There was a King in Egypt. Norma Lorimer

There was a King in Egypt - Norma Lorimer


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particular night Margaret had returned from a long walk with Michael. They had left the low level of the valley and its winding white road and had climbed up on to the heights of the Sahara. It had pleased Margaret to feel that her feet were pressing the sands of the great African desert. She had never dreamed that their valley was actually a rift in the rocks of the Sahara, that ocean of sand which travels on and on to infinity.

      They had stood side by side on its high ridge, with their eyes looking towards the plain below, the historic plain which once held the capital of the world. The plain of Thebes reached to the river, and across the river lay gay Luxor, with its lights and the luxuries of modern civilization.

      Their walk was finished. It had drawn them still closer together. The solitude of the Sahara, with its sense of Divinity, had established a new link in their sympathies; it had created a feeling between them similar to that which is the outcome of two people having been together through strenuous and trying circumstances. They had, as usual, spoken very little; yet they were conscious of having enjoyed each other's society intensely and in the best possible manner, the enjoyment of complete understanding.

      Earlier in the evening, when Michael asked her to go for a walk, because Freddy was absorbed in some business letters, he had made the proposal in his habitual way.

      "May I come and keep silence with you to-night in the great Sahara?"

      And Meg had said, "Yes, do. You know, we really talk to each other all the time—my mind has so much more the gift of speech than my tongue."

      And so their silence had been as golden as the sand at their feet, which under Egypt's moon never pales.

      Freddy was only too glad that Michael had "cottoned on to Meg," as he expressed it—in fact, he was extremely pleased, for Meg would drive "the other woman" out of his thoughts, and if anything should come of it—well, Mike was one of the very best; Meg could not have a better husband.

      But so far no such thought had entered Mike's head, nor yet Margaret's. She was too interested and busy in her new life to think of love; she was only conscious of living as she had never lived before, and as she would have asked to live if she had possessed a wishing-ring. Every hour and minute of her days were a delight. To be with her best "pal" Freddy in Egypt seemed too good to be true, and added to that, there was this unexpected pleasure, the friendship and companionship of the nicest man she had ever met. His rather "drifting" temperament and nature appealed to her as it appealed to Freddy, for the very reason, perhaps, that keenly sensitive as she was and susceptible to her surroundings, her nature and brains were of a practical order. She was not imaginative or moody.

      She loved to listen to Michael's vivid, unpractical, Utopian theories and to follow him to where his flashes of brilliance carried him. His dream cities and dream people delighted Margaret. He told her stories as she had never been told stories before, invented as he went along, stories which kept her one minute fighting against tears and the next in delicious laughter.

      Margaret never could tell stories, not even to little children; she was not gifted with a creative brain or ingenuity.

      On the heights of the Sahara they, had not broken the silence; it was only on their return journey, under a canopy of southern stars, that Margaret had said:

      "A short story, please."

      And Michael had told her a story about a certain king of Egypt who had a beautiful slave, who had such power over him that she could make him do anything she liked. The things she liked were more fantastic than anything Margaret had ever read in The Arabian Nights.

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      Now, on her lounge-chair in front of the hut, Margaret was resting after their walk. Freddy and Michael were both indoors.

      Half an hour or perhaps more might have passed, when suddenly a luminous figure stood in front of her. She had not seen its approach; it was simply there before her, just as if it had taken form out of the desert air.

      She recognized that it was the figure of an Egyptian Pharaoh or a high priest—she could not tell which. It wore the short kilt-like garment and the high head-dress, with a serpent's head sticking out from the front of it (the double crown of North and South Egypt, though Margaret did not know it at the time) which had become familiar to her in the pictures of ancient Egyptian kings. She had seen many such figures in her brother's books and in the mural paintings of the tombs.

      As Margaret looked with amazement—certainly not fear—at the face of the strange apparition in front of her, she thought that it was the saddest she had ever seen. In the eyes there was a world of suffering and sorrow.

      She felt conscious of being awake; the moon and the stars were above her; they surrounded the luminous figure. Her brain struggled for intelligence. Was this the spirit of some great king of Egypt, or of a high priest, or what was it? Was it an optical delusion? If it was a spirit, why had it come to her?

      "Tell me who you are," she said. "Do you want anything?" She spoke nervously, not expecting an answer.

      "I once ruled over Egypt, and I return to see what my people are doing, if the seed I sowed has borne fruit."

      "In this, valley there are no people—it is a valley of the dead."

      "My body was brought to my mother's tomb in this valley."

      The voice was so sad that Margaret said:

      "You are in trouble? You cannot rest? Is that why your spirit has returned to earth?"

      "My spirit is with Aton, the master of that which is ordained. I have come to deliver a message; it is for you."

      "For me?" Margaret said. "I know nothing at all about Egypt."

      "That is not necessary. Aton's love is great and large. It filled the two lands of Egypt; it fills the world to-day."

      "But I am ignorant. You think I understand—I don't. … I can do nothing."

      The sad eyes in the emaciated face, the face of a saint and fanatic, smiled at her fears so tenderly that Margaret's heart was less troubled.

      "You can tell the one who is to do my work, the one who knows and loves Aton, Aton—the compassionate, the all-Merciful. Tell him that I bid him take up my work."

      "Your work?" Margaret said. "You were a king of ancient Egypt. … You speak as if you had worshipped our God … there is no one who can do your work … " She paused, and then said nervously, "Egypt is different now—it cannot go back."

      "Egypt must go on, not back. Nothing is different in the heart of man; your soul is as my soul. Aton liveth for ever in his children. He filleth the two lands of Egypt with his love. I was his messenger."

      "But who was Aton?" Margaret said. In her mind she was striving to recall if she had ever heard any references to the worship of one god in Egypt, except by the children of Israel.

      "The one who is to do my work will tell you. He has studied my teachings, he understands the love of Aton, whose rays encompass the world."

      "Thank you," Margaret said. "I will tell him." She knew instinctively that it was Michael who "understood."

      "He knows my work and my desire for the people of Egypt. He knows that my people worship one God, but that they have no love of God in their hearts."

      As the figure moved, it became less distinct. Margaret said: "Is that all I am to tell him? Are you going away?" She felt distressed; she knew not why.

      "I will return. Give him my message."

      "That he is to continue your work in Egypt?"

      "That he is to teach my people the love and the goodness of Aton, that his mercy is everlasting."

      "Tell me, before you go, who is Aton?"

      "You


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