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Ben Hur: A Tale of the Christ
BOOK VIII   BOOK VIII - CHAPTER III
Lew Wallace
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       _ The first person to go out of the city upon the opening of the
       Sheep's Gate next morning was Amrah, basket on arm. No questions
       were asked her by the keepers, since the morning itself had not
       been more regular in coming than she; they knew her somebody's
       faithful servant, and that was enough for them.
       Down the eastern valley she took her way. The side of Olivet,
       darkly green, was spotted with white tents recently put up by
       people attending the feasts; the hour, however, was too early
       for the strangers to be abroad; still, had it not been so, no
       one would have troubled her. Past Gethsemane; past the tombs at
       the meeting of the Bethany roads; past the sepulchral village of
       Siloam she went. Occasionally the decrepit little body staggered;
       once she sat down to get her breath; rising shortly, she struggled
       on with renewed haste. The great rocks on either hand, if they had
       had ears, might have heard her mutter to herself; could they have
       seen, it would have been to observe how frequently she looked up
       over the Mount, reproving the dawn for its promptness; if it had
       been possible for them to gossip, not improbably they would have
       said to each other, "Our friend is in a hurry this morning;
       the mouths she goes to feed must be very hungry."
       When at last she reached the King's Garden she slackened her gait;
       for then the grim city of the lepers was in view, extending far
       round the pitted south hill of Hinnom.
       As the reader must by this time have surmised, she was going to
       her mistress, whose tomb, it will be remembered, overlooked the
       well En-Rogel.
       Early as it was, the unhappy woman was up and sitting outside,
       leaving Tirzah asleep within. The course of the malady had been
       terribly swift in the three years. Conscious of her appearance,
       with the refined instincts of her nature, she kept her whole person
       habitually covered. Seldom as possible she permitted even Tirzah to
       see her.
       This morning she was taking the air with bared head, knowing there
       was no one to be shocked by the exposure. The light was not full,
       but enough to show the ravages to which she had been subject.
       Her hair was snow-white and unmanageably coarse, falling over
       her back and shoulders like so much silver wire. The eyelids,
       the lips, the nostrils, the flesh of the cheeks, were either gone
       or reduced to fetid rawness. The neck was a mass of ash-colored
       scales. One hand lay outside the folds of her habit rigid as
       that of a skeleton; the nails had been eaten away; the joints of
       the fingers, if not bare to the bone, were swollen knots crusted
       with red secretion. Head, face, neck, and hand indicated all too
       plainly the condition of the whole body. Seeing her thus, it was
       easy to understand how the once fair widow of the princely Hur
       had been able to maintain her incognito so well through such a
       period of years.
       When the sun would gild the crest of Olivet and the Mount of
       Offence with light sharper and more brilliant in that old land
       than in the West, she knew Amrah would come, first to the well,
       then to a stone midway the well and the foot of the hill on which
       she had her abode, and that the good servant would there deposit
       the food she carried in the basket, and fill the water-jar afresh
       for the day. Of her former plentitude of happiness, that brief
       visit was all that remained to the unfortunate. She could then ask
       about her son, and be told of his welfare, with such bits of news
       concerning him as the messenger could glean. Usually the information
       was meagre enough, yet comforting; at times she heard he was at home;
       then she would issue from her dreary cell at break of day, and sit
       till noon, and from noon to set of sun, a motionless figure draped
       in white, looking, statue-like, invariably to one point--over the
       Temple to the spot under the rounded sky where the old house stood,
       dear in memory, and dearer because he was there. Nothing else was
       left her. Tirzah she counted of the dead; and as for herself,
       she simply waited the end, knowing every hour of life was an
       hour of dying--happily, of painless dying.
       The things of nature about the hill to keep her sensitive to
       the world's attractions were wretchedly scant; beasts and birds
       avoided the place as if they knew its history and present use;
       every green thing perished in its first season; the winds warred
       upon the shrubs and venturous grasses, leaving to drought such as
       they could not uproot. Look where she would, the view was made
       depressingly suggestive by tombs--tombs above her, tombs below,
       tombs opposite her own tomb--all now freshly whitened in warning
       to visiting pilgrims. In the sky--clear, fair, inviting--one would
       think she might have found some relief to her ache of mind; but,
       alas! in making the beautiful elsewhere the sun served her never so
       unfriendly--it did but disclose her growing hideousness. But for the
       sun she would not have been the horror she was to herself, nor been
       waked so cruelly from dreams of Tirzah as she used to be. The gift
       of seeing can be sometimes a dreadful curse.
