Cleopatra eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 378 pages of information about Cleopatra.

Cleopatra eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 378 pages of information about Cleopatra.

Flying swiftly to my house I found Atoua waiting at the gates.  She drew me into a quiet chamber and closed the doors.

“Is it done?” she asked, and turned her wrinkled face to mine, while the lamplight streamed white upon her snowy hair.  “Nay, why ask I—­I know that it is done!”

“Ay, it is done, and well done, old wife!  All are dead!  Cleopatra, Iras, Charmion—­all save myself!”

The aged woman drew up her bent form and cried:  “Now let me go in peace, for I have seen my desire upon thy foes and the foes of Khem. La! la!—­not in vain have I lived on beyond the years of man!  I have seen my desire upon thy enemies—–­I have gathered the dews of Death, and thy foe hath drunk thereof!  Fallen is the brow of Pride! the Shame of Khem is level with the dust!  Ah, would that I might have seen that wanton die!”

“Cease, woman! cease!  The Dead are gathered to the Dead!  Osiris holds them fast, and everlasting silence seals their lips!  Pursue not the fallen great with insults!  Up!—­let us fly to Abouthis, that all may be accomplished!”

“Fly thou, Harmachis!—­Harmachis, fly—­but I fly not!  To this end only I have lingered on the earth.  Now I untie the knot of life and let my spirit free!  Fare thee well, Prince, the pilgrimage is done!  Harmachis, from a babe have I loved thee, and love thee yet!—­but no more in this world may I share thy griefs—­I am spent.  Osiris, take thou my Spirit!” and her trembling knees gave way and she sank to the ground.

I ran to her side and looked upon her.  She was already dead, and I was alone upon the earth without a friend to comfort me!

Then I turned and went, no man hindering me, for all was confusion in the city, and departed from Alexandria in a vessel I had made ready.  On the eighth day, I landed, and, in the carrying out of my purpose, travelled on foot across the fields to the Holy Shrine of Abouthis.  And here, as I knew, the worship of the Gods had been lately set up again in the Temple of the Divine Sethi:  for Charmion had caused Cleopatra to repent of her decree of vengeance and to restore the lands that she had seized, though the treasure she restored not.  And the temple having been purified, now, at the season of the Feast of Isis, all the High Priests of the ancient Temples of Egypt were gathered together to celebrate the coming home of the Gods into their holy place.

I gained the city.  It was on the seventh day of the Feast of Isis.  Even as I came the long array wended through the well-remembered streets.  I joined in the multitude that followed, and with my voice swelled the chorus of the solemn chant as we passed through the pylons into the imperishable halls.  How well known were the holy words: 

     “Softly we tread, our measured footsteps falling
     Within the Sanctuary Sevenfold;
     Soft on the Dead that liveth are we calling: 
     ’Return, Osiris, from thy Kingdom cold! 
     Return to them that worship thee of old!’”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Cleopatra from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.