<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_185" id="Page_185"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>CHAPTER X.</h2>
<p class="center"><strong>THE CAT OF BUBASTES.</strong></p>
<p>For several days, upon paying their morning visit to
the birds and other pets in the inclosure in the garden,
Chebron and Mysa had observed an unusual timidity
among them. The wildfowl, instead of advancing to
meet them with demonstrations of welcome, remained
close among the reeds, and even the ibis did not respond
at once to their call.</p>
<p>“They must have been alarmed at something,” Chebron
said the third morning. “Some bird of prey must
have been swooping down upon them. See here, there
are several feathers scattered about, and some of them
are stained with blood. Look at that pretty drake that
was brought to us by the merchants in trade with the far
East. Its mate is missing. It may be a hawk or some
creature of the weasel tribe. At any rate, we must try
to put a stop to it. This is the third morning that we
have noticed the change in the behavior of the birds.
Doubtless three of them have been carried off. Amuba
and I will watch to-morrow with our bows and arrows
and see if we cannot put an end to the marauder. If this
goes on we shall lose all our pets.”</p>
<p>Upon the following morning Chebron and Amuba went
down to the inclosure soon after daybreak, and concealing
themselves in some shrubs waited for the appearance
of the intruder. The ducks were splashing about in the
pond, evidently forgetful of their fright of the day before;
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_186" id="Page_186"></SPAN></span>
and as soon as the sun was up the dogs came out of
their house and threw themselves down on a spot where
his rays could fall upon them, while the cats sat and
cleaned themselves on a ledge behind a lattice, for they
were only allowed to run about in the inclosure when
some one was there to prevent their interference with
birds.</p>
<p>For an hour there was no sign of an enemy. Then one
of the birds gave a sudden cry of alarm, and there was a
sudden flutter as all rushed to shelter among the reeds;
but before the last could get within cover a dark object
shot down from above. There was a frightened cry and a
violent flapping as a large hawk suddenly seized one of
the waterfowl and struck it to the ground. In an
instant the watchers rose to their feet, and as the hawk
rose with its prey in its talons they shot their arrows
almost simultaneously. Amuba’s arrow struck the hawk
between the wings, and the creature fell dead still clutching
its prey. Chebron’s arrow was equally well aimed,
but it struck a twig which deflected its course and it flew
wide of the mark.</p>
<p>Amuba gave a shout of triumph and leaped out from
among the bushes. But he paused and turned as an exclamation
of alarm broke from Chebron. To his astonishment,
he saw a look of horror on his companion’s face.
His bow was still outstretched, and he stood as if petrified.</p>
<p>“What’s the matter, Chebron?” Amuba exclaimed.
“What has happened? Has a deadly snake bit you?
What is it, Chebron?”</p>
<p>“Do you not see?” Chebron said in a low voice.</p>
<p>“I see nothing,” Amuba replied, looking round, and
at the same time putting another arrow into his bowstring
ready to repel the attack of some dangerous
creature. “Where is it? I can see nothing.”</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_187" id="Page_187"></SPAN></span>
“My arrow; it glanced off a twig and entered there; I
saw one of the cats fall. I must have killed it.”</p>
<p>Two years before Amuba would have laughed at the
horror which Chebron’s face expressed at the accident of
shooting a cat, but he had been long enough in Egypt to
know how serious were the consequences of such an act.
