THE BOOK OF THE SONS OF FIRE
this being
THE FOURTH BOOK OF THE BRONZEBOOK
Being all that remains of the Sacred Writings formerly contained in
the Great
Book of the Sons of Fire
Chapter 1 - THE RECONSTRUCTED CHAPTER
Chapter 2 - THE HIBSATHY Chapter 3 - THE BROTHERHOOD
Chapter 4 - AMOS Chapter 5 - THE LAWS OF AMOS Chapter 6 - THE TALE OF HIRAM
Chapter 7 - THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 1 Chapter 8 - THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 2
Chapter 9 - THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 3 Chapter 10 - THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 4
Chapter 11 - THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 5 Chapter 12 - THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 6 (Incomplete and Fragmentary)
Chapter 13 - THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 7 Chapter 14 - THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 8
Chapter 15 - THE BOOK OF KADMIS Chapter 16 - THE RECONSTRUCTION BY KADAIRATH
Chapter 17 - PART OF A MARRIAGE PLEDGE Chapter 18 - THE MASIBA AMENDMENTS
Chapter 19 - THE LETTER OF MATA A SON OF AGNER Chapter 20 - THE TEACHINGS OF SADEK
Chapter 21 - THE LAWS OF MALFIN Chapter 22 - SALVAGED FRAGMENTS RECONSTRUCTED - 1
Chapter 23 - SALVAGED FRAGMENTS RECONSTRUCTED - 2 Chapter 24 - THE LAST OF THE METAL PLATES
CHAPTER 1
THE RECONSTRUCTED CHAPTER
We took refuge with the sons of Uteno whose fathers had been in the
land many generations, for they had come out of Egypt in the days of
Pharaoh Nafohia. There on the borderland, we dwelt in caves above
Kathelim. We were without books or possessions, but we were diligent
and laboured to make the land fruitful. We knew ourselves as The
Brothers in Light, but others called us The Children of Light, even
as we are called to this day.
This is a good and fertile land, it is a wide land of flowing
streams where wheat and barley increase a hundredfold. Figs and
pomegranates flourish here and it is a land of olive groves and
vineyards. All the needs of life are supplied with an overflowing
bounty. It is a land where sheep and cattle multiply without fear
and a land where the sickle of famine never reaps. It is a land
where even an effortless search is rewarded with the materials of
copper, but it is not a manless land.
We are not alone in this land and must live among people whose ways
are not our ways. They have Gods with many names and even now those
beside the sea strive among themselves, for some say God is called
Mamrah, while others say he is called Aneh. All about us men are in
dispute and the strife among them arises out of the bounty of the
land. Gaining their livelihood with little effort they have much
time for argument and strife. We must build, for these people, a
court of peace, the four pillars whereof shall be Love,
Consideration, Justice and Truth.
The land of our fathers and our inheritance has been lost to us
forever. Their homes have been returned to the sands and their
altars where they worshipped cast down. Their temples have been
destroyed and the forms of worship practiced there are no longer
known. The songs once sung are now mingled with the winds and the
voices of the singers are silent. The wisdom once revered has
departed, the illuminating flame no longer burns and the lamps lie
broken in the dust.
The honoured writings have been used for
kindling and the sacred vessels turned into vain ornaments. The very
names held sacred by our fathers are now defiled and held to
represent wickedness. Those who would have been our brothers are
sold and their leaders slain. Those who would have been our wives
are violated and degraded in servitude. Therefore, brothers, it is
time the memory of these things was put aside and forgotten.
What cause have we for sorrow? We are in a bountiful land, we have
hope for the future and an unshakable faith. Better by far than all
else, we have with us the key to the ancient Portal of
Communication. Our memories must replace the books, and decrees of
former times. Let us, therefore, be thankful for our blessings and
diligently preserve the flame from which the lamps of Truth will one
day be relit.
In days gone by you have had leaders to guide you, but before them
were even greater leaders whom you have not known. The inspiration
of their words is something that must never be lost, it must be
preserved for all time. We must be like a man who has traveled far
with a heavy burden. He rests and seeks among the things he carries
to find what can be discarded, knowing he has still a long way to
go. The choice you must make has to be made soon, for the years
remaining to our father cannot be plentiful.
We must establish a community where men can live together and where
they can enjoy the companionship of women. Men always benefit from
united effort, but this is inseparable from necessary restrictions.
Let the restrictions imposed be such that no man can feel resentment
because of the restraints set upon him. Let the only ordinances and
restrictions imposed be founded on the nature of man and upon
spiritual and moral values.
We must seek to assure freedom of action for every man and woman, so
long as it does not prejudice the equal rights of others. We must
work for the benefit of the many, but in doing so must not overlook
the provision of rewards for those who serve best. The rewards must
go to the men who are best in all ways and not to the worst. We must
see that good lives are rewarded and evil ones punished. We must
place the greatest value on things spiritual, and no man must be
unduly rich or unduly poor.
We must provide for the sick and helpless, for the old and
incapable. We must assure the integrity of the family. The first
objective must be the spiritual goal, which is the only proper one
for all men. After that all instruction and law should be bent
towards an increasingly harmonious relationship between every living
being. The upbringing of children must have as its objective the
attainment of well balanced manhood and womanhood. We must make men
high-minded and above all pettiness. They must be upright and
rejoice in their manhood. They must possess courage and fortitude
equal to any trial, for there will be many.
They must be prepared to
endure oppression and persecution with self-control and a calmness
which no misfortune or calamity can shake. They must also be such
men that good fortune and abundance does not weaken them.
We must teach men to be quick in decision and deliberate in
judgment. Because in numbers we are like two grains of sand in the
desert, we must seek converts diligently. We must be a guiding light
before the eyes of all men, leading them along the paths of honest
labour rather than power. We must teach men their duty towards
others, so that no man ever says, “Unless I place my own welfare
first no other will”.
We must seek out and accept suitable converts and they must be
particularly precious to us. We must hold them in high regard, not
because they have accepted our beliefs, the good within them can be
developed within their own, but because they assume willingly and
cheerfully the great duties and obligations peculiar to us. We must
always remain a brotherhood engaged in an organized quest for Truth.
We must ensure that the teachings we expound are valid everywhere
and among all men as a code of goodness. If a brother become
powerful he must not glory in that power, if wise in his wisdom or
if rich in his riches. If a brother have to glory in something, then
let it be in the fact that he is always the best of men. By this is
not meant the victor in the earthly struggle, but he who best serves
the purpose and good of mankind.
We found refuge in a place where men spoke our tongue, though now
they are no more. The land of our fathers is denied to us, so we
must seek another, for a man without a nation is more heavily
afflicted than any orphan. Egypt was a land destined for greatness,
its people should have led all others towards the Great Light. Egypt
failed in its destiny because those who were entrusted with power
and position proved unworthy. Its kings, who should have reared
families dedicated to goodness and inspiration, betrayed their trust
to satisfy the weaknesses of men.
The leaders to Godhood were misled
and became ensnared in the deserts of worldliness, and those who
followed them were betrayed. The priesthood became corrupt when it
offered a life of ease and abundance, instead of a life of service
and austerity. The ideals of man were above reproach, but man
himself was unworthy of them. We have no need to change ideals, but
to attain them we must change men. The sacred lore of Egypt,
enshrining the treasure of the ages, was possessed by only a select
few who safeguarded it as nothing else has ever been guarded,
because of its greatness. Not only this, but even a little knowledge
of it could be dangerous in the hands of any who sought to utilize
it improperly.
Of all desirable things attainable by man, the assurance of his
immortality, clear insight into the purpose behind his creation and
true knowledge of the road towards the fulfillment of his destiny
are the greatest. Those were the things so closely guarded, and just
as they are the most desirable things on Earth, so are they the most
highly priced and difficult to attain. Religion records the efforts
of men, its doctrines and inspiration are the measure of its success
or failure.
The paragraphs just written replace some difficult to decipher and
translate, but they preserve the essence of what was recorded so
long ago. Much is too fragmentary for use, a great amount is
therefore lost. There is one very applicable fragment which states,
‘unless they would be open to mockery, Revealers of Light must
possess more than a dim, smoky glimmer.’
CHAPTER TWO
THE HIBSATHY
These things must not be entrusted to common folk, neither must they
be degraded by disclosing them to such as would profane them. They
were once reserved for those who were exalted in wisdom and virtue.
In those days of Harempta, Mouth of God on Earth, they were hidden
from those in high places. This is one among the Lesser Mysteries,
the Ritual of the Twice Born. It is a ceremony to regain spiritual
vigour and to restore spiritual power, whereby a Chosen One dies and
rises again. It is a grim undertaking fraught with danger. It is not
for the spiritually weak or for the faint-hearted. Not all survive
to walk again upon the friendly ground of Earth.
Only the older men who had completed the three cycles of seven years
were accepted. They had to be men with wisdom and courage, with the
strength and fortitude to survive. Other essentials were absolute
purity and complete self-discipline. The ability for self-sacrifice
and a strict sense of duty were demanded. Only men possessing all
these qualities could cross the border in consciousness and return.
To be deficient in any essential quality meant death. The Tree of
Life has many branches and that which is initiation bears the best
fruit. It is about this that your brother writes. It began in that
far away glorious period before the days of wickedness which caused
men to walk in darkness, in the days when they walked in the light
of Truth. A House of Hidden Places was maintained, so that all who
had any part in governing the lives of the people, whether as king
or priest or official, could prove themselves worthy before becoming
encumbered with the office.
Later, it came about that the Hidden
Places had to be further secured and only men long established in
goodness could enter them. Those in high places and those with power
shirked the austerities and dangers demanded, and thereby they cut
themselves off from the light of Truth. The kings and governors who
ruled in Egypt, during all the many long generations of twilight and
darkness, were born to the frailties of the flesh. Seeing only
through earthly eyes they lacked the clear guidance of revelation
and knowledge. The Serif Egg remains, it will give up its secrets on
the distant day when hatched under the breast of understanding. Then
it will open its eyes, unfold and spread its wings to reveal the
light of Truth.
The spirit of man is like an unweaned child which has wandered away
and become lost among the rocks and cave. Unless it is found and
given sustenance from the source of its life it will perish.
The first Temple of the Shrine of the Hidden Places was built on the
Scared Heights. It was a temple within an inner court where there
were lesser temples and the rooms of priests and teachers. The whole
was surrounded by a courtyard and gardens, and beneath the main
temple were the three Caverns of Initiation. Later the Temple of the
Shrine of the Hidden Places was built during a time when the light
was revealed throughout the land.
Though previously the shrines of the Twice Born had been concealed
in the smaller temples, when Ramsis built the Great Temple of Ramen
it contained, within itself, both temple and shrine of the All
Highest God. Also there were Caverns of Initiation underneath. In
the hall of the temple which faced East and West, between pillars of
pure stone, was the portal of the outer sanctuary. As the sun rises
in the East, to give life to the day, so was the Devoted Priest
placed in the East of the sanctuary, to open the services of worship
and to instruct, like a father, those who came to him with
understanding.
In the ceiling above the candidates was the symbol of
the sun and from it extended seven hands. This represented the sun
of life dispensing the vitalizing forces of life from their fount
within the circle of creative consciousness. Behind the priest were
representations of the ten rays of power that flowed out from the
All Highest God when He created Earth, and which became the
attributes of His Spirit. They are: Love, Foresight, Wisdom,
Insight, All Knowledge, Strength, Resolution, Justice, Mercy and
Courage.
Between the Devoted Priest and the wall behind him was the
triangular representation of the three Sublime Essences -Supreme
Spirit, Soul Spirit and Forming Spirit - the three parts of Spirit
ever in unity. The entrance to the sanctuary was in the East and
above this was a representation of the Great Eye, the secrets of
which cannot be written. Before the Devoted Priests was a hidden
doorway and this led down to the Marriage Chamber. In this chamber
were performed the rites known as The Marriage of the Soul. Here,
too, spiritual nourishment could be inhaled through fragrant smoke
of incense prepared from secret essences and ingredients which
activate life. Here was learned the profound Secret of the Soul, the
secret that was in the silence. Behind the sacred place in the
temple, behind the place of flame, was the Thrice Hidden Door and
this led down to the Chambers of Darkness, which were before the
Caverns of Initiation.
Before the first Chamber of Darkness there was an antechamber
containing a small lamp and light. Cut on the walls were
representations of Life and Spirit. The candidate had studied with
the priests of the upper temple for seven years and been observed by
one of the Twice Born for seven years. Now, here in the antechamber
he became an Anointed One.
The Anointed One went into the first Chamber of Darkness for testing
by one of the Twice Born of a lesser order. Here it was discovered
whether he truly desired The Great Illumination and whether he had
all earthly desires and ambitions under control. Here he was warned
of the dangers he would have to face and was tested for courage and
fortitude. Before him now there was only one choice, victory or
death. This was the Chamber of the Red Light. Now the candidate and
he who attended upon him stood before the next door, and the priest
said to one who stood there.
“Having realized by his own
preparation, that the external is unreal and having eliminated
earthly desires and substituted spiritual ones, he who aspires
stands ready. He has tamed the wild steed of his body, so that it is
completely under his command. He has awakened the man within the
man, and the eyes of inner vision are open. He has made the
irrevocable decision and is one ready to go forward”.
The Anointed
One was admitted into the second Chamber of Darkness and here he was
uncovered and placed within a bath of cold water where he remained
for a period determined by the burning of a lamp. This was the
Chamber of the Purple Light.
From here the Anointed One passed into a small chamber which was the
entrance to the Caverns of Initiation. He now stood before the
Portal of Restuah and recited the Prayer Before the Portal,
“O
Unnamable God, give me a burden of suffering to bear and place about
my shoulders the yoke of tribulation. O God, fill the empty spaces
of my spirit with pain. O grant me such fortitude that even under an
almost unendurable load of distress I may be willing to lighten the
burden and suffering of another. Even as I stand prepared for the
awaiting test, I ask that should I be returned to the light of
Earth, I be granted a share in the afflictions of others, for I need
the strength given by suffering and sorrow, and will welcome them
for the benefits they bestow”.
Then one who stood in this place gave
the Anointed One water to drink and said this prayer,
“O Unnamable
God, hear the prayer of the Anointed One. Strengthen him with such
courage and fortitude that he will not fail in his hour of awful
trial, but shall pass beyond the Place of Terror through the Portal
of Death, and so may shine with the protecting radiance and
therefore return unharmed in spirit and body”.
The Anointed One
entered the first Cavern of Initiation and was tested there in such
manner that no ordinary mortal could endure it. After three days he
came out saying to one who stood there, “O acceptable suffering,
what has been decreed is indeed best”.
After passing through the first two Caverns of Initiation the
candidate became an Enwrapped One, and in the last small Cavern of
the Lord of the Twice Born released his spirit. The Enwrapped One
was then placed within the Womb of Rebirth and there, within the
tomb of stone, he was left seven days. Here came complete liberation
of the spirit. It floated out through the confining stone and went
as it willed. No words of men, however learned, can ever describe
this experience.
The spirit of the Enwrapped One returned to the body at the behest
of the Lord of the Twice Born, and he who had survived became a
Twice Born One. When led forth into the Place of Glorification his
face shines with an inner beauty indescribable. From that day onward
his conduct and attitudes are changed and he is at peace with all
men and with himself. He needs nothing from earthly life and seeks
nothing. He accepts and enjoys whatever life offers, for he has
learned the answer to the riddle of life and solved the Secret of
the Ages.
Your brother was one who underwent the Initiation of the
Twice Born, and he has drawn the curtain aside a little to reveal
only what is permitted. It is little enough but sufficient for you
to understand why, when kings and governors rose to position and
power, they declined the ordeal. It is understandable, for the final
ordeal brought earthly life as close as possible to extinction,
without complete severance of the spiritual umbilical cord. Before
this, went more than twenty years arduous preparation. Yet long and
terrible though it was, the time and austerity did not exceed the
necessary limits by even one jot. In sorrow your brother must say
that it was not an ordeal required to obtain something man has never
possessed, it was to regain something he had lost. It was, however
hard as it may seem, the lowest price payable for the Secret of the
Ages. For long years he who aspired to become one of the Twice Born
had to practice the awakening of his spirit and bring his body under
complete control.
The first thing to overcome was met long before
any threshold was approached, it was something which lurked in the
uncontrolled thoughts of men. The frightening experiences during the
years of preparation had to be modified and their effect channeled
off, otherwise the awakening spirit would have been completely
overwhelmed. As the material body of man cannot come too close to a
blazing fire, so cannot the spirit approach too close to the sphere
of divinity. Having arisen from the Womb of Rebirth, the spirit is
completely freed from any doubt about the immortality of man. Can a
man doubt the source of sunlight when he can see the sun arising in
glory before his eyes?
Having joined the Twice Born each man has a
choice, he can go on to higher development within the Realms of
Light, or he can remain to help others. Your brother chose to
remain. This wisdom of the Twice Born has spread to every corner of
the Earth, and Caverns of Initiation are opened everywhere. But
increasingly, through the years, men have declined to undergo the
austerities and trials essential to bring them into the clear light
of Truth. Therefore, the places of initiation decay and their
secrets are lost, men grope in the dark and try to open a door to
which they have no key. If a man has not the courage or the time,
the inclination or the ability to sail to a far distant land, then
if he would know about that land he must listen to those who have
made the journey. So it is with those who would know the Secret of
the Ages.
Men possess creed of little value because they are
unwilling to pay the price of something better. Your brother has no
way of explaining his ultimate experience to others. Although he has
looked upon the face of Truth and now understands the purpose of
life, what he has seen must remain locked within the heart. Though
he no longer has to be satisfied with belief alone, he cannot extend
his certainty to others. Yet men forever seek him out hoping to
share with him the wonderful knowledge which has so gloriously
transformed his life. This he tries to do, within the limits imposed
by his own expanded enlightenment, beyond that he cannot go. The
spirit of the Twice Born can be liberated at will. How often have
you seen your brother in a state of ecstasy which he cannot
describe? It is a state beginning in quiet bliss, flowing outward in
bright radiance from an inner light which can even illuminate the
material darkness about him.
He hears the music of the sacred
spheres and sees the throbbing pulsations of life heaving about him,
like waves upon the great seas. He becomes aware of an inflowing of
unspoken knowledge from a surrounding power. It does not come from
any one point, but appears to flow out of all things and to
penetrate all things. Material objects lose their density and become
visible within, they become as though compounded of ten thousand
whirling spheres of brightness. Colours are no longer dull and
restricted, they become infinite in depth and number. The spirit
becomes lost in adoration and wonder at the beauty revealed in
everything. The soul is aware of something glorious within all this
and knows it for the spirit outflowing from its source.
There is a complete unconsciousness of others, for the greater sight
transcends their material bodies. The spirits of men are seen in a
harmony of colours and their bodies as whirling masses of power. The
experiencing soul is lost in a sea of sensitivity and feeling. There
is a swelling surge of harmony, a sounding of glorious chords. It is
the sea that washes the shores of eternity lapping upon the nearer
strand.
It is an experience that no one can give to another or adequately
describe to him. It is the earned reward of those who have paid the
price. It is not he only reward, for throughout the life of one who
is Twice Born there is boundless feeling of wellbeing, sickness and
disease are unknown. There is an abiding love for all men, a sense
of brotherhood, and over all this the certain knowledge of the
immortality of the soul and its unity with the source. The
impressions received in moments of illumination are everlasting.
They fill the spirit with a glorified splendour. There are flashes
of inspired visions, and the future unrolls and can be read as the
past.
There is a form of joyous rapture experienced by those who
have risen from the Womb of Rebirth, and when it comes it can no
more be held back than the sun can be stayed in its rising. When the
body of your brother lay enwrapped within the Womb of Rebirth, his
spirit was carried out as on the wings of a serif and became lost in
a sphere beyond understanding. He knew not which way to go or what
to seek. Then, like a roll of distant thunder, there was a swelling
sound and there came an over dazzling light. It grew steadily more
brilliant until your brother saw a beautiful form of divine glory
arrayed in a splendour beyond all earthly bounds. The cumbersome
words of Earth cannot do justice to what your brother wishes to
describe. It is like trying to sew a silk garment with rope, or to
eat sweetmeats with a spade. Words are wholly inadequate symbols.
The vision of glory which had been granted passed away and your
brother found himself in the familiar sphere of the Spirit.
Once the mysterious border has been crossed it remains open ever
after and can be recrossed almost at will. You are told of these
things because your brother knows that the age of the Twice Born
draws to its close. Because of those who have devoted their lives to
the discovery of Truth, there is progress in the sphere of the
spirit. Nothing has been lost, nothing has been in vain; the Great
Gates are still closed, but they are no longer bolted. Now they will
open at a knock. The road is better marked and the way more clearly
indicated. They who lit the path have departed from Earth, but their
service has not ended. They serve still in another place. While life
on Earth moves forward, life in the sphere of the spirit does not
stand still.
CHAPTER THREE
THE BROTHERHOOD
Brothers in belief, there are two roads through life, the Road of
Good and the Road of Evil; they are not clearly defined roads and
often run side by side, and sometimes cross each other. Those who
travel without a guide or in darkness often mistake one road for the
other. We are those who have chosen to walk in light, a brotherhood
of men who travel the Road of Good together in companionship.
We are companions on the Great Path of the True Way, and when an
instructing brother speaks of the Great Path of the True Way he
speaks of a double path. The Companions of the Right Hand are those
who bear the burdens of earthly labour and advancement, for they
require strength, dexterity and steadiness. The Companions of the
Left Hand are those who bear the burdens of spiritual Labour and
enlightenment, things closer to the heart of man.
The brotherhood is
separated into two parts. There is an Earthly Brotherhood, and
though it may be small in numbers and have few possessions, this
will not always be so. There is also a Heavenly Brotherhood
comprising certain of the Twice Born and their followers who have
gone before. Their task is to clear the Netherworld of demons and
dark spirits and to prepare the way for those who follow. They are
like men who enter a new country and must clear it of wild beasts
and bring the land under control. It is the task of those above and
those below to build a road joining the two territories.
Your brother is not well equipped to instruct in earthly matters,
and therefore leaves it to another. The caravan moves quicker when
each man rides his own camel. In spiritual matters the most
important is that each man should awaken his own soul, a task far
more difficult than it may appear, but for which Earth is the
dedicated instrument.
The first objective to attain towards this end is self-taming. Just
as a horse has to be broken in before it can be of any service, so
has the mortal body of man to be tamed and brought under control. To
do this requires not only self-discipline, but also the ability to
rise above earthly conditions. No easy task, for the Earth is a hard
taskmaster and worthy adversary, and the mortal body of man an
unruly steed.
The duties, the obligations and the restraints by which those who
follow the Great Path of the True Way direct their steps are not
imposed capriciously. They are, in fact, no more than the bare
essentials covering the first steps. That is why everyone, before
admittance to the brotherhood, must accept every obligation and
decree covering our way of life. We do not claim to know the only
path, undoubtedly there are others, but we can claim to know the
best. The top of the mountain may be reached by many paths, but the
shortest one is always the hardest.
Supreme personal spiritual experience is undoubtedly the best source
for the foundation of true spiritual faith. It begins with the
development of latent spiritual powers through meditation. When you
are ready seek out a place of solitude, a place that is away from
the abodes of men, a place that is restful and quiet. Take a skin
and a little food and water, just sufficient for your needs. now
turn your thoughts inwards, harmonizing them with the rhythm of the
body. Let your spirit seek harmony with the spirit flowing about it,
so that the two become one. While at your meditations, neither
over-eat nor under-eat, for there must be harmony in your eating and
sleeping, in your relaxation and activity.
To become one who knows the joys of spiritual self-consciousness, to
have a Truth-revealing vision transcending anything knowable by the
senses, to rise above the bondage of pain and sorrow and to free the
spirit from the shackles of the body at will, is something
unattainable by spiritual meditation alone. Leading to this road is
the path of moral self-discipline and courage. The creed that
teaches spiritual things alone is as barren as one concerned only
with earthly things.
Your brother will not set forth in writing all things concerning the
awakening of the spirit, they would be of no use until the moral
foundation is laid. Such teachings must remain within the higher
circle of those who travel the Right Hand Path and not disclosed to
the uninitiated.
Let the prayer upon your admission be always fresh in your memories:
“Great Supreme Creator, Craftsman of Earth and of the multiple
spheres, grant that our brother may always remain loyal. That he
will, day by day, become ever more worthy and so dedicate and devote
his life to the service of mankind and the completion of its
purpose, that he shall forever walk in the light of Truth. Grant him
the crown of wisdom, the garments of knowledge, and let him be shod
with diligence. Grant him the strength to abide by our instruction
and discipline, so that with these and by his own efforts he may
awaken within him the true beauties of the spirit. Add your strength
to his weakness, that he may overcome all selfish motives and
unworthy desires. Help him in his self-taming, so that he may combat
the tendency inherent in men towards anger, greed and self-pity.
