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Ben Hur: A Tale of the Christ
BOOK VII   BOOK VII - CHAPTER V
Lew Wallace
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       _ The third day of the journey the party nooned by the river Jabbok,
       where there were a hundred or more men, mostly of Peraea, resting
       themselves and their beasts. Hardly had they dismounted, before a
       man came to them with a pitcher of water and a bowl, and offered them
       drink; as they received the attention with much courtesy, he said,
       looking at the camel, "I am returning from the Jordan, where just
       now there are many people from distant parts, travelling as you
       are, illustrious friend; but they had none of them the equal of
       your servant here. A very noble animal. May I ask of what breed
       he is sprung?"
       Balthasar answered, and sought his rest; but Ben-Hur, more curious,
       took up the remark.
       "At what place on the river are the people?" he asked.
       "At Bethabara."
       "It used to be a lonesome ford," said Ben-Hur. "I cannot understand
       how it can have become of such interest."
       "I see," the stranger replied; "you, too, are from abroad, and have
       not heard the good tidings."
       "What tidings?"
       "Well, a man has appeared out of the wilderness--a very holy
       man--with his mouth full of strange words, which take hold of
       all who hear them. He calls himself John the Nazarite, son of
       Zacharias, and says he is the messenger sent before the Messiah."
       Even Iras listened closely while the man continued:
       "They say of this John that he has spent his life from childhood
       in a cave down by En-Gedi, praying and living more strictly than
       the Essenes. Crowds go to hear him preach. I went to hear him with
       the rest."
       "Have all these, your friends, been there?"
       "Most of them are going; a few are coming away."
       "What does he preach?"
       "A new doctrine--one never before taught in Israel, as all say.
       He calls it repentance and baptism. The rabbis do not know what to
       make of him; nor do we. Some have asked him if he is the Christ,
       others if he is Elias; but to them all he has the answer, 'I am
       the voice of one crying in the wilderness, Make straight the way
       of the Lord!'"
       At this point the man was called away by his friends; as he was
       going, Balthasar spoke.
       "Good stranger!" he said, tremulously, "tell us if we shall find
       the preacher at the place you left him."
       "Yes, at Bethabara."
       "Who should this Nazarite be?" said Ben-Hur to Iras, "if not the
       herald of our King?"
       In so short a time he had come to regard the daughter as more
       interested in the mysterious personage he was looking for than
       the aged father! Nevertheless, the latter with a positive glow
       in his sunken eyes half arose, and said,
       "Let us make haste. I am not tired."
       They turned away to help the slave.
       There was little conversation between the three at the stopping-place
       for the night west of Ramoth-Gilead.
       "Let us arise early, son of Hur," said the old man. "The Saviour
       may come, and we not there."
       "The King cannot be far behind his herald," Iras whispered, as she
       prepared to take her place on the camel.
       "To-morrow we will see!" Ben-Hur replied, kissing her hand.
       Next day about the third hour, out of the pass through which,
       skirting the base of Mount Gilead, they had journeyed since
       leaving Ramoth, the party came upon the barren steppe east of
       the sacred river. Opposite them they saw the upper limit of the
       old palm lands of Jericho, stretching off to the hill-country
       of Judea. Ben-Hur's blood ran quickly, for he knew the ford was
       close at hand.
       "Content you, good Balthasar," he said; "we are almost there."
       The driver quickened the camel's pace. Soon they caught sight
       of booths and tents and tethered animals; and then of the river,
       and a multitude collected down close by the bank, and yet another
       multitude on the western shore. Knowing that the preacher was
       preaching, they made greater haste; yet, as they were drawing
       near, suddenly there was a commotion in the mass, and it began
       to break up and disperse.
       They were too late!
       "Let us stay here," said Ben-Hur to Balthasar, who was wringing
       his hands. "The Nazarite may come this way."
       The people were too intent upon what they had heard, and too busy
       in discussion, to notice the new-comers. When some hundreds were
       gone by, and it seemed the opportunity to so much as see the
       Nazarite was lost to the latter, up the river not far away they
       beheld a person coming towards them of such singular appearance
       they forgot all else.
       Outwardly the man was rude and uncouth, even savage. Over a thin,
       gaunt visage of the hue of brown parchment, over his shoulders and
       down his back below the middle, in witch-like locks, fell a covering
       of sun-scorched hair. His eyes were burning-bright. All his right side
       was naked, and of the color of his face, and quite as meagre; a shirt
       of the coarsest camel's-hair--coarse as Bedouin tent-cloth--clothed
       the rest of his person to the knees, being gathered at the waist by
       a broad girdle of untanned leather. His feet were bare. A scrip,
       also of untanned leather, was fastened to the girdle. He used a
       knotted staff to help him forward. His movement was quick, decided,
       and strangely watchful. Every little while he tossed the unruly
       hair from his eyes, and peered round as if searching for somebody.
       The fair Egyptian surveyed the son of the Desert with surprise,
       not to say disgust. Presently, raising the curtain of the houdah,
       she spoke to Ben-Hur, who sat his horse near by.
