The Travels of Marco Polo — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,335 pages of information about The Travels of Marco Polo — Volume 2.

The Travels of Marco Polo — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,335 pages of information about The Travels of Marco Polo — Volume 2.
in his chastity, leading a most holy life, after their manner thereof.  And I assure you he was so staid a youth that he had never gone out of the palace, and thus he had never seen a dead man, nor any one who was not hale and sound; for the father never allowed any man that was aged or infirm to come into his presence.  It came to pass however one day that the young gentleman took a ride, and by the roadside he beheld a dead man.  The sight dismayed him greatly, as he never had seen such a sight before.  Incontinently he demanded of those who were with him what thing that was? and then they told him it was a dead man.  “How, then,” quoth the king’s son, “do all men die?” “Yea, forsooth,” said they.  Whereupon the young gentleman said never a word, but rode on right pensively.  And after he had ridden a good way he fell in with a very aged man who could no longer walk, and had not a tooth in his head, having lost all because of his great age.  And when the king’s son beheld this old man he asked what that might mean, and wherefore the man could not walk?  Those who were with him replied that it was through old age the man could walk no longer, and had lost all his teeth.  And so when the king’s son had thus learned about the dead man and about the aged man, he turned back to his palace and said to himself that he would abide no longer in this evil world, but would go in search of Him Who dieth not, and Who had created him.[NOTE 2]

So what did he one night but take his departure from the palace privily, and betake himself to certain lofty and pathless mountains.  And there he did abide, leading a life of great hardship and sanctity, and keeping great abstinence, just as if he had been a Christian.  Indeed, an he had but been so, he would have been a great saint of Our Lord Jesus Christ, so good and pure was the life he led.[NOTE 3] And when he died they found his body and brought it to his father.  And when the father saw dead before him that son whom he loved better than himself, he was near going distraught with sorrow.  And he caused an image in the similitude of his son to be wrought in gold and precious stones, and caused all his people to adore it.  And they all declared him to be a god; and so they still say. [NOTE 4]

They tell moreover that he hath died fourscore and four times.  The first time he died as a man, and came to life again as an ox; and then he died as an ox and came to life again as a horse, and so on until he had died fourscore and four times; and every time he became some kind of animal.  But when he died the eighty-fourth time they say he became a god.  And they do hold him for the greatest of all their gods.  And they tell that the aforesaid image of him was the first idol that the Idolaters ever had; and from that have originated all the other idols.  And this befel in the Island of Seilan in India.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Travels of Marco Polo — Volume 2 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.