An Egyptian Princess, Complete
the Egyptian laws w
mal
o be distinguished among the brown, white and blue ones of the smaller Nile-boats which swarmed around them, came nearer and nearer to the expectant throng. Then at last the crown-prin
st rose a golden canopy with a purple covering, beneath which cushions were conveniently arranged. On
ere possessed, in grea
nk. Even in the tomb o
the Pyramids, we meet
elonging to a we
el; and before the ship had touched the shore the youngest of
at this glorious sight, and even the grave faces of so
s much-admired
known under the name
gave him this name
of Bisitun or Behistu
el, Bardiya. We have c
, the former, which is
of the
ing of Persia, and had been endowed by nature with every
sel, and his slender but muscular figure told of strength and activity. The splendor of his apparel was proportioned to his personal beauty. A brilliant star of diamonds and turquoises glittered in the front of his tiara. An upper garment of rich white and gold brocade reaching just below the knees, was fastened round the waist
arms, adorned with many costly bracelets of gold and jewels; r
than he. The third to disembark was an aged man with snow-white hair, in whose face the gentle and kind expression of childhood was united, with the intellect of a man, and the experience of old age.
oots, which are consta
the oracle "s
ed as a synonyme for the highest point of worldly riches attainable by mankind. The old man to whom we are now introduced is no other than Croesus, the dethroned
ja and Darius; and, lastly, by his own son, the slender, pale Gyges, who after having become dumb in his fourth year through
on their breasts, cast themselves on the earth before the heir to the Egyptian throne. When the first formalities were over, Bartja, according to the custom of his native country, but greatly to the astonishment of the populace, who were totally unaccustomed
ut the larger number remained at their places, knowing
, Puhor, and the high-priest says so too, that these strangers can bring no good to the black land! I am for the good old times, when no one who cared for his life
Hebrews (Apuriu) by th
See Ebers, Aegypten
this o
priest says that in the whole of their kingdom, which is as large as half the world, there is not a single temple to the
correct, as the Persia
enidae, had no temple
d to the dogs and vul
efile the pure earth b
he fire or water for
lly polluted by such
e dead bodies to vanis
which had to be cove
our inches thick, and
structure was as it we
ontact with the pure
I
was even greater than his astonishment, an
, there is the sixth boat
his manner until the strangers drive him from his throne and country, and plunder and make slaves of us poo
boat!" shoute
d of three, eight had to be procured, for these despisers of the gods and profaners of dead bodies have not only brought kitchen utensils, dogs, horses, carriages, chests, baskets and bales, but have dragged with them, thousands of miles, a whole host of se
bassy shortly after their arrival with all
ning without exception, he went forth to walk with Croesus in the royal gardens. The remaining members of th
lar in their arrangement to those of Rhodopis, lay in
of red granite, into which an abundance of clear water flowed perpetually th
orous spirit sparkled in the small, flashing eyes, and an expression of raillery, sly banter, and at times, even of irony, played around his remarkably full lips. The low, broad brow, the large and beautifully-arched head bespoke great mental power, and in the changing color of his eyes one seemed to read that n
highest and noblest minds of Greece. Thales, Anaximander and Anaximenes of Miletus, Bias of Priene, Solon of Athens, Pittakus of Lesbos, the most celebrated Hellenic philosop
of Ionian origin, flo
ebrated for his wise m
took place during his
emple was erected to
Diog.
e reasons: thou art better acquainted with most of the countries and nations of this earth; the gods have not only allowed thee to ascend the ladder of fortune to its utmost summit, but also to descend it, and thirdly, thou hast long been the first
thine eyes, in spite of opposition near and around thee. I am thankful for the favor shown to the Hellenes, my friends, and I regar
good came first, the evil later; whereas in my own this order has been reversed. In saying this,
, "must be assuming that I am unhappy i
herwise after the loss of
, which the envious gods vouchsafe more often to the needy than to the mighty. The clear sight of the latter becomes dazzled by the glittering treasure, and they ca
eak. Terror had loosened his tongue; in that dreadful hour Gyges learnt once more to speak, and I, who but the moment before had been cursing the gods, bowed down before their power. I had commanded a slave to kill me the moment I should be taken prisoner by the Persians, but now I deprived him of his sword. I was a changed man, and by degrees learnt ever more and more to subdue the rage and indignation which yet from time to time would boil up again within my soul, rebellious against my fate and my noble enemies. Thou knowest that at last I became the friend of Cyrus, and that my son grew up at his court, a free man at my side, having entirely regained the use of his speech. Everything beautiful and good that I had heard, seen or thought during my long life I treasured up now for him; he was my kingdom, my
ures the while in the sand with the gold
verlooked, and among my equals, (the other under-officers) there could be no fun or merry-making unless I took a share in it. My predecessor king Hophra sent us against Cyrene. Seized with thirst in the desert, we refused to go on; and a suspicion that the king intended to sacrifice us to the Greek mercenaries drove the army to open mutiny. In my usual joking manner I called out to my friends: 'You can never get on without a king, take me for your ruler; a merrier you will never find!' The soldiers caught the w
t this would have been inconsistent with my new position, and have undermined my authority. One day, therefore, when the officers of the host were at one of my banquets and attempting, as usual, to maintain their old convivial footing, I showed the
ine article Phra, mu
un-worship of the Egyp
dation of their entir
at Heliopolis. Plato
fited by the teachin
as memorial monuments
were recorded, were s
they represented the
f light, the director
he reigned, as Osir
rit
transformed the despised vessel into which ye spat and in which men washed your feet, into this divine image. Such a vessel was I, but the Deity, which can fashion better and more quic
e other prop, I fixed on the Hellenes, knowing that in all military qualifications one Greek is worth more than fi
