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+Project Gutenberg's The Little Hunchback Zia, by Frances Hodgson Burnett
+#12 in our series by Frances Hodgson Burnett
+
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+
+Title: The Little Hunchback Zia
+
+Author: Frances Hodgson Burnett
+
+Release Date: March, 2004 [EBook #5303]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on June 25, 2002]
+[Date last updated: August 13, 2005]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LITTLE HUNCHBACK ZIA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Charles Franks
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+THE LITTLE HUNCHBACK ZIA
+
+BY
+
+FRANCES HODGSON BURNETT
+
+
+WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY
+SPENCER BAIRD NICHOLS
+AND
+W. T. BENDA
+
+
+
+
+
+And it came to pass nigh upon
+nineteen hundred and sixteen years ago
+
+
+
+
+
+THE LITTLE HUNCHBACK ZIA
+
+The little hunchback Zia toiled slowly up the steep road, keeping in the
+deepest shadows, even though the night had long fallen. Sometimes he
+staggered with weariness or struck his foot against a stone and
+smothered his involuntary cry of pain. He was so full of terror that he
+was afraid to utter a sound which might cause any traveler to glance
+toward him. This he feared more than any other thing--that some man or
+woman might look at him too closely. If such a one knew much and had
+keen eyes, he or she might in some way guess even at what they might not
+yet see.
+
+Since he had fled from the village in which his wretched short life had
+been spent he had hidden himself in thickets and behind walls or rocks
+or bushes during the day, and had only come forth at night to stagger
+along his way in the darkness. If he had not managed to steal some food
+before he began his journey and if he had not found in one place some
+beans dropped from a camel's feeding-bag, he would have starved. For
+five nights he had been wandering on, but in his desperate fear he had
+lost count of time. When he had left the place he had called his home he
+had not known where he was going or where he might hide himself in the
+end. The old woman with whom he had lived and for whom he had begged and
+labored had driven him out with a terror as great as his own.
+
+"Begone!" she had cried in a smothered shriek. "Get thee gone, accursed!
+Even now thou mayest have brought the curse upon me also. A creature
+born a hunchback comes on earth with the blight of Jehovah's wrath upon
+him. Go far! Go as far as thy limbs will carry thee! Let no man come
+near enough to thee to see it! If thou go far away before it is known,
+it will be forgotten that I have harbored thee."
+
+He had stood and looked at her in the silence of the dead, his immense,
+black Syrian eyes growing wider and wider with childish horror. He had
+always regarded her with slavish fear. What he was to her he did not
+know; neither did he know how he had fallen into her hands. He knew only
+that he was not of her blood or of her country and that he yet seemed to
+have always belonged to her. In his first memory of his existence, a
+little deformed creature rolling about on the littered floor of her
+uncleanly hovel, he had trembled at the sound of her voice and had
+obeyed it like a beaten spaniel puppy. When he had grown older he had
+seen that she lived upon alms and thievery and witchlike evil doings
+that made all decent folk avoid her. She had no kinsfolk or friends, and
+only such visitors as came to her in the dark hours of night and seemed
+to consult with her as she sat and mumbled strange incantations while
+she stirred a boiling pot. Zia had heard of soothsayers and dealers with
+evil spirits, and at such hours was either asleep on his pallet in a far
+corner or, if he lay awake, hid his face under his wretched covering and
+stopped his ears. Once when she had drawn near and found his large eyes
+open and staring at her in spellbound terror, she had beaten him
+horribly and cast him into the storm raging outside.
+
+A strange passion in her seemed her hatred of his eyes. She could not
+endure that he should look at her as if he were thinking. He must not
+let his eyes rest on her for more than a moment when he spoke. He must
+keep them fixed on the ground or look away from her. From his babyhood
+this had been so. A hundred times she had struck him when he was too
+young to understand her reason. The first strange lesson he had learned
+was that she hated his eyes and was driven to fury when she found them
+resting innocently upon her. Before he was three years old he had
+learned this thing and had formed the habit of looking down upon the
+earth as he limped about. For long he thought that his eyes were as
+hideous as his body was distorted. In her frenzies she told him that
+evil spirits looked out from them and that he was possessed of devils.
