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+The Project Gutenberg EBook The Bride of the Nile, by Georg Ebers, v4
+#81 in our series by Georg Ebers
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
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+**EBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These EBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers*****
+
+
+Title: The Bride of the Nile, Volume 4.
+
+Author: Georg Ebers
+
+Release Date: April, 2004 [EBook #5520]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on July 4, 2002]
+
+Edition: 10
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+Language: English
+
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+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BRIDE OF THE NILE, BY EBERS, V4 ***
+
+
+
+This eBook was produced by David Widger <widger@cecomet.net>
+
+
+
+[NOTE: There is a short list of bookmarks, or pointers, at the end of the
+file for those who may wish to sample the author's ideas before making an
+entire meal of them. D.W.]
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BRIDE OF THE NILE
+
+By Georg Ebers
+
+Volume 4.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+Paula's report of the day's proceedings, of Orion's behavior, and of
+the results of the trial angered the leech beyond measure; he vehemently
+approved the girl's determination to quit this cave of robbers, this
+house of wickedness, of treachery, of imbecile judges and false
+witnesses, as soon as possible. But she had no opportunity for a quiet
+conversation with him, for Philippus soon had his hands full in the care
+of the sufferers.
+
+Rustem, the Masdakite, who till now had been lying unconscious, had been
+roused from his lethargy by some change of treatment, and loudly called
+for his master Haschim. When the Arab did not appear, and it was
+explained to him that he could not hope to see him before the morning,
+the young giant sat up among his pillows, propping himself on his arms
+set firmly against the couch behind him, looked about him with a
+wandering gaze, and shook his big head like an aggrieved lion--but that
+his thick mane of hair had been cut off--abusing the physician all the
+time in his native tongue, and in a deep, rolling, bass voice that rang
+through the rooms though no one understood a word. Philippus, quite
+undaunted, was trying to adjust the bandage over his wound, when Rustem
+suddenly flung his arms round his body and tried with all his might, and
+with foaming lips, to drag him down. He clung to his antagonist, roaring
+like a wild beast; even now Philippus never for an instant lost his
+presence of mind but desired the nun to fetch two strong slaves. The
+Sister hurried away, and Paula remained the eyewitness of a fearful
+struggle. The physician had twisted his ancles round those of the
+stalwart Persian, and putting forth a degree of strength which could
+hardly have been looked for in a stooping student, tall and large-boned
+as he was, he wrenched the Persian's hands from his hips, pressed his
+fingers between those of Rustem, forced him back on to his pillows, set
+his knees against the brazen frame of the couch, and so effectually held
+him down that he could not sit up again. Rustem exerted every muscle to
+shake off his opponent; but the leech was the stronger, for the Masdakite
+was weakened by fever and loss of blood. Paula watched this contest
+between intelligent force and the animal strength of a raving giant with
+a beating heart, trembling in every limb. She could not help her friend,
+but she followed his every movement as she stood at the head of the bed;
+and as he held down the powerful creature before whom her frail uncle had
+cowered in abject terror, she could not help admiring his manly beauty;
+for his eyes sparkled with unwonted fire, and the mean chin seemed to
+lengthen with the frightful effort he was putting forth, and so to be
+brought into proportion with his wide forehead and the rest of his
+features. Her spirit quaked for him; she fancied she could see something
+great and heroic in the man, in whom she had hitherto discovered no merit
+but his superior intellect.
+
+The struggle had lasted some minutes before Philip felt the man's arms
+grow limp, and he called to Paula to bring him a sheet--a rope--what not
+--to bind the raving man. She flew into the next room, quite collected;
+fetched her handkerchief, snatched off the silken girdle that bound her
+waist, rushed back and helped the leech to tie the maniac's hands. She
+understood her friend's least word, or a movement of his finger; and when
+the slaves whom the nun had fetched came into the room, they found Rustem
+with his hands firmly bound, and had only to prevent him from leaping out
+of bed or throwing himself over the edge. Philippus, quite out of
+breath, explained to the slaves how they were to act, and when he opened
+his medicine-chest Paula noticed that his swollen, purple fingers were
+trembling. She took out the phial to which he pointed, mixed the draught
+according to his orders, and was not afraid to pour it between the teeth
+of the raving man, forcing them open with the help of the slaves.
+
+The soothing medicine calmed him in a few minutes, and the leech himself
+could presently wash the wound and apply a fresh dressing with the
+practised aid of the Sister.
+
+Meanwhile the crazy girl had been waked by the ravings of the Persian,
+and was anxiously enquiring if the dog--the dreadful dog--was there.
+But she soon allowed herself to be quieted by Paula, and she answered the
+questions put to her so rationally and gently, that her nurse called the
+physician who could confirm Paula in her hope that a favorable change had
+taker place in her mental condition. Her words were melancholy and mild;
+and when Paula remarked on this Philippus observed:
+
+"It is on the bed of sickness that we learn to know our fellow-
+creatures. The frantic girl, who perhaps fell on the son of this house
+with murderous intent, now reveals her true, sweet nature. And as for
+that poor fellow, he is a powerful creature, an honest one too; I would
+stake my ten fingers on it!"
+
+"What makes you so sure of that?"
+
+"Even in his delirium he did hot once scratch or bite, but only defended
+himself like a man.--Thank you, now, for your assistance. If you had not
+flung the cord round his hands, the game might have ended very
+differently."
+
+"Surely not!" exclaimed Paula decidedly. "How strong you are, Philip.
+I feel quite alarmed!"
+
+"You?" said the leech laughing. "On the contrary, you need never be
+alarmed again now that you have seen by chance that your champion is no
+weakling.--Pfooh! I shall be glad now of a little rest." She offered
+him her handkerchief, and while he thankfully used it to wipe his brow--
+controlling with much difficulty the impulse to press it to his lips, he
+added lightly:
+
+"With such an assistant everything must go well. There is no merit in
+being strong; every one can be strong who comes into the world with
+healthy blood and well-knit bones, who keeps all his limbs well
+exercised, as I did in my youth, and who does not destroy his inheritance
+by dissipated living.--However, I still feel the struggle in my hands;
+but there is some good wine in the next room yet, and two or three cups
+of it will do me good." They went together into the adjoining room
+where, by this time, most of the lamps were extinguished. Paula poured
+out the wine, touched the goblet with her lips, and he emptied it at a
+draught; but he was not to be allowed to drink off a second, for he had
+scarcely raised it, when they heard voices in the Masdakite's room, and
+Neforis came in. The governor's careful wife had not quitted her
+husband's couch--even Rustem's storming had not induced her to leave
+her post; but when she was informed by the slaves what had been going on,
+and that Paula was still up-stairs with the leech, she had come to the
+strangers' rooms as soon as her husband could spare her to speak to
+Philippus, to represent to Paula what the proprieties required, and to
+find out what the strange noises could be which still seemed to fill the
+house--at this hour usually as silent as the grave. They proceeded from
+the sick-rooms, but also from Orion, who had just come in, and from Nilus
+the treasurer, who had been called by the former into his room, though
+the night was fast drawing on to morning. To the governor's wife
+everything seemed ominous at the close of this terrible day, marked in
+the calendar as unlucky; so she made her way up-stairs, escorted by her
+husband's night watcher, and holding in her hand a small reliquary to
+which she ascribed the power of banning vile spirits.
+
+She came into the sick-room swiftly and noiselessly, put the nun through
+a strict cross-examination with the fretful sharpness of a person
+disturbed in her night's rest. Then she went into the sitting-room where
+Philippus was on the point of pledging Paula in his second cup of wine,
+while she stood before him with dishevelled hair and robe ungirt. All
+this was an offence against good manners such as she would not suffer in
+her house, and she stoutly ordered her husband's niece to go to bed.
+After all the offences that had been pardoned her this day--no,
+yesterday--she exclaimed, it would have been more becoming in the girl
+to examine herself in silence, in her own room, to exorcise the lying
+spirits which had her in their power, and implore her Saviour for
+forgiveness, than to pretend to be nursing the sick while she was
+carrying on, with a young man, an orgy which, as the Sister had just told
+her, had lasted since mid-day.
+
+Paula spoke not a word, though the color changed in her face more than
+once as she listened to this speech. But when Neforis finally pointed to
+the door, she said, with all the cold pride she had at her command when
+she was the object of unworthy suspicions:
+
+"Your aim is easily seen through. I should scorn to reply, but that you
+are the wife of the man who, till you set him against me, was glad to
+call himself my friend and protector, and who is also related to me. As
+usual, you attribute to me an unworthy motive. In showing me the door of
+this room consecrated by suffering, you are turning me out of your house,
+which you and your son--for I must say it for once--have made a hell to
+me."
+
+"I! And my--No! this is indeed--" exclaimed the matron in panting rage.
+She clasped her hands over her heaving bosom and her pale face was dyed
+crimson, while her eyes flashed wrathful lightnings. "That is too much;
+a thousand times too much--a thousand times--do you hear?--And I--I
+condescend to answer you! We picked her up in the street, and have
+treated her like a daughter, spent enormous sums on her, and now. . . ."
+
+This was addressed to the leech rather than to Paula; but she took up the
+gauntlet and replied in a tone of unqualified scorn:
+
+"And now I plainly declare, as a woman of full age, free to dispose of
+myself, that to-morrow morning I leave this house with everything that
+belongs to me, even if I should go as a beggar;--this house, where I have
+been grossly insulted, where I and my faithful servant have been falsely
+condemned, and where he is even now about to be murdered."
+
+"And where you have been dealt with far too mildly," Neforis shrieked at
+her audacious antagonist, "and preserved from sharing the fate of the
+robber you smuggled into the house. To save a criminal--it is unheard
+of:--you dared to accuse the son of your benefactor of being a corrupt
+judge."
+
+"And so he is," exclaimed Paula furious. "And what is more, he has
+inveigled the child whom you destine to be his wife into bearing false
+witness. More--much more could I say, but that, even if I did not
+respect the mother, your husband has deserved that I should spare him."
+
+"Spare him-spare!" cried Neforis contemptuously. "You--you will spare
+us! The accused will be merciful and spare the judge! But you shall be
+made to speak;--aye, made to speak! And as to what you, a slanderer, can
+say about false witness. . ."
+
+"Your own granddaughter," interrupted the leech, "will be compelled to
+repeat it before all the world, noble lady, if you do not moderate
+yourself."
