<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
<p class="center"><strong>CAPTIVE.</strong></p>
<p>So confident were the Rebu that if the Egyptians dug
through their walls, or even threw them down by undermining
them, they could repel their assault, that they
took but little heed to the huts established at the foot of
the wall, except that a strong body of men were stationed
behind the walls, half of whom were always to be under
arms in readiness to repel the Egyptians should they
burrow through. This confidence proved their ruin.
The Egyptians were thoroughly accustomed to mining
operations, and were fully aware that were they to pierce
the wall the Rebu could at once overwhelm the small
working parties; they, therefore, after penetrating a
considerable distance into the embankment, drove right and
left, making an excavation of considerable size, the roof
being supported by beams and planks hauled up at night.</p>
<p>The number of those employed in the work was increased
as fast as there was room for them; and while
the Rebu thought that there were at most a dozen men in
each of the sheltered places, there were, at the end of
twenty-four hours, fully two hundred men at work in the
heart of the embankment at each point. The Egyptian
king had ordered the chief of his engineers to have everything
in readiness for the capture of the city by the end
of the third day.</p>
<p>Each night the numbers of workmen increased, while
the excavations were carried in further and further.
No picks were used in the work, the earth being cut
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46"></SPAN></span>
away with wide daggers. Absolute silence was enjoined
among the workers, and they were thus enabled to extend
their excavations close to the surface without the defenders
having an idea of their proximity. The distance that
they were from the inner face was ascertained by boring
through at night-time with spears. By the end of the
third day the excavations had been carried so far that
there was but a foot or so of earth remaining, this being
kept from moving, on pressure from the outside, by a
lining of boards supported by beams. Thus at twenty
points the Egyptians were in readiness to burst through
among the unsuspecting defenders.</p>
<p>As soon as it was dark the preparations for the assault
began. Great numbers of stagings of vast length had
been prepared, together with an immense number of
broad and lofty ladders. These last were brought forward
noiselessly to the foot of the cliff, and great numbers
of the Egyptians mounted before the alarm was
given by those on the walls. But by this time the excavations
were all crowded with men. The Egyptian army
now advanced with shouts to the assault. The great
stages were brought forward by the labor of thousands
of men and placed against the cliff.</p>
<p>The besieged had now rushed to defend the walls, and
volleys of missiles of all sorts were poured down upon
the Egyptians as they strove to mount the ladders and
stages. No one thought of any possible danger from the
little shelters lying at the foot of the wall, and the din
was so great that the work of digging through the remaining
wall of earth was unheard. The troops who had
been specially told off to watch these points had joined
their comrades on the walls, and none marked the stream
of dark figures which presently began to pour out from
the embankment at twenty different points.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47"></SPAN></span>
At last the besieged, whose hopes were rising as the
Egyptians appeared to falter under the showers of missiles
poured down, were startled by the sound of a
trumpet in their rear—a sound which was answered instantly
from a score of points. Rushing with cries of
dismay to the back of the rampart, they saw dark bodies
of footmen drawn up in regular order, and a rain of
arrows was opened upon them. The Rebu, without a
moment’s hesitation, rushed down to attack the foes who
had gained a footing, they scarce knew how, in their
fortress. But each of the Egyptian companies was four
hundred strong, composed of picked troops, and these
for a time easily beat off the irregular attacks of the
Rebu.</p>
<p>Amusis and the other leaders of the Rebu strove to get
their men into solid order, for so alone could they hope
to break the phalanxes of the Egyptians; but the confusion
was too great. In the meantime the Egyptians
outside had taken advantage of the diversion created by
the attack within, and poured up their ladders and stagings
in vast numbers. Some dragging up ladders after
them planted them against the walls, others poured
through by the passages which had been dug, and these,
as soon as they were numerous enough, ascended the embankments
from behind and fell upon the Rebu still
defending the wall.</p>
<p>Never did the tribesmen fight with greater bravery;
but the completeness of the surprise, the number of the
Egyptians who had established themselves in their rear,
the constant pushing in of reinforcements both through
and over the wall, rendered it impossible for them to
retrieve their fortunes; and in the confusion and darkness
they were unable to distinguish friend from foe.
