<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>THE CAT OF BUBASTES.</h1>
<h3><span class="smcap">By</span> G. A. HENTY,</h3>
<hr/>
<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
<p class="center"><strong>THE KING OF THE REBU.</strong></p>
<p>The sun was blazing down upon a city on the western
shore of the Caspian. It was a primitive city, and yet
its size and population rendered it worthy of the term.
It consisted of a vast aggregation of buildings, which
were for the most part mere huts. Among them rose,
however, a few of more solid build and of higher
pretensions. These were the abodes of the chiefs and great
men, the temples, and places of assembly. But although
larger and more solidly built, these buildings could lay
no claim to architectural beauty of any kind, but were
little more than magnified huts, and even the king’s
palace was but a collection of such buildings closely
adjoining each other.</p>
<p>The town was surrounded by a lofty wall with battlements
and loopholes, and a similar but higher wall girt
in the dwellings of the king and of his principal
captains. The streets were alive with the busy multitude;
and it was evident that although in the arts of peace the
nation had made but little progress, they had in every
thing appertaining to war made great advances. Most
of the men wore helmets closely fitting to the head and
surmounted by a spike. These were for the most part
composed of hammered brass, although some of the headpieces
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8"></SPAN></span>
were made of tough hide studded with knobs of
metal. All carried round shields—those of the soldiers,
of leather stiffened with metal; those of the captains, of
brass, worked with considerable elaboration.</p>
<p>In their belts all wore daggers, while at their backs
were slung quivers of iron; painted bows hung over one
shoulder, and some had at their waist a pouch of smooth
flat stones and leather slings. Their chief garment was
a sort of kilt falling to the knee. Above the waist some
wore only a thin vest of white linen, others a garment
not unlike the nightgown of modern times, but with
short sleeves. The kilt was worn over this. Some had
breastpieces of thick leather confined by straps behind;
while in the case of the officers the leather was covered
with small pieces of metal, forming a cuirass.</p>
<p>All carried two or three javelins in the left hand and a
spear some ten feet long in the right. Horsemen galloped
about at full speed to and from the royal palace,
while occasionally chariots, drawn sometimes by one,
sometimes by two horses, dashed along. These chariots
were small, the wheels not exceeding three feet in height.
Between them was placed the body of the vehicle, which
was but just large enough for two men to stand on. It
consisted only of a small platform, with a semicircular
rail running round the front some eighteen inches above
it. A close observer would have perceived at once that
not only were the males of the city upon the point of
marching out on a military expedition, but that it was
no mere foray against a neighboring people, but a war
on which the safety of the city depended.</p>
<p>Women were standing in tearful groups as they
watched the soldiers making toward the gates. The men
themselves had a resolute and determined look, but there
was none of the light-hearted gayety among them which
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9"></SPAN></span>
betokened the expectation of success and triumph. Inside
the palace the bustle of preparation was as marked
as without. The king and his principal councilors and
leaders were assembled in the great circular hut which
formed the audience-room and council-chamber. Messengers
arrived in close succession with news of the
progress and strength of the enemy, or with messages
from the neighboring towns and tribes as to the contingents
they had furnished, and the time at which these
had set out to join the army.</p>
<p>The king himself was a tall and warlike figure, in the
prime of life. He had led his warriors on many successful
expeditions far to the west, and had repulsed with
great loss the attempts of the Persians to encroach upon
his territory. Standing behind him was his son, Amuba,
a lad of some fifteen years of age. The king and his
councilors, as well as all the wealthier inhabitants of the
city, wore, in addition to the kilt and linen jacket, a long
robe highly colored and ornamented with fanciful devices
and having a broad rich border. It was fastened at the
neck with a large brooch, fell loosely from the shoulders
to the ankles, and was open in front. The girdles which
retained the kilts and in which the daggers were worn
were highly ornamented, and the ends fell down in front
and terminated in large tassels.</p>
<p>All wore a profusion of necklaces, bracelets, and other
ornaments of gold; many of the chiefs wore feathers in
their helmets, and the greater portion of all ranks had
figures tattooed on their arms and legs. They were fair
in complexion, with blue eyes; their hair was for the
most part golden or red, and they wore their beards
short and pointed. The young Prince Amuba was attired
for the field; his helmet was of gold and his cuirass covered
with plates of the same metal. He listened with
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10"></SPAN></span>
suppressed impatience to the arguments of his elders, for
he was eager to be off, this being the first time that he
had been permitted to take part in the military expeditions
of his country.</p>
<p>After listening for some time and perceiving that there
was no prospect of the council breaking up, he retired to
the large hut adjoining the council-chamber. This
served as the dwelling place of the ladies and their
family. It was divided into several apartments by
screens formed of hide sewn together and hidden from
sight by colored hangings. In one of these a lady was
seated on a low couch covered with panthers’ skins.</p>
<p>“They have not done talking yet, mother. It has been
a question as to where we shall assemble to give battle.
