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Ben Hur: A Tale of the Christ
BOOK IV   BOOK IV - CHAPTER X
Lew Wallace
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       _ Beyond the village the country was undulating and cultivated; in fact,
       it was the garden-land of Antioch, with not a foot lost to labor.
       The steep faces of the hills were terraced; even the hedges were
       brighter of the trailing vines which, besides the lure of shade,
       offered passers-by sweet promises of wine to come, and grapes in
       clustered purple ripeness. Over melon-patches, and through apricot
       and fig-tree groves, and groves of oranges and limes, the white-washed
       houses of the farmers were seen; and everywhere Plenty, the smiling
       daughter of Peace, gave notice by her thousand signs that she was
       at home, making the generous traveller merry at heart, until he was
       even disposed to give Rome her dues. Occasionally, also, views were
       had of Taurus and Lebanon, between which, a separating line of silver,
       the Orontes placidly pursued its way.
       In course of their journey the friends came to the river, which they
       followed with the windings of the road, now over bold bluffs, and then
       into vales, all alike allotted for country-seats, and if the land
       was in full foliage of oak and sycamore and myrtle, and bay and
       arbutus, and perfuming jasmine, the river was bright with slanted
       sunlight, which would have slept where it fell but for ships in
       endless procession, gliding with the current, tacking for the wind,
       or bounding under the impulse of oars--some coming, some going, and
       all suggestive of the sea, and distant peoples, and famous places,
       and things coveted on account of their rarity. To the fancy there
       is nothing so winsome as a white sail seaward blown, unless it be
       a white sail homeward bound, its voyage happily done. And down the
       shore the friends went continuously till they came to a lake fed
       by back-water from the river, clear, deep, and without current.
       An old palm-tree dominated the angle of the inlet; turning to the
       left at the foot of the tree, Malluch clapped his hands and shouted,
       "Look, look! The Orchard of Palms!"
       The scene was nowhere else to be found unless in the favored oases
       of Arabia or the Ptolemaean farms along the Nile; and to sustain a
       sensation new as it was delightful, Ben-Hur was admitted into a tract
       of land apparently without limit and level as a floor. All under foot
       was fresh grass, in Syria the rarest and most beautiful production of
       the soil; if he looked up, it was to see the sky paley blue through
       the groinery of countless date-bearers, very patriarchs of their kind,
       so numerous and old, and of such mighty girth, so tall, so serried,
       so wide of branch, each branch so perfect with fronds, plumy and
       waxlike and brilliant, they seemed enchanters enchanted. Here was
       the grass coloring the very atmosphere; there the lake, cool and
       clear, rippling but a few feet under the surface, and helping
       the trees to their long life in old age. Did the Grove of Daphne
       excel this one? And the palms, as if they knew Ben-Hur's thought,
       and would win him after a way of their own, seemed, as he passed
       under their arches, to stir and sprinkle him with dewy coolness.
       The road wound in close parallelism with the shore of the lake;
       and when it carried the travellers down to the water's edge,
       there was always on that side a shining expanse limited not far
       off by the opposite shore, on which, as on this one, no tree but
       the palm was permitted.
       "See that," said Malluch, pointing to a giant of the place.
       "Each ring upon its trunk marks a year of its life. Count them
       from root to branch, and if the sheik tells you the grove was
       planted before the Seleucidae were heard of in Antioch, do not
       doubt him."
       One may not look at a perfect palm-tree but that, with a subtlety
       all its own, it assumes a presence for itself, and makes a poet of
       the beholder. This is the explanation of the honors it has received,
       beginning with the artists of the first kings, who could find no form
       in all the earth to serve them so well as a model for the pillars
       of their palaces and temples; and for the same reason Ben-Hur was
       moved to say,
       "As I saw him at the stand to-day, good Malluch, Sheik Ilderim
       appeared to be a very common man. The rabbis in Jerusalem would
       look down upon him, I fear, as a son of a dog of Edom. How came
       he in possession of the Orchard? And how has he been able to hold
       it against the greed of Roman governors?"
       "If blood derives excellence from time, son of Arrius, then is old
       Ilderim a man, though he be an uncircumcised Edomite."
       Malluch spoke warmly.