+Without thought of rebellion or resentment he accepted with timorous
+humility, as part of his existence, her taunts at his twisted limbs.
+What use in rebellion or anger? With the fatalism of the East he
+resigned himself to that which was. He had been born a deformity, and
+even his glance carried evil. This was life. He knew no other. Of his
+origin he knew nothing except that from the old woman's rambling
+outbursts he had gathered that he was of Syrian blood and a homeless
+outcast.
+
+But though he had so long trained himself to look downward that it had
+at last become an effort to lift his heavily lashed eyelids, there came
+a time when he learned that his eyes were not so hideously evil as his
+task-mistress had convinced him that they were. When he was only seven
+years old she sent him out to beg alms for her, and on the first day of
+his going forth she said a strange thing, the meaning of which he could
+not understand.
+
+"Go not forth with thine eyes bent downward on the dust. Lift them, and
+look long at those from whom thou askest alms. Lift them and look as I
+see thee look at the sky when thou knowest not I am near thee. I have
+seen thee, hunchback. Gaze at the passers-by as if thou sawest their
+souls and asked help of them."
+
+She said it with a fierce laugh of derision, but when in his
+astonishment he involuntarily lifted his gaze to hers, she struck at
+him, her harsh laugh broken in two.
+
+"Not at me, hunchback! Not at me! At those who are ready to give!" she
+cried out.
+
+He had gone out stunned with amazement. He wondered so greatly that when
+he at last sat down by the roadside under a fig-tree he sat in a dream.
+He looked up at the blueness above him as he always did when he was
+alone. His eyelids did not seem heavy when he lifted them to look at the
+sky. The blueness and the billows of white clouds brought rest to him,
+and made him forget what he was. The floating clouds were his only
+friends. There was something--yes, there was something, he did not know
+what. He wished he were a cloud himself, and could lose himself at last
+in the blueness as the clouds did when they melted away. Surely the
+blueness was the something.
+
+The soft, dull pad of camel's feet approached upon the road without his
+hearing them. He was not roused from his absorption until the camel
+stopped its tread so near him that he started and looked up. It was
+necessary that he should look up a long way. He was a deformed little
+child, and the camel was a tall and splendid one, with rich trappings
+and golden bells. The man it carried was dressed richly, and the
+expression of his dark face was at once restless and curious. He was
+bending down and staring at Zia as if he were something strange.
+
+"What dost thou see, child?" he said at last, and he spoke almost in a
+breathless whisper. "What art thou waiting for?"
+
+Zia stumbled to his feet and held out his bag, frightened, because he
+had never begged before and did not know how, and if he did not carry
+back money and food, he would be horribly beaten again.
+
+"Alms! alms!" he stammered. "Master--Lord--I beg for--for her who keeps
+me. She is poor and old. Alms, great lord, for a woman who is old!"
+
+The man with the restless face still stared. He spoke as if unaware that
+he uttered words and as if he were afraid.
+
+"The child's eyes!" he said. "I cannot pass him by! What is it? I must
+not be held back. But the unearthly beauty of his eyes!" He caught his
+breath as he spoke. And then he seemed to awaken as one struggling
+against a spell.
+
+"What is thy name?" he asked.
+
+Zia also had lost his breath. What had the man meant when he spoke of
+his eyes?
+
+He told his name, but he could answer no further questions. He did not
+know whose son he was; he had no home; of his mistress he knew only that
+her name was Judith and that she lived on alms.
+
+Even while he related these things he remembered his lesson, and,
+dropping his eyelids, fixed his gaze on the camel's feet.
+
+"Why dost thou cast thine eyes downward?" the man asked in a troubled
+and intense voice.
+
+Zia could not speak, being stricken with fear and the dumbness of
+bewilderment. He stood quite silent, and as he lifted his eyes and let
+them rest on the stranger's own, they became large with tears--big,
+piteous tears.
+
+"Why?" persisted the man, anxiously. "Is it because thou seest evil in
+my soul?"
