The Learned Rabbi
Zimri.
A SCORCHING sun, a blue and burning
sky, on every side lofty ranges of black and barren
mountains, dark ravines, deep caverns, unfathomable
gorges! A solitary being moved in the distance.
Faint and toiling, a pilgrim slowly clambered up the
steep and stony track.
The sultry hours moved on; the pilgrim
at length gained the summit of the mountain, a small
and rugged table-land, strewn with huge masses of
loose and heated, rock. All around was desolation:
no spring, no herbage; the bird and the insect were
alike mute. Still it was the summit: no
loftier peaks frowned in the distance; the pilgrim
stopped, and breathed with more facility, and a faint
smile played over his languid and solemn countenance.
He rested a few minutes; he took from
his wallet some locusts and wild honey, and a small
skin of water. His meal was short as well as simple.
An ardent desire to reach his place of destination
before nightfall urged him to proceed. He soon
passed over the table-land, and commenced the descent
of the mountain. A straggling olive-tree occasionally
appeared, and then a group, and soon the groups swelled
into a grove. His way wound through the grateful
and unaccustomed shade. He emerged from the grove,
and found that he had proceeded down more than half
the side of the mountain. It ended precipitously
in a dark and narrow ravine, formed on the other side
by an opposite mountain, the lofty steep of which
was crested by a city gently rising on a gradual slope.
Nothing could be conceived more barren,
wild, and terrible than the surrounding scenery, unillumined
by a single trace of culture. The city stood
like the last gladiator in an amphitheatre of desolation.
It was surrounded by a lofty turreted
wall, of an architecture to which the pilgrim was
unaccustomed: gates with drawbridge and portcullis,
square towers, and loopholes for the archer. Sentinels,
clothed in steel and shining in the sunset, paced,
at regular intervals, the cautious wall, and on a
lofty tower a standard waved, a snowy standard, with
a red, red cross!
The Prince of the Captivity at length
beheld the lost capital of his fathers.
A few months back, and such a spectacle
would have called forth all the latent passion of
Alroy; but time and suffering, and sharp experience,
had already somewhat curbed the fiery spirit of the
Hebrew Prince. He gazed upon Jerusalem, he beheld
the City of David garrisoned by the puissant warriors
of Christendom, and threatened by the innumerable
armies of the Crescent. The two great divisions
of the world seemed contending for a prize, which
he, a lonely wanderer, had crossed the desert to rescue.
If his faith restrained him from doubting
the possibility of his enterprise, he was at least
deeply conscious that the world was a very different
existence from what he had fancied amid the gardens
of Hamadan and the rocks of Caucasus, and that if
his purpose could be accomplished, it could only be
effected by one means. Calm, perhaps somewhat
depressed, but full of pious humiliation, and not deserted
by holy hope, he descended into the Valley of Jehoshaphat,
and so, slaking his thirst at Siloah, and mounting
the opposite height, David Alroy entered Jerusalem
by the gate of Zion.
He had been instructed that the quarter
allotted to his people was near this entrance.
He inquired the direction of the sentinel, who did
not condescend to answer him. An old man, in
shabby robes, who was passing, beckoned to him.
‘What want you, friend?’ inquired Alroy.
’You were asking for the quarter
of our people. You must be a stranger, indeed,
in Jerusalem, to suppose that a Frank would speak to
a Jew. You were lucky to get neither kicked nor
cursed.’
‘Kicked and cursed! Why, these dogs ’
‘Hush! hush! for the love of
God,’ said his new companion, much alarmed.
’Have you lent money to their captain that you
speak thus? In Jerusalem our people speak only
in a whisper.’
‘No matter: the cure is
not by words. Where is our quarter?’
’Was the like ever seen!
Why, he speaks as if he were a Frank. I save
him from having his head broken by a gauntlet, and ’
‘My friend, I am tired. Our quarter?’
‘Whom may you want?’
‘The Chief Rabbi.’
‘You bear letters to him?’
‘What is that to you?’
’Hush! hush! You do not
know what Jerusalem is, young man. You must not
think of going on in this way. Where do you come
from?’
‘Bagdad.’
’Bagdad! Jerusalem is not
Bagdad. A Turk is a brute, but a Christian is
a demon.’
‘But our quarter, our quarter?’
‘Hush! you want the Chief Rabbi?’
‘Ay! ay!’
‘Rabbi Zimri?’
