CHAPTER II
A DAY IN THEBES
If any foreigner
were wanting to get an idea of our country, and to see how our people
live, I suppose the first place that he would go to would be London,
because it is the capital of the whole country, and its greatest city;
and so, if we want to learn something about Egypt, and how people lived
there in those far-off days, we must try to get to the capital of the
country, and see what is to be seen there.
Suppose, then, that
we are no longer living in Britain in the twentieth century, but that
somehow or other we have got away back into the past, far beyond the
days of Jesus Christ, beyond even the times of Moses, and are living
about 1,300 years before Christ. We have come from Tyre in a Phoenician
galley, laden with costly bales of cloth dyed with Tyrian purple, and
beautiful vessels wrought in bronze and copper, to sell in the markets
of Thebes, the greatest city in Egypt. We have coasted along past
Carmel and Joppa, and, after narrowly escaping being driven in a storm
on the dangerous quicksand called the Syrtis, we have entered one of
the mouths of the Nile. We have taken up an Egyptian pilot at the river
mouth, and he stands on a little platform at the bow of the galley, and
shouts his directions to the steersmen, who work the two big rudders,
one on either side of the ship's stern. The north wind is blowing
strongly and driving us swiftly upstream, in spite of the current of
the great river; so our weary oarsmen have shipped their oars, and we
drive steadily southwards under our one big swelling sail.
At first we sail
along through a broad flat plain, partly cultivated, and partly covered
with marsh and marsh plants. By-and-by the green plain begins to grow
narrower; we are coming to the end of the Delta, and entering upon the
real valley of Egypt. Soon we pass a great city, its temples standing
out clear against the deep blue sky, with their towering gateways, gay
flags floating from tall flagstaves in front of them, and great
obelisks pointing to the sky; and our pilot says that this is Memphis,
one of the oldest towns in the country, and for long its capital. Not
far from Memphis, three great pyramid-shaped masses of stone rise up on
the river-bank, looking almost like mountains; and the pilot tells us
that these are the tombs of some of the great Kings of long past days,
and that all around them lie smaller pyramids and other tombs of Kings
and great men.
But we are bound
for a city greater even than Memphis, and so we never stop, but hasten
always southward. Several days of steady sailing carry us past many
towns that cluster near the river, past one ruined city, falling into
mere heaps of stone and brick, which our pilot tells us was once the
capital of a wicked King who tried to cast down all the old gods of
Egypt, and to set up a new god of his own; and at last we see, far
ahead of us, a huge cluster of buildings on both sides of the river,
which marks a city greater than we have ever seen.
As we sweep up the
river we see that there are really two cities. On the east bank lies
the city of the living, with its strong walls and towers, its enormous
temples, and an endless crowd of houses of all sorts and sizes, from
the gay palaces of the nobles to the mud huts of the poor people. On
the west bank lies the city of the dead. It has neither streets nor
palaces, and no hum of busy life goes up from it; but it is almost more
striking than its neighbour across the river. The hills and cliffs are
honeycombed with long rows of black openings, the doorways of the tombs
where the dead of Thebes for centuries back are sleeping. Out on the
plain, between the cliffs and the river, temple rises after temple in
seemingly endless succession. Some of these temples are small and
partly ruined, but some are very great and splendid; and, as the
sunlight strikes upon them, it sends back flashes of gold and crimson
and blue that dazzle the eyes.
Plate 2.
The Goddess Isis
dandling the King.
But now our galley
is drawing in towards the quay on the east side of the river, and in a
few minutes the great sail comes thundering down, and, as the ship
drifts slowly up to the quay, the mooring-ropes are thrown and made
fast, and our long voyage is at an end. The Egyptian Custom-house
officers come on board to examine the cargo, and collect the dues that
have to be paid on it; and we watch them with interest, for they are
quite different in appearance from our own hook-nosed, bearded sailors,
with their thick many-coloured cloaks. These Egyptians are all clean
shaven; some of them wear wigs, and some have their hair cut straight
across their brows, while it falls thickly behind upon their necks in a
multitude of little curls, which must have taken them no small trouble
to get into order. Most wear nothing but a kilt of white linen; but the
chief officer has a fine white cloak thrown over his shoulders; his
linen kilt is stiffly starched, so that it stands out almost like a
board where it folds over in front, and he wears a gilded girdle with
fringed ends which hang down nearly to his knees. In his right hand he
carries a long stick, which he is not slow to lay over the shoulders of
his men when they do not obey his orders fast enough.
After a good deal
of hot argument, the amount of the tax is settled and paid, and we are
free to go up into the great town. We have not gone far before we find
that life in Thebes can be quite exciting. A great noise is heard from
one of the narrow riverside streets, and a crowd of men comes rushing
up with shouts and oaths. Ahead of them runs a single figure, whose
writing-case, stuck in his girdle, marks him out as a scribe. He is
almost at his last gasp, for he is stout and not accustomed to running;
and he is evidently fleeing for his life, for the men behind him —
rough, half-naked, ill-fed creatures of the working class — are chasing
him with cries of anger, and a good deal of stone-throwing. Bruised and
bleeding, he darts up to the gate of a handsome house whose garden-wall
faces the street. He gasps out a word to the porter, and is quickly
passed into the garden. The gate is slammed and bolted in the faces of
his pursuers, who form a ring round it, shouting and shaking their
fists.
In a little while
the gate is cautiously unbarred, and a fine-looking man, very richly
dressed, and followed by half a dozen well-armed negro guards, steps
forward, and asks the workmen why they are here, making such a noise,
and why they have chased and beaten his secretary. He is Prince Paser,
who has charge of the Works Department of the Theban Government, and
the workmen are masons employed on a large job in the cemetery of
Thebes. They all shout at once in answer to the Prince's question; but
by-and-by they push forward a spokesman, and he begins, rather
sheepishly at first, but warming up as he goes along, to make their
complaint to the great man.
He and his mates,
he says, have been working for weeks. They have had no wages; they have
not even had the corn and oil which ought to be issued as rations to
Government workmen. So they have struck work, and now they have come to
their lord the Prince to entreat him either to give command that the
rations be issued, or, if his stores are exhausted, to appeal to
Pharaoh. "We have been driven here by hunger and thirst; we have no
clothes, we have no oil, we have no food. Write to our lord the
Pharaoh, that he may give us something for our sustenance." When the
spokesman has finished his complaint, the whole crowd volubly assents
to what he has said, and sways to and fro in a very threatening manner.
Prince Paser,
however, is an old hand at dealing with such complaints. With a smiling
face he promises that fifty sacks of corn shall be sent to the cemetery
immediately, with oil to correspond. Only the workmen must go back to
their work at once, and there must be no more chasing of poor Secretary
Amen-nachtu. Otherwise, he can do nothing. The workmen grumble a
little. They have been put off with promises before, and have got
little good of them. But they have no leader bold enough to start a
riot, and they have no weapons, and the spears and bows of the Prince's
Nubians look dangerous. Finally they turn, and disappear, grumbling,
down the street from which they came; and Prince Paser, with a shrug of
his shoulders, goes indoors again. Whether the fifty sacks of corn are
ever sent or not, is another matter. Strikes, you see, were not
unknown, even so long ago as this.
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