The Yoke eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 582 pages of information about The Yoke.

The Yoke eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 582 pages of information about The Yoke.

Meneptah having come and the old regime of life resumed, Memphis subsided into her normal state of dignity.  Mentu remained in his house preparing for his investiture with the office of murket.  His hours were spent in study, and the coming and going of Kenkenes crossed his consciousness as swiftly as the shadows wavered under his young palms.  His son might work for hours near him on mysterious drawings, but so deep was the great artist in the writings of the old murkets that he did not think to ask him what he did.  It might not have won his attention even had he seen the young man burn the sheets of papyrus thereafter, and grow restless and dissatisfied.  He remarked, however, that Kenkenes was absent during the noon-meal, but when the sundown repast was served and the young man was in his place, Mentu had forgotten that he had not been there at midday.

Kenkenes had visited his niche in the Arabian desert.  On his way to the statue he came to the line of rocks where he had hidden himself to get Athor’s likeness, and looked down into the quarry opposite him.  He was astonished to see at the ledge, just below, a great water-cart with three humped oxen attached.  The water-bearers were grouped about it and a Hebrew youth was drawing off the water in skins and jars.  The children received their burdens from his hands and passed up the wooden incline to the scaffold.  There Kenkenes saw that the incline had been extended to the level of the platform, and the children were able to deliver the hides directly into the hands of the laborers.  Then it occurred to Kenkenes that there was not a woman in sight about the quarries.  While he wondered, Rachel emerged from the windings of the valley into the open space below.

She carried a band of linen and a small box of horn in her hand.  When the young bearers saw her, one of them, who had been rubbing his eye, came to her.  She set her box upon an outstanding edge of stone and devoted herself to him.  Drawing his head back until it rested against her bosom, with tender hands she dressed the injured optic with balm from the box.

Kenkenes from his aery watched her, noting with a softening countenance the almost maternal love that beautified her face.  Now and then she spoke soothingly as the boy flinched, but her words were so softly said that the sculptor did not catch them.  The eye dressed, she covered it with the bandage and the pair separated.  It was with some regret that Kenkenes saw her turn to leave the spot.  But at that moment the taskmaster rode into the open space.  She made a sign of salutation and paused at a word from him.  Kenkenes fancied that her face had sobered and he looked down on the cowled head and shoulders of the overseer, wrathfully wondering if the Egyptian had played the master so harshly that Rachel dreaded him.  Presently the man dismounted; and though his back was turned toward Kenkenes, the young sculptor knew by his stature that he was not

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The Yoke from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.