       Does one ask why she did not make an end to her sufferings?
       THE LAW FORBADE HER!
       A Gentile may smile at the answer; but so will not a son of Israel.
       While she sat there peopling the dusky solitude with thoughts even
       more cheerless, suddenly a woman came up the hill staggering and
       spent with exertion.
       The widow arose hastily, and covering her head, cried, in a voice
       unnaturally harsh, "Unclean, unclean!"
       In a moment, heedless of the notice, Amrah was at her feet. All the
       long-pent love of the simple creature burst forth: with tears and
       passionate exclamations she kissed her mistress's garments, and for
       a while the latter strove to escape from her; then, seeing she
       could not, she waited till the violence of the paroxysm was over.
       "What have you done, Amrah?" she said. "Is it by such disobedience
       you prove your love for us? Wicked woman! You are lost; and he--your
       master--you can never, never go back to him."
       Amrah grovelled sobbing in the dust.
       "The ban of the Law is upon you, too; you cannot return to Jerusalem.
       What will become of us? Who will bring us bread? O wicked, wicked Amrah!
       We are all, all undone alike!"
       "Mercy, mercy!" Amrah answered from the ground.
       "You should have been merciful to yourself, and by so doing been
       most merciful to us. Now where can we fly? There is no one to
       help us. O false servant! The wrath of the Lord was already too
       heavy upon us."
       Here Tirzah, awakened by the noise, appeared at the door of the
       tomb. The pen shrinks from the picture she presented. In the
       half-clad apparition, patched with scales, lividly seamed,
       nearly blind, its limbs and extremities swollen to grotesque
       largeness, familiar eyes however sharpened by love could not
       have recognized the creature of childish grace and purity we
       first beheld her.
       "Is it Amrah, mother?"
       The servant tried to crawl to her also.
       "Stay, Amrah!" the widow cried, imperiously. "I forbid you touching
       her. Rise, and get you gone before any at the well see you here.
       Nay, I forgot--it is too late! You must remain now and share our
       doom. Rise, I say!"
       Amrah rose to her knees, and said, brokenly and with clasped hands,
       "O good mistress! I am not false--I am not wicked. I bring you good
       tidings."
       "Of Judah?" and as she spoke, the widow half withdrew the cloth
       from her head.
       "There is a wonderful man," Amrah continued, "who has power to cure
       you. He speaks a word, and the sick are made well, and even the dead
       come to life. I have come to take you to him."
       "Poor Amrah!" said Tirzah, compassionately.
       "No," cried Amrah, detecting the doubt underlying the expression--"no,
       as the Lord lives, even the Lord of Israel, my God as well as yours,
       I speak the truth. Go with me, I pray, and lose no time. This morning
       he will pass by on his way to the city. See! the day is at hand.
       Take the food here--eat, and let us go."
       The mother listened eagerly. Not unlikely she had heard of the
       wonderful man, for by this time his fame had penetrated every
       nook in the land.
       "Who is he?" she asked.
       "A Nazarene."
       "Who told you about him?"
       "Judah."
       "Judah told you? Is he at home?"
       "He came last night."
       The widow, trying to still the beating of her heart, was silent
       awhile.
       "Did Judah send you to tell us this?" she next asked.
       "No. He believes you dead."
       "There was a prophet once who cured a leper," the mother said
       thoughtfully to Tirzah; "but he had his power from God." Then
       addressing Amrah, she asked, "How does my son know this man so
       possessed?"
       "He was travelling with him, and heard the lepers call, and saw
       them go away well. First there was one man; then there were ten;
       and they were all made whole."