Strengthen him, that he may overthrow the evils of tale-bearing,
malice and jealousy. Grant him the ability to see with the eye of
understanding the defects and shortcomings of his brothers and to
emulate their goodness”.
CHAPTER FOUR
AMOS
Amos led the congregation and the people down from the mountains and
brought them into the land of Heth, a good land was opened up before
them. But Amos warned the people that they were like gems among
pebbles, therefore they were not to provoke the people who had
accepted them because of their skill.
Amos said, “We will build a city for ourselves and our children, and
within it a temple for those who follow the light of the Right Hand
Path. The temple will be like the pearl within an oyster, or the
heart within the body.”
The congregation with Amos were the Children of Light and the people
were Kenim who worshipped Yawileth, and Galbenim who worshipped
Eloah. But Amos taught the people to walk in the light of Truth and
said, “To each of you his own God, but above any God which can be
named is something that cannot be named and you shall know it as The
Supreme Spirit”.
The Galbenim built the city and the temple, while the Kenim set up
forges among the sons of Heth, and Amos went among them and saw that
all was well. The number of those who followed the Right Hand Path
and resided about the temple was one hundred and forty-four, and it
was never any more or any less. The number of those who laboured in
and about the city and dug the soil or attended to sheep and cattle,
was two thousand four hundred and thirty-five. The number of the
Kenim who followed Amos was eight hundred and twenty, and the number
of the Galbenim was three thousand and fifteen. These were the
numbers of those who could labour or bear arms.
As Amos went out among the sons of Heth he taught the way of light,
but they would not listen to bis words. They were like men walking a
circle in darkness, one behind the other, each having his hand on
the shoulder of the man in front. Therefore, when the king of the
sons of Heth came to buy what Kenim had made, Amos spoke to him
about the way of light, and sometimes the king listened. When they
came upon priests of the sons of Heth, Amos said,
“What manner of
men are these who prance about as though the ground were covered
with hot cinders? Before their altars they are like drunkards who go
about shouting and singing.
They leap like horses kicking at the wind”.
“What manner of spirit possess them, is it a spirit of light or a
spirit of darkness? We have seen this often among your people, it is
seen even among the princes and those who sit in judgement. Who can
understand the words that pour from their lips? This is not prophecy
but a drug-induced delusion. The people who listen to their words
are as misguided as those who resort to a tomb at night and sit
within a vault. If a spirit comes, it is a restless one whose words
have little value, for they are hollow, empty things”.
“Surely the Gods of such as these are demons in disguise, whose
powers are a myth, for they are unhearing and unseeing things. They
are unfeeling idols clothed in garments of delusion woven within the
tormented thoughts of men”.
The king said,
“I have seen your own
holy men as they sat beneath their trees and they, too, acted in a
manner strange to the eyes of ordinary men. Where is the
difference?”
Amos said,
“Our holy men sit in quietude, at peace
within themselves and if their mortal eyes are unseeing it is
because their spirits roam freely as birds. There is a test whereby
the difference can be made known, if you will agree to it”.
The king
gave the sign of consent.
Then a place of absolute darkness was prepared, a place to which
light could in no manner be admitted. Into it went two priests of
the sons of Heth and two of the Holy Ones from the congregation, the
king and two attendants, and Amos. Then, while the king and his
attendants watched, they saw the Holy Ones radiate a light that lit
up the whole darkness, so that the faces of all became visible. The
priests of the sons of Heth remained in darkness, for their spirits
were feeble things without power. This is the test of true
illumination.
Because of this the king looked even more favourably upon Amos and
his people, but he did not change his ways or seek to walk in the
light. For Amos refused to perform acts of magic before his court or
to foretell the future, and the king believed that magic could
accomplish all things. He believed there was an effortless way to
accomplish all things, if the secret were known, and could not
understand that the secret was safeguarded behind the doors of
austerity and self-discipline.
There was a city called Migdal within the kingdom and some of the
Kenim laboured there for the temple. When Amos came to the city it
was the festival of its great God and no man laboured, neither did
the Kenim, for it was the day when their fires rested. When Amos
sought the overseer of the Kenim, he could not find him and none of
his people would say where he had gone. But Amos found him at the
temple of Belath and awaited him in the courtyard outside, and was
filled with anger against the overseer.
When the overseer came out Amos chided him, but the overseer said,
“What have I done wrong? This place provides the food I eat, and is
its God not brother to mine? There was a decision to be made, should
a door of brass be cast one way or another? I sought an answer from
the God by means beyond the control of men”.
Amos said, “Might not even the God answer according to his own
pleasure? By what means was the decision sought?” The overseer said,
“By the ebin which only the God could control”. Amos said,
“You say
this is beyond the control of men, it may be so, but there are men
who are more than men, men even as this God whose smallness I will
prove. Come, let us put this matter to the test”.
Amos then sent an attendant in haste to bring back a Holy Man of the
congregation, who was with his caravan. When the Holy Man came, Amos
showed the overseer and the priests that such things were not beyond
the control of enlightened men, for the Holy Man could foretell the
issue, whatever was done with the ebin.
When Amos left the temple he took with him a woman named Kedshot,
whom he had won from the priests, and made her free. The degradation
of women to serve the temples was common in the land of Heth and
Amos raised his voice against it. When next in the presence of the
king, he said,
“The common feelings of all men condemn fornication,
and it is not allowed by your own laws. Yet if fornication is
sanctified to your God the priests permit it for their profit. Is it
not true that this wickedness is now so common in the temples of Heth that the woman who seeks to sell the services of her body in
the drinking booths can ask no more than a handful of meal? “
The
king said, “Such is the custom of Heth, which is of long standing
and cannot be changed”. Amos said, “Does the long standing of a
custom make it good?”
Amos said,
“If your desire is to walk in the light of Truth you must
choose between your form of worship and righteousness. You must
choose between your Gods of this land, and Truth. If a nation sow
the wind it must be prepared to reap the whirlwind, for no other
crop can spring from such seed, except through violation of laws
which are never inconsistent”.
The king said, “I have long been
patient with you, stranger with the unbridled tongue, but do not overvex me”. Amos held his peace, for he had disregarded his own
command to his people.
Yet the king heard the words of Amos and was kindly towards him.
When the king came to Lethsan to buy the wares of the Kenim, Amos
was there with them and the king said to him,
“The Gods of Heth are
many, added to those of other places the Gods must be beyond
counting. Why are there so many and which one is it most profitable
to serve? The priests say each has power in its own place, can this
be so among Gods?”
Amos said,
“There is only one God, but each man
views Him from a different standpoint and in his own light. It is
even so with lesser things of Earth, how much more so with the
greater things of Heaven! A mountain rises up from a plain and men
see it from all sides, and to each it appears different. Some see it
in daylight and others in moonlight, some at dusk and some at dawn,
it is never alike to all men. Even so do men view God in different
aspects. As no man knows the whole mountain but sees it only in
part, so men see God in part, and each man names the part he sees
according to what he sees and his understanding. Therefore, though
it seems that the Gods are numerous because of their names and
differences, each is no more than a part of the whole. There is, in
Truth, only one God, but what mortal man can see Him in wholeness?”
The king said, “If this be so, as well it may be, my eyesight is as
good as yours and I see just as far”. Amos said, “He who has ridden
around the mountain and climbed to its summit knows it best”.
The city built by the Children of Light grew in strength and the
people prospered under Amos and forgot their trials in Enshamis.
When Amos led them into the land of Heth he was still a young man,
but as the people became many and strong, so he became heavy in
years. The king who knew Amos died and the young king did not look
upon him with favour, for Amos did not forbid the Kenim to go out
into other nations.
CHAPTER FIVE
THE LAWS OF AMOS
These are the decrees of Amos, which he made so that justice should
prevail in the land of his people. That wickedness and wrongdoing
should be destroyed and the strong prevented from oppressing the
weak. Amos said,
“In the days that are yet to come and for all
future, let these decrees remain as a memorial”.
“When they are used in judgment, let the judges have wisdom and give
attention to the words that are written. Let every judge seek to
root out the wicked and evildoers from the land and promote the
welfare of the people. If he seek Truth and Justice among these
words, when they are before him, let him remember that no written
words can serve him fully. Truth and Justice are but dimly reflected
in the writings and laws of men and must be made clearer by the
light of righteousness within his own heart”.
‘The seats of judgment are to be raised above all small thoughts
and unworthy aims. If petty-minded men are permitted to argue over
the form of sentences or pick out particular words for attention,
then there will be no end to pettiness. Let no deduction or
interpretation be made from the decrees, which alters them”.
“Judge every man with the scales weighed in his favour. Do not be
hasty in rendering a decision, time will make it more just. Be
patient and calm in speech, whatever the provocation. The impatient
and bad-tempered judge is an unworthy judge who sits astride an
untamed horse.”
“The words of a judge must be shaped to fit the ears of his
listeners. They must be spoken at the right time and in the right
manner. His speech should not be too long or too short and every
word should be well chosen.”
“The frailties of men accompany judges to their seats, therefore no
judge shall sit in judgment alone. Where no punishment is provided
by decree, then the judges shall fix the punishment according to
past judgments. Where the words of a decree refer to men, then
women shall be treated in the same manner, unless it be otherwise
stated elsewhere. A child is one whose body has not reached manhood
or womanhood.”
“When two persons stand before a judge he should look upon them as
though both were likely to be in the wrong, and when they have gone,
as though both may have been in the right. The motives of men are
many and strange, and even though they bow to the judgment the
dispute between them may not be settled with justice.”
“When a rich man and a poor man come before a judge for a decision
between them, he cannot say in his heart, “How can I say the poor
man is wrong and the rich man is right and add to the misery of the
poor man?” Neither can he say in his heart, “How can I say the poor
man is right and the rich man is wrong, when the rich man is
powerful and I may be delivered into his hand?”
“If there is a dispute between men the judges shall not let one sit
and the other stand, or be patient with one and impatient with the
other. Both may sit or both may stand and unless one be afflicted
they shall at all times be equal before the judges.”
“A judge shall never say anything that will indicate a way to win
his favour or to obtain a favourable decision. If all men walked in
righteousness there would be no need of judges to punish the wicked.
Therefore, righteousness is more desirable than the laws of men. If
all men walked in the light of Truth there would be no need of
judges to settle disputes between them. But as men see only a pale
reflection of Truth, and that distorted by their own understanding
of it, there are times when two men in dispute each believes truly
that he is right. It is then that they come before the judges,
believing them able to see Truth more clearly. Let the judges be
able to see Truth better than any who come before them.”
“When a man comes before the judges, having his life or freedom at
stake or the freedom of one of his family, then the judges shall
first hear reasons why they should consider him innocent or in the
right, and not why they should consider him guilty or in the wrong.”
“Every man who comes before the pillars of the
judgment place to
bear witness shall be given a drink from the cup of marat and shall
swear the judgment oath before the shrine and fire. Every man shall
be allowed two months to discover those who speak for him, and if he
ask for another two months with reason it shall not be denied him”.
These are the decrees of Amos for the Children of Light:
“It is decreed that no man shall worship in the temple of any God or
stand in homage before any image or idol. No God shall be joined
with The Supreme Spirit in worship and the whole of his devotion and
worship shall be given to The Supreme Spirit.”
“It is decreed that no man shall swear an oath in the name of The
Supreme Spirit or in any other name which shall bind him to do
anything against the Scriptures of The Supreme Spirit. Neither shall
he swear an oath which will incline his loyalties and obligations
away from those who walk in their light. But as kings and governors
must be served, and loyalty and obligation together with duty are
our declared principles, to swear to serve them well or be faithful
to a trust or an obligation is not denied him. The only solemn oath
binding upon a man shall be that sworn on his immortal soul, for to
swear in the name of The Supreme Spirit is forbidden.”
“It is decreed that no man shall sell or barter spiritual knowledge
or knowledge of The Great Path of the True Way. He shall not come
into a sacred place or enter into prayer while drunk. Neither shall
he do these things when unwashed, unless he be a wayfarer or one who
has come from a distant place on the same day. If water is
unavailable to purify himself, clean sand is not to be despised.”
“It is decreed that all those who truly follow the Great Path of the
True Way and those who are of the Brotherhood of Men who serve The
Supreme Spirit shall be called the Children of Light. If any among
them shall turn from the Children of light through fear of others,
then he is unworthy and shall be cast out. He shall not be numbered
among them here or in Heaven, where there is a special place for the
Children of Light. But those who remain loyal to the Children of
Light, even though they have to flee to strange places, if they
continue to struggle there is no wrong in them.”
“It is decreed that if a man hear anything about an evil deed or
know something about it and fail to disclose the knowledge before a
judge or to the judge’s servant, he shall not go unpunished.”
“It is decreed that if any man will not bear witness to murder, to
theft or to adultery, he shall not go unpunished. If he bear false
witness according to his own understanding, before the flame and
shrine, if it be grievous he shall lose his tongue.”
“It is decreed that if any man make a false accusation of adultery
against his wife, without just cause and without her acting
indiscreetly, he shall receive seventy lashes.”
“If any man slay another he shall die, unless it be done in his own
defense or in defense of his house and family. He shall not die if
he who is slain be an adulterer or a seducer of one within the
household of the slayer.”
“It is decreed that if any man slay another in anger, during an
argument or dispute, and if the fight be fair and equal, then he
shall be exiled. But if any man slay another by lying in wait, or by
guile or by coming behind him, he shall not live.”
“It is decreed that revengers of blood shall be appointed by the
judges, and no man shall revenge another of his own blood unless he
be appointed by the judges.”
“It is decreed that if a man slay another without intent to slay,
without hatred or malice, then he shall not die for the slaying.”
“It is decreed that no man shall be put to death by the word of one
witness. If a wife cause the death of her husband through neglect or
malice, she shall not live. The law of blood shedding is: a freeman
for a freeman, a slave for a slave and a woman for a woman. The free
can be enslaved to repay a death.”
“It is decreed that when a man must die because of his deed, it
shall be by the sword, by drowning or by entombment. A woman shall
be smothered or entombed or drowned.”
“It is decreed that if a man strike his father or his mother or
curse them, he shall be seized and sold into slavery and the money
received shall be given to his father and his brothers. But if a man
stand between his father and his mother and his sister because he
fears for their lives, then he shall not be punished. In this case
the matter shall not fail to come before the judges, for if the
father be a man of such violence, how can he claim to be numbered
among the Children of Light?”
“It is decreed that if a man seize upon another to sell him into
captivity, he who seizes shall die. If a man smite another so that
he lose an eye or a tooth or suffer any wound, and this without
provocation, then he who committed the wrong shall make it good in
kind, according to the judgment.”
“It is decreed that if the beast of any man injure another man
within its own place of confinement, then there shall be no blame
upon the owner of the beast. But if the beast be outside its place
of confinement and loose, he who owns the beast shall make
restitution in kind. If the beast has been savage in times past and
this made known to he who owns it, and it strays beyond the limits
of its enclosure to harm a man, then who owns it shall make
restitution to threefold the damage. The beast shall also be slain,
but the carcass shall belong to he who owned the beast.”
“It is decreed that if a beast stray beyond the limits of its
confines and being savage to the knowledge of he who owns it, if it
cause the death of any man, then he who owns it shall die. But if it
be so decreed by the judges his life may be ransomed.”
“It is decreed that if a man shall cause death or injury to the
beast of any man and the beast be within its proper place of
confinement or upon the lands of its owner, then he who caused the
death or injury shall make restitution to threefold its value. If
the beast be outside the lands of he who owns it and be the cause of
no danger or damage, then he who caused its death shall make
restitution to its value. If it was seeming that the beast would be
the cause of danger or much damage, then providing there was no
choice but to slay it, there shall be no restitution, but the
carcass shall be returned to the owner.”
“It is decreed that if the beast of any man cause the death of
another man’s beast, then the beast causing death shall be sold and
the money received divided between the owners. But if the beast
causing the death was known to be savage and its owner informed,
then he shall make restitution in full to the value of the dead
beast, but the carcass shall be his.”
“It is decreed that if a man shall cause anything growing within the
pastures of another or upon his cultivated land, to be damaged by a
negligent or purposeful deed, then he shall make restitution twofold
its value. If a man find the beast of another man going astray, he
shall not pass it unheeded but shall provide for its return to its
owner. Having done this he shall not lose or go unrewarded, but if
the owner of the beast be a poor man, then bear with him.”
“It is decreed that if a man set off a fire he shall make
restitution for whatever it consumes to a like value in kind. But if
he be careless or seek to bide his deed, then he shall make
restitution twofold. If a thing be scorched or there is a blackening
of wood or stone, the amount to be paid for restitution shall be
agreed by the judges. If the fire was caused by accident, then he
who caused it shall make restitution to half the value of whatever
it consumes. The fire a man handles is like the arrow he shoots, for
the bowman is liable, no matter how far his arrow flies.”
“It is decreed that if a man steal any beast or fowl and dispose of
it so that it is not recovered, he shall make restitution of
threefold its value and shall not go unpunished. But if the beast or
fowl be recovered and restored, then he who stole it shall pay its
value and shall not go unpunished.”
“It is decreed that if a man give anything into the keeping of
another and that thing be of gold or other metal, or of some other
nature and it be stolen, then the thief, if caught, shall pay twice
its value and the money shall be divided equally between he who owns
it and he who held it. If the thing is not restored to its owner,
then the thief, if caught, shall pay its value threefold and one
part shall go to he who held it and two parts to he who owned it.
The thief shall not go unpunished.”
“It is decreed that if the thief is not found, then he who held the
thing in safekeeping shall be brought before the judges and
questioned about his integrity. If he took the thing for bis own use
he shall restore its value twofold and shall not go unpunished. If
he dealt with it carelessly, then he shall make restitution to its
value, but if he was not careless he shall not be called upon to do
so. But if he were paid for the safekeeping of the thing, then he
shall restore its value.”
“It is decreed that if a man give a beast or fowl into the
safekeeping of another and it be stolen or injured and die, then if
he in whose keeping it was be found careless in its keeping, he
shall make restitution of its value. If he be not found careless,
then he shall not be called upon to make restitution. If it be
stolen from him and he be paid for its safekeeping, then he shall
make restitution of its value. If the thief be found, he shall make
restitution to threefold its value and shall not go unpunished.”
“It is decreed that to take from a child, or from a man who is both
deaf and dumb, or from a blind man, or from an idiot, is stealing
and shall be punished as theft.”
“It is decreed that if a man steal the boat of another or push it
into the water so that it goes away or loose any rope that holds it,
so that it is lost, he shall restore its value twofold and shall not
go unpunished.” “It is decreed that if any man steal from a house on fire or from a
house abandoned by flood, he shall become enslaved to the owner.”
“It is decreed that if a man steal from a temple or holy place he
shall be whipped and sold into slavery and his price given to the
temple or holy place.”
“It is decreed that for all manner of disputes regarding beast or
anything without life, whether it be lost or not, where different
men make claim to own it the dispute shall be decided by the judges.
He whom the judges decide to be wrong shall pay its value to he who
was the true owner. If he who is wrong has been malicious or
avaricious, then he shall not go unpunished.”
“It is decreed that if a man borrow a beast or anything without
life, the owner not being with it, and it be lost or damaged or
injured or die, then he who borrowed it shall make good its value.
If a man find a thing that was lost and keep it, or he withhold from
another that which is rightly his, then he shall restore it and make
payment of its value in kind. If he swear falsely about these
things, then he shall make restitution to twofold its value. If the
thing be not restored he shall also restore its value.”
“It is decreed that if a man make a false report regarding another
so that he be harmed in substance, then he who did the harming shall
make restitution of twofold the amount of damage done, according to
the decision of the judges. If he knew not that the report was
false, then the judges shall judge him according to his dealings in
the matter. If it be not done carelessly and with bad intent, then
he shall make a smaller payment and shall go to the man he wronged
and make amends with words. It is an obligation on every man hearing
a report to discover its truth before letting go. Carelessness with
words should not go unpunished.”
“It is decreed that if any man bear false witness against another
and he be not otherwise punished, or to a lesser extent, then he
shall bear upon himself the punishment he would have brought down
upon the other and shall also make payment as the judges decree.”
“It is decreed that if a man take a bribe to turn a
judgment, then
he and the man who gave it shall make restitution twofold to he who
was wronged, and neither shall go unpunished.”
“ It is decreed that no man who sits in
judgment in any place shall
take a gift or benefit from any man because of his position. If any
man seeking a decision shall give a gift or benefit to another to
speak words in his favour, or shall forbear to do anything that
words may be turned, he shall not go unpunished.”
“It is decreed that if a man take advantage of the ignorance of
another, or gain advantage from his dealings with an idiot, he shall
make threefold restitution. If a man deceive another to his loss, or
take anything from him by violence or threats, he shall make
threefold restitution.”
“It is decreed that if a man declare a falsehood to the loss of
another, the loss shall be made good in kind twice its value. If a
man deceive another who has entrusted him with goods, he shall make
twofold restitution. If a man deliver a beast or thing without life,
making payment to another who deals with them, if the one who deals
with them or carries them loses them or fails to deliver, he shall
make restitution of their value. If he be found careless in his
dealings by the judges he shall make restitution to twice their
value, but if he be waylaid or struck by powers above man he shall
not make payment.”
“It is decreed that if a scribe alter a record or
make a false writing he shall be punished with thirty lashes. If a
man suffer loss because of the scribe, the loss shall be made good
by twice its value. He who does wrong or causes any loss, be it done
with purpose or without purpose, and seeks to blame another who is
innocent, shall bear the guilt of his deed. He shall not go
unpunished for his deceit and shall make payment to the man he
sought to blame.”
“It is decreed that if a man have a maidservant or slave and he seek
to give her to his son in marriage, he shall deal with her as a
daughter. If he smite a manservant or a maidservant so that they
lose blood or cannot move about, or if they suffer pain for three
days, he shall be brought before the judges and they shall decide
upon his dealings and bring justice to the one injured. It shall be
within the power of the judges to free a slave from an unworthy
master and place him with another, either as a slave or a freeman.”
“It is decreed that if a master die and all those of his blood be
absent, his servant or slave shall send for them without delay. If
the servant or slave steal anything with life or without life from
the dead man, he shall be whipped. If a servant, he shall be made a
slave. If one who is of the same blood as the dead man steal, he
shall be denied his inheritance. If he would not have inherited, he
shall make twofold restitution.”
“It is decreed that a master shall not allow his servant or slave to
remain unmarried if they wish to marry. No man or woman having a
child above the age of marriage should forbid a marriage because of
their selfishness. It is their duty to see that their child is not
left without children. The duty of a child towards father and mother
is great, but the duty to marry is greater. If a man have a slave
who serves him loyally and is righteous, he should set him free to
serve as a servant. Slave-keeping is not forbidden, but it is not
goodness, the truly righteous man sustains the poor by finding work
for their hands. When a land is divided into large portions worked
by lowly men and slaves, it is in a weak condition and ripe for the
plucking. It is a truth that if men are so oppressed with toil and
servitude they lose the manliness which would make them rise against
their oppressors, they will not have the stomach to withstand those
who invade the land. But whether the land remains at peace or is
invaded, it is no longer great.”
“It is decreed mat the inheritance of a man shall not go to his sons
alone, for the daughters are not to be denied their portion. If he
have no sons it shall pass to his wives and daughters. If he have no
wife or daughter it shall pass to his brothers. If he have no
brother it shall pass to his sisters. If he have no sister it shall
pass to his father’s brothers. If his father have no brother it
shall pass to the next nearest to him in blood, but not to a woman.”
“It is decreed that if a son or daughter be adopted, they shall be
as though they were of the same blood as he who adopted them. Those
who stand together in blood shall not be given their portion by
decree, for a man knows those of his own blood best. The portions a
man declares shall be fair, when all his reasons are known. If it be
not thought fair the judges can decide, but they must remember that
a man knows those of his blood best.”
“It is decreed that no woman having an inheritance shall marry a man
who is not of the Children of light. If she does so her possessions
shall not go with her. A man should not forget the portion for his
father and mother.”
“It is decreed that if a man who bears witness to an inheritance and
its portion shall change it so that a man suffer a loss, then he
shall make twofold retribution and not go unpunished. If he who
bears witness fear that he who died made an error and seek to adjust
it, there shall be no blame if he deal justly.”
“It is decreed that if a man die without wife or children his
inheritance shall go to his mother and father, and when they die to
his brothers and sisters. If he have wives but no children the
inheritance shall be theirs, but if one die while his mother and
father live, her portion shall go to them.”
“It is decreed that no man shall be denied his portion, if he be
worthy and righteous and not an idiot. A man’s inheritance should be
shared out fairly among all of his blood.”