+
+"No, no!" sobbed Zia. "One taught me to look away because I am hideous
+and--my eyes--are evil."
+
+"Evil!" said the stranger. "They have lied to thee." He was trembling as
+he spoke. "A man who has been pondering on sin dare not pass their
+beauty by. They draw him, and show him his own soul. Having seen them, I
+must turn my camel's feet backward and go no farther on this road which
+was to lead me to a black deed." He bent down, and dropped a purse into
+the child's alms-bag, still staring at him and breathing hard. "They
+have the look," he muttered, "of eyes that might behold the Messiah. Who
+knows? Who knows?" And he turned his camel's head, still shuddering a
+little, and he rode away back toward the place from which he had come.
+
+There was gold in the purse he had given, and when Zia carried it back
+to Judith, she snatched it from him and asked him many questions. She
+made him repeat word for word all that had passed.
+
+After that he was sent out to beg day after day, and in time he vaguely
+understood
+
+[Illustration with caption: "'Perhaps when he is a man he will be a
+great soothsayer and reader of the stars'"]
+
+that the old woman had spoken falsely when she had said that evil
+spirits looked forth hideously from his eyes. People often said that
+they were beautiful, and gave him money because something in his gaze
+drew them near to him. But this was not all. At times there were those
+who spoke under their breath to one another of some wonder of light in
+them, some strange luminousness which was not earthly.
+
+"He surely sees that which we cannot. Perhaps when he is a man he will
+be a great soothsayer and reader of the stars," he heard a woman whisper
+to a companion one day.
+
+Those who were evil were afraid to meet his gaze, and hated it as old
+Judith did, though, as he was not their servant, they dared not strike
+him when he lifted his soft, heavy eyelids.
+
+But Zia could not understand what people meant when they whispered about
+him or turned away fiercely. A weight was lifted from his soul when he
+realized that he was not as revolting as he had believed. And when
+people spoke kindly to him he began to know something like happiness for
+the first time in his life. He brought home so much in his alms-bag that
+the old woman ceased to beat him and gave him more liberty. He was
+allowed to go out at night and sleep under the stars. At such times he
+used to lie and look up at the jeweled myriads until he felt himself
+drawn upward and floating nearer and nearer to that unknown something
+which he felt also in the high blueness of the day.
+
+When he first began to feel as if some mysterious ailment was creeping
+upon him he kept himself out of Judith's way as much as possible. He
+dared not tell her that sometimes he could scarcely crawl from one place
+to another. A miserable fevered weakness became his secret. As the old
+woman took no notice of him except when he brought back his day's
+earnings, it was easy to evade her. One morning, however, she fixed her
+eyes on him suddenly and keenly.
+
+"Why art thou so white?" she said, and caught him by the arm, whirling
+him toward the light. "Art thou ailing?"
+
+"No! no!" cried Zia.
+
+She held him still for a few seconds, still staring.
+
+"Thou art too white," she said. "I will have no such whiteness. It is
+the whiteness of--of an accursed thing. Get thee gone!"
+
+He went away, feeling cold and shaken. He knew he was white. One or two
+almsgivers had spoken of it, and had looked at him a little fearfully.
+He himself could see that the flesh of his thin body was becoming an
+unearthly color. Now and then he had shuddered as he looked at it
+because--because--There was one curse so horrible beyond all others that
+the strongest man would have quailed in his dread of its drawing near
+him. And he was a child, a twelve-year-old boy, a helpless little
+hunchback mendicant.
+
+When he saw the first white-and-red spot upon his flesh he stood still
+and stared at it, gasping, and the sweat started out upon him and rolled
+down in great drops.
+
+"Jehovah!" he whispered, "God of Israel! Thy servant is but a child!"
+
+But there broke out upon him other spots, and every time he found a new
+one his flesh quaked, and he could not help looking at it in secret
+again and again. Every time he looked it was because he hoped it might
+have faded away. But no spot faded away, and the skin on the palms of
+his hands began to be rough and cracked and to show spots also.
