Conquest of the Seljuks
YOUR face is troubled, uncle.’
‘So is my mind.’ ‘All may go
well.’ ’Miriam, we have seen the
best. Prepare yourself for sorrow, gentle girl.
I care not for myself, for I am old, and age makes
heroes of us all. I have endured, and can endure
more. As we approach our limit, it would appear
that our minds grow callous. I have seen my wealth,
raised with the labours of a thoughtful life, vanish
in a morn: my people, a fragile remnant, nevertheless
a people, dispersed, or what is worse. I have
wept for them, although no tear of selfish grief has
tinged this withered cheek. And, were I but alone,
ay! there’s the pang. The solace of my
days is now my sorrow.’
’Weep not for me, dear uncle.
Rather let us pray that our God will not forsake us.’
’We know not when we are well.
Our hours stole tranquilly along, and then we murmured.
Prospering, we murmured, and now we are rightly stricken.
The legend of the past is Israel’s bane.
The past is a dream; and, in the waking present, we
should discard the enervating shadow. Why should
we be free? We murmured against captivity.
This is captivity: this damp, dim cell,
where we are brought to die.
’O! youth, rash youth, thy being
is destruction. But yesterday a child, it seems
but yesterday I nursed him in these arms, a thoughtless
child, and now our house has fallen by his deeds.
I will not think of it; ‘twill make me mad.’
’Uncle, dearest uncle, we have
lived together, and we will die together, and both
in love; but, I pray you, speak no harsh word of David.’
‘Shall I praise him?’
’Say nothing. What he has
done, if done in grief, has been done all in honour.
Would you that he had spared Alschiroch?’
’Never! I would have struck
him myself. Brave boy, he did his duty; and I,
I, Miriam, thy uncle, at whom they wink behind his
back and call him niggard, was I wanting in that hour
of trial? Was my treasure spared to save my people?
Did I shrink from all the toil and trouble of that
time? A trying time, my Miriam, but compared
with this, the building of the Temple ’
’You were then what you have
ever been, the best and wisest. And since our
fathers’ God did not forsake us, even in that
wilderness of wildest woe, I offer gratitude in present
faith, and pay him for past mercies by my prayers
for more.’
’Well, well, life must end.
The hour approaches when we must meet our rulers and
mock trial; precious justice that begins in threats
and ends in torture. You are silent, Miriam.’
‘I am speaking to my God.’
’What is that noise? A
figure moves behind the dusky grate. Our gaoler.
No, no, it is Caleb! Faithful child, I fear you
have perilled much.’
‘I enter with authority, my lord, and bear good
tidings.’
‘He smiles! Is’t possible? Speak
on, speak on!’
’Alroy has captured the harem
of our Governor, as they journeyed from Bagdad to
this city, guarded by his choicest troops. And
he has sent to offer that they shall be exchanged
for you and for your household. And Hassan has
answered that his women shall owe their freedom to
nothing but his sword. But, in the meantime,
it is agreed between him and the messenger of your
nephew, that both companies of prisoners shall be
treated with all becoming courtesy. You, therefore,
are remanded to your palace, and the trumpet is now
sounding before the great mosque to summon all the
host against Alroy, whom Hassan has vowed to bring
to Hamadan dead or alive.’
’The harem of the Governor,
guarded too by his choicest troops! ’Tis
a great deed. He did remember us. Faithful
boy! The harem of the Governor! his choicest
troops! ’Tis a very great deed. Me-thinks
the Lord is with him. He has his great father’s
heart. Only think of David, a child! I nursed
him, often. Caleb! Can this be David, our
David, a child, a girl? Yet he struck Alschiroch!
Miriam! where is she? Worthy Caleb, look to your
mistress; she has fallen. Quite gone! Fetch
water. ’Tis not very pure, but we shall
be in our palace soon. The harem of the Governor!
I can’t believe it. Sprinkle, sprinkle.
David take them prisoners! Why, when they pass,
we are obliged to turn our heads, and dare not look.
More water: I’ll rub her hand. ’Tis
warmer! Her eyes open! Miriam, choice news,
my child! The harem of the Governor! I’ll
not believe it!
’Once more within our walls,
Caleb. Life is a miracle. I feel young again.
This is home; and yet I am a prisoner. You said
the host were assembling; he can have no chance.
Think you, Caleb, he has any chance? I hope he
will die. I would not have him taken. I fear
their tortures. We will die too; we will all
die. Now I am out of that dungeon, me-thinks
I could even fight. Is it true that he has joined
with robbers?’
’I saw the messenger, and learnt
that he first repaired to some bandits in the ruins
in the desert. He had become acquainted with them
in his pilgrimage. They say their leader is one
of our people.’
’I am glad of that. He
can eat with him. I would not have him eat unclean
things with the Ishmaelites.’
’Lord, sir! our people gather
to him from all quarters. ’Tis said that
Jabaster, the great Cabalist, has joined him from the
mountains with ten thousand men.’
’The great Jabaster! then there
is some chance. I know Jabaster well. He
is too wise to join a desperate cause. Art sure
about Jabaster? ’Tis a great name, a very
potent spirit. I have heard such things of that
Jabaster, sir, would make you stare like Saul before
the spirit! Only think of our David, Caleb, making
all this noise! I am full of hope. I feel
not like a prisoner. He beat the harem guard,
and, now he has got Jabaster, he will beat them all.’
’The messenger told me he captured
the harem, only to free his uncle and his sister.’
’He ever loved me; I have done
my duty to him; I think I have. Jabaster! why,
man, the name is a spell I There are men at Bagdad
who will get up in the night to join Jabaster.
I hope David will follow his counsels in all things.
I would I had seen his servant, I could have sent him
a message.’
’Lord, sir! the Prince Alroy
has no great need of counsellors, I can tell you.
’Tis said he bears the sceptre of great Solomon,
which he himself obtained in the unknown tombs of
Palestine.’
’The sceptre of Solomon! could
I but believe it! ’Tis an age of wonders!
Where are we? Call for Miriam, I’ll tell
her this. Only think of David, a mere child,
our David with the sceptre of Solomon! and Jabaster
too! I have great faith. The Lord confound
his enemies!’
’Gentle Rachel, I fear I trouble
you; sweet Beruna, I thank you for your zeal.
I am better now; the shock was great. These are
strange tidings, maidens.’
’Yes, dear lady! who would have
thought of your brother turning out a Captain?’
‘I am sure I always thought
he was the quietest person in the world,’ said
Beruna, ‘though he did kill Alschiroch.’
‘One could never get a word out of him,’
said Rachel.
‘He was always moping alone,’ said Beruna.
‘And when one spoke to him he always turned
away,’ said Leah.
‘Or blushed,’ added Imra.
‘Well, for my part,’ said
the beautiful Bathsheba, ’I always thought
Prince David was a genius. He had such beautiful
eyes!’
‘I hope he will conquer Hassan,’ said
Rachel.
‘So do I,’ said Beruna.
‘I wonder what he has done with the harem,’
said Leah.
‘I don’t think he will dare to speak to
them,’ said Imra.
‘You are very much mistaken,’ said Bathsheba.
‘Hark!’ said Miriam.
‘’Tis Hassan,’ said Bathsheba; ‘may
he never return!’
The wild drum of the Seljuks sounded,
then a flourish of their fierce trumpets, and soon
the tramp of horse. Behind the blinds of their
chamber, Miriam and her maidens beheld the magnificent
troop of tur-baned horsemen, who, glittering with
splendid armour and bright shawls, and proudly bounding
on their fiery steeds, now went forth to crush and
conquer the only hope of Israel. Upon an Arab,
darker than night, rode the superb Hassan, and, as
he passed the dwelling of his late prisoners, whether
from the exulting anticipation of coming triumph,
or from a soft suspicion that, behind that lattice,
bright eyes and brilliant faces were gazing on his
state, the haughty but handsome Seljuk flourished
his scimitar over his head, as he threw his managed
steed into attitudes that displayed the skill of its
rider.
‘He is handsomer than Alschiroch,’ said
Rachel.
‘What a shawl!’ said Beruna.
‘His scimitar was like lightning,’ said
Leah.
‘And his steed like thunder,’ said Imra.
‘The evil eye fall on him!’ said Bathsheba.
‘Lord,’ exclaimed Miriam, ‘remember
David and all his afflictions!’
The deserted city of the wilderness
presented a very different appearance from that which
met the astonished gaze of Alroy, when he first beheld
its noble turrets, and wandered in its silent streets
of palaces.
Without the gates was pitched a numerous
camp of those low black tents common among the Kourds
and Turkmans; the principal street was full of busy
groups engaged in all the preparations of warfare,
and all the bustling expedients of an irregular and
adventurous life; steeds were stalled in ruined chambers,
and tall camels raised their still visages among
the clustering columns, or crouched in kneeling tranquillity
amid fallen statues and prostrate obelisks.
Two months had scarcely elapsed since
Alroy and Jabaster had sought Scherirah in his haunt,
and announced to him their sacred mission. The
callous heart of him, whose ‘mother was a Jewess,’
had yielded to their inspired annunciations.