The various battalions and companies were hopelessly
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48"></SPAN></span>
mixed together; the orders of their leaders and officers
were unheard in the din.</p>
<p>Upon the Egyptian side everything had been carefully
planned. One of the companies which first entered had
made their way quietly along the foot of the wall, and
were not noticed until they suddenly threw themselves
upon defenders of one of the gates. As soon as they had
obtained possession of this, great fires were lighted, and
a large body of Egyptian troops, headed by engineers
carrying beams and planks, advanced. The gaps across
the roadway were bridged over, and the Egyptians
poured in at the gate before the Rebu could dislodge the
party which had taken possession of it. Every moment
added to the confusion of the scene. To the Rebu it
seemed as if their foes were springing from the very earth
upon them, and, despairing of regaining the ground that
had been lost, they began to break away and make
some for their homes, some for the water face of the city—the
only one which was open to them, for the Egyptians
were now pressing forward from the three other
faces of the town. The boats lying along the sand were
quickly crowded with fugitives and pushed off from
shore, and those who arrived later found all means of
escape gone. Some threw down their arms and made
their way to their homes, others ran back to meet the
Egyptians and die fighting.</p>
<p>It was some hours before the conflict ceased, for the
Egyptians too were confused with the darkness, and
many desperate fights took place between different battalions
before they discovered they were friends. Light
was gained by firing numbers of the houses lying nearest
to the walls; but as soon as the Egyptians advanced beyond
the arc of light they were fiercely attacked by the
Rebu, and at last the trumpet sounded the order for the
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49"></SPAN></span>
troops to remain in the positions they occupied until
daylight.</p>
<p>As soon as morning broke a vast crowd of women were
seen advancing from the center of the town. As they
neared the Egyptians they threw themselves on the
ground with loud cries for mercy. There was a pause;
and then some Egyptian officers advanced and bade a
score of the women follow them to the presence of the
king. Thotmes had entered with the troops who made
their way into the city by the gate, but yielding to the
entreaties of the officers that he would not expose himself
to be killed in the confusion, perhaps by an arrow shot
by his own soldiers, he had retired to the plain, and had
just returned to take part in the occupation of the city.</p>
<p>The Rebu women were led to him over ground thickly
covered with dead. Fully half the defenders of the city
had fallen, while the loss of the Egyptians had been
almost as large. The women threw themselves on their
faces before the great monarch and implored mercy for
themselves, their children, and the remnant of the men
of the city.</p>
<p>Thotmes was well satisfied. He had captured a city
which was regarded as impregnable; he had crushed the
people who had inflicted defeats upon his predecessors;
he had added to his own glory and to the renown of the
Egyptian arms. The disposition of the Egyptians was
lenient. Human sacrifices were unknown to their religion,
and they do not appear at any time to have slain in
cold blood captives taken in war. Human life was held
at a far higher value in Egypt than among any other
nation of antiquity, and the whole teaching of their laws
tended to create a disposition toward mercy.</p>
<p>An interpreter translated to the king the words of the
women.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50"></SPAN></span>
“Has all resistance ceased?” the king asked. “Have
all the men laid down their arms?”</p>
<p>The women exclaimed that there was not now an armed
man in the city, all the weapons having been collected
during the night and placed in piles in the open space in
front of the entrance to the palace.</p>
<p>“Then I give to all their lives,” the king said graciously.
“When I fight with cowards I have little mercy
upon them, for men who are not brave are unfit to live;
but when I fight with men I treat them as men. The
Rebu are a valiant people, but as well might the jackal
fight with the lion as the Rebu oppose themselves to the
might of Egypt. They fought bravely in the field, and
they have bravely defended their walls; therefore I grant
life to all in the city—men, women, and children.
