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Literature Post > Haggard, H. Rider > The World's Desire > Chapter 24

The World's Desire by Haggard, H. Rider - Chapter 24

V

THE VOICE OF THE DEAD

When Meriamun the Queen had watched the chariot of the Wanderer till
it was lost in the dust of the desert, she passed down from the Palace
roof to the solitude of her chamber.

Here she sat in her chamber till the darkness gathered, as the evil
thoughts gathered in her heart, that was rent with love of him whom
she had won but to lose. Things had gone ill with her, to little
purpose she had sinned after such a fashion as may not be forgiven.
Yet there was hope. He had sworn that he would wed her when Pharaoh
was dead, and when Argive Helen had followed Pharaoh to the Shades.
Should she shrink then from the deed of blood? Nay, from evil to evil
she would go. She laid her hand upon the double-headed snake that
wound her about, and spake into the gloom:

"Osiris waits thee, Meneptah--Osiris waits thee! The Shades of those
who have died for thy love, Helen, are gathering at the gates. It
shall be done. Pharaoh, thou diest to-night. To-morrow night, thou
Goddess Helen, shall all thy tale be told. /Man/ may not harm thee
indeed, but shall fire refuse to kiss thy loveliness? Are there no
/women's/ hands to light thy funeral pile?"

Then she rose, and calling her ladies, was attired in her most
splendid robes, and caused the uraeus crown to be set upon her head,
the snake circlet of power on her brow, the snake girdle of wisdom at
her heart. And now she hid somewhat in her breast, and passed to the
ante-chamber, where the Princes gathered for the feast.

Pharaoh looked up and saw her loveliness. So glorious she seemed in
her royal beauty that his heart forgot its woes, and once again he
loved her as he had done in years gone by, when she conquered him at
the Game of Pieces, and he had cast his arms about her and she stabbed
him.

She saw the look of love grow on his heavy face, and all her gathered
hate rose in her breast, though she smiled gently with her lips and
spake him fair.

They sat at the feast and Pharaoh drank. And ever as he drank she
smiled upon him with her dark eyes and spake him words of gentlest
meaning, till at length there was nothing he desired more than that
they should be at one again.

Now the feast was done. They sat in the ante-chamber, for all were
gone save Meneptah and Meriamun. Then he came to her and took her
hand, looking into her eyes, nor did she say him nay.

There was a lute lying on a golden table, and there too, as it
chanced, was a board for the Game of Pieces, with the dice, and the
pieces themselves wrought in gold.

Pharaoh took up the gold king from the board and toyed with it in his
hand. "Meriamun," he said, "for these five years we have been apart,
thou and I. Thy love I have lost, as a game is lost for one false
move, or one throw of the dice; and our child is dead and our armies
are scattered, and the barbarians come like flies when Sihor stirs
within his banks. Love only is left to us, Meriamun."

She looked at him not unkindly, as if sorrow and wrong had softened
her heart also, but she did not speak.

"Can dead Love waken, Meriamun, and can angry Love forgive?"

She had lifted the lute and her fingers touched listlessly on the
cords.

"Nay, I know not," she said; "who knows? How did Pentaur sing of
Love's renewal, Pentaur the glorious minstrel of our father, Rameses
Miamun?"

He laid the gold king on the board, and began listlessly to cast the
dice. He threw the "Hathor" as it chanced, the lucky cast, two sixes,
and a thought of better fortune came to him.

"How did the song run, Meriamun? It is many a year since I heard thee
sing."

She touched the lute lowly and sweetly, and then she sang. Her
thoughts were of the Wanderer, but the King deemed that she thought of
himself.

O joy of Love's renewing,
Could Love be born again;
Relenting for thy rueing,
And pitying my pain:
O joy of Love's awaking,
Could Love arise from sleep,
Forgiving our forsaking
The fields we would not reap!

