Mohammed of Mequinez, the man
whom Israel went out to seek, had been a Kadi and
the son of a Kadi. While he was still a child
his father died, and he was brought up by two uncles,
his father’s brothers, both men of yet higher
place, the one being Naib es-sultan, or Foreign
Minister, at Tangier, and the other Grand Vizier to
the Sultan at Morocco. Thus in a land where there
is one noble only, the Sultan himself, where ascent
and descent are as free as in a republic, though the
ways of both are mired with crime and corruption,
Mohammed was come as from the highest nobility.
Nevertheless, he renounced his rank and the hope of
wealth that went along with it at the call of duty
and the cry of misery.
He parted from his uncles, abandoned
his judgeship, and went out into the plains.
The poor and outcast and down-trodden among the people,
the shamed, the disgraced, and the neglected left
the towns and followed him. He established a
sect. They were to be despisers of riches and
lovers of poverty. No man among them was to have
more than another. They were never to buy or
sell among themselves, but every one was to give what
he had to him that wanted it. They were to avoid
swearing, yet whatever they said was to be firmer
than an oath. They were to be ministers of peace,
and if any man did them violence they were never to
resist him. Nevertheless they were not to lack
for courage, but to laugh to scorn the enemies that
tormented them, and smile in their pains and shed
no tear. And as for death, if it was for their
glory they were to esteem it more than life, because
their bodies only were corruptible, but their souls
were immortal, and would mount upwards when released
from the bondage of the flesh. Not dissenters
from the Koran, but stricter conformers to it; not
Nazarenes and not Jews, yet followers of Jesus in
their customs and of Moses in their doctrines.
And Moors and Berbers, Arabs and Negroes,
Muslimeen and Jews, heard the cry of Mohammed of Mequinez,
and he received them all. From the streets, from
the market-places, from the doors of the prisons, from
the service of hard masters, and from the ragged army
itself, they arose in hundreds and trooped after him.
They needed no badge but the badge of poverty, and
no voice of pleading but the voice of misery.
Most of them brought nothing with them in their hands,
and some brought little on their backs save the stripes
of their tormentors. A few had flocks and herds,
which they drove before them. A few had tents,
which they shared with their fellows; and a few had
guns, with which they shot the wild boar for their
food and the hyena for their safety. Thus, possessing
little and desiring nothing, having neither houses
nor lands, and only considering themselves secure
from their rulers in having no money, this company
of battered human wrecks, life-broken and crime-logged
and stranded, passed with their leader from place
to place of the waste country about Mequinez.
And he, being as poor as they were, though he might
have been so rich, cheered them always, even when
they murmured against him, as Absalam had cheered
his little fellowship at Tetuan: “God will
feed us as He feeds the birds of the air, and clothe
our little ones as He clothes the fields.”
Such was the man whom Israel went
out to seek. But Israel knew his people too well
to make known his errand. His besetting difficulties
were enough already. The year was young, but the
days were hot; a palpitating haze floated always in
the air, and the grass and the broom had the dusty
and tired look of autumn. It was also the month
of the fast of Ramadhan, and Israel’s men were
Muslims. So, to save himself the double vexation
of oppressive days and the constant bickerings of his
famished people, Israel found it necessary at length
to travel in the night. In this way his journey
was the shorter for the absence of some obstacles,
but his time was long.
And, just as he had hidden his errand
from the men of his own caravan, so he concealed it
from the people of the country that he passed through,
and many and various, and sometimes ludicrous and sometimes
very pitiful were the conjectures they made concerning
it. While he was passing through his own province
of Tetuan, nothing did the poor people think but that
he had come to make a new assessment of their lands
and holdings, their cattle and belongings, that he
might tax them afresh and more fully. So, to
buy his mercy in advance, many of them came out of
their houses as he drew near, and knelt on the ground
before his horse, and kissed the skirts of his kaftan,
and his knees, and even his foot in his stirrup, and
called him Sidi (master, my lord), a title never
before given to a Jew, and offered him presents out
of their meagre substance.
“A gift for my lord,”
they would say, “of the little that God has given
us, praise His merciful name for ever!”
Then they would push forward a sheep
or a goat, or a string of hens tied by the legs so
as to hang across his saddle-bow, or, perhaps, at the
two trembling hands of an old woman living alone on
a hungry scratch of land in a desolate place, a bowl
of buttermilk.
Israel was touched by the people’s
terror, but he betrayed no feeling.
“Keep them,” he would
answer; “keep them until I come again,”
intending to tell them, when that time came, to keep
their poor gifts altogether.
And when he had passed out of the
province of Tetuan into the bashalic of El Kasar,
the bareheaded country-people of the valley of the
Koos hastened before him to the Kaid of that grey
town of bricks and storks and palm-trees and evil
odours, and the Kaid, with another notion of his errand,
came to the tumble-down bridge to meet him on his approach
in the early morning.