It does not seem to me to make much difference where we
fight, but they seem to think that it is most important;
and of course they know more about it than I do. They
have fixed upon a place at last—it is about fifteen miles
from here. They say that the ground in front is marshy
and can hardly be traversed by the enemy’s chariots; but
if they cannot get at us, it seems to me that we cannot get
at them. Messengers have been sent off to order all the
contingents to assemble at that spot. Six thousand men
are to remain behind to guard the city, but as we mean
to beat them I do not think there can be much occasion
for that; for you think we shall beat them—don’t you,
mother?”</p>
<p>“I hope so, Amuba, but I am very fearful.”</p>
<p>“But we have several times repulsed them when they
have invaded our country, mother; why should we not
do so this time?”</p>
<p>“They are much stronger than they have ever been before
when they have come against us, my boy, and their
king is a great warrior who has been successful in almost
every enterprise he has undertaken.”</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11"></SPAN></span>
“I cannot think why he wants to conquer us, mother.
They say the riches of Egypt are immense and the
splendor of their temples and buildings such as we have
no idea of. We have no quarrel with them if they will
but let us alone.”</p>
<p>“No country is so rich that it does not desire more,
my son. We have gold and are skilled in the working
of it, and no doubt they anticipate that they will capture
much treasure in the land; besides, as you say, their
expeditions against the Rebu have been several times
repulsed, and therefore their monarch will reap all the
greater honor if he should defeat us. As to their having
no quarrel with us, have we not made many expeditions
to the west, returning with captives and much booty?
And yet the people had no quarrel with us—many of
them, indeed, could scarcely have known us by name
when our army appeared among them. Some day, my
son, things may be managed differently; but at present
kings who have power make war upon people that are
weaker than themselves, spoil them of their goods, and
make slaves of them.</p>
<p>“I hope, Amuba, you will not expose yourself too
much in the conflict. You have not come to man’s
strength yet; and remember you are my only child. See
that your charioteer covers you with his shield when you
have entered the battle, for the Egyptians are terrible as
archers. Their bows carry much further than do ours,
and the arrows will pierce even the strongest armor. Our
spearmen have always shown themselves as good as theirs—nay,
better, for they are stronger in body and full of
courage. It is in the goodness of her archers and the
multitude of her chariots that the strength of Egypt lies.
Remember that although your father, as king, must needs
go into the thick of the battle to encourage his soldiers,
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12"></SPAN></span>
there is no occasion why you, who are yet a boy, should
so expose yourself.</p>
<p>“It will doubtless be a terrible battle. The Egyptians
have the memory of past defeats to wipe out, and they
will be fighting under the eye of their king. I am
terrified, Amuba. Hitherto when your father has gone out
to battle I have never doubted as to the result. The
Persians were not foes whom brave men need dread; nor
was it difficult to force the hordes passing us from the
eastward toward the setting sun to respect our country,
for we had the advantage in arms and discipline. But
the Egyptians are terrible foes, and the arms of their
king have been everywhere victorious. My heart is filled
with dread at the thought of the approaching conflict,
though I try to keep up a brave face when your father is
with me, for I would not that he should deem me cowardly.”</p>
<p>“I trust, mother, that your fears are groundless, and I
cannot think that our men will give way when fighting
for their homes and country upon ground chosen by
themselves.”</p>
<p>“I hope not, Amuba. But there is the trumpet sounding;
it is the signal that the council have broken up and
that your father is about to start. Bless you, my dear
boy, and may you return safe and sound from the conflict!”</p>
<p>The queen fondly embraced her son, who left the
apartment hastily as his father entered in order that the
latter might not see the traces of tears on his cheeks.