“It is decreed that if a wife die and have an inheritance, the
portion of her husband shall be half and the other half she may
leave to her mother or father, or to her brothers and sisters. But
if she have children, then the other half shall be theirs.”
“It is decreed that if a man die and have wife or children, they
shall not be put out of their habitation. If a wife remarry and
there are others of her husband’s blood within the habitation who
are not children, she shall not remain there.”
“It is decreed that the wives of a man who has died shall be able to
marry again after one year and no restraint shall be placed upon
them against remarriage.”
“It is decreed that no man shall cause his daughter or any other
woman to remain a maiden under oath. Strife between the children of
the same father to the same mother is worse than bloodshed. These
things are the obligations of a father towards his son: to teach him
a craft, to teach him to defend himself and his wife and children,
to teach him the wisdom of the Sacred Books and to find him a wife.
These things are the obligations of a mother towards her daughter:
to teach her housewifery and the care of children, to teach her the
craft of clothes and to teach her the womanly virtues according to
the Sacred Books. A father should never show favour to one son over
another. A child should be instructed in the Sacred Books as soon as
it is able to talk. A wife should be able to prepare flour and bake
bread, cook food and brew, gather herbs, wash and mend clothes, keep
her dwelling neat and clean. She should be able to make all things
and do all things for the comfort of her husband; to suckle his
children and work in linen, wool, pottery, basketry and tapestry. If
she brought one maidservant from her father’s house, she should give
her the least important of the tasks, but no matter how many
maidservants accompanied her, she should never neglect the care and
upbringing of her children or be idle. There is an excuse for the
poor woman whose children are willful and unruly, but none for the
rich woman who has all the time to devote to them. They and her
husband are her greatest obligations and her most important concern.
The husband who permits his wife to be slothful or idle inclines her
towards unfaithfulness. A man without a wife may not be man, but one
with an unchaste wife certainly is not.”
“It is decreed that a man shall not pledge his daughter in marriage
while she is still young, but must wait until she can say “yes” or
“no” to his choice. A worthless wife or one who is lewd, a wife who
displays herself immodestly before other men, or is over wasteful,
may be enslaved within her own household but cannot be sold outside
of it. A woman may become an inferior wife by decision of the
judges. It is intended that the pledges of marriage shall be
maintained until death.”
“It is decreed that if a man divorce his wife and she be of good
character, he shall leave their dwelling or provide another suitable
for her until she marry again. A man and wife shall not be intruded
upon and their enjoyment of each other shall be unhampered by any
other. Every child is entitled to proper shelter, bed, food,
upbringing and instruction. If a child have no father or mother or
if they be proven worthless, the judges shall appoint a guardian for
it. If an unmarried woman become with child it shall be a disgrace
upon her father who shall be called before the judges. If she have
no father, then her mother or her brothers or the person having care
of her. If a wife fear she cannot be trusted or remain faithful to
her pledges she shall not deceive her husband but declare herself
truly, and he shall decide whether to put her away or not. If he
decide to keep her and she prove unworthy, her punishment shall be
lessened. The punishment of an unfaithful wife is not only for the
deed but for the deception.”
“It is decreed that if a man divorce his wife they shall not come
together again without renewing the pledges of marriage after they
have the permission of the judges. If it be done it shall not go
unpunished.”
“It is decreed that if a wife fear for herself at the hands of her
husband, she may come before the judges who will decide for her
welfare. Men should treat their wives with kindness and generosity.
It is the duty of a wife to be faithful to her husband; to be modest
in the presence of others and to be prudent during her husband’s
absence. A wife must not only be faithful, but she must give her
husband no cause to suspect her of unfaithfulness. A wife must never
forget that marriage was ordained for the benefit and protection of
women. Therefore, they have the greater obligation in upholding it.
Wanton women for fornicators and good women for good men, that is the
rule! Thus shall the cause of mankind be advanced and calamity kept
from the heart. The upright man who walks in the paths of duty and
obligation is allowed all things wholesome and healthful. He should
marry only a chaste woman who would be a good mother to his
children. He should live with her in cleanliness of heart and meet
her without the stain of fornication. It is not wholly good to
maintain a concubine, but an unchaste woman may be kept as one or
lain with if a slave.”
“It is decreed that before a man and woman come to judges seeking a
divorcement, there shall have been a meeting between those of their
blood. There shall be a man or woman of the wife’s blood and a man
or woman of the husband’s blood who, between them, shall choose
another not of their blood to deliberate with them. Let them try to
reach agreement and strive to heal the breach with goodwill, and if
anyone have a grievance it should not be hidden.”
“It is decreed
that before every marriage there shall be an announcement of
betrothals in a public place. If anyone have something to say
regarding the man or the woman, not in their favour, he shall
declare it to the nearest of their blood and one who witnesses. If
any man hide within his breast something that should be declared, or
speak about it after the marriage, he shall not go unpunished.”
“It is decreed that if a man say a betrothed woman is unchaste,
without proper cause, he shall be punished with twenty lashes and if
a woman do so she shall be punished with twenty stripes. If a man
know a betrothed woman to be unchaste and fail to make it known, he
shall be punished with forty lashes and shall make repayment as the
judges decide. If a woman, she shall receive thirty stripes. No
marriage shall take place until seven weeks after the betrothal. No
fornication shall be committed during this time, for it would be a
betrayal of marriage, and your soul bears witness to your deeds.”
“It is decreed that when a man takes to himself a wife and is newly
married he shall not be called upon to take up weapons or to serve
away from home for one year. If he is taken away he must not be
separated from his wife. A marriage is the union of flesh with flesh
and of spirit reaching out to spirit. It shall be witnessed by two
men and two women and declared before men by the man giving the
woman a ring and bangle and piece of silver, and by her giving him a
lock of hair and piece of woven cloth.”
“It is decreed that all women who are not unchaste are women
reserved for marriage. They shall, be sought as wives with
respectful conduct and without fornication or deceit. A man who
seduces them shall not go unpunished. It is not wrong for a man to
make a proposal of marriage to a woman within the time she is denied
to him. A promise of marriage shall not be made in secret, for such
promises often cover shame and deceit.”
"It is decreed that if a man accuse his wife of adultery or lewdness
and there be no other witness, he shall swear three times on his
immortal soul that he speaks the truth. His words shall be accepted,
for if he swear a falsehood he has condemned himself and his soul to
most grievous punishment. But if the wife likewise swear three times
that the words sworn to by the man were false, then it shall not
before the judges to decide which has damned their soul. Both shall
go their own ways and if one speak to the other, that one shall not
go unpunished; if they both speak, then both shall be punished. The
judges shall receive reports on both and if one of them cease to
live a righteous life, that one shall be cast out.”
“It is decreed that if a man divorce a woman who has done no
grievous wrong, he shall support her in the household of one of her
blood for six months. If the woman be with child and she hide it
from the father, she shall not go unpunished, neither shall they
with whom she dwells. If she be found with child, then she shall be
treated with kindness and consideration and those of the child’s
blood may seek a reconciliation between its mother and father. Both
must act fairly towards the other and in righteousness and good
faith.”
“It is decreed that a wife may be divorced once and taken back, but
if she be divorced again she shall not be taken back. The things a
man gives his wife during marriage remain hers. A woman who is
divorced without committing any grievous wrong is to be treated
kindly and generously by her husband. A woman shall not be divorced
while carrying a child or suckling it, unless it be the child of
adultery. If a man be called to high office with the Elect of the
Children of Light and his wife prefer earthly things to spiritual
things, then they may agree to a just and fair divorce. Such a woman
would be a burden, for her soul is heavy with darkness.”
“It is decreed that if a man divorce his wife he shall put no
restraint upon her. She shall not take his heir with her and if
children go with her their father shall sustain and clothe them. A
true man makes fair provision.”
“It is decreed that if a man seduce a maiden he shall endow her with
goods as though she were his wife and bestow upon her all the
benefits due to a wife. He shall do this even though her father keep
her from him.”
“It is decreed that if a man permit his wife to become a whore, he
shall be declared unworthy of a wife and shall not marry. His wife
shall be removed from him so that he has none, and he shall not go
unpunished. If a man permit his daughter to become a whore he shall
die.”
“It is decreed that as a woman may be taken in lust with her
consent, if it be done, both man and woman shall bear the guilt
alike and neither be more deserving of punishment than the other.
But if the woman be a child or an idiot, or if she be protected by
the judges, it shall be as though she were ravished without consent.
When a woman is taken with force it shall be punished with death. If
the deed be done in the fields or in places where women go away from
the abodes of men, or in a forest or uncultivated place, or where no
man can hear her cry, then it shall be taken by the judges that the
deed was done without her consent, unless otherwise proven. But the
woman shall explain her presence alone. If it be done in the city,
among habitations, and the woman made no call for help and did not
cry out, it shall be taken that she consented, unless threatened
with death or mutilation by a weapon. Where there has been no
struggle, then it was with her consent, for no man can take a woman
without her consent while she is conscious.”
“It is decreed that if a man commit adultery with his son’s wife or
his wife’s mother, both shall die by stoning. If a married women
commit adultery, both she and the man with whom she committed it
shall die. A husband may ransom his wife, but if he does he shall be
cast out from the people, lest he bring corruption upon them. When a
woman is ransomed from adultery he who shared the blame with her
shall not die, but he shall not go unpunished. When judging the
adulterer or adulteress, the whore and the whoremonger, deal with
them strictly and without compassion, for they are the enemies of
love. They place man back among the beasts. A fornicator should not
marry a chaste woman, but it is not forbidden. A whore shall not
marry among the Children of Light. The sins of whoredom are not
unforgivable and those who truly show repentance over many years may
be accepted back into the Children of Light. A woman who becomes a
whore to feed a starving child has committed no great wrong. The
wrongdoing is by the people.”
“It is decreed that no man shall permit a female slave to engage in
fornication and it is his duty to keep her modest and free from
lewdness. If, after marriage, slaves commit adultery they shall not
be punished to the extent of a free person, for they have been
brought up as slaves. Though the punishment of a slave be less, the
master may be punished, if the slave warranted punishment because of
his neglect.”
“It is decreed that a man shall not be guilty of adultery except
with a married woman. If a woman have three witnesses against her
for whoring, or she does not deny it, she shall be shut up in a
place alone where no man can come at her. There, she shall weave or
work for her sustenance, and if any man come to lie with her he
shall be punished. If the judges decree and a man be found willing
to take her, with obligations for her keeping, she may be enslaved
to him. If a whore run away from her place of confinement or from
her master she shall die.”
“It is decreed that if a man have a woman slave who is a maiden and
the intended wife of a freeman, he shall not lie with her. If a man
he with a slave and she become with child, he shall not sell her or
cease to support her. If a woman slave marry the slave of another
master, then her master shall not restrain her unduly, but he shall
meet with the master of her husband and make an arrangement
concerning her that is fair and just.”
“It is decreed that the punishment for whoring shall not be upward
of two years. If a woman be accused of fornication and three bear
witness against her, she shall be treated as a whore. A maiden
cannot be guilty of whoring after a man.”
“It is decreed that the Children of Light shall not deny their
servants or their slaves, or the ignorant among them, their own
Gods, for they have no better light. Even as the dim glow of an
ember comforts a child in darkness, so are they comforted. The Gods
Teloth, Yole, Yahwelwa, Bel, Behalim, Elim and all the lesser Gods
of light may have a shrine in the city and lands about it, to serve
those who would be blinded by a greater light. Better the glow from
rotted wood than no light at all. Negil, Mudu, Hani, Neflim and the
Gods of darkness shall not be permitted to the servants and to the
slaves and to the ignorant. But the stranger shall not be denied his
God, for the Children of Light are not denied their light and dwell
in peace among strangers.”
“It is decreed that if the tongue of the stranger stray to lewdness
in the presence of women, or he cast lustful looks upon them, he
shall be spoken to and warned. If the warning is not heeded he shall
be dismissed, so that the women be established in their goodness and
be honoured among men. In the lands of strangers, where deceit is
considered a virtue and vanity a womanly charm, there is no
understanding of women who are modest and restrained. Men treat
women as they find them, therefore women should restrain their
glances and conduct themselves with modesty. They should not display
too much of their body or reveal clothes that are not overgarments.
They should not reveal the nakedness of their bosoms. It shall not
be wrong for woman to uncover before woman, or before young children
who’will grow to be men but have not reached the age of full
talking.”
“It is decreed that if a wife be guilty of lewdness before the eyes
of men, or provoke them to lust after her, she shall not go
unpunished by her husband and can lose her rights of inheritance. If
any man complain to the judges about her, then her husband shall be
called before them to account for her. If a maiden be proven guilty
of lewdness, then her father or guardian shall not go unpunished. If
a man be so punished he shall not revenge himself on the maiden or
her mother, for the fault is not theirs alone and he must bear his
burden manfully. It is well to deal with daughters kindly, so that
they are not estranged. In chastising a daughter for something bad
in her, do not overlook the good. If the wife of a man in high
position be guilty of any lewdness or other unwomanly thing, her
punishment shall be doubled, for she is unworthy of her trust.”
“It is decreed that if a man slander a woman who is virtuous but
careless, he shall come before judges to swear to the truth of his
words. If he decline or his words be proven against him he shall not
go unpunished. If the man swear, then the woman shall be brought
before the judges to swear likewise that his words are false, and if
she decline, his words are established. If both swear they shall go
out, but one soul has condemned itself to punishment.”
“It is decreed that when a woman is beyond the age of childbearing
it shall not
be wrong if she lay aside the garments of modesty, providing she
does not
degrade modesty or is unmarried. It shall not be done so that she
display some
part of her body not commonly displayed by women. Neither shall she
display any
ugliness, but what she does shall be done with decorum and grace. No
woman slave
shall be made to do any deed of lewdness and her modesty shall be
honoured. If
she be forced into lewdness or immodesty she shall bear no sin, but
he who
forced her shall not go unpunished. Lewd talk about women and foul
speech shall
not go unpunished,”
“It is decreed that the fat of a beast that has died of itself or
been torn by another beast may be used, providing it is not eaten or
placed upon the body in any way. The flesh may be given to another
beast to eat, but if any part of it is given to a man without him
knowing its nature, he who gave it shall not go unpunished. No man
shall eat the flesh of the falcon, the vulture, the eagle, the crow,
the raven, the ibis, the owl, the hawk, the pelican, or of any bird
that wades in water and has legs greater than the height of its
body. These creeping things shall not be eaten: the beetle, the
snail, the ant, the slug, the grasshopper, all manner of lice and
all creeping things less in size than a finger joint, and everything
that creeps upon the ground without legs. The cat, the dog, the
mouse, the mole, the weasel and the fox shall not be eaten. To
overeat is as harmful as to starve. To fast is not an empty deed and
is healthful for both spirit and body.
It teaches discipline and self-control as well as moderation and
frugality. Food is never lacking in the places where justice holds
sway. Consume food slowly and with content, for a restless stomach
robs it of taste and goodness. The man who overeats is worse than
the beast who knows no better. If any man pollute food he shall not
go unpunished.”
“It is decreed that if a man steal water from the land of another or
cause it to run away, or if he pollute it, he shall not go
unpunished. If there be loss, then he shall make threefold
restitution. Water in which there is a carcass shall not be used to
drink. A man may drink wine or beer, or anything that is not
unwholesome, providing he maintains his self-control and decency,
but no longer. He who causes strife or harm to another because of
something he has put into his mouth, shall not go unpunished. Wine
taken in moderation is not wrong, unless it lead the hand to
wickedness. No fruit-bearing tree shall be cut down until it ceases
to bear or dies.”
“It is decreed that no man shall leave a dead beast undealt with. If
he do so he shall not go unpunished, for if it be not eaten or used
it must be buried. If a man place anything that is foul into a
storage pit or among stored corn, he shall make fourfold restitution
and shall not go unpunished.”
“It is decreed that no man shall cut his flesh for adornment or make
any mark upon it which cannot be removed, though the ears of men and
women may be pierced.
Circumcision such as the strangers practice is mutilation and is
forbidden.”
“It is decreed that no man shall engage in usury, but shall deal
with men in fairness and moderation. Payments and punishments shall
be decided by the judges.”
“It is decreed that no man shall associate with another who deals
with spells or calls up the spirits of the dead. If he do he shall
not go unpunished and those who practice sorcery shall be cast out.”
“It is decreed that no man shall cheat in weight or measure and he
who does shall make threefold restitution and not go unpunished. No
man shall take advantage of the misfortune of another of his own
blood and shall not buy their house, their field, their beast or
anything without life, to his own advantage. No man should lend upon
interest to another of his own blood or to a friend, for this is the
cause of much strife.”
“It is decreed that if a man remove a beast or a fowl or a fish from
a trap laid by another, he is stealing. If a man is collecting fruit
from the top of a tree, it is stealing to take whatever falls to the
ground. If a man borrow something and sell it, or sell something in
his keeping belonging to another, it is stealing. If a man do any of
these things he shall make restitution as though he had stolen
them.”
“It is decreed that if a man receive a beast or anything with life
or without life from another, and the two do not have proper
witnesses, whether it be sold or given the two shall be punished by
making payment as the judges decide.”
“It is decreed that no man shall cut the living flesh from any beast
or remove a limb or a piece of hide while it lives, and if he do he
shall not go unpunished. The law of life demands that men eat and
that beasts be slain for food, but this should be done with least
pain and distress to the beasts. No beast shall be tormented for the
enjoyment of its suffering and shall not be confined with cruelty,
and he who does so shall not go unpunished. A beast and its young
shall not be slain within sight of each other, or where the blood of
the other can be smelled. No man should partake of food or drink
while beasts in his charge go unprovided and uncared for.”
“It is decreed that if a man carry weapons without the right to do
so, he shall be punished with thirty lashes. If another be hurt so
that blood is drawn unjustly, restitution shall be made for any loss
and payment made according to the decree of the judges. If a man who
carries weapons without the right wound another grievously, he shall
die. It is cowardly to slay a man who has cast down his weapons in
surrender, or to slay a woman or child. It is cowardly to torture a
man who is helpless in your power or a bound captive. These things
are unworthy. Treat a captive with firmness and dignity. When in
battle raise your thoughts above the spoil, look to Heaven for your
reward. Peace is the proper course for all men to follow, but peace
at any price is a delusion. Therefore, it may better become a man of
peace to stir up the righteous to fight. Ten courageous men can
overcome a hundred of lesser courage. Prepare for war with peace in
your heart and with regret, but for the sake of the cause press
forward resolutely. Be at peace within yourself through gain or
loss, advance or retreat, victory or defeat. The peaceful man who
shouts “Peace at any price” does not prevent war, he only steps
aside to put another to the fore who will slay and be slain. That is
contemptible and worse than if he had stood his own ground.”
“It is decreed that if a man or woman be bound to another for a debt
or payment, they shall be fed, clothed and given shelter. They shall
not be beaten or ill-treated, but they should do a full day’s work.
Their welfare shall be in the hands of the judges.”
“It is decreed that if two men enter upon the same wrongdoing
together, or one against the other, both shall be punished alike,
except if one be in the power of the other.”
“It is decreed that games of chance played for money shall be
undertaken only in moderation and if any man cheat or weigh the game
unfairly, he shall not go unpunished.”
“It is decreed that no man or woman who is of the Children of Light
shall marry another who is not, for this is wrong against their
children, whose upbringing is divided against itself. A slavewoman
who believes as her master is better for a mate than a freewoman who
does not, even though the freewoman be more pleasing. No man shall
permit his maiden daughter to marry a man who is not of the Children
of Light. A slave who is righteous and walks in the light would be
better, even though he be unacceptable to her father.”
“It is decreed that if a man withhold from an orphan or anyone under
his care that which is theirs, if it be done without cause or to his
benefit, he shall not go unpunished and shall also make twofold
restitution. He shall not deny them the right to marry, or if it be
a man the right to his own livelihood. If a man or woman of a man’s
own blood be in his care because they are an idiot or incapable,
then let not the burden of responsibility for their own sustenance
fall upon them. Keep them from harm, support them with food and
maintain them in clothes. The man who is rich and powerful has a
duty to protect the destitute and ailing woman from the afflictions
of life and from the wiles of men.”
“It is decreed that if any man or woman die, those who stand next to
them in blood shall be responsible for the disposal of the body.
Those who declare the need to burn the body so that the departed one
may use its essence in Heaven, indulge in a vain superstition.”
“It is decreed that if anyone seek refuge within the sanctuary of
the temple, it shall not be denied them, and if any violate this
sanctuary they shall not go unpunished. The labours of the sanctuary
shall not be diminished.”
“It is decreed that the measure within a logua shall be equal to the
water which can be contained in twelve blown eggs of the groundfowl.
The weight of a silver shekel shall be the same as barleycorns
numbered according to the days in the year. The length of a cubit
shall be the same as forty-eight barleycorns. From these all things
shall be weighed and measured.”
“It is decreed that a man may be declared to be outside the law, and
then though he be liable to all restrictions and penalties which it
imposes, he can enjoy none of it benefits or its protection. If a
man be declared fully beyond the law, no other shall speak to him or
supply him with food or clothing or shelter. If a man be declared an
outlaw, he is to be slain on sight. If exiled, he is to be slain if
he return from his place of exile.”
“It is decreed that no man shall make an image of any God or make
anything in the likeness of a God, but all objects of beauty can be
made. Anything can be made bearing the likeness or image of a man,
woman or beast, providing it be done with good taste and without
obscenity.”
“It is decreed that if anyone attempt to slay another with poison,
they shall die, even though they have not succeeded. All who aid
them in the deed or seek to hide it shall also die.”
“It is decreed that if anyone take their own life they shall not be
buried or burnt for three days.”
“It is decreed that if a man die having no son or daughter, and no
one of his own blood who can claim, a son or daughter born to his
wife after remarriage may become his heir.”
“Justice and Truth are not in the safekeeping of the judges. They
are, to those who sit in judgment, as the sun is to other men.
Every man who comes before the judges should walk in the light of
Truth and Justice, even though he speak against himself or against
those of his own blood. The man who bears witness should take no
heed whether he be on the side of the rich or the poor. He should
not follow the road of passion or the paths of his own prejudices,
lest he lose the guiding light of Truth. The man who hides within
himself knowledge that would assist the cause of Justice and Truth
inflicts an injustice upon his own soul.”
“A too hasty decision by the judges often inclines towards
injustice. Therefore, when the judges have heard all and every word
has been spoken by those who have a right to speak, the judges shall
retire and pray. Each should say, within his heart, “I will consider
my words carefully before I speak and they will be uttered in the
purity of Truth, untainted by falsity or hypocrisy. I will not be
harsh in my judgment and it will be bent towards a benefit rather
than a loss. My speech will be directed towards the safeguarding of
others and be without any taint of malice or evil intent.”
CHAPTER SIX
THE TALE OF HIRAM
Thute, the son of Pelath, a freeman of Elanmora in the land of the
Hethim, wrote these things in the harvest years of his life, when
his heart was filled with wisdom and understanding. He who reads
them with the eyes alone will derive little benefit, but he who
receives them with an enlightened and uplifted heart will find a
response within the depths of his own spirit.
While Hiram Uribas, son of Hashem, was still a beardless youth
taking his pleasure among the riches and splendour of his father’s
house, a wise man came from a faraway land. He came, not as a great
man riding with a rich caravan but weary-footed, begging water and
food. These were not denied him and while he sat in the shade,
slaking his thirst and satisfying his hunger, Hiram, the youth, came
up to him with courteous greetings. The wise man was pleased and
poured out words like jewels, so that the young man became filled
with the desire for wisdom and Truth, swearing that from that day
forward he would devote his life to the search for them.
After the departure of the wise man, Hiram became restless under his
father’s roof and it was not long before he set off with a bundle of
food and skin of water for Uraslim. Arriving there he slept in the
house of Gabel, a servant at the temple of the Winged God of Fire,
and from thence he journeyed towards Bethshemis, which lies past
Tirgalud, on the road to Egypt. Hiram was a young man of his people,
tall of stature, with a darting bright-eyed glance. His long,
band-bound hair hung low on bis shoulders and his stride was wide
and firm.
He came upon Bethshemis close to nightfall, when it was not good to
enter the city, and therefore as darkness closed about him he
prepared to lay himself down beneath the wall of a vineyard. This
was owned by a wealthy widow who, seeing the young man preparing for
the night, sent men out to bring him into her guest house. The widow
was neither old nor unbeautiful and when she saw the comeliness of
the young man her heart was gladdened and she bade him welcome.
Hiram did not depart with the light of the morning and it came to
pass that the widow offered him a high place on her estates. Hiram
accepted, for he was young and pleased with the honour, but in the
course of time the widow had become enamoured with him and sought to
make him her husband. Hiram sought a way of release from this, for
he had already heard tales of the woman’s many lovers.
