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    Joshua — Volume 4

    Part 1

    小说: Joshua — Volume 4 作者:Georg Ebers 字数:56929 更新时间:2019-11-20 11:56:04

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    Title: Joshua, Volume 4.

    Author: Georg Ebers

    Release Date: April, 2004 [EBook #5470]

    [Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]

    [This file was first posted on May 15, 2002]

    Edition: 10

    Language: English

    *** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JOSHUA, BY GEORG EBERS, VOLUME 4 ***

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    JOSHUA

    By Georg Ebers

    Volume 4.

    CHAPTER XX.

    The storm which had risen as night closed in swept over the isthmus. The

    waves in its lakes dashed high, and the Red Sea, which thrust a bay

    shaped like the horn of a snail into it from the south, was lashed to the

    wildest fury.

    Farther northward, where Pharaoh's army, protected by the Migdol of the

    South, the strongest fort of the Etham line, had encamped a short time

    before, the sand lashed by the storm whirled through the air and, in the

    quarter occupied by the king and his great officials, hammers were

    constantly busy driving the tent-pins deeper into the earth; for the

    brocades, cloths, and linen materials which formed the portable houses of

    Pharaoh and his court, struck by the gale, threatened to break from the

    poles by which they were supported.

    Black clouds hung in the north, but the moon and stars were often

    visible, and flashes of distant lightning frequently brightened the

    horizon. Even now the moisture of heaven seemed to avoid this rainless

    region and in all directions fires were burning, which the soldiers

    surrounded in double rows, like a living shield, to keep the storm from

    scattering the fuel.

    The sentries had a hard duty; for the atmosphere was sultry, in spite of

    the north wind, which still blew violently, driving fresh clouds of sand

    into their faces.

    Only two sentinels were pacing watchfully to and fro at the most northern

    gate of the camp, but they were enough; for, on account of the storm, no

    one had appeared for a long time to demand entrance or egress. At last,

    three hours after sunset, a slender figure, scarcely beyond boyhood,

    approached the guards with a firm step and, showing a messenger's pass,

    asked the way to Prince Siptah's tent.

    He seemed to have had a toilsome journey; for his thick black locks were

    tangled and his feet were covered with dust and dried clay. Yet he

    excited no suspicion; for his bearing was that of a self-reliant freeman,

    his messenger's pass was perfectly correct, and the letter he produced

    was really directed to Prince Siptah; a scribe of the corn storehouses,

    who was sitting at the nearest fire with other officials and subordinate

    officers, examined it.

    As the youth's appearance pleased most of those present, and he came from

    Tanis and perhaps brought news, a seat at the fire and a share in the

    meal were offered; but he was in haste.

    Declining the invitation with thanks, he answered the questions curtly

    and hurriedly and begged the resting soldiers for a guide. One was

    placed at his disposal without delay. But he was soon to learn that it

    would not be an easy matter to reach a member of the royal family; for

    the tents of Pharaoh, his relatives, and dignitaries stood in a special

    spot in the heart of the camp, hedged in by the shields of the heavily-

    armed troops.

    When he entered he was challenged again and again, and his messenger's

    pass and the prince's letter were frequently inspected. The guide, too,

    was sent back, and his place was filled by an aristocratic lord, called I

    the 'eye and ear of the king,' who busied himself with the seal of the

    letter. But the messenger resolutely demanded it, and as soon as it was

    again in his hand, and two tents standing side by side rocking in the

    tempest had been pointed out to him, one as Prince Siptah's, the other as

    the shelter of Masana, the daughter of Hornecht, for whom he asked, he

    turned to the chamberlain who came out of the former one, showed him the

    letter, and asked to be taken to the prince; but the former offered to

    deliver the letter to his master—whose steward he was—and Ephraim—for

    he was the messenger—agreed, if he would obtain him immediate admission

    to the young widow.

    The steward seemed to lay much stress upon getting possession of the

    letter and, after scanning Ephraim from top to toe, he asked if Kasana

    knew him, and when the other assented, adding that he brought her a

    verbal message, the Egyptian said smiling:

    "Well then; but we must protect our carpets from such feet, and you seem

    weary and in need of refreshment. Follow me."

    With these words he took him to a small tent, before which an old slave

    and one scarcely beyond childhood were sitting by the fire, finishing

    their late meal with a bunch of garlic.

    They started up as they saw their master; but he ordered the old man to

    wash the messenger's feet, and bade the younger ask the prince's cook in

    his name for meat, bread, and wine. Then he led Ephraim to his tent,

    which was lighted by a lantern, and asked how he, who from his appearance

    was neither a slave nor a person of mean degree, had come into such a

    pitiable plight. The messenger replied that on his way he had bandaged

    the wounds of a severely injured man with the upper part of his apron,

    and the chamberlain instantly went to his baggage and gave him a piece of

    finely plaited linen.

    Ephraim's reply, which was really very near the truth, had cost him so

    little thought and sounded so sincere, that it won credence, and the

    steward's kindness seemed to him so worthy of gratitude that he made no

    objection when the courtier, without injuring the seal, pressed the roll

    of papyrus with a skilful hand, separating the layers and peering into

    the openings to decipher the contents. While thus engaged, the corpulent

    courtier's round eyes sparkled brightly and it seemed to the youth as if

    the countenance of the man, whose comfortable plumpness and smooth

    rotundity at first appeared like a mirror of the utmost kindness of

    heart, now had the semblance of a cat's.

    As soon as the steward had completed his task, he begged the youth to

    refresh himself in all comfort, and did not return until Ephraim had

    bathed, wrapped a fresh linen upper-garment around his hips, perfumed and

    anointed his hair, and, glancing into the mirror, was in the act of

    slipping a broad gold circlet upon his arm.

    He had hesitated some time ere doing this; for he was aware that he would

    encounter great perils; but this circlet was his one costly possession

    and, during his captivity, it had been very difficult for him to hide it

    under his apron. It might be of much service to him but, if he put it

    on, it would attract attention and increase the danger of being

    recognized.

    Yet the reflection he beheld in the mirror, vanity, and the desire

    to appear well in Kasana's eyes, conquered caution and prudent

    consideration, and the broad costly ornament soon glittered on his arm.

    The steward stood in astonishment before the handsome, aristocratic

    youth, so haughty in his bearing, who had taken the place of the

    unassuming messenger. The question whether he was a relative of Kasana

    sprang to his lips, and receiving an answer in the negative, he asked to

    what family he belonged.

    Ephraim bent his eyes on the ground for some time in embarrassment, and

    then requested the Egyptian to spare him an answer until he had talked

    with Hornecht's daughter.

    The other, shaking his head, looked at him again, but pressed him no

    farther; for what he had read in the letter was a secret which might

    bring death to whoever was privy to it, and the aristocratic young

    messenger was doubtless the son of a dignitary who belonged to the circle

    of the fellow-conspirators of Prince Siptah, his master.

    A chill ran through the courtier's strong, corpulent body, and he gazed

    with mingled sympathy and dread at the blooming human flower associated

    thus early in plans fraught with danger.

    His master had hitherto only hinted at the secret, and it would still be

    possible for him to keep his own fate separate from his. Should he do

    so, an old age free from care lay before him; but, if he joined the

    prince and his plan succeeded, how high he might rise! Terribly

    momentous was the choice confronting him, the father of many children,

    and beads of perspiration stood on his brow as, incapable of any coherent

    thought, he led Ephraim to Kasana's tent, and then hastened to his

    master.

    Silence reigned within the light structure, which was composed of poles

    and gay heavy stuffs, tenanted by the beautiful widow.

