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Ben Hur: A Tale of the Christ
BOOK V   BOOK V - CHAPTER II
Lew Wallace
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       _ About the time the couriers departed from Messala's door with the
       despatches (it being yet the early morning hour), Ben-Hur entered
       I1derim's tent. He had taken a plunge into the lake, and breakfasted,
       and appeared now in an under-tunic, sleeveless, and with skirt scarcely
       reaching to the knee.
       The sheik saluted him from the divan.
       "I give thee peace, son of Arrius," he said, with admiration, for,
       in truth, he had never seen a more perfect illustration of glowing,
       powerful, confident manhood. "I give thee peace and good-will.
       The horses are ready, I am ready. And thou?"
       "The peace thou givest me, good sheik, I give thee in return.
       I thank thee for so much good-will. I am ready."
       Ilderim clapped his hands.
       "I will have the horses brought. Be seated."
       "Are they yoked?"
       "No."
       "Then suffer me to serve myself," said Ben-Hur. "It is needful
       that I make the acquaintance of thy Arabs. I must know them by
       name, O sheik, that I may speak to them singly; nor less must
       I know their temper, for they are like men: if bold, the better
       of scolding; if timid, the better of praise and flattery. Let the
       servants bring me the harness."
       "And the chariot?" asked the sheik.
       "I will let the chariot alone to-day. In its place, let them bring
       me a fifth horse, if thou hast it; he should be barebacked, and fleet
       as the others."
       Ilderim's wonder was aroused, and he summoned a servant immediately.
       "Bid them bring the harness for the four," he said--"the harness
       for the four, and the bridle for Sirius."
       Ilderim then arose.
       "Sirius is my love, and I am his, O son of Arrius. We have been
       comrades for twenty years--in tent, in battle, in all stages of the
       desert we have been comrades. I will show him to you."
       Going to the division curtain, he held it, while Ben-Hur passed
       under. The horses came to him in a body. One with a small head,
       luminous eyes, neck like the segment of a bended bow, and mighty
       chest, curtained thickly by a profusion of mane soft and wavy
       as a damsel's locks, nickered low and gladly at sight of him.
       "Good horse," said the sheik, patting the dark-brown cheek.
       "Good horse, good-morning." Turning then to Ben-Hur, he added,
       "This is Sirius, father of the four here. Mira, the mother,
       awaits our return, being too precious to be hazarded in a region
       where there is a stronger hand than mine. And much I doubt," he
       laughed as he spoke--"much I doubt, O son of Arrius, if the tribe
       could endure her absence. She is their glory; they worship her;
       did she gallop over them, they would laugh. Ten thousand horsemen,
       sons of the desert, will ask to-day, 'Have you heard of Mira?' And
       to the answer, 'She is well,' they will say, 'God is good! blessed
       be God!'"
       "Mira--Sirius--names of stars, are they not, O sheik?" asked
       Ben-Hur, going to each of the four, and to the sire, offering his
       hand.
       "And why not?" replied Ilderim. "Wert thou ever abroad on the
       desert at night?"
       "No."
       "Then thou canst not know how much we Arabs depend upon the stars.
       We borrow their names in gratitude, and give them in love. My fathers
       all had their Miras, as I have mine; and these children are stars
       no less. There, see thou, is Rigel, and there Antares; that one is
       Atair, and he whom thou goest to now is Aldebaran, the youngest
       of the brood, but none the worse of that--no, not he! Against
       the wind he will carry thee till it roar in thy ears like Akaba;
       and he will go where thou sayest, son of Arrius--ay, by the glory
       of Solomon! he will take thee to the lion's jaws, if thou darest
       so much."
       The harness was brought. With his own hands Ben-Hur equipped the
       horses; with his own hands he led them out of the tent, and there
       attached the reins.
       "Bring me Sirius," he said.
       An Arab could not have better sprung to seat on the courser's back.
       "And now the reins."
       They were given him, and carefully separated.
       "Good sheik," he said, "I am ready. Let a guide go before me to
       the field, and send some of thy men with water."
       There was no trouble at starting. The horses were not afraid.
