CALEB
It may be wondered whether any girl
who was ever born into the world could boast a stranger
or a happier upbringing than Miriam. She was,
it is true, motherless, but by way of compensation
Fate endowed her with several hundred fathers, each
of whom loved her as the apple of his eye. She
did not call them “Father” indeed, a term
which under the circumstances they thought incorrect.
To her, one and all, they went by the designation
of “Uncle,” with their name added if she
happened to know it, if not as Uncle simply.
It cannot be said, however, that Miriam brought peace
to the community of the Essenes. Indeed, before
she had done with them she rent it with deep and abiding
jealousies, to the intense but secret delight of Nehushta,
who, although she became a person of great importance
among them as the one who had immediate charge of
their jewel, could never forgive them certain of their
doctrines or their habit of persistent interference.
The domiciliary visits which took
place twice a week, and, by special subsequent resolution
passed in full Court, on the Sabbath also, were, to
begin with, the subject of much covert bitterness.
At first a standing committee was appointed to make
these visits, of whom Ithiel was one. Before
two years had gone by, however, much murmuring arose
in the community upon this matter. It was pointed
out in language that became vehement for
an Essene that so much power should not
be left in the hands of one fixed set of individuals,
who might become careless or prejudiced, or, worst
of all, neglectful of the welfare of the child who
was the guest not of them only, but of the whole order.
It was demanded, therefore, that this committee should
change automatically every month, so that all might
serve upon it in turn, Ithiel, as the blood-relation
of Miriam, remaining its only permanent member.
This proposal was opposed by the committee, but as
no one else would vote for them the desired alteration
was made. Further, to be removed temporarily,
or for good, from its roster was thenceforth recognised
as one of the punishments of the order.
Indeed, the absurdities to which its
existence gave rise, especially as the girl grew in
years, sweetness and beauty, cannot be numbered.
Thus, every visiting member must wash his whole person
and clothe himself in clean garments before he was
allowed to approach the child, “lest he should
convey to her any sickness, or impure substance, or
odour.” Then there was much trouble because
some members were discovered to be ingratiating themselves
with Miriam by secretly presenting her with gifts
of playthings, some of them of great beauty, which
they fashioned from wood, shells, or even hard stones.
Moreover, they purveyed articles of food such as they
found the child loved; and this it was that led to
their detection, for, having eaten of them, she was
ill. Thereupon Nehushta, enraged, disclosed the
whole plot, using the most violent language, and,
amidst murmurs of “Shame on them!” designating
the offenders by name. They were removed from
their office, and it was decreed that henceforth any
gifts made to the child must be offered to her by
the committee as a whole, and not by a single individual,
and handed over in their name by Ithiel, her uncle.
Once, when she was seven years old,
and the idol of every brother among the Essenes, Miriam
fell ill with a kind of fever which often strikes
children in the neighbourhood of Jericho and the Dead
Sea. Among the brethren were several skilful
and famous physicians, who attended her night and
day. But still the fever could not be abated,
and at last, with tears, they announced that they
feared for the child’s life. Then indeed
there was lamentation among the Essenes. For three
days and three nights did they wrestle in constant
prayer to God that she might be spared, many of them
touching nothing but water during all that time.
Moreover, they sat about at a distance from her house,
praying and seeking tidings. If it was bad they
beat their breasts, if good they gave thanks.
Never was the sickbed of a monarch watched with more
care or devotion than that of this little orphan, and
never was a recovery for at length she
did recover received with greater thankfulness
and joy.
This was the truth. These pure
and simple men, in obedience to the strict rule they
had adopted, were cut off from all the affections of
life. Yet, the foundation-stone of their doctrine
being Love, they who were human must love something,
so they loved this child whom they looked upon as
their ward, and who, as there was none other of her
age and sex in their community, had no rival in their
hearts. She was the one joy of their laborious
and ascetic hours; she represented all the sweetness
and youth of this self-renewing world, which to them
was so grey and sapless. Moreover, she was a
lovely maid, who, wherever she had been placed, would
have bound all to her.