+
+Neforis laughed hysterically.
+
+"So that is the way the wind blows!" she exclaimed, quite beside
+herself. "The sick-room is a temple of Bacchus and Venus; and this
+disgraceful conduct is not enough, but you must conspire to heap shame
+and disgrace on this righteous house and its masters."
+
+Then, resting her left hand which held the reliquary on her hip, she
+added with hasty vehemence:
+
+"So be it. Go away; go wherever you please! If I find you under this
+roof to-morrow at noon, you thankless, wicked girl, I will have you
+turned out into the streets by the guard. I hate you--for once I will
+ease my poor, tormented heart--I loathe you; your very existence is an
+offence to me and brings misfortune on me and on all of us; and besides
+--besides, I should prefer to keep the emeralds we have left."
+
+This last and cruelest taunt, which she had brought out against her
+better feelings, seemed to have relieved her soul of a hundred-weight of
+care; she drew a deep breath, and turning to Philippus, went on far more
+quietly and rationally:
+
+"As for you, Philip, my husband needs you. You know well what we have
+offered you and you know George's liberal hand. Perhaps you will think
+better of it, and will learn to perceive. . ."
+
+"I! . . ." said the leech with a lofty smile. "Do you really know me
+so little? Your husband, I am ready to admit, stands high in my esteem,
+and when he wants me he will no doubt send for me. But never again will
+I cross this threshold uninvited, or enter a house where right is trodden
+underfoot, where defenceless innocence is insulted and abandoned to
+despair.
+
+"You may stare in astonishment! Your son has desecrated his father's
+judgment-seat, and the blood of guiltless Hiram is on his head.--You--
+well, you may still cling to your emeralds. Paula will not touch them;
+she is too high-souled to tell you who it is that you would indeed do
+well to lock up in the deepest dungeon-cell! What I have heard from your
+lips breaks every tie that time had knit between us. I do not demand
+that my friends should be wealthy, that they should have any attractions
+or charm, any special gifts of mind or body; but we must meet on common
+ground: that of honorable feeling. That you did not bring into the
+world, or you have lost it; and from this hour I am a stranger to you and
+never wish to see you again, excepting by the side of your husband when
+he requires me."
+
+He spoke the last words with such immeasurable dignity that Neforis was
+startled and bereft of all self-control. She had been treated as a
+wretch worthy of utter scorn by a man beneath her in rank, but whom she
+always regarded as one of the most honest, frank and pure-minded she had
+ever known; a man indispensable to her husband, because he knew how to
+mitigate his sufferings, and could restrain him from the abuse of his
+narcotic anodyne. He was the only physician of repute, far and wide.
+She was to be deprived of the services of this valuable ally, to whom
+little Mary and many of the household owed their lives, by this Syrian
+girl; and she herself, sure that she was a good and capable wife and
+mother, was to stand there like a thing despised and avoided by every
+honest man, through this evil genius of her house!
+
+It was too much. Tortured by rage, vexation, and sincere distress, she
+said in a complaining voice, while the tears started to her eyes:
+
+"But what is the meaning of all this? You, who know me, who have seen me
+ruling and caring for my family, you turn your back upon me in my own
+house and point the finger at me? Have I not always been a faithful
+wife, nursing my husband for years and never leaving his sick-bed, never
+thinking of anything but how to ease his pain? I have lived like a
+recluse from sheer sense of duty and faithful lose, while other wives,
+who have less means than I, live in state and go to entertainments.--And
+whose slaves are better kept and more often freed than ours? Where is
+the beggar so sure of an alms as in our house, where I, and I alone,
+uphold piety?--And now am I so fallen that the sun may not shine on me,
+and that a worthy man like you should withdraw his friendship all in a
+moment, and for the sake of this ungrateful, loveless creature--because,
+because, what did you call it--because the mind is wanting in me--or what
+did you call it that I must have before you....?"
+
+"It is called feeling," interrupted the leech, who was sorry for the
+unhappy woman, in whom he knew there was much that was good. "Is the
+word quite new to you, my lady Neforis?--It is born with us; but a firm
+will can elevate the least noble feeling, and the best that nature can
+bestow will deteriorate through self-indulgence. But, in the day of
+judgment, if I am not very much mistaken, it is not our acts but our
+feeling that will be weighed. It would ill-become me to blame you, but I
+may be allowed to pity you, for I see the disease in your soul which,
+like gangrene in the body. . ."
+
+"What next!" cried Neforis.
+
+"This disease," the physician calmly went on--"I mean hatred, should be
+far indeed from so pious a Christian. It has stolen into your heart like
+a thief in the night, has eaten you up, has made bad blood, and led you
+to treat this heavily-afflicted orphan as though you were to put stocks
+and stones in the path of a blind man to make him fall. If, as it would
+seem, my opinion still weighs with you a little, before Paula leaves
+your house you will ask her pardon for the hatred with which you have
+persecuted her for years, which has now led you to add an intolerable
+insult--in which you yourself do not believe--to all the rest."
+
+At this Paula, who had been watching the physician all through his
+speech, turned to Dame Neforis, and unclasped her hands which were lying
+in her lap, ready to shake hands with her uncle's wife if she only
+offered hers, though she was still fully resolved to leave the house.
+
+A terrible storm was raging in the lady's soul. She felt that she had
+often been unkind to Paula. That a painful doubt still obscured the
+question as to who had stolen the emerald she had unwillingly confessed
+before she had come up here. She knew that she would be doing her
+husband a great service by inducing the girl to remain, and she would
+only too gladly have kept the leech in the house;--but then how deeply
+had she, and her son, been humiliated by this haughty creature!
+
+Should she humble herself to her, a woman so much younger, offer her
+hand, make....
+
+At this moment they heard the tinkle of the silver bowl, into which her
+husband threw a little ball when he wanted her. His pale, suffering face
+rose before her inward eye, she could hear him asking for his opponent
+at draughts, she could see his sad, reproachful gaze when she told him
+to-morrow that she, Neforis, had driven his niece, the daughter of the
+noble Thomas, out of the house--, with a swift impulse she went towards
+Paula, grasping the reliquary in her left hand and holding out her right,
+and said in a low voice.
+
+"Shake hands, girl. I often ought to have behaved differently to you;
+but why have you never in the smallest thing sought my love? God is my
+witness that at first I was fully disposed to regard you as a daughter,
+but you--well, let it pass. I am sorry now that I should--if I have
+distressed you."
+
+At the first words Paula had placed her hand in that of Neforis. Hers
+was as cold as marble, the elder woman's was hot and moist; it seemed as
+though their hands were typical of the repugnance of their hearts. They
+both felt it so, and their clasp was but a brief one. When Paula
+withdrew hers, she preserved her composure better than the governor's
+wife, and said quite calmly, though her cheeks were burning:
+
+"Then we will try to part without any ill-will, and I thank you for
+having made that possible. To-morrow morning I hope I may be permitted
+to take leave of my uncle in peace, for I love him; and of little Mary."
+
+"But you need not go now! On the contrary, I urgently request you to
+stay," Neforis eagerly put in.
+
+"George will not let you leave. You yourself know how fond he is of
+you."
+
+"He has often been as a father to me," said Paula, and even her eyes
+shone through tears. "I would gladly have stayed with him till the end.
+Still, it is fixed--I must go."
+
+"And if your uncle adds his entreaties to mine?"
+
+"It will be in vain."
+
+Neforis took the maiden's hand in her own again, and tried with genuine
+anxiety to persuade her,--but Paula was firm. She adhered to her
+determination to leave the governor's house in the morning.
+
+"But where will you find a suitable house?" cried Neforis. "A residence
+that will be fit for you?"
+
+"That shall be my business," replied the physician. "Believe me, noble
+lady, it would be best for all that Paula should seek another home. But
+it is to be hoped that she may decide on remaining in Memphis."
+
+At this Neforis exclaimed:
+
+"Here, with us, is her natural home!--Perhaps God may turn your heart
+for your uncle's sake, and we may begin a new and happier life." Paula's
+only reply was a shake of the head; but Neforis did not see it the metal
+tinkle sounded for the third time, and it was her duty to respond to its
+call.
+
+As soon as she had left the room Paula drew a deep breath, exclaiming:
+
+"O God! O God! How hard it was to refrain from flinging in her teeth
+the crime her wicked son.... No, no; nothing should have made me do
+that. But I cannot tell you how the mere sight of that woman angers me,
+how light-hearted I feel since I have broken down the bridge that
+connected me with this house and with Memphis."
+
+"With Memphis?" asked Philippus.
+
+"Yes," said Paula gladly. "I go away--away from hence, out of the
+vicinity of this woman and her son!--Whither? Oh! back to Syria, or to
+Greece--every road is the right one, if it only takes me away from this
+place."
+
+"And I, your friend?" asked Philippus.
+
+"I shall bear the remembrance of you in a grateful heart."
+
+The physician smiled, as though something had happened just as he
+expected; after a moment's reflection he said:
+
+"And where can the Nabathaean find you, if indeed he discovers your
+father in the hermit of Sinai?"
+
+The question startled and surprised Paula, and Philippus now adduced
+every argument to convince her that it was necessary that she should
+remain in the City of the Pyramids. In the first place she must liberate
+her nurse--in this he could promise to help her--and everything he said
+was so judicious in its bearing on the circumstances that had to be
+reckoned with, and the facts actual or possible, that she was astonished
+at the practical good sense of this man, with whom she had generally
+talked only of matters apart from this world. Finally she yielded,
+chiefly for the sake of her father and Perpetua; but partly in the hope
+of still enjoying his society. She would remain in Memphis, at any rate
+for the present, under the roof of a friend of the physician's--long
+known to her by report--a Melchite like herself, and there await the
+further development of her fate.
+
+To be away from Orion and never, never to see him again was her heartfelt
+wish. All places were the same to her where she had no fear of meeting
+him. She hated him; still she knew that her heart would have no peace so
+long as such a meeting was possible. Still, she longed to free herself
+from a desire to see what his further career would be, which came over
+her again and again with overwhelming and terrible power. For that
+reason, and for that only, she longed to go far, far away, and she was
+hardly satisfied by the leech's assurance that her new protector would be
+able to keep away all visitors whom she might not wish to receive. And
+he himself, he added, would make it his business to stand between her and
+all intruders the moment she sent for him.