+
+
+In a cave on a hillside near the road where he sat and begged there
+lived a deathly being who, with face swathed in linen and with bandaged
+stumps of limbs, hobbled forth now and then, and came down to beg also,
+but always keeping at a distance from all human creatures, and, as he
+approached the pitiful, rattled loudly his wooden clappers, wailing out:
+"Unclean! Unclean!"
+
+It was the leper Berias, whose hopeless tale of awful days was almost
+done. Zia himself had sometimes limped up the hillside and laid some of
+his own poor food upon a stone near his cave so that he might find it.
+One day he had also taken a branch of almond-blossom in full flower, and
+had laid it by the food. And when he had gone away and stood at some
+distance watching to see the poor ghost come forth to take what he had
+given, he had seen him first clutch at the blossoming branch and fall
+upon his face, holding it to his breast, a white, bound, shapeless
+thing, sobbing, and uttering hoarse, croaking, unhuman cries. No
+almsgiver but Zia had ever dreamed of bringing a flower to him who was
+forever cut off from all bloom and loveliness.
+
+It was this white, shuddering creature that Zia remembered with the sick
+chill of horror when he saw the spots.
+
+"Unclean! Unclean!" he heard the cracked voice cry to the sound of the
+wooden clappers. "Unclean! Unclean!"
+
+Judith was standing at the door of her hovel one morning when Zia was
+going forth for the day. He had fearfully been aware that for days she
+had been watching him as he had never known her to watch him before.
+This morning she had followed him to the door, and had held him there a
+few moments in the light with some harsh speech, keeping her eyes fixed
+on him the while.
+
+Even as they so stood there fell upon the clear air of the morning a
+hollow, far-off sound--the sound of wooden clappers rattled together,
+and the hopeless crying of two words, "Unclean! Unclean!"
+
+Then silence fell. Upon Zia descended a fear beyond all power of words
+to utter. In his quaking young torment he lifted his eyes and met the
+gaze of the old woman as it flamed down upon him.
+
+"Go within!" she commanded suddenly, and pointed to the wretched room
+inside. He obeyed her, and she followed him, closing the door behind
+them.
+
+"Tear off thy garment!" she ordered. "Strip thyself to thy skin--to thy
+skin!"
+
+He shook from head to foot, his trembling hands almost refusing to obey
+him. She did not touch him, but stood apart, glaring. His garments fell
+from him and lay in a heap at his feet, and he stood among them naked.
+
+One look, and she broke forth, shaking with fear herself, into a
+breathless storm of fury.
+
+"Thou hast known this thing and hidden it!" she raved. "Leper! Leper!
+Accursed hunchback thing!"
+
+As he stood in his nakedness and sobbed great, heavy childish sobs, she
+did not dare to strike him, and raged the more.
+
+If it were known that she had harbored him, the priests would be upon
+her, and all that she had would be taken from her and burned. She would
+not even let him put his clothes on in her house.
+
+"Take thy rags and begone in thy nakedness! Clothe thyself on the
+hillside! Let none see thee until thou art far away! Rot as thou wilt,
+but dare not to name me! Begone! begone! begone!"
+
+And with his rags he fled naked through the doorway, and hid himself in
+the little wood beyond.
+
+Later, as he went on his way, he had hidden himself in the daytime
+behind bushes by the wayside or off the road; he had crouched behind
+rocks and boulders; he had slept in caves when he had found them; he had
+shrunk away from all human sight. He knew it could not be long before he
+would be discovered, and then he would be shut up; and afterward he
+would be as Berias until he died alone. Like unto Berias! To him it
+seemed as though surely never child had sobbed before as he sobbed,
+lying hidden behind his boulders, among his bushes, on the bare hill
+among the rocks.
+
+
+For the first four nights of his wandering he had not known where he was
+going, but on this fifth night he discovered. He was on the way to
+Bethlehem--beautiful little Bethlehem curving on the crest of the
+Judean mountains and smiling down upon the fairness of the fairest of
+sweet valleys, rich with vines and figs and olives and almond-trees. He
+dimly recalled stories he had overheard of its loveliness, and when he
+found that he had wandered unknowingly toward it, he was aware of a
+faint sense of peace. He had seen nothing of any other part of the world
+than the poor village outside which the hovel of his bond-mistress had
+clung to a low hill. Since he was near it, he vaguely desired to see
+Bethlehem.