“Peace be with you!” said
the Kaid. “So my lord is going again to
the Shereef at Wazzan; may the mercy of the Merciful
protect him!”
Israel neither answered yea nor nay,
but threaded the maze of crooked lanes to the lodging
which had been provided for him near the market-place,
and the same night he left the town (laden with the
presents of the Kaid) through a line of famished and
half-naked beggars who looked on with feverish eyes.
Next day, at dawn, he came to the
heights of Wazzan (a holy city of Morocco), by the
olives and junipers and evergreen oaks that grow at
the foot of the lofty, double-peaked Boo-Hallal, and
there the young grand Shereef himself, at the gate
of his odorous orange-gardens, stood waiting to give
audience with yet another conjecture as to the intention
of his journey.
“Welcome! welcome!” said
the Shereef; “all you see is yours until Allah
shall decree that you leave me too soon on your happy
mission to our lord the Sultan at Fez may
God prolong his life and bless him!”
“God make you happy!”
said Israel, but he offered no answer to the question
that was implied.
“It is twenty and odd years,
my lord,” the Shereef continued, “since
my father sent for you out of Tetuan, and many are
the ups and downs that time has wrought since then,
under Allah’s will; but none in the past have
been so grateful as the elevation of Israel ben
Oliel, and none in the future can be so joyful as
the favours which the Sultan (God keep our lord Abd
er-Rahman!) has still in store for him.”
“God will show,” said Israel.
No Jew had ever yet ridden in this
Moroccan Mecca; but the Shereef alighted from his
horse and offered it to Israel, and took Israel’s
horse instead and together they rode through the market-place,
and past the old Mosque that is a ruin inhabited by
hawks and the other mosque of the Aissawa, and the
three squalid fondaks wherein the Jews live like cattle.
A swarm of Arabs followed at their heels in tattered
greasy rags, a group of Jews went by them barefoot
and a knot of bedraggled renegades leaning against
the walls of the prison doffed the caps from their
dishevelled heads and bowed.
That day, while the poor people of
the town fasted according to the ordinance of the
Ramadhan, Israel’s little company of Muslimeen guests
in the house of the descendants of the Prophet were,
by special Shereefian dispensation, permitted as travellers
to eat and drink at their pleasure. And before
sunset, but at the verge of it, Israel and his men
started on their journey afresh, going out of the town,
with the Shereef’s black bodyguard riding before
them for guide and badge of honour, through the dense
and noisome market-place, where (like a clock that
is warning to strike) a multitude of hungry and thirsty
people with fierce and dirty faces, under a heavy
wave of palpitating heat, and amid clouds of hot dust,
were waiting for the sound of the cannon that should
proclaim the end of that day’s fast. Water-carriers
at the fountains stood ready to fill their empty goats’
skins, women and children sat on the ground with dishes
of greasy soup on their knees and balls of grain rolled
in their fingers, men lay about holding pipes charged
with keef, and flint and tinder to light them, and
the mooddin himself in the minaret stood looking abroad
(unless he were blind) to where the red sun was lazily
sinking under the plain.
Israel’s soul sickened within
him, for well he knew that, lavish as were the honours
that were shown him, they were offered by the rich
out of their selfishness and by the poor out of their
fear. While they thought the Sultan had sent
for him, they kissed his foot who desired no homage,
and loaded him with presents who needed no gifts.
But one word out of his mouth, only one little word,
one other name, and what then of this lip-service,
and what of this mock-honour!
Two days later Israel and his company
reached before dawn the snake-like ramparts of Mequinez
the city of walls. And toiling in the darkness
over the barren plain and the belt of carrion that
lies in front of the town, through the heat and fumes
of the fetid place, and amid the furious barks of
the scavenger dogs which prowl in the night around
it, they came in the grey of morning to the city gate
over the stream called the Father of Tortoises.
The gate was closed, and the night police that kept
it were snoring in their rags under the arch of the
wall within.
“Selam! M’barak!
Abd el Kader! Abd el Kareem!” shouted the
Shereef’s black guard to the sleepy gate-keepers.
They had come thus far in Israel’s honour, and
would not return to Wazzan until they had seen him
housed within.
From the other side of the gate, through
the mist and the gloom, came yawns and broken snores
and then snarls and curses. “Burn your father!
Pretty hubbub in the middle of the night!”
“Selam!” shouted one of
the black guard. “You dog of dogs!
Your father was bewitched by a hyena! I’ll
teach you to curse your betters. Quick! get up, or
I’ll shave your beard. Open! or I’ll
ride the donkey on your head! There! and
there! and there again!” and at every
word the butt of his long gun rang on the old oaken
gate.