Better by far that Chebron’s arrow had lodged in the
heart of a man. In that case an explanation of the manner
in which the accident had occurred, a compensation
to the relatives of the slain, and an expiatory offering at
one of the temples would have been deemed sufficient to
purge him from the offense; but to kill a cat, even by
accident, was the most unpardonable offense an Egyptian
could commit, and the offender would assuredly be torn
to pieces by the mob. Knowing this, he realized at once
the terrible import of Chebron’s words.</p>
<p>For a moment he felt almost as much stunned as Chebron
himself, but he quickly recovered his presence of
mind.</p>
<p>“There is only one thing to be done, Chebron; we
must dig a hole and bury it at once. I will run and
fetch a hoe.”</p>
<p>Throwing down his bow and arrows he ran to the little
shed at the other end of the garden where the implements
were kept, bidding a careless good-morning to the
men who were already at work there. He soon rejoined
Chebron, who had not moved from the spot from which
he had shot the unlucky arrow.</p>
<p>“Do you think this is best, Amuba? Don’t you think
I had better go and tell my father?”</p>
<p>“I do not think so, Chebron. Upon any other matter
it would be right at once to confer with him, but as
high priest it would be a fearful burden to place upon
his shoulders. It would be his duty at once to denounce
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_188" id="Page_188"></SPAN></span>
you; and did he keep it secret, and the matter be ever
found out, it would involve him in our danger. Let us
therefore bear the brunt of it by ourselves.”</p>
<p>“I dare not go in,” Chebron said in awestruck tones.
“It is too terrible.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I will manage that,” Amuba said lightly. “You
know to me a cat is a cat and nothing more, and I would
just as soon bury one as that rascally hawk which has
been the cause of all this mischief.”</p>
<p>So saying he crossed the open space, and entering a
thick bush beyond the cat house, dug a deep hole; then
he went into the house. Although having no belief
whatever in the sacredness of one animal more than
another, he had yet been long enough among the Egyptians
to feel a sensation akin to awe as he entered and
saw lying upon the ground the largest of the cats pierced
through by Chebron’s arrow.</p>
<p>Drawing out the shaft he lifted the animal, and putting
it under his garment went out again, and entering
the bushes buried it in the hole he had dug. He leveled
the soil carefully over it, and scattered a few dead leaves
on the top.</p>
<p>“There, no one would notice that,” he said to himself
when he had finished; “but it’s awfully unlucky it’s
that cat of all others.”</p>
<p>Then he went in, carefully erased the marks of blood
upon the floor, and brought out the shaft, took it down
to the pond and carefully washed the blood from it, and
then returned to Chebron.</p>
<p>“Is it—” the latter asked as he approached. He did
not say more, but Amuba understood him.</p>
<p>“I am sorry to say it is,” he replied. “It is horribly
unlucky, for one of the others might not have been
missed. There is no hoping that now.”</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_189" id="Page_189"></SPAN></span>
Chebron seemed paralyzed at the news.</p>
<p>“Come, Chebron,” Amuba said, “it will not do to give
way to fear; we must brave it out. I will leave the door
of the cat house open, and when it is missed it will be
thought that it has escaped and wandered away. At any
rate, there is no reason why suspicion should fall upon
us if we do but put a bold face upon the matter; but we
must not let our looks betray us. If the worst comes to
the worst and we find that suspicions are entertained, we
must get out of the way. But there will be plenty of
time to think of that; all that you have got to do now is
to try and look as if nothing had happened.”</p>
<p>“But how can I?” Chebron said in broken tones. “To
you, as you say, it is only a cat; to me it is a creature
sacred above all others that I have slain. It is ten thousand
times worse than if I had killed a man.”</p>
<p>“A cat is a cat,” Amuba repeated. “I can understand
what you feel about it, though to my mind it is ridiculous.