He embraced their cause with all the fervour of conversion,
and his motley band were not long sceptical of a creed
which, while it assuredly offered danger and adventure,
held out the prospects of wealth and even empire.
From the city of the wilderness the new Messiah sent
forth his messengers to the neighbouring cities, to
announce his advent to his brethren in captivity.
The Hebrews, a proud and stiff-necked race, ever prone
to rebellion, received the announcement of their favourite
prince with transport. The descendant of David,
and the slayer of Alschiroch, had double claims upon
their confidence and allegiance, and the flower of
the Hebrew youth in the neighbouring cities of the
Caliphate repaired in crowds to pay their homage to
the recovered sceptre of Solomon.
The affair was at first treated by
the government with contempt, and the sultan of the
Seljuks contented himself with setting a price upon
the head of the murderer of his brother; but, when
several cities had been placed under contribution,
and more than one Moslem caravan stopped, and plundered
in the name of the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of
Jacob, orders were despatched from Bagdad to the new
governor of Hamadan, Hassan Subah, to suppress the
robbers, or the rebels, and to send David Alroy dead
or alive to the capital.
The Hebrew malcontents were well apprised
by their less adventurous but still sympathising brethren
of everything that took place at the head-quarters
of the enemy. Spies arrived on the same day at
the city of the wilderness, who informed Alroy that
his uncle was thrown into a dungeon at Hamadan, and
that a body of chosen troops were about to escort
a royal harem from Bagdad into Persia.
Alroy attacked the escort in person,
utterly discomfited them, and captured their charge.
It proved to be the harem of the Governor of Hamadan,
and if for a moment the too sanguine fancy of the captor
experienced a passing pang of disappointment, the prize
at least obtained, as we have seen, the freedom and
security of his dear though distant friends.
This exploit precipitated the expedition which was
preparing at Hamadan for his destruction. The
enraged Hassan Subah started from his divan, seized
his scimitar, and without waiting for the auxiliaries
he had summoned from the neighbouring chieftains, called
to horse, and at the head of two thousand of the splendid
Seljuk cavalry, hurried to vindicate his love and
satiate his revenge.
Within the amphitheatre which he first
entered as a prisoner, Alroy sat in council.
On his right was Jabaster, Scherirah on his left.
A youth, little his senior, but tall as a palm-tree,
and strong as a young lion, was the fourth captain.
In the distance, some standing, some reclining, were
about fifty men completely armed.
‘Are the people numbered, Abner?’
inquired Alroy of the youth.
’Even so; three hundred effective
horsemen, and two thousand footmen; but the footmen
lack arms.’
‘The Lord will send them in
good time,’ said Jabaster; ’meanwhile let
them continue to make javelins.’
‘Trust in the Lord,’ murmured
Scherirah, bending his head, with his eyes fixed on
the ground.
A loud shout was heard throughout
the city. Alroy started from his carpet.
The messenger had returned. Pale and haggard,
covered with sweat and sand, the faithful envoy was
borne into the amphitheatre almost upon the shoulders
of the people. In vain the guard endeavoured to
stem the passage of the multitude. They clambered
up the tiers of arches, they filled the void and crumbling
seats of the antique circus, they supported themselves
upon each other’s shoulders, they clung to the
capitals of the lofty columns. The whole multitude
had assembled to hear the intelligence; the scene
recalled the ancient purpose of the building, and
Alroy and his fellow-warriors seemed like the gladiators
of some old spectacle.
‘Speak,’ said Alroy, ’speak
the worst. No news can be bitter to those whom
the Lord will avenge.’
‘Ruler of Israel! thus saith
Hassan Subah,’ answered the messenger: ’My
harem shall owe their freedom to nothing but my sword.
I treat not with rebels, but I war not with age or
woman; and between Bostenay and his household on one
side, and the prisoners of thy master on the other,
let there be peace. Go, tell Alroy, I will seal
it in his best blood. And lo! thy uncle and thy
sister are again in their palace.’
Alroy placed his hand for a moment
to his eyes, and then instantly resuming his self-possession,
he enquired as to the movements of the enemy.
’I have crossed the desert on
a swift dromedary lent to me by Shelomi of the
Gate, whose heart is with our cause. I have not
tarried, neither have I slept. Ere to-morrow’s
sunset the Philistines will be here, led by Hassan
Subah himself. The Lord of Hosts be with us!
Since we conquered Canaan, Israel hath not struggled
with such a power!’
A murmur ran through the assembly.
Men exchanged enquiring glances, and involuntarily
pressed each other’s arms.
‘The trial has come,’
said a middle-aged Hebrew, who had fought twenty years
ago with Jabaster.
‘Let me die for the Ark!’
said a young enthusiast of the band of Abner.
‘I thought we should get into
a scrape,’ whispered Kisloch the Kourd to Calidas
the Indian. ’What could have ever induced
us to give up robbing in a quiet manner?’
‘And turn Jews!’ said the Guèbre,
with a sneer.
‘Look at Scherirah,’ said
the Negro, grinning. ’If he is not kissing
the sceptre of Solomon!’
‘I wish to heaven he had only
hung Alroy the first time he met him,’ said
Calidas.
‘Sons of the Covenant!’
exclaimed Alroy, ’the Lord hath delivered them
into our hands. To-morrow eve we march to Hamadan!’
A cheer followed this exclamation.
‘It is written,’ said
Jabaster, opening a volume, ’"Lo! I will
defend this city, to save it, for mine own sake, and
for my servant David’s sake.”
’"And it came to pass that night
that the angel of the Lord went out, and smote in
the camp of the Assyrians, an hundred four score and
five thousand; and when they arose early in the morning,
behold! they were all dead corpses.”
’Now, as I was gazing upon the
stars this morn, and reading the celestial alphabet
known to the true Cabalist, behold! the star of
the house of David and seven other stars moved, and
met together, and formed into a circle. And the
word they formed was a mystery to me; but lo!
I have opened the book, and each star is the initial
letter of each line of the Targum that I have now
read to you. Therefore the fate of Sennacherib
is the fate of Hassan Subah!’
’"Trust in him at all times,
ye people; pour out your heart before him.”
god is a refuge for us. Selah!’
At this moment a female form appeared
on the very top of the amphitheatre, upon the slight
remains of the upper most tier of which a solitary
arch alone was left. The chorus instantly died
away, every tongue was silent, every eye fixed.
Hushed, mute, and immovable, even Kisloch and his
companions were appalled as they gazed upon Esther
the Prophetess.
Her eminent position, her imposing
action, the flashing of her immense eyes, her beautiful
but awful countenance, her black hair, that hung almost
to her knees, and the white light of the moon, just
rising over the opposite side of the amphitheatre,
and which threw a silvery flash upon her form, and
seemed to invest her with some miraculous emanation,
while all beneath her was in deep gloom,-these circumstances
combined to render her an object of universal interest
and attention, while in a powerful but high voice
she thus addressed them:
’They come, they come!
But will they go? Lo! hear ye this, O house of
Jacob, which are called by the name of Israel, and
are come forth out of the waters of Judah! I
hear their drum in the desert, and the voice of their
trumpets is like the wind of eve, but a decree hath
gone forth, and it says, that a mortal shall be more
precious than fine gold, yea, a man than the rich
ore of Ophir.
’They come, they come!
But will they go? I see the flash of their scimitars,
I mark the prancing of their cruel steeds; but a decree
hath gone forth, and it says, a gleaning shall be
left among them, as in the shaking of the olive-tree;
two or three berries on the top of the uppermost bough;
four or five on the straggling branches.
’They come, they come!
But will they go? Lo! a decree hath gone forth,
and it says, Hamadan shall be to thee for a spoil,
and desolation shall fall upon Babylon. And there
shall the wild beasts of the desert lodge, and howling
monsters shall fill their houses, and there shall the
daughters of the ostrich dwell, and there shall the
screech-owl pitch her tent, and there shall the night-raven
lay her eggs, and there shall the satyrs hold their
revels. And wolves shall howl to one another in
their palaces, and dragons in their voluptuous pavilions.
Her time is near at hand; her days shall not be prolonged;
the reed and the lotus shall wither in her rivers;
and the meadows by her canals shall be as the sands
of the desert. For, is it a light thing that the
Lord should send his servant to raise up the tribes
of Jacob, and to restore the preserved of Israel?
Sing, O heavens, and be joyful, O earth, and break
forth into singing, O mountains, for the Lord hath
comforted his people, and will have mercy upon his
afflicted!’
She ceased; she descended the precipitous
side of the amphitheatre with rapid steps, vaulting
from tier to tier, and bounding with wonderful agility
from one mass of ruin to another. At length she
reached the level; and then, foaming and panting,
she rushed to Alroy, threw herself upon the ground,
embraced his feet, and wiped off the dust from his
sandals with her hair.
The assembly broke into long and loud
acclamations of supernatural confidence and sanguine
enthusiasm. They beheld their Messiah wave his
miraculous sceptre. They thought of Hassan Subah
and his Seljuks only as of victims, and of to-morrow
only as of a day which was to commence a new era of
triumph, freedom, and empire!