“Hamed el Wazzani!” muttered several voices
within.
“Yes,” shouted the Shereef’s
man. “And my Lord Israel of Tetuan on his
way to the Sultan, God grant him victory. Do you
hear, you dogs? Sidi Israel el Tetawani sitting
here in the dark, while you are sleeping and snoring
in your dirt.”
There was a whispered conference on
the inside, then a rattle of keys, and then the gate
groaned back on its hinges. At the next moment
two of the four gatemen were on their knees at the
feet of Israel’s horse, asking forgiveness by
grace of Allah and his Prophet. In the meantime,
the other two had sped away to the Kasbah, and before
Israel had ridden far into the town, the Kaid against
all usage of his class and country ran
and met him afoot, slipperless, wearing
nothing but selham and tarboosh, out of breath, yet
with a mouth full of excuses.
“I heard you were coming,”
he panted “sent for by the Sultan Allah
preserve him! but had I known you were to
be here so soon I that is ”
“Peace be with you!” interrupted Israel.
“God grant you peace. The
Sultan praise the merciful Allah!”
the Kaid continued, bowing low over Israel’s
stirrup “he reached Fez from Marrakesh
last sunset; you will be in time for him.”
“God will show,” said Israel, and he pushed
forward.
“Ah, true yes certainly my
lord is tired,” puffed the Kaid, bowing again
most profoundly. “Well, your lodging is
ready the best in Mequinez and
your moña is cooking all the dainties
of Barbary and when our merciful Abd er-Rahman
has made you his Grand Vizier ”
Thus the man chattered like a jay,
bowing low at nigh every word, until they came to
the house wherein Israel and his people were to rest
until sunset; and always the burden of his words was
the same the Sultan, the Sultan, the Sultan,
and Abd er-Rahman, Abd er-Rahman!
Israel could bear no more. “Basha,”
he said “it is a mistake; the Sultan has not
sent for me, and neither am I going to see him.”
“Not going to him?” the Kaid echoed vacantly.
“No, but to another,”
said Israel; “and you of all men can best tell
me where that other is to be found. A great man,
newly risen yet a poor man the
young Mahdi Mohammed of Mequinez.”
Then there was a long silence.
Israel did not rest in Mequinez until
sunset of that day. Soon after sunrise he went
out at the gate at which he had so lately entered,
and no man showed him honour. The black guard
of the Shereef of Wazzan had gone off before him,
chuckling and grinning in their disgust, and behind
him his own little company of soldiers, guides, muleteers,
and tentmen, who, like himself, had neither slept
nor eaten, were dragging along in dudgeon. The
Kaid had turned them out of the town.
Later in the day, while Israel and
his people lay sheltering within their tents on the
plain of Sais by the river Nagar, near the tent-village
called a Douar, and the palm-tree by the bridge,
there passed them in the fierce sunshine two men in
the peaked shasheeah of the soldier, riding at a furious
gallop from the direction of Fez, and shouting to
all they came upon to fly from the path they had to
pass over. They were messengers of the Sultan,
carrying letters to the Kaid of Mequinez, commanding
him to present himself at the palace without delay,
that he might give good account of his stewardship,
or else deliver up his substance and be cast into
prison for the défalcations with which rumour
had charged him.
Such was the errand of the soldiers,
according to the country-people, who toiled along
after them on their way home from the markets at Fez;
and great was the glee of Israel’s men on hearing
it, for they remembered with bitterness how basely
the Kaid had treated them at last in his false loyalty
and hypocrisy. But Israel himself was too nearly
touched by a sense of Fate’s coquetry to rejoice
at this new freak of its whim, though the victim of
it had so lately turned him from his door. Miserable
was the man who laid up his treasure in money-bags
and built his happiness on the favour of princes!
When the one was taken from him and the other failed
him, where then was the hope of that man’s salvation,
whether in this world or the next? The dungeon,
the chain, the lash, the wooden jellab what
else was left to him? Only the wail of the poor
whom he has made poorer, the curse of the orphan whom
he has made fatherless, and the execration of the
down-trodden whom he has oppressed. These followed
him into his prison, and mingled their cries with
the clank of his irons, for they were voices which
had never yet deserted the man that made them, but
clamoured loud at the last when his end had come,
above the death-rattle in his throat. One dim
hour waited for all men always, whether in the prison
or in the palace one lonely hour wherein
none could bear him company and what was
wealth and treasure to man’s soul beyond it?
Was it power on earth? Was it glory? Was
it riches? Oh! glory of the earth what
could it be but a will-o’-the-wisp pursued in
the darkness of the night! Oh! riches of gold
and silver what had they ever been but marsh-fire
gathered in the dusk! The empire of the world
was evil, and evil was the service of the prince of
it!