There are thousands of cats in Thebes; let them
choose another one for the temple. But I grant the
danger of what has happened, and I know that if it is
found out there is no hope for us.”</p>
<p>“You had nothing to do with it,” Chebron said;
“there is no reason why you should take all this risk
with me.”</p>
<p>“We were both in the matter, Chebron, and that twig
might just as well have turned my arrow from its course
as yours. We went to kill a hawk together and we have
shot a cat, and it is a terrible business, there is no
doubt; and it makes no difference whatever whether I
think the cat was only a cat if the people of Thebes considered
it is a god. If it is found out it is certain death,
and we shall need all our wits to save our lives; but
unless you pluck up courage and look a little more like
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_190" id="Page_190"></SPAN></span>
yourself, we may as well go at once and say what has
happened and take the consequences. Only if you
don’t value your life I do mine; so if you mean to let
your looks betray us, say so, and stop here for a few
hours till I get a good start.”</p>
<p>“I will tell my father,” Chebron said suddenly, “and
abide by what he says. If he thinks it his duty to denounce
me, so be it; in that case you will run no risk.”</p>
<p>“But I don’t mind running the risk, Chebron; I am
quite ready to share the peril with you.”</p>
<p>“No; I will tell my father,” Chebron repeated, “and
abide by what he says. I am sure I can never face this
out by myself, and that my looks will betray us. I have
committed the most terrible crime an Egyptian can commit,
and I dare not keep such a secret to myself.”</p>
<p>“Very well, Chebron, I will not try to dissuade you,
and I will go and see Jethro. Of course to him as to me
the shooting of a cat is a matter not worth a second
thought; but he will understand the consequences, and
if we fly will accompany us. You do not mind my
speaking to him? You could trust your life to him as to
me.”</p>
<p>Chebron nodded, and moved away toward the house.</p>
<p>“For pity sake, Chebron!” Amuba exclaimed, “do not
walk like that. If the men at work get sight of you they
cannot but see that something strange has happened, and
it will be recalled against you when the creature is
missed.”</p>
<p>Chebron made an effort to walk with his usual gait.
Amuba stood watching him for a minute, and then turned
away with a gesture of impatience.</p>
<p>“Chebron is clever and learned in many things, and I
do not think that he lacks courage; but these Egyptians
seem to have no iron in their composition when a pinch
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_191" id="Page_191"></SPAN></span>
comes. Chebron walks as if all his bones had turned to
jelly. Of course he is in a horrible scrape; still, if he
would but face it out with sense and pluck it would be
easier for us all. However, I do not think that it is
more the idea that he has committed an act of horrible
sacrilege than the fear of death that weighs him down.
If it were not so serious a matter one could almost laugh
at any one being crushed to the earth because he had
accidentally killed a cat.”</p>
<p>Upon entering the house Chebron made his way to the
room where his father was engaged in study. Dropping
the heavy curtains over the door behind him he advanced
a few paces, then fell on his knees, and touched the
ground with his forehead.</p>
<p>“Chebron!” Ameres exclaimed, laying down the roll
of papyrus on which he was engaged and rising to his
feet. “What is it, my son? Why do you thus kneel
before me in an attitude of supplication? Rise and tell
me what has happened.”</p>
<p>Chebron raised his head, but still continued on his
knees. Ameres was startled at the expression of his
son’s face. The look of health and life had gone from
it, the color beneath the bronze skin had faded away,
drops of perspiration stood on his forehead, his lips were
parched and drawn.</p>
<p>“What is it, my son?” Ameres repeated, now thoroughly
alarmed.</p>
<p>“I have forfeited my life, father! Worse, I have
offended the gods beyond forgiveness! This morning I
went with Amuba with our bows and arrows to shoot a
hawk which has for some time been slaying the waterfowl.
It came down and we shot together. Amuba
killed the hawk, but my arrow struck a tree and flew
wide of the mark, and entering the cats’ house killed
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192"></SPAN></span>
Paucis, who was chosen only two days to take the place
of the sacred cat in the temple of Bubastes.”</p>
<p>An exclamation of horror broke from the high priest,
and he recoiled a pace from his son.</p>
<p>“Unhappy boy,” he said, “your life is indeed forfeited.