       "Is that the herald of thy King?"
       "It is the Nazarite," he replied, without looking up.
       In truth, he was himself more than disappointed. Despite his
       familiarity with the ascetic colonists in En-Gedi--their dress,
       their indifference to all worldly opinion, their constancy to
       vows which gave them over to every imaginable suffering of body,
       and separated them from others of their kind as absolutely as if
       they had not been born like them--and notwithstanding he had been
       notified on the way to look for a Nazarite whose simple description
       of himself was a Voice from the Wilderness--still Ben-Hur's dream of
       the King who was to be so great and do so much had colored all his
       thought of him, so that he never doubted to find in the forerunner
       some sign or token of the goodliness and royalty he was announcing.
       Gazing at the savage figure before him, the long trains of courtiers
       whom he had been used to see in the thermae and imperial corridors
       at Rome arose before him, forcing a comparison. Shocked, shamed,
       bewildered, he could only answer,
       "It is the Nazarite."
       With Balthasar it was very different. The ways of God, he knew,
       were not as men would have them. He had seen the Saviour a child
       in a manger, and was prepared by his faith for the rude and simple
       in connection with the Divine reappearance. So he kept his seat,
       his hands crossed upon his breast, his lips moving in prayer.
       He was not expecting a king.
       In this time of such interest to the new-comers, and in which they
       were so differently moved, another man had been sitting by himself
       on a stone at the edge of the river, thinking yet, probably, of the
       sermon he had been hearing. Now, however, he arose, and walked slowly
       up from the shore, in a course to take him across the line the Nazarite
       was pursuing and bring him near the camel.
       And the two--the preacher and the stranger--kept on until they
       came, the former within twenty yards of the animal, the latter
       within ten feet. Then the preacher stopped, and flung the hair
       from his eyes, looked at the stranger, threw his hands up as a
       signal to all the people in sight; and they also stopped, each in
       the pose of a listener; and when the hush was perfect, slowly the
       staff in the Nazarite's right hand came down and pointed to the
       stranger.
       All those who before were but listeners became watchers also.
       At the same instant, under the same impulse, Balthasar and Ben-Hur
       fixed their gaze upon the man pointed out, and both took the same
       impression, only in different degree. He was moving slowly towards
       them in a clear space a little to their front, a form slightly above
       the average in stature, and slender, even delicate. His action
       was calm and deliberate, like that habitual to men much given to
       serious thought upon grave subjects; and it well became his costume,
       which was an undergarment full-sleeved and reaching to the ankles,
       and an outer robe called the talith; on his left arm he carried the
       usual handkerchief for the head, the red fillet swinging loose down
       his side. Except the fillet and a narrow border of blue at the
       lower edge of the talith, his attire was of linen yellowed with
       dust and road stains. Possibly the exception should be extended
       to the tassels, which were blue and white, as prescribed by law
       for rabbis. His sandals were of the simplest kind. He was without
       scrip or girdle or staff.
       These points of appearance, however, the three beholders observed
       briefly, and rather as accessories to the head and face of the man,
       which--especially the latter--were the real sources of the spell they
       caught in common with all who stood looking at him.
       The head was open to the cloudless light, except as it was draped
       with hair long and slightly waved, and parted in the middle,
       and auburn in tint, with a tendency to reddish golden where
       most strongly touched by the sun. Under a broad, low forehead,
       under black well arched brows, beamed eyes dark-blue and large,
       and softened to exceeding tenderness by lashes of the great length
       sometimes seen on children, but seldom, if ever, on men. As to the
       other features, it would have been difficult to decide whether they
       were Greek or Jewish. The delicacy of the nostrils and mouth was
       unusual to the latter type; and when it was taken into account
       with the gentleness of the eyes, the pallor of the complexion,
       the fine texture of the hair, and the softness of the beard,
       which fell in waves over his throat to his breast, never a
       soldier but would have laughed at him in encounter, never a
       woman who would not have confided in him at sight, never a
       child that would not, with quick instinct, have given him its
       hand and whole artless trust; nor might any one have said he
       was not beautiful.
       The features, it should be further said, were ruled by a certain
       expression which, as the viewer chose, might with equal correctness
       have been called the effect of intelligence, love, pity, or sorrow;
       though, in better speech, it was a blending of them all--a look
       easy to fancy as the mark of a sinless soul doomed to the sight
       and understanding of the utter sinfulness of those among whom it
       was passing; yet withal no one could have observed the face with
       a thought of weakness in the man; so, at least, would not they
       who know that the qualities mentioned--love, sorrow, pity--are the
       results of a consciousness of strength to bear suffering oftener
       than strength to do; such has been the might of martyrs and devotees
       and the myriads written down in saintly calendars. And such, indeed,
       was the air of this one.
       Slowly he drew near--nearer the three.
       Now Ben-Hur, mounted and spear in hand, was an object to claim the
       glance of a king; yet the eyes of the man approaching were all the
       time raised above him--and not to Iras, whose loveliness has been
       so often remarked, but to Balthasar, the old and unserviceable.