Fleet, fleet we fly, pursuing
The Love that fled amain,
But will he list our wooing,
Or call we but in vain?
Ah! vain is all our wooing,
And all our prayers are vain,
Love listeth not our suing,
Love will not wake again.

"Will he not waken again?" said Pharaoh. "If two pray together, will
Love refuse their prayer?"

"It might be so," she said, "if two prayed together; for if they
prayed, he would have heard already!"

"Meriamun," said the Pharaoh eagerly, for he thought her heart was
moved by pity and sorrow, "once thou didst win my crown at the Pieces,
wilt thou play me for thy love?"

She thought for one moment, and then she said:

"Yes, I will play thee, my Lord, but my hand has lost its cunning, and
it may well be that Meriamun shall lose again, as she has lost all.
Let me set the Pieces, and bring wine for my lord."

She set the Pieces, and crossing the room, she lifted a great cup of
wine, and put it by Pharaoh's hand. But he was so intent on the game
that he did not drink.

He took the field, he moved, she replied, and so the game went between
them, in the dark fragrant chamber where the lamp burned, and the
Queen's eyes shone in the night. This way and that went the game, till
she lost, and he swept the board.

Then in triumph he drained the poisoned cup of wine, and cried,
"Pharaoh is dead!"

"Pharaoh is dead!" answered Meriamun, gazing into his eyes.

"What is that look in thine eyes, Meriamun, what is that look in thine
eyes?"

And the King grew pale as the dead, for he had seen that look before--
when Meriamun slew Hataska.

"Pharaoh is dead!" she shrilled in the tone of women who wail the
dirges. "Pharaoh, great Pharaoh is dead! Ere a man may count a hundred
thy days are numbered. Strange! but to-morrow, Meneptah, shalt thou
sit where Hataska sat, dead on the knees of Death, an Osirian in the
lap of the Osiris. Die, Pharaoh, die! But while thy diest, hearken.
There is one I love, the Wanderer who leads thy hosts. His love I
stole by arts known to me, and because I stole it he would have shamed
me, and I accused him falsely in the ears of men. But he comes again,
and, so sure as thou shalt sit on the knees of Osiris, so surely shall
he sit upon thy throne, Pharaoh. For Pharaoh is dead!"

He heard. He gathered his last strength. He rose and staggered towards
her, striking at the air. Slowly she drew away, while he followed her,
awful to see. At length he stood still, he threw up his hands, and
fell dead.

Then Meriamun drew near and looked at him strangely.

"Behold the end of Pharaoh," she said. "That then was a king, upon
whose breath the lives of peoples hung like a poised feather. Well,
let him go! Earth can spare him, and Death is but the richer by a
weary fool. 'Tis done, and well done! Would that to-morrow's task were
also done--and that Helen lay as Pharaoh lies. So--rinse the cup--and
now to sleep--if sleep will come. Ah, where hath sleep flown of late?
To-morrow they'll find him dead. Well, what of it? So do kings
ofttimes die. There, I will be going; never were his eyes so large and
so unlovely!"



Now the light of morning gathered again on all the temple tops, and
men rose from sleep to go about their labours. Meriamun watched it
grow as she lay sleepless in her golden bed, waiting for the cry that
presently should ring along the Palace walls. Hark! What was that? The
sound of swinging doors, the rush of running feet. And now it came--
long and shrill it rose.

"Pharaoh is dead! Awake! Awake, ye sleepers! Awake! awake! and look
upon that which has come about. Pharaoh is dead! Pharaoh is dead!"

Then Meriamun arose, and followed by the ladies, rushed from her
chamber.

"Who dreams so evilly?" she said. "Who dreams and cries aloud in his
haunted sleep?"

"O Queen, it is no dream," said one. "Pass into the ante-chamber and
see. There lies Pharaoh dead, and with no wound upon him to tell the
manner of his end."

