For Everywhere I Saw The Face Of
Little Ali, With Every Feature Exactly Reproduced.
Here he was bending
over a sacrifice, leading a sacred bull, feeding geese from a cup,
roasting a chicken, pulling a boat, carpentering, polishing,
conducting a monkey for a walk, or merely sitting bolt upright and
sneering.
There were lines of little Alis with their hands held to
their breasts, their faces in profile, their knees rigid, in the happy
tomb of Thi; but he glanced at them unheeding, did not recognize his
ancestors. And he did not care to penetrate into the tombs of Mera and
Meri-Ra-ankh, into the Serapeum and the Mestaba of Ptah-hotep. Perhaps
he was right. The Serapeum is grand in its vastness, with its long and
high galleries and its mighty vaults containing the huge granite
sarcophagi of the sacred bulls of Apis; Mera, red and white, welcomes
you from an elevated niche benignly; Ptah-hotep, priest of the fifth
dynasty, receives you, seated at a table that resembles a rake with
long, yellow teeth standing on its handle, and drinking stiffly a cup
of wine. You see upon the wall near by, with sympathy, a patient being
plied by a naked and evidently an unyielding physician with medicine
from a jar that might have been visited by Morgiana, a musician
playing upon an instrument like a huge and stringless harp. But it is
the happy tomb of Thi that lingers in your memory. In that tomb one
sees proclaimed with a marvellous ingenuity and expressiveness the joy
and the activity of life. Thi must have loved life; loved prayer and
sacrifice, loved sport and war, loved feasting and gaiety, labor of
the hands and of the head, loved the arts, the music of flute and
harp, singing by the lingering and plaintive voices which seem to
express the essence of the east, loved sweet odors, loved sweet women
- do we not see him sitting to receive offerings with his wife beside
him? - loved the clear nights and the radiant days that in Egypt make
glad the heart of man. He must have loved the splendid gift of life,
and used it completely. And so little Ali had very right to make his
sole obeisance at Thi's delicious tomb, from which death itself seems
banished by the soft and embracing radiance of the almost living
walls.
This delicate cheerfulness, a quite airy gaiety of life, is often
combined in Egypt, and most beautifully and happily combined, with
tremendous solidity, heavy impressiveness, a hugeness that is well-
nigh tragic; and it supplies a relief to eye, to mind, to soul, that
is sweet and refreshing as the trickle of a tarantella from a reed
flute heard under the shadows of a temple of Hercules. Life showers us
with contrasts. Art, which gives to us a second and a more withdrawn
life, opening to us a door through which we pass to our dreams, may
well imitate life in this.
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