Hassan Subah after five days’
forced marches pitched his sumptuous pavilion in that
beautiful Oasis, which had afforded such delightful
refreshment to Alroy when a solitary pilgrim.
Around for nearly a mile, were the tents of his warriors,
and of the numerous caravan that had accompanied him,
laden with water and provisions for his troops.
Here, while he reposed, he also sought information
as to the position of his enemy.
A party of observation, which he had
immediately despatched, returned almost instantly
with a small caravan that had been recently plundered
by the robbers. The merchant, a venerable and
pious Moslem, was ushered into the presence of the
Governor of Hamadan.
‘From the robbers’ haunt?’ enquired
Hassan.
‘Unfortunately so,’ answered the merchant.
‘Is it far?’
‘A day’s journey.’
‘And you quitted it?’
‘Yesterday morn.’
‘What is their force?’
The merchant hesitated.
‘Do they not make prisoners?’
enquired the Governor, casting a scrutinising glance
at his companion.
‘Holy Prophet! what a miserable
wretch am I!’ exclaimed the venerable merchant,
bursting into tears. ’A faithful subject
of the Caliph, I am obliged to serve rebels, a devout
Moslem, I am forced to aid Jews! Order me to
be hanged at once, my lord,’ continued the unfortunate
merchant, wringing his hands. ’Order me
to be hanged at once. I have lived long enough.’
‘What is all this?’ enquired Hassan; ‘speak,
friend, without fear.’
‘I am a faithful subject of
the Caliph,’ answered the merchant; ’I
am a devout Moslem, but I have lost ten thousand dirhems.’
’I am sorry for you, sir; I
also have lost something, but my losses are nothing
to you, nor yours to me.’
’Accursed be the hour when these
dogs tempted me! Tell me, is it sin to break
faith with a Jew?’
’On the contrary, I could find
you many reverend Mollahs, who will tell you that
such a breach is the highest virtue. Come! come,
I see how it is: you have received your freedom
on condition of not betraying your merciful plunderers.
Promises exacted by terror are the bugbears of fools.
Speak, man, all you know. Where are they?
What is their force? Are we supposed to be at
hand?’
‘I am a faithful subject of
the Caliph, and I am bound to serve him,’ replied
the merchant; ’I am a devout Moslem, and ’tis
my duty to destroy all Giaours, but I am also a man,
and I must look after my own interest. Noble
Governor, the long and the short is, these scoundrels
have robbed me of ten thousand dirhems, as my
slaves will tell you: at least, goods to that
amount. No one can prove that they be worth less.
It is true that I include in that calculation the
fifty per cent. I was to make on my shawls at
Hamadan, but still to me it is as good as ten thousand
dirhems. Ask my slaves if such an assortment
of shawls was ever yet beheld.’
‘To the point, to the point.
The robbers?’ ’I am at the point.
The shawls is the point. For when I talked of
the shawls and the heaviness of my loss, you must
know that the captain of the robbers ’
‘Alroy?’
’A fierce young gentleman, I
do not know how they call him: said the captain
to me, “Merchant, you look gloomy.”
“Gloomy,” I said, “you would look
gloomy if you were a prisoner, and had lost ten thousand
dirhems.” “What, is this trash
worth ten thousand dirhems?” said he.
“With the fifty per cent. I was to make
at Hamadan.” “Fifty per cent.,”
said he; “you are an old knave.”
“Knave! I should like to hear any one call
me knave at Bagdad.” “Well, knave
or not, you may get out of this scrape.”
“How?” “Why you are a respectable-looking
man,” said he, “and are a good Moslem
into the bargain, I warrant.” “That
I am,” said I, “although you be a Jew:
but how the faith is to serve me here I am sure I don’t
know, unless the angel Gabriel, as in the fifty-fifth
verse of the twenty-seventh chapter of the Koran “’
‘Tush, tush!’ exclaimed Hassan; ‘to
the point.’
’I always am at the point, only
you put me out. However, to make it as short
as possible, the captain knows all about your coming,
and is frightened out of his wits, although he did
talk big; I could easily see that. And he let
me go, you see, with some of my slaves, and gave me
an order for five thousand dirhems on one Bostenay,
of Hamadan (perhaps you know him; is he a good man?),
on condition that I would fall in with you, and, Mohammed
forgive me, tell you a lie!’
‘A lie!’
’Yes, a lie; but these Jewish
dogs do not understand what a truly religious man
is, and when I began to tell the lie, I was soon put
out. Now, noble Hassan, if a promise to a Jew
be not binding on a true believer, and you will see
me straight with the five thousand dirhems, I
will betray everything at once.’
‘Be easy about the five thousand
dirhems, good man, and tell me all.’
‘You will see me paid?’
‘My honour upon it.’
’’Tis well! Know
then, the infamous dogs are very weak, and terrified
at the news of your progress: one, whom I think
they call Jabaster, has departed with the great majority
of the people into the interior of the desert, about
seven hundred strong. I heard so; but mind, I
do not know it. The young man, whom you call
Alroy, being wounded in a recent conflict, could not
depart with them, but remains among the ruins with
some female prisoners, some treasure, and about a hundred
companions hidden in sepulchres. He gave me my
freedom on condition that I should fall in with you,
and assure you that the dogs, full five thousand strong,
had given you the go-by in the night, and marched towards
Hamadan. They wanted me to frighten you; it was
a lie, and I could not tell it. And now you know
the plain truth; and if it be a sin to break faith
with an infidel, you are responsible for it, as well
as for the five thousand dirhems, which, by-the-bye,
ought to have been ten.’
‘Where is your order?’
‘’Tis here,’ said
the merchant, drawing it from his vest, ’a very
business-like document, drawn upon one Bostenay, whom
they described as very rich, and who is here enjoined
to pay me five thousand dirhems, if, in consequence
of my information, Hassan Subah, that is yourself,
return forthwith to Hamadan without attacking them.’
‘Old Bostenay’s head shall answer for
this.’
‘I am glad of it. But were I you, I would
make him pay me first.’
‘Merchant,’ said Hassan,
’have you any objection to pay another visit
to your friend Alroy?’
‘Allah forbid!’
‘In my company?’
‘That makes a difference.’
‘Be our guide. The dirhems shall be
doubled.’
’That will make up for the fifty
per cent. I hardly like it; but in your company
that makes a difference. Lose no time. If
you push on, Alroy must be captured. Now or never!
The Jewish dogs, to rifle a true believer!’
‘Oglu,’ said Hassan to
one of his officers. ’To horse! You
need not strike the tents. Can we reach the city
by sunset, merchant?’
‘An hour before, if you be off
at once.’ ’Sound the drums. To
horse! to horse!’ The Seljuks halted before
the walls of the deserted city. Their commander
ordered a detachment to enter and reconnoitre.
They returned and reported its apparent desolation.
Hassan Subah, then directing that a guard should surround
the walls to prevent any of the enemy from escaping,
passed with his warriors through the vast portal into
the silent street. The still magnificence of
the strange and splendid scene influenced the temper
even of this ferocious cavalry. They gazed around
them with awe and admiration. The fierceness of
their visages was softened, the ardour of their
impulse stilled. A supernatural feeling of repose
stole over their senses. No one brandished his
scimitar, the fiery courser seemed as subdued as his
lord, and no sound was heard but the melancholy, mechanical
tramp of the disciplined march, unrelieved by martial
music, inviolate by oath or jest, and unbroken even
by the ostentatious caracoling of any showy steed.
It was sunset; the star of eve glittered
over the white Ionian fane that rose serene and delicate
in the flashing and purple sky.
‘This way, my lord!’ said
the merchant guide, turning round to Hassan Subah,
who, surrounded by his officers, led the van.
The whole of the great way of the city was filled
with the Seljukian warriors. Their ebon steeds,
their snowy turbans, adorned with plumes of the black
eagle and the red heron, their dazzling shawls, the
blaze of their armour in the sunset, and the long
undulating perspective of beautiful forms and brilliant
colours, this regiment of heroes in a street of palaces.
War had seldom afforded a more imposing or more picturesque
spectacle.
‘This way, my lord!’ said
the merchant, pointing to the narrow turning that,
at the foot of the temple, led through ruined streets
to the amphitheatre.
‘Halt!’ exclaimed a wild
shrill voice. Each warrior suddenly arrested
his horse.
‘Who spoke?’ exclaimed Hassan Subah.
‘I!’ answered a voice.
A female form stood in the portico of the temple,
with uplifted arms.
‘And who art thou?’ enquired
Hassan Subah, not a little disconcerted.
‘Thine evil genius, Seljuk!’
Hassan Subah, pale as his ivory battle-axe,
did not answer; every man within hearing shuddered;
still the dread woman remained immovable within the
porch of the temple.
‘Woman, witch, or goddess,’
at length exclaimed Hassan Subah, ’what wouldst
thou here?’
’Seljuk! behold this star.
’Tis a single drop of light, yet who even of
thy wild band can look upon it without awe? And
yet thou worse than Sisera, thou comest to combat
against those for whom even “the stars in their
courses fought."’
‘A Jewish witch!’ exclaimed the Seljuk.