Then Israel thought of Naomi, his
sweet treasure so far away. Though
all else fell from him like dry sand from graspless
fingers, yet if by God’s good mercy the lot
of the sin-offering could be lifted away from his
child, he would be content and happy! Naomi!
His love! His darling! His sweet flower
afflicted for his transgression. Oh! let him lose
anything, everything, all that the world and all that
the devil had given him; but let the curse be lifted
from his helpless child! For what was gold without
gladness, and what was plenty without peace?
Israel lit upon the Mahdi at last
in the country of the verbena and the musk that lies
outside the walls of Fez. The prophet was a young
man of unusual stature, but no great strength of body,
with a head that drooped like a flower and with the
wild eyes of an enthusiast. His people were a
vast concourse that covered the plain a furlong square,
and included multitudes of women and children.
Israel had come upon them at an evil moment.
The people were murmuring against their leader.
Six months ago they had abandoned their houses and
followed him They had passed from Mequinez to Rabat,
from Rabat to Mazagan, from Mazagan to Mogador, from
Mogador to Marrakesh, and finally from Marrakesh through
the treacherous Beni Magild to Fez. At every
step their numbers had increased but their substance
had diminished, for only the destitute had joined them.
Nevertheless, while they had their flocks and herds
they had borne their privations patiently the
weary journeys, the exposure, the long rains of the
spring and the scorching heat of summer. But the
soldiers of the Kaids whose provinces they had passed
through had stripped them of both in the name of tribute.
The last raid on their poverty had been made that
very day by the Kaid of Fez, and now they were without
goats or sheep or oxen, or even the guns with which
they had killed the wild bear, and their children
were crying to them for bread.
So the people’s faces grew black,
and they looked into each other’s eyes in their
impotent rage. Why had they been brought out of
the cities to starve? Better to stay there and
suffer than come out and perish! What of the
vain promises that had been made to them that God would
feed them as He fed the birds! God was witness
to all their calamities; He was seeing them robbed
day by day, He was seeing them famish hour by hour,
He was seeing them die. They had been fooled!
A vain man had thought to plough his way to power.
Through their bodies he was now ploughing it.
“The hunger is on us!” “Our children
are perishing!” “Find us food!”
“Food!” “Food!”
With such shouts, mingled with deep
oaths, the hungry multitude in their madness had encompassed
Mohammed of Mequinez as Israel and his company came
up with them. And Israel heard their cries, and
also the voice of their leader when he answered them.
First the young prophet rose up among
his people, with flashing eyes and quivering nostrils.
“Do you think I am Moses,” he cried, “that
I should smite the rock and work you a miracle?
If you are starving, am I full? If you are naked,
am I clothed?”
But in another instant the fire of
anger was gone from his face, and he was saying in
a very moving voice, “My good people, who have
followed me through all these miseries, I know that
your burdens are heavier than you can bear, and that
your lives are scarce to be endured, and that death
itself would be a relief. Nevertheless, who shall
say but that Allah sees a way to avert these trials
of His poor servants, and that, unknown to us all,
He is even at this moment bringing His mercy to pass!
Patience, I beg of you; patience, my poor people patience
and trust!”
At that the murmurs of discontent
were hushed. Then Israel remembered the presents
with which the Kaid of El Kasar and the Shereef of
Wazzan had burdened him. They were jewels and
ornaments such as are sometimes worn unlawfully by
vain men in that country silver signet rings
and earrings, chains for the neck, and Solomon’s
seal to hang on the breast as safeguard against the
evil eye as well as much gold filagree of
the kind that men give to their women. Israel
had packed them in a box and laid them in the leaf
pannier of a mule, and then given no further thought
to them; but, calling now to the muleteer who had charge
of them, he said, “Take them quickly to the
good man yonder, and say, ’A present to the
man of God and to his people in their trouble.’”
And when the muleteer had done this,
and laid the box of gold and silver open at the feet
of the young Mahdi, saying what Israel had bidden him,
it was the same to the young man and his followers
as if the sky had opened and rained manna on their
heads.
“It is an answer to your prayer,”
he cried; “an angel from heaven has sent it.”
Then his people, as soon as they realised
what good thing had happened to them, took up his
shout of joy, and shouted out of their own parched
throats
“Prophet of Allah, we will follow
you to the world’s end!”
And then down on their knees they
fell around him, the vast concourse of men and women,
all grinning like apes in their hunger and glee together,
and sobbing and laughing in a breath, like children,
and sent up a great broken cry of thanks to God that
He had sent them succour, that they might not die.
At last, when they had risen to their feet again, every
man looked into the eyes of his fellow and said, as
if ashamed, “I could have borne it myself, but
when the children called to me for bread. I was
a fool.”