An Egyptian Princess β Complete by Georg Ebers (good books for 8th graders TXT) π
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- Author: Georg Ebers
Read book online Β«An Egyptian Princess β Complete by Georg Ebers (good books for 8th graders TXT) πΒ». Author - Georg Ebers
Croesus and Phanes went into the green and pleasant garden lying on the eastern side of the royal palace, which abounded in groves of trees, shrubberies, fountains and flower-beds. Phanes was radiant with delight; Croesus full of care and thought.
βHave you duly reflected,β said the latter, βon the burning brand that you have just flung out into the world?β
βIt is only children and fools that act without reflection,β was the answer.
βYou forget those who are deluded by passion.β
βI do not belong to that number.β
βAnd yet revenge is the most fearful of all the passions.β
βOnly when it is practised in the heat of feeling. My revenge is as cool as this piece of iron; but I know my duty.β
βThe highest duty of a good man, is to subordinate his own welfare to that of his country.β
βThat I know.β
βYou seem to forget, however, that with Egypt you are delivering your own country over to the Persians.β
βI do not agree with you there.β
βDo you believe, that when all the rest of the Mediterranean coasts belong to Persia, she will leave your beautiful Greece untouched?β
βCertainly not, but I know my own countrymen; I believe them fully capable of a victorious resistance to the hosts of the barbarians, and am confident that their courage and greatness will rise with the nearness of the danger. It will unite our divided tribes into one great nation, and be the ruin of the tyrants.β
βI cannot argue with you, for I am no longer acquainted with the state of things in your native country, and besides, I believe you to be a wise manβnot one who would plunge a nation into ruin merely for the gratification of his own ambition. It is a fearful thing that entire nations should have to suffer for the guilt of one man, if that man be one who wears a crown. And now, if my opinion is of any importance to you, tell me what the deed was which has roused your desire of vengeance.β
βListen then, and never try again to turn me from my purpose. You know the heir to the Egyptian throne, and you know Rhodopis too. The former was, for many reasons, my mortal enemy, the latter the friend of every Greek, but mine especially. When I was obliged to leave Egypt, Psamtik threatened me with his vengeance; your son Gyges saved my life. A few weeks later my two children came to Naukratis, in order to follow me out to Sigeum. Rhodopis took them kindly under her protection, but some wretch had discovered the secret and betrayed it to the prince. The very next night her house was surrounded and searched,βmy children found and taken captive. Amasis had meanwhile become blind, and allowed his miserable son to do what he liked; the wretch dared to...β
βKill your only son?β
βYou have said it.β
βAnd your other child?β
βThe girl is still in their hands.β
βThey will do her an injury when they hear...β
βLet her die. Better go to oneβs grave childless, than unrevenged.β
βI understand. I cannot blame you any longer. The boyβs blood must be revenged.β
And so saying, the old man pressed the Athenianβs right hand. The latter dried his tears, mastered his emotion, and cried: βLet us go to the council of war now. No one can be so thankful for Psamtikβs infamous deeds as Cambyses. That man with his hasty passions was never made to be a prince of peace.β
βAnd yet it seems to me the highest duty of a king is to work for the inner welfare of his kingdom. But human beings are strange creatures; they praise their butchers more than their benefactors. How many poems have been written on Achilles! but did any one ever dream of writing songs on the wise government of Pittakus?β
βMore courage is required to shed blood, than to plant trees.β
βBut much more kindness and wisdom to heal wounds, than to make them.βI have still one question which I should very much like to ask you, before we go into the hall. Will Bartja be able to stay at Naukratis when Amasis is aware of the kingβs intentions?β
βCertainly not. I have prepared him for this, and advised his assuming a disguise and a false name.β
βDid he agree?β
βHe seemed willing to follow my advice.β
βBut at all events it would be well to send a messenger to put him on his guard.β
βWe will ask the kingβs permission.β
βNow we must go. I see the wagons containing the viands of the royal household just driving away from the kitchen.β
βHow many people are maintained from the kingβs table daily?β
βAbout fifteen thousand.β
βThen the Persians may thank the gods, that their king only takes one meal a day.β
[This immense royal household is said to have cost 400 talents, that is (L90,000.) daily. Athenaus, Deipn. p. 607.]CHAPTER IX.
Six weeks after these events a little troop of horsemen might have been seen riding towards the gates of Sardis. The horses and their riders were covered with sweat and dust. The former knew that they were drawing near a town, where there would be stables and mangers, and exerted all their remaining powers; but yet their pace did not seem nearly fast enough to satisfy the impatience of two men, dressed in Persian costume, who rode at the head of the troop.
The well-kept royal road ran through fields of good black, arable land, planted with trees of many different kinds. It crossed the outlying spurs of the Tmolus range of mountains. At their foot stretched rows of olive, citron and plane-trees, plantations of mulberries and vines; at a higher level grew firs, cypresses and nut-tree copses. Fig-trees and date-palms, covered with fruit, stood sprinkled over the fields; and the woods and meadows were carpeted with brightly-colored and sweetly-scented flowers. The road led over ravines and brooks, now half dried up by the heat of summer, and here and there the traveller came upon a well at the side of the road, carefully enclosed, with seats for the weary, and sheltering shrubs. Oleanders bloomed in the more damp and shady places; slender palms waved wherever the sun was hottest. Over this rich landscape hung a deep blue, perfectly cloudless sky, bounded on its southern horizon by the snowy peaks of the Tmolus mountains, and on the west by the Sipylus range of hills, which gave a bluish
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