+
+They did not part till the sun was rising above the eastern hills; as
+they separated Paula said:
+
+"So this morning a new life begins for me, which I can well imagine will,
+by your help, be pleasanter than that which is past."
+
+And Philippus replied with happy emotion: "The new life for me began
+yesterday."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+Between morning and noon Mary was sitting on a low cane seat under the
+sycamores which yesterday had shaded Katharina's brief young happiness;
+by her side was her governess Eudoxia, under whose superintendence she
+was writing out the Ten Commandments from a Greek catechism.
+
+The teacher had been lulled to sleep by the increasing heat and the
+pervading scent of flowers, and her pupil had ceased to write. Her eyes,
+red with tears, were fixed on the shells with which the path was strewn,
+and she was using her long ruler, at first to stir them about, and then
+to write the words: "Paula," and "Paula, Mary's darling," in large
+capital letters. Now and again a butterfly, following the motion of the
+rod, brought a smile to her pretty little face from which the dark spirit
+"Trouble" had not wholly succeeded in banishing gladness. Still, her
+heart was heavy. Everything around her, in the garden and in the house,
+was still; for her grandfather's state had become seriously worse at
+sunrise, and every sound must be hushed. Mary was thinking of the poor
+sufferer: what pain he had to bear, and how the parting from Paula would
+grieve him, when Katharina came towards her down the path.
+
+The young girl did little credit to-day to her nickname of "the water-
+wagtail;" her little feet shuffled through the shelly gravel, her head
+hung wearily, and when one of the myriad insects, that were busy in the
+morning sunshine, came within her reach she beat it away angrily with her
+fan. As she came up to Mary she greeted her with the usual "All
+hail!" but the child only nodded in response, and half turning her back
+went on with her inscription.
+
+Katharina, however, paid no heed to this cool reception, but said in
+sympathetic tones:
+
+"Your poor grandfather is not so well, I hear?" Mary shrugged her
+shoulders.
+
+"They say he is very dangerously ill. I saw Philippus himself."
+
+"Indeed?" said Mary without looking up, and she went on writing.
+
+"Orion is with him," Katharina went on. "And Paula is really going
+away?"
+
+The child nodded dumbly, and her eyes again filled with tears.
+
+Katharina now observed how sad the little girl was looking, and that she
+intentionally refused to answer her. At any other time she would not
+have troubled herself about this, but to-day this taciturnity provoked
+her, nay it really worried her; she stood straight in front of Mary, who
+was still indefatigably busy with the ruler, and said loudly and with
+some irritation:
+
+"I have fallen into disgrace with you, it would seem, since yesterday.
+Every one to his liking; but I will not put up with such bad manners, I
+can tell you!"
+
+The last words were spoken loud enough to wake Eudoxia, who heard them,
+and drawing herself up with dignity she said severely:
+
+"Is that the way to behave to a kind and welcome visitor, Mary?"
+
+"I do not see one," retorted the child with a determined pout.
+
+"But I do," cried the governess. "You are behaving like a little
+barbarian, not like a little girl who has been taught Greek manners.
+Katharina is no longer a child, though she is still often kind enough to
+play with you. Go to her at once and beg her pardon for being so rude."
+
+"I!" exclaimed Mary, and her tone conveyed the most positive refusal to
+obey this behest. She sprang to her feet, and with flashing eyes, she
+cried: "We are not Greeks, neither she nor I, and I can tell you once
+for all that she is not my kind and welcome visitor, nor my friend any
+more! We have nothing, nothing whatever to do with each other any more!"
+
+"Are you gone mad?" cried Eudoxia, and her long face assumed a
+threatening expression, while she rose from her easy-chair in spite of
+the increasing heat, intending to capture her pupil and compel her to
+apologize; but Mary was more nimble than the middle-aged damsel and fled
+down the alley towards the river, as nimble as a gazelle.
+
+Eudoxia began to run after her; but the heat was soon too much for her,
+and when she stopped, exhausted and panting, she perceived that
+Katharina, worthy once more of her name of "water-wagtail," had flown
+past her and was chasing the little girl at a pace that she shuddered to
+contemplate. Mary soon saw that no one but Katharina was in pursuit; she
+moderated her pace, and awaited her cast-off friend under the shade of a
+tall shrub. In a moment Katharina was facing her; with a heightened
+color she seized both her hands and exclaimed passionately:
+
+"What was it you said? You--you-- If I did not know what a wrong-headed
+little simpleton you were, I could . . . ."
+
+"You could accuse me falsely!--But now, leave go of my hands or I will
+bite you. And as Katharina, at this threat, released her she went on
+vehemently.
+
+"Oh! I know you now--since yesterday! And I tell you, once for all,
+I say thank you for nothing for such friends. You ought to sink into the
+earth for shame of the sin you have committed. I am only ten years old,
+but rather than have done such a thing I would have let myself be shut up
+in that hot hole with poor, innocent Perpetua, or I would have let myself
+be killed, as you want poor, honest Hiram to be! Oh, shame!"
+
+Katharina's crimson cheeks bad turned pale at this address and, as she
+had no answer ready, she could only toss her head and say, with as much
+pride and dignity as she could assume:
+
+"What can a child like you know about things that puzzle the heads of
+grown-up people?"
+
+"Grown-up people!" laughed Mary, who was not three inches shorter than
+her antagonist. "You must be a great deal taller before I call you grown
+up! In two years time, you will scarcely be up to my eyes." At this the
+irascible Egyptian fired up; she gave the child a slap in the face with
+the palm of her hand. Mary only stood still as if petrified, and after
+gazing at the ground for a minute or two without a cry, she turned her
+back on her companion and silently went back into the shaded walk.
+
+Katharina watched her with tears in her eyes. She felt that Mary was
+justified in disapproving of what she had done the day before; for she
+herself had been unable to sleep and had become more and more convinced
+that she had acted wrongly, nay, unpardonably. And now again she had
+done an inexcusable thing. She felt that she had deeply hurt the child's
+feelings, and this sincerely grieved her. She followed Mary in silence,
+at some little distance, like a maid-servant. She longed to hold her
+back by her dress, to say something kind to her, nay, to ask her pardon.
+As they drew near to the spot where the governess had dropped into her
+chair again, a hapless victim to the heat of Egypt, Katharina called Mary
+by her name, and when the child paid no heed, laid her hand on her
+shoulder, saying in gentle entreaty: "Forgive me for having so far
+forgotten myself. But how can I help being so little? You know very
+well when any one laughs at me for it......"
+
+"You get angry and slap!" retorted the child, walking on. "Yesterday,
+perhaps, I might have laughed over a box on the ear--it is not the first
+--or have given it to you back again; but to-day!--Just now," and she
+shuddered involuntarily, "just now I felt as if some black slave had laid
+his dirty hand on my cheek. You are not what you were. You walk quite
+differently, and you look--depend upon it you do not look as nice and as
+bright as you used, and I know why: You did a very bad thing last
+evening."
+
+"But dear pet," said the other, "you must not be so hard. Perhaps I did
+not really tell the judges everything I knew, but Orion, who loves me so,
+and whose wife I am to be. . . ."
+
+"He led you into sin!--Yes; and he was always merry and kind till
+yesterday; but since--Oh, that unlucky day!"
+
+Here she was interrupted by Eudoxia, who poured out a flood of
+reproaches and finally desired her to resume her task. The child obeyed
+unresistingly; but she had scarcely settled to her wax tablets again when
+Katharina was by her side, whispering to her that Orion would certainly
+not have asserted anything that he did not believe to be true, and that
+she had really been in doubt as to whether a gem with a gold back, or a
+mere gold frame-work, had been hanging to Paula's chain. At this Mary
+turned sharply and quickly upon her, looked her straight in the eyes and
+exclaimed--but in Egyptian that the governess might not understand, for
+she had disdained to learn a single word of it:
+
+"A rubbishy gold frame with a broken edge was hanging to the chain, and,
+what is more, it caught in your dress. Why, I can see it now! And, when
+you bore witness that it was a gem, you told a lie--Look here; here are
+the laws which God Almighty himself gave on the sacred Mount of Sinai,
+and there it stands written: 'Thou shalt not bear false witness against
+thy neighbor.' And those who do, the priest told me, are guilty of
+mortal sin, for which there is no forgiveness on earth or in Heaven,
+unless after bitter repentance and our Saviour's special mercy. So it is
+written; and you could actually declare before the judges a thing that
+was false, and that you knew would bring others to ruin?"
+
+The young criminal looked down in shame and confusion, and answered
+hesitatingly:
+
+"Orion asserted it so positively and clearly, and then--I do not know
+what came over me--but I was so angry, so--I could have murdered her!"
+
+"Whom?" asked Mary in surprise. "You know very well: Paula."
+
+"Paula!" said Mary, and her large eyes again filled with tears. "Is it
+possible? Did you not love her as much as I do? Have not you often and
+often clung about her like a bur?"
+
+"Yes, yes, very true. But before the judges she was so intolerably
+proud, and then.--But believe me, Mary you really and truly cannot
+understand anything of all this."
+
+"Can I not?" asked the child folding her arms.
+
+"Why do you think me so stupid?"
+
+"You are in love with Orion--and he is a man whom few can match, over
+head and ears in love; and because Paula looks like a queen by the side
+of you, and is so much handsomer and taller than you are, and Orion, till
+yesterday--I could see it all--cared a thousand times more for her than
+for you, you were jealous and envious of her. Oh, I know all about it.
+--And I know that all the women fall in love with him, and that Mandaile
+had her ears cut off on his account, and that it was a lady who loved him
+in Constantinople that gave him the little white dog. The slave-girls
+tell me what they hear and what I like.--And after all, you may well be
+jealous of Paula, for if she only made a point of it, how soon Orion
+would make up his mind never to look at you again! She is the handsomest
+and the wisest and the best girl in the whole world, and why should she
+not be proud? The false witness you bore will cost poor Hiram his life:
+but the merciful Saviour may forgive you at last. It is your affair, and
+no concern of mine; but when Paula is forced to leave the house and all
+through you, so that I shall never, never, never see her any more--I
+cannot forget it, and I do not think I ever shall; but I will pray God to
+make me."
+
+She burst into loud sobs, and the governess had started up to put an end
+to a dialogue which she could not understand, and which was therefore
+vexatious and provoking, when the water-wagtail fell on her knees before
+the little girl, threw her arms round her, and bursting into tears,
+exclaimed:
+
+"Mary--darling little Mary forgive me.