Where is your king?”</p>
<p>“He died in the battle four days since,” the women
replied.</p>
<p>“Where is your queen?”</p>
<p>“She drank poison last night, preferring to join her
husband than to survive the capture of the city.”</p>
<p>Thotmes had now ordered the whole of the inhabitants
to be taken out to the plain and kept there under a
guard. The town was then methodically searched and
everything of value brought together. The king set
aside a certain portion of the golden vessels for the services
of the Temple, some he chose for himself, and after
presenting others to his generals, ordered the rest to be
divided among the troops. He then ordered a hundred
captives—fifty young men and fifty maidens of the highest
rank—to be selected to be taken to Egypt as slaves,
and then fixed the tribute which the Rebu were in future
to pay. The army then evacuated the city and the inhabitants
were permitted to return.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51"></SPAN></span>
The next day messengers arrived from the other Rebu
towns. The fall of the capital, which had been believed
to be impregnable, after so short a siege had struck terror
into the minds of all, and the messengers brought offers
of submission to the king, with promises to pay any
tribute that he might lay upon them.</p>
<p>The king, well satisfied with his success and anxious
to return to Egypt, from which he had been absent nearly
two years, replied graciously to the various deputations,
informing them that he had already fixed the tribute that
the nation was to pay annually, and ordered a contribution
to be sent in at once by each city in proportion to
its size. In a few days the required sums, partly in
money, partly in vessels of gold, embroidered robes, and
other articles of value, were brought in. When the full
amount had been received the camp was struck and the
army started on their long march back to Egypt, an
officer of high rank being left as governor of the newly
captured province, with ten thousand men as a garrison.</p>
<p>Amuba was one of the fifty selected as slaves. Amusis
had escaped in the confusion, as had many others.
Jethro was also one of the selected band. Amuba was
for a time careless of what befell him. The news of the
death of his mother, which had met him as, after fighting
to the last, he returned to the palace, had been a terrible
blow, following as it did so closely upon the loss of his
father and the overthrow of the nation. His mother had
left the message for him that although as life had no
longer a charm for her she preferred death to the humiliation
of being carried a prisoner to Egypt, she trusted
that he would bear the misfortunes which had fallen on
him and his people with submission and patience; he
was young, and there was no saying what the future had
in store for him.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52"></SPAN></span>
“You will doubtless, my son,” were the words of her
message, “be carried away captive into Egypt, but you
may yet escape some day and rejoin your people, or may
meet with some lot in which you may find contentment
or even happiness there. At any rate, my last words to
you are, bear patiently whatever may befall you, remember
always that your father was king of the Rebu, and
whatever your station in life may be, try to be worthy of
the rank to which you were born. There is no greater
happiness on a throne than in a cottage. Men make
their own happiness, and a man may be respected even
though only a slave. May the gods of your country preside
over and protect you always.”</p>
<p>The message was delivered by an old woman who had
been with the queen since her birth, and struck down
with grief as Amuba was at his mother’s death, he yet
acknowledged to himself that even this loss was less hard
to bear than the knowledge that she who had been so
loved and honored by the people should undergo the
humiliation of being dragged a slave in the train of the
conquering Egyptians. He was, however, so prostrate
with grief that he obeyed with indifference the order to
leave the city, and was scarcely moved when the Egyptian
officer appointed to make the selection chose him as
one of the party that were to be taken as slaves to Egypt.</p>
<p>Prostrate as he was, however, he felt it to be a satisfaction
and comfort when he found that Jethro was also
of the party set aside.</p>
<p>“It is selfish, Jethro,” he said, “for me to feel glad
that you too are to be dragged away as a slave, but it will
be a great comfort to have you with me. I know almost
all the others of the party, but to none shall I be able to
talk of my father and mother and my home here as I
should to you whom I have known so long.”</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53"></SPAN></span>
“I am not sorry that I have been chosen,” Jethro said,