‘It may be so. I neither know nor care.’
’Neither knows nor cares!
This will never do; you must not go on in this way
at Jerusalem. You must not think of it.’
’Fellow, I see thou art a miserable
prattler. Show me our quarter, and I will pay
thee well, or be off.’
’Be off! Art thou a Hebrew?
to say “be off” to any one. You come
from Bagdad! I tell you what, go back to Bagdad.
You will never do for Jerusalem.’
’Your grizzled beard protects
you. Old fool, I am a pilgrim just arrived, wearied
beyond expression, and you keep me here listening to
your flat talk!’
‘Flat talk! Why! what would you?’
‘Lead me to the Rabbi Zimri, if that be his
name.’
’If that be his name! Why,
every one knows Rabbi Zimri, the Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem,
the successor of Aaron. We have our temple yet,
say what they like. A very learned doctor is
Rabbi Zimri.’
’Wretched driveller. I
am ashamed to lose my patience with such a dotard.’
‘Driveller! dotard! Why, who are you?’
’One you cannot comprehend.
Without another word, lead me to your chief.’
’Chief! you have not far to
go. I know no one of the nation who holds his
head higher than I do here, and they call me Zimri.’
‘What, the Chief Rabbi, that very learned doctor?’
‘No less; I thought you had heard of him.’
’Let us forget the past, good
Zimri. When great men play the incognito, they
must sometimes hear rough phrases. It is the Caliph’s
lot as well as yours. I am glad to make the acquaintance
of so great a doctor. Though young, and roughly
habited, I have seen the world a little, and may offer
next Sabbath in the synagogue more dirhems than
you would perhaps suppose. Good and learned Zimri,
I would be your guest.’
’A very worshipful young man!
And he speaks low and soft now! But it was lucky
I was at hand. Good, what’s your name?’
‘David.’
’A very honest name, good David.
It was lucky I was at hand when you spoke to the sentinel,
though. A Jew speak to a Frank, and a sentinel
too! Hah! hah! hah! that is good. How Rabbi
Maimón will laugh! Faith it was very lucky,
now, was not it?’
‘Indeed, most fortunate.’
’Well that is candid! Here!
this way. ’Tis not far. We number few,
sir, of our brethren here, but a better time will
come, a better time will come.’
‘I think so. This is your door?’
‘An humble one. Jerusalem is not Bagdad,
but you are welcome.’
‘King Pirgandicus entered
them,’ said Rabbi Maimón, ’but no
one since.’
‘And when did he live?’
inquired Alroy. ’His reign is recorded in
the Talmud,’ answered Rabbi Zimri, ‘but
in the Talmud there are no dates.’ ‘A
long while ago?’ asked Alroy. ‘Since
the Captivity,’ answered Rabbi Maimón.
‘I doubt that,’ said Rabbi Zimri, ’or
why should he be called king?’
‘Was he of the house of David?’ said Alroy.
‘Without doubt,’ said
Rabbi Maimón; ’he was one of our greatest
kings, and conquered Julius Caesar.’
‘His kingdom was in the northernmost
parts of Africa,’ said Rabbi Zimri, ‘and
exists to this day, if we could but find it.’
‘Ay, truly,’ added Rabbi
Maimón, ’the sceptre has never departed
out of Judah; and he rode always upon a white elephant.’
‘Covered with cloth of gold,’
added Rabbi Zimri. ’And he visited the
Tombs of the Kings?’ inquired Alroy.
‘Without doubt,’ said
Rabbi Maimón. ’The whole account is
in the Talmud.’
‘And no one can now find them?’
‘No one,’ replied Rabbi Zimri: ’but,
according to that learned doctor, Moses Hallevy, they
are in a valley in the mountains of Lebanon, which
was sealed up by the Archangel Michael.’
‘The illustrious Doctor Abarbanel,
of Babylon,’ said Rabbi Maimón, ’gives
one hundred and twenty reasons in his commentary on
the Gemara to prove that they sunk under the earth
at the taking of the Temple.’
‘No one reasons like Abarbanel
of Babylon,’ said Rabbi Zimri.
‘The great Rabbi Akiba, of Pundebita,
has answered them all,’ said Rabbi Maimón,
‘and holds that they were taken up to heaven.’
‘And which is right?’ inquired Rabbi Zimri.
‘Neither,’ said Rabbi Maimón.
