Uarda : a Romance of Ancient Egypt — Volume 08 by Georg Ebers
page 9 of 64 (14%)
page 9 of 64 (14%)
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"Well, the whole will be reflected in you, you know," said Uarda, "as the
whole moon is reflected in each drop." "It shall!" cried the prince, clasping the trembling girl in his arms, and the two young souls were united in their first kiss. "Now do go!" Uarda entreated. "Let me stay a little while," said Rameri. "Sit down here by me on the bench in front of the house. The hedge shelters us, and besides this valley is now deserted, and there are no passers by." "We are doing what is not right," said Uarda. "If it were right we should not want to hide ourselves." "Do you call that wrong which the priests perform in the Holy of Holies?" asked the prince. "And yet it is concealed from all eyes." "How you can argue!" laughed Uarda. "That shows you can write, and are one of his disciples." "His, his!" exclaimed Rameri. "You mean Pentaur. He was always the dearest to me of all my teachers, but it vexes me when you speak of him as if he were more to you than I and every one else. The poet, you said, was one of the drops in which the moon of your soul finds a reflection-- and I will not divide it with many." "How you are talking!" said Uarda. "Do you not honor your father, and the Gods? I love no one else as I do you--and what I felt when you kissed me--that was not like moon-light, but like this hot mid-day sun. |
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