       Already there seemed a tacit understanding between them and
       the new driver, who had performed his part calmly, and with
       the confidence which always begets confidence. The order of
       going was precisely that of driving, except that Ben-Hur sat
       upon Sirius instead of standing in the chariot. Ilderim's spirit
       arose. He combed his beard, and smiled with satisfaction as he
       muttered, "He is not a Roman, no, by the splendor of God!" He
       followed on foot, the entire tenantry of the dowar--men, women,
       and children--pouring after him, participants all in his solicitude,
       if not in his confidence.
       The field, when reached, proved ample and well fitted for the
       training, which Ben-Hur began immediately by driving the four
       at first slowly, and in perpendicular lines, and then in wide
       circles. Advancing a step in the course, he put them next into
       a trot; again progressing, he pushed into a gallop; at length
       he contracted the circles, and yet later drove eccentrically here
       and there, right, left, forward, and without a break. An hour was
       thus occupied. Slowing the gait to a walk, he drove up to Ilderim.
       "The work is done, nothing now but practice," he said. "I give
       you joy, Sheik Ilderim, that you have such servants as these.
       See," he continued, dismounting and going to the horses, "see,
       the gloss of their red coats is without spot; they breathe lightly
       as when I began. I give thee great joy, and it will go hard if"--he
       turned his flashing eyes upon the old man's face--"if we have not
       the victory and our--"
       He stopped, colored, bowed. At the sheik's side he observed,
       for the first time, Balthasar, leaning upon his staff, and two
       women closely veiled. At one of the latter he looked a second time,
       saying to himself, with a flutter about his heart, "'Tis she--'tis
       the Egyptian!" Ilderim picked up his broken sentence--
       "The victory, and our revenge!" Then he said aloud, "I am not
       afraid; I am glad. Son of Arrius, thou art the man. Be the end
       like the beginning, and thou shalt see of what stuff is the lining
       of the hand of an Arab who is able to give."
       "I thank thee, good sheik," Ben-Hur returned, modestly. "Let the
       servants bring drink for the horses."
       With his own hands he gave the water.
       Remounting Sirius, he renewed the training, going as before from
       walk to trot, from trot to gallop; finally, he pushed the steady
       racers into the run, gradually quickening it to full speed.
       The performance then became exciting; and there were applause
       for the dainty handling of the reins, and admiration for the four,
       which were the same, whether they flew forward or wheeled in varying
       curvature. In their action there were unity, power, grace, pleasure,
       all without effort or sign of labor. The admiration was unmixed with
       pity or reproach, which would have been as well bestowed upon swallows
       in their evening flight.
       In the midst of the exercises, and the attention they received from
       all the bystanders, Malluch came upon the ground, seeking the sheik.
       "I have a message for you, O sheik," he said, availing himself
       of a moment he supposed favorable for the speech--"a message
       from Simonides, the merchant."
       "Simonides!" ejaculated the Arab. "Ah! 'tis well. May Abaddon take
       all his enemies!"
       "He bade me give thee first the holy peace of God," Malluch continued;
       "and then this despatch, with prayer that thou read it the instant
       of receipt."
       Ilderim, standing in his place, broke the sealing of the package
       delivered to him, and from a wrapping of fine linen took two letters,
       which he proceeded to read.
       [No. 1.]
       "Simonides to Sheik Ilderim.
       "O friend!
       "Assure thyself first of a place in my inner heart.
       "Then--
       "There is in thy dowar a youth of fair presence, calling himself
       the son of Arrius; and such he is by adoption.
       "He is very dear to me.
       "He hath a wonderful history, which I will tell thee; come thou
       to-day or to-morrow, that I may tell thee the history, and have
       thy counsel.
       "Meantime, favor all his requests, so they be not against honor.
       Should there be need of reparation, I am bound to thee for it.
       "That I have interest in this youth, keep thou private.
       "Remember me to thy other guest. He, his daughter, thyself, and all
       whom thou mayst choose to be of thy company, must depend upon me
       at the Circus the day of the games. I have seats already engaged.
       "To thee and all thine, peace.
       "What should I be, O my friend, but thy friend?
       "SIMONIDES."
       [No. 2.]
       "Simonides to Sheik Ilderim.
       "O friend!
       "Out of the abundance of my experience, I send you a word.