Then Meriamun cried aloud with a great cry, and threw her hair about
her face, while tears fell from her dark eyes. She passed into the
chamber, and there, fallen on his back and cold, lay Pharaoh in his
royal robes. Awhile the Queen looked upon him as one who is dumb with
grief. Then she lifted up her voice and cried:

"Still is the curse heavy upon Khem and the people of Khem. Pharaoh
lies dead; yea, he is dead who has no wound, and this I say, that he
is slain of the witchcraft of her whom men name the Hathor. Oh, my
Lord, my Lord!" and kneeling, she laid her hand upon his breast; "by
this dead heart of thine I swear that I will wreak thy murder on her
who wrought it. Lift him up! Lift up this poor clay, that was the
first of kings. Clothe him in the robes of death, and set him on the
knees of Osiris in the Temple of Osiris. Then go forth through the
city and call out this, the Queen's command; call it from street to
street. This is the Queen's command, that 'every woman in Tanis who
has lost son, or husband, or brother, or kin or lover, through the
witchcraft of the False Hathor, or by the plagues that she hath
wrought on Khem, or in the war with the Apura, whom she caused to fly
from Khem, do meet me at sundown in the Temple of Osiris before the
face of the God and of dead Pharaoh's Majesty.'"

So they took Meneptah the Osirian, and wrapping him in the robes of
death, bore him to the knees of Osiris, where he should sit a day and
a night. And the messengers of Meriamun went forth summoning the women
of the city to meet her at sunset in the Temple of Osiris. Moreover,
Meriamun sent out slaves by tens and by twenties to the number of two
thousand, bidding them gather up all the wood that was in Tanis, and
all the oil and the bitumen, and bundles of reeds by hundreds such as
are used for the thatching of houses, and lay them in piles and stacks
in a certain courtyard near the Temple of Hathor. This they did, and
so the day wore on, while the women wailed about the streets because
of the death of Pharaoh.



Now it chanced that the camel of Rei the Priest fell down from
weariness as it journeyed swiftly back to Tanis. But Rei sped forward
on foot, and came to the gates of Tanis, sorely wearied, towards the
evening of that day. When he heard the wailing of the women, he asked
of a passer-by what new evil had fallen upon Khem, and learned the
death of Pharaoh. Then Rei knew by whose hand Pharaoh was dead, and
grieved at heart, because she whom he had served and loved--Meriamun
the moon-child--was a murderess. At first he was minded to go up
before the Queen and put her to an open shame, and then take his death
at her hands; but when he heard that Meriamun had summoned all the
women of Tanis to meet her in the Temple of Osiris, he had another
thought. Hurrying to that place where he hid in the city, he ate and
drank. Then he put off his beggar's rags, and robed himself afresh,
and over all drew the garment of an aged crone, for this was told him,
that no man should be suffered to enter the Temple. Now the day was
dying, and already the western sky was red, and he hurried forth and
mingled with the stream of women who passed towards the Temple gates.

"Who then slew Pharaoh?" asked one; "and why does the Queen summon us
to meet her?"

"Pharaoh is slain by the witchcraft of the False Hathor," answered
another; "and the Queen summons us that we may take counsel how to be
rid of the Hathor."

"Tell not of the accursed Hathor," said a third; "my husband and my
brother are dead at her hands, and my son died in the death of the
first-born that she called down on Khem. Ah, if I could but see her
rent limb from limb I should seek Osiris happily."

"Some there be," quoth a fourth, "who say that not the Hathor, but the
Gods of those Apura brought the woes on Khem, and some that Pharaoh
was slain by the Queen's own hand, because of the love she bears to
that great Wanderer who came here a while ago."

"Thou fool," answered the first; "how can the Queen love one who would
have wrought outrage on her?"

"Such things have been," said the fourth woman; "perchance he wrought
no outrage, perchance she beguiled him as women may. Yes, yes, such
things have been. I am old, and I have seen such things."