The widow said to Hiram,
“Be my husband, for the one I had has died
and left no heir. Let us enjoy the fruits of your manhood, for I
desire the seed of your body, so that I may have a splendid son. I
will give you robes of blue and red and they will be laced with
chains of gold. You shall ride in a high chariot wheeled with brass
and poled with copper. Many servants will attend you and wise men
brought from East and West will fill your heart with wisdom. You
shall lack nothing that satisfies your desires.”
Hiram was not at ease with himself, for he was young and lacked the
wisdom to deal with the situation. He answered the widow hastily in
these words,
“You are a woman of beauty and this alone makes you a
desirable treasure to men, but how would it fare with me in
marriage? It is said that you have had many lovers and they find you
as a smouldering fire in a cold room, a door restraining neither
wind nor sand, a roof that falls in upon the sleeper beneath it, a
boat that drowns the boatman, the crust over a quicksand, water that
does not slake the thirst and food that sits heavily on the stomach.
Which man did you ever love with constancy, so that he walked in the
joy of contentment? Which man could ever call you his?”
The words from his mouth stung the widow like hornets and she flew
into a rage after the manner of women. She called upon her servants
and they beat Hiram with sticks and drove him off her estate. With a
little more wisdom in his heart, he continued on his way into Egypt
and after many days he arrived at the city of On.
Hiram dwelt among the Southern Men on the outskirts of the city, for
many had been captured during the wars and made slaves. When
lustfully aroused the bodies of these men exude a sweet odour like
honey, which no man can detect and it makes all women succumb to
them. This is the manner in which the nation of Egypt sacrificed its
purity. In the days when Hiram came to Egypt the Pharaoh Athmos
ruled.
In those days Egypt was at war with the Abramites, for their great
red-headed king had committed adultery with the wife of a prince of
Paran. The remorseful king reaped as he had sown, for his favourite
daughter was ravished by her own brother and his wives were
humiliated and ravished before the eyes of all men. Because of the
war, there was much coming and going of strangers in the city of On
and Hiram went unnoticed.
Hiram dwelt long in Egypt and absorbed its wisdom, but the thing
which delighted his heart the most was the tale of its long-hidden
treasures. He learnt about the nest-burning bird whose wondrous
many-hued egg granted men the gift of eternal life. He heard about
the serpent pearls and the bright jewels which glowed with the light
of the sun even on the darkest night. All these things he desired to
possess for himself.
The nesting place of the nest-burning bird was among the Mothbenim,
eastward of Egypt, but among the treasures of Egypt was one of its
eggs. The egg, the pearls and the jewels were safeguarded in a dark
cave upon an island called Inmishpet, which was set in the middle of
a lake called Sidana. In the waters of the lake were fearsome
watermonsters, part beast, part fish. On the shores of the lake
dwelt the shapeshifting priests, guardians of the treasures.
Northward of the lake was a broad pastureland where the shepherd
Naymin tended the temple flocks, but Naymin was old and had no son
who would follow him. Therefore, he took Hiram into his household
and Hiram became as a son to him, tending the sheep of the temple,
and no Egyptian was with him.
One day, while the sheep still suckled their lambs, Hiram was out in
the pastures, sitting near the cool waters because of the heat. As
he reclined in the shade he played gay shepherd tunes on his flute
and in the many times he had been there no one had ever disturbed
him. Yet not far away was the House of the Virgins of Elre, but the
maidens who dwelt there rarely went abroad.
This day, however, Asu, daughter of the High Priest, walked abroad
and hearing the melody of the flute drew near to listen, but Hiram
did not see her because of the bush between them. The maiden sat
down, taking the sandals of her feet.
Hearing a cry from one of the sheep in the distance Hiram stopped
playing and stood up, his back towards the maiden. She, seeing him
standing up, sought to creep away before he saw her, but as she did
so her foot was pierced by a thorn and she let out a cry of pain.
Hiram turned and seeing her distress hastened to help her. He
withdrew the thorn tenderly and carried her down to the pool, so
that she could bathe the foot in cool waters. While she did so he
entertained her with sweet melodies on his flute.
The maiden fell in love with Hiram and he with her, but because she
was a dedicated virgin and daughter of the High Priest neither could
open the doors of their heart. The maiden spent nights weeping, for
she had a love for which there was no remedy. Hiram took his flock
to other pastures, but still their hearts drew them back to the
place of meeting and they met again and yet again.
Now, the wife of Naymin noticed that Hiram pined as with a sickness
and she spoke to him about it, and he told her of Asu, the maiden
from the House of the Virgins of Elre. The wife of Naymin spoke
words of consolation for this hopeless love, knowing they helped but
little.
In the fullness of the year Hiram took his flock to distant pastures
around the other side of the lake. While he was away the wife of
Naymin took herself down to the place where he was wont to meet Asu,
and one day Asu came. She was known to the wife of Naymin who was
the gatherer of herbs for the temple. They spoke of many things, of
Hiram and of the Gods, of priests and their ways and of temples and
those who served in them, of life and of man and of woman.
Now, when Hiram returned it was nigh the feast of sheepslaying and
at this time sacrifices of lambs were made to the watermonsters in
the lake. While away Hiram had thought about Asu and about the
treasure of Egypt, both seemingly equally unattainable. The wife of
Naymin spoke to him rarely and Hiram wondered, for this is not the
way of women.
On the eve of the feast of sheepslaying the lake boats were prepared
for the annual pilgrimage to the island. Among these was the great
boat of Erab, kept in memory of the day when the Scorcher of Heaven
rose with the sun, and earth was overwhelmed. From this boat the
sacrificial lambs were offered to the watermonsters and on it served
Asu and eight virgins. There, too, the High Priest officiated.
Hiram had conceived a plan within his mind whereby, at the risk of
bis life, he might possess himself of the treasures of Egypt. This
year, Naymin being now frail, he alone would be in charge of the
sacrificial lambs, together with two boy priests to assist him. They
came from the Temple of the Lake dedicated to the Bright Bearded One
who once saved Earth from destruction through fiery hail by making a
third round.
On the night before the festival, Hiram slept with his small flock
beside the boats and at first light they were put aboard. As the sun
rose upon high the High Priest came with many other priests and
princes, and the virgins came also. They offered sacrifices at the
Temple of Departure and then set out upon the waters. In another
boat were Naymin and his wife and there were other boats filled with
people.
After making offerings upon the waters the boats arrived at the
island and preparations were made for the Island Ceremony, which
lasted throughout the night. The lambs were offered as darkness came
and the waters became red with blood, and the watermonsters satiated
with meat.
Now, the cave on the island was protected from men by the Spirit of
Mot, who had died there in days long forgotten, and the priests
guarded its entrance. But Hiram did not fear the Spirit of Mot, for
it could do no harm to one who carried upon his body the same
bloodscar as Mot had borne. Hiram the stranger had been so marked
out from other men in his childhood.
At the sixth hour of the night three virgins entered the cave to
bring forth the treasures, and with them went a priest protected by
sanctification in the blood of a lamb. Five priests who were
Guardians of the Treasures and never left the island also went into
the cave with them, garbed in skins and masked with the heads of
beasts. The treasures were brought forth and placed upon the altar
against the rock wall beside the cave, so that all might behold
them. Over the altar was laid a cloth of linen and gold. While the
people passed before the treasures and danced and sang, priests came
and went in the cave.
Before the cave and away from the road leading down to the lake,
there was a pathway which went down to the Pool of Purification.
Here, after the maidens had bathed, men and women came down one by
one to be purified in its waters. They then went through an opening
into the lake and, passing through the waters along the shore where
they rose not much above the waist, ascended by steps through a
small arched temple back on the road. If they were truly purified
they were never touched by watermonsters.
Never had a maiden been taken by the watermonsters, but on this
awful night, while a maiden passed between pool and temple, there
was a loud cry of agony quickly stifled. The island fell silent with
forboding and as the night passed the name of Asu was whispered from
mouth to mouth. The treasures were carried back in gloom and silence
under a mantle of dread, and the head of the High Priest was bowed
in sorrow and disgrace.
When the boats departed none noticed that Hiram was missing, for his
duty done he could return in any boat. And none was the strange
craft that clove the waters of the lake of Sidana that night. Hiram
returned to the shepherd hut of Naymin and nothing was said to him,
for Naymin thought he had joined with the people sorrowing in the
temples, and always many remained about for several days.
When Hiram had refreshed himself he left Naymin who was weary and
weighed down with age and sorrow, and prepared to return to his
flocks. In his grief, because of the death of Asu, he could find
solace nowhere, except perhaps in the familiar solitude among his
sheep. But the wife of Naymin said,
“Let me walk with you a little
way, for I, too, suffer and yet must seek herbs which are needed and
not easy to find.”
When they had gone some distance, she said, “I go
this way, will you not accompany me and humour an old woman who may
need your aid?”
Hiram did so, for the woman was even as his own mother, though he
could not understand her strange manner. She brought him to a place
in a hollow enclosed by thickets, and lo there was Asu. When the
embraces and the greetings were over and the explanations given, the
wife of Naymin said,
“Here you cannot remain. There are clothes and
food and no pursuers will follow the maiden, and none will query
your departure. Go this night, taking thought for nothing here, for
you are young, with a lifetime of joy before you, after the pangs of
parting have passed.”
Hiram said,
“No gladness, no joy can ever surpass what I now feel,
yet this thing increases a burden already upon me and is less simple
than it appears. For this you must know, I have taken the treasures
of Egypt and hidden them in a place where no man can find them. Who
would suspect me if I went about my task without change, a shepherd
with no thought beyond his sheep and flute? The cry may be raised
even now, though I think another day will pass first. Then who could
trace the passage of every man who has departed, even though pursuit
is made in all directions? Why did you not tell me of your plot?”
The wife of Naymin said,
“How could you be told of something which
might not have been or which you might have betrayed by glance or
bearing? We, too, thought you no more than a simple shepherd with no
thought beyond flute-playing, except love. What now will you flee
with the maiden and abandon the treasures? Or shall she flee alone,
for she is committed to flight.”
Hiram said,
“I cannot abandon love for treasure, but neither can I
abandon this treasure for lif e or let it corrupt. Therefore, let
Asu, the maiden disguise herself and together we will depart to a
safe place without the treasure, none suspecting she still lives.
Then in the fullness of time I will return and recover the treasure,
for no man can discover its hiding place. However, I will not depart
in haste but wait and bid Naymin farewell and go in the fullness of
time.”
Hiram left Asu and returned with the wife of Naymin. Coming in to
Naymin Hiram told him he had had a vision such as no man could
disregard and must go to the land of his fathers, but would return
before the coming again of the season. That night a great cry went
up among the temples and in the light of the morning men came and
questioned Naymin and those with him, but found them simple
shepherds.
Hiram departed, taking the ass of Naymin and with him went the wife
of Naymin. They were joined by Asu, cloaked as a beggar girl who
earned her food by ungainly dancing, whose face was unwashed and
clothes unclean. They accompanied men who hunted for the stolen
treasures and their possessions were open before the eyes of all
men. After seven days the wife of Naymin returned.
Hiram and Asu went onwards until they came to Bethelim near Fenis.
beyond the borders of Egypt, and they dwelt there among the Kerofim.
In the fullness of time Hiram returned to Egypt and recovered the
treasures, bringing them inside skins hidden within other skins
filled with water and oil. Now, when Hiram had left Egypt and drawn
nigh to Bethelim, he saw that the dwelling he had left no longer
stood and the fields about it were overgrown with burning bushes.
Within the burnt out ruins he found remains and bones and knew them
for those of Asu and the Kerofim with whom she dwelt. He saw that
they had died by the sword.
Hiram did not linger at the place of death and thought to take
himself to a place of safety, but knowing the dangers of the land he
sought a place where he hid the egg of the nest-burning bird and the
pearls, all except two, and most of the jewels. Having secured them
in safety, he went on his way.
Hiram kept going until he came upon a small wooded place nearly two
days journey away. Here, while he slept, two wild swine came and
swallowed three of the jewels which he had tied in a piece of hide.
Later he lost one while fording a river, and one was taken from him
when he sought shelter in a temple. Two pearls and two jewels were
taken from him by other priests who placed them in the treasury of
their God. The remaining treasures which he had with him were lost
when he was waylaid, and though his life was spared he was left
bleeding and near to death. As Hiram lay by the roadside he was
succoured by wandering metalworkers and brought back to health by
them, for they were men of his own blood.
Hiram remained with the metalworkers for some years and learned
their craft. He became skilled in the making of weapons and in their
use. In the fullness of time he returned to the place where he had
secreted the treasures and recovered them. He then went down to a
city by the sea and took ship to a far off land. No man has seen him
since, but it is said he married the daughter of a king and became a
prince among foreign people.
This is the tale of Hiram. As written, it was a wordy tale and well
preserved but without great import. It has imaginative descriptions
and indulged in valueless flights of poetic fancy. Therefore, it is
rendered in outline and reduced to a few paragraphs.
CHAPTER SEVEN
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 1
By the hand of Raben, son of Hoskiah who was the Bowman of God and
brought the Children of Light to the Land of Mists.
Hoskiah was a mighty man whose bow shafts struck like the lightning
flash, and his enemies went down like corn before the reapers. He
was a Captain of Men in the War of Gods and those he slew where
numbered like barley in the measure. His enemies were spread before
him hke a carpet at his feet and there was no other like him.
He was a man who knew the Almight God and looked up to Him as the
God of his fathers. But Hoskiah worshipped Him after the customs of
his people and therefore knew Truth only in part, for having stolen
Him they were unable to know Him fully.
Now the days of fighting were past and Hoskiah and those who
remained alive with him slept in strange places, for they were
sought by the king who had been victorious. His wives and his
children and all his household dwelt at Kadesh, against the
mountain, and awaited his coming there. But he came not while being
sought by the king.
So it came to pass that his brother Isias, who held stewardship over
all his household and his possessions, seeing that Hoskiah could not
come unto this place, possessed himself of them. Isias had the ear
of those in high places, and Hoskiah lost his birthright.
So all that was Hoskiah’s passed into the possession of his brother
Isias. He took even the wives of Hoskiah, for such was the decree of
the king.
But Athelia, the first of the wives of Hoskiah, spurned Isais and
called down the wrath of Helyawi upon his head. And Isais was afraid
and did not possess her. When they saw this the other wives, being
jealous of her, for she was ever in high favour with Hoskiah,
stirred Isais up against her. They mocked him, saying, “Are you
truly the master here, or are there fruits you cannot pluck?”
So Isais sought to take Athelia by strength, but she strove against
him and his manhood was hurt, so thatddid did not take her. Then
Isias had her bound and her hands were tied for seven days, so that
she could not of herself either eat or drink or do the things
required by her body. She was humiliated and her womanhood betrayed,
for an idiot man attended her wants and he mocked her modesty, and
she was tormented by her needs.
Then on the seventh day she was brought forth by Isias to trial, and
she was stripped and lashed and her hair was burnt off. She was
branded on the face and her lips and tongue were cut. She was given
a robe and a pitcher of water, and dried fruits and flour. She was
driven forth by Isias who said, “Go woman, and perhaps, should you
even find him, Hoskiah will understand your babble.”
Athelia went out into the wilderness to die and at night she fell in
pain and weariness, under an elan tree and lay there. In anguish she
cried out unto her God and cast her soul from her, that she might
not feel pain. And her soul found Hoskiah.
As it became light next day, Athelia awoke and praised God, saying,
“I have slept amid my pain, for God is good and merciful. And I know
that Hoskiah yet lives in a far off place, but my soul and my God
will lead me to him.”
And she went, guided by her soul.
On the same night, Hoskiah lay in a cavern amid mountains, but he
slept not, for one had come bearing tidings of his brother, saying,
“Isias has possessed himself of all that once was yours. Even your
wives has he taken, and between you and he are many men who would
slay you.”
As Hoskiah lay thus in agony of spirit it came to pass that he felt
the presence of Athelia’s soul, and peace came upon him and he
slept. And as he slept he dreamed, and in his dream Athelia stood at
his feet, fairer than he had ever known her. And she said, “All is
not lost unto you, for I come seeking you in the wilderness and I
will find you, so be at peace.” And Hoskiah awoke refreshed and
strong in spirit.
And he came down out of the mountains, and over the wilderness came
to the Place of Bitter Waters where men find refuge. And men were
hiding there from the wrath of the king. And Hoskiah enquired of
them, saying, “You have come from many places, which of you has seen
a woman seeking me?” They said, “No woman travels abroad on such a
quest. Or has she many attendants, and what is her appearances?” And
Hoskiah said,
“She is fair as the dawning, with hair like the
raven’s wing and skin like fine oil. Her touch is like cool waters
and her bearing like the gazelle.”
Then the men mocked him and talked much, saying,
“How long would
such a one as you describe travel alone? It is not in the nature of
women to leave their household and come into the wilderness. Would
any man pass her by? Who, then, now possesses her? Seek her not in
the wilderness, for is she not clad in fine linen and perfumed with
sweet smelling oils?”
Then Hoskiah took counsel with himself and said, “I am indeed a fool
who chases dreams. This is no time for dreaming when there is a
man’s task at hand”. So in the morning he said to those with him, “I
go up against my brother”. But they pleaded with him, saying, “Have
you a host of men or even a company? Abandon such foolishness”.
Now, at that time Athelia dwelt beneath a mountain where there was a
spring, for she was weary from many days journeying. And she was
sick in spirit, for men, when she came among them, beat her with
sticks and drove her from the place of their habitations. She
offended their eyes and none desired her.
No man came to the spring, for it was an accursed place where voices
came from the rocks and the dead spoke. Therefore, it is called the
Audience Chamber of the Dead. And none but witches go there, for
these the dead do not harm.
Now, when night fell Hoskiah slept, and those with him were not
watchful. And evil men said among themselves,
“Let us slay Hoskiah
in the night, for he has gold and silver and spoils of war with him.
Let us cut off his head and carry it to his brother, that we may be
rewarded and made welcome.”
So it came to pass that in the morning hours of the night men came
to fall upon Hoskiah and those with him to slay them. But one among
them was heavy-footed and Hoskiah awoke as they fell upon him, and
he seized his sword and leaping up as a lion springs smote about
him, and there was a slaughter. But he was without helmet and his
head was bare, and so he was wounded. They who came against him died
or fled, but of those with him just one remained, and he sorely
wounded.
In the morning they left with their asses laden, and Hoskiah held
his bow and none came near him. And as the sun mounted on high the
sight departed from the eyes of Hoskiah and he became blind.
So Hoskiah and he who was his companion abandoned hope, for there
were men who would destroy them in front and behind, and the
wilderness enclosed them. And they said, “Let us, therefore, go to
the place called the Audience Chamber of the Dead, which is by our
side. For are we not as those already dead? There we shall find
water to quench our thirsts and soothe our wounds as we end our
days.”
And as they entered the pass at the place where the waters entered
the sand, the companion of Hoskiah died. Then Hoskiah heard voices
of the dead calling him from among the mountains, and he arose and
said, “I come, for this is my hour.” And he passed up the
watercourse. So it was that being blind he dashed against the rocks
and fell to the ground, and lay there as one already dead.
Now, on that day the soul of Athelia was troubled and she wandered
abroad, straying from her tasks. And she looked up and saw a raven
descending from out of the sky, and her soul said unto her, “Behold,
it comes for the soul of Hoskiah, for he is near by and close to
death.” So Athelia sped away guided by the bird.
She came upon Hoskiah as his soul was preparing to depart, and she
took him in her arms and lifting his head gave him water. And her
soul communed with his soul and bade it stay, and because of the
bond between them it stayed. And she remained with him three days
and built a bower and ministered to him, but he lay as one already
dead.
On the third day, as the sun prepared to enter into his night
kingdom, Hoskiah stirred. He groaned in anguish from his wounds and
Athelia comforted him, and he slept in peace. When it became light
next day he awoke and felt Athelia’s touch upon him. And Hoskiah
knew her and said, “Athelia are you here? How came you to this place
and found me in my hour of need?”
But Athelia answered not because of her tongue and she drew a veil
around her face, for she knew not that Hoskiah was blind. She wept
and her tears fell upon his face. And he held on to her, for her
hands told him that she could not speak to him as once she did. And
he said, “I am blind and cannot see”, but she drew not the veil, for
she feared for him when his hands sought to be his eyes.
Days passed and Hoskiah grew strong, and he knew the tale of his
brother’s deeds and swore vengeance in the name of his God. He said,
“For this purpose life has been left to me”. And Athelia grieved
that he spoke thus, for he could not walk without her.
The waters of the valley were cool and there were herbs and wild
fruits, and goats upon the mountainside. So it came to pass that
after many days Hoskiah was whole and strong again. But he remained
blind, so he could not see Athelia and therefore she remained fair
in his eyes. But the soft speech was gone from her. This, Hoskiah
did not mind, for what he heard daily was the speech which greeted
him as he lay in her arms before she knew he had come back to life.
Hoskiah and Athelia were no longer troubled by the voices among the
rocks, for no harm was done to them in this place.
When Hoskiah became strong again he desired to go from that place
and fretted to be gone, but Athelia bade him stay. She said, “You
are blind and therefore like a child. And will we not die of hunger
in the wilderness, or be slain by men who seek after you? Let us
stay here.” And Hoskiah listened to her words, for it was not
unpleasant in this place.
And it came to pass that one day, as Athelia gathered herbs in the
valley, she espied a stranger drinking at the waters and he was weak
and weary from much journeying. And she took Hoskiah and together
they went up to the stranger and Hoskiah greeted him, saying, “May
the peace of God be with you, master, how may we serve you?” The
stranger answered them saying,
“I am Lokus, Son of the Fire Bird and
physician to the king of Tyre. I have travelled from afar to this
place, that I may hear the wisdom of the dead. I came to talk with
my soul in solitude, for I am weary of the ways of men. I no longer
seek to be the companion of those in high places who concern
themselves overmuch with wars and the affairs of men”.
And Hoskiah
knew Lokus for a magician of great renown.
Hoskiah dwelt in a cave in the mountainside, by the waters of a
spring which
came forth from a smaller cave nearby. The land before the caves was
flat and
there were ancient gardens and enclosures. Beyond these were trees.
When Lokus
had been brought to the abode of Hoskiah, to the place where he
camped, he was
given food and rested. The Hoskiah said unto him,
“You are great
even among
great magicians, for your magic is greater even than the magic of
Egypt. I beg
you, master,
look with pity upon my blindness, for it makes me even as a child, I
who am a man among men and have a man’s task before me. Pray,
therefore, cast magic with fire, that I may be made whole again.”
Lokus said unto Hoskiah, “Is this then the one desire of your heart,
is there nought in Heaven or Earth you desire more?” Hoskiah said,
“There is nought above this.”
Then Lokus spoke to Athelia, saying, “What is your desire, is it
that you may be as you once were?” And Athelia said, ‘This indeed I
desire, especially for the sake of my lord. But, master, above all I
desire that he may see again; but, oh, let not his eyes lead him
from me to destruction.” Lokus said to Athelia, “You know what his
eyes will see.” She answered him, “Let his eyes see what they will,
but let them see.”
Lokus said unto her,
“So it shall be, for you
have but one desire between you. I will make a covenant with Hoskiah, so that his eyes may see again. This is the covenant: That
Hoskiah will stay in this place until Athelia has borne him a son
and until six months after his son’s weaning he will sit at my feet
and absorb my instruction”.
Then Athelia said unto Lokus, “Master, when he is no longer blind
and sees me as I am, will not the burden of the covenant be too
great for him? Lokus answered, “He has more than two eyes.”
Lokus took Hoskiah and cast a spell upon him, so that he fell
asleep. And Lokus opened his head and let out the evil which blinded
him and encased his head in clay, that the demon might not resume
its residence. And Hoskiah was left asleep for six days and six
nights.
On the seventh day Hoskiah awoke, and behold, he was no longer
blind. And he called for Athelia, but she came not unto him. Then
Hoskiah cried, “I see, but the woman is not here, is this not a time
for rejoicing? But lo, she stays away”. Lokus said unto him, “It is
the manner of women, let her be.”. And when night had come Atheha
came and sat at the feet of Hoskiah and said unto him, “It is well
my lord, and my heart rejoices.” And Hoskiah, stretching out his
hand, caught hold of Atheha, saying unto Lokus,
“Long have I been
with this woman. And I was blinded that I could not see her face;
now I say, bring me my torch quickly, that I may look upon the face
I desire to see with all my heart.”
And Athelia, bowing her head, remained cold and still beside
Hoskiah, the veil held before her face. And Lokus, placing the torch
aside, drew the veil and lifted her head towards the light, and the
woman looked up fearfully.
Hoskiah looked long upon her in silence. Then he lifted her towards
him and kissed her face, saying, “Wife of my bosom, the years have
taken nothing from the loveliness of your youth”. And Athelia fell
before him in a swoon.