+
+He had learned of its nearness as he lay hidden in the undergrowth on
+the mountain-side that he had begun to climb the night before. Awakening
+from sleep, he had heard many feet passing up the climbing road--the
+feet of men and women and children, of camels and asses, and all had
+seemed to be of a procession ascending the mountainside. Lying flat upon
+the earth, he had parted the bushes cautiously, and watched, and
+listened to the shouts, cries, laughter, and talk of those who were near
+enough to be heard. So bit by bit he had heard the story of the passing
+throng. The great Emperor Augustus, who, to the common herd seemed some
+strange omnipotent in his remote and sumptuous paradise of Rome,
+had issued a decree that all the world of his subjects should be
+enrolled, and every man, woman, and child must enroll himself in his own
+city. And to the little town of Bethlehem all these travelers were
+wending their way, to the place of their nativity, in obedience to the
+great Caesar's command.
+
+All through the day he watched them--men and women and children who
+belonged to one another, who rode together on their beasts, or walked
+together hand in hand. Women on camels or asses held their little ones
+in their arms, or walked with the youngest slung on their backs. He
+heard boys laugh and talk with their fathers--boys of his own age, who
+trudged merrily along, and now and again ran forward, shouting with
+glee. He saw more than one strong man swing his child up to his shoulder
+and bear him along as if he found joy in his burden. Boy and girl
+companions played as they went and made holiday of their journey; young
+men or women who were friends, lovers, or brothers and sisters bore one
+another company.
+
+"No one is alone," said Zia, twisting his thin fingers together--"no
+one! no one! And there are no lepers. The great Caesar would not count a
+leper. Perhaps, if he saw one, he would command him to be put to death."
+
+And then he writhed upon the grass and sobbed again, his bent chest
+almost bursting with his efforts to make no sound. He had always been
+alone--always, always; but this loneliness was such as no young human
+thing could bear. He was no longer alive; he was no longer a human
+being. Unclean! Unclean! Unclean!
+
+At last he slept, exhausted, and past his piteous, prostrate childhood
+and helplessness the slow procession wound its way up the mountain road
+toward the crescent of Bethlehem, knowing nothing of his nearness to its
+unburdened comfort and simple peace.
+
+When he awakened, the night had fallen, and he opened his eyes upon a
+high vault of blue velvet darkness strewn with great stars. He saw this
+at the first moment of his consciousness; then he realized that there
+was no longer to be heard the sound either of passing hoofs or treading
+feet. The travelers who had gone by during the day had probably reached
+their journey's end, and gone to rest in their tents, or had found
+refuge in the inclosing khan that gave shelter to wayfarers and their
+beasts of burden.
+
+But though there was no human creature near, and no sound of human voice
+or human tread, a strange change had taken place in him. His loneliness
+had passed away, and left him lying still and calm as though it had
+never existed, as though the crushed and broken child who had plunged
+from a precipice of woe into deadly, exhausted sleep was only a vague
+memory of a creature in a dark past dream.
+
+Had it been himself? Lying upon his back, seeing only the immensity of
+the deep blue above him and the greatness of the stars, he scarcely
+dared to draw breath lest he should arouse himself to new anguish. It
+had not been he who had so suffered; surely it had been another Zia.
+What had come upon him, what had come upon the world? All was so still
+that it was as if the earth waited--as if it waited to hear some word
+that would be spoken out of the great space in which it hung. He was not
+hungry or cold or tired. It was as if he had never staggered and
+stumbled up the mountain path and dropped shuddering, to hide behind the
+bushes before the daylight came and men could see his white face. Surely
+he had rested long. He had never felt like this before, and he had never
+seen so wonderful a night. The stars had never been so many and so
+large. What made them so soft and brilliant that each one was almost
+like a sun? And he strangely felt that each looked down at him as if it
+said the word, though he did not know what the word was. Why had he been
+so terror-stricken? Why had he been so wretched? There were no lepers;
+there were no hunchbacks. There was only Zia, and he was at peace, and
+akin to the stars that looked down.
