Told in the East eBook

Talbot Mundy
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 250 pages of information about Told in the East.

Told in the East eBook

Talbot Mundy
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 250 pages of information about Told in the East.

To the temple!  The cry went up before the sun was fifteen minutes high.  There are a hundred temples in Hanadra, age-old all of them and carved on the outside with strange images of heathen gods in high relief, like molds turned inside out.  But there is but one temple that that cry could mean—­Kharvani’s; and there could be but one meaning for the cry.  Man, woman and child would pray Kharvani, Bride of Siva the Destroyer, to intercede with Siva and cause him to rise and smite the English.  On the skyline, glinting like flashed signals in the early sun, bright English bayonets had appeared; and between them and Hanadra was a dense black mass, the whole of old Hanadra’s able-bodied manhood, lined up to defend the city.  Now was the time to pray.  Fifty to one are by no means despicable odds, but the aid of the gods as well is better!

So the huge dome of Kharvani’s temple began to echo to the sound of slippered feet and awe-struck whisperings, and the big, dim auditorium soon filled to overflowing.  No light came in from the outer world.  There was nothing to illuminate the mysteries except the chain-hung grease-lamps swinging here and there from beams, and they served only to make the darkness visible.  Bats flicked in and out between them and disappeared in the echoing gloom above.  Censers belched out sweet-smelling, pungent clouds of sandalwood to drown the stench of hot humanity; and the huge graven image of Kharvani—­serene and smiling and indifferent—­stared round-eyed from the darkness.

Then a priest’s voice boomed out in a solemn incantation and the whispering hushed.  He chanted age-old verses, whose very meaning was forgotten in the womb of time—­forgotten as the artist who had painted the picture of idealized Kharvani on the wall.  Ten priests, five on either side of the tremendous idol, emerged chanting from the gloom behind, and then a gong rang, sweetly, clearly, suddenly, and the chanting ceased.  Out stepped the High Priest from a niche below the image, and his voice rose in a wailing, sing-song cadence that reechoed from the dome and sent a thrill through every one who heard.

His chant had scarcely ceased when the temple door burst open and a man rushed in.

“They have begun!” he shouted.  “The battle has begun!”

As though in ready confirmation of his words, the distant reverberating boom of cannon filtered through the doorway from the world of grim realities outside.

“They have twenty cannon with them!  They have more guns than we have!” wailed he who brought the news.  Again began the chanting that sought the aid of Siva the Destroyer.  Only, there were fewer who listened to this second chant.  Those who were near the doorway slipped outside and joined the watching hundreds on the roofs.

For an hour the prayers continued in the stifling gloom, priest relieving priest and chant following on chant, until the temple was half emptied of its audience.  One by one, and then by twos and threes, the worshipers succumbed to human curiosity and crept stealthily outside to watch.

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Project Gutenberg
Told in the East from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.