    With a throbbing heart Ephraim approached the entrance, and when he at

    last summoned courage and drew aside the curtain fastened firmly to the

    earth, which the wind puffed out like a sail, he beheld a dark room, from

    which a similar one opened on the right and left. The one on the left

    was as dark as the central one; but a flickering light stole through

    numerous chinks of the one on the right. The tent was one of those with

    a flat roof, divided into three apartments, which he had often seen, and

    the woman who irresistibly attracted him was doubtless in the lighted

    one.

    To avoid exposing himself to fresh suspicion, he must conquer his timid

    delay, and he had already stooped and loosed the loop which fastened the

    curtain to the hook in the floor, when the door of the lighted room

    opened and a woman's figure entered the dark central chamber.

    Was it she?

    Should he venture to speak to her? Yes, it must be done.

    Panting for breath and clenching his hands, he summoned up his courage as

    if he were about to steal unbidden into the most sacred sanctuary of a

    temple. Then he pushed the curtain aside, and the woman whom he had just

    noticed greeted him with a low cry.

    But he speedily regained his composure, for a ray of light had fallen on

    her face, revealing that the person who stood before him was not Kasana,

    but her nurse, who had accompanied her to the prisoners and then to the

    camp. She, too, recognized him and stared at him as though he had risen

    from the grave.

    They were old acquaintances; for when he was first brought to the

    archer's house she had prepared his bath and moistened his wound with

    balsam, and during his second stay beneath the same roof, she had joined

    her mistress in nursing him. They had chatted away many an hour

    together, and he knew that she was kindly disposed toward him; for when

    midway between waking and sleeping, in his burning fever, her hand had

    stroked him with maternal tenderness, and afterwards she had never

    wearied of questioning him about his people and at last had acknowledged

    that she was descended from the Syrians, who were allied to the Hebrews.

    Nay, even his language was not wholly strange to her; for she had been a

    woman of twenty when dragged to Egypt with other prisoners of Rameses the

    Great. Ephraim, she was fond of saying, reminded her of her own son when

    he was still younger.

    The youth had no ill to fear from her, so grasping her hand, he whispered

    that he had escaped from his guards and come to ask counsel from her

    mistress and herself.

    The word "escaped" was sufficient to satisfy the old woman; for her idea

    of ghosts was that they put others to flight, but did not fly themselves.

    Relieved, she stroked the youth's curls and, ere his whispered

    explanation was ended, turned her back upon him and hurried into the

    lighted room to tell her mistress whom she had found outside.

    A few minutes after Ephraim was standing before the woman who had become

    the guiding star of his life. With glowing cheeks he gazed into the

    beautiful face, still flushed by weeping, and though it gave his heart a

    pang when, before vouchsafing him a greeting, she enquired whether Hosea

    had accompanied him, he forgot the foolish pain when he saw her gaze

    warmly at him. Yet when the nurse asked whether she did not think he

    looked well and vigorous, and withal more manly in appearance, it seemed

    as though he had really grown taller, and his heart beat faster and

    faster.

    Kasana desired to learn the minutest details of his uncle's experiences;

    but after he had done her bidding and finally yielded to the wish to

    speak of his own fate, she interrupted him to consult the nurse

    concerning the means of saving him from unbidden looks and fresh

    dangers—and the right expedient was soon found.

    First, with Ephraim's help, the old woman closed the main entrance of the

    tent as firmly as possible, and then pointed to the dark room into which

    he must speedily and softly retire as soon as she beckoned to him.

    Meanwhile Kasana had poured some wine into a goblet, and when he came

    back with the nurse she made him sit down on the giraffe skin at her feet

    and asked how he had succeeded in evading the guards, and what he

    expected from the future. She would tell him in advance that her father

    had remained in Tanis, so he need not fear recognition and betrayal.

    Her pleasure in this meeting was evident to both eyes and ears; nay,

    when Ephraim commenced his story by saying that Prince Siptah's command

    to remove the prisoners' chains, for which they were indebted solely to

    her, had rendered his escape possible, she clapped her hands like a

    child. Then her face clouded and, with a deep sigh, she added that ere

    his arrival her heart had almost broken with grief and tears; but Hosea

    should learn what a woman would sacrifice for the most ardent desire of

    her heart.

    She repaid with grateful words Ephraim's assurance that, before his

    flight, he had offered to release his uncle from his bonds and, when she

    learned that Joshua had refused to accept his nephew's aid, lest it might

    endanger the success of the plan he had cleverly devised for him, she

    cried out to her nurse, with tearful eyes, that Hosea alone would have

    been capable of such a deed.

    To the remainder of the fugitive's tale she listened intently, often

    interrupting him with sympathizing questions.

    The torturing days and nights of the past, which had reached such a happy

    termination, seemed now like a blissful dream, a bewildering fairy-tale,

    and the goblet she constantly replenished was not needed to lend fire to

    his narrative.

    Never before had he been so eloquent as while describing how, in the

    ravine, he had stepped on some loose stones and rolled head foremost down

    into the chasm with them. On reaching the bottom he had believed that

    all was lost; for soon after extricating himself from the rubbish that

    had buried him, in order to hurry to the pool, he had heard the whistle

    of the guards.

    Yet he had been a good runner from his childhood, had learned in his

    native pastures to guide himself by the light of the stars, so without

    glancing to the right or to the left, he had hastened southward as fast

    as his feet would carry him. Often in the darkness he had fallen over

    stones or tripped in the hollows of the desert sand, but only to rise

    again quickly and dash onward, onward toward the south, where he knew he

    should find her, Kasana, her for whose sake he recklessly flung to the

    winds what wiser-heads had counselled, her for whom he was ready to

    sacrifice liberty and life.

    Whence he derived the courage to confess this, he knew not, and neither

    the blow from her fan, nor the warning exclamation of the nurse: "Just

    look at the boy!" sobered him. Nay, his sparkling eyes sought hers still

    mote frequently as he continued his story.

    One of the hounds which attacked him he had flung against a rock, and the

    other he pelted with stones till it fled howling into a thicket. He had

    seen no other pursuers, either that night, or during the whole of the

    next day. At last he again reached a travelled road and found country

    people who told him which way Pharaoh's army had marched. At noon,

    overwhelmed by fatigue, he had fallen asleep under the shade of a

    sycamore, and when he awoke the sun was near its setting. He was very

    hungry, so he took a few turnips from a neighboring field. But their

    owner suddenly sprang from a ditch near by, and he barely escaped his

    pursuit.

    He had wandered along during a part of the night, and then rested beside

    a well on the roadside, for he knew that wild beasts shun such frequented

    places.

    After sunrise he continued his march, following the road taken by the

    army. Everywhere he found traces of it, and when, shortly before noon,

    exhausted and faint from hunger, he reached a village in the cornlands

    watered by the Seti-canal, he debated whether to sell his gold armlet,

    obtain more strengthening food, and receive some silver and copper in

    change. But he was afraid of being taken for a thief and again

    imprisoned, for his apron had been tattered by the thorns, and his

    sandals had long since dropped from his feet. He had believed that even

    the hardest hearts could not fail to pity his misery so, hard as it was

    for him, he had knocked at a peasant's door and begged. But the man gave

    him nothing save the jeering counsel that a strong young fellow like him

    ought to use his arms and leave begging to the old and weak. A second

    peasant had even threatened to beat him; but as he walked on with

    drooping bead, a young woman whom he had noticed in front of the

    barbarian's house followed him, thrust some bread and dates into his

    hand, and whispered hastily that heavy taxes had been levied on the

    village when Pharaoh marched through, or she would have given him

    something better.