+
+How heavenly still the waiting world was, how heavenly still! He lay and
+smiled and smiled; perhaps he lay so for an hour. Then high, high above
+he saw, or thought he saw, in the remoteness of the vault of blue a
+brilliant whiteness float. Was it a strange snowy cloud or was he
+dreaming? It seemed to grow whiter, more brilliant. His breath came
+fast, and his heart beat trembling in his breast, because he had never
+seen clouds so strangely, purely brilliant. There was another, higher,
+farther distant, and yet more dazzling still. Another and another showed
+its radiance until at last an arch of splendor seemed to stream across
+the sky.
+
+"It is like the glory of the ark of the covenant," he gasped, and threw
+his arm across his blinded eyes, shuddering with rapture.
+
+He could not uncover his face, and it was as he lay quaking with an
+unearthly joy that he first thought he heard sounds of music as remotely
+distant as the lights.
+
+"Is it on earth?" he panted. "Is it on earth?"
+
+He struggled to his knees. He had heard of miracles and wonders of old,
+and of the past ages when the sons of God visited the earth.
+
+"Glory to God in the highest!" he stammered again and again and again.
+"Glory to the great Jehovah!" and he touched his forehead seven times to
+the earth.
+
+Then he beheld a singular thing. When he had gone to sleep a flock of
+sheep had been lying near him on the grass. The flock was still there,
+but something seemed to be happening to it. The creatures were awakening
+from their sleep as if they had heard something. First one head was
+raised, and then another and another and another, until every head was
+lifted, and every one was turned toward a certain point as if listening.
+What were they listening for? Zia could see nothing, though he turned
+his own face toward the climbing road and listened with them. The
+floating radiance was so increasing in the sky that at this point of the
+mountain-side it seemed no longer to the night, and the far-away paeans
+held him breathless with mysterious awe. Was the sound on earth? Where
+did it come from? Where?
+
+"Praised be Jehovah!" he heard his weak and shaking young voice quaver.
+
+Some belated travelers were coming slowly up the road. He heard an ass's
+feet and low voices.
+
+The sheep heard them also. Had they been waiting for them? They rose one
+by one--the whole flock--to their feet, and turned in a body toward the
+approaching sounds.
+
+Zia stood up with them. He waited also, and it was as if at this moment
+his soul so lifted itself that it almost broke away from his body--
+almost.
+
+Around the curve an ass came slowly bearing a woman, and led by a man
+who walked by his side. He was a man of sober years and walked wearily.
+Zia's eyes grew wide with awe and wondering as he gazed, scarce
+breathing.
+
+The light upon the hillside was so softly radiant and so clear that he
+could
+
+[Illustration with caption: "Zia's eyes grew wide with awe and wondering
+as he gazed, scarce breathing"--Page 38]
+
+see that the woman's robe was blue and that she lifted her face to the
+stars as she rode. It was a young face, and pale with the pallor of
+lilies, and her eyes were as stars of the morning. But this was not all.
+A radiance shone from her pure pallor, and bordering her blue robe and
+veil was a faint, steady glow of light. And as she passed the standing
+and waiting sheep, they slowly bowed themselves upon their knees before
+her, and so knelt until she had passed by and was out of sight. Then
+they returned to their places, and slept as before.
+
+When she was gone, Zia found that he also was kneeling. He did not know
+when his knees had bent. He was faint with ecstasy.
+
+
+"She goes to Bethlehem," he heard himself say as he had heard himself
+speak before. "I, too; I, too."
+
+He stood a moment listening to the sound of the ass's retreating feet as
+it grew fainter in the distance. His breath came quick and soft. The
+light had died away from the hillside, but the high-floating radiance
+seemed to pass to and fro in the heavens, and now and again he thought
+he heard the faint, far sound that was like music so distant that it was
+as a thing heard in a dream.
+
+"Perhaps I behold visions," he murmured. "It may be that I shall awake."
+
+But he found himself making his way through the bushes and setting his
+feet upon the road. He must follow, he must follow. Howsoever steep the
+hill, he must climb to Bethlehem. But as he went on his way it did not
+seem steep, and he did not waver or toil as he usually did when walking.