“for I have no family ties, and now that the Rebu are a
conquered people I should have little satisfaction in my
life here. When we get to Egypt we shall probably be
separated, but there is a march of months’ duration before
us, and during that time we may at least be together;
since, then, my being with you is as you say, prince, a
comfort to you, I am well content that I have been
chosen. I thought it a hard thing when my wife died
but a few weeks after our marriage. Now I rejoice that
it was so, and that I can leave without any one’s heart
being wrung at my departure. You and I, prince, perhaps
of all those chosen will feel the least misery at the
fate that has befallen us. Most of those here are leaving
wives and children behind; some of the youngest are still
unmarried, but they have fathers and mothers from whom
they will be separated. Therefore, let us not bemoan
our lot, for it might have been worse, and our life in
Egypt may not be wholly unbearable.”</p>
<p>“That is just what my dear mother said, Jethro,”
Amuba replied, repeating the message the queen had sent
him.</p>
<p>“My dear mistress was right,” Jethro said. “We may
find happiness in Egypt as elsewhere; and now let us try
to cheer up our companions, for in cheering them we
shall forget our own misfortunes.”</p>
<p>Jethro and Amuba went among the rest of the captives,
most of whom were prostrated with grief, and did their
best to rouse them from their stupor.</p>
<p>“The Egyptians have seen that the Rebu are men in
the field,” Amuba said to some of them. “Let them see
that we can also bear misfortune like men. Grieving
will not mitigate our lot, nay, it will add to its burden.
If the Egyptians see that we bear our fate manfully they
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54"></SPAN></span>
will have far more compassion upon us than if they see
that we bemoan ourselves. Remember we have a long
and toilsome journey before us, and shall need all our
strength. After all, the hardship of our lot is as nothing
to that of the women yonder. We are accustomed to
exercise and toil, but the journey, which we can support
as well as the Egyptians, will be terrible to them, delicate
in nature as they are. Let us therefore set them an
example of courage and patience; let us bear ourselves as
men whose suffering is unmerited, who have been conquered
but not disgraced, who are prepared to defy fate
and not to succumb to it.”</p>
<p>Amuba’s words had a great effect upon the captives.
They regarded him with respect as the son of their late
king, and as one who would have been king himself had
not this misfortune befallen them; and his calmness and
manly speech encouraged them to strive against their
grief and to look their fate more hopefully in the face.
As long as the army remained in camp the hands of the
captives were tied behind them, but when the march was
begun they were relieved of their bonds and were placed
in the center of an Egyptian regiment.</p>
<p>It was a long and tedious journey. On the way the
train of captives was very largely increased by those who
had been taken in the earlier conquests of the army, and
who had been left in charge of the troops told off to the
various provinces brought into subjection by the Egyptians
until the army passed through on its homeward
march. Provisions had been everywhere collected to
supply it on its progress, and as the distance traversed
each day was small the captives suffered but little until
they entered upon the passage of the desert tract between
the southern point of Syria and the mouth of the Nile.</p>
<p>Here, although vast quantities of water were carried in
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55"></SPAN></span>
the train of the army, the supply given to the captives
was extremely small, and as the sun blazed down with
tremendous heat, and they were half-suffocated by the
dust which rose in clouds under the feet of the vast body
of men, their sufferings were very severe. The Rebu
captives had gained the respect of the troops who escorted
them by their manly bearing and the absence of the
manifestations of grief which were betrayed by most of
the other captives. The regiment was composed of
Libyan mercenaries, hardy, active men, inured alike to
heat and fatigue.</p>
<p>During the three months which the march had occupied
Amuba and Jethro, and indeed most of the captives,
had acquired some knowledge of the Egyptian
language. Jethro had from the first impressed upon the
young prince the great advantage this would be to them.
In the first place, it would divert their thoughts from
dwelling upon the past, and in the second, it would make
their lot more bearable in Egypt.</p>
<p>“You must remember,” he said, “that we shall be
slaves, and masters are not patient with their slaves.