Now, when morning came Lokus sat outside the cave and Athelia came,
and kneeling before him said,
“Great master, what magic have you
wrought? The waters do not lie, yet my lord sees me not as they”.
And Lokus answered her, saying,
“Nor does the soul he, but the eyes
of men are deceivers and not to be trusted. One desire only have I
granted, for my magic has not touched you. Hoskiah sees indeed, but
if he sees not wholly with his eyes and in part with his heart,
seeing not with the eyes of other men, then perhaps my magic is
imperfect and I am not the greatest of magicians”.
Unnumbered days passed and Athelia was first delivered of a daughter
and then of a son. And Hoskiah sat before Lokus and received his
instruction, and many books were opened unto him. He learned the
Mysteries of the Secret Way and the Songs of the Fire. He knew the
wisdom that had come down through the ages.
So it came to pass that one day Hoskiah went unto Lokus and said,
“All has been done that the covenant required.” And Lokus answered
him, saying, “It is well, prepare now to follow the path of your
destiny.”
Then Hoskiah took Athelia and his son and his daughter, and with
Lokus passed out into the wilderness. And when they came to the
habitations of men Atheha was veiled. And Lokus journeyed as a great
magician, following his stars, and Hoskiah served him as though bis
slave.
Thus they came to the lands held by Isias and Lokus made masks of
animal skins, with tree gum and clay, and gave them unto Hoskiah and
Athelia. And he clothed them in strange garments and dyed their
skins, saying,
“Men expect all things of a magician and make no
query concerning the strange things they see about him. Therefore,
let not the men of this place be disappointed in my attendants”.
To Hoskiah he said, “Be as one dumb, for your tongue would betray you
to those we come amongst in this place”. And Hoskiah answered, “My
tongue shall be dead in this place.“ In this manner they came before Isias.
Isias had looked well upon the fleshpots and his body was filled
with fat. He was clad in fine linen from Egypt and perfumed. And
Hoskiah said within himself, “Can this be the son of my father and
the companion of my childhood? It is truly written, in the hands of
a weakling gold turns to fat”.
Lokus spoke unto Isias, saying,
“Lord I have come far and therefore
beg that I and my servants be given food and drink and a place to
lay our heads. I am a magician of magicians and a physician of
physicians. Mayhap there are those within your household who are
sick or possessed by demons, whom I may serve. Or may I enliven your
leisure with wonders and magic and show you strange things beyond
the understanding of men?"
Isias said unto Lokus,
“Remain with us, for there is little pleasure
here. If you enliven our days you serve us well.”
So it came to pass that Isias prepared a great feast to which came
many lords with their households. The fame of Lokus had spread afar,
for he had healed the sick and cast out demons and shown many
wonders beyond the understanding of men. And among those who came
were many who knew Hoskiah.
When the day of the great feast came there was much feasting and
merrymaking, and Lokus worked great wonders, so that all men
acclaimed his magic. And there were games and feats of strength and
dancing.
When night had fallen great fires were lit and many torches. Tables
were spread with all manner of good things and the guests assembled
within the great courtyard. Isias sat beneath the tall sycamore tree
and before him was a table laden with every kind of meat. There were
breads and sweet things and spices in abundance. And Isias was
sitting among half men and wanton women and with him were gluttons
and drunkards. There was much loud laughter in their company and
many sly gestures. There were singing women and dancing girls. There
were half men who performed as women, and the night was heavy with
the scents of wickedness.
The feasting and dancing went on well into the night and Lokus
displayed his powers before the assembly. When the clamour was at
its height Isias spoke to Lokus, saying, “Show us now the greatest
of your wonders which we have not yet seen. Let the night be more
enlivened”.
So Lokus stood before them and lo, before their eyes he changed
stones into gold, and a dog into an ass. He drew wine and milk from
an empty pitcher and caused a rod to become a snake. Standing before
a table that was bare he drew all manner of foods and wines out of
the air and furnished it for a splendid repast. Then he called
Hoskiah as his slave and stood a comely maiden before him. And
Hoskiah shot arrows into her and they stood out from her body, so
that there was not space for a man to place his hand. And the blood
flowed down her robe as though she stood in a rainstorm of blood,
before she sank to the ground and lay there dead before them.
Then Lokus went up to her and after wrenching the arrows from out of
her body threw a cloak over it. The arrows he carried to Isias and
those about him, saying, “See the blood of amaiden”, and they held
the arrows and looked at them. And behold, as they held the arrows
and looked the blood went from them and the arrows were clean. And
Lokus cried out in a loud voice, “Lo, the blood returns”. Then,
passing over unto the maiden, he lifted the cloak off her and
behold, as he did so her robe became clean again. And Lokus took her
by the hand and said unto her, “Arise”, and she arose and stood
before Isias. And he was silent and those about him did not speak.
Casting aside her garment, which was the outer robe, the maiden
danced before the gathering, and all there wondered greatly, for her
body was unmarked.
Isias spoke to Lokus, saying, “How can such things be? What manner
of magic is this?” Lokus answered him, saying, “Lord your eyes saw
as I bid them see, for I am the master of men’s hearts, not the
master of flesh and wood. The eye is the greatest of deceivers. It
is the magic of Egypt which undid the work of the Ethiopian’s bow”.
And Isias said,
“Who is this Ethiopian who stands there so strangely
garbed? It is indeed a bowman among bowmen to loose his arrows so
that one has scarcely struck ere another left the bow. Has Rasfamishel come among us? “
Lokus answered him, saying, “Lord he
comes from beyond the Land of Elephants, in the place where the
Earth tips over. The magic is in his bow, which can shoot at a wild
ass and bring down a lion.”
So saying Lokus took up a clay pot and stood it on a table, and
Hoskiah, standing off, loosed an arrow at it. And the pot was
shattered and as it fell apart lo and behold, a silver pot appeared
in its place. And those who saw these things were amazed and spoke
one to the other about the magic of Lokus.
One among the gathering, a speechmaker, stood up and spoke words
praising the magic of Lokus, but Isias sat quiet, deep in thought.
Then bidding Lokus come to his side, Isias said,
“This night I have
seen With my own eyes a maiden slain with arrows and raised from the
sleep of death. I have seen the magic of the bow change clay to
silver. Is then your magic great enough to change age into youth and
weakness into strength? It is said that the greatest of magicians
can do even this.”
And Lokus lifted himself and said, “Even this I
can do”.
Then there was much whispering back and forth and talk among those
who sat about Isias. They that stood in the place of his favour
said,
“Master this is the hour, let the magic of this great magician
cast the years from off your back and renew the vigour of youth”.
And while they spoke there was much whispering and sly laughter
among the half men.
Lokus stepped back from the presence of Isias and he raised his left
hand, and there were loud thunders. He raised his right hand and
fire leaped forth from the ground, and a great cloud of smoke went
up. And he said unto Isias,
“Great Isias, this is your hour. You are
the lord of this land and place, therefore command as you will.
Already the night is more than half spent and speeds to its closing.
Hear now my words, this I say unto you: Enter now into my magic tent
which stands strangely adorned over against the edge of the feasting
place. The tent wherefrom I issue forth my magic, to which I return
to replenish my strength when it is done. Therein is the fount of my
magic, the hub of the great circle of power. Remain in there until
the first red glow from the fires of the underworld appears in the
night sky. Then lord, I will come into the tent and, standing
against it, will call forth the lord of this land and place, and
behold, a new lord will stand before the gathering in manly strength
and vigour. A man among men and a fitting master for this household.
He will be such a man that I, even I Lokus, the master of magic,
will be the first to proclaim him.”
So Isias entered into the tent of Lokus the magician, and as he
passed within, Lokus gave him the great bow of Hoskiah, saying,
‘Take this with you, for its magic is great and may well be needed.
It is a worthy weapon for the lord of this land.”
Then the gathering spoke amongst themselves and waited. Singing
women whiled away the hours. And as the first arrows of morning
light struck the night sky, Lokus arose and stood against the tent
of magic. Lifting up the door he cried out in a loud voice, “Great
Lord of these lands and place, come forth to your heritage, behold
your lord.” And as he spoke, lo, Hoskiah stepped forth into the
morning light, arrayed as a lord and girded about with belt and
sword. He wore a helmet and in his hand was the great bow.
The sound of a great sigh passed through the gathering and men
looked one at the other. They were bemused, not knowing what to do,
for there was magic about them. And Lokus lifted up his voice in the
silence and cried,
“Behold, I have brought forth a man among men as
lord of these lands and place. Will you not, therefore, receive him
in a befitting manner?”
And men spoke among themselves, saying,
“This is one having the appearance of Hoskiah whom we know, in truth
the lord of these lands and place. He is a man indeed, if it be he;
has magic drawn him back from the grave, or has the spirit of Isias
clothed itself in the form of Hoskiah?”
Then first one and then
another hailed the man before them saying, “This is a man among men,
if not our lord Hoskiah.” Then a great shout of, “Hoskiah!” went up,
and Hoskiah stood stern before them.
Now, there were those among the gathering who stood silent. The half
men and wanton women who were about the table where Isias had been,
sat pale and silent, clinging to each other. They said among
themselves, “If indeed this be Hoskiah, where then is our lord Isias
?” And a man stood up among the gathering, shouting,
“This is not Isias transformed by magic, but Hoskiah, who, with this evil
magician, has worked a trick. Isias is not transformed but murdered.
Let him be avenged”.
And reaching back he took a javelin and sought
to hurl it at Hoskiah. But the bow in the hand of Hoskiah bent, and
before the javelin could be sped an arrow pierced the man’s throat.
Then the bow sang twice more before the enemies of Hoskiah departed.
Now, it came to pass that those remaining gathered about Hoskiah and
rejoiced, saying, “Hoskiah is indeed the rightful lord and none but
he ever bent bow as we have seen a bow bent this dawning”. And
Hoskiah passed through them to the seat of Isias. And those gathered
there shrank from him, and he swept the table clean and drove away
those who stood about it, saying, “Begone, lest I have you seized
and beaten, for you befoul the Earth and serve neither God nor man.”
They departed, saying, "This is indeed Hoskiah and not Isias.” And
Isias was seen no more by the eyes of men.
Now, after three days had passed Lokus said to Hoskiah,
“The time
has come when I must depart. I shall go unto my king who is now your
king and speak with him concerning you. It is well that I go now and
dally not unduly here, for mayhap as things are he will lend a
willing ear to my words. But if I dally here with you, others will
gain his ear with another account.”
So Lokus departed and Hoskiah
was grieved.
Before he left, Lokus was given horses and servants, also slaves and
asses with food for the journey. And Lokus said to Hoskiah, “We
shall meet again, for it is decreed in the Book of Heaven.”
Athelia came before Hoskiah many times and said, “Lord let me depart
from your residence and dwell in a place not too far off.” And
Hoskiah was perplexed within himself because of her manner of
speech, for he did not understand what she wanted. He said, “Have no
fear for the women of my household, for there is none I desire but
you”.
And it came to pass that on his way to the king, Lokus was stricken
with a sickness and lay as one already dead, and for many days his
soul was prepared for departure. And while he lay sick the power
that bound the eyes of Hoskiah became weakened and the eyes of
Hoskiah were no longer bound.
Now, Hoskiah purged his household and spent the days dealing with
his estates, and his lands flourished. His servants no longer
bickered among themselves as before and contentment reigned within
his shadow.
So when many days had passed and all things were ordered, Hoskiah
called his steward and said unto him, “Let a feast be prepared. As
the land has given generously to me, so will I give no less
generously.” Hoskiah said this and it was done.
Now, there was a woman called Mirim of the household of Isias, who
was fair to behold and she sought the favour of Hoskiah. And among
the women there was much talk of Athelia who remained ever veiled,
for there were those among the women who knew her. But none spoke to
Hoskiah, for he was a man who talked little with women and Athelia
stood first in his eyes.
Mirim had not seen the degradation of Athelia, nor had she seen her
unveiled. But it came to pass that she spied upon Athelia one day,
while she was about her toilet, and seeing her unveiled Mirim took
counsel with herself.
Now, the day of feasting came and many were the guests, but of half
men and wanton women there were none. And among the women Athelia
sat apart, and among the men there was much talk of riches and
battles, and of spoils of war and husbandry.
Among the guests was a young lord who sought the favours of Mirim.
And while the feasting and dancing were at their height, they came
one to the other. And as they dallied beyond the torchlight Mirim
said unto him, “Am I fair indeed?” And he answered her, saying, “You
are fair even among the fairest”. Then she said unto him,
“Yet there
is one more fair by far, so fair that she needs go veiled before
men. She is Athelia, wife of Hoskiah, who keeps her thus. He fears
for himself and does not trust her, for this is his weakness”.
And Mirim moved away from the young lord, saying, “Go look upon her
face, and if you can then say I am the fairest of the fair, I shall
know that your heart speaks sincerely of itself and not at the
behest of your body.”
The young lord returned to the feasting and sat in a place nearby to
Hoskiah and spoke to those about him, saying, “Have any among you
seen a woman here who rivals the fairest bearers of myrtle and
palm?” And the men rebuked him, saying,
“It is not meet to talk thus
about the women of a household wherein you are a guest. Are they to
be judged as are women of the night?”
But the tongue of the young lord was not stayed and he replied,
saying, ‘That which causes talk will be talked about?” And Hoskiah
heard him and was angry and said, “What, in my household, moves
foolish tongues to gossip?” The young lord said, “That which a man
tries to conceal ever arouses the interests of others. Does any man
conceal that of which he is proud?” And Hoskiah looked about him,
saying, “This talk I do not understand”. The young lord said,
“My
lord, men talk of what lies beneath the veil of the woman you
brought here, is she indeed as fair as men say, or is there truth
even in the gossip of women?”
And those who knew about the degradation of Athelia muttered among
themselves, for her secret could not be kept hidden. They said,
“This is loose talk and wicked, let the evil which belongs to the
past remain buried. Does this concern any man but Hoskiah? Are we
among women that the talk should be thus? Is our custom to be
lightly set aside? Let the veil remain”.
But Hoskiah, hearing the muttering, thought wrongly of what was
said. And he spoke to the young lord, saying, “This woman is fair as
few women are fair, should I not know? This you shall indeed see for
yourself”. And Hoskiah said within himself, “Long enough have I
indulged Athelia her whims, does a pearl give pleasure withinits
shell?” And Hoskiah sent his attendant for her.
So Athelia came with her hand maiden, and Mirim came too and stood
close behind them. And Athelia stood before Hoskiah and said, “My
lord what is your wish?” And he said to her, “Woman, remove your
veil.” And Athelia put her hand to the veil and pleaded with him,
saying, “My lord there are many men here and strangers. There is a
custom of my people by which I abide.” And men, hearing her voice,
looked one at another and the oldest among them said to Hoskiah,
“Let the woman be, for this is of no importance and of no interest
to us. Allow her the whim, for such is the nature of women. Shall we
deny them their small pleasures?”
Athelia inclined her head towards
the man who spoke and as she did so Mirim stepped forward and caught
hold of the veil, snatching it aside. And the stricken face of
Athelia was revealed to the gathering.
All men were silent and still, like statues. And Hoskiah looked at
Athelia and she at him. And Hoskiah saw her as she was, and Athelia
knew whathe saw. Then came the voice of the young lord, saying,
“Behold the pearl of Hoskiah.” And Hoskiah turned upon him in rage
and slew him.
And Hoskiah turned to Athelia who stood still and alone, saying,
“What evil has been wrought here? Begone, take your face from me.”
And Athelia went out between the gathering. And passing into her
bedchamber she took a draught of poison. And her handmaiden sped to
Hoskiah, saying, “Come my lord, my mistress dies.”
Then Hoskiah, his heart filled with remorse, sped to Athelia. And as
he came unto her she died.
And Hoskiah wept over her and his heart was filled with grief. And
he looked upon the body of Athelia and said,
“I have slain the life
within my own heart. I have slain the one who cherished me in my
blindness, the one who loved beyond the bounds of love.”
In his anguish the eye of his soul was opened and saw the soul of
Athelia standing nearby. And Hoskiah was dazzled by the vision of
her beauty, for she was radiant as the sun. He stretched out his
hands towards her, but could not touch her, for she was beyond the
reach of earthly things. And she shook her head at him and raising
her hand departed to the Antechamber of Eternity.
Hoskiah raised himself up and strode out from the chamber, but he
returned not again to the place of feasting. He sorrowed many days.
Now, while Hoskiah still sorrowed, word came to him that a company
of men was coming against him.
And he sent out his servants with laden asses and went forth
himself. And with his true men he prepared a place on the heights
above the road, to meet those who came to take him. And Hoskiah met
them with arrows and with stones and left them with their dead.
And Hoskiah and those with him passed out into the wilderness and
lived there many days. And it came to pass that word came to him of
Lokus and he arose and went into the land of the Sons of Fire,
passing into Tyre as a merchant from Kithim.
So it came about that Hoskiah came with sons of the Children of
Light on ships of Arad, by way of Hawnibo and Mesilonas, where there
are many temples. The ships made one harvest towards the Land of
Trees, where the great river flows to the West. And his sons he left
in Tyre, that they might receive instruction in the household of
Lokus.
Hoskiah governed many years in the Land of Mists and made laws, and
died in his old age. And he was buried by the river where the ground
rises, beneath stones and soil carried in many baskets. A fence was
made and trees, which still grow, set about the place.
When Hoskiah came here he had been forty and four years on Earth,
and two score and five years passed before he died. May his God
fulfil his hopes! Raben, the son of Hoskiah, was born of a daughter
from the house of Lokus in this land.
CHAPTER EIGHT
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 2
Lothan, Captain of Men of Valour, Victorious over the Sons of the
New Moon and Guardian of the Hidden Wisdom. Maker of Roads in the
Red Lands and Builder of the Secret Fort. By Abisobel, once Scribe
of the God Eloah in Ladosa, Keeper of Records in the New Temple, to
his Fathers in Wisdom at the Temple of Iswarah, Greetings. May you
live long on Earth in prosperity, peace and health, and depart in
knowledge.
We left the good land, hearts heavy-laden with grief. The ships were
five and I looked to mine and found it good. It was built of
alonwood and stout-masted. All about it, casks were lashed. Along
the planking the cords that moved were free, but all clear spaces
were filled with things wrapped about and bound. There was much
leather for the sails and leathern scoops. There were half a score
of large buckets of wood hooped about and handled with plaited
leather. Between the eyes of the ship the guide pole was raised,
beneath which were stored all kinds of unusual things made of wood
and cordage used by men of the sea. There was a machine for slinging
stones and another for hurling fire. There were high shieldguards
which could be strapped to the side. A store contained every kind of
weapon and much armour. There were pots for cooking and braziers.
There was a store behind the mast and in it were over five score
jars of oil and not less of wine and vinegar. Casks of food there
were and more stored in baskets. Many large pitchers were lashed
about and dried meat stored in cloth. Dried dates and figs and small
fruits there were in large quantities. Water was not lacking, nor
the dishes for eating. There were nets for fishing and hooks for
catching birds.
The chief among the men of the sea was skilled in the notched stick
called ‘thumb of the night’, which guided him across the widths of
the sea. We brought up against Keftor, where Nebam departed, for
they were troublesome. Men of Melkat came who had been wrecked, and
we took a score who were men of valour. We passed many lands by the
sea, where once broad sea-girt Posidma reigned, before blown apart
by underworld fires. By the lands of Hogburim we went over the wide
sea to the gate of Athlesan and beyond it across the sea of Tapuim.
One ship and forty men and the households of six men were lost on
the way. Three ships have I left, with one brought up on the land.
Twelve men have I lost in battle and ten have gone with sickness.
There are, with me, two hundred fighting men. One hundred and ten
men of skill and one hundred bondsmen. Sixty households with their
cattle and sheep and corn and tools and wagons. All things with us
are numbered and the tally grows daily.
The encampment is well made and encircled with a wall where water
does not lie. Trees and soil are the material of its construction.
Great trees are about us, but no stone for building, for the soil is
deep. The waters rise not over the fields where men have cut water
passages, but there is much rain.
Wild men are in the land, who write on their skins.
They are hairy ones whose Gods are the plants of the field. Their
quarters are like baskets over the ground and they are unwashed. The
women are like hellcats, uttering wild cries among the trees, but
the men are quiet and come in silence.
They have temples of poles, roofed over in part and encircled by
great logs, with logs laid over. Skins and painted leather are hung
about, but no cloth. They place plants on altars, that their high
Gods may consume the essence of life within them and draw it back
into themselves.
Virgins they keep in cages, why I know not, but the women in cages
are virgins and well cared for. Is virginity uncaged like a hound
unleashed?
The wild men are unlearned and without soft speech. They are cousins
to the wild dog, yet with children they are gentle. The children of
Fikol, the stoneworker, were lost among the trees and wild beasts
beset them at night. The wild men found them there and carried them
away and fed them. Then came the searchband of men of valour upon
the place, and the children, seeing them, ran away from the wild
men. The men of valour slew the wild men, thinking they had taken
the children, for they knew not their speech. Since then we have
seen their ways.
One hundred and ten of the wild people we have as bondsmen and
bondswomen. The men work with the soil and wood about the
encampment. The wall I caused to be built out into the water and it
encloses a pier against the bank, where ships can moor.
Within the wall and circle of water I have built the temple, but not
all go in there with me. We are not one people. The gates of the
temple are on pillars of wood and turn on a stone, and wooden are
the pillars within. Great beams support the roof, and the walls are
of wood and mud brick. The floor is of sand finely raked, and before
the heir the altar rests on stones. There are no images designed to
confuse men, for though the temple is poor it does not enshrine
ignorance. We have no evil men with us. There are men of valour and
men of skill, men of the land and men of the sea, no more.
Beneath the altar is the Grave of Life, kept dry with mortar. In its
place is the Great Chest of Mysteries and in the Urns of Life are
the records. Well kept they are and safe from the unlearned, all the
records of the Eastern Quarter. Thus all things have been done
according to your divining, and it is good.
(Between that just copied and that which follows there was a full
plate, but the writing upon it was ineffective.)
In the land at the edge of the Earth there is little sun and the
people grow sick with water. The dampness causes a sickness among
us, where the teeth become loose in the gums and skin peels. Flesh
puffs up and holds the marks of fingers.
The people of the land beset us and we cannot find them among the
trees. Lothan was slain, with twelve men of valour, three days
journey inland among the trees. He died in the night. Two men were
caught by the wild men who burnt them in cages.
Men have come in ships from the Land of the Sons of Fire, who are
our brothers. Alman, the scribe, and Kora, the builder, came.
Hoskiah who is a man mighty in battle, having gone from us brought
them here by Kedaris.
Of the Sons of Fire there are four hundred, but few are fighting
men. They are not men of valour. They are men of the sea and
cultivators and men who trade. There are builders among them and men
skilled in the ways of wood and stone, for they came to establish a
city in this place.
This, the Kingdom of the Trees, is no place for a city. Trees shut
us in and hold us captive. They conceal those who lie in wait to do
us harm. A house is built and trees take over the roof, and plants
creep over the walls. Corn is planted and rots, while weeds smother
other growing food. Greyness is everywhere, even the face of the sun
is pale here.
Men shiver without heat and the air is not pure and mixed with
water. Wild dogs lurk among the trees, to tear the unwary to pieces.
There are few stones and they are covered with slime. The wild
fruits and herbs are poisonous and men have died eating them. The
wild men in this place eat their own children and anoint their
bodies with the fat of the dead. There is a race of men with great
hairy bodies and the heads of dogs, who carry children off to feast
on them. Arutha, wife of Amora, died in the embrace of one. They
have hides that no arrow can pierce.
The Book of Heaven is open to the Sons of Fire, in it they found the
road across the waters. They are filled with the wisdom of
wanderers. As we came by the sea in the hands of seafarers, so shall
we go out. We long for the welcome omens of the shining arrows of
the night. Our people are weary and there is muttering among the men
of valour, for they fear the Spirit of the Trees. His breath
surrounds us. His grey fingernails corrupt our possessions. He has
caused our cattle to die and our crops to wither. Against him we are
powerless. He was robbed of this land hewn out from among the trees,
he will never forget.
The Great Secrets and Sacred Wisdom are secured for our children. We
place them and ourselves in the hands of the Sons of Fire. We shall
leave this place and sail towards Hireh, towards the West, where
lies the Land of White Stone. There we may build with stone and
brick.
Here is the tally of our departure: Of those who came with Lothan,
ninety men of valour and the households of thirty-five. There are
seventy men of valour who came later, and those of the Sons of Fire.
Eighty-two men of skill and eight households newly formed. There are
the men of valour who came with Hoskiah and the households among
them. There are nine households which came later.
There are two hundred and forty bondsmen. Of these one hundred and
ten carry slings and clubs. Some have fighting axes of stone and
stave shod with metal, but there is no sharpened weapon among them.