+He felt no weariness or ache in his limbs, and the high radiance gently
+lighted the path and dimly revealed that many white flowers he had never
+seen before seemed to have sprung up by the roadside and to wave softly
+to and fro, giving forth a fragrance so remote and faint, yet so clear,
+that it did not seem of earth. It was perhaps part of the vision.
+
+Of the distance he climbed his thought took no cognizance. There was in
+this vision neither distance nor time. There was only faint radiance,
+far, strange sounds, and the breathing of air which made him feel an
+ecstasy of lightness as he moved. The other Zia had traveled painfully,
+had stumbled and struck his feet against wayside stones. He seemed ten
+thousand miles, ten thousand years away. It was not he who went to
+Bethlehem, led as if by some power invisible. To Bethlehem! To
+Bethlehem, where went the woman whose blue robe was bordered with a glow
+of fair luminousness and whose face, like an uplifted lily, softly
+shone. It was she he followed, knowing no reason but that his soul was
+called.
+
+When he reached the little town and stood at last near the gateway of
+the khan in which the day-long procession of wayfarers had crowded to
+take refuge for the night, he knew that he would find no place among the
+multitude within its walls. Too many of the great Caesar's subjects had
+been born in Bethlehem and had come back for their enrolment. The khan
+was crowded to its utmost, and outside lingered many who had not been
+able to gain admission and who consulted plaintively with one another as
+to where they might find a place to sleep, and to eat the food they
+carried with them.
+
+Zia had made his way to the entrance-gate only because he knew the
+travelers he had followed would seek shelter there, and that he might
+chance to hear of them.
+
+
+He stood a little apart from the gate and waited. Something would tell
+him what he must do. Almost as this thought entered his mind he heard
+voices speaking near him. Two women were talking together, and soon he
+began to hear their words.
+
+"Joseph of Nazareth and Mary his wife," one said. "Both of the line of
+David. There was no room for them, even as there was no room for others
+not of royal lineage. To the mangers in the cave they have gone, seeing
+the woman had sore need of rest. She, thou knowest--"
+
+Zia heard no more. He did not ask where the cave lay. He had not needed
+to ask his way to Bethlehem. That which had led him again directed his
+feet away from the entrance-gate of the khan, past the crowded court and
+the long, low wall of stone within the inclosure of which the camels and
+asses browsed and slept, on at last to a pathway leading to the gray of
+rising rocks. Beneath them was the cave, he knew, though none had told
+him so. Only a short distance, and he saw what drew him trembling
+nearer. At the open entrance, through which he could see the rough
+mangers of stone, the heaps of fodder, and the ass munching slowly in a
+corner, the woman who wore the blue robe stood leaning wearily against
+the heavy wooden post. And the soft light bordering her garments set her
+in a frame of faint radiance and glowed in a halo about her head.
+
+"The light! the light!" cried Zia in a breathless whisper. And he
+crossed his hands upon his breast.
+
+Her husband surely could not see it. He moved soberly about, unpacking
+the burden the ass had carried and seeming to see naught else. He heaped
+straw in a corner with care, and threw his mantle upon it.
+
+"Come," he said. "Here thou canst rest, and I can watch by thy side. The
+angels of the Lord be with thee!" The woman turned from the door and
+went toward him, walking with slow steps. He gazed at her with mild,
+unillumined eyes.
+
+"Does he not see the light!" panted Zia. "Does he not see the light!"
+
+Soon he himself no longer saw it. Joseph of Nazareth came to the wooden
+doors and drew them together, and the boy stood alone on the mountain-
+side, trembling still, and wet with the dew of the night; but not weary,
+not hungered, not athirst or afraid, only quaking with wonder and joy--
+he, the little hunchback Zia, who had known no joy before since the hour
+of his birth.
+
+He sank upon the earth slowly in an exquisite peace--a peace that
+thrilled his whole being as it stole over his limbs, deepening moment by
+moment. His head drooped softly upon a cushion of moss. As his eyelids
+fell, he saw the splendor of whiteness floating in the height of the
+purple vault above him.