    This unexpected donation, which he had eaten at the next well, had not

    tasted exactly like a festal banquet, but he did not tell Kasana that it

    had been embittered by the doubt whether to fulfil Joshua's commission

    and return to his people or yield to the longing that drew him to her.

    He moved forward irresolutely, but fate seemed to have undertaken to

    point out his way; for after walking a short half hour, the latter

    portion of the time through barren land, he had found by the wayside a

    youth of about his own age who, moaning with pain, held his foot clasped

    between both hands. Pity led him to go to him and, to his astonishment,

    he recognized the runner and messenger of Kasana's father, with whom he

    had often talked.

    "Apu, our nimble Nubian runner?" cried the young widow, and Ephraim

    assented and then added that the messenger had been despatched to convey

    a letter to Prince Siptah as quickly as possible, and the swift-footed

    lad, who was wont to outstrip his master's noble steeds, had shot over

    the road like an arrow and would have reached his destination in two

    hours more, had he not stepped on the sharp edge of a bottle that had

    been shattered by a wagon-wheel—and made a deep and terrible wound.

    "And you helped him?" asked Kasana.

    "How could I do otherwise?" replied Ephraim. "He had already lost a

    great deal of blood and was pale as death. So I carried him to the

    nearest ditch, washed the gaping wound, and anointed it with his balsam."

    "I put the little box in his pouch myself a year ago," said the nurse who

    was easily moved, wiping her eyes. Ephraim confirmed the statement, for

    Apu had gratefully told him of it. Then he went on.

    "I tore my upper garment into strips and bandaged the wound as well as I

    could. Meanwhile he constantly urged haste, held out the pass and letter

    his master had given him and, knowing nothing of the misfortune which had

    befallen me, charged me to deliver the roll to the prince in his place.

    Oh, how willingly I undertook the task and, soon after the second hour

    had passed, I reached the camp. The letter is in the prince's hands, and

    here am I—and I can see that you are glad! But no one was ever so happy

    as I to sit here at your feet, and look up to you, so grateful as I am

    that you have listened to me so kindly, and if they load me with chains

    again I will bear it calmly, if you will but care for me. Ah, my

    misfortune has been so great! I have neither father nor mother, no one

    who loves me. You, you alone are dear, and you will not repulse me, will

    you?"

    He had fairly shouted the last words, as if beside himself, and carried

    away by the might of passion and rendered incapable by the terrible

    experiences of the past few hours of controlling the emotions that

    assailed him, the youth, still scarcely beyond childhood, who saw himself

    torn away from and bereft of all that had usually sustained and supported

    him, sobbed aloud, and like a frightened birdling seeking protection

    under its mother's wings, hid his head, amid floods of tears, in Kasana's

    lap.

    Warm compassion seized upon the tender-hearted young widow, and her own

    eyes grew dim. She laid her hands kindly upon his head, and feeling the

    tremor that shook the frame of the weeping lad, she raised his head with

    both hands, kissed his brow and cheeks, looked smilingly into his eyes

    with tears in her own, and exclaimed:

    "You poor, foolish fellow! Why should I not care for you, why should I

    repel you? Your uncle is the most beloved of men to me, and you are like

    his son. For your sakes I have already accepted what I should otherwise

    have thrust far, far from me! But now I must go on, and must not care

    what others may think or say of me, if only I can accomplish the one

    thing for which I am risking person, life, all that I once prized! Wait,

    you poor, impulsive fellow!"—and here she again kissed him on the

    cheeks—"I shall succeed in smoothing the path for you also. That is

    enough now!"

    This command sounded graver, and was intended to curb the increasing

    impetuosity of the ardent youth. But she suddenly started up, exclaiming

    with anxious haste: "Go, go, at once!"

    The footsteps of men approaching the tent, and a warning word from the

    nurse had brought this stern order to the young widow's lips, and

    Ephraim's quick ear made him understand her anxiety and urged him to join

    the old nurse in the dark room. There he perceived that a few moments'

    delay would have betrayed him; for the curtain of the tent was drawn

    aside and a man passed through the central space straight to the lighted

    apartment, where Kasana—the youth heard it distinctly—welcomed the new

    guest only too cordially, as though his late arrival surprised her.

    Meanwhile the nurse had seized her own cloak, flung it over the

    fugitive's bare shoulders, and whispered:

    "Be near the tent just before sunrise, but do not enter it until I call

    you, if you value your life. You have neither mother nor father, and my

    child Kasana ah, what a dear, loving heart she has!—she is the best

    of all good women; but whether she is fit to be the guide of an

    inexperienced young blusterer, whose heart is blazing like dry straw with

    love for her, is another question. I considered many things, while

    listening to your story, and on account of my liking for you I will tell

    you this. You have an uncle who—my child is right there—is the best of

    men, and I know mankind. Whatever he advised, do; for it will surely

    benefit you. Obey him! If his bidding leads you far away from here and

    Kasana, so much the better for you. We are walking in dangerous paths,

    and had it not been done for Hosea's sake, I would have tried to hold her

    back with all my might. But for him—I am an old woman; but I would go

    through fire myself for that man. I am more grieved than I can tell,

    both for the pure, sweet child and for yourself, whom my own son was once

    so much like, so I repeat: Obey your uncle, boy! Do that, or you will go

    to ruin, and that would be a pity!"

    With these words, without waiting for an answer, she drew the curtain of

    the tent aside, and waited until Ephraim had slipped through. Then,

    wiping her eyes, she entered, as if by chance, the lighted chamber;

    but Kasana and her late guest had matters to discuss that brooked no

    witnesses, and her "dear child" only permitted her to light her little

    lamp at the three-armed candelabra, and then sent her to rest.

    She promptly obeyed and, in the dark room, where her couch stood beside

    that of her mistress, she sank down, hid her face in her hands, and wept.

    She felt as though the world was upside down. She no longer understood

    her darling Kasana; for she was sacrificing purity and honor for the sake

    of a man whom—she knew it—her soul abhorred.

    CHAPTER XXI.

    Ephriam cowered in the shadow of the tent, from which he had slipped,

    and pressed his ear close to the wall. He had cautiously ripped a small

    opening in a seam of the cloth, so he could see and hear what was passing

    in the lighted room of the woman he loved. The storm kept every one

    within the tents whom duty did not summon into the open air, and Ephraim

    had less reason to fear discovery on account of the deep shadow that

    rested on the spot where he lay. The nurse's cloak covered him and,

    though shiver after shiver shook his young limbs, it was due to the

    bitter anguish that pierced his soul.

    The man on whose breast he saw Kasana lay her head was a prince, a person

    of high rank and great power, and the capricious beauty did not always

    repel the bold man, when his lips sought those for whose kiss Ephraim so

    ardently longed.

    She owed him nothing, it is true, yet her heart belonged to his uncle,

    whom she had preferred to all others. She had declared herself ready to

    endure the most terrible things for his liberation; and now his own eyes

    told him that she was false and faithless, that she granted to another

    what belonged to one alone. She had bestowed caresses on him, too, but

    these were only the crumbs that fell from Hosea's table, a robbery—he

    confessed it with a blush—he had perpetrated on his uncle, yet he felt

    offended, insulted, deceived, and consumed to his inmost soul with fierce

    jealousy on behalf of his uncle, whom he honored, nay, loved, though he

    had opposed his wishes.