The years went by and the time came
when, in obedience to the first decree, Miriam must
be educated. Long were the discussions which ensued
among the curators of the Essenes. At length three
of the most learned of their body were appointed to
this task, and the teaching began. As it chanced,
Miriam proved an apt pupil, for her memory was good,
and she had a great desire to learn many things, more
especially history and languages, and all that has
to do with nature. One of her tutors was an Egyptian,
who, brought up in the priests’ college at Thebes,
when on a journey to Judaea had fallen sick near Jericho,
been nursed by the Essenes and converted to their
doctrine. From him Miriam learnt much of their
ancient civilisation, and even of the inner mysteries
of the Egyptian religion, and of its high and secret
interpretations which were known only to the priests.
The second, Theophilus by name, was a Greek who had
visited Rome, and he taught her the tongues and literature
of those countries. The third, all his life long
had studied beasts and birds and insects, and the
workings of nature, and the stars and their movements,
in which things he instructed her day by day, taking
her abroad with him that examples of each of them
might be before her eyes.
Lastly, when she grew older, there
was a fourth master, who was an artist. He taught
Miriam how to model animals, and even men, in the clay
of the Jordan, and how to carve them out in marble,
and something of the use of pigments. Also this
man, who was very clever, had a knowledge of singing
and instrumental music, which he imparted to her in
her odd hours. Thus it came about that Miriam
grew learned and well acquainted with many matters
of which most girls of her day and years had never
even heard. Nor did she lack knowledge of the
things of her own faith, though in these the Essenes
did not instruct her further than its doctrines tallied
with their own. Of the rest, Nehushta told her
something; moreover, on several occasions Christian
travellers or preachers visited this country to address
the Essenes or the other Jews who dwelt there.
When they learned her case, these showed themselves
very eager to inform her of the Christian doctrine.
Among them was one old man who had heard the preaching
of Jesus Christ, and been present at His Crucifixion,
to all of which histories the girl listened with eagerness,
remembering them to the last hour of her life.
Further, and perhaps this was the
best part of her education, she lived in the daily
company of Nature. But a mile or two away spread
the Dead Sea, and along its melancholy and lifeless
shores, fringed with the white trunks of trees that
had been brought down by Jordan, she would often walk.
Before her day by day loomed the mountains of Moab,
while behind her were the fantastic and mysterious
sand-hills of the desert, backed again by other mountains
and that grey, tormented country which stretches between
Jericho and Jerusalem. Quite near at hand also
ran the broad and muddy Jordan, whose fertile banks
were clothed in spring with the most delicious greenery
and haunted by kingfishers, cranes, wildfowl, and
many other birds. About these banks, too, stretching
into the desert land beyond, the flowers of the field
grew by myriads, at different periods of the year
carpeting the whole earth with various colours, brilliant
as are those of the rainbow. These it was her
delight to gather, and even to cultivate in the garden
of her house.
Thus wisdom, earthly and divine, was
gathered in Miriam’s heart till very soon its
light began to shine through her eyes and face, making
them ever more tender and beautiful. Nor did she
lack charm and grace of person. From the first,
in stature she was small and delicate, pale also in
complexion; but her dark hair was plenteous and curling,
and her eyes were large and of a deep and tender blue.
Her hands and feet were very slender, and her every
gesture quick and agile as that of a bird. Thus
she grew up loving all things and beloved by all; for
even the flowers which she tended and the creatures
that she fed, seemed in her to find a friend.
Now of so much learning and all this
system of solemn ordered hours, Nehushta did not approve.
For a while she bore with it, but when Miriam was
about eleven years of age, she spoke her mind to the
Committee and through them to the governing Court
of Curators.
Was it right that a child should be
brought up thus, she asked, and turned into a grave
old woman whilst, quite heedless of such things, others
of her age were occupied with youthful games?