+
+ [The German has the diminutive 'Mariechen'. To this Dr. Ebers
+ appends this note. "An ignorant critic took exception to the use of
+ the diminutive form of names (as for instance 'Irenchen', little
+ Irene) in 'The Sisters,' as an anachronism. It is nevertheless a
+ fact that the Greeks settled in Egypt were so fond of using the
+ diminutive form of woman's names that they preferred them, even in
+ the tax-rolls. This form was common in Attic Greek,"]
+
+Oh, if you could but know what I endured before I came out here! Forgive
+me, Mary; be my sweet, dear little Mary once more. Indeed and indeed you
+are much better than I am. Merciful Saviour, what possessed me last
+evening? And all through him, through the man no one can help loving--
+through Orion!--And would you believe it: I do not even know why he led
+me into this sin. But I must try to care for him no more, to forget him
+entirely, although, although,--only think, he called me his betrothed;
+but now that he has betrayed me into sin, can I dare to become his wife?
+It has given me no peace all night. I love him, yes I love him, you
+cannot think how dearly; still, I cannot be his! Sooner will I go into a
+convent, or drown myself in the Nile!--And I will say all this to my
+mother, this very day."
+
+The Greek governess had looked on in astonishment, for it was indeed
+strange to see the young girl kneeling in front of the child. She
+listened to her eager flow of unintelligible words, wondering whether she
+could ever teach her pupil--with her grandmother's help if need should
+be--to cultivate a more sedate and Greek demeanor.
+
+At this juncture Paula came down the path. Some slaves followed her,
+carrying several boxes and bundles and a large litter, all making their
+way to the Nile, where a boat was waiting to ferry her up the river to
+her new home.
+
+As she lingered unobserved, her eye rested on the touching picture of the
+two young things clasped in each other's arms, and she overheard the last
+words of the gentle little creature who had done her such cruel wrong.
+She could only guess at what had occurred, but she did not like to be a
+listener, so she called Mary; and when the child started up and flew to
+throw her arms round her neck with vehement and devoted tenderness, she
+covered her little face and hair with kisses. Then she freed herself
+from the little girl's embrace, and said, with tearful eyes:
+
+"Good-bye, my darling! In a few minutes I shall no longer belong here;
+another and a strange home must be mine. Love me always, and do not
+forget me, and be quite sure of one thing: you have no truer friend on
+earth than I am."
+
+At this, fresh tears flowed; the child implored her not to go away, not
+to leave her; but Paula could but refuse, though she was touched and
+astonished to find that she had reaped so rich a harvest of love, here
+where she had sown so little. Then she gave her hand at parting to the
+governess, and when she turned to Katharina, to bid farewell, hard as it
+was, to the murderer of her happiness, the young girl fell at her feet
+bathed in tears of repentance, covered her knees and hands with kisses,
+and confessed herself guilty of a terrible sin. Paula, however, would
+not allow her to finish; she lifted her up, kissed her forehead, and said
+that she quite understood how she had been led into it, and that she,
+like Mary, would try to forgive her.
+
+Standing by the governor's many-oared barge, to which the young girls now
+escorted her, she found Orion. Twice already this morning he had tried
+in vain to get speech with her, and he looked pale and agitated. He had
+a splendid bunch of flowers in his hand; he bestowed a hasty greeting on
+Mary and his betrothed, and did not heed the fact that Katharina returned
+it hesitatingly and without a word.
+
+He went close up to Paula, told her in a low voice that Hiram was safe,
+and implored her, as she hoped to be forgiven for her own sins, to grant
+him a few minutes. When she rejected his prayer with a silent shrug,
+and went on towards the boat he put out his hand to help her, but she
+intentionally overlooked it and gave her hand to the physician. At this
+he sprang after her into the barge, saying in her ear in a tremulous
+whisper:
+
+"A wretch, a miserable man entreats your mercy. I was mad yesterday. I
+love you, I love you--how deeply!--you will see!"
+
+"Enough," she broke in firmly, and she stood up in the swaying boat.
+Philippus supported her, and Orion, laying the flowers in her lap, cried
+so that all could hear: "Your departure will sorely distress my father.
+He is so ill that we did not dare allow you to take leave of him. If you
+have anything to say to him. . ."
+
+"I will find another messenger," she replied sternly.
+
+"And if he asks the reason for your sudden departure?"
+
+"Your mother and Philippus can give him an answer."
+
+"But he was your guardian, and your fortune, I know. . ."
+
+"In his hands it is safe."
+
+"And if the physician's fears should be justified?"
+
+"Then I will demand its restitution through a new Kyrios."
+
+"You will receive it without that! Have you no pity, no forgiveness?"
+For all answer she flung the flowers he had given her into the river;
+he leaped on shore, and regardless of the bystanders, pushed his fingers
+through his hair, clasping his hands to his burning brow.
+
+The barge was pushed off, the rowers plied their oars like men; Orion
+gazed after it, panting with laboring breath, till a little hand grasped
+his, and Mary's sweet, childish voice exclaimed:
+
+"Be comforted, uncle. I know just what is troubling you."
+
+"What do you know?" he asked roughly.
+
+"That you are sorry that you and Katharina should have spoken against her
+last evening, and against poor Hiram."
+
+"Nonsense!" he angrily broke in. "Where is Katharina?"
+
+"I was to tell you that she could not see you today. She loves you
+dearly, but she, too, is so very, very sorry."
+
+"She may spare herself!" said the young man. "If there is anything to
+be sorry for it falls on me--it is crushing me to death. But what is
+this!--The devil's in it! What business is it of the child's? Now, be
+off with you this minute. Eudoxia, take this little girl to her tasks."
+
+He took Mary's head between his hands, kissed her forehead with impetuous
+affection, and then pushed her towards her governess, who dutifully led
+her away.
+
+When Orion found himself alone, he leaned against a tree and groaned like
+a wounded wild beast. His heart was full to bursting.
+
+"Gone, gone! Thrown away, lost! The best on earth!" He laid his hands
+on the tree-stem and pressed his head against it till it hurt him. He
+did not know how to contain himself for misery and self-reproach. He
+felt like a man who has been drunk and has reduced his own house to ashes
+in his intoxication. How all this could have come to pass he now no
+longer knew. After his nocturnal ride he had caused Nilus the treasurer
+to be waked, and had charged him to liberate Hiram secretly. But it was
+the sight of his stricken father that first brought him completely to his
+sober senses. By his bed-side, death in its terrible reality had stared
+him in the face, and he had felt that he could not bear to see that
+beloved parent die till he had made his peace with Paula, won her
+forgiveness, brought her whom his father loved so well into his presence,
+and besought his blessing on her and on himself.
+
+Twice he had hastened from the chamber of suffering to her room, to
+entreat her to hear him, but in vain; and now, how terrible had their
+parting been! She was hard, implacable, cruel; and as he recalled her
+person and individuality as they had struck him before their quarrel,
+he was forced to confess that there was something in her present behavior
+which was not natural to her. This inhuman severity in the beautiful
+woman whose affection had once been his, and who, but now, had flung his
+flowers into the water, had not come from her heart; it was deliberately
+planned to make him feel her anger. What had withheld her, under such
+great provocation, from betraying that she had detected him in the theft
+of the emerald? All was not yet lost; and he breathed more freely as he
+went back to the house where duty, and his anxiety for his father,
+required his presence. There were his flowers, floating on the stream.
+
+"Hatred cast them there," thought he, "but before they reach the sea many
+blossoms will have opened which were mere hard buds when she flung them
+away. She can never love any man but me, I feel it, I know it. The
+first time we looked into each other's eyes the fate of our hearts was
+sealed. What she hates in me is my mad crime; what first set her against
+me was her righteous anger at my suit for Katharina. But that sin was
+but a dream in my life, which can never recur; and as for Katharina--I
+have sinned against her once, but I will not continue to sin through a
+whole, long lifetime. I have been permitted to trifle with love
+unpunished so often, that at last I have learnt to under-estimate its
+power. I could laugh as I sacrificed mine to my mother's wishes; but
+that, and that alone, has given rise to all these horrors. But no, all
+is not yet lost! Paula will listen to me; and when she sees what my
+inmost feelings are--when I have confessed all to her, good and evil
+alike--when she knows that my heart did but wander, and has returned to
+her who has taught me that love is no jest, but solemn earnest, swaying
+all mankind, she will come round--everything will come right."
+
+A noble and rapturous light came into his face, and as he walked on, his
+hopes rose:
+
+"When she is mine I know that everything good in me that I have inherited
+from my forefathers will blossom forth. When my mother called me to my
+father's bed-side, she said: 'Come, Orion, life is earnest for you and me
+and all our house, your father. . .' Yes, it is earnest indeed, however
+all this may end! To win Paula, to conciliate her, to bring her near to
+me, to have her by my side and do something great, something worthy of
+her--this is such a purpose in life as I need! With her, only with her I
+know I could achieve it; without her, or with that gilded toy Katharina,
+old age will bring me nothing but satiety, sobering and regrets--or,
+to call it by its Christian designation: bitter repentance. As Antaeus
+renewed his strength by contact with mother earth, so, father do I feel
+myself grow taller when I only think of her. She is salvation and honor;
+the other is ruin and misery in the future. My poor, dear Father, you
+will, you must survive this stroke to see the fulfilment of all your
+joyful hopes of your son. You always loved Paula; perhaps you may be the
+one to appease her and bring her back to me; and how dear will she be to
+you, and, God willing, to my mother, too, when you see her reigning by my
+side an ornament to this house, to this city, to this country--reigning
+like a queen, your son's redeeming and guardian angel!"
+
+Uplifted, carried away by these thoughts, he had reached the viridarium.
+He there found Sebek the steward waiting for his young master: "My lord
+is asleep now," he whispered, "as the physician foretold, but his face...
+Oh, if only we had Philippus here again!"
+
+"Have you sent the chariot with the fast horses to the Convent of St.
+Cecilia?" asked Orion eagerly; and when Sebek had replied in the
+affirmative and vanished again indoors, the young man, overwhelmed with
+painful forebodings, sank on his knees near a column to which a crucifix
+was hung, and lifted up his hands and soul in fervent prayer.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+The physician had installed Paula in her new home, and had introduced her
+to the family who were henceforth to be her protectors, and to enable her
+to lead a happier life.