A few minutes later the king, with his captains, started
from the palace. Most of them rode in chariots, the rest
on horseback. The town was quiet now and the streets
almost deserted. With the exception of the garrison, all
the men capable of bearing arms had gone forth; the
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13"></SPAN></span>
women with anxious faces stood in groups at their doors
and watched the royal party as it drove out.</p>
<p>The charioteer of Amuba was a tall and powerful man;
he carried a shield far larger than was ordinarily used,
and had been specially selected by the king for the service.
His orders were that he was not to allow Amuba to
rush into the front line of fighters, and that he was even
to disobey the orders of the prince if he wished to charge
into the ranks of the enemy.</p>
<p>“My son must not shirk danger,” his father said,
“and he must needs go well in the fight; but he is still
but a boy, not fit to enter upon a hand-to-hand contest
with the picked warriors of Egypt. In time I hope he
will fight abreast of me, but at present you must restrain
his ardor. I need not bid you shield him as well as you
can from the arrows of the Egyptians. He is my eldest
son, and if aught happens to me he will be the king of
the Rebu; and his life is therefore a precious one.”</p>
<p>Half an hour later they came upon the tail of the stragglers
making their way to the front. The king stopped
his chariot and sharply reproved some of them for their
delay in setting out, and urged them to hasten on to the
appointed place. In two hours the king arrived at this
spot, where already some forty thousand men were assembled.
The scouts who had been sent out reported that
although the advance-guard of the Egyptians might
arrive in an hour’s time, the main body were some distance
behind and would not be up in time to attack
before dark.</p>
<p>This was welcome news, for before night the rest of the
forces of the Rebu, fully thirty thousand more, would
have joined. The king at once set out to examine the
ground chosen by his general for the conflict. It sloped
gently down in front to a small stream which ran through
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14"></SPAN></span>
soft and marshy ground, and would oppose a formidable
obstacle to the passage of chariots. The right rested
upon a dense wood, while a village a mile and a half distant
from the wood was held by the left wing.</p>
<p>A causeway which led from this across the marsh had
been broken up, and heavy blocks of stone were scattered
thickly upon it to impede the passage of chariots. The
archers were placed in front to harass the enemy attempting
to cross. Behind them were the spearmen in readiness
to advance and aid them if pressed. The chariots
were on the higher ground in the rear ready to dash in
and join in the conflict should the enemy succeed in
forcing their way through the marsh.</p>
<p>The visit of inspection was scarcely finished when a
cloud of dust was seen rising over the plain. It approached
rapidly. The flash of arms could be seen in the
sun, and presently a vast number of horses were seen
approaching in even line.</p>
<p>“Are they horsemen, father?” Amuba asked.</p>
<p>“No, they are chariots, Amuba. The Egyptians do
not, like us, fight on horseback, although there may be a
few small bodies of horsemen with the army; their
strength lies in their chariots. See, they have halted;
they have perceived our ranks drawn up in order of
battle.”</p>
<p>The chariots drew up in perfect line, and as the clouds
of dust blew away four lines of chariots could be made
out ranged at a distance of a hundred yards apart.</p>
<p>“There are about a thousand in each line,” the king
said, “and this is but their advance-guard. We have
learned from fugitives that there are fully fifteen thousand
chariots with their army.”</p>
<p>“Is there no other place where they can pass this
swamp, father?”</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15"></SPAN></span>
“Not so well as here, Amuba; the valley deepens further
on, and the passage would be far more difficult than
here. Above, beyond the wood, there is a lake of considerable
extent, and beyond that the ground is broken
and unsuited for the action of chariots as far as the sea.