+
+The dawn was breaking and yet the stars had not faded away. This was his
+thought when his eyes first opened on a great one, greater than any
+other in the sky, and of so pure a brilliance that it seemed as if even
+the sun would not be bright enough to put it out. It hung high in the
+paling blue, high as the white radiance; and as he lay and gazed, he
+thought it surely moved. What new star was it that in that one night had
+been born? He had watched the stars through so many desolate hours that
+he knew each great one as a friend, and this one he had never seen
+before.
+
+The morning was cold, and his clothes were wet with dew, but he felt no
+chill. He remembered; yes, he remembered. If he had lived in a vision
+the day before, he was surely living in one yet. The Zia who had been
+starved and beaten and driven out naked into the world, who had clutched
+his thin breast and sobbed, writhing upon the earth, where was he? He
+looked down upon his hands and saw the cracked and scaling palms, and it
+was as though they were not. He thrust back the covering from his chest
+and saw the spots there. But there were no lepers, there were no
+hunchbacks; there were only Zia and the light. He knelt and turned
+himself toward the cave and prayed, and as he so knelt and prayed the
+man Joseph rolled open the heavy wooden door.
+
+Then Zia, still kneeling, beat himself softly upon the breast and prayed
+again, not as before to Jehovah, but to that which he beheld.
+
+The light was there, fair, radiant, wonderful. The cave was bathed in
+it. The woman in the blue robe sat upon the straw, and in her arms she
+held a new-born child. Zia touched his forehead to the earth again,
+again, again, unknowing that he did so. The child was the light itself!
+
+He must rise and draw near. That which had drawn him up the mountainside
+drew him again. The child was the light itself! As he crept near the
+cave's entrance, the woman's eyes rested upon him soft and wonderful.
+
+She spoke to him--she spoke!
+
+"Be not afraid," she said. "Draw nigh and behold!"
+
+Her voice was not as the voice of other women; it was like her eyes, his
+body, through his blood, through every limb and fleshy atom of him, he
+felt it steal--new life, warming, thrilling, wakening in his veins new
+life! As he felt it, he knelt quaking with rapture even as he had stood
+the night before gazing at the light. The new-born hand lay still.
+
+He did not know how long he knelt. He did not know that the woman leaned
+toward him, scarce drawing breath, her wondrous eyes resting upon him as
+if she waited for a sign. Even as she so gazed she beheld it, and spoke,
+whispering as in awed prayer:
+
+"Go forth and cleanse thy flesh in running water," she said. "Go forth."
+
+He moved, he rose, he stood upright--the hunchback Zia who had never
+stood upright before! His body was straight, his limbs were strong. He
+looked upon his hands, and there was no blemish or spot to be seen!
+
+"I am made whole!" he cried in ecstasy so wild that his boy's voice rang
+and echoed in the cave's hollowed roof. "I am made whole!"
+
+"Go forth," she said softly. "Go forth and give praise."
+
+He turned and went into the dawning day. He stood swaying, and heard
+himself sob forth a rapturous cry of prayer. His flesh was fresh and
+pure; he stood erect and tall. He was as others whom God had not cursed.
+The light! the light! He stretched forth his arms to the morning sky.
+
+Some shepherds roughly clothed in the skins of lambs and kids were
+climbing the hill toward the cave. They carried their crooks, and they
+talked eagerly as though in wonderment at some strange thing which had
+befallen them, looking up at the heavens, and one pointed with his
+crook.
+
+"Surely it draws nearer, the star!" he said. "Look!"
+
+As they passed a thicket where a brook flowed through the trees a fair
+boy came forth, cleansed, fresh, and radiant as if he had but just
+bathed in its clear waters. It was the boy Zia.
+
+"Who is this one?" said the oldest shepherd.
+
+"How beautiful he is! How the light shines on him! He looks like a king's
+son."
+
+[Illustration with caption: "'How beautiful he is!'"--Page 54]
+
+And as they passed, they made obeisance to him.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Little Hunchback Zia
+by Frances Hodgson Burnett
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