‘One hundred and twenty reasons are strong proof,’
said Rabbi Zimri.
‘The most learned and illustrious
Doctor Aaron Mendola, of Granada,’ said Rabbi
Maimón, ’has shown that we must look for
the Tombs of the Kings in the south of Spain.’
‘All that Mendola writes is worth attention,’
said Rabbi Zimri.
‘Rabbi Hillel, of Samaria,
is worth two Mendolas any day,’ said Rabbi Maimón.
‘’Tis a most learned doctor,’ said
Rabbi Zimri; ‘and what thinks he?’
‘Hillel proves that there are
two Tombs of the Kings,’ said Rabbi Maimón,
‘and that neither of them are the right ones.’
‘What a learned doctor!’ exclaimed Rabbi
Zimri.
‘And very satisfactory,’ remarked Alroy.
‘These are high subjects,’
continued Maimón, his blear eyes twinkling with
complacency. ’Your guest, Rabbi Zimri, must
read the treatise of the learned Shimei, of Damascus,
on “Effecting Impossibilities."’
‘That is a work!’ exclaimed Zimri.
‘I never slept for three nights
after reading that work,’ said Rabbi Maimón.
’It contains twelve thousand five hundred and
thirty-seven quotations from the Pentateuch, and not
a single original observation.’
‘There were giants in those
days,’ said Rabbi Zimri; ’we are children
now.’
‘The first chapter makes equal
sense, read backward or forward,’ continued
Rabbi Maimón. ‘Ichabod!’ exclaimed
Rabbi Zimri. ’And the initial letter of
every section is a cabalistical type of a king of
Judah.’
‘The temple will yet be built,’
said Rabbi Zimri. ’Ay, ay! that is learning!’
exclaimed Rabbi Maimón; ’but what is the
great treatise on “Effecting Impossibilities”
to that profound, admirable, and ’
‘Holy Rabbi!’ said a youthful
reader of the synagogue, who now entered, ‘the
hour is at hand.’
’You don’t say so!
Learned Miamon, I must to the synagogue. I could
sit here all day listening to you. Come, David,
the people await us.’
Zimri and Alroy quitted the house,
and proceeded along the narrow hilly streets to the
chief temple of the Hebrews.
‘It grieves the venerable
Maimón much that he cannot join us,’ said
Rabbi Zimri. ’You have doubtless heard of
him at Bagdad; a most learned doctor.’
Alroy bowed in silence.
’He bears his years well.
You would hardly believe that he was my master.’
‘I perceive that you inherit much of his erudition.’
’You are kind. If he have
breathed one year, Rabbi Maimón will be a hundred
and ten next Passover.’
‘I doubt it not.’
’When he is gathered to his
fathers, a great light will be extinguished in Israel.
You wanted to know something about the Tombs of the
Kings; I told you he was your man. How full he
was! His mind, sir, is an egg.’
’A somewhat ancient one.
I fear his guidance will hardly bring me the enviable
fortune of King Pirgandicus.’
’Between ourselves, good David,
talking of King Pirgandicus, I cannot help fancying
that the learned Maimón made a slight mistake.
I hold Pirgandicus was only a prince. It was
after the Captivity, and I know no authority for any
of our rulers since the destruction assuming a higher
title. Clearly a prince, eh? But, though
I would whisper it to no one but you, I think our
worthy friend grows a little old. We should remember
his years, sir. A hundred and ten next Passover.
’Tis a great burden.’
‘Ay! with his learning added,
a very fearful burden indeed!’
’You have been a week in Jerusalem,
and have not yet visited our synagogue. It is
not of cedar and ivory, but it is still a temple.
This way. It is only a week that you have been
here? Why, you look another man! I shall
never forget our first meeting: you did not know
me. That was good, eh? And when I told you
I was the chief Rabbi Zimri, how you changed!
You have quite regained your appetite. Ah! ’tis
pleasant to mix once more with our own people.
To the left. So! we must descend a little.
We hold our meetings in an ancient cemetery. You
have a finer temple, I warrant me, in Bagdad.
Jerusalem is not Bagdad. But this has its conveniences.
’Tis safe, and we are not very rich, nor wish
to seem so.’
A long passage brought them to a number
of small, square, low chambers leading into each
other. They were lighted by brass lamps, placed
at intervals in vacant niches, that once held corpses,
and which were now soiled by the smoky flame.