One hundred and four among all the households are children and
unmarried women, for many have died of the sickness belonging to
this place. There are slaves, but most have died or perished among
the trees.
The cattle are gone and there are a few sheep and goats. There are,
for each man of valour, two measures of corn at morning and for
others one measure. Of corn there are sixty great baskets. Of herbs
dried by fire, forty-five ankrim. There is fish fried by fire and
some meat.
There are a hundred and ten baskets of cuped nuts, which are bitter
and go sour. The Men of the Trees eat them and for such people it is
proper food. There are narah nuts which grow in this place, sweet
but not stomach filling, and nuts which are good for cakes in
quantities.
There is much weapon metal melted down and gold and silver in
pieces. There are all kinds of tools for the men of skill and much
pottery in the households. But much has gone to the Men of the
Trees, and of cloth there is little, and men are clothed in skins
and the woven fiber of plants.
The Harbour of Sorrow we leave behind and with four ships sail
towards the sunsetting. One ship goes to the Land of the Sons of
Fire. Spirit of Lothan, remain among us as we go far away among men
who are strangers to us!
CHAPTER NINE
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 3
The Sons of Fire came to the Land of Mists, they and their
households and their cattle, and all the tools of craftsmen. With
them came others, men of Egypt and men of Javen. Also strangers who
were not as valiant as are the Sons of Fire. Many among them were
sickly and distressed in their hearts.
They took land among the barbarians and built a city and a port at
the place called Sadel, near Saham, and cut roads about it into the
forests. But they were kept in by the barbarians, and strangers in a
strange land. The city was a place for buying and selling and men
came and went. Ships came bearing cloth and pottery, instruments and
weapons of war and all manner of things. The ships went away bearing
things from the barbarians who dug in the soil. The place of the
city was good, for it was fertile and well watered, and the bay was
guarded by a great rock.
When he came, Hoskiah caused statutes to be set up for the city and
they were kept in the courts of the temple. This record was made at
his command:
“It is unlawful for you to curse your father or your mother, or
their father or their mother, or to raise your hand in anger against
them. If the forbidden be done you shall be burnt with fire and iron
upon the left shoulder and a task and time set upon you.”
“It is unlawful for you to steal the reputation of another man by
lies. If the forbidden be done you shall be branded by fire and iron
upon the lips of the mouth.”
“It is unlawful for you to defile the wife of another man. If the
forbidden be done you shall be branded with fire and iron upon the
soles of the feet and upon the backside and the armpits, and upon
the mouth and nose, and shall be cast out from among us, unless
bearing arms in war.”
“It is unlawful for a wife to lie with any man not her husband. If
the forbidden be done she shall suffer her time upon the adulteress’
saddle and shall not be healed with skyfire.”
“It is unlawful for you to penetrate a child in lust. If the
forbidden be done you shall be castrated and the wound healed with
iron and fire.”
“It is unlawful for you to place your hands between the legs of a
womanchild. If the forbidden be done you shall be burnt with iron
and fire upon the palm of the left hand and upon the left cheek and
between the thighs.”
“It is unlawful for you if, being a guest, you defile the household
of the man who harbours you. If the forbidden be done with a free
man or a free woman you shall be burnt with fire and iron on the
soles of the feet and in the armpits, and shall die in the waters,
after the custom of the barbarians. If with a slave or bondsman or
bondswoman, you shall be burn upon the backside and the armpits, and
shall pay their price to their master.”
“It is unlawful for you to speak falsehood against another so that
he suffer at trial. If the forbidden be done you shall suffer the
same as he and be burnt upon the tongue with iron and fire, and pay
the recompense set by the council.”
“It is unlawful for you to give a daughter of your house to the
barbarians in marriage, unless she be one who has brought shame upon
you. If the forbidden be done you shall be dispossessed of your
property and household.”
“It is unlawful for you to allow any man within your household to
fornicate with the barbarians. If the forbidden be done you shall be
burnt with iron and fire upon the left thigh. The man within your
household shall be burnt upon the soles of his feet and in his
armpits. If it be done again you shall be burnt with iron and fire
upon the backside and dispossessed of a tithe of your property. The
man within your household shall be blinded in the left eye with iron
and fire, and burn upon the soles of his feet.”
“It is unlawful for you to allow any woman within your household to
fornicate with a barbarian. If the forbidden be done and she be a
free worn an you shall be dispossessed of your household and
property, and she shall die as women die. If a slave or a
bondswoman, you shall be dispossessed of a tithe of your property
and she shall be burnt upon her private parts, after the manner of
burning women.”
“It is unlawful for you to fornicate with the barbarians. If the
forbidden be done you shall be dispossessed of your property and
household and made a slave of the council.”
“It is unlawful for a woman to show her breasts to the eyes of men
not of her household. If the forbidden be done she shall be burnt
between the breasts, after the manner of burning women.”
“It is unlawful for any woman to show her private parts to any man,
unless he be her husband or master. If the forbidden be done she
shall be burnt daily, after the manner of burning women, until each
of the seven points have been burnt. If she do so with a man not of
her household, then her husband or master shall be burnt with iron
and fire upon his right thigh.”
“It is unlawful for you to show your nakedness
willfully to any woman
or maiden not of your household. If the forbidden be done you shall
be burnt with iron and fire upon the backside.”
These are the statutes made because of the things done before the
eyes of the barbarians who hold their women in high esteem:
“It is unlawful for you to slay or maim any man or woman, or any
child among us. If the forbidden be done, then a life shall be taken
for a life, by water, after the custom of die barbarians. A limb
shall be taken for a limb and an eye for an eye. Except that if it
be one among you who is a bearer of arms in war, he shall not be
maimed so that he cannot fight, but he may be slain for a slaying.”
“It is unlawful for you to steal or dispossess by deceit. If the
forbidden be done the harm done shall be restored double. If it be
done again to the same man or another you shall also be burnt with
iron and fire upon the right forearm. But if a man act foolishly so
that he is easily dispossessed, than only that taken shall be
restored in value.”
“It is unlawful for you to
willfully destroy a writing or record in
writing, or marks of meaning or name-marks. If the forbidden be done
you shall be burnt with iron and fire upon each palm of the hands
and be dispossessed of one quarter of your property.”
“It is unlawful for you to
willfully damage the property of another
man among us. If the forbidden be done you shall make it good by
paying its value to the man you wronged.”
“It is unlawful for you to change worked iron with the barbarians
for other things. If the forbidden be done you shall be burnt with
iron and fire upon the sole of the left foot and upon the palm of
the right hand.”
“It is unlawful for you to deal deceitfully with the barbarians or
to steal from
them. Or to cause hurt to them or damage to their property. If the
forbidden be
done you shall be burnt with iron and fire upon the palm of the
right hand. You
shall be cast out without weapons outside our boundary in a place
where you can
be taken by them, so they may deal with you according to their own
customs,”
“It is unlawful for you to increase gold or silver with other
substances. If the forbidden be done you shall be dispossessed of
half your property and possession, and burnt upon the ears with iron
and fire.”
“It is unlawful for you to enter secretly into the habitation of
another man or within the enclosure about it. If the forbidden be
done you shall if within the habitation, be blinded in the left eye
with iron and fire, and if it be done again, in the right eye. If
you enter secretly within the enclosure about the habitation you
shall be burnt with iron and fire upon the soles of the feet and
upon the backside. If you be found with weapon you shall be made a
slave to the owner of the place.”
“It is unlawful for you to use an animal for lust. If the forbidden
be done and one penetrate the other, you shall be castrated and the
wound healed by iron and fire. Unless a bearer of arms in war you
shall be driven out from among us, and the animal shall die. If
neither penetrate the other you shall be burnt with iron and fire
upon your private parts.”
“It is unlawful for you to befoul the well of another man or the
clear water from which he drinks. If the forbidden be done you shall
be burnt with iron and fire upon the backside.”
“It is unlawful for you to cause damage to the herds or the crops,
the goods or the property of another man. If the forbidden be done
you shall make good the damage. If it be done again to him or
another man you shall also suffer burning with iron and fire upon
the sole of the left foot.”
“It is unlawful for a woman to sell herself for the use of men,
unless she first proclaim herself a public woman by standing from
dawn to dusk, for two days, at the market gate of the temple. If
such be done no guilt shall attach to her, but if the forbidden be
done she shall be burnt after the manner of the burning of women,
upon the cheeks and on the arms and on the belly. If she do it again
without proclaiming herself she shall be sold as a slave. Her price
shall be given to the governor.”
“It is unlawful for the wife or the bondswoman or the slave of any
man to sell herself for the use of men. If the forbidden be done the
husband or master shall be burnt with iron and fire upon the mouth
and upon the backside and upon the soles of the feet, except it be
done secretly from him. The woman shall be sold and her price given
to the governor.”
“It is unlawful for you, if a man with womanly ways, to conduct
yourself as such, unless you first proclaim your nature by standing
from dawn to dusk, for one day, at the market gate of the temple. If
such be done no guilt shall attach itself to your conduct as a man
with womanly ways. If the forbidden be done you shall be burnt with
iron and fire upon the belly and the backside, and sold in the
market place and your price given to the governor.”
“It is unlawful for an unprotected man with womanly ways to be the
master of a household or to take a wife. He cannot own anything,
except it be required for eating or sleeping, clothing and the
practice of his craft. He may own a dwelling of one room, but if he
bear arms in war he may own a dwelling of any size. If the forbidden
be done he shall be burnt with iron and fire on the backside and
chest, and sold as a slave and his price given to the governor.”
“It is unlawful for you to satisfy your lusts with a man of your
household. If the forbidden be done you shall both be burnt with
iron and fire on both armpits, unless one be in the hands of the
other.”
“It is unlawful for a woman to slay her child or let it die by
neglect. If the forbidden be done and the child be unweaned the
woman shall be sold into slavery and her price given to the
governor. If the child be weaned a life shall be taken for a life.”
“It is unlawful for you, if the master of a household, to go beyond
our boundaries for upwards of two days and one night, unless you
appoint a steward in your place or have a son in manhood. If the
forbidden be done you shall be burnt with iron and fire upon the
sole of your right foot and upon your backside. If you be detained
by force you shall not be burnt.”
“It is unlawful for you to touch a woman not of your household upon
her private parts, unless she be a woman who sells herself to men.
If the forbidden be done you shall be burnt with fire and iron upon
the palm and fingers of the right hand, and upon the left cheek and
upon the backside. If it be done again you shall also be blinded
with iron and fire in the left eye, and if again in the right eye
also.”
“It is unlawful for you to take a woman not of your household by
force for lust, unless she be a woman who sells herself to men. If
the forbidden be done you shall be blinded by iron and fire in both
eyes.”
“It is unlawful for you to enter the sacred places of the barbarians
or their
temples, or to pass within a thousand paces of the Rabukimra. You
may attend
their festivals outside these places. If the forbidden be done you
shall be
burnt with iron and fire on the sole of the left foot,”
“It is unlawful for you to carry upon yourself or to have within
your household the talismans of other Gods. If the forbidden be done
you shall pay a tithe of your possessions and property to the
temple.”
“It is unlawful for you, if a guest, to conceal a weapon upon
yourself or be in the dwelling of your host, while within his
habitation. If the forbidden be done you shall be burnt upon the
muscle of your left arm and upon the forehead.”
“It is unlawful for you to act seemingly towards an unlawful deed so
that men will say, “His thoughts are towards an unlawful thing.” If
the forbidden be done it shall be as though you had already done the
unlawful deed, except that the council shall look upon you with
mercy, if it be deserved.”
“It is unlawful for you to talk to another man towards an unlawful
deed. If the forbidden be done you shall be burnt with iron and fire
upon the lower lip and the left hand palm. The man among you who
denounces this thing shall not be burnt.”
“It is unlawful for you to he so that another man be harmed. If the
forbidden be done and it be not serious, or without evil intent, you
shall pay recompense. If it be more serious you shall be burnt upon
the upper lip and if more serious still, upon the tongue.”
“It is unlawful for you to allow a woman of your household to be
drunk in an outside place. If the forbidden be done you shall, if it
happen twice, be burnt with fire and iron upon the left thigh. If it
happen again you shall be burnt upon the left armpit.”
“It is unlawful for a stranger to remain within our boundaries after
sunset, unless he be a guest within a household or under its
protection. Or unless he remain within the strangers’ court or he be
proclaimed. No man shall remain beyond ten days, unless he be
proclaimed. At this proclaiming nothing of his past deeds or his
comings and goings shall be bidden, and lies shall not be told. If
the forbidden be done he shall be burnt with iron and fire upon the
nose and placed beyond our boundaries. He shall not return and his
goods shall be taken to the governor. As the sun goes down all men
shall bid the stranger be gone and shall not hold him.”
“It is unlawful for you to delay the departure of a stranger when he
must go and has done no wrong. If the forbidden be done you shall be
burnt with iron and fire upon the left backside.”
“It is unlawful for a woman to depart from her household or to
remain outside her home after sunset, unless she be protected. If
the forbidden be done and she be a wife she shall be burnt upon the
sole of the left foot. If she be a slave or bondswoman she shall be
burnt upon the soles of both feet, and if she be a freewoman or
servant woman she shall be burnt upon the left leg. If she be a
virgin she shall be beaten with a leathern throng.”
“It is unlawful for a man to raise his hand against the master of
his household. If the forbidden be done he shall, if a freeman, be
burnt with iron and fire upon the right shoulder and upon the
backside. If a servant, upon both shoulders and upon the backside,
and if a slave or bondsman, upon both shoulders and upon the
backside, and upon the soles of his feet. But if the master be hurt
so that he is put to bed, then he who struck him shall be seized and
confined and shall also be burnt on the body each day, until the
master be up again.”
“It is unlawful for you to maim or mark in chastisement beyond
repair any woman of your household, or any freeman within its
protection. If the forbidden be done you shall be burnt with iron
and fire, as the council declare.”
“It is unlawful for you to strike in chastisement any woman not of
your household, or touch her in anger. If the forbidden be done and
she be without marks, if a freewoman you shall be burnt with fire
and iron upon the right thigh and the right armpit. If a
maidservant, upon the right armpit and if a slave or bondswoman,
upon the left thigh. But if she be marked or maimed you shall make
payment to her master or her household and be burnt according to the
declaration of the council.”
“It is unlawful for you to drive a woman or a child from your
household unlawfully. If the forbidden be done you shall recompense
the one driven out with a fifth part of your property and
possessions. They may then enter any other household and shall not
be held back.”
“It is unlawful for you, if placed in stewardship or in
guardianship, to do an unfaithful thing against anyone under your
care. Or to cause loss or harm to the man who trusted you. You shall
not conduct yourself unseemingly in the household under your
stewardship or cause the man who trusted you to lose his reputation.
If the forbidden be done, and it be serious, the council may put you
to death by water, after the custom of the barbarians, but if it be
less serious you shall be burnt as the council declare.”
“It is unlawful for you or any man or woman within your household to
eat uncooked meat, unless it be dried by sun or fire, or be pickled.
Blood shall not be drunk. If the forbidden be done you shall be
burnt with iron and fire upon the left forearm.”
“It is unlawful for you to become drunk or quarrelsome while among
the barbarians. Or to curse them in their hearing, or to use
unseemingly language in their presence, or to talk against us to
them. If the forbidden be done, the first time you shall be burnt
with iron and fire upon the left leg; the second time you shall be
burnt upon the left armpit, and the third time, upon the lips of the
mouth. Each time of chastisement you shall be bound from the time of
burning until sunset, and displayed on the boundary.”
“It is unlawful for you to pass water within the temple enclosure,
or to befoul the grounds or floors there. If the forbidden be done
you shall be burnt with iron and fire upon the backside and the
soles of the feet, and between the thighs. If it be done again you
shall be blinded in both eyes.”
“It is unlawful for you to spit or use foul language within the
temple enclosure. Or to shout or raise your voice unseemingly or act
irreverently there. If the forbidden be done you shall be burnt with
iron and fire upon the mouth and right ear.”
“It is unlawful for you to destroy anything within the temple
enclosure. If the forbidden be done you shall be burnt with iron and
fire upon the palms of the hands and between the thighs. This may be
increased to death by water, according to the custom of the
barbarians, if the council think it fitting.”
“It is unlawful for you to steal anything from within the temple
enclosure. If the forbidden be done you shall die by water, after
the custom of the barbarians.”
“It is unlawful for you to strike any priest or servant of the
temple or anyone under its protection. If the forbidden be done you
shall be blinded by iron and fire. But if you maim someone you shall
die by water, after the custom of the barbarians. If it be a slave
of the temple or a bondsman, then for striking him you shall be
burnt with iron and fire upon the soles of the feet and between the
thighs. If he be maimed you shall be blinded in the right eye.”
“It is unlawful for you to be within the temple enclosure at night,
in secret.
If the forbidden be done you shall be blinded by iron and fire.”
“It is unlawful for you to carry weapons of metal or sharpened
weapons within the temple enclosure, unless with the sanction of the
temple guardians. If the forbidden be done you shall be burnt with
iron and fire upon the soles of the feet and the palm of the left
hand.”
“It is unlawful to seize any wrongdoer within the temple enclosure,
unless it be done by those who serve the temple. If the forbidden be
done he who commanded the deed shall be blinded by iron and fire.
Those who did the deed shall be burnt with iron and fire upon the
palms of the hands and soles of the feet.”
“It is unlawful to speak against the governor or the council or the
commanders or princes, unless it be done before them or at the
market gate of the temple. If the forbidden be done you shall be
burnt with iron and fire upon each side of the mouth. But no man
shall suffer for anything he says in public at the market gate of
the temple, except he talk about the God of This Enclosure.”
“It is unlawful for you to speak against the God of This Enclosure
within this His enclosure. If the forbidden be done you shall be
burnt upon the tongue and upon the mouth and driven out beyond our
boundary, and may not return for seven years.”
“It is unlawful for you to speak against any priest of the temple,
except before the High Priest on the days when any man may speak
freely without fear. If the forbidden be done you shall be burnt
with iron and fire upon the backside and beneath the chin.”
“It is unlawful for you to approach the Place of the High Altar or
the forbidden place about it, or to touch the Sacred Treasures,
unless you be a priest or high servant of the temple, or a man
admitted by them. If the forbidden be done you shall be blinded by
iron and fire.”
“It is unlawful to take a virgin to wife if you have a wife, but if
without wife you may marry a virgin. You shall not have more than
three wives. If the forbidden be done you shall be dispossessed of a
fourth part of your property and possessions, which shall go to the
wife you have taken unlawfully.”
“It is unlawful for you to have intercourse with your mother, your
daughter, your father’s sister or your mother’s sister, your
brother’s daughter or your sister’s daughter, your father’s mother
or your mother’s mother, your wife’s mother or your son’s wife,
whether they be by blood or by law. If the forbidden be done you
shall die by water, after the custom of the barbarians.”
“It is unlawful for men to wear the garments of women or women to
wear the garments of men, unless they have proclaimed their natures.
If the forbidden be done men shall be burnt with iron and fire on
the left cheek. Women may not be touched with iron made hot and
therefore are to be burnt with skyfire. All men shall be burnt with
iron and fire.”
“Men may be put to death by water or fire and women by water or by
smothering. Women shall not suffer chastisement so that their blood
flow. When men are castrated it shall be done with a knife of
stone.”
“Men shall be punished in a place where all men may see them, but a
woman shall suffer away from the eyes of men, though she may receive
punishment at the hands of a man. The punishment of a woman shall be
witnessed by two men of the council and two women from the household
she wronged.”
“A man punished by burning shall suffer at high noon and then be
laid on his back or his belly, according to which eases him most.
Each of his limbs shall be drawn out and fastened to a stake and he
shall be left until midnight, and then let go. A woman, having been
punished, shall be placed within a room which has a pole lengthwise
at sitting height and left there from noon to midnight. Any man or
woman suffering punishment shall be allowed one attendant after it
be inflicted, until their release. No man shall refuse to let
another go to attend his friend.”
“If a woman do something for which a man would be punished she shall
suffer likewise, except that the burning shall be with skyfire. The
council shall not overlook a suitable punishment for the master of
her household.”
“If a man become indebted by trial and fail within the season to pay
whatever be demanded of him, he and his possessions shall be seized
and given into the keeping of those to whom he is indebted.”
“A woman having been declared by her husband before the council as
unsuitable for a wife, and the council having found this to be so,
she may remain within his household without being his wife. Or she
may return to the household from which she came or that of her
father or her brother or her father’s brother or mother’s brother,
as she wills. But she may not go elsewhere and having chosen where
to go cannot choose again.”
“It is unlawful for a man to use whatever force and chastisements
are necessary to maintain order within his household. He may make
any adjustments within the household to endow it with contentment,
but all things must be done with justice and moderation. All
disagreements within a household shall be judged by its master.”
“That which be done by a wife or a daughter, a youth or a child; or
a servant or his wife or his sons or his daughters, or his servants;
or by a freeman or his wife or his sons or his daughters, or his
servants or slaves; or by a slave or a bondswoman or a bondsman, or
their wives or their sons or their daughters, within your household;
or by a freewoman or by a guest or by the stranger within your
gates, shall be as though it were done by the master of the
household and both shall suffer alike. Except that the council shall
weigh all the actions of the master of the household and set his
punishment according to them.”
“If, upon marriage, it be found that a woman taken to wife as a
virgin be not a virgin, evidence of this may be given at the Seat of
Truth before three witnesses. One witness shall then go to her
household and declare this before its master. Then, except the
matter come before the council, the woman may be put aside as a wife
and returned to her household, and her bride price reclaimed double.
Or, if her husband choose, she may remain in his household as wife
or concubine, but he may reclaim her bride price.”
“If a woman be put aside by her husband as no longer his wife and
she remain in his household, she shall be as a concubine.”
“The rights of a concubine are those of a bondswoman, but she is a
bondswoman to her master for life.”
“When the master of a household dies his eldest son shall become the
master, and brother shall follow brother, until there are no sons.
Then the brothers of the master shall follow in the order of their
ages, and their sons, according to their kinship. The new master
shall provide for the wives and concubines of his father in the same
manner as previously. His brothers and sisters shall become as sons
and daughters. Within a household the death of its master changes
nought but the master. After the death of its master a household
cannot divide, except it be done lawfully by the new master after he
has been master for one year.”
“All who stand at the market gate of the temple shall be proclaimed
by the hours, and under the proclaimer’s voice all men shall cease
exchanges and be silent.”
“A child may be adopted into house and household according to the
custom of the Sons of Fire, and it may be one of us or a barbarian
from across the waters, or a barbarian from outside our boundary.
But if a barbarian from outside our boundary it shall not be adopted
unless a foundling under seven years if male, or a child if female.”
“If a man take a barbarian woman to wife and have no other wife from
among us who is her superior, he shall not become the master of a
household, and a younger son shall step over him.”
“A man with womanly ways who has proclaimed himself shall stand
before us as a woman and be treated as one. Except if he bear arms
in war he shall then stand before us as a man, unless he choose
otherwise.”
“If the master of a household have within it a woman who is not a
virgin and is a concubine or slave, and he give her to a guest or
another within the household, that he may go in unto her, no wrong
is done.”
“If a man be proclaimed a man with womanly ways, an arrangement may
be made with the governor and a price paid to become his protector.
He shall then enter the household of the man who paid the price.”
“A slave or bondsman may be bought for any woman of your household.
But if she be a freewoman, then the slave shall be made free, and if
a bondsman the debt paid so that he be free.”
“If a woman be a concubine and within five years of her loss of
virginity or admittance into your household have not become with
child, she shall pass into the household of another after the custom
of the Sons of Fire, and returned according to the same custom.”
“During the proclaiming of a stranger his deeds, good and bad, shall
be made known. All things about him shall be told to all within
hearing of the proclaimer’s voice. Any man may question the stranger
concerning such things and if aught be hidden or lies told, the
stranger shall be dealt with lawfully by the council.”
“A virgin shall not be burnt, but is to be whipped with wands and
the council shall set the number of stripes.”
“A man who has been punished by trial three times shall be driven
out from among us after the fourth punishment, unless he be a bearer
of arms in war.”
“Records and writings, name-marks and marks of meaning can be
destroyed or altered only by permission of the council and the
governor.”
“The man who is the companion of thieves is himself a thief at heart
and may be taken to trial if his companions steal.” “If the rightful master of a household be under age of manhood, the
council shall appoint a steward and guardian for the household and
heir.”
“A stranger may not enter our boundaries bearing weapons of war made
of metal.
But the lords of the barbarians about our boundaries may come
bearing weapons.”
These are the statutes between the council and the governor and men.
Those between man and man are in the keeping of the court of the
market place. There are others between the court of the temple and
men.
It was Hoskiah who set the statutes up and Racob recorded them. I,
Brigadan of the Gulwa, preserved them, but many are unknown. Those
are the statutes of Hoskiah.
This was misplaced from its text.