"Yea, thou art old," said the first. "Thou hast no child, no husband,
no father, no lover, and no brother. Thou hast lost none who are dear
to thee through the magic of the Hathor. Speak one more such slander
on the Queen, and we will fall upon thee and tear thy lying tongue
from its roots."

"Hush," said the second woman, "here are the Temple gates. By Isis did
any ever see such a multitude of women, and never a man to cheer them,
a dreary sight, indeed! Come, push on, push on or we shall find no
place. Yea, thou soldier--we are women, all women, have no fear. No
need to bare our breasts, look at our eyes blind with weeping over the
dead. Push on! push on!"

So they passed by the guards and into the gates of the Temple, and
with them went Rei unheeded. Already it was well-nigh filled with
women. Although the sun was not yet dead, torches were set about to
lighten the gloom, and by them Rei saw that the curtains before the
Shrine were drawn. Presently the Temple was full to overflowing, the
doors were shut and barred, and a voice from behind the veil cried:

"/Silence!/"

Then all the multitude of women were silent, and the light of the
torches flared strangely upon their shifting upturned faces, as fires
flare over the white sea-foam. Now the curtains of the Shrine of
Osiris were drawn aside slowly, and the light that burned upon the
altar streamed out between them. It fell upon the foremost ranks of
women, it fell upon the polished statue of the Osiris. On the knees of
Osiris sat the body of Pharaoh Meneptah, his head resting against the
breast of the God. Pharaoh was wrapped about with winding clothes like
the marble statue of the God, and in his cold hands were bound the
crook, the sceptre, and the scourge, as the crook, the sceptre, and
the scourge were placed in the hands of the effigy of the God. As was
the statue of the God, so was the body of Pharaoh that sat upon his
knees, and cold and awful was the face of Osiris, and cold and awful
was the face of Meneptah the Osirian.

At the side, and somewhat in front of the statue of the God, a throne
was placed of blackest marble, and on the throne sat Meriamun the
Queen. She was glorious to look on. She wore the royal robes of Khem,
the double-crown of Khem fashioned of gold, and wreathed with the
uraeus snakes, was set upon her head; in her hand was the crystal
cross of Life, and between her mantle's purple folds gleamed the eyes
of her snake girdle. She sat awhile in silence speaking no word, and
all the women wondered at her glory and at dead Pharaoh's awfulness.
Then at length she spoke, low indeed, but so clearly that every word
reached the limits of the Temple hall.

"Women of Tanis, hear me, the Queen. Let each search the face of each,
and if there be any man among your multitude, let him be dragged forth
and torn limb from limb, for in this matter no man may hear our
counsels, lest following his madness he betray them."

Now every woman looked upon her neighbour, and she who was next to Rei
looked hard upon him so that he trembled for his life. But he crouched
into the shadow and stared back on her boldly as though he doubted if
she were indeed a woman, and said no word. When all had looked, and no
man had been found, Meriamun spoke again.

"Hearken, women of Tanis, hearken to your sister and your Queen. Woe
upon woe is fallen on the head of Khem. Plague upon plague hath
smitten the ancient land. Our first-born are dead, our slaves have
spoiled us and fled away, our hosts have been swallowed in the Sea of
Weeds, and barbarians swarm along our shores like locusts. Is it not
so, women of Tanis?"

"It is so, O Queen," they answered, as with one voice.

"A strange evil hath fallen on the head of Khem. A false Goddess is
come to dwell within the land; her sorceries are great in the land.
Month by month men go up to look upon her deadly beauty, and month by
month they are slain of her sorceries. She takes the husband from his
marriage bed; she draws the lover from her who waits to be a bride;
the slave flies to her from the household of his lord; the priests
flock to her from the altars of the Gods--ay, the very priests of Isis
flock forsworn from the altars of Isis. All look upon her witch-
beauty, and to each she shows an altered loveliness, and to all she
gives one guerdon--Death! Is it not so, women of Tanis?"

"Alas! alas! it is so, O Queen," answered the women as with one voice.