t, Pythagoras. I endeavored to introduce Greek art and manners among ourselves, seeing what folly lay in a self-willed adherence to that wh
me with overthrow and ruin whenever I attempt to accomplish anything new. The priests are my opponents, my masters, they hang like a dead weight upon me. Clinging with superstitious awe to all that is old and traditionary, abominating everything foreign, and regarding every stranger as the natural enemy of their authority and their teaching, they can lead the
not have believed that an entire race of human beings existed, to whom a gloomy, sullen heart was as natural as a poisonous tooth to the serpent. Yet it is true, that on my journey hither and during my residence at this court I have se
a stranger is odious to the priests, and the moroseness which thou observest is intended as retaliation on me for my alliance with the strangers. Those very boys, of whom thou spakest, are the greatest torment of my life. They perform for me the service of slaves, and obey my slightest nod. One might imagine that the parents who devote their children to this service, and who are the highest in rank
h these spies and select servants from the military caste,
being watched. To-morrow I will have that grove of fig-trees yonder uprooted. The young priest there, who seems so fond of gardening, has other fruit in his mind beside
father Zeus,
ty, I must submit, at least in the main, to the ceremonies handed down through thousands of years. Were I to burst these fetters, I know positively that at
om among the ancient
k narrators, but by t
vered in the chamb
ed Croesus, becoming angry. "We
What has been sung to us in our childhood, and praised as sacred in our youth, lingers on in the heart until the day which sees us embalmed as mummies. I am an old man and have but a short span yet to run, before I reach the landmark which separates us from that farther country. For the sake of life's few
onsidered as a part of
r the death of the bod
The Egyptian Cosmos
ens, the Earth and the
e vault of heaven, the
ets and fixed stars.
ircle in their ships,
who sit enthroned ab
rs. The mouth of this
d rises from the mists
he surface of the eart
e in the three great
m the heights of heave
al body is of the eart
one human being is dis
or shadow-belongs to
ow separate from one
om whence it came, to
he body, to be commit
n the image of its cr
to the depths, the ki
as placed in the West
own daily,-where he
onding conceptions co
departing, being born
ody after death from
f inward decay, but a
eligion of ancient Egy
y the priests on sani
deliverance of the s
with the source of Li
idea, one and indivi
was supposed to remai
dy during a long cycl
he body from time to t
various forms and pla
the hour, and were pre
lineat
fficult to enter into such thoughts. Tell me rathe
ear as if placed there to repel entrance. Your many-colored hieroglyphics likewise attract the gaze, but baffle the inquiring spirit by the mystery that lies within their characters. The images of your manifold gods are everywhere to be seen; they crowd on our gaze, and yet who knows not that their real is not their apparent significance? that they are mere outward images of thoughts accessible only to
ot be celebrated and esteemed as they are, if we did not believe that their skill could prolong our earthly existence. This remi
. It was Nebenchari who first spoke to Cambyses of the charms of thy daughter Tachot. But we deplore that he understands d
ed, pursued by the priests (to whose caste the physicians belong) with a most praiseworthy earnestness in all branches of science. Yonder lies the house of the high-priest Neithotep, whose knowledge of astronomy and geometry was so highly praised, even by Pythagoras. It lies next to the porch leading into the temple of the goddess Neith, the protectress of Sais. Would I could show thee the sacred grove with its magnificent trees, the splendid pillars of the temple with capitals modelled from the lotus-flower, and
ther; and she will need my help, for the apartments of the women in the Persian palaces are dangerous ground. But she will meet with great consideration. Cambyses may b
es of the journey and the pain of separation. Indeed were I to follow the dictates of my own heart, Nitetis sh
PTE
the Nile to the pyramids. Prexaspes alone, the ambassador from Cambyses, had already
ssy, nearly three hundred in number, and by the high guests themselves, to whom every possible attention was paid. The
ial display of the wealth and splendor of his court, at
s hung against the walls and threw a strange light on the scene, something like that when the sun's rays strike through colored glass. The space between the columns and the walls was filled with cho
ables covered with dishes of all kinds, cold roast meats, sweets, well-arranged basket
emselves in handing these dishes to the guests, who, either standing around, or rec
le nosegays from the young priests in the personal service of the king, and many a youth of high degree appe
ond-shaped eyes, whose loveliness was heightened by having their lids dyed with the eye-paint called "mestem." The majority wore their hair arranged in the same manner; the wealth of waving brown locks floated back over the shoulders and was brushed behind the ears, one braid being
with rings; the finger-nails were stained red, according to Egyptian custom, a
ning finger-nails) is
a, Laosonia spinosa,
r the purpose. The Eg
t it will be difficult
for coloring the eye
employed. The Papyru
ony, which is frequen
monuments belongin
rao
tis, the Pharaoh's daughter, among the women, were equally conspicuous for their superior beauty, grace and charms. The royal maiden wore a transparent rose-colo
ed the young Persians to her children. A light lace robe was thrown over her garment of purple, embroidered wit
and every movement betrayed the grace
Egyptian Tentcheta, mother of Psamtik the heir to the throne,) had followed his
s, were called twin-sisters, but showed no signs
Nitetis, on the other hand, tall and majestic, with black hair
is' cheek. "Be of good courage, and meet thy future bravely.
ong and enquiringly on the beautiful youth. He bowed low
husband is a great hero, and a powerful king; our mother is the noblest of women, and among the Persians the beauty and virtue of woman is as much revered as the life-givi
a seat immediately opposite the dancing-girls, who were just about to display their skill for the entertainment of the guests. A thin petticoat was the only clothing of these girls,
ok the hall, their grave demeanor bei
as well as men, are to
icated condition. One
ood, on the heads of