    And Hosea? Why, he too, like himself, this princely suitor, and all

    other men, must love her, spite of his strange conduct at the well by the

    roadside—it was impossible for him to do otherwise—and now, safe from

    the poor prisoner's resentment, she was basely, treacherously enjoying

    another's tender caresses.

    Siptah, he had heard at their last meeting, was his uncle's foe, and it

    was to him that she betrayed the man she loved!

    The chink in the tent was ready to show him everything that occurred

    within, but he often closed his eyes that he might not behold it. Often,

    it is true, the hateful scene held him in thrall by a mysterious spell

    and he would fain have torn the walls of the tent asunder, struck the

    detested Egyptian to the ground, and shouted into the faithless woman's

    face the name of Hosea, coupled with the harshest reproaches.

    The fervent passion which had taken possession of him was suddenly

    transformed to hate and scorn. He had believed himself to be the

    happiest of mortals, and he had suddenly become the most miserable; no

    one, he believed, had ever experienced such a fall from the loftiest

    heights to the lowest depths.

    The nurse had been right. Naught save misery and despair could come to

    him from so faithless a woman.

    Once he started up to fly, but he again heard the bewitching tones of her

    musical laugh, and mysterious powers detained him, forcing him to listen.

    At first the seething blood had throbbed so violently in his ears that he

    felt unable to follow the dialogue in the lighted tent. But, by degrees,

    he grasped the purport of whole sentences, and now he understood all that

    they said, not a word of their further conversation escaped him, and it

    was absorbing enough, though it revealed a gulf from which he shrank

    shuddering.

    Kasana refused the bold suitor many favors for which he pleaded, but this

    only impelled him to beseech her more fervently to give herself to him,

    and the prize he offered in return was the highest gift of earth, the

    place by his side as queen on the throne of Egypt, to which he aspired.

    He said this distinctly, but what followed was harder to understand; for

    the passionate suitor was in great haste and often interrupted his hasty

    sentences to assure Kasana, to whose hands in this hour he was committing

    his life and liberty, of his changeless love, or to soothe her when the

    boldness of his advances awakened fear and aversion. But he soon began

    to speak of the letter whose bearer Ephraim had been and, after reading

    it aloud and explaining it, the youth realized with a slight shudder that

    he had become an accomplice in the most criminal of all plots, and for a

    moment the longing stole over him to betray the traitors and deliver them

    into the hand of the mighty sovereign whose destruction they were

    plotting. But he repelled the thought and merely sunned himself in the

    pleasurable consciousness—the first during this cruel hour-of holding

    Kasana and her royal lover in his hand as one holds a beetle by a string.

    This had a favorable effect on him and restored the confidence and

    courage he had lost. The baser the things he continued to hear, the more

    clearly he learned to appreciate the value of the goodness and truth

    which he had lost. His uncle's words, too, came back to his memory.

    "Give no man, from the loftiest to the lowliest, a right to regard you

    save with respect, and you can hold your head as high as the proudest

    warrior who ever wore purple robe and golden armor."

    On the couch in Kasana's house, while shaking with fever, he had

    constantly repeated this sentence; but in the misery of captivity, and on

    his flight it had again vanished from his memory. In the courtier's tent

    when, after he had bathed and perfumed himself, the old slave held a

    mirror before him, he had given it a passing thought; but now it mastered

    his whole soul. And strange to say, the worthless traitor within wore a

    purple coat and golden mail, and looked like a military hero, but he

    could not hold his head erect, for the work he sought to accomplish could

    only succeed in the sccresy that shuns the light, and was like the labor

    of the hideous mole which undermines the ground in the darkness.

    His tool was the repulsive cloven-footed trio, falsehood, fraud, and

    faithlessness, and she whom he had chosen for his help-mate was the

    woman—it shamed him to his inmost soul-for whom he had been in the act

    of sacrificing all that was honorable, precious, and dear to him.

    The worst infamies which he had been taught to shun were the rounds of

    the ladder on which this evil man intended to mount.

    The roll the youth had brought to the camp contained two letters. The

    first was from the conspirators in Tanis, the second from Siptah's

    mother.

    The former desired his speedy return and told him that the Syrian Aarsu,

    the commander of the foreign mercenaries, who guarded the palace, as well

    as the women's house, was ready to do him homage. If the high-priest of

    Amon, who was at once chief-judge, viceroy and keeper of the seal,

    proclaimed him king, he was sovereign and could enter the palace which

    stood open to him and ascend the throne without resistance. If Pharaoh

    returned, the body-guards would take him prisoner and remove him as

    Siptah, who liked no halfway measures, had secretly directed, while the

    chief-priest insisted upon keeping him in mild imprisonment.

    Nothing was to be feared save the premature return from Thebes of Seti,

    the second son of Menephtah; for the former, after his older brother's

    death, had become heir to the throne, and carrier doves had brought news

    yesterday that he was now on his way. Therefore Siptah and the powerful

    priest who was to proclaim him king were urged to the utmost haste.

    The necessary measures had been adopted in case of possible resistance

    from the army; for as soon as the Hebrews had been destroyed, the larger

    portion of the troops, without any suspicion of the impending

    dethronement of their commander-in-chief, would be sent to their former

    stations. The body-guards were devoted to Siptah, and the others who

    entered the capital, should worst come to worst, could be easily

    overpowered by Aarsu and his mercenaries.

    "There is nothing farther for me to do," said the prince, "stretching

    himself comfortably, like a man who has successfully accomplished a

    toilsome task," except to rush back to Tanis in a few hours with Bai,

    have myself crowned and proclaimed king in the temple of Amon, and

    finally received in the palace as Pharaoh. The rest will take care of

    itself. Seti, whom they call the heir to the throne, is just such

    another weakling as his father, and must submit to a fixed fact, or if

    necessary, be forced to do so. The captain of the body-guards will see

    that Menephtah does not again enter the palace in the city of Rameses.

    The second letter which was addressed to the Pharaoh, had been written by

    the mother of the prince in order to recall her son and the chief-priest

    Bai to the capital as quickly as possible, without exposing the former to

    the reproach of cowardice for having quitted the army so shortly before

    the battle. Though she had never been better, she protested with

    hypocritical complaints and entreaties, that the hours of her life were

    numbered, and besought the king to send her son and the chief-priest Bai

    to her without delay, that she might be permitted to bless her only child

    before her death.

    She was conscious of many a sin, and no one, save the high-priest,

    possessed the power of winning the favor of the gods for her, a dying

    woman. Without his intercession she would perish in despair.

    This letter, too, the base robber of a crown read aloud, called it a

    clever bit of feminine strategy, and rubbed his hands gleefully.

    Treason, murder, hypocrisy, fraud, shameful abuse of the most sacred

    feelings, nay all that was evil must serve Siptah to steal the throne,

    and though Kasana had wrung her hands and shed tears when she heard

    that he meant to remove Pharaoh from his path, she grew calmer after

    the prince had represented that her own father had approved of his

    arrangements for the deliverance of Egypt from the hand of the king, her

    destroyer.

    The letter from the prince's mother to Pharaoh, the mother who urged her

    own son to the most atrocious crimes, was the last thing Ephraim heard;

    for it roused in the young Hebrew, who was wont to consider nothing purer

    and more sacred than the bonds which united parents and children, such

    fierce indignation, that he raised his fist threateningly and, springing

    up, opened his lips in muttered invective.

    He did not hear that Kasana made the prince swear that, if he attained

    the sovereign power, he would grant her first request. It should cost

    him neither money nor lands, and only give her the right to exercise

    mercy where her heart demanded it; for things were in store which must

    challenge the wrath of the gods and he must leave her to soothe it.