       The hush was profound.
       Presently the Nazarite, still pointing with his staff, cried, in a
       loud voice,
       "Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world!"
       The many standing still, arrested by the action of the speaker,
       and listening for what might follow, were struck with awe by words
       so strange and past their understanding; upon Balthasar they were
       overpowering. He was there to see once more the Redeemer of men.
       The faith which had brought him the singular privileges of the
       time long gone abode yet in his heart; and if now it gave him
       a power of vision above that of his fellows--a power to see and
       know him for whom he was looking--better than calling the power
       a miracle, let it be thought of as the faculty of a soul not yet
       entirely released from the divine relations to which it had been
       formerly admitted, or as the fitting reward of a life in that age
       so without examples of holiness--a life itself a miracle. The ideal
       of his faith was before him, perfect in face, form, dress, action,
       age; and he was in its view, and the view was recognition. Ah,
       now if something should happen to identify the stranger beyond
       all doubt!
       And that was what did happen.
       Exactly at the fitting moment, as if to assure the trembling
       Egyptian, the Nazarite repeated the outcry,
       "Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world!"
       Balthasar fell upon his knees. For him there was no need of explanation;
       and as if the Nazarite knew it, he turned to those more immediately about
       him staring in wonder, and continued:
       "This is he of whom I said, After me cometh a man which is preferred
       before me, for he was before me. And I knew him not: but that
       he should be manifest to Israel, therefore am I come baptizing
       with water. I saw the Spirit descending from heaven like a dove,
       and it abode upon him. And I knew him not: but he that sent me to
       baptize with water, the same said unto me, Upon whom thou shalt
       see the Spirit descending and remaining on him, the same is he
       which baptizeth with the Holy Ghost. And I saw and bare record,
       that this"--he paused, his staff still pointing at the stranger
       in the white garments, as if to give a more absolute certainty
       to both his words and the conclusions intended--"I bare record,
       THAT THIS IS THE SON OF GOD!"
       "It is he, it is he!" Balthasar cried, with upraised tearful eyes.
       Next moment he sank down insensible.
       In this time, it should be remembered, Ben-Hur was studying the face
       of the stranger, though with an interest entirely different. He was
       not insensible to its purity of feature, and its thoughtfulness,
       tenderness, humility, and holiness; but just then there was room in
       his mind for but one thought--Who is this man? And what? Messiah or
       king? Never was apparition more unroyal. Nay, looking at that calm,
       benignant countenance, the very idea of war and conquest, and lust
       of dominion, smote him like a profanation. He said, as if speaking
       to his own heart, Balthasar must be right and Simonides wrong.
       This man has not come to rebuild the throne of Solomon; he has
       neither the nature nor the genius of Herod; king he may be,
       but not of another and greater than Rome.
       It should be understood now that this was not a conclusion with
       Ben-Hur, but an impression merely; and while it was forming,
       while yet he gazed at the wonderful countenance, his memory began
       to throe and struggle. "Surely," he said to himself, "I have seen
       the man; but where and when?" That the look, so calm, so pitiful,
       so loving, had somewhere in a past time beamed upon him as that
       moment it was beaming upon Balthasar became an assurance. Faintly
       at first, at last a clear light, a burst of sunshine, the scene
       by the well at Nazareth what time the Roman guard was dragging
       him to the galleys returned, and all his being thrilled. Those
       hands had helped him when he was perishing. The face was one of
       the pictures he had carried in mind ever since. In the effusion
       of feeling excited, the explanation of the preacher was lost by
       him, all but the last words--words so marvellous that the world
       yet rings with them:
       "--this is the SON OF GOD!"
       Ben-Hur leaped from his horse to render homage to his benefactor;
       but Iras cried to him, "Help, son of Hur, help, or my father will
       die!"
       He stopped, looked back, then hurried to her assistance. She gave
       him a cup; and leaving the slave to bring the camel to its knees,
       he ran to the river for water. The stranger was gone when he came
       back.
       At last Balthasar was restored to consciousness. Stretching forth
       his hands, he asked, feebly, "Where is he?"
       "Who?" asked Iras.
       An intense instant interest shone upon the good man's face, as if
       a last wish had been gratified, and he answered,
       "He--the Redeemer--the Son of God, whom I have seen again."
       "Believest thou so?" Iras asked in a low voice of Ben-Hur.
       "The time is full of wonders; let us wait," was all he said.
       And next day while the three were listening to him, the Nazarite
       broke off in mid-speech, saying reverently, "Behold the Lamb of
       God!"
       Looking to where he pointed, they beheld the stranger again. As
       Ben-Hur surveyed the slender figure, and holy beautiful countenance
       compassionate to sadness, a new idea broke upon him.
       "Balthasar is right--so is Simonides. May not the Redeemer be a
       king also?"
       And he asked one at his side, "Who is the man walking yonder?"
       The other laughed mockingly, and replied,
       "He is the son of a carpenter over in Nazareth." _
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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