+
+He had but a few minutes to devote to her and her hosts; for scarcely had
+he taken her into the spacious rooms, gay with flowers, of which she now
+took possession, when he was enquired for by two messengers, both anxious
+to speak with him. Paula knew how critical her uncle's state was, and
+now, contemplating the probability of losing him, she first understood
+what he had been to her. Thus sorrow was her first companion in her new
+abode--a sorrow to which the comfort of her pretty, airy rooms added
+keenness.
+
+One of the messengers was a young Arab from the other side of the river,
+who handed to Philippus a letter from the merchant Haschim. The old man
+informed him that, in consequence of a bad fall his eldest son had had,
+he was forced to start at once for Djiddah on the Red Sea. He begged the
+physician to take every care of his caravan-leader, to whom he was much
+attached, to remove him when he thought fit from the governor's house,
+and to nurse him till he was well, in some quiet retreat. He would bear
+in mind the commission given him by the daughter of the illustrious
+Thomas. He sent with this letter a purse well-filled with gold pieces.
+
+The other messenger was to take the leech back again in the light chariot
+with the fast horses to the suffering Mukaukas. He at once obeyed the
+summons, and the steeds, which the driver did not spare, soon carried him
+back to the governor's house.
+
+A glance at his patient told him that this was the beginning of the end;
+still, faithful to his principle of never abandoning hope till the heart
+of the sufferer had ceased to beat, he raised the senseless man, heedless
+of Orion, who was on his knees by his father's pillow, signed to the
+deaconess in attendance, an experienced nurse, and laid cool, wet cloths
+on the head and neck of the sufferer, who was stricken with apoplexy.
+Then he bled him.
+
+Presently the Mukaukas wearily opened his eyes, turned uneasily from side
+to side, and recognizing his kneeling son and his wife, bathed in tears,
+he murmured, almost inarticulately, for his paralyzed tongue no longer
+did his will: "Two pillules, Philip!"
+
+The physician unhesitatingly acceded to the request of the dying man, who
+again closed his eyes; but only to reopen them, and to say, with the same
+difficulty, but with perfect consciousness: "The end is at hand! The
+blessing of the Church--Orion, the Bishop."
+
+The young man hastened out of the room to fetch the prelate, who was
+waiting in the viridarium with two deacons, an exorcist, and a sacristan
+bearing the sacred vessels.
+
+The governor listened in devout composure to the service of the last
+sacrament, looked on at the ceremonies performed by the exorcist as, with
+waving of hands and pious ejaculations he banned the evil spirits and
+cast out from the dying man the devil that might have part in him; but
+he could no longer swallow the bread which, in the Jacobite rite, was
+administered soaked in the wine. Orion took the holy elements for him,
+and the dying man, with a smile, murmured to his son:
+
+"God be with thee, my son! The Lord, it seems, denies me His precious
+Blood--and yet--let me try once more."
+
+This time he succeeded in swallowing the wine and a few crumbs of bread;
+and the bishop Ptolimus, a gentle old man of a beautiful and dignified
+presence, spoke comfort to him, and asked him whether he felt that he was
+dying penitent and in perfect faith in the mercy of his Lord and Saviour,
+and whether he repented of his sins and forgave his enemies.
+
+The sick man bowed his head with an effort and murmured:
+
+"Even the Melchites who murdered my sons--and even the head of our
+Church, the Patriarch, who was only too glad to leave it to me to achieve
+things which he scrupled to do himself. That--that--But you, Ptolimus--
+a wise and worthy servant of the Lord--tell me to the best of your
+convictions: May I die in the belief that it was not a sin to conclude a
+peace with the Arab conquerors of the Greeks?--May I, even at this hour,
+think of the Melchites as heretics?"
+
+The prelate drew his still upright figure to its full height, and his
+mild features assumed a determined--nay a stern expression as he
+exclaimed:
+
+"You know the, decision pronounced by the Synod of Ephesus--the words
+which should be graven on the heart of every true Jacobite as on marble
+and brass 'May all who divide the nature of Christ--and this is what the
+Melchites do--be divided with the sword, be hewn in pieces and be burnt
+alive!'--No Head of our Church has ever hurled such a curse at the
+Moslems who adore the One God!"
+
+The sufferer drew a deep breath, but he presently added with a sigh:
+
+"But Benjamin the Patriarch, and John of Niku have tormented my soul with
+fears! Still, you too, Ptolimus, bear the crosier, and to you I will
+confess that your brethren in office, the shepherds of the Jacobite fold,
+have ruined my peace for hundreds of days and nights, and I have been
+near to cursing them. But before the night fell the Lord sent light into
+my soul, and I forgave them, and now, through you, I crave their pardon
+and their blessing. The Church has but reluctantly opened the doors to
+me in these last years; but what servant can be allowed to complain of
+the Master from whom he expects grace? So listen to me. I close my eyes
+as a faithful and devoted adherent of the Church, and in token thereof I
+will endow her to the best of my power and adorn her with rich and costly
+gifts; I will--but I can say no more.--Speak for me, Orion. You know--
+the gems--the hanging. . . ."
+
+His son explained to the bishop what a splendid gift, in priceless
+jewels, the dying man intended to offer to the Church. He desired to be
+buried in the church of St. John at Alexandria by his father's side, and
+to be prayed for in front of the mortuary chapel of his ancestors in the
+Necropolis; he had set aside a sum of money, in his will, to pay for the
+prayers to be offered for his soul. The priests were well pleased to
+hear this, and they absolved him unconditionally and completely; then,
+after blessing him fervently, they quitted the room.
+
+Philippus heaved a sigh of relief when the ecclesiastics had departed,
+and constantly renewed the wet compress, while the dying governor lay for
+a long time in silence with his eyes shut. Presently he rubbed them as
+though he felt revived, raised his head a little with the physician's
+help, and looking up, said:
+
+"Draw the ring off my finger, Orion, and wear it worthily.--Where is
+little Mary, where is Paula? I should wish to bid them farewell too."
+
+The young man and his mother exchanged uneasy glances, but Neforis
+collected herself at once and replied:
+
+"We have sent for Mary; but Paula--you know she never was happy with
+us--and since the events of yesterday. . . ."
+
+"Well?" asked the invalid.
+
+"She hastily quitted the house; but we parted friends, I can assure you
+of that; she is still in Memphis, and she spoke of you most
+affectionately and wished to see you, and charged me with many loving
+messages for you; so, if you really care to see her. . . ."
+
+The sick man tried to nod his head, but in vain. He did not, however,
+insist on her being sent for, but his face wore an expression of deep
+melancholy and the words came faintly from his lips.
+
+"Thomas' daughter! The noblest and loveliest of all."
+
+"The noblest and loveliest," echoed Orion, in a voice that was tremulous
+with strong, deep and sincere emotion; then he begged the leech and the
+deaconess to leave him alone with his parents. As soon as they had left
+the room the young man spoke softly but urgently into his father's ear:
+
+"You are quite right, Father," he said. "She is better and more noble,
+more beautiful and more highminded than any girl living. I love her,
+and will stake everything to win her heart. Oh, God! Oh, God! Merciful
+Heaven!--Are you glad, do you give your consent, Father? You dearest and
+best of men; I see it in your face."
+
+"Yes, yes, yes," murmured the governor; his yellow, bloodshot eyes looked
+up to Heaven, and with a terrible effort he stammered out: "Blessing--my
+blessing, on you and Paula.--Tell her from me.... If she had confided in
+her old uncle, as she used to do, the freedman would never have robbed
+us.--She is a brave soul; how she fought for the poor fellow. I will
+hear more about it if my strength holds out.--Why is she not here?"
+
+"She wished so much to bid you farewell," replied Neforis, "but you were
+asleep."
+
+"Was she in such a hurry to be gone?" asked her husband with a bitter
+smile. "Fear about the emerald may have had something to do with it?
+But how could I be angry with her? Hiram acted without her knowledge,
+I suppose? Yes, I knew it!--Ah; that dear, sweet face! If I could but
+see it once more. The joy--of my eyes, and my companion at draughts!
+A faithful heart too; how she clung to her father! she was ready to
+sacrifice everything for him.--And you, you, my old.... But no--no
+reproaches at such a time. You, Mother--you, my Neforis, thanks,
+a thousand thanks for all your love and kindness. What a mystical and
+magic bond is that of a Christian marriage like ours? Mark that, Orion.
+And you, Mother: I am anxious about this. You--do not hurt the girl's
+feelings again. Say--say you bless this union; it will make me happier
+at the last.--Paula and Orion; both of them-both.--I never dared before
+--but what better could we wish?"
+
+The matron clasped her hands and sobbed out:
+
+"Anything, everything you wish! But Father, Orion, our faith!--
+And then, merciful Saviour, that poor little Katharina!"
+
+"Katharina!" repeated the sick man, and his feeble lips parted in a
+compassionate smile. "Our boy and the water--water--you know what I
+would say."
+
+Then his eyes began to sparkle more brightly and he said in a low voice,
+but still eagerly, as though death were yet far from him:
+
+"My name is George, the son of the Mukaukas; I am the great Mukaukas and
+our family--all fine men of a proud race; all: My father, my uncle, our
+lost sons, and Orion here--all palms and oaks! And shall a dwarf, a mere
+blade of rice be grafted on to the grand old stalwart stock? What would
+come of that?--Oh, ho! a miserable little brood! But Paula! The cedar
+of Lebanon--Paula; she would give new life to the grand old race."
+
+"But our faith, our faith," moaned Neforis. "And you, Orion, do you even
+know what her feeling is towards you?"
+
+"Yes and no. Let that rest for the present," said the youth, who was
+deeply moved. "Oh Father! if I only knew that your blessing. . ."
+
+"The Faith, the Faith," interrupted the Mukaukas in a broken voice.
+
+"I will be true to my own!" cried Orion, raising his father's hand to
+his lips. "But think, picture to yourself, how Paula and I would reign
+in this house, and how another generation would grow up in it worthy of
+the great Mukaukas and his ancestors!"
+
+"I see it, I see it," murmured the sick man sinking back on his pillows,
+unconscious.
+
+Philippus was immediately called in, and, with him, little Mary came
+weeping into the room. The physician's efforts to revive the sufferer
+were presently successful; again the sick man opened his eyes, and spoke
+more distinctly and loudly than before:
+
+"There is a perfume of musk. It is the fragrance that heralds the Angel
+of Death."
