。雨若第一次写小说,写的不好,还请多多包涵!谢谢!注:本书纯属虚构。