       "There is a sign which all persons not Romans, and who have moneys or
       goods subject to despoilment, accept as warning--that is, the arrival
       at a seat of power of some high Roman official charged with authority.
       "To-day comes the Consul Maxentius.
       "Be thou warned!
       "Another word of advice.
       "A conspiracy, to be of effect against thee, O friend, must include
       the Herods as parties; thou hast great properties in their dominions.
       "Wherefore keep thou watch.
       "Send this morning to thy trusty keepers of the roads leading south
       from Antioch, and bid them search every courier going and coming;
       if they find private despatches relating to thee or thine affairs,
       THOU SHOULDST SEE THEM.
       "You should have received this yesterday, though it is not too
       late, if you act promptly.
       "If couriers left Antioch this morning, your messengers know the
       byways, and can get before them with your orders.
       "Do not hesitate.
       "Burn this after reading.
       "O my friend! thy friend,
       "SIMONIDES."
       Ilderim read the letters a second time, and refolded them in the
       linen wrap, and put the package under his girdle.
       The exercises in the field continued but a little longer--in all
       about two hours. At their conclusion, Ben-Hur brought the four to
       a walk, and drove to Ilderim.
       "With leave, O sheik," he said, "I will return thy Arabs to the
       tent, and bring them out again this afternoon."
       Ilderim walked to him as he sat on Sirius, and said, "I give them
       to you, son of Arrius, to do with as you will until after the games.
       You have done with them in two hours what the Roman--may jackals gnaw
       his bones fleshless!--could not in as many weeks. We will win--by the
       splendor of God, we will win!"
       At the tent Ben-Hur remained with the horses while they were being
       cared for; then, after a plunge in the lake and a cup of arrack with
       the sheik, whose flow of spirits was royally exuberant, he dressed
       himself in his Jewish garb again, and walked with Malluch on into
       the Orchard.
       There was much conversation between the two, not all of it important.
       One part, however, must not be overlooked. Ben-Hur was speaking.
       "I will give you," he said, "an order for my property stored in
       the khan this side the river by the Seleucian Bridge. Bring it
       to me to-day, if you can. And, good Malluch--if I do not overtask
       you--"
       Malluch protested heartily his willingness to be of service.
       "Thank you, Malluch, thank you," said Ben-Hur. "I will take you
       at your word, remembering that we are brethren of the old tribe,
       and that the enemy is a Roman. First, then--as you are a man of
       business, which I much fear Sheik Ilderim is not--"
       "Arabs seldom are," said Malluch, gravely.
       "Nay, I do not impeach their shrewdness, Malluch. It is well,
       however, to look after them. To save all forfeit or hindrance
       in connection with the race, you would put me perfectly at rest by
       going to the office of the Circus, and seeing that he has complied
       with every preliminary rule; and if you can get a copy of the rules,
       the service may be of great avail to me. I would like to know the
       colors I am to wear, and particularly the number of the crypt
       I am to occupy at the starting; if it be next Messala's on the
       right or left, it is well; if not, and you can have it changed
       so as to bring me next the Roman, do so. Have you good memory,
       Malluch?"
       "It has failed me, but never, son of Arrius, where the heart helped
       it as now."
       "I will venture, then, to charge you with one further service.
       I saw yesterday that Messala was proud of his chariot, as he
       might be, for the best of Caesar's scarcely surpass it. Can you
       not make its display an excuse which will enable you to find if
       it be light or heavy? I would like to have its exact weight and
       measurements--and, Malluch, though you fail in all else, bring me
       exactly the height his axle stands above the ground. You understand,
       Malluch? I do not wish him to have any actual advantage of me.
       I do not care for his splendor; if I beat him, it will make his
       fall the harder, and my triumph the more complete. If there are
       advantages really important, I want them."
       "I see, I see!" said Malluch. "A line dropped from the centre of
       the axle is what you want."
       "Thou hast it; and be glad, Malluch--it is the last of my commissions.
       Let us return to the dowar."
       At the door of the tent they found a servant replenishing the
       smoke-stained bottles of leben freshly made, and stopped to
       refresh themselves. Shortly afterwards Malluch returned to
       the city.
       During their absence, a messenger well mounted had been despatched
       with orders as suggested by Simonides. He was an Arab, and carried
       nothing written. _
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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