’A Jewish witch! Be it
so; behold, then, my spell falls upon thee, and that
spell is Destruction.
’Awake, awake, Deborah:
awake, awake, utter a song; arise, Barak, and lead
thy captivity captive, thou son of Abinoam!’
Immediately the sky appeared to darken,
a cloud of arrows and javelins broke from all sides
upon the clevoted Seljuks: immense masses of stone
and marble were hurled from all directions, horses
were stabbed by spears impelled by invisible hands,
and riders fell to the ground without a struggle,
and were trampled upon by their disordered and affrighted
brethren.
‘We are betrayed,’ exclaimed
Hassan Subah, hurling a javelin at the merchant, but
the merchant was gone. The Seljuks raised their
famous war cry.
‘Oglu, regain the desert,’ ordered the
chieftain.
But no sooner had the guard without
the walls heard the war cry of their companions, than,
alarmed, for their safety, they rushed to their assistance.
The retreating forces of Subah, each instant diminishing
as they retreated, were baffled in their project by
the very eagerness of their auxiliaries. The
unwilling contention of the two parties increased
the confusion; and when the Seljuks, recently arrived,
having at length formed into some order, had regained
the gate, they found to their dismay that the portal
was barricadoed and garrisoned by the enemy.
Uninspired by the presence of their commander, who
was in the rear, the puzzled soldiers were seized
with a panic, and spurring their horses, dispersed
in all directions of the city. In vain Hassan
Subah endeavoured to restore order. The moment
was past. Dashing with about thirty men to an
open ground, which his quick eye had observed in his
progress down the street, and dealing destruction with
every blow, the dreaded Governor of Hamadan, like
a true soldier, awaited an inevitable fate, not wholly
despairing that some chance might yet turn up to extricate
him from his forlorn situation.
And now, as it were by enchantment,
wild armed men seemed to arise from every part of
the city. From every mass of ruin, from every
crumbling temple and mouldering mansion, from every
catacomb and cellar, from behind every column and
every obelisk, upstarted some desperate warrior with
a bloody weapon. The massacre of the Seljuks was
universal. The horsemen dashed wildly about the
ruined streets, pursued by crowds of footmen; sometimes,
formed in small companies, the Seljuks charged and
fought desperately; but, however stout might be their
resistance to the open foe, it was impossible to withstand
their secret enemies. They had no place of refuge,
no power of gaining even a moment’s breathing
time. If they retreated to a wall it instantly
bristled with spears; if they endeavoured to form,
in a court, they sank under the falling masses which
were showered upon them. Strange shouts of denunciation
blended with the harsh braying of horns, and the clang
and clash of cymbals and tambours sounded in
every quarter of the city.
‘If we could only mount the
walls, Ibrahim, and leap into the desert!’ exclaimed
Hassan Subah to one of his few remaining comrades;
’’tis our only chance. We die here
like dogs! Could I but meet Alroy!’
Three of the Seljuks dashed swiftly
across the open ground in front, followed by several
Hebrew horsemen.
‘Smite all, Abner. Spare
none, remember Amalek,’ exclaimed their youthful
leader, waving his bloody scimitar.
’They are down; one, two, there
goes the third. My javelin has done for him.’
‘Your horse bleeds freely. Where’s
Jabaster?’
’At the gates; my arm aches
with slaughter. The Lord hath delivered them
into our hands. Could I but meet their chieftain!’
‘Turn, bloodhound, he is here,’ exclaimed
Hassan Subah.
‘Away, Abner, this affair is mine.’
‘Prince, you have already slain your thousands.’
’And Abner his tens of thousands.
Is it so? This business is for me only.
Come on, Turk.’
‘Art thou Alroy?’
‘The same.’
‘The slayer of Alschiroch?’
‘Even so.’
‘A rebel and a murderer.’
‘What you please. Look to yourself.’
The Hebrew Prince flung a javelin
at the Seljuk. It glanced from the breastplate;
but Hassan Subah staggered in his seat. Recovering,
he charged Alroy with great force. Their scimitars
crossed, and the blade of Hassan shivered.
’He who sold me that blade told
me it was charmed, and could be broken only by a caliph,’
said Hassan Subah. ‘He was a liar.’
‘As it may be,’ said Alroy,
and he cut the Seljuk to the ground. Abner had
dispersed his comrades. Alroy leaped from his
fainting steed, and, mounting the ebon courser of
his late enemy, dashed again into the thickest of
the fight.
The shades of night descended, the
clamour gradually decreased, the struggle died away.
A few unhappy Moslemin who had quitted their saddles
and sought concealment among the ruins, were occasionally
hunted out, and brought forward and massacred.
Long ere midnight the last of the Seljuks had expired.
The moon shed a broad light upon the
street of palaces crowded with the accumulated slain
and the living victors. Fires were lit, torches
illumined, the conquerors prepared the eager meal as
they sang hymns of praise and thanksgiving.
A procession approached. Esther
the prophetess, clashing her cymbals, danced before
the Messiah of Israel, who leant upon his victorious
scimitar, surrounded by Jabaster, Abner, Scherirah,
and his chosen chieftains. Who could now doubt
the validity of his mission? The wide and silent
desert rang with the acclamations of his enthusiastic
votaries.
Heavily the anxious hours crept on
in the Jewish quarter of Hamadan. Again and again
the venerable Bostenay discussed the chances of success
with the sympathising but desponding elders. Miriam
was buried in constant prayer. Their most sanguine
hopes did not extend beyond the escape of their Prince.
A fortnight had elapsed, and no news
had been received of the progress of the expedition,
when suddenly, towards sunset, a sentinel on a watch-tower
announced the appearance of an armed force in the distance.
The walls were instantly lined with the anxious inhabitants,
the streets and squares filled with curious crowds.
Exultation sat on the triumphant brow of the Moslemin;
a cold tremor stole over the fluttering heart of the
Hebrew.
‘There is but one God,’ said the captain
of the gate.
‘And Mahomed is His prophet,’ responded
a sentinel.
‘To-morrow we will cut off the noses of all
these Jewish dogs.’
‘The sceptre has departed,’ exclaimed
the despairing Bostenay.
‘Lord, remember David!’
whispered Miriam, as she threw herself upon the court
of the palace, and buried her face in ashes.
The Mollahs in solemn procession advanced
to the ramparts, to shed their benediction on the
victorious Hassan Subah. The Muezzin ascended
the minarets to watch the setting sun, and proclaim
the power of Allah with renewed enthusiasm.
‘I wonder if Alroy be dead or alive,’
said the captain of the gate.
‘If he be alive, he will be impaled,’
responded a sentinel.
‘If dead, the carcass will be
given to the dogs,’ rejoined the captain; ‘that
is the practice.’
‘Bostenay will be hung,’ said the sentinel.
‘And his niece, too,’ answered the captain.
‘Hem!’ said the sentinel. ‘Hassan
Subah loves a black eye.’
‘I hope a true Moslem will not
touch a Jewess,’ exclaimed an indignant black
eunuch.
‘They approach. What a dust!’ said
the captain of the gate.
‘I see Hassan Subah!’ said the sentinel.
‘So do I,’ said the eunuch, ‘I know
his black horse.’
‘I wonder how many dirhems old Bostenay
is worth,’ said the captain.
‘Immense!’ said the sentinel.
‘No plunder, I suppose?’ said the eunuch.
‘We shall see,’ said the
captain; ’at any rate, I owe a thousand to old
Shelomi. We need not pay now, you know.’
‘Certainly not,’ said the black eunuch.
‘The rebels.’
A body of horsemen dashed forward.
Their leader in advance reined in his fiery charger
beneath the walls.
‘In the name of the Prophet,
who is that?’ exclaimed the captain of the gate,
a little confused.
‘I never saw him before,’
said the sentinel, ’although he is in the Seljuk
dress. ‘Tis some one from Bagdad, I guess.’
A trumpet sounded.
‘Who keeps the gate?’ called out the warrior.
‘I am the captain of the gate,’ answered
our friend.
‘Open it, then, to the King of Israel.’
‘To whom?’ enquired the astonished captain.
’To King David. The Lord
hath delivered Hassan Subah and his host into our
hands, and of all the proud Seljuks none remaineth.
Open thy gates, I say, and lose no time. I am
Jabaster, a lieutenant of the Lord; this scimitar
is my commission. Open thy gates, and thou and
thy people shall have that mercy which they have never
shown; but if thou delayest one instant, thus saith
the King our master, “I will burst open your
portal, and smite, and utterly destroy all that you
have, and spare them not; but slay both man and woman,
infant and suckling, ox and sheep, camel and ass."’
‘Call forth the venerable Lord
Bostenay,’ said the captain of the gate, with
chattering teeth. ‘He will intercede for
us.’
‘And the gentle Lady Miriam,’
said the sentinel. ’She is ever charitable.’
‘I will head the procession,’
said the black eunuch; ’I am accustomed to women.’
The procession of Mollahs shuffled
back to their college with profane precipitation;
the sun set, and the astounded Muezzin stood with their
mouths open, and quite forgot to announce the power
of their Deity, and the validity of their Prophet.
