登陆注册
26283900000020

第20章 PHARAOH MAKES TROUBLE(1)

Another six weeks or so had gone by, and at length the character of the country began to change. At last we were passing out of the endless desert over which we had travelled for so many hundreds of miles; at least a thousand, according to our observations and reckonings, which I checked by those that I had taken upon my eastward journey. Our march, after the great adventure at the oasis, was singularly devoid of startling events. Indeed, it had been awful in its monotony, and yet, oddly enough, not without a certain charm--at any rate for Higgs and Orme, to whom the experience was new.

Day by day to travel on across an endless sea of sand so remote, so unvisited that for whole weeks no man, not even a wandering Bedouin of the desert, crossed our path. Day by day to see the great red sun rise out of the eastern sands, and, its journey finished, sink into the western sands. Night by night to watch the moon, the same moon on which were fixed the million eyes of cities, turning those sands to a silver sea, or, in that pure air, to observe the constellations by which we steered our path ****** their majestic march through space.

And yet to know that this vast region, now so utterly lonesome and desolate, had once been familiar to the feet of long-forgotten men who had trod the sands we walked, and dug the wells at which we drank.

Armies had marched across these deserts, also, and perished there. For once we came to a place where a recent fearful gale had almost denuded the underlying rock, and there found the skeletons of thousands upon thousands of soldiers, with those of their beasts of burden, and among them heads of arrows, sword-blades, fragments of armour and of painted wooden shields.

Here a whole host had died; perhaps Alexander sent it forth, or perhaps some far earlier monarch whose name has ceased to echo on the earth. At least they had died, for there we saw the memorial of that buried enterprise. There lay the kings, the captains, the soldiers, and the concubines, for I found the female bones heaped apart, some with the long hair still upon the skulls, showing where the poor, affrighted women had hived together in the last catastrophe of slaughter or of famine, thirst, and driven sand. Oh, if only those bones could speak, what a tale was theirs to tell!

There had been cities in this desert, too, where once were oases, now overwhelmed, except perhaps for a sand-choked spring. Twice we came upon the foundations of such places, old walls of clay or stone, stark skeletons of ancient homes that the shifting sands had disinterred, which once had been the theatre of human hopes and fears, where once men had been born, loved, and died, where once maidens had been fair, and good and evil wrestled, and little children played. Some Job may have dwelt here and written his immortal plaint, or some king of Sodom, and suffered the uttermost calamity. The world is very old; all we Westerns learned from the contemplation of these wrecks of men and of their works was just that the world is very old.

One evening against the clear sky there appeared the dim outline of towering cliffs, shaped like a horseshoe. They were the Mountains of Mur many miles away, but still the Mountains of Mur, sighted at last.

Next morning we began to descend through wooded land toward a wide river that is, I believe, a tributary of the Nile, though upon this point I have no certain information. Three days later we reached the banks of this river, following some old road, and faring sumptuously all the way, since here there was much game and grass in plenty for the camels that, after their long abstinence, ate until we thought that they would burst. Evidently we had not arrived an hour too soon, for now the Mountains of Mur were hid by clouds, and we could see that it was raining upon the plains which lay between us and them. The wet season was setting in, and, had we been a single week later, it might have been impossible for us to cross the river, which would then have been in flood. As it was, we passed it without difficulty by the ancient ford, the water never rising above the knees of our camels.

Upon its further bank we took counsel, for now we had entered the territory of the Fung, and were face to face with the real dangers of our journey. Fifty miles or so away rose the fortress of Mur, but, as I explained to my companions, the question was how to pass those fifty miles in safety. Shadrach was called to our conference, and at my request set out the facts.

Yonder, he said, rose the impregnable mountain home of the Abati, but all the vast plain included in the loop of the river which he called Ebur, was the home of the savage Fung race, whose warriors could be counted by the ten thousand, and whose principal city, Harmac, was built opposite to the stone effigy of their idol, that was also called Harmac----

"Harmac--that is Harmachis, god of dawn. Your Fung had something to do with the old Egyptians, or both of them came from a common stock," interrupted Higgs triumphantly.

"I daresay, old fellow," answered Orme; "I think you told us that before in London; but we will go into the arch?ology afterwards if we survive to do so. Let Shadrach get on with his tale."

This city, which had quite fifty thousand inhabitants, continued Shadrach, commanded the mouth of the pass or cleft by which we must approach Mur, having probably been first built there for that very purpose.