They give them orders, and if the order is not understood
so much the worse for the slaves. It will add to
our value, and therefore obtain for us better treatment, if
we are able to converse in their tongue.”</p>
<p>Amuba was thankful indeed when the gray monotony
of the desert was succeeded by the bright verdure of the
plains of Egypt. As they entered the land the order in
which they had marched was changed, and the long line
of captives followed immediately after the chariot of the
king. Each of them was laden with a portion of the
spoil taken from their native country. Amuba bore on
his head a large golden vase which had been used in the
ceremonies of the temple. Jethro carried a rich helmet
and armor which had belonged to the king.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56"></SPAN></span>
The first city they entered Amuba was astonished at
the massive splendor of the buildings and at the signs of
comfort and wealth which everywhere met his eye. The
streets were thronged with people who, bending to the
ground, shouted their acclamations as the king passed
along, and who gazed with interest and surprise at the
long procession of captives representing the various nations
who had been subjected to his arms. Most of all
he was surprised at the temples with their long avenues
of sphinxes, the gigantic figures representing the gods,
the rows of massive pillars, the majesty and grandeur of
the edifices themselves.</p>
<p>“How were they built, Jethro?” he exclaimed over
and again. “How were these massive stones placed in
order? How did they drag these huge figures across the
plains? What tools could they have used to carve them
out of the solid granite?”</p>
<p>“I am afraid, Amuba,” Jethro said grimly, for the lad
had positively forbidden him to address him any longer
as prince, saying that such title addressed to a slave was
no better than mockery, “we are likely to learn to our
cost before long how they manage these marvels, for
marvels they assuredly are. It must have taken the
strength of thousands of men to have transported even
one of these strange figures, and although the people
themselves may have aided in the work, you may be sure
the slaves bore the brunt of it.”</p>
<p>“But what is the meaning of these figures, Jethro?
Surely neither in this country nor in any other are there
creatures with the faces of women and the bodies of lions
and great wings such as these have. Some, too, have the
faces of men and the bodies of bulls, while others have
heads like birds and bodies like those of men.”</p>
<p>“Assuredly there can be no such creatures, Amuba;
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57"></SPAN></span>
and I wonder that a people so enlightened and wise as
the Egyptians should choose such strange figures for
their gods. I can only suppose that these figures represent
their attributes rather than the gods themselves.
Do you see, the human head may represent their intelligence,
the bodies of the lions or bulls their strength and
power, the wings of the bird their swiftness. I do not
know that it is so, but it seems to me that it is possible
that it may be something of this sort. We cannot but
allow that their gods are powerful, since they give them
victory over all other people; but no doubt we shall learn
more of them and of many other things in time.”</p>
<p>The journey was continued for another three weeks,
and was the cause of constant surprises to the captives.
The extraordinary fertility of the land especially struck
them. Cultivation among the Rebu was of a very primitive
description, and the abundance and variety of the
crops that everywhere met their eye seemed to them
absolutely marvelous. Irrigation was not wholly unknown
to the Rebu, and was carried on to a considerable
extent in Persia; but the enormous works for the purpose
in Egypt, the massive embankments of the river,
the network of canals and ditches, the order and method
everywhere apparent, filled them with surprise and
admiration.</p>
<p>Many of the cities and temples greatly surpassed in
magnificence and splendor those they had first met with,
and Amuba’s wonder reached its climax when they arrived
at Memphis, till lately the capital of Egypt. The wealth
and contents of the city astonished the captives, but
most of all were they surprised when they saw the enormous
bulk of the pyramids rising a few miles distant
from the town, and learned that these were some of the
tombs of the kings.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58"></SPAN></span>
The country had now altered in character. On the left
a range of steep hills approached the river, and as the
march proceeded similar though not so lofty hills were
seen on the right.</p>
<p>At last, after another fortnight’s traveling, a shout of
joy from the army proclaimed that Thebes, the capital of
Egypt, the goal of the long and weary march was in view.</p>
<p>Thebes stood on both sides of the Nile. On the eastern
bank the largest portion of the population was gathered,
but this part of the city was inhabited principally by the
poorer class. There was, too, a large population on the
Libyan side of the Nile, the houses being densely packed
near the bank of the river. Behind these were numbers
of temples and palaces, while the tombs of the kings and
queens were excavated in a valley further back, whose
precipitous sides were honeycombed with the rock sepulchers
of the wealthy. As the dwelling-houses were all
low, the vast piles of the temples, palaces, and public
buildings rose above them, and presented a most
striking appearance to those approaching the city, which
lay in a great natural amphitheater, the hills on both
sides narrowing toward the river both above and below
it. The march of the royal army from Memphis had
been on the western bank of the river, and it was the
great Libyan suburb with its palaces and temples that
they were approaching. As they neared the city an
enormous multitude poured out to welcome the king and
the returning army. Shouts of enthusiasm were raised,
the sound of trumpets and other musical instruments
filled the air, religious processions from the great temples
moved with steady course through the dense crowd,
which separated at once to allow of the passage of the
figures of the gods, and of the priests and attendants
bearing their emblems.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59"></SPAN></span>
“Indeed, Jethro,” Amuba exclaimed with enthusiasm,
“it is almost worth while being made a slave if it is only
to witness this glorious scene. What a wonderful people
are these; what knowledge, and power, and magnificence!