+
+After this he lay still and silent for a long time. His eyes were
+closed, but his brows were knit and showed that he was thinking with a
+painful effort. At length, with a sigh, he said, almost inaudibly:
+"So it was and so it is: The Greek oppressed my people with arbitrary
+cruelty as if we were dogs; the Moslem, too, is a stranger, but he is
+just. That which happened it was out of my power to prevent; and it is
+well, it is very well that it turned out so.--Very well," he repeated
+several times, and then he shivered and said with a groan:
+
+"My feet are so cold! But never mind, never mind, I like to be cool."
+
+The leech and the deaconess at once set to work to heat blocks of wood to
+warm his feet; the sick man looked up gratefully and went on: "At church,
+in the House of God, I have often found it deliciously cool and to-day it
+is the Church that eases my death-bed by her pardon. Do you, my Son, be
+faithful to her. No member of our house should ever be an apostate. As
+to the new faith--it is overspreading land after land with incredible
+power; ambition and covetousness are driving thousands into its fold.
+But we--we are faithful to Christ Jesus, we are no traitors. If I, I the
+Mukaukas, had consented to go over to the Khaliff I might have been a
+prince in purple, and have governed my own country in his name. How many
+have deserted to the Moslems! And the temptation will come to you, too,
+and their faith offers much that is attractive to the crowd. They
+imagine a Paradise full of unspeakably alluring joys--but we, my son--
+we shall meet again in our own, shall we not?"
+
+"Yes, yes, Father!" cried the young man. "I will remain a Christian,
+staunch and true. . ."
+
+"That is right," interrupted the sick man. He was determined to forget
+that his son wished to marry a Melchite and went on quickly: "Paula...
+But no more of that. Remain faithful to your own creed--otherwise...
+However, child, seek your own road; you are--but you will walk in the
+right way, and it is because I know that, know it surely, that I can die
+so calmly.
+
+"I have provided abundantly for your temporal welfare. I have been a
+good husband, a faithful father, have I not, O Saviour?--Have I not,
+Neforis? And that which is my best and surest comfort is that for many
+long years I have administered justice in this land, and never, never
+once--and Thou my Refuge and Comforter art my witness!--never once
+consciously or willingly have I been an unrighteous judge. Before me the
+poor were equal with the rich, the powerful with the helpless widow. Who
+would have dared..." Here he broke off; his eyes, wandering feebly round
+the room, fell on Mary who had sunk on her knees, opposite to Orion on
+the other side of the bed. The dying man, who had thus summed up the
+outcome of a long and busy life, ceased his reflections, and when the
+child saw that he was vainly trying to turn his powerless head towards
+her, she threw her arms round him with passionate grief; unscared by his
+fixed gaze or the altered hue of his beloved face, she kissed his lips
+and cheeks, exclaiming:
+
+"Grandfather, dear grandfather, do not leave us; stay with us, pray, pray
+stay with us!"
+
+Something faintly resembling a smile parted his parched lips, and all the
+tenderness with which his soul was overflowing for this sweet young bud
+of humanity would have found expression in his voice but that he could
+only mutter huskily:
+
+"Mary, my darling! For your sake I should be glad to live a long while
+yet, a very long while; but the other world--I am standing already on its
+threshold. Good-bye--I must indeed say good-bye."
+
+"No, no--I will pray; oh! I will pray so fervently that you may get well
+again!" cried the child. But he replied:
+
+"Nay, nay. The Saviour is already taking me by the hand. Farewell, and
+again farewell. Did you bring Paula? I do not see her. Did you bring
+Paula with you, sweetheart? She--did she leave us in anger? If she only
+knew; ah! your Paula has treated us ill." The child's heart was still
+full of the horrible crime which had so revolted her truthful nature, and
+which had deprived her of rest all through an evening, a long night and
+a morning; she laid her little head close to that of the old man--her
+dearest and best friend. For years he had filled her father's place, and
+now he was dying, leaving her forever! But she could not let him depart
+with a false idea of the woman whom she worshipped with all the fervor of
+her child's heart; in a subdued voice, but with eager feeling, she said,
+close to his ear:
+
+"But Grandfather, there is one thing you must know before the Saviour
+takes you away to be happy in Heaven. Paula told the truth, and never,
+never told a lie, not even for Hiram's sake. An empty gold frame hung to
+her necklace and no gem at all. Whatever Orion may say, I saw it myself
+and cannot be mistaken, as truly as I hope to see you and my poor father
+in heaven! And Katharina, too, thought better of it, and confessed to me
+just now that she had committed a great sin and had borne false witness
+before the judges to please her dear Orion. I do not know what Hiram had
+done to offend him; but on the strength of Katharina's evidence the
+judges condemned him to death. But Paula--you must understand that Paula
+had nothing, positively nothing whatever to do with the stealing of the
+emerald."
+
+Orion, kneeling there, was condemned to hear every word the little girl
+so vehemently whispered, and each one pierced his heart like a dagger-
+thrust. Again and again he felt inclined to clutch at her across the bed
+and fling her on the ground before his father's eyes; but grief and
+astonishment seemed to have paralyzed his whole being; he had not even
+the power to interrupt her with a single word.
+
+She had spoken, and all was told.
+
+He clung to the couch like a shattered wretch; and when his father turned
+his eyes on him and gasped out: "Then the Court--our Court of justice
+pronounced an unrighteous sentence?" he bowed his head in contrition.
+
+The dying man murmured even less articulately and incoherently than
+before: "The gem--the hanging--you, you perhaps--was it you? that
+emerald--I cannot. . ."
+
+Orion helped his father in his vain efforts to utter the dreadful words.
+Sooner would he have died with the old man than have deceived him in such
+a moment; he replied humbly and in a low voice:
+
+"Yes, Father--I took it. But as surely as I love you and my mother this,
+the first reckless act of my life, which has brought such horrors in its
+train. . . Shall be the last," he would have said; but the words "I took
+it," had scarcely passed his lips when his father was shaken by a violent
+trembling, the expression of his eyes changed fearfully, and before the
+son had spoken his vow to the end the unhappy father was, by a tremendous
+effort, sitting upright. Loud sobs of penitence broke from the young
+man's heaving breast, as the Mukaukas wrathfully exclaimed, in thick
+accents, as quickly as the heavy, paralyzed tongue would allow:
+
+"You, you! A disgrace to our ancient and blameless Court! You?--Away
+with you! A thief, an unjust judge, a false witness,--and the only
+descendant of Menas! If only these hands were able--you--you--Go,
+villain!" And with this wild outcry, George, the gentle and just
+Mukaukas, sank back on his pillows; his bloodshot eyes were staring,
+fixed on vacancy; his gasping lips repeated again and again, but less and
+less audibly the one word "Villain;" his swollen fingers clutched at the
+light coverlet that lay over him; a strange, shrill wheezing came through
+his open mouth, and the heavy corpse of the great dignitary fell, like a
+falling palm-tree, into Orion's arms.
+
+Orion started up, his eyes inflamed, his hair all dishevelled, and shook
+the dead man as though to compel him back to life again, to hear his oath
+and accept his vow, to see his tears of repentance, to pardon him and
+take back the name of infamy which had been his parting word to his loved
+and spoilt child.
+
+In the midst of this wild outbreak the physician came back, glanced at
+the dead man's distorted features, laid a hand on his heart, and said
+with solemn regret as he led little Mary away from the couch:
+
+"A good and just man is gone from the land of the living."
+
+Orion cried aloud and pushed away Mary, who had stolen close to him; for,
+young as she was, she felt that it was she who had brought the worst woe
+on her uncle, and that it was her part to show him some affection.
+
+She ran then to her grandmother; but she, too, put her aside and fell on
+her knees by the side of her wretched son to weep with him; to console
+him who was inconsolable, and in whom, a few minutes since, she had hoped
+to find her own best consolation; but her fond words of motherly comfort
+found no echo in his broken spirit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+When Philippus had parted from Paula he had told her that the Mukaukas
+might indeed die at any moment, but that it was possible that he might
+yet struggle with death for weeks to come. This hope had comforted her;
+for she could not bear to think that the only true friend she had had in
+Memphis, till she had become more intimate with the physician, should
+quit the world forever without having heard her justification. Nothing
+could be more unlikely than that any one in Neforis' household--excepting
+her little grandchild should ever remember her with kindness; and she
+scarcely desired it; but she rebelled against the idea of forfeiting the
+respect she had earned, even in the governor's house. If her friend
+should succeed in prolonging her uncle's life, by a confidential
+interview with him she might win back his old affection and his good
+opinion.
+
+Her new home she felt was but a resting-place, a tabernacle in the
+desert-journey of her solitary pilgrimage, and she here meant to avail
+herself of the information she had gathered from her Melchite dependents.
+Hope had now risen supreme in her heart over grief and disappointment.
+Orion's presence alone hung like a threatening hail-cloud over the
+sprouting harvest of her peace of mind. And yet, next to the necessity
+of waiting at Memphis for the return of her messenger, nothing tied her
+to the place so strongly as her interest in watching the future course of
+his life, at any rate from a distance. What she felt for him-and she
+told herself it was deep aversion-nevertheless constituted a large share
+of her inner life, little as she would confess it to herself.
+
+Her new hosts had received her as a welcome guest, and they certainly did
+not seem to be poor. The house was spacious, and though it was old and
+unpretentious it was comfortable and furnished with artistic taste. The
+garden had amazed her by the care lavished on it; she had seen a hump-
+backed gardener and several children at work in it. A strange party-for
+every one of them, like their chief, was in some way deformed or
+crippled.
+
+The plot of ground--which extended towards the river to the road-way for
+foot passengers, vehicles and the files of men towing the Nile-boats--was
+but narrow, and bounded on either side by extensive premises. Not far
+from the spot where it lay nearest to the river was the bridge of boats
+connecting Memphis with the island of Rodah. To the right was the
+magnificent residence--a palace indeed--belonging to Susannah; to the
+left was an extensive grove, where tall palms, sycamores with spreading
+foliage, and dense thickets of blue-green tamarisk trees cast their
+shade. Above this bower of splendid shrubs and ancient trees rose a
+long, yellow building crowned with a turret; and this too was not unknown
+to her, for she had often heard it spoken of in her uncle's house, and
+had even gone there now and then escorted by Perpetua. It was the
+convent of St. Cecilia, the refuge of the last nuns of the orthodox creed
+left in Memphis; for, though all the other sisterhoods of her confession
+had long since been banished, these had been allowed to remain in their
+old home, not only because they were famous sick-nurses, a distinction
+common to all the Melchite orders, but even more because the decaying
+municipality could not afford to sacrifice the large tax they annually
+paid to it. This tax was the interest on a considerable capital
+bequeathed to the convent by a certain wise predecessor of the Mukaukas',
+with the prudent proviso, ratified under the imperial seal of Theodosius
+II., that if the convent were at any time broken up, this endowment, with
+the land and buildings which it likewise owed to the generosity of the
+same benefactor, should become the property of the Christian emperor at
+that time reigning.