The end of it might be that her brain would break
and she would die or become crazy, and then what good
would so much wisdom do her? It was necessary
that she should have more leisure and other children
with whom she could associate.
“White-bearded hermits,”
she added with point, “were not suitable as
sole companions to a little maid.”
Thereon followed much debate and consultation
with the doctors, who agreed that friends of her own
years should be found for the child. This, however,
proved difficult, since among these Essenes were no
other girls. Therefore those friends must be
of the male sex. Here too were difficulties,
as at that time, of the lads adopted by this particular
community which they were destined to join in after
days, there was but one of equal birth with Miriam.
Now so far as concerned their own order the Essenes
thought little of social distinctions, or even of the
differences of blood and race. But Miriam was
not of their order; she was their guest, no more,
to whom they stood in the place of parents, and who
would go from them out into the great world. Therefore,
notwithstanding their childlike simplicity, being,
many of them, men experienced in life, they did not
think it right that she should mix with those of lower
breeding.
This one lad, Caleb by name, was born
in the same year as Miriam, when Cuspius Fadus became
governor on the death of Agrippa. His father was
Jew of very high rank named Hilliel, who, although
he sided from time to time with the Roman party, was
killed by them, or perished among the twenty thousand
who were trampled to death at the Feast of the Passover
at Jerusalem, when Cumanus, the Procurator, ordered
his soldiers to attack the people. Thereon the
Zealots, who considered him a traitor, managed to
get possession of all his property, so that his son
Caleb, whose mother was dead, was brought in a destitute
condition by one of her friends to Jericho. There,
as she could not dispose of him otherwise, he was
given over to the Essenes, to be educated in their
doctrine, and, should he wish it, to enter their order
when he reached full age. This lad, it was now
decreed, should become the playmate of Miriam, a decision
that pleased both of them very well.
Caleb was a handsome child with quick,
dark eyes that watched everything without seeming
to watch, and black hair which curled upon his shoulders.
He was clever also and brave; but though he did his
best to control his temper, by nature very passionate
and unforgiving. Moreover, that which he desired
he would have, if by any means it could be obtained,
and was faithful in his loves as in his hates.
Of these hates Nehushta was one. With all the
skill of a Libyan, whose only book is that of Nature
and men’s faces, she read the boy’s heart
at once and said openly that he might come to be the
first in any cause if he did not betray
it and that when God mixed his blood of
the best, lest Caesar should find a rival He left
out the salt of honesty and filled up the cup with
the wine of passion. When these sayings were repeated
to Caleb by Miriam, who thought them to be a jest
fit to tease her playmate with, he did not fly into
one of his tempers, as she had hoped, but only screwed
up his eyelids after his fashion in certain moods,
and looked black as the rain-storm above Mount Nebo.
“Did you hear, Caleb?”
asked Miriam, somewhat disappointed.
“Oh, yes! Lady Miriam,”
for so he had been ordered to call her. “I
heard. Do you tell that old black woman that I
will lead more causes than she ever thought of, for
I mean to be the first everywhere. Also that
whatever God left out of my cup, at least He mixed
it with a good memory.”
When Nehushta heard this, she laughed
and said that it was true enough, only he that tried
to climb several ladders at once generally fell to
the ground, and that when a head had said good-bye
to its shoulders, the best of memories got lost between
the two.
Miriam liked Caleb, but she never
loved him as she did the old men, her uncles, or Nehushta,
who to her was more than all. Perhaps this may
have been because he never grew angry with her whatever
she might say or do, never even spoke to her roughly,
but always waited on her pleasure and watched for
her wish. Still, of all companions he was the
best. If Miriam desired to walk by the Dead Sea,
he would desire the same. If she wanted to go
fishing in the Jordan, he would make ready the baits
or net, and take the fishes off the hook a
thing she hated. If she sought a rare flower,
Caleb would hunt it out for days, although she knew
well that in himself he did not care for flowers,
and when he had found it, would mark the spot and
lead her there in triumph. Also there was this
about him, as she was soon quick enough to learn:
he worshipped her. Whatever else might be false,
that note in his nature rang true. If one child
could love another, then Caleb loved Miriam, first
with the love of children, then as a man loves a woman.