“It was decreed that the iron for
burning should not glow, neither should a blinding be made by
contact with metal but should be through heat alone nor should it be
absolute.”
CHAPTER TEN
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 4
Now, even in the days of Hoskiah the records were not whole and
Hoskiah caused it to be that this was written. It was set down in
the manner of Kahadmos.
It is written, in the Book of Mithram: The True Man has many
qualities and among the greatest is the inclination towards his duty.
A man has a duty to his soul, to his God, to those who govern and to
his household.
The weakling runs in battle and says, “See, I have done my duty, I
am alive.” The True Man stands resolute and grim, his enemies are
like chaff before the wind, he is the master of life. Duty is the
Goddess of manhood and she demands no mean sacrifice.
The grim Goddess says “Die”, and the True Man steps forward. The
ranks of the Everlasting Lords of Life open and he takes his place
among them.
Duty says, “Glory and honour will never be yours, your miserable lot
is to labour in the brickpits, so that your wife and children will
not go hungry”. The True Man faces his task with fortitude and
cheerfulness. Courage is the greatest quality of manliness, and duty
the greatest expression of courage. What chastity is to woman duty
is to man, the willingly assumed burden of their kind. Man and woman
travel the same road together, but each bears a different burden.
Hoskiah said, ‘This shall be added to the records”: Even the wild
beasts have a duty to perform, for duty is the handmaiden of life.
All things that have life have a duty, for life itself is duty. When
a man has no obligations he is dead.
The greater the standing of a man the greater is his duty. The
Captain of Men shall serve better than the footman. Greater men have
greater duties, lesser men have lesser duties. Wherever there is
life there is danger.
It is written, in the Book of Mithram: The True Man is generous in
word and deed, meanness has no place with him. He who gives with one
hand gathers with the other.
It is also written thus: All men must seek to rise above their
estate. They either rise or are cast down. Only man knows discontent
and seeks to improve his lot, for discontent is the maker of men.
Hoskiah added this to the records: Aim your arrow above your
expectations. The man who sends an arrow towards the moon shoots
farther than the one who sends it to a treetop. Choose your bow
according to your strength. A strong bow without a strong arm is of
no more value than a weak bow. Judge a man by his aim and not by his
bow. A plain bow for service, a fancy bow for display. The strongest
bow ever made is useless without an arrow.
Hoskiah said, “These are things which are written but have been
lost. Let them be recorded again” : Success is the child of
diligence and persistence. It follows the footsteps of the wise,
even as failure dogs the foolish. Men have the choice of either
success or ease, they cannot have both. To be beaten and still not
surrender, that is true victory.
Failure is the yardstick of success. It alone adds value to
achievement, but there can be no real failure except through the
acceptance of failure.
These things were added to the records, but we cannot tell when,
though it is said by Hoskiah: The manly spirit rejoices in freedom
and cannot bear the yoke of servitude. It will admit no master who
imposes his will by force.
A man may submit to leadership and command in warfare, and be a
better man, for true service is not servility. Never demand your
rights before you have earned them.
A man is unworthy of freedom unless he also recognises the rights of
others to freedom. The freeman is his own governor and his rule is
more rigorous than that of a despot. The only man entitled to be
free is the one who governs himself strictly and wisely.
Every nation moves either towards freedom or towards servility, for
none can remain suspended between the two. It is free men, if they
are weak, who are the greatest enemies of freedom. Great events do
not make either heroes or cowards, they just unveil them to the eyes
of men.
Hoskiah caused this to be written, saying, “This too was once
written but is now lost to us by decay”: The way of the evildoer is
the path of sleeplessness. The wicked follow a road of darkness,
they tread in constant fear of falling.
The evildoer is caught by his own wrongdoing. He is imprisoned by
his own wickedness. The evildoer becomes trapped in a snare of his
own making, he flees when none pursues.
It is truly said: The wicked in heart praise the wicked in deed.
More men think wicked thoughts than commit wicked deeds, for many
who would act are cowards. Observe the man who talks much about the
deeds of wicked men, would he not be among them did he not lack the
courage?
This was written in records which were lost even in the days of
Racob: In a hundred generations men will be less wicked, for such
was written in the Plans of God. When a thousand years have passed,
women will be more fair, for this was written in the Plans of God.
A day will come when a great nation will rise above all others, to
lead the nations of the Earth, and it will survive even the Day of
Visitation. Much was written of this nation, which is now lost.
As the generations pass, the Earth will become more fruitful, for
this was written in the Plans of God.
The body of the Great God contains all that is and His Spirit is
contained in all that is. The spirit is perfect, but the body is
imperfect.
Hoskiah said, “Let this now be written, for it was written before”.
No man shall walk in ways set against the will of the people. No man
shall bear an unjust grudge or take personal vengeance unjustly.
These things shall be punished: If a man take a wife before he be
one score of age, though he may have a concubine; if he empty his
body, except in private; if he purify himself, except in flowing
waters.
Because of his birth Hoskiah could not become governor over the Sons
of Fire, but he sat equal with the governor at the council, for he
commanded all in this place.
The council made these statutes and set them together with those of
Hoskiah: A stranger, even a barbarian, may become one of us if he be
supported by three members of the council, but he shall not sit in
the council, unless he has carried arms in war for us. He shall not
become one of us until one year after his proclaiming, and any man
may come before the council and speak his objections to the
acceptance of the stranger.
Each man shall have his assigned place at the council and may speak
at his time according to his place. No man shall interrupt another
while he is speaking.
No man shall speak before his turn and any man having spoken may
speak again. If a man has spoken twice and desires to speak again he
shall stand and remain silent. If one man in five raise their hands
for him he may speak again, but if they do not he shall be reseated
and not speak. If more than one man stand up at a time those of
lesser placement shall reseat themselves. On the third time no man
shall speak, except on some matter spoken about by one who came
after him, and he may not speak about any new thing. No man shall
speak beyond his own time.
The old statute shall be changed, so that no man shall sit on the
council except he be one score and five years old, but those over
three score years may remain on the council. A man who has carried
weapons of war in battle shall take a higher position than a man
entering the council with him who has not.
If a man go to sleep during a meeting of the council he shall not
come there again for one season.
A man shall not leave a meeting of the council while another is on
his feet speaking, and when a man goes outside no man shall speak in
debate.
A man shall not spit or laugh foolishly or make body noises during a
meeting of the council. No man shall whisper or talk, except in his
talking time.
A man shall not revile another at a meeting of the council. If a man
wish to make an accusation or call something into question he shall
state it when he is speaking and ask that a time be made for it to
be debated.
This shall be the stranger’s oath upon admittance:
“I swear before
The God of This Enclosure that I will dutifully follow His ways and
obey His commands. I swear to be steadfast on the Great Path. I
swear to submit myself to all your statutes and to remain faithful
to you in warfare and before the face of terror, even under torment
by the barbarians. This I swear for all time.”
CHAPTER ELEVEN
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 5
“Supreme One Above Greatness, illuminate the hearts of my people and
let them see the path ahead. Permit them to understand the meaning
of life. Make their hearts fearful for the responsibility they carry
with regard to the future state of their souls. To this end help
them towards achieving a humble spirit and a kindly heart. Grant
them some glimpse of eternity while here on Earth, so that they may
better understand what lies before them. Bestow upon them the
ability to make contact with the fount of wisdom and Truth and let
them draw near the well of holiness to sip its waters. Help them to
make right judgments and guide their hearts, so they hold fast to
the teachings of our Masters who have gone before. Make them
steadfast in the light and show them the falsity that glitters in
the darkness. When they come to the end of their journey, Supreme
One Above Greatness, grant them immortality in the Region of Eternal
Light. Incline towards them in mercy, for You can even mitigate the
impress of wickedness upon their everlasting souls”.
“Our Masters taught that the soul of man is the seed of a spirit
implanted within the body of a beast. Supreme One Above Greatness,
send down the refreshing waters of Your wisdom and compassion upon
my people, that the seed may be nourished within them, to spring to
life in the Land of Light. If the seed wither within the body or be
consumed by the beast, we are condemned to the doom of everlasting
nothingness. Let none of my people suffer this, for even the most
wicked among them will be missed by others in the Region of Eternal
Light”.
“Supreme One Above Greatness, who reads the hearts of men as an
unrolled book, what can I ask for myself? I who, though first in
rank among my people, fall far below many of them in strength of
soul. I am a man of battles and not a man of prayer, therefore I
cannot know how I stand with You.”
“Indeed, Supreme One Above Greatness, I have brought about much
sorrow and suffering in my days. The burden of my manhood has
weighed down heavily upon me. But, Supreme One Above Greatness, I
have never robbed the widow or fatherless, or struck at the helpless
and those without protection. I have not mocked the afflicted or
stood aside in fear when wickedness was being done. I have slain no
man unless he has been my enemy and would have slain me. When I
served any man I served him well. I have never deserted a friend in
distress or violated the sanctity of another man’s home. Yet,
Supreme One Above Greatness, I have done much that men condemn and
therefore cannot know my standing before You. Yet, however I stand
in Your eyes do not consider me too unworthy to plead for my
people.”
“I was not born among those who are now my people. I am not of their
blood, and once I called upon the God of My Fathers after the manner
of my fathers. Yet, are You not the same Being, by whatever name
called? You are the Being before Whom my spirit bows, the Sustainer
of its strength. You alone know the conflict which has twisted my
heart in its resting place, for I cannot know what, indeed, is
Truth. I do not expect to know, being unworthy of such knowledge. I
did not desert You, but sought only to see You more clearly and
serve You better. When I could not understand You in one place, I
sought You in another. I looked for You where there was more light.
Amid the people of my youth You seemed close, yet I could not
understand You, for they wished to enclose You in a box. Now, though
You appear further away I see more clearly and know Your nature.”
“Supreme One Above Greatness, I cannot say, as others do, that I
have no doubts, for indeed I am often torn with conflicting
thoughts. I do not doubt Your existence, for I have been granted a
manifestation of its reality. But I am full of doubts about my
relationship with You. Then, too, there is so much I cannot
understand, yet others turn to me for guidance. When I make an error
affecting only myself I do not complain about the consequences, but
should I guide others into error my heart will be torn apart.”
“God of My Heart and Father of My Soul, incline towards me a little,
for of myself I cannot reach You. Enlighten me, so that I may lead
others into the light. Death and destruction I do not fear, not even
everlasting nothingness, but I do fear being inadequate for my task.
Supreme One Above Greatness, give me confidence and strength, I ask
no more. If I cannot find these with You I can find them nowhere.
Guide me, Supreme One Above Greatness, what shall I do for my
people?”
This was not written for the eyes of men, but will he who wrote it
object if by being recorded for men it adds even a mite to the
storehouse of goodness available to men on Earth?
When Hoskiah was past three score years of age he sent to Pelasi for
the remnants of the Children of Light. None of them came, for they
said it was not meet for them to journey to the edge of the Earth to
dwell among barbarians. They said, “We will retain the light here,
for out there it will surely be extinguished”.
Later, four ships did come, but they carried the standards of
Ashratem. With them came Enos Husadim of the Sons of Dan, a learned
man from the slopes of the mountain which rests in darkness and
reaches up to the limits of light. He knew Hoskiah when a child.
There came also one named Zodak, who had dwelt in Twalus, and he
brought with him all the books of the Children of Light. With Zodak
came many men who knew the mysteries of metal, and they brought with
them the light of Amos. When they came, the spirit of Hoskiah had
already joined his fathers.
Before his spirit took wings Hoskiah wrote this for the guidance of
his people:
“My trusted ones, the time draws near for my departure on the Great
Voyage and I cannot complete the tasks before my hands. In one thing
I have been neglectful, for though the Chief Guardian of the
Records, the time I devoted to their care was little enough. Thank
the priests for their care. I have recorded many statutes needful
for this place. Their like was known before, but were not set down
for men to see. Now they are made known to the ears of every man.
Your welfare and safety has ever been my first concern, but I am a
man of battle and a commander of men, not a scribe and recorder”.
“My trusted ones, we are few and the barbarians about us are many.
For a while they are well kept in hand, for Cladwigen wishes us
well, and his sons are our friends. We have toiled to raise a city
and men come and go freely among us. Many ships come in their
season. Yet stout warriors who are not friendly press down from the
Northeast and therefore vigilance can never be relaxed. We cannot
sleep peacefully side by side with the barbarians and must ever be
alert. Danger hangs over us like a boulder upon the mountainside,
and our safety is like a playstone in the hands of a child. The
barbarians do not forget that we are strangers in this land and only
while we serve a purpose are we welcome”.
“Yet, my trusted ones, with all the dangers around us it is the
dangers threatening within that I fear the most. We are few indeed
against the numbers of barbarians, yet we weaken ourselves with
foolish strife one with the other and people with people. Our city
is a place for buying and selling, a place where things are
exchanged. Outside it is a market place where men come and go as
they please and they buy and sell without hindrance. We have laws
for the city and laws for the marketplace. Amongst us are many
craftsmen who exchange the things they make with the barbarians who
bring things to eat. We have a good life here, but it is not a life
I fully understand. We came from afar to set up a city dedicated to
the light, to hold the light. Yet, is this such a city? Do men seek
the light and worship it, or do they seek luxury and worship wealth
and possessions?”
“When some of us came from the Harbour of Sorrow we were full of
praise at our deliverance from death, but amid the forests of
fruitfulness much of our gratitude and will was lost. Why must men
always be better men in the face of disaster and in the midst of
privation, than in the green fields of peace and plenty? Does this
not answer the questions of many who ask why there is sorrow and
suffering on Earth? Why is it the lot of men to struggle and suffer,
if not to make better men?”
“My trusted ones, my eyes may be clouded to the things before them,
but I am not blind to your ways. Already our women cast their eyes
towards the barbarians, and when women seek men outside their own
kind it is a sign of a people’s degeneracy. I read what is written
and I fear for the future.”
“Many who are with us in the light will join us and then we shall be
stronger in arms and strengthened in belief. (Annotation: How few
came!). Yet our destiny lies among the barbarians. They are fine,
upright men endowed with courage, do not belittle their ways, but
bring them into the light.”
“Our city was not founded as a marketplace, a place for exchanging
only the things of Earth. Neither did we come here as conquerors,
but as men seeking refuge.”
“My trusted ones, remember that the road of life is not smooth,
neither is the way of survival a path of grass. The most needful
thing for any people who wish to survive is self-discipline. Think
less of gold and more of the iron which protects the gold. Remember,
too, these words from the Book of Mithram, The keenest sword is
useless unless it be held in the hand of a resolute man. Also, the
man who has gold keeps it in peace if he tends his bowstring.”
The remainder of Hoskiah’s words to the people has been lost.
CHAPTER TWELVE
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 6
(Incomplete and Fragmentary)
Before we left Droidesh they brought living sheep and goats and hung
them upon a tree standing in the place of assembly. Birds of bright
colours and things of worked gold and silver were hung upon the
branches. Perfumes and oils with garments. They danced about the
tree and hewn wood was brought and laid against it. Three maidens
came and it was lit and burnt as an offering to success.
We went Northwards and came to a strand where many ships were drawn
up and armed men such as we had not seen before were disputing among
themselves with great noise.
We drew off, for they were foreign to us, but others came behind and
we were taken in among them and brought before Albanik, the Leader
of Armed Men. They pushed around about us and some cried out for
blood. They wished to take our ships and possessions, but the leader
said, “Leave the deed until the morning, for if blood flows now it
will not cease with the foreigners”.
That night the wife of Albanik spoke to him and said,
“It would be a
foolish thing and an evil deed to slay these strangers, for they
have wisdom and are men of learning. Why destroy something you may
use to good end?”
The leader listened to her advice, for he knew
there were many wounded men and none more skilled than we to attend
them. Because she was carrying a child our lives were spared and our
goods restored to us.
The commander among the captains was a warrior who, while hunting,
had slain his own father and so had to flee his own land. With him
he had taken the queen captured by sly and subtle means, but we
feared him not, for Albanik looked upon us with favourable eyes.
Of the warriors who came with us there were a score of score of men
from Ilopinos. They wore helmets of bronze with plumes of scarlet
and purple. Their shields were of bronze burnished, so that they
shone like the sun and were edged with a band of hardened metal. In
length they were two and a half cubits, and in width one and a half
cubits. They had spears of unknotted wood six cubits in length, with
blades of hard metal set in sockets.
Their swords were of pure hard metal worked in a strange way, and in
length one and half cubits and in width three fingers breadth. They
were horn-handled and bound about with wire of copper and silver.
Some among them were armed with war javelins and darts. They had a
curious dart that turned over itself in flight, and another that
struck in from the side.
In battle they stood three and three to withstand the rush of the
enemy, but they were weak in attack, for they moved heavily. With
them were slaves and six score attendants who were plunderers of the
battlefield, pillagers of the land, the cooks, the baggage keepers
and the carriers of burdens. The warriors were the battle craftsmen.
In seven days all the ships sailed together and in seven days came
upon some land by the sea. It was a place of the dead where all was
desolation. In the centre of the land by the sea there stood a
temple which had fallen into itself, for there were no people to
keep it. The leaders and the chief among them went up to the temple
and made sacrifices to their Gods whose voices they wished to hear.
The daughter of Laben, the armourer, had hidden herself in the
opening behind the flame and spoke to them in a strange tongue. They
heard her voice and thought it came from a shadow God. She told them
of the land of her mother, called Belharia, and bid them find their
way there. She told them to take the Bethedan with them, for they
brought good fortune and were beloved by the Gods. The leaders went
out from the temple believing they had been granted a vision.
We sailed with a large company towards the West and had nothing to
fear, except the whirlpool, for the Red Men with us knew the way of
the waters. For long days we saw only the sea, and the landsighting
birds all came back.
We went out through the mouth of the sea into the sea of the Great
River. Past the lands of white copper to the Place of Painted Men,
where we drew up the ships and staked them.
Among the fighting men were some from Sparsia whose leader was
Korin, called the axeman, but whom we named ‘the cunning one’. These
went out into the forests to hunt and the king of that place sent
men to take them, but they refused to go and there was a loud
dispute.
The bodyguard with the leader of the Painted Men were bowmen and one
shot an arrow at Korin. He slewed aside behind his shield and the
arrow turned into the throat of a Painted Man who held a sword
against him. This started a great fight between forest and sea, and
though surrounded by many enemies Korin fought through them. The
battle was his because he went forward through the forest and
attacked the houses of the Painted Men.
The ships were divided and those who wished to set up the eagle and
serpent went to the Harbour of Giants in Belharia. The same giants
are builders of great temples and they are six cubits tall.
The ship with Korin stayed with us and he hunted them out of their
caves and slew them all, save one giantess. She came to us, bound as
a surety for the life of the wife of Albanik.
We came to a bay on one side of which was a forest and on the other
a plain where herds grazed. For the men of that place it was the
time of the feast of fires and they held games upon the shore and
ran races in cleared land behind. At this time they would not fight,
so we met them in peace. They wore garments woven in two parts and
belted with hide. They had caps of skin or leather, and the tunic
which hung about them was darkly coloured in blue, green and brown.
They enclosed their legs and feet in dressed skins bound in front
with throngs. They had many ornaments of copper, but little gold or
silver, though their armbands and brooches shone like silver. They
had the art of making copper like silver or gold.
These people hold a great feast before the beginning of the heat,
when their God Mago appears. Inside the God were the spirits of men
whom the God had eaten, and their voices could be heard calling for
deliverance from darkness. Because of the feast these people
demanded the giantess, and she was given over to them for the days
of feasting.
We did not know the ways of these people and when we saw they wished
us to drink blood, we drew apart from them. The headman sent a
messenger to us and Korin and the giantess wrestled together, but
the giantess was the stronger, so Korin lured her towards the cliff
edge. Korin taunted her and laughed at her clumsiness, and then at
the break of the cliff he tricked her, so that she rushed forward.
As she passed beside him he turned behind her and pushed, so that
she fell over the cliff edge on to a large black rock below. Her
back was broken. The same black rock was later split and taken up to
be worshipped.
In the place to which we came the deathless stars ride high. The
adze rests on the morning and the watchman at the gate of the sky
sits at the eastern tiller in the evening. The falcon is rarely seen
clearly. This is the Land of Dada.
We warned them, but they would not listen. They were fasting before
the battle, the sacred fast before they ate the meat of the
offerings. We buried salt beneath the floors of their houses, so
that no man would live there again. When the horns sounded the alarm
and danger threatened, these shrewd bargainers came running to us.
Their faces were wet with the sweat of fear and their lips trembled.
When the danger was past they came out with chests puffed up and
tongues bragging about their deeds. They were the first to push
forward for a share in the plunder.
Korin left to seek them. He took two ships but did not return to his
children. The leader may be carried away, but the lowliest of those
who followed him has a will which need never be broken. Now when men
wish to say a thing is impossible they say, “Where is Korin?”
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 7
In the seven and twentieth year came Emos who was a learned man, and
with him came Zadok who was one of us. Mosu, son of Shonthel, came
also and others in four large ships. Keeta came in a ship apart.
They were welcomed and Keeta set up a place of learning, and many
came and sat before him. When Keeta died, those whom he had taught
said, “Let us record the knowledge of our master, so that it may be
added to the records and not lost.”
We who are the pupils of Keeta and have been blessed by him and
purified by water, shall be one. From this day we will call
ourselves by the name he gave us, which is ‘Bartha Hedsha Hethed’
The meaning of the words is lost.
God and goodness are one and alike. God is not a person, but The
Supreme Spirit. He made the Earth so that it brought forth man and
woman, and they lived together in a far away land where everything
was pleasant, even the forests. Woman tempted man so that he ate
something which was part of God, and man was punished, for he is
responsible for woman.
Children were born in their generations and multiplied, until Earth
was filled. They built cities of stone and cut channels for water to
flow away, and made lakes. They were cunning workers in stone and in
wood and in ivory. They made instruments from firestone and pottery
in many colours. They raised up temples to the sunlight and
worshipped inside many pillars, but within the temples were inner
temples where greater things were known.
In the Land of Copper, which was the Land of The Golden Light, one
man in twelve was a priest. There were priestesses who took care of
them and watched over the sacred elements within the temples. The
headdresses of the priests were red and they wore feathers and
cloaks of black. They had circlets of gold and beads of silver, and
there was a spiral of blackstones at their waist.
There was war between those who lived within the city and those who
lived beyond its limits. Those who lived within the city grew all
kinds of things and clothed themselves with the labour of their
hands. Those who lived outside the city were hairy hunters clad in
the skin of wild animals.
Outside the grounds of the city there was a holy mountain and
priests lived within it. The men of the city brought them herbs and
fruit with bread and wine. The men who were not of the city brought
them sheep and goats and beasts of the chase.
The men of the city loved wealth, like city dwellers, and were less
generous than those who gained their food by strength and hunting.
The men of the city held back portions of their dues and caused the
priests to look upon them less kindly. When the great day of the sun
came and the High Priest gave his blessing of fruitfulness, he
withheld it from the city dwellers and gave it only to the hunters
and herdsmen. That night, when those who had received the blessings
were rejoicing beside the mountain, the city dwellers fell upon them
and slew many. This was the cause of a great war in which many men
died.
Men did to men what their natures inclined them to do, but they also
ravaged women and children. The evil grew in greatness, until the
land could no longer contain it and had to be purged clean.
Therefore, the revenging dragon was called up out of the heavenly
abyss and it lashed the land with fire and thunder. The whole land
was filled with its smoky breath and men choked to death.
The land was split apart between the city and the mountain and the
sea rolled in upon it, so that the city was destroyed. The valleys
of the mountain were filled with dead men and animals and with
trees.
The High Priest survived with seven others who were priests. He
brought these, together with one hundred and ten men and their wives
and children, into Labeth, which is a land among high cliffs at the
edge of the Wide Plain.
Here the priests sought to preserve their wisdom and knowledge and
pass it on to the children, but it became distorted and
misunderstood. They did not understand the radiating power from the
bodies of the dead, which could guide the living. Even we do not
understand these things clearly.
The priests who came from the Land of Copper could make their soul
depart from the body at their command and return as they willed.
When ignorant men saw seemingly dead bodies return to life when the
soul came back into them, they thought the same could happen to a
dead body if kept long enough. Even this superstition stays with us.
Later, when they had left Labern, men believed that if they kept a
dead body so that it remained whole, the soul would not finally
enter the Sphere of Accounting. Such was the knowledge of their
wickedness and fear of their fate that they used every art to
prevent the body falling apart and entering decay. They may have
believed that until the soul entered the sphere above Earth it
remained flexible and capable of acting to counter some of the
ill-effects of a life of wickedness and ignorance.
Later still the light of Truth dimmed until it could scarce be seen,
but always there were the few within the many and the many hid them.
