Uarda : a Romance of Ancient Egypt — Volume 07 eBook

Georg Ebers
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 73 pages of information about Uarda .

Uarda : a Romance of Ancient Egypt — Volume 07 eBook

Georg Ebers
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 73 pages of information about Uarda .

“Is she come?” he asked hastily; when Ameni answered in the affirmative Ani went on meanwhile carefully disentangling the disordered curls of his wig, and arranging his broad, collar-shaped necklace: 

“The witch may exercise some influence over me; will you not give me your blessing to preserve me from her spells?  It is true, I have on me this Houss’-eye, and this Isis-charm, but one never knows.”

“My presence will be your safe-guard,” said Ameni.  “But-no, of course you wish to speak with her alone.  You shall be conducted to a room, which is protected against all witchcraft by sacred texts.  My brother,” he continued to one of the serving-priests, “let the witch be taken into one of the consecrated rooms, and then, when you have sprinkled the threshold, lead my lord Ani thither.”

The high-priest went away, and into a small room which adjoined the hall where the interview between the Regent and the old woman was about to take place, and where the softest whisper spoken in the larger room could be heard by means of an ingeniously contrived and invisible tube.

When Ani saw the old woman, he started back is horror; her appearance at this moment was, in fact, frightful.  The storm had tossed and torn her garment and tumbled all her thick, white hair, so that locks of it fell over her face.  She leaned on a staff, and bending far forward looked steadily at the Regent; and her eyes, red and smarting from the sand which the wind had flung in her face, seemed to glow as she fixed them on his.  She looked as a hyaena might when creeping to seize its prey, and Ani felt a cold shiver and he heard her hoarse voice addressing him to greet him and to represent that he had chosen a strange hour for requiring her to speak with him.

When she had thanked him for his promise of renewing her letter of freedom, and had confirmed the statement that Paaker had had a love-philter from her, she parted her hair from off her face—­it occurred to her that she was a woman.

The Regent sat in an arm-chair, she stood before him; but the struggle with the storm had tired her old limbs, and she begged Ani to permit her to be seated, as she had a long story to tell, which would put Paaker into his power, so that he would find him as yielding as wax.  The Regent signed her to a corner of the room, and she squatted down on the pavement.

When he desired her to proceed with her story, she looked at the floor for some time in silence, and then began, as if half to herself: 

“I will tell thee, that I may find peace—­I do not want, when I die, to be buried unembalmed.  Who knows but perhaps strange things may happen in the other world, and I would not wish to miss them.  I want to see him again down there, even if it were in the seventh limbo of the damned.  Listen to me!  But, before I speak, promise me that whatever I tell thee, thou wilt leave me in peace, and will see that I am embalmed when I am dead.  Else I will not speak.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Uarda : a Romance of Ancient Egypt — Volume 07 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.