Egypt (La Mort de Philae). Pierre Loti
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Pierre Loti
Egypt (La Mort de Philae)
Published by Good Press, 2021
EAN 4064066220617
Table of Contents
Translated from the French by W. P. Baines
A WINTER MIDNIGHT BEFORE THE GREAT SPHINX
IN THE TEMPLE OF THE GODDESS OF LOVE AND JOY
A TWENTIETH-CENTURY EVENING AT THEBES
AT THEBES IN THE TEMPLE OF THE OGRESS
Translated from the French by W. P. Baines
CHAPTER I
A WINTER MIDNIGHT BEFORE THE GREAT SPHINX
A night wondrously clear and of a colour unknown to our climate; a place of dreamlike aspect, fraught with mystery. The moon of a bright silver, which dazzles by its shining, illumines a world which surely is no longer ours; for it resembles in nothing what may be seen in other lands. A world in which everything is suffused with rosy color beneath the stars of midnight, and where granite symbols rise up, ghostlike and motionless.
Is that a hill of sand that rises yonder? One can scarcely tell, for it has as it were no shape, no outline; rather it seems like a great rosy cloud, or some huge, trembling billow, which once perhaps raised itself there, forthwith to become motionless for ever. . . . And from out this kind of mummified wave a colossal human effigy emerges, rose-coloured too, a nameless, elusive rose; emerges, and stares with fixed eyes and smiles. It is so huge it seems unreal, as if it were a reflection cast by some mirror hidden in the moon. . . . And behind this monster face, far away in the rear, on the top of those undefined and gently undulating sandhills, three apocalyptic signs rise up against the sky, those rose-coloured triangles, regular as the figures of geometry, but so vast