The Bride of the Nile — Volume 02 eBook

Georg Ebers
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 86 pages of information about The Bride of the Nile — Volume 02.

The Bride of the Nile — Volume 02 eBook

Georg Ebers
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 86 pages of information about The Bride of the Nile — Volume 02.

Finally the young man had indulged his desire to compose a few lines addressed to the fair Heliodora—­for there was no form of physical or mental effort to which he was not trained.  He had not lost the idea that had occurred to him yesterday before his theft in the tablinum, and to put it into verse was in his present mood an easy task.  He wrote as follows: 

     “‘Like liketh like’ saith the saw; and like to like is but fitting. 
     Yet, in the hardest of gems thy soft nature rejoices? 
     Nay, but if noble and rare, if its beauty is priceless,
     Then, Heliodora, the stone is like thee—­akin to thy beauty. 
     Thus let this emerald please thee;—­and know that the fire
     That fills it with light burns more fierce in the heart of thy
          
                                                  Friend.”

He penned the lines rapidly; and as he did so he felt, he knew not why, an excited thrill, as though every word he threw off was a blow aimed at Paula.  Last night he had intended to send the costly jewel to the handsome widow in a suitable setting; but now it would be madly imprudent to order such a thing.  He must send it away at once; he had hastened to pack it up with the verses, with his own hand, and entrusted it to Chusar, a horsedealer’s groom from Constantinople, who had brought his Pannonian steeds to Memphis.  He had himself seen off this trustworthy messenger, who could speak no Egyptian and very little Greek, and when his horse was lost to sight in the dust of the road leading to Alexandria he had returned home in a calmer mood.  Ships were constantly putting to sea from that port for Constantinople, and Chusar was enjoined to sail by the first that should be leaving.  At least the odious deed should not have been committed in vain; and yet he would have given a year of his life if now he could but know that it had never been done.

“Impossible!” and “Curse it!” were the words he had most frequently repeated in the course of his retrospect during the past night and morning.  How he had had to rush and hurry under the broiling sun! and the sense of being compelled to do so for mere concealment’s sake seemed to him—­who had never in his life before done anything that he could not justify in the eyes of honest men—­so humiliating, that it brought the sweat to his burning brow.  He—­Orion—­to dread discovery as a thief!  It was inconceivable, and he was afraid, positively afraid for the first time since his boyhood.  His fortunate star, which in the Capital had shone on him so brightly and benevolently, seemed to have proved faithless in this ruinous hole!  What had that Persian girl taken into her crazy head that she must rush upon him like some furious beast of prey?  He had been bound to her once, no doubt, by a transient passion—­ and what youth of his age was blind to the charms of a pretty slave-girl?  She had been a lovely child, and it was a vexation,

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Bride of the Nile — Volume 02 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.