Between two and three hundred individuals were assembled
in these chambers, at first scarcely distinguishable
by those who descended from the broad daylight; but
by degrees the eyesight became accustomed to the dim
and vaporous atmosphere, and Al-roy recognised in
the final and more illumined chamber a high cedar
cabinet, the type of the ark, and which held the sacred
vessels and the sanctified copy of the law.
Standing in lines, with their heads
mystically covered, the forlorn remnant of Israel,
captives in their ancient city, avowed, in spite of
all their sufferings, their fidelity to their God,
and, notwithstanding all the bitterness of hope delayed,
their faith in the fulfilment of his promises.
Their simple service was completed, their prayers were
read, their responses made, their law exhibited, and
their charitable offerings announced by their high
priest. After the service, the venerable Zimri,
opening a volume of the Talmud, and fortified by the
opinions of all those illustrious and learned doctors,
the heroes of his erudite conversations with the aged
Maimón, expounded the law to the congregation
of the people.
‘It is written,’ said
the Rabbi, ’"Thou shalt have none other God but
me.” Now know ye what our father Abraham
said when Nimrod ordered him to worship fire?
“Why not water,” answered Abraham, “which
can put out fire? why not clouds, which can pour forth
water? why not the winds, which can produce clouds?
why not God, which can create winds?"’
A murmur of approbation sounded throughout
the congregation.
‘Eliezer,’ said Zimri,
addressing himself to a young Rabbi, ’it is
written, that he took a rib from Adam when he was asleep.
Is God then a robber?’
The young Rabbi looked puzzled, and
cast his eyes on the ground. The congregation
was perplexed and a little alarmed.
‘Is there no answer?’ said Zimri.
‘Rabbi,’ said a stranger,
a tall, swarthy African pilgrim, standing in a corner,
and enveloped in a red mantle, over which a lamp threw
a flickering light; ’Rabbi, some robbers broke
into my house last night, and stole an earthen pipkin,
but they left a golden vase in its stead.’
‘It is well said; it is well
said,’ exclaimed the congregation. The
applause was loud.
‘Learned Zimri,’ continued
the African, ’it is written in the Gemara, that
there was a youth in Jerusalem who fell in love with
a beautiful damsel, and she scorned him. And
the youth was so stricken with his passion that he
could not speak; but when he beheld her, he looked
at her imploringly, and she laughed. And one
day the youth, not knowing what to do with himself,
went out into the desert; and towards night he returned
home, but the gates of the city were shut. And
he went down into the valley of Jehoshaphat, and entered
the tomb of Absalom and slept; and he dreamed
a dream; and next morning he came into the city smiling.
And the maiden met him, and she said, “Is that
thou; art thou a laugher?” and he answered,
“Behold, yesterday being disconsolate, I went
out of the city into the desert, and I returned home,
and the gates of the city were shut, and I went down
into the valley of Jehoshaphat, and I entered the
tomb of Absalom, and I slept, and I dreamed a dream,
and ever since then I have laughed.” And
the damsel said, “Tell me thy dream.”
And he answered and said, “I may not tell my
dream only to my wife, for it regards her honour.”
And the maiden grew sad and curious, and said, “I
am thy wife, tell me thy dream.” And straightway
they went and were married and ever after they both
laughed. Now, learned Zimri, what means this
tale, an idle jest for a master of the law, yet it
is written by the greatest doctor of the Captivity?’
‘It passeth my comprehension,’ said the
chief Rabbi.
Rabbi Eliezer was silent; the congregation groaned.
‘Now hear the interpretation,’
said the African. ’The youth is our people,
and the damsel is our lost Sion, and the tomb of Absalom
proves that salvation can only come from the house
of David. Dost thou hear this, young man?’
said the African, coming forward and laying his hand
on Alroy. ’I speak to thee, because I have
observed a deep attention in thy conduct.’
The Prince of the Captivity started,
and shot a glance at the dark visage before him, but
the glance read nothing. The upper part of the
countenance of the African was half concealed by masses
of dark matted hair, and the lower by his uncouth
robes. A flashing eye was its only characteristic,
which darted forth like lightning out of a black cloud.
‘Is my attention the only reason
that induces you to address me?’ inquired Alroy.
‘Whoever gave all his reasons?’
replied the African, with a laughing sneer.
’I seek not to learn them.
Suffice it, stranger, that how much soever you may
mean, as much I can understand.’