The people all called out for the venerable Lord Bostenay
and the gentle Lady Miriam, and ran in crowds to see
who could first kiss the hem of their garments.
The principal gate of Hamadan opened
into the square of the great mosque. Here the
whole population of the city appeared assembled.
The gates were thrown open; Jabaster and his companions
mounted guard. The short twilight died away,
the shades of night descended. The minarets were
illumined, the houses hung with garlands, the ramparts
covered with tapestry and carpets.
A clang of drums, trumpets, and cymbals
announced the arrival of the Hebrew army. The
people shouted, the troops without responded with a
long cheer of triumph. Amid the blaze of torches,
a youth waving his scimitar, upon a coal-black steed,
bounded into the city, at the head of his guards,
the people fell upon their knees, and shouted ’Long
live Alroy!’
A venerable man, leading a beauteous
maiden with downcast eyes, advanced. They headed
a deputation of the chief inhabitants of the city.
They came to solicit mercy and protection. At
the sight of them, the youthful warrior leaped from
his horse, flung away his scimitar, and clasping the
maiden in his arms, exclaimed, ’Miriam, my sister,
this, this indeed is triumph!’
‘Drink,’ said Kisloch
the Kourd to Calidas the Indian; ’you forget,
comrade, we are no longer Moslemin.’
‘Wine, methinks, has a peculiarly
pleasant flavour in a golden cup,’ said the
Guèbre. ‘I got this little trifle to-day
in the Bazaar,’ he added, holding up a magnificent
vase studded with gems.
‘I thought plunder was forbidden,’ grinned
the Negro.
‘So it is,’ replied the
Guèbre; ’but we may purchase what we please,
upon credit.’
‘Well, for my part, I am a moderate
man,’ exclaimed Calidas the Indian, ’and
would not injure even these accursed dogs of Turks.
I have not cut my host’s throat, but only turned
him into my porter, and content myself with his harem,
his baths, his fine horses, and other little trifles.’
‘What quarters we are in!
There is nothing like a true Messiah!’ exclaimed
Kisloch, devoutly.
‘Nothing,’ said Calidas;
’though to speak truth, I did not much believe
in the efficacy of Solomon’s sceptre, till his
Majesty clove the head of the valiant Seljuk with
it.’
‘But now there’s no doubt of it,’
said the Guèbre.
‘We should indeed be infidels if we doubted
now,’ replied the Indian.
‘How lucky,’ grinned the
Negro, ’as I had no religion before, that I
have now fixed upon the right one!’
‘Most fortunate!’ said
the Guèbre. ’What shall we do to amuse
ourselves to-night?’
‘Let us go to the coffee-houses
and make the Turks drink wine,’ said Calidas
the Indian.
‘What say you to burning down
a mosque?’ said Kisloch the Kourd.
‘I had great fun with some Dervishes
this morning,’ said the Guèbre. ’I
met one asking alms with a wire run through his cheek,
so I caught another, bored his nose, and tied them
both together!’
‘Hah! hah! hah!’ burst the Negro.
Asia resounded with the insurrection
of the Jews, and the massacre of the Seljuks.
Crowds of Hebrews, from the rich cities of Persia and
the populous settlements on the Tigris and the Euphrates,
hourly poured into Hamadan.
The irritated Moslemin persecuted
the brethren of the successful rebel, and this impolicy
precipitated their flight. The wealth of Bagdad
flowed into the Hebrew capital. Seated on the
divan of Hassan Subah, and wielding the sceptre of
Solomon, the King of Israel received the homage of
his devoted subjects, and despatched his envoys to
Syria and to Egypt. The well-stored magazines
and arsenals of Hamadan soon converted the pilgrims
into warriors. The city was unable to accommodate
the increased and increasing population. An extensive
camp, under the command of Abner, was formed without
the walls, where the troops were daily disciplined,
and where they were prepared for greater exploits
than a skirmish in a desert.
Within a month after the surrender
of Hamadan, the congregation of the people assembled
in the square of the great mosque, now converted into
a synagogue. The multitude was disposed in ordered
ranks, and the terrace of every house was crowded.
In the centre of the square was an altar of cedar
and brass, and on each side stood a company of priests
guarding the victims, one young bullock, and two rams
without blemish.
Amid the flourish of trumpets, the
gates of the synagogue opened, and displayed to the
wondering eyes of the Hebrews a vast and variegated
pavilion planted in the court. The holy remnant,
no longer forlorn, beheld that tabernacle of which
they had so long dreamed, once more shining in the
sun, with its purple and scarlet hangings, its curtains
of rare skins, and its furniture of silver and gold.
A procession of priests advanced,
bearing, with staves of cedar, run through rings of
gold, a gorgeous ark, the work of the most cunning
artificers of Persia. Night and day had they laboured,
under the direction of Jabaster, to produce this wondrous
spectacle. Once more the children of Israel beheld
the cherubim. They burst into a triumphant hymn
of thanksgiving, and many drew their swords, and cried
aloud to be led against the Canaanites.
From the mysterious curtains of the
tabernacle, Alroy came forward, leading Jabaster.
They approached the altar. And Alroy took robes
from the surrounding priests, and put them upon Jabaster,
and a girdle, and a breastplate of jewels. And
Alroy took a mitre, and placed it upon the head of
Jabaster, and upon the mitre he placed a crown; and
pouring oil upon his head, the pupil anointed the
master High Priest of Israel.
The victims were slain, the sin-offering
burnt. Amid clouds of incense, bursts of music,
and the shouts of a devoted people; amid odour, and
melody, and enthusiasm, Alroy mounted his charger,
and at the head of twenty thousand men, departed to
conquer Media.
The extensive and important province
of Aderbijan, of which Hamadan was the capital, was
formed of the ancient Media. Its fate was decided
by one battle. On the plain of Nehauend, Alroy
met the hastily-raised levies of the Atabek of Kermanshah,
and entirely routed them. In the course of a
month, every city of the province had acknowledged
the supremacy of the new Hebrew monarch, and, leaving
Abner to complete the conquest of Louristan, Alroy
entered Persia.
The incredible and irresistible progress
of Alroy roused Togrul, the Turkish Sultan of Persia,
from the luxurious indolence of the palaces of Nishapur.
He summoned his émirs to meet him at the imperial
city of Rhey, and crush, by one overwhelming effort,
the insolent rebel.
Religion, valour, and genius, alike
inspired the arms of Alroy, but he was, doubtless,
not a little assisted by the strong national sympathy
of his singular and scattered people, which ever ensured
him prompt information of all the movements of his
enemy. Without any preparation, he found agents
in every court, and camp, and cabinet; and, by their
assistance, he anticipated the designs of his adversaries,
and turned even their ingenuity to their confusion.
The imperial city of Rhey was surprised in the night,
sacked, and burnt to the ground. The scared and
baffled émirs who escaped, flew to the Sultan
Togrul, tearing their beards, and prophesying the
approaching termination of the world. The palaces
of Nishapur resounded with the imprecations of their
master, who, cursing the Jewish dogs, and vowing a
pilgrimage to Mecca, placed himself at the head of
a motley multitude of warriors, and rushed upon the
plains of Irak, to exterminate Alroy.
The Persian force exceeded the Hebrew
at least five times in number. Besides a large
division of Seljuks, the Caucasus had poured forth
its strange inhabitants to swell the ranks of the
Faithful. The wild tribes of the Bactiari were
even enlisted, with their fatal bows, and the savage
Turkmans, tempted by the sultan’s gold, for a
moment yielded their liberty, and shook their tall
lances in his ranks.
But what is a wild Bactiari, and what
is a savage Turkman, and what even a disciplined and
imperious Seljuk, to the warriors of the God of Abraham,
of Isaac, and of Jacob? At the first onset, Alroy
succeeded in dividing the extended centre of Togrul,
and separating the greater part of the Turks from
their less disciplined comrades. At the head of
his Median cavalry, the Messiah charged and utterly
routed the warriors of the Caucasus. The wild
tribes of the Bactiari discharged their arrows and
fled, and the savage Turkmans plundered the baggage
of their own commander.
The Turks themselves fought desperately;
but, deserted by their allies, and surrounded by an
inspired foe, their efforts were unavailing, and their
slaughter terrible. Togrul was slain while heading
a desperate and fruitless charge, and, after his fall,
the battle resembled a massacre rather than a combat.
The plain was glotted with Seljuk gore. No quarter
was given or asked. Twenty thousand chosen troops
fell on the side of the Turks; the rest dispersed
and gained the mountains. Leaving Scherirah to
restore order, Alroy the next morning pushed on to
Nishapur at the head of three thousand horsemen, and
summoned the city ere the inhabitants were apprised
of the defeat and death of their sultan. The
capital of Persia escaped the fate of Rhey by an inglorious
treaty and a lavish tribute. The treasures of
the Chosroes and the Gasnevides were despatched to
Hamadan, on which city day dawned, only to bring intelligence
of a victory or a conquest.
While Alroy dictated peace on his
own terms in the palaces of Nishapur, Abner, having
reduced Louristan, crossed the mountains, and entered
Persia with the reinforcements he had received from
Jabaster. Leaving the government and garrisoning
of his new conquests to this valiant captain, Alroy,
at the head of the conquerors of Persia, in consequence
of intelligence received from Hamadan, returned by
forced marches to that city.
