[The Ancient Allan by H. Rider Haggard]@TWC D-Link bookThe Ancient Allan CHAPTER XIII 14/29
I put the matter by as shortly as I could and asked her if she had seen aught of Amada.
She answered that she had neither seen nor heard of her which I was sure she thought strange, as she began to talk quickly of other things.
I said to her what I had said to the holy Tanofir, that doubtless she was making ready for the feast since I could not find her at the Crowning. "Or saying good-bye to the goddess," answered my mother nodding, "since there are some who find it even harder to fall from heaven to earth than to climb from earth to heaven, and after all you are but a man, my son." Then she slipped away to attire herself, leaving me wondering, because my mother was shrewd and never spoke at random. There was the holy Tanofir, too, with his talk about the temple of Isis, and he also did not speak at random.
Oh! now I felt as I had done when the shadow of the palm-tree fell on me yonder in the palace garden. The mood passed for my blood still tingled with the glory of that great fight, and my heart shut its doors to sadness, knowing as I did, that I was the most praised man in Memphis that day.
Indeed had I not, I should have learned it when with my mother I entered the great banqueting-hall of the palace somewhat late, for she was long in making ready. The first thing I saw there was Bes gorgeously arrayed in Eastern silks that he had plundered from the Satrap's tent, standing on a table so that all might see and hear him, and holding aloft in one hand the grisly head of Idernes and in the other that of the hawk-eyed noble whom he had slain, while in his thick, guttural voice he told the tale of that great fray.
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