The king himself could not save his son from the
fury of the populace had he perpetrated such a deed.”</p>
<p>“It is not my life I am thinking of, father,” Chebron
said, “but first of the horrible sacrilege, and then that I
alone cannot bear the consequences, but that some of
these must fall upon you and my mother and sister; for
even to be related to one who has committed such a
crime is a terrible disgrace.”</p>
<p>Ameres walked up and down the room several times
before he spoke.</p>
<p>“As to our share of the consequences, Chebron, we
must bear it as best we can,” he said at last in a calmer
tone than he had before used; “it is of you we must first
think. It is a terrible affair; and yet, as you say, it was
but an accident, and you are guiltless of any intentional
sacrilege. But that plea will be as nothing. Death is
the punishment for slaying a cat; and the one you have
slain having been chosen to succeed the cat of Bubastes
is of all others the one most sacred. The question is,
What is to be done? You must fly and that instantly,
though I fear that flight will be vain; for as soon as the
news is known it will spread from one end of Egypt to
the other, and every man’s hand will be against you, and
even by this time the discovery may have been made.”</p>
<p>“That will hardly be, father; for Amuba has buried
the cat among the bushes, and has left the door of the
house open so that it may be supposed for a time that it
has wandered away. He proposed to me to fly with him
at once; for he declares that he is determined to share
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193"></SPAN></span>
my fate since we were both concerned in the attempt to
kill the hawk. But in that of course he is wrong; for it
is I, not he, who has done this thing.”</p>
<p>“Amuba has done rightly,” Ameres said. “We have
at least time to reflect.”</p>
<p>“But I do not want to fly, father. Of what good will
life be to me with this awful sin upon my head? I wonder
that you suffer me to remain a moment in your
presence—that you do not cast me out as a wretch who
has mortally offended the gods.”</p>
<p>Ameres waved his hand impatiently.</p>
<p>“That is not troubling me now, Chebron. I do not
view things in the same way as most men, and should it
be that you have to fly for your life I will tell you more;
suffice for you that I do not blame you, still less regard
you with horror. The great thing for us to think of at
present is as to the best steps to be taken. Were you to
fly now you might get several days’ start, and might
even get out of the country before an alarm was spread;
but upon the other hand, your disappearance would at
once be connected with that of the cat as soon as it became
known that she is missing, whereas if you stay here
quietly it is possible that no one will connect you in any
way with the fact that the cat is gone.</p>
<p>“That something has happened to it will speedily be
guessed, for a cat does not stray away far from the place
where it has been bred up; besides, a cat of such a size
and appearance is remarkable, and were it anywhere in
the neighborhood it would speedily be noticed. But
now go and join Amuba in your room, and remain there
for the morning as usual. I will give orders that your
instructor be told that you will not want him to-day, as
you are not well. I will see you presently when I have
thought the matter fully out and determined what had
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194"></SPAN></span>
best be done. Keep up a brave heart, my boy; the
danger may yet pass over.”</p>
<p>Chebron retired overwhelmed with surprise at the
kindness with which his father had spoken to him, when
he had expected that he would be so filled with horror at
the terrible act of sacrilege that he would not have suffered
him to remain in the house for a moment after the
tale was told. And yet he had seemed to think chiefly
of the danger to his life, and to be but little affected by
what to Chebron himself was by far the most terrible
part of the affair—the religious aspect of the deed. On
entering the room where he pursued his studies he found
Jethro as well as Amuba there.</p>
<p>“I am sorry for you, young master,” Jethro said as he
entered. “Of course to me the idea of any fuss being
made over the accidental killing of a cat is ridiculous;
but I know how you view it, and the danger in which
it has placed you. I only came in here with Amuba to
say that you can rely upon me, and that if you decide on
flight I am ready at once to accompany you.”</p>
<p>“Thanks, Jethro,” Chebron replied. “Should I fly it
will indeed be a comfort to have you with me as well as
Amuba, who has already promised to go with me; but at
present nothing is determined. I have seen my father
and told him everything, and he will decide for me.”</p>
<p>“Then he will not denounce you,” Amuba said. “I
thought that he would not.”</p>
<p>“No; and he has spoken so kindly that I am amazed.
It did not seem possible to me that an Egyptian would
have heard of such a dreadful occurrence without feeling
horror and destation of the person who did it, even were
he his own son. Still more would one expect it from a
man who, like my father, is a high priest to the gods.”</p>
<p>“Your father is a wise as well as a learned man,”
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195"></SPAN></span>
Jethro said: “and he knows that the gods cannot be altogether
offended at an affair for which fate and not the
slayer is responsible. The real slayer of the cat is the
twig which turned the arrow, and I do not see that you
are any more to blame, or anything like so much to
blame, as is the hawk at whom you shot.”</p>
<p>This, however, was no consolation to Chebron, who
threw himself down on a couch in a state of complete
prostration. It seemed to him that even could this terrible
thing be hidden he must denounce himself and bear
the penalty. How could he exist with the knowledge
that he was under the ban of the gods? His life would
be a curse rather than a gift under such circumstances.