Besides, they have come to fight us, and the pride of
their king would not permit of their making a detour.
See, there is some great personage, probably the king
himself, advancing beyond their ranks to reconnoiter the
ground.”</p>
<p>A chariot was indeed approaching the opposite brow of
the depression; there were two figures in it; by the side
walked numerous figures, who, although too far off to be
distinguished, were judged to be the attendants and
courtiers of the king. The sun flashed from the side of
the chariot, which appeared at this distance to be composed
of burnished gold. Great fans carried on wands
shaded the king from the heat of the sun.</p>
<p>He drove slowly along the edge of the brow until he
reached a point opposite the wood, and then, turning,
went the other way till he reached the causeway which
passed on through the village. After this he rode back
to the line of chariots and evidently gave a word of command,
for instantly the long line of figures seen above the
horses disappeared as the men stepped off the chariots
to the ground. No movement took place for an hour;
then there was a sudden stir, and the long lines broke up
and wheeled round to the right and left, where they took
up their position in two solid masses.</p>
<p>“The main army are at hand,” the king said. “Do
you see that great cloud, ruddy in the setting sun?
That is the dust raised by their advance. In another
hour they will be here, but by that time the sun will
have set, and assuredly they will not attack until morning.”</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16"></SPAN></span>
The front line were ordered to remain under arms for
a time; the others were told to fall out and prepare their
food for the night. The Egyptian army halted about a
mile distant, and as soon as it was evident that no further
movement was intended, the whole of the soldiers
were ordered to fall out. A line of archers were placed
along the edge of the swamp, and ere long a party of
Egyptian bowmen took up their post along the opposite
crest. Great fires were lighted, and a number of oxen
which had been driven forward in readiness were slaughtered
for food.</p>
<p>“If the Egyptians can see what is going on,” the king
said to his son, “they must be filled with fury, for they
worship the oxen as among their chief gods.”</p>
<p>“Is it possible, father, that they can believe that cattle
are gods?” Amuba asked in surprise.</p>
<p>“They do not exactly look upon them as gods, my son,
but as sacred to their gods. Similarly they reverence
the cat, the ibis, and many other creatures.”</p>
<p>“How strange!” Amuba said. “Do they not worship,
as we and the Persians do, the sun, which, as all
must see, is the giver of light and heat, which ripens our
crops and gives fertility in abundance?”</p>
<p>“Not so far as I know, Amuba; but I know that they
have many gods who they believe give them victory over
their enemies.”</p>
<p>“They don’t always give them victory,” Amuba said,
“since four times they have been repulsed in their endeavors
to invade our land. Perhaps our gods are more
powerful than theirs.”</p>
<p>“It may be that, my son; but so far as I can see the
gods give victory to the bravest and most numerous
armies.”</p>
<p>“That is to say, they do not interfere at all, father.”</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17"></SPAN></span>
“I do not say that, my son; we know little of the ways
of the gods. Each nation has its own, and as some
nations overthrow others, it must be that either some
gods are more powerful than others or that they do not
interfere to save those who worship them from destruction.
But these things are all beyond our knowledge.
We have but to do our part bravely, and we need assuredly
not fear the bulls and the cats and other creatures
in which the Egyptians trust.”</p>
<p>Some hours were spent by the king, his leaders, and
his captains in going about among the troops seeing that
all the contingents had arrived well armed and in good
order, notifying to the leaders of each the position they
should take up in the morning, and doing all in their
power to animate and encourage the soldiers. When all
was done the king sat down on a pile of skins which had
been prepared for him and talked long and earnestly
with his son, giving him advice as to his conduct in
future if aught should befall him in the coming fight.</p>
<p>“You are my heir,” he said, “and as is customary to
the country the throne goes down from father to son.
