Uarda : a Romance of Ancient Egypt — Volume 10 by Georg Ebers
page 58 of 61 (95%)
page 58 of 61 (95%)
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and Pentaur became his most trusted adviser, and responsible for the
weightiest affairs in the state. Rameses learned from the papers found in Ani's tent, and from other evidence which was only too abundant, that the superior of the House of Seti, and with him the greater part of the priesthood, had for a long time been making common cause with the traitor; in the first instance he determined on the severest, nay bloodiest punishment, but he was persuaded by Pentaur and by his son Chamus to assert and support the principles of his government by milder and yet thorough measures. Rameses desired to be a defender of religion--of the religion which could carry consolation into the life of the lowly and over-burdened, and give their existence a higher and fuller meaning--the religion which to him, as king, appeared the indispensable means of keeping the grand significance of human life ever present to his mind--sacred as the inheritance of his fathers, and useful as the school where the people, who needed leading, might learn to follow and obey. But nevertheless no one, not even the priests, the guardians of souls, could be permitted to resist the laws of which he was the bulwark, to which he himself was subject, and which enjoined obedience to his authority; and before be left Tanis he had given Ameni and his followers to understand that he alone was master in Egypt. The God Seth, who had been honored by the Semite races since the time of the Hyksos, and whom they called upon under the name of Baal, had from the earliest times never been allowed a temple on the Nile, as being the God of the stranger; but Rameses--in spite of the bold remonstrances of the priestly party who called themselves the 'true believers'--raised a magnificent temple to this God in the city of Tanis to supply the |
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