Physically, Chebron was not a coward, but he had not the
toughness of mental fibre which enables some men to
bear almost unmoved misfortunes which would crush
others to the ground. As to the comforting assurances
of Amuba and Jethro, they failed to give him the slightest
consolation. He loved Amuba as a brother, and in
all other matters his opinion would have weighed greatly
with him; but Amuba knew nothing of the gods of
Egypt, and could not feel in the slightest the terrible
nature of the act of sacrilege, and therefore on this point
his opinion could have no weight.</p>
<p>“Jethro,” Amuba said, “you told me you were going
to escort Mysa one day or other to the very top of the
hills, in order that she could thence look down upon the
whole city. Put it into her head to go this morning, or
at least persuade her to go into the city. If she goes
into the garden she will at once notice that the cat is
lost; whereas if you can keep her away for the day it
will give us so much more time.”</p>
<p>“But if Ameres decides that you had best fly, I might
on my return find that you have both gone.”</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196"></SPAN></span>
“Should he do so, Jethro, he will tell you the route
we have taken, and arrange for some point at which you
can join us. He would certainly wish you to go with us,
for he would know that your experience and strong arm
would be above all things needful.”</p>
<p>“Then I will go at once,” Jethro agreed. “There are
two or three excursions she has been wanting to make,
and I think I can promise that she shall go on one of them
to-day. If she says anything about wanting to go to see
her pets before starting, I can say that you have both
been there this morning and seen after them.”</p>
<p>“I do not mean to fly,” Chebron said, starting up,
“unless it be that my father commands me to do so.
Rather a thousand worlds I stay here and meet my fate!”</p>
<p>Jethro would have spoken, but Amuba signed to him
to go at once, and crossing the room took Chebron’s
hand. It was hot and feverish, and there was a patch of
color in his cheek.</p>
<p>“Do not let us talk about it, Chebron,” he said.
“You have put the matter in your father’s hands, and
you may be sure that he will decide wisely; therefore
the burden is off your shoulders for the present. You
could have no better counselor in all Egypt, and the fact
that he holds so high and sacred an office will add to the
weight of his words. If he believes that your crime
against the gods is so great that you have no hope of
happiness in life, he will tell you so; if he considers
that, as it seems to me, the gods cannot resent an accident
as they might do a crime against them done willfully,
and that you may hope by a life of piety to win
their forgiveness, then he will bid you fly.</p>
<p>“He is learned in the deepest of the mysteries of your
religion, and will view matters in a different light to
that in which they are looked at by the ignorant rabble.
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197"></SPAN></span>
At any rate, as the matter is in his hands, it is useless
for you to excite yourself. As far as personal danger
goes, I am willing to share it with you, to take half the
fault of this unfortunate accident, and to avow that as
we were engaged together in the act that led to it we are
equally culpable of the crime.</p>
<p>“Unfortunately, I cannot share your greater trouble—your
feeling of horror at what you regard as sacrilege;
for we Rebu hold the life of one animal no more sacred
than the life of another, and have no more hesitation in
shooting a cat than a deer. Surely your gods cannot be
so powerful in Egypt and impotent elsewhere; and yet
if they are as powerful, how is it that their vengeance
has not fallen upon other peoples who slay without hesitation
the animals so dear to them?”</p>
<p>“That is what I have often wondered,” Chebron said,
falling readily into the snare, for he and Amuba had had
many conversations on such subjects, and points were
constantly presenting themselves which he was unable to
solve.</p>
<p>An hour later, when a servant entered and told Chebron
and Amuba that Ameres wished to speak to them,
the former had recovered to some extent from the nervous
excitement under which he had first suffered. The two
lads bowed respectfully to the high priest, and then
standing submissively before him waited for him to
address them.</p>
<p>“I have sent for you both,” he said after a pause,
“because it seems to me that although Amuba was not
himself concerned in this sad business, it is probable
that as he was engaged with you at the time the popular
fury might not nicely discriminate between you.” He
paused as if expecting a reply, and Amuba said quietly:</p>
<p>“That is what I have been saying to Chebron, my lord.