Were I to survive for another eight or ten years you
would, of course, succeed me, but should I fall to-morrow
and should the Egyptians overrun the land, things may
happen otherwise. In that case the great need of the
people would be a military leader who would rouse them
to prolonged resistance and lead them again and again
against the Egyptians until these, worn out by the perpetual
fighting, abandon the idea of subjecting us and
turn their attention to less stubborn-minded people.</p>
<p>“For such work you are far too young, and the people
would look to Amusis or one of my other captains as
their leader. Should success crown his efforts they may
choose him as their king. In that case I would say,
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18"></SPAN></span>
Amuba, it will be far better for you to acquiesce in the
public choice than to struggle against it. A lad like you
would have no prospect of success against a victorious
general, the choice of the people, and you would only
bring ruin and death upon yourself and your mother by
opposing him.</p>
<p>“I can assure you that there is nothing so very greatly
to be envied in the lot of a king, and as one of the nobles
of the land your position would be far more pleasant here
than as king. A cheerful acquiescence on your part to
their wishes will earn you the good will of the people,
and at the death of him whom they may choose for their
king their next choice may fall upon you. Do all in
your power to win the good will of whoever may take the
place of leader at my death by setting an example of
prompt and willing obedience to his orders. It is easy
for an ambitious man to remove a lad from his path, and
your safety absolutely demands that you shall give him
no reason whatever to regard you as a rival.</p>
<p>“I trust that all this advice may not be needed and
that we may conquer in to-morrow’s fight, but if we are
beaten the probability that I shall escape is very small,
and it is therefore as well that you should be prepared
for whatever may happen. If you find that in spite of
following my advice the leader of the people, whoever he
may be, is ill-disposed toward you, withdraw to the
borders of the country, collect as large a band as you
can—there are always plenty of restless spirits ready to
take part in any adventure—and journey with them to
the far west, as so many of our people have done before,
and establish yourself there and found a kingdom.</p>
<p>“None of those who have ever gone in that direction
have returned, and they must therefore have found space
to establish themselves, for had they met with people
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19"></SPAN></span>
skilled in war and been defeated, some at least would
have found their way back; but so long as traditions
have been handed down to us tribes from the east have
poured steadily westward to the unknown land, and no
band has ever returned.”</p>
<p>His father spoke so seriously that Amuba lay down
that night on his couch of skins in a very different mood
to that in which he had ridden out. He had thought
little of his mother’s forebodings, and had looked upon
it as certain that the Rebu would beat the Egyptians as
they had done before, but his father’s tone showed him
that he too felt by no means confident of the issue of the
day.</p>
<p>As soon as daylight broke the Rebu stood to their
arms, and an hour later dense masses of the Egyptians
were seen advancing. As soon as these reached the edge
of the slope and began to descend toward the stream, the
king ordered his people to advance to the edge of the
swamp and to open fire with their arrows.</p>
<p>A shower of missiles flew through the air and fell
among the ranks of the Egyptian footmen who had just
arrived at the edge of the swamp. So terrible was the
discharge that the Egyptians recoiled and, retreating
halfway up the slope, where they would be beyond the
reach of the Rebu, in turn discharged their arrows. The
superiority of the Egyptian bowmen was at once manifest.
They carried very powerful bows, and standing
sideways drew them to the ear, just as the English
archers did at Crecy, and therefore shot their arrows a
vastly greater distance than did their opponents, who
were accustomed to draw their bows only to the breast.</p>
<p>Scores of the Rebu fell at the first discharge, and as
the storm of arrows continued, they, finding themselves
powerless to damage the Egyptians at that distance,
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20"></SPAN></span>
retired halfway up the side of the slope. Now from
behind the lines of the Egyptian archers a column of men
advanced a hundred abreast, each carrying a great fagot.