Orme asked if there was no other way into the stronghold, which, he understood, the embassy had left by being let down a precipice.

Shadrach answered that this was true, but that although the camels and their loads had been let down that precipitous place, owing to the formation of its overhanging rocks, it would be perfectly impossible to haul them up it with any tackle that the Abati possessed.

同类推荐
  • 太上飞行九晨玉经

    太上飞行九晨玉经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 黄帝阴符经心法

    黄帝阴符经心法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • UNDINE

    UNDINE

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 王艮尺牍

    王艮尺牍

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 啸亭杂录

    啸亭杂录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 万丈迷津,请自渡

    万丈迷津,请自渡

    本仙仙号扶摇,生于岷山羽波湖畔,真身乃是.....一颗石头。本上仙生来仙胎,得天地之造化,乃父神开天辟地以来第二个在五千岁前修成的上仙,一时风光无二。俗话说:出来混的,迟早是要还的,在我七千八百岁时又历经了晋位上神的九九雷劫,历经艰辛终于成功的...仙力尽失,落地为人。嗯。這是一场由神魔掐架开始的千古爱情。一个沦为凡人的年轻上神在人间不断游历,找寻返回九重天的宝物,在路上遇见温柔深情的天界皇子伊何,脾气暴躁深情专一的神兽白泽、还有邪魅疯狂的魔神昊苍...一段凄美绚烂的爱情,一个救人与自救的故事。心之何如?有如万丈迷津,遥亘千里,其中并无舟子可渡人,除了自渡,他人爱莫能助。
  • 假如时光倒流我依然爱你

    假如时光倒流我依然爱你

    假如时光可以倒流,命运的轨迹,依然在那里,你改变不了过去,改变不了曾经,唯一能改变的,是那一份接受结局的心情!有一种亲情是相濡以沫的感动,而有一种爱情是相忘江湖的洒脱。该小说为《时光邂逅了年华》的续集。
  • 剑侠魔灵

    剑侠魔灵

    寒绝魔脉、地煞之躯、荒绝之体、星煞之手、冥火之心、冥影之灵、九天魔鸣、魔灵血瞳八大禁忌体横空出世,封印少年不走寻常路。幻灵一途,一体、二气、三修、四命、五地、六天,神碑、方休、得天道。
  • 受益一生的44种思维方法

    受益一生的44种思维方法

    本书向大家陈列出种种的思维方法的最主要的目的就是要掌握思维的钥匙,每个人都应当有这样的紧迫感和自觉性。
  • 霍少唯爱新妻

    霍少唯爱新妻

    荣城中没有一个人不想将褚幂送去精神病院,可荣城中没有一个人有胆量提及褚幂的病,因为宠着她的那个男人,只手遮天
  • 唯禹之路

    唯禹之路

    赵唯禹本是一个初2的学生,在学校经常挨欺负。从此下定决心要当王者!
  • 笑看江湖录

    笑看江湖录

    纵马江湖道,今生任逍遥。游侠生活好,四海结英豪。刀剑本无眼,较量收招巧。剑气笑寒雪,阳光洒心稍。武艺如浮龙,内功涌波涛。行为品德正,积善除魔妖。回想行侠时,豪情比天高。梦想如实现,愿剑埋深谷。晚霞红似火,朝阳洒江娇。重整游侠装,笑看江湖录。
  • 明朝大官人

    明朝大官人

    “凌成,念你今世死得冤,前世又有功,便给你一个头等富贵的去处,让你在大明朝走上一遭。记住,到了那边要遵守大明朝的规则,莫要改了历史,否则时空错乱,你就一辈子也回不去了。”“喂喂喂,别冲动,我还没准备好,我不是告诉你还没有准备,等等等,你们要干什么?放开我,放开我……”
  • 张强文集·艺术个案与群体批评卷

    张强文集·艺术个案与群体批评卷

    当艺术表现成为一种生命内在需要的时候,精神便与纵情无羁的行动混合,使艺术传达成为义无返顾的冒险。王易罡的作品是他淋漓尽致地表达生命体验和袒露个人意志的深刻印迹。
  • 魔体仙尊著

    魔体仙尊著

    魔本无道,无为之道。以魔弑魔,亦是正道。仙本是道,道亦有道。抑强扶弱,道中有道!