+
+Mukaukas George, notwithstanding his well-founded aversion for everything
+Melchite, had taken good care not to press this useful Sisterhood too
+hardly, or to deprive his impoverished capital of its revenues only to
+throw them into the hands of the wealthy Moslems. The title-deed on
+which the Sisters relied was good; and the governor, who was a good
+lawyer as well as a just man, had not only left them unmolested, but in
+spite of his fears--during the last few years--for his own safety, had
+shown himself no respecter of persons by defending their rights firmly
+and resolutely against the powerful patriarch of the Jacobite Church.
+The Senate of the ancient capital naturally, approved his course, and had
+not merely suffered the heretic Sisterhood to remain, but had helped and
+encouraged it.
+
+The Jacobite clergy of the city shut their eyes, and only opened them to
+watch the convent at Easter-tide; for on the Saturday before Easter, the
+nuns, in obedience to an agreement made before the Monophysite Schism,
+were required to pay a tribute of embroidered vestments to the head of
+the Christian Churches, with wine of the best vintages of Kochome near
+the Pyramid of steps, and a considerable quantity of flowers and
+confectionary. So the ancient coenobium of women was maintained, and
+though all Egypt was by this time Jacobite or Moslem, and many of the
+older Sisters had departed this life within the last year, no one had
+thought of enquiring how it was that the number of the nuns remained
+still the same, till the Jacobite archbishop Benjamin filled the
+patriarchal throne of Alexandria in the place of the Melchite Cyrus.
+
+To Benjamin the heretical Sisters at Memphis--the hawks in a dove-cote,
+as he called them--were an offence, and he thought that the deed might
+bear a new interpretation: that as there was no longer a Christian
+emperor, and as the word "Christian" was used in the document, if the
+convent were broken up the property should pass into the hands of the
+only Christian magnate then existing in the country: himself, namely,
+and his Church. The ill-feeling which the Patriarch fostered against the
+Mukaukas had been aggravated to hostility by their antagonism on this
+matter.
+
+A musical dirge now fell on Paula's ear from the convent chapel. Was the
+worthy Mother Superior dead? No, this lament must be for some other
+death, for the strange skirling wail of the Egyptian women came up to her
+corner window from the road, from the bridge, and from the boats on the
+river. No Jacobite of Memphis would have dared to express her grief so
+publicly for the death of a Melchite; and as the chorus of voices
+swelled, the thought struck her with a chill that it must be her uncle
+and friend who had closed his weary eyes in death.
+
+It was with deep emotion and many tears that she perceived how sincerely
+the death of this righteous man was bewailed by all his fellow-citizens.
+Yes, he only, and no other Egyptian, could have called forth this great
+and expressive regret. The wailing women in the road were daubing the
+mud of the river on their foreheads and bosoms; men were standing in
+large groups and beating their heads and breasts with passionate
+gestures. On the bridge of boats the men would stop others, and from
+thence, too, piercing shrieks came across to her.
+
+At last Philippus came in and confirmed her fears. The governor's death
+had shocked him no less than it did her, and he had to tell Paula all he
+knew of the dead man's last hours.
+
+"Still, one good thing has come out of this misery," he said. "There is
+nothing so comforting as the discovery that we have been deceived in
+thinking ill of a man and of his character. This Orion, who has sinned
+so basely against himself and against you, is not utterly reprobate."
+
+"Not?" interrupted Paula. "Then he has taken you in too!"
+
+"Taken me in?" said the leech. "Hardly, I think. I have, alas! stood
+by many a death-bed; for I am too often sent for when Death is already
+beckoning the sick man away. I have met thousands of mourners in these
+melancholy scenes, which, I can assure you, are the very best school for
+training any one who desires to search the hearts of his fellow-
+creatures. By the bed of death, or in the mart, where everything is a
+question of Mine and Thine, it is easy to see how some--we for instance
+--are as careful to hide from the world all that is great and noble in us
+as others are to conceal what is petty and mean--we read men's hearts as
+an open page. From my observations of the dying and of those who sorrow
+for them, I, who am not Menander not Lucian, could draw a series of
+portraits which should be as truthful likenesses as though the men had
+turned themselves inside out before me."
+
+"That a dying man should show himself as he really is I can well
+believe," replied Paula. "He need have no further care for the opinions
+of others; but the mourners? Why, custom requires them to assume an air
+of grief and to shed tears."
+
+"Very true; regret repeats itself by the side of the dead," replied the
+physician. "But the chamber of the dying is like a church. Death
+consecrates it, and the man who stands face to face with death often
+drops the mask by which he cheats his fellows. There we may see faces
+which you would shudder to look on, but others, too, which merely to see
+is enough to make us regard the degenerate species to which we belong
+with renewed respect."
+
+"And you found such a comforting vision in Orion,--the thief, the false
+witness, the corrupt judge!" exclaimed Paula, starting up in indignant
+astonishment.
+
+"There! you see," laughed Philippus. "Just like a woman! A little
+juggling, and lo! what was only rose color is turned to purple. No.
+The son of the Mukaukas has not yet undergone such a dazzling change of
+hue; but he has a feeling and impressible heart--and I hold even that in
+high esteem. I have no doubt that he loved his father deeply, nay
+passionately; though I have ample reason to believe him capable of the
+very worst. So long as I was present at the scene of death the father
+and son were parting in all friendship and tenderness, and when the good
+old man's heart had ceased to beat I found Orion in a state which is only
+possible to have when love has lost what it held dearest."
+
+"All acting!" Paula put in.
+
+"But there was no audience, dear friend. Orion would not have got up
+such a performance for his mother and little Mary."
+
+"But he is a poet--and a highly-gifted one too. He sings beautiful songs
+of his own invention to the lyre; his ecstatic and versatile mind works
+him up into any frame of feeling; but his soul is perverted; it is soaked
+in wickedness as a sponge drinks up water. He is a vessel full of
+beautiful gifts, but he has forfeited all that was good and noble in him
+--all!"
+
+The words came in eager haste from her indignant lips. Her cheeks glowed
+with her vehemence, and she thought she had won over the physician; but
+he gravely shook his head, and said:
+
+"Your righteous anger carries you too far. How often have you blamed me
+for severity and suspicions but now I have to beg you to allow me to ask
+your sympathy for an experience to which you would probably have raised
+no objection the day before yesterday:
+
+"I have met with evil-doers of every degree. Think, for instance, how
+many cases of wilful poisoning I have had to investigate."
+
+"Even Homer called Egypt the land of poison," exclaimed Paula. "And it
+seems almost incredible that Christianity has not altered it in the
+least. Kosmas, who had seen the whole earth, could nowhere find more
+malice, deceit, hatred, and ill-will than exist here."
+
+"Then you see in what good schools my experience of the wickedness of men
+has ripened," said Philippus smiling, "and they have taught me chiefly
+that there is never a criminal, a sinner, or a scapegrace, however
+infamous he may be, however cruel or lost to virtue, in whom some good
+quality or other may not be discovered.--Do you remember Nechebt, the
+horrible woman who poisoned her two brothers and her own father? She was
+captured scarcely three weeks ago; and that very monster in human form
+could almost die of hunger and thirst for the sake of her rascally son,
+who is a common soldier in the imperial army; at last she took to
+concocting poisons, not to improve her own wretched condition, but to
+send the shameless wretch means for a fresh debauch. I have known a
+thousand similar cases, but I will only mention that of one of the
+wildest and blood-thirstiest of robbers, who had evaded the vigilance
+of the watch again and again, but at last fell into their hands--and how?
+Because he had heard that his old mother was ill and he longed to see the
+withered old woman once more and give her a kiss, since he was her own
+child! In the same way Orion, however reprobate we may think him, has at
+any rate one characteristic which we must approve of: a tender affection
+for his father and mother. Your sponge is not utterly steeped in
+wickedness; there are still some pores, some cells which resist it; and
+if in him, as in so many others, the heart is one of them, then I say
+hopefully, like Horace the Roman: 'Nil desperandum.' It would be unjust
+to give him up altogether for lost."
+
+To this assurance Paula found no answer; indeed, it struck her that--if
+Orion had told her the truth--it was only to please his mother that he
+had asked Katharina to marry him, while she herself occupied his heart.
+--The physician, wishing to change the subject, was about to speak again
+of the death of the Mukaukas, when one of the crippled serving girls came
+to announce a woman who asked to speak with Paula. A few minutes later
+she was clasped in the embrace of her faithful old friend and nurse, who
+rejoiced as heartily, laughing and crying for sheer delight, as if no
+tidings of misfortune had reached her; while Paula, though so much
+younger, was cut to the heart, and could not shake off the spell of her
+grief.
+
+Perpetua understood this and owed her no grudge for the coolness with
+which she met her joyful excitement.
+
+She told Paula that she had been well treated in her hot cell, and that
+about half an hour since Orion himself, the young Master now, had opened
+the door of her prison. He had been very gracious to her, but looked so
+pale and sad. The overbearing young man was quite altered; his eyes,
+which were dim with weeping, had moved her, Perpetua, to tears. She
+trusted that God would forgive him for his sins against herself and
+Paula; he must have been possessed by some evil demon; he had not been at
+all like himself; for he had a kind, warm heart, and though he had been
+so hard and unjust yesterday to poor Hiram he had made it up to him the
+first thing this morning, and had not only let him out of prison but had
+sent him and his son home to Damascus with large gifts and two horses.