Why, my father’s palace would be regarded as a
mere hut in Thebes, and our temples, of which we
thought so much, are pygmies by the side of these immense
edifices.”</p>
<p>“All that is true enough, Amuba, and I do not say
that I, too, am not filled with admiration, and yet you
know the Rebu several times drove back their forces, and
man for man are more than a match for their soldiers.
Our people are taller than they by half a head. We have
not so much luxury, nor did we want it. All this must
make people effeminate.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps so,” Amuba assented; “but you must remember
it is not so very long ago that we were a people
living in tents, and wandering at will in search of pasture,
and we have not, I think, become effeminate because
we have settled down and built towns. No one can say
that the Egyptians are not brave; certainly it is not for
us to say so, though I agree with you that physically
they are not our equals. See how the people stare and
point at us, Jethro. I should think they have never seen
a race like ours with blue eyes and fair hair, though even
among them there are varying shades of darkness. The
nobles and upper classes are lighter in hue than the common
people.”</p>
<p>The surprise of the Egyptians was indeed great at the
complexion of their captives, and the decoration of their
walls has handed down in paintings which still remain
the blue eyes and fair hair of the Rebu. The rejoicings
upon the return of the king went on for several days; at
the end of that time the captives were distributed by the
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60"></SPAN></span>
royal order. Some were given to the generals who had
most distinguished themselves. Many were assigned to
the priests, while the great bulk were sent to labor upon
the public works.</p>
<p>The Rebu captives, whose singular complexion and
fairness caused them to be regarded with special interest,
were distributed among the special favorites of the king.
Many of the girls were assigned to the queen and royal
princesses, others to the wives of the priests and generals
who formed the council of the king. The men were, for
the most part, given to the priests for service about the
temples.</p>
<p>To his great delight Amuba found that Jethro and himself
were among the eight captives who were assigned to
the service of the priests of one of the great temples.
This was scarcely the effect of chance, for the captives
were drawn up in line, and the number assigned to each
temple were marched off together in order that there
might be no picking and choosing of the captives, but
that they might be divided impartially between the various
temples, and as Jethro always placed himself by
Amuba’s side, it naturally happened that they fell to the
same destination.</p>
<p>On reaching the temple the little band of captives were
again drawn up, and the high priest, Ameres, a grave
and distinguished-looking man, walked along the line
scrutinizing them. He beckoned to Amuba to step forward.
“Henceforth,” he said, “you are my servant.