       "All his fathers before him were sheiks. One of them--I shall not
       say when he lived or did the good deed--once helped a king who was
       being hunted with swords. The story says he loaned him a thousand
       horsemen, who knew the paths of the wilderness and its hiding-places
       as shepherds know the scant hills they inhabit with their flocks;
       and they carried him here and there until the opportunity came,
       and then with their spears they slew the enemy, and set him upon
       his throne again. And the king, it is said, remembered the service,
       and brought the son of the Desert to this place, and bade him set up
       his tent and bring his family and his herds, for the lake and trees,
       and all the land from the river to the nearest mountains, were his
       and his children's forever. And they have never been disturbed in
       the possession. The rulers succeeding have found it policy to keep
       good terms with the tribe, to whom the Lord has given increase
       of men and horses, and camels and riches, making them masters of
       many highways between cities; so that it is with them any time they
       please to say to commerce, 'Go in peace,' or 'Stop,' and what they
       say shall be done. Even the prefect in the citadel overlooking
       Antioch thinks it happy day with him when Ilderim, surnamed the
       Generous on account of good deeds done unto all manner of men,
       with his wives and children, and his trains of camels and horses,
       and his belongings of sheik, moving as our fathers Abraham and
       Jacob moved, comes up to exchange briefly his bitter wells for
       the pleasantness you see about us."
       "How is it, then?" said Ben-Hur, who had been listening unmindful
       of the slow gait of the dromedaries. "I saw the sheik tear his
       beard while he cursed himself that he had put trust in a Roman.
       Caesar, had he heard him, might have said, 'I like not such a
       friend as this; put him away.'"
       "It would be but shrewd judgment," Malluch replied, smiling.
       "Ilderim is not a lover of Rome; he has a grievance. Three years
       ago the Parthians rode across the road from Bozra to Damascus,
       and fell upon a caravan laden, among other things, with the
       incoming tax-returns of a district over that way. They slew every
       creature taken, which the censors in Rome could have forgiven if
       the imperial treasure had been spared and forwarded. The farmers
       of the taxes, being chargeable with the loss, complained to Caesar,
       and Caesar held Herod to payment, and Herod, on his part, seized
       property of Ilderim, whom he charged with treasonable neglect of
       duty. The sheik appealed to Caesar, and Caesar has made him such
       answer as might be looked for from the unwinking sphinx. The old
       man's heart has been aching sore ever since, and he nurses his
       wrath, and takes pleasure in its daily growth."
       "He can do nothing, Malluch."
       "Well," said Malluch, "that involves another explanation, which I
       will give you, if we can draw nearer. But see!--the hospitality
       of the sheik begins early--the children are speaking to you."
       The dromedaries stopped, and Ben-Hur looked down upon some little
       girls of the Syrian peasant class, who were offering him their
       baskets filled with dates. The fruit was freshly gathered, and not
       to be refused; he stooped and took it, and as he did so a man in the
       tree by which they were halted cried, "Peace to you, and welcome!"
       Their thanks said to the children, the friends moved on at such
       gait as the animals chose.
       "You must know," Malluch continued, pausing now and then to dispose
       of a date, "that the merchant Simonides gives me his confidence,
       and sometimes flatters me by taking me into council; and as I
       attend him at his house, I have made acquaintance with many of
       his friends, who, knowing my footing with the host, talk to him
       freely in my presence. In that way I became somewhat intimate
       with Sheik IIderim."
       For a moment Ben-Hur's attention wandered. Before his mind's eye
       there arose the image, pure, gentle, and appealing, of Esther,
       the merchant's daughter. Her dark eyes bright with the peculiar
       Jewish lustre met his in modest gaze; he heard her step as when
       she approached him with the wine, and her voice as she tendered
       him the cup; and he acknowledged to himself again all the
       sympathy she manifested for him, and manifested so plainly that
       words were unnecessary, and so sweetly that words would have been
       but a detraction. The vision was exceeding pleasant, but upon his
       turning to Malluch, it flew away.
       "A few weeks ago," said Malluch, continuing, "the old Arab called
       on Simonides, and found me present. I observed he seemed much
       moved about something, and, in deference, offered to withdraw,
       but he himself forbade me. 'As you are an Israelite,' he said,
       'stay, for I have a strange story to tell.' The emphasis on the
       word Israelite excited my curiosity. I remained, and this is
       in substance his story--I cut it short because we are drawing
       nigh the tent, and I leave the details to the good man himself.