Leaving the army within a day’s
march of the capital, Alroy, accompanied only by his
staff, entered Hamadan in the evening, and, immediately
repairing to the citadel, summoned Jabaster to council.
The night was passed by the king and the high priest
in deep consultation. The next morning, a decree
apprised the inhabitants of the return of their monarch,
of the creation of the new ‘Kingdom of the Medes
and Persians,’ of which Hamadan was declared
the capital, and Abner the viceroy, and of the intended
and immediate invasion of Syria, and re-conquest of
the Land of Promise.
The plan of this expedition had been
long matured, and the preparations to effect it were
considerably advanced. Jabaster had not been idle
during the absence of his pupil. One hundred thousand
warriors were now assembled at the capital of
the kingdom of the Medes and Persians; of these the
greater part were Hebrews, but many Arabs, wearied
of the Turkish yoke, and many gallant adventurers
from the Caspian, easily converted from a vague idolatry
to a religion of conquest, swelled the ranks of the
army of the Lord of Hosts.
The plain of Hamadan was covered with
tents, the streets were filled with passing troops,
the bazaars loaded with military stores; long caravans
of camels laden with supplies every day arrived from
the neighbouring towns; each instant some high-capped
Tatar with despatches rushed into the city and
galloped his steed up the steep of the citadel.
The clang of arms, the prance of horses, the flourish
of warlike music, resounded from all quarters.
The business and the treasure of the world seemed,
as it were in an instant, to have become concentrated
in Hamadan. Every man had some great object; gold
glittered in every hand. All great impulses were
stirring; all the causes of human energy were in lively
action. Every eye sparkled, every foot trod firm
and fast. Each man acted as if the universal fate
depended upon his exertions; as if the universal will
sympathised with his particular desire. A vast
population influenced by a high degree of excitement
is the most sublime of spectacles.
The commander of the Faithful raised
the standard of the Prophet on the banks of the Tigris.
It was the secret intelligence of this intended event
that had recalled Alroy so suddenly from Persia.
The latent enthusiasm of the Moslemin was excited
by the rare and mystic ceremony, and its effects were
anticipated by previous and judicious preparations.
The Seljuks of Bagdad alone amounted to fifty thousand
men; the Sultan of Syria contributed the warriors
who had conquered the Arabian princes of Damascus
and Aleppo; while the ancient provinces of Asia Minor,
which formed the rich and powerful kingdom of Seljukian
Roum, poured forth a myriad of that matchless cavalry,
which had so often baffled the armies of the Caesars.
Never had so imposing a force been collected on the
banks of the Tigris since the reign of Haroun Alraschid.
Each day some warlike Atabek, at the head of his armed
train, poured into the capital of the caliphs,
or pitched his pavilion on the banks of the river;
each day the proud emir of some remote principality
astonished or affrighted the luxurious Babylonians
by the strange or uncouth warriors that had gathered
round his standard in the deserts of Arabia, or on
the shores of the Euxine. For the space of twenty
miles, the banks of the river were, on either side,
far as the eye could reach, covered with the variegated
pavilions, the glittering standards, the flowing streamers
and twinkling pennons of the mighty host, of which
Malek, the Grand Sultan of the Seljuks, and Governor
of the Caliph’s palace, was chief commander.
Such was the power assembled on the
plains of Asia to arrest the progress of the Hebrew
Prince, and to prevent the conquest of the memorable
land promised to the faith of his fathers, and forfeited
by their infidelity. Before the walls of Hamadan,
Alroy reviewed the army of Israel, sixty thousand
heavy-armed footmen, thirty thousand archers and light
troops, and twenty thousand cavalry. Besides these,
there had been formed a body of ten thousand picked
horsemen, styled the ’Sacred Guard,’ all
of whom had served in the Persian campaign. In
their centre, shrouded in a case of wrought gold,
studded with carbuncles, and carried on a lusty lance
of cedar, a giant for the height of Elnebar
exceeded that of common men by three feet bore
the sceptre of Solomon. The Sacred Guard was
commanded by Asriel, the brother of Abner.
The army was formed into three divisions.
All marched in solemn order before the throne of Alroy,
raised upon the ramparts, and drooped their standards
and lances as they passed their heroic leader.
Bostenay, and Miriam, and the whole population of
the city witnessed the inspiring spectacle from the
walls. That same eve, Scherirah, at the head of
forty thousand men, pushed on towards Bagdad, by Kermanshah;
and Jabaster, who commanded in his holy robes, and
who had vowed not to lay aside his sword until the
rebuilding of the temple, conducted his division over
the victorious plain of Nehauend. They were to
concentrate at the pass of Kerrund, which conducted
into the province of Bagdad, and await the arrival
of the king.
At the dawn of day, the royal division
and the Sacred Guard, the whole under the command
of Asriel, quitted the capital. Alroy still lingered,
and for some hours the warriors of his staff might
have been observed lounging about the citadel, or
practising their skill in throwing the jerreed as
they exercised their impatient chargers before the
gates.
The king was with the Lady Miriam,
walking in the garden of their uncle. One arm
was wound round her delicate waist, and with the other
he clasped her soft and graceful hand. The heavy
tears burst from her downcast eyes, and stole along
her pale and pensive cheek. They walked in silence,
the brother and the sister, before the purity of whose
surpassing love even ambition vanished. He opened
the lattice gate. They entered into the valley
small and green; before them was the marble fountain
with its columns and cupola, and in the distance the
charger of Alroy and his single attendant.
They stopped, and Alroy gathered flowers,
and placed them in the hair of Miriam. He would
have softened the bitterness of parting with a smile.
Gently he relaxed his embracing arm, almost insensibly
he dropped her quivering hand.
‘Sister of my soul,’ he
whispered, ’when we last parted here, I was a
fugitive, and now I quit you a conqueror.’
She turned, she threw herself upon
his neck, and buried her face in his breast.
‘My Miriam, we shall meet at Bagdad.’
He beckoned to her distant maidens;
they advanced, he delivered Miriam into their arms.
He pressed her hand to his lips, and, rushing to his
horse, mounted and disappeared.
A body of irregular cavalry feebly
defended the pass of Kerrund. It was carried,
with slight loss, by the vanguard of Scherirah, and
the fugitives prepared the host of the caliph for
the approach of the Hebrew army.
Upon the plain of the Tigris the enemy
formed into battle array. The centre was commanded
by Malek, the Grand Sultan of the Seljuks himself;
the right wing, headed by the Sultan of Syria, was
protected by the river; and the left, under the Sultan
of Roum, was posted upon the advantageous position
of some irregular and rising ground. Thus proud
in the number, valour, discipline, and disposition
of his forces, Malek awaited the conqueror of Persia.
The glittering columns of the Hebrews
might even now be perceived defiling from the mountains,
and forming at the extremity of the plain. Before
nightfall the camp of the invaders was pitched within
hearing of that of Malek. The moving lights in
the respective tents might plainly be distinguished;
and ever and anon the flourish of hostile music fell
with an ominous sound upon the ears of the opposed
foe-men. A few miles only separated those mighty
hosts. Upon to-morrow depended, perhaps, the
fortunes of ages. How awful is the eve of battle!
Alroy, attended by a few chieftains,
personally visited the tents of the soldiery, promising
them on the morrow a triumph, before which the victories
of Nehauend and Nishapur would sink into insignificance.
Their fiery and excited visages proved at once
their courage and their faith. The sceptre of
Solomon was paraded throughout the camp in solemn
procession. On the summit of a huge tumulus, perhaps
the sepulchre of some classic hero, Esther, the prophetess,
surrounded by the chief zealots of the host, poured
forth her exciting inspirations. It was a grand
picture, that beautiful wild girl, the groups of stern,
devoted warriors, the red flame of the watch-fires
mixing with the silver shadows of the moon as they
illumined the variegated turbans and gleaming armour
of her votaries!
In the pavilion of Alroy, Jabaster
consulted with his pupil on the conduct of the morrow.
‘This is a different scene from
the cavern of the Caucasus,’ said Alroy, as
the high priest rose to retire.
‘It has one great resemblance,
sire; the God of our fathers is with us.’
’Ay! the Lord of Hosts.
Moses was a great man. There is no career except
conquest.’
‘You muse.’
‘Of the past. The present is prepared.
Too much thought will mar it.’
’The past is for wisdom, the
present for action, but for joy the future. The
feeling that the building of the temple is at hand,
that the Lord’s anointed will once again live
in the house of David, absorbs my spirit; and, when
I muse over our coming glory, in my fond ecstasy I
almost lose the gravity that doth beseem my sacred
office.’
‘Jerusalem; I have seen it. How many hours
to dawn?’
‘Some three.’
’’Tis strange I could
sleep. I remember, on the eve of battle I was
ever anxious. How is this, Jabaster?’
‘Your faith, sire, is profound.’
’Yes, I have no fear. My
destiny is not complete. Good night, Jabaster.
See, Asriel, valiant priest. Pharez!’
‘My lord!’