’’Tis well. Learned
Zimri, is this thy pupil? I congratulate thee.
I will match him against the hopeful Eliezer.’
So saying, the lofty African stalked out of the chamber.
The assembly also broke up. Alroy would willingly
have immediately followed the African, and held some
further and more private conversation with him; but
some minutes elapsed, owing to the officious attentions
of Zimri, before he could escape; and, when he did,
his search after the stranger was vain. He inquired
among the congregation, but none knew the African.
He was no man’s guest and no man’s debtor,
and apparently had never before been seen.
The trumpet was sounding to close
the gates, as Alroy passed the Zion entrance.
The temptation was irresistible. He rushed out,
and ran for more than one hundred yards without looking
back, and when he did, he had the satisfaction of
ascertaining that he was fairly shut out for the night.
The sun had set, still the Mount of Olives was flushed
with the reflection of his dying beams, but Jehoshaphat
at its feet was in deep shadow.
He wandered among the mountains for
some time, beholding Jerusalem from a hundred different
points of view, and watching the single planets and
clustering constellations that gradually burst into
beauty, or gathered into light. At length, somewhat
exhausted, he descended into the vale. The scanty
rill of Siloah looked like a thread of silver winding
in the moonlight. Some houseless wretches were
slumbering under the arch of its fountain. Several
isolated tombs of considerable size rose at the
base of Olivet, and the largest of these Alroy entered.
Proceeding through a narrow passage, he entered a
small square chamber. On each side was an empty
sarcophagus of granite, one with its lid broken.
Between these the Prince of the Captivity laid his
robe, and, wearied by his ramble, soon soundly slept.
After some hours he woke. He
fancied that he had been wakened by the sound of voices.
The chamber was not quite dark. A straggling moonbeam
fought its way through an open fretwork pattern in
the top of the tomb, and just revealed the dim interior.
Suddenly a voice spoke, a strange and singular voice.
‘Brother, brother, the sounds of the night begin.’
Another voice answered,
‘Brother, brother, I hear them, too.’
‘The woman in labour!’
‘The thief at his craft!’
‘The sentinel’s challenge!’
‘The murderer’s step!’
‘Oh! the merry sounds of the night!’
‘Brother, brother, let us come forth and wander
about the world.’
’We have seen all things.
I’ll lie here and listen to the baying hound.
‘Tis music for a tomb.’
’Choice and rare. You are
idle. I like to sport in the starry air.
Our hours are few, they should be fair.’
‘What shall we see, Heaven or
Earth?’ ’Hell for me, ‘tis more amusing.’
‘As for me, I am sick of Hades.’ ‘Let
us visit Solomon!’ ’In his unknown metropolis?’
‘That will be rare.’
‘But where, oh! where?’
’Even a spirit cannot tell.
But they say, but they say, I dare not whisper what
they say.’
‘Who told you?’
’No one. I overheard an
Afrite whispering to a female Ghoul he wanted to seduce.’
‘Hah! hah! hah! hah! choice pair, choice pair!
We are more ethereal.’
’She was a beauty in her way.
Her eyes were luminous, though somewhat dank, and
her cheek tinged with carnation caught from infant
blood.’
‘Oh! gay; oh! gay; what said they?’
’He was a deserter without leave
from Solomon’s body-guard. The trull wriggled
the secret out.’
‘Tell me, kind brother.’
‘I’ll show, not tell.’
‘I pr’ythee tell me.’
’Well, then, well. In Genthesma’s
gloomy cave there is a river none has reached, and
you must sail, and you must sail
Brother!’
‘Ay.’
‘Methinks I smell something too earthly.’
‘What’s that?’
‘The breath of man.’
‘Scent more fatal than the morning air!
Away, away!’
In the range of mountains that lead
from Olivet to the river Jordan is the great cavern
of Genthesma, a mighty excavation formed by the combined
and immemorial work of Nature and of Art; for on the
high basaltic columns are cut strange characters and
unearthly forms, and in many places the natural
ornaments have been completed by the hands of the
sculptor into symmetrical entablatures and fanciful
capitals, the work, they say, of captive Dives and
conquered Afrites for the great king.
It was midnight; the cold full moon
showered it brilliancy upon this narrow valley, shut
in on all sides by black and barren mountains.
A single being stood at the entrance of the cave.