       A good many years ago, three men called at Ilderim's tent out
       in the wilderness. They were all foreigners, a Hindoo, a Greek,
       and an Egyptian; and they had come on camels, the largest he had
       ever seen, and all white. He welcomed them, and gave them rest.
       Next morning they arose and prayed a prayer new to the sheik--a
       prayer addressed to God and his son--this with much mystery besides.
       After breaking fast with him, the Egyptian told who they were,
       and whence they had come. Each had seen a star, out of which
       a voice had bidden them go to Jerusalem and ask, Where is he
       that is born King of the Jews?' They obeyed. From Jerusalem they
       were led by a star to Bethlehem, where, in a cave, they found a
       child newly born, which they fell down and worshipped; and after
       worshipping it, and giving it costly presents, and bearing witness
       of what it was, they took to their camels, and fled without pause to
       the sheik, because if Herod--meaning him surnamed the Great--could
       lay hands upon them, he would certainly kill them. And, faithful to
       his habit, the sheik took care of them, and kept them concealed for
       a year, when they departed, leaving with him gifts of great value,
       and each going a separate way."
       "It is, indeed, a most wonderful story," Ben-Hur exclaimed at
       its conclusion. "What did you say they were to ask at Jerusalem?"
       "They were to ask, 'Where is he that is born King of the Jews?'"
       "Was that all?"
       "There was more to the question, but I cannot recall it."
       "And they found the child?"
       "Yes, and worshipped him."
       "It is a miracle, Malluch."
       "Ilderim is a grave man, though excitable as all Arabs are. A lie
       on his tongue is impossible."
       Malluch spoke positively. Thereupon the dromedaries were forgotten,
       and, quite as unmindful of their riders, they turned off the road
       to the growing grass.
       "Has Ilderim heard nothing more of the three men?" asked Ben-Hur.
       "What became of them?"
       "Ah, yes, that was the cause of his coming to Simonides the day of
       which I was speaking. Only the night before that day the Egyptian
       reappeared to him."
       "Where?"
       "Here at the door of the tent to which we are coming."
       "How knew he the man?"
       "As you knew the horses to-day--by face and manner."
       "By nothing else?"
       "He rode the same great white camel, and gave him the same
       name--Balthasar, the Egyptian."
       "It is a wonder of the Lord's!"
       Ben-Hur spoke with excitement.
       And Malluch, wondering, asked, "Why so?"
       "Balthasar, you said?"
       "Yes. Balthasar, the Egyptian."
       "That was the name the old man gave us at the fountain today."
       Then, at the reminder, Malluch became excited.
       "It is true," he said; "and the camel was the same--and you saved
       the man's life."
       "And the woman," said Ben-Hur, like one speaking to himself--"the
       woman was his daughter."
       He fell to thinking; and even the reader will say he was having
       a vision of the woman, and that it was more welcome than that
       of Esther, if only because it stayed longer with him; but no--
       "Tell me again," he said, presently. "Were the three to ask,
       'Where is he that is to be King of the Jews?'"
       "Not exactly. The words were BORN TO BE KING OF THE JEWS. Those were
       the words as the old sheik caught them first in the desert, and he
       has ever since been waiting the coming of the king; nor can any one
       shake his faith that he will come."
       "How--as king?"
       "Yes, and bringing the doom of Rome--so says the sheik."
       Ben-Hur kept silent awhile, thinking and trying to control his
       feelings.
       "The old man is one of many millions," he said, slowly--"one of
       many millions each with a wrong to avenge; and this strange faith,
       Malluch, is bread and wine to his hope; for who but a Herod may
       be King of the Jews while Rome endures? But, following the story,
       did you hear what Simonides said to him?"
       "If Ilderim is a grave man, Simonides is a wise one," Malluch replied.
       "I listened, and he said-- But hark! Some one comes overtaking us."
       The noise grew louder, until presently they heard the rumble of
       wheels mixed with the beating of horse-hoofs--a moment later Sheik
       I1derim himself appeared on horseback, followed by a train, among which
       were the four wine-red Arabs drawing the chariot. The sheik's chin,
       in its muffling of long white beard, was drooped upon his breast.
       Our friends had out-travelled him; but at sight of them he raised
       his head and spoke kindly.
       "Peace to you!--Ah, my friend Malluch! Welcome! And tell me you
       are not going, but just come; that you have something for me from
       the good Simonides--may the Lord of his fathers keep him in life
       for many years to come! Ay, take up the straps, both of you, and
       follow me. I have bread and leben, or, if you prefer it, arrack,
       and the flesh of young kid. Come!"