    Ephraim could not endure to see or hear more of these abominable things.

    For the first time he felt how great a danger he ran of being dragged

    into this marsh and becoming a lost, evil man; but never, he thought,

    would he have been so corrupt, so worthless, as this prince. His uncle's

    words again returned to his mind, and he now raised his head proudly and

    arched his chest as if to assure himself of his own unbroken vigor,

    saying meanwhile, with a long breath, that he was of too much worth to

    ruin himself for the sake of a wicked woman, even though, like Kasana,

    she was the fairest and most bewitching under the sun.

    Away, away from the neighborhood of this net, which threatened to

    entangle him in murder and every deed of infamy.

    Resolved to seek his people, he turned toward the gate of the camp, but

    after a few hasty steps paused, and a glance at the sky showed him that

    it was the second hour past midnight. Every surrounding object was

    buried in silence save that from the neighboring Dens of the royal

    steeds, came the sound of the rattle of a chain, or of the stamp of a

    stallion's hoof.

    If he risked escaping from the camp now, he could not fail to be seen and

    stopped. Prudence commanded him to curb his impatience and, as he

    glanced around, his eyes rested on the chamberlain's tent from which the

    old slave had just emerged to look for his master, who was still waiting

    in the prince's tent for his lord's return.

    The old man had treated Ephraim kindly, and now asked him with good-

    natured urgency to come in and rest; for the youth needed sleep.

    And Ephraim accepted the well-meant invitation. He felt for the first

    time how weary his feet were, and he had scarcely stretched himself upon

    the mat which the old slave—it was his own—spread on the floor of the

    tent for him, ere the feeling came over him that his limbs were relaxing;

    and yet he had expected to find here time and rest for calm deliberation.

    He began, too, to think of the future and his uncle's commission.

    That he must join his people without delay was decided. If they escaped

    Pharaoh's army, the others could do what they pleased, his duty was to

    summon his shepherds, servants, and the youths of his own age, and with

    them hurry to the mines to break Joshua's chains and bring him back to

    his old father and the people who needed him. He already saw himself

    with a sling in his girdle and a battle-axe in his hand, rushing on in

    advance of the others, when sleep overpowered him and bound the sorely

    wearied youth so firmly and sweetly that even dreams remained aloof from

    his couch and when morning came the old slave was obliged to shake him to

    rouse him.

    The camp was already pervaded with bustling life. Tents were struck,

    asses and ox-carts laden, steeds curried and newly-shod, chariots washed,

    weapons and harnesses cleaned, breakfast was distributed and eaten.

    At intervals the blare of trumpets was heard in one direction, loudly

    shouted commands in another, and from the eastern portion of the camp

    echoed the chanting of the priests, who devoutly greeted the new-born

    sun-god.

    A gilded chariot, followed by a similar one, drove up to the costly

    purple tent beside Kasana's, which active servants were beginning to take

    down.

    Prince Siptah and the chief-priest Bai had received Pharaoh's permission

    to set off for Tanis, to fulfil the wish of a "dying woman."

    Soon after Ephraim took leave of the old slave and bade him give Kasana's

    nurse the cloak and tell her that the messenger had followed her advice

    and his uncle's.

    Then he set off on his walk.

    He escaped unchallenged from the Egyptian camp and, as he entered the

    wilderness, he heard the shout with which he called his shepherds in the

    pastures. The cry, resounding far over the plain, startled a sparrow-

    hawk which was gazing into the distance from a rock and, as the bird

    soared upward, the youth fancied that if he stretched out his arms, wings

    must unfold strong enough to bear him also through the air. Never had he

    felt so light and active, so strong and free, nay had the priest at this

    hour asked him the question whether he would accept the office of a

    captain of thousands in the Egyptian army, he would undoubtedly have

    answered, as he did before the ruined house of Nun, that his sole desire

    was to remain a shepherd and rule his flocks and servants.

    He was an orphan, but he had a nation, and where his people were was his

    home.

    Like a wanderer, who, after a long journey, sees his home in the

    distance, he quickened his pace.

    He had reached Tanis on the night of the new moon and the round silver

    shield which was paling in the morning light was the same which had then

    risen before his eyes. Yet it seemed as though years lay between his

    farewell of Miriam and the present hour, and the experiences of a life

    had been compressed into these few days.

    He had left his tribe a boy; he returned a man; yet, thanks to this one

    terrible night, he had remained unchanged, he could look those whom he

    loved and reverenced fearlessly in the face.

    Nay, more!

    He would show the man whom he most esteemed that he, too, Ephraim, could

    hold his head high. He would repay Joshua for what he had done, when he

    remained in chains and captivity that he, his nephew, might go forth as

    free as a bird.

    After hurrying onward an hour, he reached a ruined watch-tower, climbed

    to its summit, and saw, at a short distance beyond the mount of Baal-

    zephon, which had long towered majestically on the horizon, the

    glittering northern point of the Red Sea.

    The storm, it is true, had subsided, but he perceived by the surging of

    its emerald surface that the sea was by no means calm, and single black

    clouds in the sky, elsewhere perfectly clear, seemed to indicate an

    approaching tempest.

    He gazed around him asking himself what the leader of the people probably

    intended, if—as the prince had told Kasana—they had encamped between

    Pihahiroth—whose huts and tents rose before him on the narrow gulf the

    northwestern arm of the Red Sea thrust into the land—and the mount of

    Baal-zephon.

    Had Siptah lied in this too?

    No. This time the malicious traitor had departed from his usual custom;

    for between the sea and the village, where the wind was blowing slender

    columns of smoke asunder, his falcon-eye discovered many light spots

    resembling a distant flock of sheep, and among and beside them a singular

    movement to and fro upon the sands.

    It was the camp of his people.

    How short seemed the distance that separated him from them!

    Yet the nearer it was, the greater became his anxiety lest the great

    multitude, with the women and children, herds and tents, could not escape

    the vast army which must overtake them in a few hours.

    His heart shrank as he gazed around him; for neither to the east, where a

    deeper estuary was surging, nor southward, where the Red Sea tossed its

    angry waves, nor even toward the north, whence Pharaoh's army was

    marching, was escape possible. To the west lay the wilderness of Aean,

    and if the wanderers escaped in that direction, and were pressed farther,

    they would again enter Egyptian soil and the exodus would be utterly

    defeated.

    So there was nothing left save to risk a battle, and at the thought a

    chill ran through the youth's veins; for he knew how badly armed,

    untrained, savage, unmanageable, and cowardly were the men of his race,

    and had witnessed the march of the powerful, well-equipped Egyptian army,

    with its numerous foot-soldiers and superb war-chariots.

    To him now, as to his uncle a short time before, his people seemed doomed

    to certain destruction, unless succored by the God of his fathers. In

    former years, and just before his departure, Miriam, with sparkling eyes

    and enthusiastic words, had praised the power and majesty of this

    omnipotent Lord, who preferred his people above all other nations; but

    the lofty words of the prophetess had filled his childish heart with a

    slight fear of the unapproachable greatness and terrible wrath of this

    God.

    It had been easier for him to uplift his soul to the sun-god, when his

    teacher, a kind and merry-hearted Egyptian priest, led him to the temple

    of Pithom. In later years he had felt no necessity of appealing to any

    god; for he lacked nothing, and while other boys obeyed their parents'

    commands, the shepherds, who well knew that the flocks they tended

    belonged to him, called him their young master, and first in jest, then

    in earnest, paid him all the honor due a ruler, which prematurely

    increased his self-importance and made him an obstinate fellow.