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198"></SPAN></span>
I consider myself fully as guilty as he is. It was a mere
accident that his arrow and not mine was turned aside
from the mark we aimed at, and I am ready to share his
lot, whether you decide that the truth shall be published
at once, or whether we should attempt to fly.” Ameres
bowed his head gravely, and then looked at his son.</p>
<p>“I, father, although I am ready to yield my wishes to
your will, and to obey you in this as in all other matters,
would beseech you to allow me to denounce myself
and to bear my fate. I feel that I would infinitely rather
die than live with this terrible weight and guilt upon my
head.”</p>
<p>“I expected as much of you, Chebron, and applaud
your decision,” Ameres said gravely.</p>
<p>Chebron’s face brightened, while that of Amuba fell.
Ameres, after a pause, went on:</p>
<p>“Did I think as you do, Chebron, that the accidental
killing of a cat is a deadly offense against the gods, I
should say denounce yourself at once, but I do not so
consider it.”</p>
<p>Chebron gazed at his father as if he could scarce
credit his sense of hearing, while even Amuba looked
surprised.</p>
<p>“You have frequently asked me questions, Chebron,
which I have either turned aside or refused to answer.
It was, indeed, from seeing that you had inherited from
me the spirit of inquiry that I deemed it best that you
should not ascend to the highest order of the priesthood;
for if so, the knowledge you would acquire would render
you, as it has rendered me, dissatisfied with the state of
things around you. Had it not been for this most unfortunate
accident I should never have spoken to you further
on the subject, but as it is I feel that it is my duty to tell
you more.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199"></SPAN></span>
“I have had a hard struggle with myself, and have,
since you left me, thought over from every point of view
what I ought to do. On the one hand, I should have to
tell you things known only to an inner circle, things
which were it known I had whispered to any one my life
would be forfeited. On the other hand, if I keep silent
I should doom you to a life of misery. I have resolved
to take the former alternative. I may first tell you what
you do not know, that I have long been viewed with suspicion
by those of the higher priesthood who know my
views, which are that the knowledge we possess should
not be confined to ourselves, but should be disseminated,
at least among that class of educated Egyptians capable
of appreciating it.</p>
<p>“What I am about to tell you is not, as a whole, fully
understood perhaps by any. It is the outcome of my
own reflections, founded upon the light thrown upon
things by the knowledge I have gained. You asked me
one day, Chebron, how we knew about the gods—how
they first revealed themselves, seeing that they are not
things that belong to the world? I replied to you at the
time that these things are mysteries—a convenient answer
with which we close the mouths of questioners.</p>
<p>“Listen now and I will tell you how religion first
began upon earth, not only in Egypt, but in all lands.
Man felt his own powerlessness. Looking at the operations
of nature—the course of the heavenly bodies, the
issues of birth and life and death—he concluded, and
rightly, that there was a God over all things, but this
God was too mighty for his imagination to grasp.</p>
<p>“He was everywhere and nowhere, he animated all
things, and yet was nowhere to be found; he gave fertility
and he caused famine, he gave life and he gave
death, he gave light and heat, he sent storms and
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200"></SPAN></span>
tempests. He was too infinite and too various for the
untutored mind of the early man to comprehend, and so
they tried to approach him piecemeal. They worshiped
him as the sun, the giver of heat and life and fertility;
they worshiped him as a destructive god, they invoked
his aid as a beneficent being, they offered sacrifices to
appease his wrath as a terrible one. And so in time they
came to regard all these attributes of his—all his sides
and lights under which they viewed him—as being distinct
and different, and instead of all being the qualities
of one God as being each the quality or attribute of
separate gods.</p>
<p>“So there came to be a god of life and a god of death,
one who sends fertility and one who causes famine. All
sorts of inanimate objects were defined as possessing
some fancied attribute either for good or evil, and the
one Almighty God became hidden and lost in the crowd
of minor deities. In some nations the fancies of man
went one way, in another another. The lower the intelligence
of the people the lower their gods. In some
countries serpents are sacred, doubtless because originally
they were considered to typify at once the subtleness
and the destructive power of a god. In others trees
are worshiped. There are peoples who make the sun
their god. Others the moon. Our forefathers in Egypt
being a wiser people than the savages around them, worshiped
the attributes of gods under many different names.