Only and this was the sorrow of it Miriam
never loved Caleb. Had she done so both their
stories would have been very different. To her
he was a clever companion and no more.
What made the thing more strange was
that he loved no one else, except, mayhap, himself.
In this way and in that the lad soon came to learn
his own history, which was sad enough, with the result
that if he hated the Romans who had invaded the country
and trampled it beneath their heel, still more did
he hate those of the Jews who looked upon his father
as their enemy and had stolen all the lands and goods
that were his by right. As for the Essenes who
reared and protected him, so soon as he came to an
age when he could weigh such matters, he held them
in contempt, and because of their continual habit
of bathing themselves and purifying their garments,
called them the company of washer-women. On him
their doctrines left but a shallow mark. He thought,
as he explained to Miriam, that people who were in
the world should take the world as they found it,
without dreaming ceaselessly of another world to which,
as yet, they did not belong; a sentiment that to some
extent Nehushta shared.
Wishing, with the zeal of the young,
to make a convert, Miriam preached to him the doctrine
of Christianity, but without success. By blood
Caleb was a Jew of the Jews, and could not understand
or admire a God who would consent to be trodden under
foot and crucified. The Messiah he desired to
follow must be a great conqueror, one who would overthrow
the Caesars and take the throne of Caesar, not a humble
creature with his mouth full of maxims. Like
the majority of his own, and, indeed, of every generation,
to the last day of his life, Caleb was unable to divine
that mind is greater than matter, while spirit is greater
than mind; and that in the end, by many slow advances
and after many disasters seemingly irremediable, spirituality
will conquer all. He looked to a sword flashing
from thrones, not to the word of truth spoken by lowly
lips in humble streets or upon the flanks of deserts,
trusting to the winds of Grace to bear it into the
hearts of men and thus regenerate their souls.
Such was Caleb, and these things are
said of him here because the child is father to the
man.
Swiftly the years went by. There
were tumults in Judaea and massacres in Jerusalem.
False prophets such as Theudas, who pretended that
he could divide Jordan, attracted thousands to their
tinsel standards, to be hewn down, poor folk! by the
Roman legions. Caesars rose and fell; the great
Temple was at length almost completed in its glory,
and many events happened which are remembered even
to this day.
But in the little village of the Essenes
by the grey shores of the Dead Sea, nothing seemed
to change, except that now and again an aged brother
died, and now and again a new brother was admitted.
They rose before daylight and offered their invocation
to the sun; they went out to toil in the fields and
sowed their crops, to reap them in due season, thankful
if they were good, still thankful if they were bad.
They washed, they prayed, they mourned over the wickedness
of the world, and wove themselves white garments emblematic
of a better. Also, although of this Miriam knew
nothing, they held higher and more secret services
wherein they invoked the presence of their “angels,”
and by arts of divination that were known to them,
foretold the future, an exercise which brought them
little joy. But as yet, however evil might be
the omens, none came to molest their peaceful life,
which ran quietly towards the great catastrophe as
often deep waters swirl to the lip of a precipice.
At length when Miriam was seventeen
years of age, the first stroke of trouble fell upon
them.
From time to time the high priests
at Jerusalem, who hated the Essenes as heretics, had
made demands upon them that they should pay tithe for
the support of the sacrifices in the Temple. This
they refused to do, since all sacrifices were hateful
to them. So things went on until the day of the
high priest Ananos, who sent armed men to the village
of the Essenes to take the tithes. These were
refused to them, whereon they broke open the granary
and helped themselves, destroying a great deal which
they could not carry away. As it chanced, on that
day Miriam, accompanied by Nehushta, had visited Jericho.