‘Rouse me at the second watch. Good night,
boy.’
‘Good night, my lord.’
’Pharez! Be sure you rouse
me at the second watch. Think you it wants three
hours to dawn?’
‘About three hours, my lord.’
‘Well! at the second watch, remember; good night.’
‘It is the second watch, my lord.’
‘So soon! Have I slept? I feel fresh
as an eagle. Call Scherirah, boy.’
’’Tis strange I never
dream now. Before my flight my sleep was ever
troubled. Say what they like, man is made for
action. My life is now harmonious, and sleep
has now become what nature willed it, a solace, not
a contest. Before, it was a struggle of dark passions
and bright dreams, in whose creative fancy and fair
vision my soul sought refuge from the dreary bale
of daily reality.
’I will withdraw the curtains
of my tent. O most majestic vision! And
have I raised this host? Over the wide plain,
far as my eye can range, their snowy tents studding
the purple landscape, embattled legions gather round
their flags to struggle for my fate. It is the
agony of Asia.
’A year ago, upon this very
spot, I laid me down to die, an unknown thing, or
known and recognised only to be despised, and now the
sultans of the world come forth to meet me. I
have no fear. My destiny is not complete.
And whither tends it? Let that power decide which
hitherto has fashioned all my course.
’Jerusalem, Jerusalem! ever
harping on Jerusalem. With all his lore, he is
a narrow-minded zealot whose dreaming memory would
fondly make a future like the past. O Bagdad,
Bagdad, within thy glittering halls, there is a charm
worth all his Cabala!
’Hah! Scherirah! The
dawn is near at hand, the stars are still shining.
The air is very pleasant. Tomorrow will be a great
day, Scherirah, for Israel and for you. You lead
the attack. A moment in my tent, my brave Scherirah!’
The dawn broke; a strong column of
the Hebrews, commanded by Scherirah, poured down upon
the centre of the army of the caliph. Another
column, commanded by Jabaster, attacked the left wing,
headed by the Sultan of Roum. No sooner had Alroy
perceived that the onset of Scherirah had succeeded
in penetrating the centre of the Turks, than he placed
himself at the head of the Sacred Guard, and by an
irresistible charge completed their disorder and confusion.
The division of the Sultan of Syria, and a great part
of the centre, were entirely routed and driven into
the river, and the remainder of the division of Malek
was effectually separated from his left wing.
But while to Alroy the victory seemed
already decided, a far different fate awaited the
division of Jabaster. The Sultan of Roum, posted
in an extremely advantageous position, and commanding
troops accustomed to the discipline of the Romans
of Constantinople, received the onset of Jabaster
without yielding, and not only repelled his attack,
but finally made a charge which completely disordered
and dispersed the column of the Hebrews. In vain
Jabaster endeavoured to rally his troops, in vain
he performed prodigies of valour, in vain he himself
struck down the standard-bearer of the sultan, and
once even penetrated to the pavilion of the monarch.
His division was fairly routed. The eagerness
of the Sultan of Roum to effect the annihilation of
his antagonists prevented him from observing the forlorn
condition of the Turkish centre. Had he, after
routing the division of Jabaster, only attacked Alroy
in the rear, the fortune of the day might have been
widely different. As it was, the eagle eye of
Alroy soon detected his inadvertence, and profited
by his indiscretion. Leaving Ithamar to keep
the centre in check, he charged the Sultan of Roum
with the Sacred Guard, and afforded Jabaster an opportunity
of rallying some part of his forces. The Sultan
of Roum, perceiving that the day was lost by the ill-conduct
of his colleagues, withdrew his troops, retreated
in haste, but in good order to Bagdad, carried off
the caliph, his harem, and some of his treasure, and
effected his escape into Syria. In the meantime
the discomfiture of the remaining Turkish army was
complete. The Tigris was dyed with their blood,
and the towns through which the river flowed were apprised
of the triumph of Alroy by the floating corpses of
his enemies. Thirty thousand Turks were slain
in battle: among them the Sultans of Bagdad and
Syria, and a vast number of atabeks, émirs, and
chieftains. A whole division, finding themselves
surrounded, surrendered on terms, and delivered up
their arms. The camps and treasures of the three
sultans were alike captured, and the troops that escaped
so completely dispersed, that they did not attempt
to rally, but, disbanded and desperate, prowled over
and plundered the adjoining provinces. The loss
of the division of Jabaster was also severe, but the
rest of the army suffered little. Alroy himself
was slightly wounded. The battle lasted barely
three hours. Its results were immense. David
Alroy was now master of the East.
The plain was covered with the corpses
of men and horses, arms and standards, and prostrate
tents. Returning from the pursuit of the Sultan
of Roum, Alroy ordered the trumpets to sound to arms,
and, covered with gore and dust, dismounted from his
charger, and stood before the pavilion of Malek, leaning
on his bloody scimitar, and surrounded by his victorious
generals.
‘Ah, Jabaster!’ said the
conqueror, giving his hand to the pontiff, ’’twas
well your troops had such a leader. No one but
you could have rallied them.
You must drill your lads a little
before they again meet the Cappadocian cavalry.
Brave Scherirah, we shall not forget our charge.
Asriel, tell the guard, from me, that the victory
of the Tigris was owing to their scimitars. Ithamar,
what are our freshest troops?’
‘The legion of Aderbijan, sire.’
‘How strong can they muster?’
‘It counts twelve thousand men: we might
collect two-thirds.’
’Valiant Ithamar, take the Aderbijans
and a division of the guards, push on towards Bagdad,
and summon the city. If his Sultanship of Roum
offer battle, take up a position, and he shall quickly
have his desire. For the present, after these
hasty marches and sharp fighting, the troops must
rest. I think he will not tarry. Summon the
city, and say that if any resistance be offered, I
will make it as desolate as old Babylon. Treat
with no armed force. Where is the soldier that
saved me a cracked skull; his name Benaiah?’
‘I wait your bidding, sire.’
’You’re a captain.
Join the division of Ithamar, and win fresh laurels
ere we meet again. Gentle Asriel, let your brother
know our fortune.’
‘Sire, several Tartars have already been despatched
to Hamadan.’
’’Tis well. Send
another with these tablets to the Lady Miriam.
Despatch the pavilion of Malek as a trophy for the
town. Elnebar, Goliath of the Hebrews, you bore
our sacred standard like a hero! How fares the
prophetess? I saw her charging in our ranks, waving
a sabre with her snowy arm, her long, dark hair streaming
like a storm, from which her eyes flashed lightning.’
‘The king bleeds,’ said Jabaster.
’Slightly. It will do me
service. I am somewhat feverish. A kingdom
for a draught of water! And now for our wounded
friends. Asriel, do you marshal the camp.
It is the Sabbath eve. Time presses.’
The dead were plundered, and thrown
into the river, the encampment of the Hebrews completed.
Alroy, with his principal officers, visited the wounded,
and praised the valiant. The bustle which always
succeeds a victory was increased in the present instance
by the anxiety of the army to observe with grateful
strictness the impending Sabbath.
When the sun set, the Sabbath was
to commence. The undulating horizon rendered
it difficult to ascertain the precise moment of the
setting. The crimson orb sunk behind the purple
mountains, the sky was flushed with a rich and rosy
glow. Then might be perceived the zealots, proud
in their Talmudical lore, holding a skein of white
silk in their hands, and announcing the approach of
the Sabbath by their observation of its shifting tints.
While the skein was yet golden, the forge of the armourer
still sounded, the fire of the cook still blazed, still
the cavalry led their steeds to the river, and still
the busy footmen braced up their tents and hammered
at their palisades. The skein of silk became
rosy, the armourer worked with renewed energy, the
cook puffed with increased zeal, the horsemen scampered
from the river, the footmen cast an anxious glance
at the fading twilight.
The skein of silk became blue; a dim,
dull, sepulchral, leaden tinge fell over its purity.
The hum of gnats arose, the bat flew in circling whirls
over the tents, horns sounded from all quarters, the
sun had set, the Sabbath had commenced. ’The
forge was mute, the fire extinguished, the prance
of horses and the bustle of men in a moment ceased.
A deep, a sudden, an all-pervading stillness dropped
over that mighty host. It was night; the sacred
lamp of the Sabbath sparkled in every tent of the
camp, which vied in silence and in brilliancy with
the mute and glowing heavens.
Morn came; the warriors assembled
around the altar and the sacrifice. The high
priest and his attendant Levites proclaimed the unity
and the omnipotence of the God of Israel, and the
sympathetic responses of his conquering and chosen
people reechoed over the plain. They retired
again to their tents, to listen to the expounding of
the law; even the distance of a Sabbath walk was not
to exceed that space which lies between Jerusalem
and the Mourft of Olives. This was the distance
between the temple and the tabernacle; it had been
nicely measured, and every Hebrew who ventured forth
from the camp this day might be observed counting
the steps of a Sabbath-day’s journey. At
length the sun again set, and on a sudden fires blazed,
voices sounded, men stirred, in the same enchanted
and instantaneous manner that had characterised the
stillness of the preceding eve. Shouts of laughter,
bursts of music, announced the festivity of the coming
night; supplies poured in from all the neighbouring
villages, and soon the pious conquerors commemorated
their late triumph in a round of banqueting.