    He whom stalwart, strong men obeyed, was sufficient unto himself, and

    felt that others needed him and, as nothing was more difficult for him

    than to ask a favor, great or small, from any one, he rebelled against

    praying to a God so far off and high above him.

    But now, when his heart was oppressed by the terrible destiny that

    threatened his people, he was overwhelmed by the feeling that only the

    Greatest and Mightiest could deliver them from this terrible, unspeakable

    peril, as if no one could withstand this powerful army, save He whose

    might could destroy heaven and earth.

    What were they that the Most High, whom Miriam and Hosea described as so

    pre-eminently great, should care for them? Yet his people numbered many

    thousands, and God had not disdained to make them His, and promise great

    things for them in the future. Now they were on the verge of

    destruction, and he, Ephraim, who came from the camp of the enemy, was

    perhaps the sole person who saw the full extent of the danger.

    Suddenly he was filled with the conviction that it was incumbent upon

    him, above all others, to tell the God of his fathers,—who perhaps in

    caring for earth and heaven, sun and stars, had forgotten the fate of His

    people—of the terrible danger impending, and beseech Him to save them.

    He was still standing on the top of the ruined tower, and raised his arms

    and face toward heaven.

    In the north he saw the black clouds which he had noticed in the blue sky

    swiftly massing and rolling hither and thither. The wind, which had

    subsided after sunrise, was increasing in strength and power, and rapidly

    becoming a storm. It swept across the isthmus in gusts, which followed

    one another more and more swiftly, driving before them dense clouds of

    yellow sand.

    He must lift up his voice loudly, that the God to whom he prayed might

    hear him in His lofty heaven, so, with all the strength of his young

    lungs, he shouted into the storm:

    "Adonai, Adonai! Thou, whom they call Jehovah, mighty God of my fathers,

    hear me, Ephraim, a young inexperienced lad, of whom, in his

    insignificance, Thou hast probably never thought. I ask nothing for

    myself. But the people, whom Thou dost call Thine, are in sore peril.

    They have left durable houses and good pastures because Thou didst

    promise them a better and more beautiful land, and they trusted in Thee

    and Thy promises. But now the army of Pharaoh is approaching, so great a

    host that our people will never be able to resist it. Thou must believe

    this, Eli, my Lord. I have seen it and been in its midst. So surely as

    I stand here, I know that it is too mighty for Thy people. Pharaoh's

    power will crush them as the hoofs of the cattle trample the grain on the

    threshing-floor. And my people, who are also Thine, are encamped in a

    spot where Pharaoh's warriors can cut them down from all directions, so

    that there is no way for them to fly, not one. I saw it distinctly from

    this very spot. Hear me now, Adonai. But canst Thou hear my words, oh

    Lord, in such a tempest? Surely Thou canst; for they call Thee

    omnipotent and, if Thou dost hear me and dost understand the meaning of

    my words, Thou wilt see with Thy mighty eyes, if such is Thy will, that I

    speak the truth. Then Thou wilt surely remember the vow Thou didst make

    to the people through Thy servant Moses.

    "Among the Egyptians, I have witnessed treachery and murder and shameful

    wiles; their deeds have filled me, who am myself but a sinful,

    inexperienced youth, with horror and indignation. How couldst Thou, from

    whom all good is said to proceed, and whom Miriam calls truth itself, act

    like those abominable men and break faith with those who trusted in Thee?

    I know, Thou great and mighty One, that this is far from Thee, nay,

    perhaps it is a sin even to cherish such a thought. Hear me, Adonai!

    Look northward at the troops of the Egyptians, who will surely soon leave

    their camp and march forward, and southward to the peril of Thy people,

    for whom escape is no longer possible, and Thou wilt rescue them by Thy

    omnipotence and great wisdom; for Thou hast promised them a new country,

    and if they are destroyed, how can they reach it?"

    With these words he finished his prayer, which, though boyish and

    incoherent, gushed from the inmost depths of his heart. Then he sprang

    with long leaps from the ruined tower to the barren plain at his feet,

    and ran southward as fleetly as if he were escaping from captivity a

    second time. He felt how the wind rushing from the north-east urged him

    forward, and told himself that it would also hasten the march of

    Pharaoh's soldiers. Perhaps the leaders of his people did not yet know

    how vast was the military power that threatened them, and undervalued the

    danger in which their position placed them. But he saw it, and could

    give them every information. Haste was necessary, and he felt as though

    he had gained wings in this race with the storm.

    The village of Pihahiroth was soon gained, and while dashing by it

    without pausing, he noticed that its huts and tents were deserted by men

    and cattle. Perhaps its inhabitants had fled with their property to a

    place of safety before the advancing Egyptian troops or the hosts of his

    own people.

    The farther he went, the more cloudy became the sky,—which here so

    rarely failed to show a sunny vault of blue at noonday,—the more

    fiercely howled the tempest. His thick locks fluttered wildly around his

    burning head, he panted for breath, yet flew on, on, while his sandals

    seemed to him to scarcely touch the ground.

    The nearer he came to the sea, the louder grew the howling and whistling

    of the storm, the more furious the roar of the waves dashing against the

    rocks of Baal-zephon. Now—a short hour after he had left the tower—he

    reached the first tents of the camp, and the familiar cry: "Unclean!" as

    well as the mourning-robes of those whose scaly, disfigured faces looked

    forth from the ruins of the tents which the storm had overthrown,

    informed him that he had reached the lepers, whom Moses had commanded to

    remain outside the camp.

    Yet so great was his haste that, instead of making a circuit around their

    quarter, he dashed straight through it at his utmost speed. Nor did he

    pause even when a lofty palm, uprooted by the tempest, fell to the ground

    so close beside him that the fan-shaped leaves in its crown brushed his

    face.

    At last he gained the tents and pinfolds of his people, not a few of

    which had also been overthrown, and asked the first acquaintances he met

    for Nun, the father of his dead mother and of Joshua.

    He had gone down to the shore with Moses and other elders of the people.

    Ephraim followed him there, and the damp, salt sea-air refreshed him and

    cooled his brow.

    Yet he could not instantly get speech with him, so he collected his

    thoughts, and recovered his breath, while watching the men whom he sought

    talking eagerly with some gaily-clad Phoenician sailors. A youth like

    Ephraim might not venture to interrupt the grey-haired heads of the

    people in the discussion, which evidently referred to the sea; for the

    Hebrews constantly pointed to the end of the bay, and the Phoenicians

    sometimes thither, sometimes to the mountain and the sky, sometimes to

    the north, the center of the still increasing tempest.

    A projecting wall sheltered the old men from the hurricane, yet they

    found it difficult to stand erect, even while supported by their staves

    and clinging to the stones of the masonry.

    At last the conversation ended and while the youth saw the gigantic

    figure of Moses go with slow, yet firm steps among the leaders of the

    Hebrews down to the shore of the sea, Nun, supported by one of his

    shepherds, was working his way with difficulty, but as rapidly as

    possible toward the camp. He wore a mourning-robe, and while the others

    looked joyous and hopeful when they parted, his handsome face, framed by

    its snow-white beard and hair, had the expression of one whose mind and

    body were burdened by grief.

    Not until Ephraim called him did he raise his drooping leonine head, and

    when he saw him he started back in surprise and terror, and clung more

    firmly to the strong arm of the shepherd who supported him.

    Tidings of the cruel fate of his son and grandson had reached him through

    the freed slaves he had left in Tanis; and the old man had torn his

    garments, strewed ashes on his head, donned mourning robes, and grieved

    bitterly for his beloved, noble, only son and promising grandson.