       The elder listener was silent again. The skeleton hand shook. We may
       believe she was struggling to give the story the sanction of faith,
       which is always an absolutist in demand, and that it was with her as
       with the men of the day, eye-witnesses of what was done by the Christ,
       as well as the myriads who have succeeded them. She did not question
       the performance, for her own son was the witness testifying through
       the servant; but she strove to comprehend the power by which work
       so astonishing could be done by a man. Well enough to make inquiry
       as to the fact; to comprehend the power, on the other hand, it is
       first necessary to comprehend God; and he who waits for that will
       die waiting. With her, however, the hesitation was brief. To Tirzah
       she said,
       "This must be the Messiah!"
       She spoke not coldly, like one reasoning a doubt away, but as a
       woman of Israel familiar with the promises of God to her race--a
       woman of understanding, ready to be glad over the least sign of
       the realization of the promises.
       "There was a time when Jerusalem and all Judea were filled with a
       story that he was born. I remember it. By this time he should be
       a man. It must be--it is he. Yes," she said to Amrah, "we will go
       with you. Bring the water which you will find in the tomb in a jar,
       and set the food for us. We will eat and be gone."
       The breakfast, partaken under excitement, was soon despatched, and the
       three women set out on their extraordinary journey. As Tirzah had
       caught the confident spirit of the others, there was but one fear
       that troubled the party. Bethany, Amrah said, was the town the man
       was coming from; now from that to Jerusalem there were three roads,
       or rather paths--one over the first summit of Olivet, a second
       at its base, a third between the second summit and the Mount
       of Offence. The three were not far apart; far enough, however,
       to make it possible for the unfortunates to miss the Nazarene if
       they failed the one he chose to come by.
       A little questioning satisfied the mother that Amrah knew nothing
       of the country beyond the Cedron, and even less of the intentions
       of the man they were going to see, if they could. She discerned,
       also, that both Amrah and Tirzah--the one from confirmed habits
       of servitude, the other from natural dependency--looked to her
       for guidance; and she accepted the charge.
       "We will go first to Bethphage," she said to them. "There, if the
       Lord favor us, we may learn what else to do."
       They descended the hill to Tophet and the King's Garden, and paused
       in the deep trail furrowed through them by centuries of wayfaring.
       "I am afraid of the road," the matron said. "Better that we keep
       to the country among the rocks and trees. This is feast-day,
       and on the hill-sides yonder I see signs of a great multitude
       in attendance. By going across the Mount of Offence here we may
       avoid them."
       Tirzah had been walking with great difficulty; upon hearing this
       her heart began to fail her.
       "The mount is steep, mother; I cannot climb it."
       "Remember, we are going to find health and life. See, my child,
       how the day brightens around us! And yonder are women coming this
       way to the well. They will stone us if we stay here. Come, be strong
       this once."
       Thus the mother, not less tortured herself, sought to inspire
       the daughter; and Amrah came to her aid. To this time the latter
       had not touched the persons of the afflicted, nor they her; now,
       in disregard of consequences as well as of command, the faithful
       creature went to Tirzah, and put her arm over her shoulder, and
       whispered, "Lean on me. I am strong, though I am old; and it is
       but a little way off. There--now we can go."
       The face of the hill they essayed to cross was somewhat broken with
       pits, and ruins of old structures; but when at last they stood upon
       the top to rest, and looked at the spectacle presented them over
       in the northwest--at the Temple and its courtly terraces, at Zion,
       at the enduring towers white beetling into the sky beyond--the mother
       was strengthened with a love of life for life's sake.
       "Look, Tirzah," she said--"look at the plates of gold on the Gate
       Beautiful. How they give back the flames of the sun, brightness for
       brightness! Do you remember we used to go up there? Will it not be
       pleasant to do so again? And think--home is but a little way off.
       I can almost see it over the roof of the Holy of Holies; and Judah
       will be there to receive us!"
       From the side of the middle summit garnished green with myrtle and
       olive trees, they saw, upon looking that way next, thin columns of
       smoke rising lightly and straight up into the pulseless morning,
       each a warning of restless pilgrims astir, and of the flight of
       the pitiless hours, and the need of haste.
       Though the good servant toiled faithfully to lighten the labor
       in descending the hill-side, not sparing herself in the least,
       the girl moaned at every step; sometimes in extremity of anguish
       she cried out. Upon reaching the road--that is, the road between
       the Mount of Offence and the middle or second summit of Olivet--she
       fell down exhausted.