Their object was evident: they were about to prepare a
wide causeway across the marsh by which the chariots
could pass. Again the Rebu advanced to the edge of the
swamp and poured in their showers of arrows; but the
Egyptians, covering themselves with the bundles of fagots
they carried, suffered but little harm, while the Rebu
were mown down by the arrows of the Egyptian archers
shooting calmly and steadily beyond the range of their
missiles.</p>
<p>As soon as the front rank of the Egyptian column
reached the edge of the swampy ground the men of the
front line laid down their fagots in a close row and then
retired in the intervals between their comrades behind
them. Each rank as it arrived at the edge did the same.
Many fell beneath the arrows of the Rebu, but the operation
went on steadily, the fagots being laid down two
deep as the ground became more marshy, and the Rebu
saw, with a feeling approaching dismay, the gradual but
steady advance of a causeway two hundred yards wide
across the swamp.</p>
<p>The king himself and his bravest captains, alighting
from their chariots, went down among the footmen and
urged them to stand firm, pointing out that every yard
the causeway advanced their arrows inflicted more fatal
damage among the men who were forming it. Their
entreaties, however, were vain; the ground facing the
causeway was already thickly incumbered with dead, and
the hail of the Egyptian arrows was so fast and deadly
that even the bravest shrank from withstanding it. At
last even their leaders ceased to urge them, and the king
gave the order for all to fall back beyond the range of
the Egyptian arrows.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21"></SPAN></span>
Some changes were made in the formation of the
troops, and the best and most disciplined bands were
placed facing the causeway so as to receive the charge of
the Egyptian chariots. The two front lines were of
spearmen, while on the higher ground behind them were
placed archers whose orders were to shoot at the horses,
and to pay no heed to those in the chariots; then came
the chariots, four hundred in number. Behind these
again was a deep line of spearmen; on the right and left
extending to the wood and village were the main body of
the army, who were to oppose the Egyptian footmen
advancing across the swamp.</p>
<p>The completion of the last portion of the causeway cost
the Egyptians heavily, for while they were exposed to
the arrows of the Rebu archers these were now beyond
the range of the Egyptians on the opposite crest. But
at last the work was completed. Just as it was finished
and the workmen had retired, the king leaped from his
chariot, and, leading a body of a hundred men carrying
blazing brands, dashed down the slope. As soon as they
were seen the Egyptian archers ran forward and a storm
of arrows was poured into the little band. Two-thirds
of them fell ere they reached the causeway; the others
applied their torches to the fagots.</p>
<p>The Egyptian footmen rushed across to extinguish the
flames, while the Rebu poured down to repel them. A
desperate fight ensued, but the bravery of the Rebu prevailed,
and the Egyptians were driven back. Their attack,
however, had answered its purpose, for in the
struggle the fagots had been trodden deeper into the
mire, and the fire was extinguished. The Rebu now
went back to their first position and waited the attack
which they were powerless to avert. It was upward of
an hour before it began, then the long line of Egyptian
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22"></SPAN></span>
footmen opened, and their chariots were seen fifty
abreast, then with a mighty shout the whole army advanced
down the slope. The Rebu replied with their warcry.</p>
<p>At full speed the Egyptian chariots dashed down the
declivity to the causeway. This was the signal for the
Rebu archers to draw their bows, and in an instant confusion
was spread among the first line of chariots. The
horses wounded by the missiles plunged madly. Many,
stepping between the fagots, fell. For a moment the
advance was checked, but the Egyptian footmen, entering
the swamp waist-deep, opened such a terrible fire
with their arrows that the front line of the Rebu were
forced to fall back, and the aim of their archers became
wild and uncertain.</p>
<p>In vain the king endeavored to steady them. While
he was doing so, the first of the Egyptian chariots had
already made their way across the causeway, and behind
them the others poured on in an unbroken column. Then
through the broken lines of spearmen the Rebu chariots
dashed down upon them, followed by the host of spearmen.