    Now Ephraim was standing before him; and after Nun had laid his hand on

    his shoulders, and kissed him again and again, he asked if his son was

    still alive and remembered him and his people.

    As soon as the youth had joyfully assured him that such was the case, Nun

    threw his arms around the boy's shoulders, that henceforth his own blood,

    instead of a stranger, should protect him from the violence of the storm.

    He had grave and urgent duties to fulfil, from which nothing might

    withhold him. Yet as the fiery youth shouted into his ear, through the

    roar of the hurricane, on their way through the camp, that he would

    summon his shepherds and the companions of his own age to release Hosea,

    who now called himself Joshua, old Nun's impetuous spirit awoke and,

    clasping Ephraim closer to his heart, he cried out that though an old man

    he was not yet too aged to swing an axe and go with Ephraim's youthful

    band to liberate his son. His eyes sparkled through his tears, and

    waving his free arm aloft, he cried:

    "The God of my fathers, on whom I learned to rely, watches over His

    faithful people. Do you see the sand, sea-weed, and shells yonder at the

    end of the estuary? An hour ago the place was covered with water, and

    roaring waves were dashing their white spray upward. That is the way,

    boy, which promises escape; if the wind holds, the water—so the

    experienced Phoenicians assure us—will recede still farther toward the

    sea. Their god of the north wind, they say, is favorable to us, and

    their boys are already lighting a fire to him on the summit of Baal-

    zephon yonder, but we know that it is Another, Who is opening to us a

    path to the desert. We were in evil case, my boy!"

    "Yes, grandfather!" cried the youth. "You were trapped like lions in

    the snare, and the Egyptian host—it passed me from the first man to the

    last—is mighty and unconquerable. I hurried as fast as my feet could

    carry me to tell you how many heavily-armed troops, bowmen, steeds, and

    chariots…."

    "We know, we know," the old man interrupted, "but here we are."

    He pointed to an overturned tent which his servants were trying to prop,

    and beside which an aged Hebrew, his father Elishama, wrapped in cloth,

    sat in the chair in which he was carried by bearers.

    Nun hastily shouted a few words and led Ephraim toward him. But while

    the youth was embracing his great-grandfather, who hugged and caressed

    him, Nun, with youthful vivacity, was issuing orders to the shepherds and

    servants:

    "Let the tent fall, men! The storm has begun the work for you! Wrap the

    covering round the poles, load the carts and beasts of burden. Move

    briskly, You, Gaddi, Shamma, and Jacob, join the others! The hour for

    departure has come! Everybody must hasten to harness the animals, put

    them in the wagons, and prepare all things as fast as possible. The

    Almighty shows us the way, and every one must hasten, in His name and by

    the command of Moses. Keep strictly to the old order. We head the

    procession, then come the other tribes, lastly the strangers and leprous

    men and women. Rejoice, oh, ye people; for our God is working a great

    miracle and making the sea dry land for us, His chosen people. Let

    everyone thank Him while working, and pray from the depths of the heart

    that He will continue to protect us. Let all who do not desire to be

    slain by the sword and crushed by the weight of Pharaoh's chariots put

    forth their best strength and forget rest! That will await us as soon as

    we have escaped the present peril. Down with the tent-cover yonder; I'll

    roll it up myself. Lay hold, boy! Look across at the children of

    Manasseh, they are already packing and loading. That's right, Ephraim,

    you know how to use your hands!

    "What more have we to do! My head, my forgetful old head! So much has

    come upon me at once! You have nimble feet, Raphu;—I undertook to warn

    the strangers to prepare for a speedy departure. Run quickly and hurry

    them, that they may not linger too far behind the people. Time is

    precious! Lord, Lord, my God, extend Thy protecting hand over Thy

    people, and roll the waves still farther back with the tempest, Thy

    mighty breath! Let every one pray silently while working, the

    Omnipresent One, Who sees the heart, will hear it. That load is too

    heavy for you, Ephraim, you are lifting beyond your strength. No. The

    youth has mastered it. Follow his example, men, and ye of Succoth,

    rejoice in your master's strength."

    The last words were addressed to Ephraim's shepherds, men and maid

    servants, most of whom shouted a greeting to him in the midst of their

    work, kissed his arm or hand, and rejoiced at his return. They were

    engaged in packing and wrapping their goods, and in gathering,

    harnessing, and loading the animals, which could only be kept together

    by blows and shouts.

    The people from Succoth wished to vie with their young master, those from

    Tanis with their lord's grandson, and the other owners of flocks and

    lesser men of the tribe of Ephraim, whose tents surrounded that of their

    chief Nun, did the same, in order not to be surpassed by others; yet

    several hours elapsed ere all the tents, household utensils, and

    provisions for man and beast were again in their places on the animals

    and in the carts, and the aged, feeble and sick had been laid on litters

    or in wagons.

    Sometimes the gale bore from the distance to the spot where the

    Ephraimites were busily working the sound of Moses' deep voice or the

    higher tones of Aaron. But neither they nor the men of the tribe of

    Judah heeded the monition; for the latter were ruled by Hur and Naashon,

    and beside the former stood his newly-wedded wife Miriam. It was

    different with the other tribes and the strangers, to the obstinacy and

    cowardice of whose chiefs was due the present critical position of the

    people.

    CHAPTER XXII.

    To break through the center of the Etham line of fortifications and march

    toward the north-east along the nearest road leading to Palestine had

    proved impossible; but Moses' second plan of leading the people around

    the Migdol of the South had also been baffled; for spies had reported

    that the garrison of the latter had been greatly strengthened. Then the

    multitude had pressed around the man of God, declaring that they would

    rather return home with their families and appeal to Pharaoh's mercy than

    to let themselves, their wives, and their families be slaughtered.

    Several days had been spent in detaining them; but when other messengers

    brought tidings that Pharaoh was approaching with a powerful army the

    time seemed to have come when the wanderers, in the utmost peril, might

    be forced to break through the forts, and Moses exerted the full might of

    his commanding personality, Aaron the whole power of his seductive

    eloquence, while old Nun and Hur essayed to kindle the others with their

    own bold spirit.

    But the terrible news had robbed the majority of the last vestige of self

    reliance and trust in God, and they had already resolved to assure

    Pharaoh of their repentance when the messengers whom, without their

    leader's knowledge, they had sent forth, returned, announcing that the

    approaching army had been commanded to spare no Hebrew, and to show by

    the sharp edge of the sword, even to those who sued for mercy, how

    Pharaoh punished the men by whose shameful sorcery misery and woe had

    come upon so many Egyptians.

    Then, too late, they became aware that to return would ensure more speedy

    destruction than to boldly press forward. But when the men capable of

    bearing arms followed Hur and Nun to the Migdol of the South, they turned

    to fly at the defiant blare of the Egyptian war trumpets. When they came

    back to the camp with weary limbs, depressed and disheartened, new and

    exaggerated reports of Pharaoh's military force had reached the people,

    and now terror and despair had taken possession of the bolder men. Every

    admonition was vain, every threat derided, and the rebellious people had

    forced their leaders to go with them till, after a short march, they

    reached the Red Sea, whose deep green waves had forced them to pause in

    their southward flight.

    So they had encamped between Pihahiroth and Baal-zephon, and here the

    leaders again succeeded in turning the attention of the despairing people

    to the God of their fathers.