Returning in the afternoon they passed through a certain
torrent bed in which were many rocks, and among them
thickets of thorn trees. Here they were met by
Caleb, now a noble-looking youth very strong and active,
who carried a bow in his hand and on his back a sheath
of six arrows.
“Lady Miriam,” he said,
“well met. I have come to seek you, and
to warn you not to return by the road to-day, since
on it you will meet presently those thieves sent by
the high priest to plunder the stores of the Order,
who, perhaps, will offer you insult or mischief, for
they are drunk with wine. Look, one of them has
struck me,” and he pointed to a bruise upon
his shoulder and scowled.
“What then shall we do?”
asked Miriam. “Go back to Jericho?”
“Nay, for there they will come
too. Follow up this gully till you reach the
footpath a mile away, and by it walk to the village;
so you will miss these robbers.”
“That is a good plan,” said Nehushta.
“Come, lady.”
“Whither are you going, Caleb?”
asked Miriam, lingering, since she saw that he did
not mean to accompany them.
“I? Oh, I shall hide among
the rocks near by till the men are passed, and then
go to seek that hyena which has been worrying the sheep.
I have tracked him down and may catch him as he comes
from his hole at sunset. That is why I have brought
my bow and arrows.”
“Come,” broke in Nehushta
impatiently, “come. The lad well knows how
to guard himself.”
“Be careful, Caleb, that you
get no hurt from the hyena,” said Miriam, doubtfully,
as Nehushta seized her by the wrist and dragged her
away. “It is strange,” she added
as they went, “that Caleb should choose this
evening to go hunting.”
“Unless I mistake, it is a human
hyena whom he hunts,” answered Nehushta shortly.
“One of those men struck him, and he desires
to wash the wound with his blood.”
“Oh, surely not! Nou.
That would be taking vengeance, and revenge is evil.”
Nehushta shrugged her shoulders.
“Caleb may think otherwise, as I do at times.
Wait, and we shall see.”
As it chanced, they did see something.
The footpath by which they returned to the village
ran over a high ridge of ground, and from its crest,
although they were a mile or more away, in that clear
desert air they could easily discern the line of the
high priest’s servants straggling along, driving
before them a score or so of mules, laden with wine
and other produce which they had stolen from the stores.
Presently the company of them descended into that
gully along which the road ran, whence a minute or
two later rose a sound of distant shouting. Then
they appeared on the further side, running, or riding
their beasts hither and thither, as though in search
of some one, while four of them carried between them
a man who seemed to be hurt, or dead.
“I think that Caleb has shot
his hyena,” said Nehushta meaningly; “but
I have seen nothing, and if you are wise, you will
say nothing. I do not like Caleb, but I hate
these Jewish thieves, and it is not for you to bring
your friend into trouble.”
Miriam looked frightened but nodded
her head, and no more was said of the matter.
That evening, as Miriam and Nehushta
stood at the door of their house in the cool, by the
light of the full moon they saw Caleb advancing towards
them down the road, a sight that made Miriam glad at
heart, for she feared lest he might have come into
trouble. Catching sight of them, he asked permission
to enter through the door, which he closed behind them,
so that now they stood in the little garden within
the wall.
“Well,” said Nehushta,
“I see that you had a shot at your hyena; did
you kill it?”
“How do you know that?”
he asked, looking at her suspiciously.
“A strange question to put to
a Libyan woman who was brought up among bowmen,”
she replied. “You had six arrows in your
quiver when we met you, and now I count but five.
Also your bow was newly waxed; and look, the wax is
rubbed where the shaft lay.”
“I shot at the beast, and, as
I think, hit it. At least, I could not find the
arrow again, although I searched long.”
“Doubtless. You do not
often miss. You have a good eye and a steady
hand. Well, the loss of a shaft will not matter,
since I noticed, also, that this one was differently
barbed from the others, and double feathered; a true
Roman war-shaft, such as they do not make here.