It was Alroy. Desperate and determined,
after listening to the spirits in the tomb, he resolved
to penetrate the mysteries of Genthesma. He
took from his girdle a flint and steel, with which
he lighted a torch and then he entered.
The cavern narrowed as he cautiously
advanced, and soon he found himself at the head of
an evidently artificial gallery. A crowd of bats
rushed forward and extinguished his torch He
leant down to relight it and in so doing observed
that he had trod upon an artificial pavement.
The gallery was of great extent, with
a gradual declination Being in a straight line
with the mouth of the cavern, the moonlit scene was
long visible, but Alroy, on looking round, now perceived
that the exterior was shut out by the eminence that
he had left behind him. The sides of the gallery
were covered with strange and sculptured forms.
The Prince of the Captivity proceeded
along this gallery for nearly two hours. A distant
murmur of falling water, which might have been distinguished
nearly from the first, increased in sound as he advanced,
and now, from the loud roar and dash at hand, he felt
that he was on the brink of some cataract. It
as very dark. His heart trembled. He felt
his footing ere he ventured to advance. The spray
suddenly leaped forward and extinguished his torch.
His eminent danger filled him with
terror, and he receded some paces, but in vain endeavoured
to reillumine his torch, which was soaked with water.
His courage deserted him. Energy
and exertion seemed hopeless. He was about to
deliver himself up to despair, when and expanding lustre
attracted his attention in the opposing gloom.
A small and bright red cloud seemed
sailing towards him. It opened, discharged from
its bosom as silvery star, and dissolved again into
darkness. But the star remained, the silvery star,
and threw a long line of tremulous light upon the
vast and raging rapid, which now, fleet and foaming,
revealed itself on all sides to the eye of Alroy.
The beautiful interposition in his
favour re-animated the adventurous pilgrim. A
dark shadow in the foreground, breaking the line of
light shed by the star upon the waters, attracted
his attention. He advanced, regained his former
footing, and more nearly examined it. It was a
boat, and in the boat, mute and immovable, sat one
of those vast, singular, and hidden forms which eh
had observed sculptured on the walls of the gallery.
David Alry, committing his fortunes
to the God of Israel, leapt into the boat.
And at the same moment the Afrite,
for it was one of those dread beings, raised the
oars, and the barque moved. The falling waters
suddenly parted in the long line of the star’s
reflection, and the barque glided through their high
and severed masses.
In this wise they proceeded for a
few minutes, until they entered a beautiful and moonlit
lake. In the distance was mountainous country.
Alroy examined his companion with a feeling of curiosity
not unmixed with terror. It was remarkable that
Alroy could never succeed in any way in attracting
his notice. The Afrite seemed totally unconscious
of the presence of his passenger. At length the
boat reached the opposite shore of the lake, and the
Prince of the Captivity debarked.
He debarked at the head of an avenue
of colossal lions of red granite, extending far
as the eye could reach, and ascending the side of
the mountain, which was cut into a flight of magnificent
steps. The easy ascent was in consequence soon
accomplished, and Alroy, proceeding along the avenue
of lions, soon gained the summit of the mountain.
To his infinite astonishment he beheld
Jerusalem. That strongly-marked locality could
not be mistaken: at his feet were Jehoshaphat,
Kedron, Siloah; he stood upon Olivet; before him was
Zion. But in all other respects, how different
was the landscape from the one that he had gazed upon
a few days back, for the first time! The surrounding
hills sparkled with vineyards, and glowed with summer
palaces, and voluptuous pavilions, and glorious gardens
of pleasure. The city, extending all over Mount
Sion, was encompassed with a wall of white marble,
with battlements of gold; a gorgeous mass of gates
and pillars, and gardened terraces; lofty piles of
rarest materials, cedar, and ivory, and precious stones;
and costly columns of the richest workmanship and the
most fanciful orders, capitals of the lotus and the
palm, and flowing friezes of the olive and the vine.
And in the front a mighty Temple rose,
with inspiration in its very form; a Temple so vast,
so sumptuous, that there needed no priest to tell
us that no human hand planned that sublime magnificence!
‘God of my fathers!’ said
Alroy, ’I am a poor, weak thing, and my life
has been a life of dreams and visions, and I have sometimes
thought my brain lacked a sufficient master; where
am I? Do I sleep or live? Am I a slumberer
or a ghost? This trial is too much.’
He sank down, and hid his face in his hands:
his over-exerted mind appeared to desert him:
he wept.