The king’s object was to arrest the first onslaught
of the Egyptians, to overwhelm the leaders, and prevent
the mass behind from emerging from the crowded causeway.</p>
<p>The shock was terrible. Horses and chariots rolled
over in wild confusion, javelins were hurled, bows
twanged, and the shouts of the combatants and the cries
of the wounded as they fell beneath the feet of the struggling
horses created a terrible din. Light and active,
the Rebu footmen mingled in the fray, diving under the
bellies of the Egyptian horses, and inflicting vital stabs
with their long knives or engaging in hand-to-hand conflicts
with the dismounted Egyptians. Amuba had
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23"></SPAN></span>
charged down with the rest of the chariots. He was stationed
in the second line, immediately behind his father;
and his charioteer, mindful of the orders he had received,
strove, in spite of the angry orders of the lad, to keep the
chariot stationary; but the horses, accustomed to maneuver
in line, were not to be restrained, and in spite of
their driver’s efforts charged down the slope with the
rest.</p>
<p>Amuba, who had hunted the lion and leopard, retained
his coolness, and discharged his arrows among the
Egyptians with steady aim. For a time the contest was
doubtful. The Egyptian chariots crowded on the causeway
were unable to move forward, and in many places
their weight forced the fagots so deep in the mire that
the vehicles were immovable. Meanwhile, along the
swamp on both sides a terrible contest was going on.
The Egyptians, covered by the fire of their arrows, succeeded
in making their way across the swamp, but here
they were met by the Rebu spearmen, and the fight raged
along the whole line.</p>
<p>Then two thousand chosen men, the bodyguard of the
Egyptian king, made their way across the swamp close
to the causeway, while at the same time there was a
movement among the densely packed vehicles. A tremendous
impulse was given to them from behind: some
were pressed off into the swamp, some were overthrown
or trampled under foot, some were swept forward on to
the firm ground beyond, and thus a mass of the heaviest
chariots drawn by the most powerful horses forced their
way across the causeway over all obstacles.</p>
<p>In their midst was the King of Egypt himself, the
great Thotmes.</p>
<p>The weight and impetus of the mass of horses and
chariots pressed all before it up the hill. This gave to
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24"></SPAN></span>
the chariots which came on behind room to open to the
right and left. The king’s bodyguard shook the solid
formation of the Rebu spearmen with their thick flights
of arrows, and the chariots then dashed in among them.
The Rebu fought with the valor of their race. The
Egyptians who first charged among them fell pierced
with their arrows, while their horses were stabbed in
innumerable places. But as the stream of chariots
poured over without a check, and charged in sections
upon them, bursting their way through the mass of footmen
by the force and fury with which they charged,
the infantry became broken up into groups, each fighting
doggedly and desperately.</p>
<p>At this moment the officer in command of the Rebu
horse, a thousand strong, charged down upon the Egyptian
chariots, drove them back toward the swamp, and
for a time restored the conflict; but the breaks which had
occurred between the Rebu center and its two flanks had
enabled the Egyptian bodyguard to thrust themselves
through and to fall upon the Rebu chariots and spearmen,
who were still maintaining the desperate conflict.
The Rebu king had throughout fought in the front line
of his men, inspiriting them with his voice and valor.
Many times, when his chariot was so jammed in the mass
that all movement was impossible, he leaped to the
ground, and, making his way through the throng, slew
many of the occupants of the Egyptian chariots.</p>
<p>But his efforts and those of his captains were unavailing.
The weight of the attack was irresistible. The
solid phalanx of Egyptian chariots pressed onward, and
the Rebu were forced steadily back. Their chariots,
enormously outnumbered, were destroyed rather than
defeated. The horses fell pierced by the terrible rain of
arrows, and the wave of Egyptians passed over them.
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25"></SPAN></span>
The king, looking round in his chariot, saw that all was
lost here, and that the only hope was to gain one or other
of the masses of his infantry on the flank, and to lead
them off the field in solid order. But as he turned to
give orders, a shaft sent by a bowman in a chariot a few
yards away struck him in the eye and he fell back dead
in his chariot.</p>
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