       They followed after him to the door of the tent, in which, when they
       were dismounted, he stood to receive them, holding a platter with three
       cups filled with creamy liquor just drawn from a great smoke-stained
       skin bottle, pendent from the central post.
       "Drink," he said, heartily, "drink, for this is the fear-naught
       of the tentmen."
       They each took a cup, and drank till but the foam remained.
       "Enter now, in God's name."
       And when they were gone in, Malluch took the sheik aside, and spoke
       to him privately; after which he went to Ben-Hur and excused himself.
       "I have told the sheik about you, and he will give you the trial
       of his horses in the morning. He is your friend. Having done for
       you all I can, you must do the rest, and let me return to Antioch.
       There is one there who has my promise to meet him to-night. I have
       no choice but to go. I will come back to-morrow prepared, if all
       goes well in the meantime, to stay with you until the games are
       over."
       With blessings given and received, Malluch set out in return. _
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BOOK I
   BOOK I - CHAPTER I
   BOOK I - CHAPTER II
   BOOK I - CHAPTER III
   BOOK I - CHAPTER IV
   BOOK I - CHAPTER V
   BOOK I - CHAPTER VI
   BOOK I - CHAPTER VII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER VIII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER IX
   BOOK I - CHAPTER X
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XI
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XIII
   BOOK I - CHAPTER XIV
BOOK II
   BOOK II - CHAPTER I
   BOOK II - CHAPTER II
   BOOK II - CHAPTER III
   BOOK II - CHAPTER IV
   BOOK II - CHAPTER V
   BOOK II - CHAPTER VI
   BOOK II - CHAPTER VII
BOOK III
   BOOK III - CHAPTER I
   BOOK III - CHAPTER II
   BOOK III - CHAPTER III
   BOOK III - CHAPTER IV
   BOOK III - CHAPTER V
   BOOK III - CHAPTER VI
BOOK IV
   BOOK IV - CHAPTER I
   BOOK IV - CHAPTER II
   BOOK IV - CHAPTER III
   BOOK IV - CHAPTER IV
   BOOK IV - CHAPTER V
   BOOK IV - CHAPTER VI
   BOOK IV - CHAPTER VII
   BOOK IV - CHAPTER VIII
   BOOK IV - CHAPTER IX
   BOOK IV - CHAPTER X
   BOOK IV - CHAPTER XI
   BOOK IV - CHAPTER XII
   BOOK IV - CHAPTER XIII
   BOOK IV - CHAPTER XIV
   BOOK IV - CHAPTER XV
   BOOK IV - CHAPTER XVI
   BOOK IV - CHAPTER XVII
BOOK V
   BOOK V - CHAPTER I
   BOOK V - CHAPTER II
   BOOK V - CHAPTER III
   BOOK V - CHAPTER IV
   BOOK V - CHAPTER V
   BOOK V - CHAPTER VI
   BOOK V - CHAPTER VII
   BOOK V - CHAPTER VIII
   BOOK V - CHAPTER IX
   BOOK V - CHAPTER X
   BOOK V - CHAPTER XI
   BOOK V - CHAPTER XII
   BOOK V - CHAPTER XIII
   BOOK V - CHAPTER XIV
   BOOK V - CHAPTER XV
   BOOK V - CHAPTER XVI
BOOK VI
   BOOK VI - CHAPTER I
   BOOK VI - CHAPTER II
   BOOK VI - CHAPTER III
   BOOK VI - CHAPTER IV
   BOOK VI - CHAPTER V
   BOOK VI - CHAPTER VI
BOOK VII
   BOOK VII - CHAPTER I
   BOOK VII - CHAPTER II
   BOOK VII - CHAPTER III
   BOOK VII - CHAPTER IV
   BOOK VII - CHAPTER V
BOOK VIII
   BOOK VIII - CHAPTER I
   BOOK VIII - CHAPTER II
   BOOK VIII - CHAPTER III
   BOOK VIII - CHAPTER IV
   BOOK VIII - CHAPTER V
   BOOK VIII - CHAPTER VI
   BOOK VIII - CHAPTER VII
   BOOK VIII - CHAPTER VIII
   BOOK VIII - CHAPTER IX
   BOOK VIII - CHAPTER X