Then There Are Silent Voices That
Summon One Across The River, When The Dawn Is Breaking Over The Hills
Of The Arabian Desert, Or When The Sun Is Declining Toward The Libyan
Mountains - Voices Issuing From Lips Of Stone, From The Twilight Of
Sanctuaries, From The Depths Of Rock-Hewn Tombs.
The peace of the plain of Thebes in the early morning is very rare and
very exquisite.
It is not the peace of the desert, but rather,
perhaps, the peace of the prairie - an atmosphere tender, delicately
thrilling, softly bright, hopeful in its gleaming calm. Often and
often have I left the /Loulia/ very early moored against the long sand
islet that faces Luxor when the Nile has not subsided, I have rowed
across the quiet water that divided me from the western bank, and,
with a happy heart, I have entered into the lovely peace of the great
spaces that stretch from the Colossi of Memnon to the Nile, to the
mountains, southward toward Armant, northward to Kerekten, to Danfik,
to Gueziret-Meteira. Think of the color of young clover, of young
barley, of young wheat; think of the timbre of the reed flute's voice,
thin, clear, and frail with the frailty of dewdrops; think of the
torrents of spring rushing through the veins of a great, wide land,
and growing almost still at last on their journey. Spring, you will
say, perhaps, and high Nile not yet subsided! But Egypt is the favored
land of a spring that is already alert at the end of November, and in
December is pushing forth its green. The Nile has sunk away from the
feet of the Colossi that it has bathed through many days. It has freed
the plain to the fellaheen, though still it keeps my island in its
clasp. And Hapi, or Kam-wra, the "Great Extender," and Ra, have made
this wonderful spring to bloom on the dark earth before the
Christian's Christmas.
What a pastoral it is, this plain of Thebes, in the dawn of day! Think
of the reed flute, I have said, not because you will hear it, as you
ride toward the mountains, but because its voice would be utterly in
place here, in this arcady of Egypt, playing no tarantella, but one of
those songs, half bird-like, and half sadly, mysteriously human, which
come from the soul of the East. Instead of it, you may catch distant
cries from the bank of the river, where the shadoof-man toils, lifting
ever the water and his voice, the one to earth, the other, it seems,
to sky; and the creaking lay of the water-wheel, which pervades Upper
Egypt like an atmosphere, and which, though perhaps at first it
irritates, at last seems to you the sound of the soul of the river, of
the sunshine, and the soil.
Much of the land looks painted. So flat is it, so young are the
growing crops, that they are like a coating of green paint spread over
a mighty canvas. But the doura rises higher than the heads of the
naked children who stand among it to watch you canter past. And in the
far distance you see dim groups of trees - sycamores and acacias,
tamarisks and palms. Beyond them is the very heart of this "land of
sand and ruins and gold"; Medinet-Abu, the Ramesseum, Deir-el Medinet,
Kurna, Deir-el-Bahari, the tombs of the kings, the tombs of the queens
and of the princes. In the strip of bare land at the foot of those
hard, and yet poetic mountains, have been dug up treasures the fame of
which has gone to the ends of the world. But this plain, where the
fellaheen are stooping to the soil, and the women are carrying the
water-jars, and the children are playing in the doura, and the oxen
and the camels are working with ploughs that look like relics of far-
off days, is the possession of the two great presiding beings whom you
see from an enormous distance, the Colossi of Memnon. Amenhotep III.
put them where they are. So we are told. But in this early morning it
is not possible to think of them as being brought to any place.
Seated, the one beside the other, facing the Nile and the home of the
rising sun, their immense aspect of patience suggests will, calmly,
steadily exercised, suggests choice; that, for some reason, as yet
unknown, they chose to come to this plain, that they choose solemnly
to remain there, waiting, while the harvests grow and are gathered
about their feet, while the Nile rises and subsides, while the years
and the generations come, like the harvests, and are stored away in
the granaries of the past. Their calm broods over this plain, gives to
it a personal atmosphere which sets it quite apart from every other
flat space of the world. There is no place that I know on the earth
which has the peculiar, bright, ineffable calm of the plain of these
Colossi. It takes you into its breast, and you lie there in the
growing sunshine almost as if you were a child laid in the lap of one
of them. That legend of the singing at dawn of the "vocal Memnon," how
could it have arisen? How could such calmness sing, such patience ever
find a voice? Unlike the Sphinx, which becomes ever more impressive as
you draw near to it, and is most impressive when you sit almost at its
feet, the Colossi lose in personality as you approach them and can see
how they have been defaced.
From afar one feels their minds, their strange, unearthly temperaments
commanding this pastoral. When you are beside them, this feeling
disappears. Their features are gone, and though in their attitudes
there is power, and there is something that awakens awe, they are more
wonderful as a far-off feature of the plain. They gain in grandeur
from the night in strangeness from the moonrise, perhaps specially
when the Nile comes to their feet.
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