On the morrow, a Tatar arrived from
Ithamar, informing Alroy that the Sultan of Roum had
retreated into Syria, that Bagdad was undefended, but
that he had acceded to the request of the inhabitants
that a deputation should wait upon Alroy before the
troops entered the city, and had granted a safe conduct
for their passage.
On the morrow, messengers announced
the approach of the deputation. All the troops
were under arms. Alroy directed that the suppliants
should be conducted through the whole camp before
they arrived at the royal pavilion, on each side of
which the Sacred Guard was mustered in array.
The curtains of his tent withdrawn displayed the conqueror
himself, seated on a sumptuous divan. On his
right hand stood Jabaster in his priestly robes, on
his left Scherirah. Behind him, the giant Elnebar
supported the sacred sceptre. A crowd of chieftains
was ranged on each side of the pavilion.
Cymbals sounded, muffled kettle-drums,
and the faint flourish of trumpets; the commencement
of the procession might be detected in the long perspective
of the tented avenue. First came a company of
beauteous youths, walking two by two, and strewing
flowers; then a band of musicians in flowing robes
of cloth of gold, plaintively sounding their silver
trumpets. After these followed slaves of all climes,
bearing a tribute of the most rare and costly productions
of their countries: Negroes with tusks and teeth
of the elephant, plumes of ostrich feathers, and caskets
of gold dust; Syrians with rich armour; Persians with
vases of atar-gul, and Indians with panniers of
pearls of Ormuz, and soft shawls of Cachemire.
Encircled by his children, each of whom held alternately
a white or fawn-coloured gazelle, an Arab clothed in
his blue bornouz, led by a thick cord of crimson silk
a tall and tawny giraffe. Fifty stout men succeeded
two by two, carrying in company a silver shield laden
with gold coin, or chased goblets studded with gems.
The clash of cymbals announced the
presence of the robes of honour, culled from the
wardrobe of the commander of the Faithful; the silk
of Aleppo and the brocade of Damascus, lined with
the furs of the sable and the ermine, down from the
breast of the swan, and the skins of white foxes.
After these followed two grey dromedaries,
with furniture of silver, and many caparisoned horses,
each led by a groom in rich attire. The last
of these was a snow-white steed, upon whose front was
the likeness of a ruby star, a courser of the sacred
stud of Solomon, and crossed only by the descendants
of the Prophet.
The muffled kettle-drums heralded
the company of black eunuchs, with their scarlet vests
and ivory battle-axes. They surrounded and shrouded
from the vulgar gaze fourteen beautiful Circassian
girls, whose brilliant visages and perfect forms
were otherwise concealed by their long veils and ample
drapery.
The gorgeous procession, as they approached
the conqueror, bowed humbly to Alroy, and formed in
order on each side of the broad avenue. The deputation
appeared; twelve of the principal citizens of Bagdad,
with folded arms, and downcast eyes, and disordered
raiment. Meekly and mutely each touched the earth
with his hand, and kissed it in token of submission,
and then, moving aside, made way for the chief envoy
and orator of the company, Honain!
Humbly, but gracefully, the physician
of the caliph bowed before the conqueror of the East.
His appearance and demeanour afforded a contrast to
the aspect of his brother envoys; not less calm or
contented his countenance, not less sumptuous or studied
his attire, than when he first rescued Alroy in the
bazaar of Bagdad from the grip of the false Abdallah.
He spoke, and every sound was hushed
before the music of his voice.
’Conqueror of the world, that
destiny with which it is in vain to struggle has placed
our lives and fortunes in your power. Your slaves
offer for your approbation specimens of their riches;
not as tribute, for all is yours; but to show you
the products of security and peace, and to induce
you to believe that mercy may be a policy as profitable
to the conqueror as to the conquered; that it may be
better to preserve than to destroy; and wiser to enjoy
than to extirpate.
’Fate ordained that we should
be born the slaves of the caliph; that same fate has
delivered his sceptre into your hands. We offer
you the same devotion that we yielded to him, and
we entreat the same protection which he granted to
us.
’Whatever may be your decision,
we must bow to your decree with the humility that
recognises superior force. Yet we are not without
hope. We cannot forget that it is our good fortune
not to be addressing a barbarous chieftain, unable
to sympathise with the claims of civilisation, the
creations of art, and the finer impulses of humanity.
We acknowledge your irresistible power, but we dare
to hope everything from a prince whose genius all
acknowledge and admire, who has spared some portion
of his youth from the cares of government and the pursuits
of arms to the ennobling claims of learning, whose
morality has been moulded by a pure and sublime faith,
and who draws his lineage from a sacred and celebrated
race, the unrivalled antiquity of which even the Prophet
acknowledges.’
He ceased: a buzz of approbation
sounded throughout the pavilion, which was hushed
instantly as the lips of the conqueror moved.
‘Noble emir,’ replied
Alroy, ’return to Bagdad, and tell your fellow-subjects
that the King of Israel grants protection to their
persons, and security to their property.’
‘And for their faith?’
enquired the envoy, in a lower voice.
‘Toleration,’ replied Alroy, turning to
Jabaster.
‘Until further regulations,’ added the
high priest.
‘Emir,’ said Alroy, ‘the person
of the caliph will be respected.’
‘May it please your highness,’
replied Honain, ’the Sultan of Roum has retired
with our late ruler.’
‘And his harem?’
‘And his harem.’
‘It was needless. We war not with women.’
’Men, as well as women, must
acknowledge the gracious mercy of your highness.’
‘Benomi,’ said Alroy,
addressing himself to a young officer of the guard,
’command the guard of honour that will attend
this noble emir on his return. We soldiers deal
only in iron, sir, and cannot vie with the magnificence
of Bagdad, yet wear this dagger for the donor’s
sake:’ and Alroy held out to Honain a poniard
flaming with gems.
The Envoy of Bagdad advanced, took
the dagger, pressed it to his lips, and placed it
in his vest.
‘Scherirah,’ continued
Alroy, ’this noble emir is your charge.
See that a choice pavilion of the host be for his
use, and that his train complain not of the rough
customs of our camp.’
‘May it please your highness,’
replied Honain, ’I have fulfilled my office,
and, with your gracious permission, would at once return.
I have business only less urgent than the present,
because it concerns myself.’
‘As you will, noble emir.
Benomi, to your post. Farewell, sir.’
The deputation advanced, bowed, and
retired. Alroy turned to Jabaster.
‘No common person that, Jabaster?’
‘A very gracious Turk, sire.’
‘Think you he is a Turk?’
‘By his dress.’
’It may be so. Asriel,
break up the camp. We’ll march at once to
Bagdad.’
The chiefs dispersed to make the necessary
arrangements for the march. The news that the
army was immediately to advance to Bagdad soon circulated
throughout the camp, and excited the most lively enthusiasm.
Every hand was at work, striking the tents, preparing
the arms and horses. Alroy retired to his pavilion.
The curtains were drawn. He was alone, and plunged
in profound meditation.
‘Alroy!’ a voice sounded.
He started, and looked up. Before him stood Esther
the prophetess.
‘Esther! is it thou?’
‘Alroy! enter not into Babylon.’
‘Indeed.’
‘As I live, the Lord hath spoken it. Enter
not into Babylon.’
‘Not enjoy my fairest conquest, maiden?’
‘Enter not into Babylon.’
‘What affrights thee?’
‘Enter not into Babylon.’
‘I shall surely change the fortunes of my life
without a cause.’
‘The Lord hath spoken. Is not that a cause?’
‘I am the Lord’s anointed. His warning
has not reached me.’
’Now it reaches thee. Doth
the king despise the prophetess of the Lord?
It is the sin of Ahab.’
’Despise thee! Despise
the mouth that is the herald of my victories!
’Twere rank blasphemy. Prophesy triumph,
Esther, and Alroy will never doubt thy inspiration.’
’He doubts it now. I see
he doubts it now. O my king, I say again, enter
not into Babylon.’
’Beauteous maiden, those eyes
flash lightning. Who can behold their wild and
liquid glance, and doubt that Esther is inspired!
Be calm, sweet girl, some dream disturbs thy fancy.’
‘Alroy, Alroy, enter not into Babylon!’
‘I have no fear, I bear a charmed life.’
‘Ah me! he will not listen.’ All
is lost!’
‘All is gained, my beautiful.’
’I would we were upon the Holy
Mount, and gazing on the stars of sacred Zion.’
‘Esther,’ said Alroy,
advancing, and gently taking her hand, ’the
capital of the East will soon unfold its marvels to
thy sight. Prepare thyself for wonders.
Girl, we are no longer in the desert. Forget thy
fitful fancies. Come, choose a husband from my
generals, child, and I will give a kingdom for thy
dower. I would gladly see a crown upon that imperial
brow. It well deserves one.’
The prophetess turned her dark eyes
full upon Alroy. What passed in her mind was
neither evident nor expressed. She gazed intently
upon the calm and inscrutable countenance of the conqueror,
then flung away his hand, and rushed out of the pavilion.