First, eight great deities were chosen to typify the chief
characteristics of the Mighty One. Chnoumis, or Neuf,
typified the idea of the spirit of God—that spirit which
pervades all creation. Ameura, the intellect of God.
Osiris, the goodness of God. Ptah typified at once the
working power and the truthfulness of God. Khem represents
the productive power—the god who presides over
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201"></SPAN></span>
the multiplication of all species: man, beast, fish, and
vegetable—and so with the rest of the great gods and of
the minor divinities, which are reckoned by the score.</p>
<p>“In time certain animals, birds, and other creatures
whose qualities are considered to resemble one or other
of the deities are in the first place regarded as typical of
them, then are held as sacred to them, then in some sort
of way become mixed up with the gods and to be held
almost as the gods themselves. This is, I think, the history
of the religions of all countries. The highest intelligences,
the men of education and learning, never quite
lose sight of the original truths, and recognize that the
gods represent only the various attributes of the one
Almighty God. The rest of the population lose sight of
the truth, and really worship as gods these various creations,
that are really but types and shadows.</p>
<p>“It is perhaps necessary that it should be so. It is
easier for the grosser and more ignorant classes to worship
things that they can see and understand, to strive
to please those whose statues and temples they behold,
to fear to draw upon themselves the vengeance of those
represented to them as destructive powers, than to worship
an inconceivable God, without form or shape, so
mighty the imagination cannot picture him, so beneficent,
so all-providing, so equable and serene that the human
mind cannot grasp even a notion of him. Man is material,
and must worship the material in a form in which he
thinks he can comprehend it, and so he creates gods for
himself with figures, likenesses, passions, and feelings
like those of the many animals he sees around him.</p>
<p>“The Israelite maid whom we brought hither, and with
whom I have frequently conversed, tells me that her people
before coming to this land worshiped but one God
like unto him of whom I have told you, save that they
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202"></SPAN></span>
belittled him by deeming that he was their own special
God, caring for them above all peoples of the earth; but
in all other respects he corresponded with the Almighty
One whom we who have gained glimpses of the truth
which existed ere the Pantheon of Egypt came into existence,
worship in our hearts, and it seems to me as if this
little handful of men who came to Egypt hundreds of
years ago were the only people in the world who kept the
worship of the one God clear and undefiled.”</p>
<p>Chebron and Amuba listened in awestruck silence to
the words of the high priest. Amuba’s face lit up with
pleasure and enthusiasm as he listened to words which
seemed to clear away all the doubts and difficulties that
had been in his mind. To Chebron the revelation,
though a joyful one, came as a great shock. His mind,
too, had long been unsatisfied. He had wondered and
questioned, but the destruction at one blow of all the
teachings of his youth, of all he had held sacred, came
at first as a terrible shock. Neither spoke when the
priest concluded, and after a pause he resumed.</p>
<p>“You will understand, Chebron, that what I have told
you is not in its entirety held even by the most enlightened,
and that the sketch I have given you of the formation
of all religions is, in fact, the idea which I myself
have formed as the result of all I have learned, both as
one initiated in all the learning of the ancient Egyptians
and from my own studies both of our oldest records and
the traditions of all the peoples with whom Egypt has
come in contact. But that all our gods merely represent
attributes of the one deity, and have no personal existence
as represented in our temples, is acknowledged
more or less completely by all those most deeply initiated
in the mysteries of our religion.</p>
<p>“When we offer sacrifices we offer them not to the
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203"></SPAN></span>
images behind our altar, but to God the creator, God the
preserver, God the fertilizer, to God the ruler, to God
the omnipotent over good and evil. Thus, you see, there
is no mockery in our services, although to us they bear
an inner meaning not understood by others. They worship
