Uarda : a Romance of Ancient Egypt — Volume 06 by Georg Ebers
page 69 of 79 (87%)
page 69 of 79 (87%)
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and implored him to come with her. Pentaur immediately followed her in
his working dress, just as he was, without putting on the white priest's robe, which he did not wish to wear on this expedition. When they drew near to the paraschites' hovel, he perceived the tumult among the people, and, loud above all the noise, heard Uarda's shrill cry of terror. He hurried forward, and in the dull light of the scattered fire-brands and colored lanterns, he saw the black hand of the soldier clutching the hair of the helpless child; quick as thought he gripped the soldier's throat with his iron fingers, seized him round the body, swung him in the air, and flung him like a block of stone right into the little yard of the hut. The people threw themselves on the champion in a frenzy of rage, but he felt a sudden warlike impulse surging up in him, which he had never felt before. With one wrench he pulled out the heavy wooden pole, which supported the awning which the old paraschites had put up for his sick grandchild; he swung it round his head, as if it were a reed, driving back the crowd, while he called to Uarda to keep close to him. "He who touches the child is a dead man!" he cried. "Shame on you!-- falling on a feeble old man and a helpless child in the middle of a holy festival!" For a moment the crowd was silent, but immediately after rushed forward with fresh impetus, and wilder than ever rose the shouts of: "Tear him to pieces! burn his house down!" A few artisans from Thebes closed round the poet, who was not |
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