    In the presence of sure destruction, from which no human power could save

    them, they had again learned to raise their eyes to Heaven; but Moses'

    soul had once more been thrilled with anxiety and compassion for the

    poor, sorely afflicted bands who had followed his summons. During the

    night preceding, he had climbed one of the lower peaks of Baal-zephon

    and, amid the raging of the tempest and the roar of the hissing surges,

    sought the Lord his God, and felt his presence near him. He, too, had

    not wearied of pleading the need of his people and adjuring him to save

    them.

    At the same hour Miriam, the wife of Hur, had gone to the sea-shore

    where, under a solitary palmtree, she addressed the same petition to her

    God, whose trusted servant she still felt herself. Here she besought Him

    to remember the women and children who, trusting in Him, had wandered

    forth into distant lands. She had also knelt to pray for the friend of

    her youth, languishing in terrible captivity; but had only cried in low,

    timid accents: "Oh, Lord, do not forget the hapless Hosea, whom at Thy

    bidding I called Joshua, though he showed himself less obedient to Thy

    will than Moses, my brother, and Hur, my husband. Remember also the

    youthful Ephraim, the grandson of Nun, Thy faithful servant."

    Then she returned to the tent of the chief, her husband, while many a

    lowly man and poor anxious woman, before their rude tents or on their

    thin, tear-drenched mats, uplifted their terrified souls to the God of

    their fathers and besought His care for those who were dearest to their

    hearts.

    So, in this night of utmost need, the camp had become a temple in which

    high and low, the heads of families and the housewives, masters and

    slaves, nay, even the afflicted lepers sought and found their God.

    At last the morning came on which Ephraim had shouted his childish prayer

    amid the roaring of the storm, and the waters of the sea had begun to

    recede.

    When the Hebrews beheld with their own eyes the miracle that the Most

    High was working for His chosen people, even the discouraged and

    despairing became believing and hopeful.

    Not only the Ephraimites, but the other tribes, the foreigners, and

    lepers felt the influence of the newly-awakened joyous confidence, which

    urged each individual to put forth all his powers to prepare for the

    journey and, for the first time, the multitude gathered and formed into

    ranks without strife, bickering, deeds of violence, curses, and tears.

    After sunset Moses, holding his staff uplifted, and Aaron, singing and

    praying, entered at the head of the procession the end of the bay.

    The storm, which continued to rage with the same violence, had swept the

    water out of it and blew the flame and smoke of the torches carried by

    the tribes toward the south-west.

    The chief leaders, on whom all eyes rested with trusting eagerness, were

    followed by old Nun and the Ephraimites. The bottom of the sea on which

    they trod was firm, moist sand, on which even the herds could walk as if

    it were a smooth road, sloping gently toward the sea.

    Ephraim, in whom the elders now saw the future chief, had been entrusted,

    at his grandfather's suggestion, with the duty of seeing that the

    procession did not stop and, for this purpose, had been given a leader's

    staff; for the fishermen whose huts stood at the foot of Baal-zephon,

    like the Phoenicians, believed that when the moon reached her zenith the

    sea would return to its old bed, and therefore all delay was to be

    avoided.

    The youth enjoyed the storm, and when his locks fluttered and he battled

    victoriously against the gale in rushing hither and thither, as his

    office required, it seemed to him a foretaste of the venture he had in

    view.

    So the procession moved on through the darkness which had speedily

    followed the dusk of evening. The acrid odor of the sea-weed and fishes

    which had been left stranded pleased the boy,—who felt that he had

    matured into manhood,—better than the sweet fragrance of spikenard in

    Kasana's tent. Once the memory of it flashed through his brain, but with

    that exception there was not a moment during these hours which gave him

    time to think of her.

    He had his hands full of work; sometimes a heap of sea-weed flung on the

    path by a wave must be removed; sometimes a ram, the leader of a flock,

    refused to step on the wet sand and must be dragged forward by the horns,

    or cattle and beasts of burden must be driven through a pool of water

    from which they shrank.

    Often, too, he was obliged to brace his shoulder against a heavily-laden

    cart, whose wheels had sunk too deeply into the soft sand; and when, even

    during this strange, momentous march, two bands of shepherds began to

    dispute about precedence close to the Egyptian shore, he quickly settled

    the dispute by making them draw lots to decide which party should go

    first.

    Two little girls who, crying bitterly, refused to wade through a pool of

    water, while their mother was busy with the infant in her arms, he

    carried with prompt decision through the shallow puddle, and the cart

    with a broken wheel he had moved aside by the light of the torches and

    commanded some stalwart bondmen, who were carrying only small bundles, to

    load themselves with the sacks and bales, nay, even the fragments of the

    vehicle. He uttered a word of cheer to weeping women and children and,

    when the light of a torch fell upon the face of a companion of his own

    age, whose aid he hoped to obtain for the release of Joshua, he briefly

    told him that there was a bold adventure in prospect which he meant to

    dare in concert with him.

    The torch-bearers who usually headed the procession this time were

    obliged to close its ranks, for the storm raging from the northeast would

    have blown the smoke into the people's faces. They stood on the Egyptian

    shore, and already the whole train had passed them except the lepers who,

    following the strangers, were the last of the whole multitude.

    These "strangers" were a motley crew, comprising Asiatics of Semitic

    blood, who had escaped from the bondage or severe punishments which the

    Egyptian law imposed, traders who expected to find among the wanderers

    purchasers of their wares, or Shasu shepherds, whose return was

    prohibited by the officials on the frontier. Ephraim had much trouble

    with them, for they refused to leave the firm land until the lepers had

    been forced to keep farther away from them; yet the youth, with the aid

    of the elders of the tribe of Benjamin, who preceded them, brought them

    also to obedience by threatening them with the prediction of the

    Phoenicians and the fishermen that the moon, when it had passed its

    zenith, would draw the sea back to its old bed.

    Finally he persuaded the leader of the lepers, who had once been an

    Egyptian priest, to keep at least half the distance demanded.

    Meanwhile the tempest had continued to blow with increased violence, and

    its howling and whistling, blended with the roar of the dashing waves and

    the menacing thunder of the surf, drowned the elders' shouts of command,

    the terrified shrieks of the children, the lowing and bleating of the

    trembling herds, and the whining of the dogs. Ephraim's voice could be

    heard only by those nearest and, moreover, many of the torches were

    extinguished, while others were kept burning with the utmost difficulty.

    Seeking to recover his wind and get a little rest, he walked slowly for a

    time over the damp sand behind the last lepers, when he heard some one

    call his name and, turning, he saw one of his former playmates, who was

    returning from a reconnoitring expedition and who, with the sweat pouring

    from his brow and panting breath, shouted into the ear of the youth, in

    whose hand he saw the staff of a leader, that Pharaoh's chariots were

    approaching at the head of his army. He had left them at Pihahiroth and,

    if they did not stop there to give the other troops time to join them,

    they might overtake the fugitives at any moment. With these words he

    darted past the lepers to join the leaders; but Ephraim stopped in the

    middle of the road, pressing his hand upon his brow, while a new burden

    of care weighed heavily upon his soul.

    He knew that the approaching army would crush the men, women, and

    children whose touching fear and helplessness he had just beheld, as a

    man's foot tramples on an ant-bill, and again every instinct of his being

    urged him to pray, while from his oppressed heart the imploring cry rose

    through the darkness:

    "Eli, Eli, great God most high! Thou knowest—for I have told Thee, and

    Thine all-seeing eye must perceive it, spite of the darkness of this

    night—the strait of Thy people, whom Thou hast promised to lead into a

    new country. Remember Thy vow, Jehovah! Be merciful unto us, Thou great

    and mighty one! Our foe is approaching with resistless power! Stay him!

    Save us! Protect the poor women and children! Save us, be merciful to

    us!"

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