a personality endowed with principle; we the principle
itself. They see in the mystic figure the representation
of a deity; we see in it the type of an attribute of
a higher deity.</p>
<p>“You may think that in telling you all this I have
told you things which should be told only to those whose
privilege it is to have learned the inner mysteries of their
religion; that maybe I am untrue to my vows. These,
lads, are matters for my own conscience. Personally, I
have long been impressed with the conviction that it
were better that the circles of initiates should be very
widely extended, and that all capable by education and
intellect of appreciating the mightiness of the truth
should no longer be left in darkness. I have been overruled,
and should never have spoken had not this accident
taken place; but when I see that the whole happiness
of your life is at stake, that should the secret ever
be discovered you will either be put to death despairing
and hopeless, or have to fly and live despairing and hopeless
in some foreign country, I have considered that the
balance of duty lay on the side of lightening your mind
by a revelation of what was within my own. And it is
not, as I have told you, so much the outcome of the
teaching I have received as of my own studies and a conviction
I have arrived at as to the nature of God. Thus,
then, my son, you can lay side the horror which you
have felt at the thought that by the accidental slaying of
a cat you offended the gods beyond forgiveness. The
cat is but typical of the qualities attributed to Baste.
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204"></SPAN></span>
Baste herself is but typical of one of the qualities of the
One God.”</p>
<p>“Oh, my father!” Chebron exclaimed, throwing himself
on his knees beside Ameres and kissing his hand,
“how good you are. What a weight have you lifted
from my mind! What a wonderful future have you
opened to me if I escape the danger that threatens me
now! If I have to die I can do so like one who fears not
the future after death. If I live I shall no longer be oppressed
with the doubts and difficulties which have so
long weighed upon me. Though till now you have given
me no glimpse of the great truth, I have at times felt not
only that the answers you gave me failed to satisfy me,
but it seemed to me also that you yourself with all your
learning and wisdom were yet unable to set me right in
these matters as you did in all others upon which I questioned
you. My father, you have given me life, and
more than life—you have given me a power over fate. I
am ready now to fly, should you think it best, or to
remain here and risk whatever may happen.”</p>
<p>“I do not think you should fly, Chebron. In the first
place, flight would be an acknowledgment of guilt; in
the second, I do not see where you could fly. To-morrow,
at latest, the fact that the creature is missing will
be discovered, and as soon as it was known that you had
gone a hot pursuit would be set up. If you went
straight down to the sea you would probably be overtaken
long before you got there; and even did you reach
a port before your pursuers you might have to wait days
before a ship sailed.</p>
<p>“Then, again, did you hide in any secluded neighborhood,
you would surely be found sooner or later, for the
news will go from end to end of Egypt, and it will be
everyone’s duty to search for and denounce you. Messengers
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205"></SPAN></span>
will be sent to all countries under Egyptian government,
and even if you passed our frontiers by land or
sea your peril would be as great as it is here. Lastly,
did you surmount all these difficulties and reach some
land beyond the sway of Egypt, you would be an exile
for life. Therefore I say that flight is your last resource,
to be undertaken only if a discovery is made; but we
may hope that no evil fortune will lead the searchers to
the conclusion that the cat was killed here.</p>
<p>“When it is missed there will be search high and low
in which every one will join. When the conclusion is at
last arrived at that it has irrecoverably disappeared all
sorts of hypotheses will be started to account for it; some
will think that it probably wandered to the hills and became
the prey of hyenas or other wild beasts; some will
assert that it has been killed and hidden away; others
that it has made its way down to the Nile and has been
carried off by a crocodile. Thus there is no reason why
suspicion should fall upon you more than upon others,
but you will have to play your part carefully.”</p>
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