+Nilus had told her this. He who hoped to be forgiven by his neighbor
+must also be ready to forgive. The great Augustine, even, had been no
+model of virtue in his youth and yet he had become a shining light in the
+Church; and now the son of the Mukaukas would tread in his father's
+footsteps. He was a handsome, engaging man, who would be the joy of
+their hearts yet, they might be very sure. Why, he had been as grave and
+as solemn as a bishop to-day; perhaps he had already turned over a new
+leaf. He himself had put her into his mother's chariot and desired the
+charioteer to drive her hither: what would Paula say to that? Her things
+were to be given over to her to-morrow morning, and packed under her own
+eyes, and sent after her. Nilus, the treasurer, had come with her to
+deliver a message to Paula; but he had gone first to the convent.
+
+Paula desired the old woman to go thither and fetch him; as soon as
+Perpetua had left the room, she exclaimed:
+
+"There, you see, is some one who is quite of your opinion. What
+creatures we are! Last evening my good Betta would have thought no pit
+of hell too deep for our enemy, and now? To be led to a chariot by such
+a fine gentleman in person is no doubt flattering; and how quickly the
+old body has forgotten all her grievances, how soothed and satisfied she
+is by the gracious permission to pack her precious and cherished
+possessions with her own hands.--You told me once that the Jacobites had
+made a Saint Orion out of the pagan god Osiris, and my old Betta sees a
+future Saint Augustine in the governor's son. I can see that she already
+regards him as her tutelary patron, and when we get back to Syria, she
+will be begging me to join her in a pilgrimage to his shrine!"
+
+"And you will perhaps consent," replied the physician, to whom Paula at
+this moment, for the first time since his heart had glowed with love for
+her, did not seem to be quite what a man looks for in the woman he
+adores. Hitherto he had seen and heard nothing that was not high-minded
+and worthy of her; but her last words had, been spoken with vehement and
+indignant irony--and in Philip's opinion irony, blame which was intended
+to wound and not to improve its object, was unbecoming in a noble woman.
+The scornful laugh, with which she had triumphantly ended her speech,
+had opened as it were a wide abyss between his mind and hers. He, as he
+freely confessed to himself, was of a coarser and humbler grain than
+Paula, and he was apt to be satirical oftener than was right. She had
+been wont to dislike this habit in him; he had been glad that she did; it
+answered to the ideal he had formed of what the woman he loved should be.
+But now she had turned satirical; and her irony was no jest of the lips.
+It sprang, full of passion, from her agitated soul; this it was that
+grieved the leech who knew human nature, and at the same time roused his
+apprehensions. Paula read his disapproval in his face, and felt that
+there was a deep significance in his words And you will perhaps consent."
+
+"Men are vexed," thought she, "when, after they have decisively expressed
+an opinion, we women dare unhesitatingly to assert a different one," so,
+as she would on no account hurt the feelings of the friend to whom she
+owed so much, she said kindly:
+
+"I do not care to enquire into the meaning of your strange
+prognostication. Thank God, by your kindness and care I have severed
+every tie that could have bound me to my poor uncle's son!--Now we will
+drop the subject; we have said too much about him already."
+
+"That is quite my opinion," replied Philippus. "And, indeed, I would beg
+you quite to forget my 'perhaps.' I live wholly in the present and am no
+prophet; but I foresee, nevertheless, that Orion will make every effort,
+cost what it may. . . ."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"To approach you again, to win your forgiveness, to touch your heart,
+to......"
+
+"Let him dare" exclaimed Paula lifting her hand with a threatening
+gesture.
+
+"And when he, gifted as he is in every way, has found his better self
+again and can come forward purified and worthy of the approbation of the
+best. . . ."
+
+"Still I will never, never forget how he has sinned and what he brought
+upon me!--Do you think that I have already forgotten your conversation
+with Neforis? You ask nothing of your friends but honest feeling akin to
+your own,--and what is it that repels me from Orion but feeling?
+Thousands have altered their behavior, but--answer me frankly--surely not
+what we mean by their feeling?"
+
+"Yes, that too," said the leech with stern gravity. "Feeling, too, may
+change. Or do you range yourself on the side of the Arab merchant and
+his fellow-Moslems, who regard man as the plaything of a blind Fate?--
+But our spiritual teachers tell us that the evil to which we are
+predestined, which is that born into the world with us, may be averted,
+turned and guided to good by what they call spiritual regeneration. But
+who that lives in the tumult of the world can ever succeed in 'killing
+himself' in their sense of the word, in dying while yet he lives, to be
+born again, a new man? The penitent's garb does not suit the stature of
+an Orion; however, there is for him another way of returning to the path
+he has lost. Fortune has hitherto offered her spoilt favorite so much
+pleasure, that sheer enjoyment has left him no time to think seriously on
+life itself; now she is showing him its graver side, she is inviting him
+to reflect; and if he only finds a friend to give him the counsel which
+my father left in a letter for me, his only child, as a youth--and if he
+is ready to listen, I regard him as saved."
+
+"And that word of counsel--what is it?" asked Paula with interest.
+
+"To put it briefly, it is this: Life is not a banquet spread by fate for
+our enjoyment, but a duty which we are bound to fulfil to the best of our
+power. Each one must test his nature and gifts, and the better he uses
+them for the weal and benefit of the body of which he was born a member,
+the higher will his inmost gladness be, the more certainly will he attain
+to a beautiful peace of mind, the less terrors will Death have for him.
+In the consciousness of having sown seed for eternity he will close his
+eyes like a faithful steward at the end of each day, and of the last hour
+vouchsafed to him on earth. If Orion recognizes this, if he submits to
+accept the duties imposed on him by existence, if he devotes himself to
+them now for the first time to the best of his powers, a day may come
+when I shall look up to him with respect--nay, with admiration. The
+shipwreck of which the Arab spoke has overtaken him. Let us see how he
+will save himself from the waves, and behave when he is cast on shore."
+
+"Let us see!" repeated Paula, "and wish that he may find such an
+adviser! As you were speaking it struck me that it was my part.--But no,
+no! He has placed himself beyond the pale of the compassion which I
+might have felt even for an enemy after such a frightful blow. He! He
+can and shall never be anything to me till the end of time. I have to
+thank you for having found me this haven of rest. Help me now to keep
+out everything that can intrude itself here to disturb my peace. If
+Orion should ever dare, for whatever purpose, to force or steal a way
+into this house, I trust to you, my friend and deliverer!"
+
+She held out her hand to Philippus, and as he took it the blood seethed
+in his veins with tender emotion.
+
+"My strength, like my heart, is wholly yours!" he exclaimed ardently.
+"Command them, and if the devoted love of a faithful, plain-spoken man--"
+
+"Say no more, no, no!" Paula broke in with anxious vehemence. "Let us
+remain closely bound together by friendship-as brother and sister."
+
+"As brother and sister?" he dully echoed with a melancholy smile. "Aye,
+friendship too is a beautiful, beautiful thing. But yet--let me speak--
+I have dreamed of love, the tossing sea of passion; I have felt its
+surges here--in here; I feel them still.... But man, man," and he struck
+his forehead with his fist, "have you forgotten, like a fool, what your
+image is in the mirror; have you forgotten that you are an ugly, clumsy
+fellow, and that the gorgeous flower you long for. . . ."
+
+Paula had shrunk back, startled by her friend's vehemence; but she now
+went up to him, and taking his hand with frank spirit, she said
+impressively:
+
+"It is not so, Philippus, my dear, kind, only friend. The gorgeous
+flower you desire I can no longer give you--or any one. It is mine no
+longer; for when it had opened, once for all, cruel feet trod it down.
+Do not abuse your mirrored image; do not call yourself a clumsy fellow.
+The best and fairest might be proud of your love, just as you are.
+Am I not proud, shall I not always be proud of your friendship?"
+
+"Friendship, friendship!" he retorted, snatching away his hand.
+"This burning, longing heart thirsts for other feelings! Oh, woman!
+I know the wretch who has trodden down the flower of flowers in your
+heart, and I, madman that I am, can sing his praises, can take his part;
+and cost what it may, I will still do so as long as you.... But perhaps
+the glorious flower may strike new roots in the soil of hatred and I, the
+hapless wretch who water it, may see it."
+
+At this, Paula again took both his hands, and exclaimed in deep and
+painful agitation of mind:
+
+"Say no more, I beg and entreat you. How can I live in peace here, under
+your protection and in constant intercourse with you, without knowing
+myself guilty of a breach of propriety such as the most sacred feelings
+of a young girl bid her avoid, if you persist in overstepping the limits
+which bound true and faithful friendship? I am a lonely girl and should
+give myself up to despair, as lost, if I could not take refuge in the
+belief that I can rely upon myself. Be satisfied with what I have to
+offer you, my friend, and may God reward you! Let us both remain worthy
+of the esteem which, thank Heaven! we are fully justified in feeling for
+each other."
+
+The physician, deeply moved, bent his head; scarcely able to control
+himself, he pressed her firm white hand to his lips, while, just at this
+moment, Perpetua and the treasurer came into the room.
+
+This worthy official--a perfectly commonplace man, neither tall nor
+short, neither old nor young, with a pale, anxious face, furrowed by work
+and responsibility, but shrewd and finely cut-glanced keenly at the pair,
+and then proceeded to lay a considerable sum in gold pieces before Paula.
+His young master had sent it, in obedience to his deceased father's
+wishes, for her immediate needs; the rest, the larger part of her
+fortune, with a full account, would be given over to her after the
+Mukaukas was buried. Nilus could, however, give her an approximate idea
+of the sum, and it was so considerable that Paula could not believe her
+ears. She now saw herself secure against external anxiety, nay, in such
+ease that she was justified in living at some expense.
+
+Philippus was present throughout the interview, and it cut him to the
+heart. It had made him so happy to think that he was all in all to the
+poor orphan, and could shelter her against pressing want. He had been
+prepared to take upon himself the care of providing Paula with the home
+she had found and everything she could need; and now, as it turned out,
+his protege was not merely higher in rank than himself, but much richer.
+
+He felt as though Orion's envoy had robbed him of the best joy in life.
+After introducing Paula to her worthy host and his family, he quitted the
+house of Rufinus with a very crushed aspect.
+
+When night came Perpetua once more enjoyed the privilege of assisting her
+young mistress to undress; but Paula could not sleep, and when she joined
+her new friends next morning she told herself that here, if anywhere, was
+the place where she might recover her lost peace, but that she must still
+have a hard struggle and a long pilgrimage before she could achieve this.
+
+
+
+
+ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+In whom some good quality or other may not be discovered
+Life is not a banquet
+
+
+
+
+
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