Was this
the ideal of joy in the time of the Ptolemies?
Joy may be rapturous,
or it may be serene; but could it ever be like this? The pale,
delicious blue that here and there, in tiny sections, broke the almost
haggard, greyish whiteness of this first hall with the roof of black,
like bits of an evening sky seen through tiny window-slits in a sombre
room, suggested joy, was joy summed up in color. But Hathor's face was
weariful and sad.
From the gloom of the inner halls came a sound, loud, angry, menacing,
as I walked on, a sound of menace and an odor, heavy and deathlike.
Only in the first hall had those builders and decorators of two
thousand years ago been moved by their conception of the goddess to
hail her, to worship her, with the purity of white, with the sweet
gaiety of turquoise. Or so it seems to-day, when the passion of
Christianity against Hathor has spent itself and died. Now Christians
come to seek what Christian Copts destroyed; wander through the
deserted courts, desirous of looking upon the faces that have long
since been hacked to pieces. A more benign spirit informs our world,
but, alas! Hathor has been sacrificed to deviltries of old. And it is
well, perhaps, that her temple should be sad, like a place of silent
waiting for the glories that are gone.
With every step my melancholy grew.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 26 of 135
Words from 6717 to 6969
of 36756