If any find your wounded beast you will not get its
hide, since it is known that you do not use such arrows.”
Then, with a smile that was full of meaning, Nehushta
turned and entered the house, leaving him staring
after her, half in wrath and half in wonder at her
wit.
“What does she mean?”
he asked Miriam, but in the voice of one who speaks
to himself.
“She thinks that you shot at
a man, not at a beast,” replied Miriam; “but
I know well that you could not have done this, since
that would be against the rule of the Essenes.”
“Even the rule of the Essenes
permits a man to protect himself and his property
from thieves,” he answered sulkily.
“Yes, to protect himself if
he is attacked, and his property if he has
any. But neither that faith nor mine permits him
to avenge a blow.”
“I was one against many,”
he answered boldly. “My life was on the
hazard: it was no coward’s act.”
“Were there, then, a troop of
these hyenas?” asked Miriam, innocently.
“I thought you said it was a solitary beast that
took the sheep.”
“It was a whole company of beasts
who took the wine, and smote those in charge of it
as though they were street dogs.”
“Hyenas that took wine like
the tame ape whom the boys make drunken over yonder ”
“Why do you mock me,”
broke in Caleb, “who must know the truth?
Or if you do not know it, here it is. That thief
beat me with his staff, and called me the son of a
dog, and I swore that I would pay him back. Pay
him back I did, for the head of that shaft which Nehushta
noted, stands out a span beyond his neck. They
never saw who shot it; they never saw me at all, who
thought at first that the man had fallen from his horse.
By the time they knew the truth I was away where they
could not follow. Now go and tell the story if
you will, or let Nehushta, who hates me, tell it,
and give me over to be tortured by the servants of
the high priest, or crucified as a murderer by the
Romans.”
“Neither Nehushta nor I saw
this deed done, nor shall we bear witness against
you, Caleb, or judge you, who doubtless were provoked
by violent and lawless men. Yet, Caleb, you told
me that you came out to warn us, and it grieves me
to learn that the true wish of your heart was to take
the life of a man.”
“It is false,” he answered
angrily; “I said that I came to warn you, and
afterwards to kill a hyena. To make you safe that
was my first thought, and until you were safe my enemy
was safe also. Miriam, you know it well.”
“Why should I know it?
To you, Caleb, I think revenge is more than friendship.”
“Perhaps; for I have few friends
who am a penniless orphan brought up by charity.
But, Miriam, to me revenge is not more than love.”
“Love,” she stammered,
turning crimson to her hair and stepping back a pace;
“what do you mean, Caleb?”
“What I say, neither more nor
less,” he answered sullenly. “As I
have worked one crime to-day, I may as well work two,
and dare to tell the lady Miriam, the Queen of the
Essenes, that I love her, though she loves not me as
yet.”
“This is madness,” faltered Miriam.
“Mayhap, but it is a madness
which began when first I saw you that was
soon after we learned to speak a madness
which will continue until I cease to see you, and
that shall be soon before I grow silent forever.
Listen, Miriam, and do not think my words only those
of a foolish boy, for all my life shall prove them.
This love of mine is a thing with which you must reckon.
You love me not therefore, even had I the
power, I would not force myself upon you against your
will; only I warn you, learn to love no other man,
for then it shall go ill either with him or with me.
By this I swear it,” and, snatching her to him,
Caleb kissed her on the forehead, then let her go,
saying, “Fear not. It is the first and
last time, except by your own will. Or if you
fear, tell the story to the Court of the Essenes,
and to Nehushta, who will right your wrongs.”
“Caleb,” she gasped, stamping
her foot upon the ground in anger, “Caleb, you
are more wicked than I dreamed, and,” she added,
as though to herself “and greater!”
“Yes,” he answered, as
he turned to go, “I think that you are right.
I am more wicked than you dreamed and greater.
Also, Miriam, I love you as you will never be loved
again. Farewell!”