Many minutes elapsed before Alroy
grew composed. His wild bursts of weeping sank
into sobs, and the sobs died off into sighs. And
at length, calm from exhaustion, he again looked up,
and lo! the glorious city was no more! Before
him was a moon-lit plain, over which the avenue of
lions still advanced, and appeared to terminate only
in the mountainous distance.
This limit the Prince of the Captivity
at length reached, and stood before a stupendous portal,
cut out of the solid rock, four hundred feet in height,
and supported by clusters of colossal Caryatides.
Upon the portal were engraven some Hebrew characters,
which upon examination proved to be the same as those
upon the talisman of Jabaster. And so, taking
from his bosom that all-precious and long-cherished
deposit, David Alroy, in obedience to his instructions,
pressed the signet against the gigantic portal.
The portal opened with a crash of
thunder louder than an earthquake. Pale, panting,
and staggering, the Prince of the Captivity entered
an illimitable hall, illumined by pendulous balls
of glowing metal. On each side of the hall, sitting
on golden thrones, was ranged a line of kings, and,
as the pilgrim entered, the monarchs rose, and took
off their diadems, and waved them thrice, and thrice
repeated, in solemn chorus, ‘All hail, Alroy!
Hail to thee, brother king! Thy crown awaits thee!’
The Prince of the Captivity stood
trembling, with his eyes fixed upon the ground, and
leaning breathless against a column. And when
at length he had a little recovered himself, and dared
again to look up, he found that the monarchs were
re-seated; and, from their still and vacant visages,
apparently unconscious of his presence. And this
emboldened him, and so, staring alternately at each
side of the hall, but with a firm, perhaps desperate
step, Alroy advanced.
And he came to two thrones which were
set apart from the others in the middle of the hall.
On one was seated a noble figure, far above the common
stature, with arms folded and downcast eyes. His
feet rested upon a broken sword and a shivered sceptre,
which told that he was a monarch, in spite of his
discrowned head.
And on the opposite throne was a venerable
personage, with a long flowing beard, and dressed
in white raiment. His countenance was beautiful,
although ancient. Age had stolen on without its
imperfections, and time had only invested it with a
sweet dignity and solemn grace. The countenance
of the king was upraised with a seraphic gaze, and,
as he thus looked up on high, with eyes full of love,
and thanksgiving, and praise, his consecrated fingers
seemed to touch the trembling wires of a golden harp.
And further on, and far above the
rest, upon a throne that stretched across the hall,
a most imperial presence straightway flashed upon the
startled vision of Alroy. Fifty steps of ivory,
and each step guarded by golden lions, led to
a throne of jasper. A dazzling light blazed forth
from the glittering diadem and radiant countenance
of him who sat upon the throne, one beautiful as a
woman, but with the majesty of a god. And in
one hand he held a seal, and in the other a sceptre.
And when Alroy had reached the foot
of the throne, he stopped, and his heart misgave him.
And he prayed for some minutes in silent devotion,
and, without daring to look up, he mounted the first
step of the throne, and the second, and the third,
and so on, with slow and faltering feet, until he
reached the forty-ninth step.
The Prince of the Captivity raised
his eyes. He stood before the monarch face to
face. In vain Alroy attempted to attract his attention,
or to fix his gaze. The large dark eyes, full
of supernatural lustre, appeared capable of piercing
all things, and illuminating all things, but they
flashed on without shedding a ray upon Alroy.
Pale as a spectre, the pilgrim, whose
pilgrimage seemed now on the point of completion,
stood cold and trembling before the object of all his
desires and all his labours. But he thought of
his country, his people, and his God; and, while his
noiseless lips breathed the name of Jéhovah, solemnly
he put forth his arm, and with a gentle firmness grasped
the unresisting sceptre of his great ancestor.
And, as he seized it, the whole scene
vanished from his sight!
Hours or years might have passed away,
so far as the sufferer was concerned, when Alroy again
returned to self-consciousness. His eyes slowly
opened, he cast around a vacant stare, he was lying
in the cavern of Genthesma. The moon had set,
but the morn had not broken. A single star glittered
over the brow of the black mountains. He faintly
moved his limbs; he would have raised his hand to
his bewildered brain, but found that it grasped a
sceptre. The memory of the past returned to him.
He tried to rise, and found that he was reposing in
the arms of a human being. He turned his head;
he met the anxious gaze of Jabaster!