Behave well, and you will be well treated.” He again
walked down the line, and Amuba saw that he was going
to choose another, and threw himself on his knees before
him.</p>
<p>“Will my lord pardon my boldness,” he said, “but
may I implore you to choose yonder man who stood next
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61"></SPAN></span>
beside me? He has been my friend from childhood, he
covered me with his shield in battle, he has been a father
to me since I have lost my own. Do not, I implore you,
my lord, separate us now. You will find us both willing
to labor at whatsoever you may give us to do.”</p>
<p>The priest listened gravely.</p>
<p>“It shall be as you wish,” he said; “it is the duty of
every man to give pleasure to those around him if it lies
in his power, and as your friend is a man of thews and
sinews, and has a frank and honest face, he will assuredly
suit me as well as another; do you therefore both follow
me to my house.”</p>
<p>The other captives saluted Amuba as he and Jethro
turned to follow. The priest observed the action, and
said to the lad:</p>
<p>“Were you a person of consequence among your people
that they thus at parting salute you rather than your
comrade, who is older than you?”</p>
<p>“I am the son of him who was their king,” Amuba
said. “He fell in action with your troops, and had not
our city been taken, and the nation subdued by the
Egyptians, I should have inherited the throne.”</p>
<p>“Is it so?” the priest said. “Truly the changes and
fortunes of life are strange. I wonder that, being the
son of their king, you were not specially kept by
Thotmes himself.”</p>
<p>“I think that he knew it not,” Amuba said. “We
knew not your customs, and my fellow-captives thought
that possibly I might be put to death were it known that
I was a son of their king, and therefore abstained from
all outward marks of respect, which, indeed, would to
one who was a slave like themselves have been ridiculous.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps it is best so,” the priest said thoughtfully.
“You would not have been injured, for we do not slay
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62"></SPAN></span>
our captives taken in war; still maybe your life will be
easier to bear as the servant of a priest than in the
household of the king. You had better, however, mention
to no one the rank you have borne, for it might be
reported to the king, and then you might be sent for to
the palace; unless indeed you would rather be a spectator
of the pomp and gayety of the court than a servant in a
quiet household.”</p>
<p>“I would far rather remain with you, my lord,” Amuba
said eagerly. “You have already shown the kindness of
your heart by granting my request, and choosing my
comrade Jethro as my fellow-slave, and I feel already
that my lot will be a far happier one than I had ventured
to hope.”</p>
<p>“Judge not hastily by appearances,” the priest said.
“At the same time, here in Egypt, slaves are not treated
as they are among the wild peoples of Nubia and the
desert. There is a law for all, and he who kills a slave is
punished as if he took the life of an Egyptian. However,
I think I can say that your life will not be a hard
one; you have intelligence, as is shown by the fact that
you have so rapidly acquired sufficient knowledge of our
tongue to speak it intelligibly. Can you, too, speak our
language?” he asked Jethro.</p>
<p>“I can speak a little,” Jethro said; “but not nearly so
well as Amuba. My lips are too old to fashion a strange
tongue as rapidly as can his younger ones.”</p>
<p>“You speak sufficiently well to understand,” the priest
said, “and doubtless will in time acquire our tongue
perfectly. This is my house.”</p>
<p>The priest entered an imposing gateway, on each side
of which stretched a long and lofty wall. At a distance
of fifty yards from the gate stood a large dwelling, compared
to which the royal abode which Amuba had been
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63"></SPAN></span>
brought up in was but a miserable hut. Inclosed within
the walls was a space of ground some three hundred
yards square, which was laid out as a garden. Avenues
of fruit trees ran all round it, a portion was laid out as a
vineyard, while separated from the rest by an avenue of
palm trees was a vegetable garden.</p>
<p>In front of the house was a large piece of water in
which floated a gayly-painted boat; aquatic plants of all
kinds bordered its edges. Graceful palms grouped their
foliage over it, the broad flat leaves of lilies floated on its
surface, while the white flowers which Amuba had seen
carried in all the religious processions and by large numbers
of people of the upper rank, and which he heard
were called the lotus, rose above them. The two captives
were struck with surprise and admiration at the beauty
of the scene, and forgot for a moment that they were
slaves as they looked round at a vegetation more beautiful
than they had ever beheld. A smile passed over the
countenance of the priest.</p>
<p>“Perfect happiness is for no man,” he said, “and yet
methinks that you may in time learn at least contentment
here.”</p>
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