An Egyptian Princess โ Complete by Georg Ebers (good books for 8th graders TXT) ๐
Read free book ยซAn Egyptian Princess โ Complete by Georg Ebers (good books for 8th graders TXT) ๐ยป - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Georg Ebers
Read book online ยซAn Egyptian Princess โ Complete by Georg Ebers (good books for 8th graders TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Georg Ebers
โWe know that well enough,โ said Araspes, โand yet we are ready to swear by Mithras, that we have not left Bartja or his garden one moment since we came back from hunting.โ
โAs for me,โ said Darius, โI, the son of Hystaspes, have especially convincing evidence to give in favor of your brotherโs innocence; I watched the rising of the Tistar-star with him; and this, according to Boges, was the very star that shone on his flight.โ
Hystaspes gazed on his son in astonishment and doubt at hearing these words, and Cambyses turned a scrutinizing eye first on the one and then on the other party of these strange witnesses, who wished so much, and yet found it so impossible, to believe one another, himself unable to come to a decision.
Bartja, who till now had remained perfectly silent, looking down sadly at his chained hands, took advantage of the silence to say, making at the same time a deep obeisance: โMay I be allowed to speak a few words, my King?โ
โSpeak!โ
โFrom our father we learnt to strive after that which was pure and good only; so up to this time my life has been unstained. If you have ever known me take part in an evil deed, you have a right not to believe me, but if you find no fault in me then trust to what I say, and remember that a son of Cyrus would rather die than tell a lie. I confess that no judge was ever placed in such a perplexing position. The best men in your kingdom testify against one another, friend against friend, father against son. But I tell you that were the entire Persian nation to rise up against you, and swear that Cambyses had committed this or that evil deed, and you were to say, โI did not commit it,โ I, Bartja, would give all Persia the lie and exclaim, โYe are all false witnesses; sooner could the sea cast up fire than a son of Cyrus allow his mouth to deal in lies.โ No, Cambyses, you and I are so high-born that no one but yourself can bear evidence against me; and you can only be judged out of your own mouth.โ
Cambysesโ looks grew a little milder on hearing these words, and his brother went on: โSo I swear to you by Mithras, and by all pure spirits, that I am innocent. May my life become extinct and my race perish from off the earth, if I tell you a lie, when I say that I have not once set foot in the hanging-gardens since my return!โ
Bartjaโs voice was so firm and his tone so full of assurance, as he uttered this oath that Cambyses ordered his chains to be loosened, and, after a few momentsโ thought, said: โI should like to believe you, for I cannot bear to imagine you the worst and most abandoned of men. To-morrow we will summon the astrologers, soothsayers and priests. Perhaps they may be able to discover the truth. Can you see any light in this darkness, Oropastes?โ
โThy servant supposes, that a Div has taken upon him the form of Bartja, in order to ruin the kingโs brother and stain thine own royal soul with the blood of thy fatherโs son.โ
Cambyses and every one present nodded their assent to this proposition, and the king was just going to offer his hand to Bartja, when a staff-bearer came in and gave the king a dagger. A eunuch had found it under the windows of Nitetisโ sleeping-apartment.
Cambyses examined the weapon carefully. Its costly hilt was thickly set with rubies and turquoises. As he looked he turned pale, and dashed the dagger on the ground before Bartja with such violence, that the stones fell out of their setting.
โThis is your dagger, you wretch!โ he shrieked, seized by the same violent passion as before. โThis very morning you used it to give the last thrust to the wild boar, that I had mortally wounded. Croesus, you ought to know it too, for my father brought it from your treasure-house at Sardis. At last you are really convicted, you liar!โyou impostor! The Divs require no weapons, and such a dagger as this is not to be picked up everywhere. Ah, ha! you are feeling in your girdle! You may well turn pale; your dagger is gone!โ
โYes, it is gone. I must have lost it, and some enemy...โ
โSeize him, Bischen, put on his fetters! Take him to prisonโthe traitor, the perjurer! He shall be strangled to-morrow. Death is the penalty of perjury. Your heads for theirs, you guards, if they escape. Not one word more will I hear; away with you, you perjured villains! Boges, go at once to the hanging-gardens and bring the Egyptian to me. Yet no, I wonโt see that serpent again. It is very near dawn now, and at noon she shall be flogged through the streets. Then Iโll...โ
But here he was stopped by another fit of epilepsy, and sank down on to the marble floor in convulsions. At this fearful moment Kassandane was led into the hall by the old general Megabyzus. The news of what had happened had found its way to her solitary apartments, and, notwithstanding the hour, she had risen in order to try and discover the truth and warn her son against pronouncing a too hasty decision. She believed firmly that Bartja and Nitetis were innocent, though she could not explain to herself what had happened. Several times she had tried to put herself in communication with Nitetis, but without avail. At last she had been herself to the hanging-gardens, but the guards had actually had the hardihood to refuse her admission.
Croesus went at once to meet her, told her what had happened, suppressing as many painful details as possible, confirmed her in her belief of the innocence of the accused, and then took her to the bedside of the king.
The convulsions had not lasted long this time. He lay on his golden bed under purple silk coverlets, pale and exhausted. His blind mother seated herself at his side, Croesus and Oropastes took their station at the foot of the bell, and in another part of the room, four physicians discussed the patientโs condition in low whispers.
[It was natural, that medicine should be carefully studied among a people who set such a high value upon life as did the Persians. Pliny indeed, (XXX. I.) maintains, that the whole of Zoroasterโs religion was founded on the science of medicine, and it is true that there are a great many medical directions to be found in the Avesta. In the Vendidad, Farg. VII. there is a detailed list of medical fees. โThe physician shall treat a priest for a pious blessing or spell, the master of a house for a small draught animal, etc., the lord of a district for a team of four oxen. If the physician cures the mistress of the house, a female ass shall be his fee, etc., etc.โ We read in the same Fargard, that the physician had to pass a kind of examination. If he had operated thrice successfully on bad men, on whose bodies he had been permitted to try his skill, he was pronounced โcapable for ever.โ If, on the other hand, three evil Daevayacna (worshippers of the Divs) died under his hands, he was pronounced โincapable of healing for evermore.โ]Kassandane was very gentle with her son; she begged him not to yield to passionate anger, and to remember what a sad effect every such outburst had on his health.
โYes, mother, you are right,โ answered the king, smiling bitterly; โI see that I must get rid of everything that rouses my anger. The Egyptian must die, and my perfidious brother shall follow his mistress.โ
Comments (0)