       "Go on with Amrah, mother, and leave me here," she said, faintly.
       "No, no, Tirzah. What would the gain be to me if I were healed
       and you not? When Judah asks for you, as he will, what would I
       have to say to him were I to leave you?"
       "Tell him I loved him."
       The elder leper arose from bending over the fainting sufferer,
       and gazed about her with that sensation of hope perishing which
       is more nearly like annihilation of the soul than anything else.
       The supremest joy of the thought of cure was inseparable from Tirzah,
       who was not too old to forget, in the happiness of healthful life to
       come, the years of misery by which she had been so reduced in body
       and broken in spirit. Even as the brave woman was about leaving the
       venture they were engaged in to the determination of God, she saw a
       man on foot coming rapidly up the road from the east.
       "Courage, Tirzah! Be of cheer," she said. "Yonder I know is one
       to tell us of the Nazarene."
       Amrah helped the girl to a sitting posture, and supported her
       while the man advanced.
       "In your goodness, mother, you forget what we are. The stranger
       will go around us; his best gift to us will be a curse, if not
       a stone."
       "We will see."
       There was no other answer to be given, since the mother was too
       well and sadly acquainted with the treatment outcasts of the
       class to which she belonged were accustomed to at the hands of
       her countrymen.
       As has been said, the road at the edge of which the group was posted
       was little more than a worn path or trail, winding crookedly through
       tumuli of limestone. If the stranger kept it, he must meet them face
       to face; and he did so, until near enough to hear the cry she was
       bound to give. Then, uncovering her head, a further demand of the
       law, she shouted shrilly,
       "Unclean, unclean!"
       To her surprise, the man came steadily on.
       "What would you have?" he asked, stopping opposite them not four
       yards off.
       "Thou seest us. Have a care," the mother said, with dignity.
       "Woman, I am the courier of him who speaketh but once to such as
       thou and they are healed. I am not afraid."
       "The Nazarene?"
       "The Messiah," he said.
       "Is it true that he cometh to the city to-day?"
       "He is now at Bethphage."
       "On what road, master?"
       "This one."
       She clasped her hands, and looked up thankfully.
       "For whom takest thou him?" the man asked, with pity.
       "The Son of God," she replied.
       "Stay thou here then; or, as there is a multitude with him, take thy
       stand by the rock yonder, the white one under the tree; and as he
       goeth by fail not to call to him; call, and fear not. If thy faith
       but equal thy knowledge, he will hear thee though all the heavens
       thunder. I go to tell Israel, assembled in and about the city,
       that he is at hand, and to make ready to receive him. Peace to
       thee and thine, woman."
       The stranger moved on.
       "Did you hear, Tirzah? Did you hear? The Nazarene is on the road,
       on this one, and he will hear us. Once more, my child--oh, only once!
       and let us to the rock. It is but a step."
       Thus encouraged Tirzah took Amrah's hand and arose; but as they
       were going, Amrah said, "Stay; the man is returning." And they
       waited for him.
       "I pray your grace, woman," he said, upon overtaking them. "Remembering
       that the sun will be hot before the Nazarene arrives, and that the
       city is near by to give me refreshment should I need it, I thought
       this water would do thee better than it will me. Take it and be of
       good cheer. Call to him as he passes."
       He followed the words by offering her a gourd full of water,
       such as foot-travellers sometimes carried with them in their
       journeys across the hills; and instead of placing the gift on
       the ground for her to take up when he was at a safe distance,
       he gave it into her hand.
       "Art thou a Jew?" she asked, surprised.
       "I am that, and better; I am a disciple of the Christ who teacheth
       daily by word and example this thing which I have done unto you.
       The world hath long known the word charity without understanding it.
       Again I say peace and good cheer to thee and thine."
       He went on, and they went slowly to the rock he had pointed out
       to them, high as their heads, and scarcely thirty yards from the
       road on the right. Standing in front of it, the mother satisfied
       herself they could be seen and heard plainly by passers-by whose
       notice they desired to attract. There they cast themselves under
       the tree in its shade, and drank of the gourd, and rested refreshed.
       Ere long Tirzah slept, and fearing to disturb her, the others held
       their peace. _
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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