"Woes are fallen on you and Khem, my sisters, but on me most of all
are woes fallen. My people have been slain, my land--the land I love--
has been laid waste with plagues; my child, the only one, is dead in
the great death; hands have been laid on me, the Queen of Khem. Think
on it, ye who are women! My slaves are fled, my armies have been
swallowed in the sea; and last, O my sisters, my consort, my beloved
lord, mighty Pharaoh, son of great Rameses Miamun, hath been taken
from me! Look! look! ye who are wives, look on him who was your King
and my most beloved lord. There he sits, and all my tears and all my
prayers may not summon one single answering sigh from that stilled
heart. The curse hath fallen on him also. He too hath been smitten
silently with everlasting silence. Look! look! ye who are wives, and
weep with me, ye who are left widowed."

Now the women looked, and a great groan went up from all that
multitude, while Meriamun hid her face with the hollow of her hand.
Then again she spoke.

"I have besought the Gods, my sisters; I have dared to call down the
majesty of the Gods, who speak through the lips of the dead, and I
have learnt whence these woes come. And this I have won by my prayers,
that ye who suffer as I suffer shall learn whence they come, not from
my mortal lips, indeed, but from the lips of the dead that speak with
the voice of the Gods."

Then, while the women trembled, she turned to the body of Pharaoh,
which was set upon the knees of Osiris, and spoke to it.

"Dead Pharaoh! great Osirian, ruling in the Underworld, hearken to me
now! Hearken to me now, thou Osiris, Lord of the West, first of the
hosts of Death. Hearken to me, Osiris, and be manifest through the
lips of him who was great on earth. Speak through his cold lips, speak
with mortal accents, that these people may hear and understand. By the
spirit that is in me, who am yet a dweller on the earth, I charge thee
speak. Who is the source of the woes of Khem? Say, Lord of the dead,
who are the living evermore?"

Now the flame on the altar died away, and dreadful silence fell upon
the Temple, gloom fell upon the Shrine, and through the gloom the
golden crown of Meriamun, and the cold statue of the Osiris, and the
white face of dead Meneptah gleamed faint and ghost-like.

Then suddenly the flame of the altar flared as flares the summer
lightning. It flared full on the face of the dead, and lo! the lips of
the dead moved, and from them came the sound of mortal speech. They
spake in awful accents, and thus they spoke:

"/She who was the curse of Achæans, she who was the doom of Ilios; she
who sits in the Temple of Hathor, the Fate of man, who may not be
harmed of Man, she calls down the wrath of the Gods on Khem. It is
spoken!/"

The echo of the awful words died away in the silence. Then fear took
hold of the multitude of women because of the words of the Dead, and
some fell upon their faces, and some covered their eyes with their
hands.

"Arise, my sisters!" cried the voice of Meriamun. "Ye have heard not
from my lips, but from the lips of the dead. Arise, and let us forth
to the Temple of the Hathor. Ye have heard who is the fountain of our
woes; let us forth and seal it at its source for ever. Of men she may
not be harmed who is the fate of men, from men we ask no help, for all
men are her slaves, and for her beauty's sake all men forsake us. But
we will play the part of men. Our women's milk shall freeze within our
breasts, we will dip our tender hands in blood, ay, scourged by a
thousand wrongs we will forget our gentleness, and tear this foul
fairness from its home. We will burn the Hathor's Shrine with fire,
her priests shall perish at the altar, and the beauty of the false
Goddess shall melt like wax in the furnace of our hate. Say, will ye
follow me, my sisters, and wreak our shames upon the Shameful One, our
woes upon the Spring of Woe, our dead upon their murderess?"

She ceased, and then from every woman's throat within the great Temple
there went up a cry of rage, fierce and shrill.

"We will, Meriamun, we will!" they screamed. "To the Hathor! Lead us
to the Hathor's Shrine! Bring fire! Bring fire! Lead us to the
Hathor's Shrine!"