The light of the few was a precious thing safeguarded with diligence
and care. The people knew the many, but the few remained unknown,
their treasure safe. Gods multiplied, but those who sought Truth
among them could always find it if they were sincere and diligent
seekers. It was then as it is now.
A nation was once made from the blood of kings and it became great
and good. The light of Truth was revealed to this nation and it
rejoiced in the light, but in a few generations it accepted the
light as being something to which it was entitled by heritage. So
the nation became careless in the preservation of the light, it was
kept in a poorly built and neglected shrine. The winds of adversity
came and the light was blown out.
Another nation was made from the blood of sturdy herdsmen and the
lamp of Truth was lit among them. They, too, rejoiced in the light
for a few generations and cherished it in a house of gold. Then a
powerful king coveted the house of gold and came with many armed men
and drove out the guardians, together with their light. The
guardians built a house of reeds for the light, but because the
house was so humble they no longer bothered to guard it closely.
Then some drunken men came by, staggering like ships with broken
steering oars, and the house of reeds was knocked over.
The light
within burst into an all consuming flame, and not only the house of
reeds but the house of gold was destroyed. Still another nation was
made out of slaves and they lit a lamp from the Eternal Flame which
belongs to all men. Because they had no veil over their light they
were blinded and thought it the only light. They became arrogant and
called themselves ‘The Chosen of God’. But it was they who made the
choice not He. Though their God was a God above Earth and their God,
he was not the God of Mankind, and though he serves The Supreme
Spirit he is not The Supreme Spirit.
So it is that the Children of Light understand that the majority of
men who seek the light are like children playing about a brazier. As
a man long-confined in darkness is blinded by the sunlight, so are
most men blinded when brought into the presence of the Light of
Truth, even though it be heavily veiled. Only gradually can men be
brought out of darkness into light.
Yet even the Children of Light have become divided among themselves
and one institution became two. The institution of the East claims
it is the true guardian of the written records, but now we have
books written even before those copied by the scribes of Hoskiah.
We
are not the Children of the Lesser Light and we know the mysteries
of the Hidden Light. Only we in the cold north will survive, for did
not Amos write. “Our destiny lies in a much bleaker land where our
seed will be planted in strange soil. It will lie within the bosom
of an untamed land, until quickened to growth by the warmth of the
desires of men”.
Keeta taught that this means we should not seek to spread or reveal
the light until our day of destiny, which must lay ahead. Therefore,
those who say we must multiply our strength or be lost like a bead
among the wheat harvest, are mistaken. They talk against our
destiny, which is written and unalterable.
We know nothing of our first leader in Light, except that he was a
priest warrior skilled with the spear, and he lived in times of war.
His name is not recorded, for he said, “True Masters are to be known
by their works and not by their names. They who seek to stand forth
from other men and raise themselves up to increase their stature
before the generations, seek vain glory”. He said, “I am no more
than the storehouse into which the harvest is gathered. The good
grain within comes from many fields and is produced by the labours
of many men. If I said all this is my own growing, I would lie.
Therefore, so that men cannot attribute undeserved greatness to me I
make myself faceless and men may see as they will.”
In those days the Children of Light were sought out and persecuted,
and no man knew another by his name, for the tools of the tormentors
awaited them. Many were hung by the riverbank, feet uppermost, for
the governors said, “These people read their books upside down”. The
women, they consigned to houses of pleasure, so that many died in
their degradation.
We know that the first Leader of Light was among the highborn of
Egypt and his name was struck on marble pillars. He was cast down
because he carried the lamp of Truth and his name was removed from
the records of Egypt. He raised an army, but it was like a goat
attacking a wild bull and he was slain in the great marshlands lying
near Ethiopia.
He wrote the book which is known to all and the Book of Rites and
Ceremonies, which is known only to the elect. He did not write the
three books in the Lion Urns, which we alone know, or the Book of
The Secret Way. He may have written the Book of Instruction For The
Children of The Written Word Within The Children of Light. The
manner of keeping the book is taught from generation to generation.
The books are our foundation, our shield and our sword. They are our
promise and our hope, our guide and our defense.
It is said now, as in the days of our fathers and their fathers in
the generations before them, that men steal our words and light
their lamps from our flame. This may be so, but we have gathered
seeds from the flowers of wisdom wherever they grew and planted them
within our own garden. Shall we then deny to others what we
ourselves have taken? Is it not written that no man can make Truth,
but many can find it if they seek? Therefore, is not Truth the
property of all men, even though most spurn it? For Truth is not a
pleasant draught.
Nevertheless, it is true also that we may keep the Truth, as we find
it, secured to ourselves. If a man seek for unwrought gold and find
it, he has not made it, yet it is still his. Is it not also written,
‘Gold is the treasure of a lifetime, but Truth is the treasure of
eternity. Gold can nourish the body, but it may poison the soul’.
Which do men treasure most in this place, gold or wisdom? Is it not
the earthly thing they can hold in their hands and not the treasure
they can safeguard in their hearts? The things they hold in their
hands and hearts are already being weighed on the Scales of Fate and
our destiny decreed accordingly. Many in this place, who seek the
light and have gone so far and no further, declare this is not what
they sought and go back discarding what they have. Yet if a man seek
gold and find silver, does he throw it away? Better half a loaf than
no loaf at all.
If gold were as plentiful as copper it would be valued less than
silver. Only the things hard to obtain have value, and what is more
difficult to discover than Eternal Truth, which must be sought
beyond the boundaries of Earth? Only the beginning of the long road
towards it is here and it is this beginning you must seek. Every
journey has a beginning and an end, and you can make your way only
in one direction. If you are dispirited, be comforted by the
knowledge that you need only find the beginning of the road. Then,
having found it, let every step you take be in the right direction.
The journey is long and the road rough and stony, but do not turn
back before you reach the first staging post, you will find new
strength and encouragement there.
Our light was lit in the land of our beginnings. Many books were
made and kept in four places, and we were in truth Children of The
Written Word. There were scribes and readers, officials and
guardians. There were servants and those who served in the
courtyards.
Strangers came into the land of our beginnings and brought practices
which were different but more acceptable. They promised an easier
road, they displayed deceitful marvels, the usual baits thrown to
the ignorant. Their hands were heavy against us, and what could we
show except Truth arrayed in her earthly robes of simplicity? Even
the princes turned against their own customs and the twin
priesthoods of the undergods became earthly-wise and corrupt. Few
were ready to undergo the perils of initiation, no more were
prepared to accept the austere life prescribed. As spiritual
barrenness spread, evil practices crept in to fill the places
vacated by the Sacred Mysteries. The candidates accepted into the
body of light became fewer and fewer.
As the name, The Children of Light’, is written in the old
characters, it may also be read as The Children of The Written Word’
and this is a truth. We alone preserve our secrets in this manner.
The Children of Light followed a destined course by abandoning their
altars in the land of their beginnings, and went to dwell among
strangers where many ate at one table. We do not know what befell of
their books, for those we have are rewritten. We know the Children
of The Written Word went Northward after the scattering, but we do
not know what were their journeyings.
We know about Lothan and Kabel Kai, designer of houses, who sailed
around the edge of the Earth. With them was Raileb, the scribe, who
knew hidden mysteries. They gathered the records, which were in
Kindia, and carried them the long sea journey, believing the records
safer among the barbarians than among those who sought to destroy
them. If the records are destroyed by barbarians it will be done in
ignorance and not in the knowledge of wickedness. Many books were
laid open to the eyes of ignorant men and destroyed.
They came to the Harbour of Sorrow, which lies by the Hazy Sea, away
from the Land of Mists. There great trees grew and smaller trees
upon them, and moss hung from them like door curtains. It lay near
the great shallow waters South of the Isle of Hawhige and North of
the Sea Pass. Green pearls are found there.
Many died in the Harbour of Sorrow, for it was a place with a curse
upon it, which caused an evil sickness. The Sons of Fire came with
Hoskiah and saved them, and they came to this place and built a
city. Labrun, the son of Koreb, was governor.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
THE ROLLS OF RECORD - 8
(This was originally transcribed in full, but many portions of the
written pages are missing.)
The sister of Kabel Kai was born in the House of Sothus and her name
was Amarahiti. There were four children and one still remains among
us. Amarahiti was said to be a lovely-faced woman.
In the days when the city was being built, the barbarians came and
went freely among us Many came but stood off and watched from afar,
for they did not understand our ways. Among those who came was
Cluth, the son of Cladda and brother of Cladwigen, and he talked
with Amarahiti in the days when she was still in her father’s
household. In those days she sat at the Place of the Talking Stone,
which still stands in its place, for she was among those who sought
to know the speech of the barbarians.
In the season of fruitfulness the true wife of Cladda was overcome
with a sickness which no one among her own people could cure, not
even the wise men or priests who were able enough in such things.
Therefore, Cluth came to Ramana, the mother of Amarahiti, who was
known afar for her skill with herbs. Amarahiti came with Cluth, to
speak for him. When Ramana understood his needs she and Amarahiti
went with him, taking two armed men and men of the barbarians. The
peace of Cladwigen went before them. They came to the place where
the true wife of Cladda lay, on the evening of the second day.
The
wise men and priests went among the people, muttering against the
women and dark looks were cast upon Ramana.
The mother of Amarahiti cleansed the sick woman with ashes and made
a brew of herbs and bitter bark of the river ash. She sat by the
true wife of Cladda and in the morning the sick body no longer
burned, neither did it consume itself.
When the priests of the
barbarians heard about it they declared it was not a thing of
goodness, but something brought about by evil arts. They told people
a devil was loosed among them, whose trailing vapours they saw going
among the huts. When darkness came that night there were loud cries
among the barbarians, for many were seized with weakness and
vomiting, but this was something brought about by the priests and
not by the devil.
Among the barbarians the priests were held in high regard and so the
true wife of Cladda sought to appease them. She called the highest
of the priests to her and asked him what should be done to make the
evil depart and leave the people in peace. The priest told her that
if the two foreign women were sent away, their evil and the devil
would depart with them. He asked her to let her own people treat her
after their own manner. He told her that the things which cured
sickness in another race would not cure sickness in theirs. The true
wife of Cladda, seeking to avoid strife and being already half
cured, said it would be done as he wished.
So Amarahiti and her mother departed, together with their servants
and the armed men who accompanied them. On the night after they left
the true wife of Cladda died, with vomit stopping in her throat.
Then the priests made their voices heard among the barbarians and
told them to behold the work of the devil which remained among them.
They said it had not departed, nor would it leave until it was
appeased. They spoke in such a manner that men of the barbarians set
out in haste and came upon the women and Cluth, who with armed men
were preparing to leave their camping place. When Cluth heard the
words of the priests spoken by those who came he was dismayed and
knew not what to do. There was a man among those who came, who spoke
many words to Cluth, so that he was stirred up against our women.
For Cluth was a barbarian and their ways were his ways. (Here some
three hundred and fifty words are missing).
It resumes: Amarahiti turned her face towards Cluth and told him
that by strength alone he had brought her to this distant place and
its stronghold. That through his stubbornness her people had died
and her mother had been wounded. She said that though the priests
called for the sacrifice of her modesty, after the customs of his
people, she was already made sacred to a man of her own and would
rather die than be degraded.
She asked him what would be his
pleasure, and would it not be even less than that given by a woman
with a price, who would at any rate be willing to please. What a
small pleasure that is set against the pleasure women can really
give. (Indistinct, then several lines missing). Cluth stood apart
with his arms (Part missing). The priests prepared the cage and
Amarahiti was fetched (some words missing) stood by with dignified
modesty. Her mother sat apart before the image (large part lost
here).
It begins again: Away Cluth lay against the bole of the tree and
when they fetched her to him he raised himself up. He hardly stood,
for he was bloodied and weak. Amarahiti told him that never had
woman beheld a braver man, though a foolish one. Down at the water’s
edge lay Kabel Kai and the men who had cut the lashings of the
structure laved his wounds.
The old man who had read the omens and divided the people bade those
nearby to carry Cluth to the riverbank. When they came nearby Kabel
Kai had disappeared into the thickets of the forest. The men of
Kelkilith remained on the other side.
They left the destroyed place and the buried dead behind them and
Amarahiti stayed in the keeping of the priests of Cladwigen. In this
manner they came to the place where Cladwigen and his warriors were
assembled to meet the enemy. They were received joyfully, but there
was sorrow for Kabel Kai whose cunning had carried the day. They
feared for him, thinking he had been taken by the Wictas.
Cluth was slain in the battle with the Wictas and the Men of Broad
Knives at the crossing of the river now called by the barbarians
Cluthradrodwin. Kabel Kai was not taken, though he was sorely
wounded. His face was torn from the blows of the spiked club, so
that flesh hung loosely down. He was twisted, for his shoulder was
broken when the logs fell upon him. So he remained hidden within the
forest, the companion of beasts, for his appearance caused men to
shudder.
When the leaves left the trees in the fall of the year he came close
in to the city, near the boundary where Amarahiti was wont to sit,
by the side of the flowing stream. In the winter he was clothed with
skins and moved hardly.
At the time of the midwinter feast of the barbarians the people of
the city met them on common ground beyond the city and before the
forest. Fires were lit and there was feasting and revelry. Gifts
were exchanged between the people of the city and the barbarians.
There was an image (part missing).
Amarahiti was sorrowful because of this and withdrew into some
bushes close by the stream. With her were the two hounds. The hounds
smelled out Kabel Kai, for he had come close, being drawn by the
warmth and cheerfulness at the place of feasting. They leaped upon
him gladly, for they knew him. Kabel Kai sought to escape back into
the forest, but Amarahiti caught him by the hand. She looked at him
and fell on his neck with tears. She covered him with her cloak of
coney fur and when her two attendants came they carried him to a
sheltered place close by the stream. (Some five paragraphs are
missing).
It goes on: The most skilful with herbs among them. In the spring of
the year they returned as husband and wife and were welcomed with a
great feast. They were remarried within the house of Kabel Kai.
The fortress of Cluth was built up again by Kabel Kai according to
his promise, and the sons of Cluth live there in these days. It
stands on high ground rising out of the waters, surrounded by a high
wall of logs.
The city was built and finished with a wall which was two walls of
wood with soil between. Men came in ships, with cloth and pottery,
with things of metal and shells and beads. The barbarians gave much
for cloth dyed scarlet, for their tree blue is not fast in cloth.
Scarlet is made nowhere except in the land of The Sons of Fire,
where a white fish turns scarlet under the warmth of the sun. Men
say that those who bring the scarlet cloth declare it to have been
found in this manner: A man was out hunting with his dog and while
they walked along the strand the dog caught a fish which it carried
to its master in its mouth. The man saw a scarlet stain on the dog’s
mouth and wiped it away with a piece of linen. When the colour could
not be withdrawn from the cloth it was taken to a dyer who sought
out the thing that had made it.
The temple was built within the city and raised up on logs. Beside
it was the Place of Instruction and just before it was the Place of
Exchanging. It stands today as a sanctuary and a centre for those
who seek the light. In its keeping are the records of the Children
of Light who are the Children of the Written Word.
But all is not well with the heart and spirit of the city, which is
the people. A city lives not by the wood and stones with which it is
built. Therefore, since the coming of Samon of the Barhedhoy and
those who follow Ameth, we who are the heart of the Children of
Light prepare our departure. (Some words missing). By the waters of
Glaith not far distant where we may dwell by ourselves.
The first books we leave in the temple with those who guard them,
but we have made other books which will go with us. In another place
we will make them incorruptible, (piece missing). This we leave with
you, as we also take it with us, so that it may not be lost. The
names are written and the seals placed.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
THE BOOK OF KADMIS
By command of our master Lodas, son of Kadmis and Karla, by the hand
of Orailuga, the writer born of the Hortheni. Set down in the seven
and eightieth year of the temple, which is the fourth year in the
cycle of Balgren and the nineth year of our oath.
As man moves in air, so does God move in goodness. As God is
incomprehensible to man as mortal man but comprehensible to him as
man in spirit, so is God not a Being with the mere attributes of men
but The Supreme Spirit among spirits. As man stands at the apex of
material creation, so is The Supreme Spirit the Ultimate Unity above
the spiritual sphere.
From this day forward we shall be known as the Craftsmen of The
Supreme Spirit, and this place, upon the waters of Glaith which we
call the Valley of Reeds, known to those about us as Carsteflan,
shall be called the Smithy of The Supreme Spirit.
The boundaries of the land pledged solely unto us are the waters
below, upward of the markpost three thousand and two score set
paces. Downward of the markpost one thousand and twelve set paces.
In the water and its divisions you may fish and gather reeds and cut
water herbage over to its further bank.
Landward of the markpost, at four thousand four score and ten paces
is the stone placed by Calraneh, set upright, and there is the
boundary to the East. Out ward from this, two thousand and five
hundred set paces on each side is placed a markstone set that all
may recognize it. From these stones to the markposts on the waters
edge are the boundaries North and South.
Within the boundaries the land shall be clear of trees and shall be
pastured and sown, and therein we shall have our habitations. In the
forest about us may be gathered wood, and swine may be fed there and
we may hunt.
The House of Men shall remain as before, but no longer shall we be
divided into parts. Men shall be made men as they have been in the
past. If any man be in years and without wife and children, or
having a son who is a man placed in his stead, he may enter wholly
into the House of Men.
No man shall absent himself from the House of Men at his times,
unless by dispensation of the Houseruler, or if it be impossible for
him to be there. But all time not served shall be served doubly
later, unless, with the dispensation of the Houseruler, it is
waived.
The Ruler outside the House of Men shall be a man chosen by the
council, which shall be four men chosen in meeting together at noon,
one day before midwinter’s eve. The Ruler and the council shall
govern and judge in all things among us, but they shall not alter
these decrees, which shall stand among us as a rock. We will govern
our lives by them and abide by them and pass them on to those who
follow. These, together with the words of the Holy Writ, are the
candle stick and container for the mortal Light of Truth which is
among us. They shall be honoured by all who walk in that light, now
and henceforth.
They shall be written on copper made incorruptible and placed within
the sacred urns, together with the records. Yet they shall remain
with us and be among us written on tablets of wood.
We shall keep the decrees of Hoskiah and abide by them and their
punishments. Though the punishments may be changed by the council,
so that men are lashed with the whip and the women with leathern
throngs or wands of wood. We now have with us the decrees of Amos
and they alone shall stand before those of Hoskiah. All other laws
shall stand according to the order of their numbering. Where laws
are at variance one shall not be set against another, but that which
is latest shall stand highest and the others be subordinate.
The decrees of the Old Law, which is not written, shall be kept only
if their keeping be the custom in judgement. Let no man build a
habitation of brick or stone upon these lands, for this is an
unlawful thing unto the people within whom we dwell.
If any decree be set against another, the last written decree shall
prevail, except between the decrees of Amos and Hoskiah. Let no man
change to his benefit the brandmark upon the beast of another, for
this is an unlawful thing. If done, the wrong shall be adjusted by
restoring double the value and if done again by restoring treble.
Let no man among us worship otherwise than in the manner of our
brotherhood. To the rituals nothing shall be added and nothing taken
away. Our beliefs shall be supported manfully, without shame and
with all our strength. You shall not be faint-hearted when danger
threatens, nor indifferent when hard-pressed. No man among us shall
be voiceless when our beliefs are ridiculed, or remain passive
before their enemies. If anyone become a coward or fail in this, he
shall not be numbered among us.
The works of men are imperfect and no man has ever seen the Light of
Truth in absolute purity. Therefore, though two things within the
body of our written records may appear contradictory, if not capable
of reconciliation through greater understanding, the thing written
later, unless a manifest error, shall be more acceptable. Be men of
good faith, goodwill and commonsense. Nothing passing through the
hands of many men escapes contamination. Only sincerity and
diligence will maintain its purity. Nevertheless, having established
something, uphold it steadfastly. In this sphere of falsity, cling
to every truth, as a man swept out to sea by the river torrents
clings to a log.
All men held captive for anything they may have done, and not yet
brought before the council or punished, shall be kept encaged at the
waters edge. A man may be encaged as a punishment and the cage
either covered or uncovered. If a man must die he may die either in
clean or unclean waters, as is done by the people who surround us.
No man shall draw blood to slay in judgement.
A man shall take his brother’s wife into his household, if his
brother die and leave her unprotected. The unprotected of any man’s
bloodkin or lawkin shall become his responsibility. Inasmuch as the
Lord of Heaven mated with the Queen of Heaven, brother and sister
are not forbidden to each other under the Old Law.
A man shall not gaze upon the nakedness of any of his bloodkin or
lawkin in lust, and no woman shall expose her nakedness to any man
not her husband. Punishments may be executed either by burning or
the cage.
Every man shall learn to fight and defend himself with the axe, the
bow, the spear, the sword, the javelin or the sling, and all weapons
of the hand shall be sharpened.
Every man among us shall know the words of the Holy Writ by
understanding of the writings or by memory. They shall be cut into
his heart, as they are on copper and wood.
The records shall now be written in the Sacred Characters and not in
letters of the Sons of Fire. Line for line the letters of the People
of the Five Red Gods shall be used, the letters from the sky-signs
seen by the Master of Writing.
(Many following chapters are lost.)
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
THE RECONSTRUCTION BY KADAIRATH
The Master was seated at his table, and, about him in a half circle,
were those he instructed, and he taught them in this manner:
“My brothers, these are the ordinances of living and the laws which
are the ordinances of men. No law, whether it be of The Supreme
Spirit or of man, wholly produces happiness and causes no sorrow.
So, to be worthy and good an ordinance or law must produce more
contentment and happiness than it prevents. It must also prevent
more sorrow and confusion than it produces, or it would be a work of
wickedness and a memorial to the follies of men”.
“Pleasure never comes unadulterated and no form of goodness which
man seeks to promote is unencumbered with restriction. Nonetheless,
there is no form of goodness which is unproductive of happiness in
the hands of those governed with wisdom. Joy and sorrow, pain and
pleasure, success and failure are all moulding processes operating
on the spirits and natures of men. Neither of the opposites is of
less importance than the other.”
These were the things taught:
"The nature of every person is different and all tend to drift
towards the circles which accord with their natures. Therefore, we
set a standard, which not all will find acceptable, so that only
those whose natures demand the best find our company congenial.”
“Unless the soul of each man and woman is developed and disciplined
by the restraints of spiritual and material decrees, it cannot rise
above its earthly elements. As the earthly body must be kept fit by
discipline and self-control, and become gross and weak through
overindulgence or indifference, so is the spirit controlling the
body required to exercise restraint.”
“Every law, whether arising in the sphere of the spirit or the
sphere of matter, suppresses something arising out of the nature of
man and therefore calls for the exercise of restraint and
forbearance. Yet is it not true that though every just law restrains
something within men and women, it also restricts evil and things
which are not good? The less a law imposes upon men and women and
the more it imposes upon the things detrimental to their welfare,
the better the law. All laws are paid for out of treasury of
freedom, the lower the cost the better the law.”
“The laws of earthly rulers are kept by force of arms, but the
keeping of the higher spiritual laws can only be ensured through
enlightenment and wisdom. The causes of misjudgments, sorrow and
remorse stem more frequently from breaches in spiritual laws than in
earthly ones.”
“Moral laws and restraints are essential to the progress and welfare
of mankind. When passions are unrestricted and weaknesses unfenced
by moral laws, various forms of vice and perversions become accepted
and sap the stamina of nations. When the abnormal is given free
access to intrude upon the normal, the nation degenerates, the race
is contaminated and mankind suffers a reverse. The Great Law places
an obligation upon mankind to improve itself. Every man and woman
must safeguard their heritage and raise themselves above earthly
sordidness. This is one of the reasons for living. The struggle of
life is with man, the struggle of man is with himself.”
“Wise leaders in every land and age have made laws restraining the
weak and abnormal from satisfying their carnal appetites and immoral
urges. If their own uncontrolled desires were allowed freedom to
dictate their actions, then not only would the weak and abnormal
destroy themselves, but they would be like a cancer in the living
body of mankind.”
“The Sacred Books tell us that the nature of man contains a sense of
shame. This is so, and it is there that he may also know the meaning
of decency and be proud of himself as a man. It is there to make a
better state known to him, a state of spiritual cleanliness and
purity.”
“Such knowledge does not come naturally to man, any more than good
pastures come naturally to the husbandman. The city over the hill
was founded in goodness, and its founders were not men who found
pleasure in wickedness. Nonetheless, as the years passed it became
apparent that all was not well within its walls. Now, because of the
inclination of its inhabitants, the city’s days are numbered.”
“Men come across the sea in ships from the South, bringing things
much sought after by the people who surround us, who go into the
city to exchange the things they have caught or grown, or which have
been dug out of the ground. Things are exchanged in the marketplace
of the city, but they are for the enjoyment of the body, not the
satisfaction of the soul.”
“Nonetheless, men will always be driven, by their very natures, to
seek for and obtain things which do not satisfy any earthly
appetite. Such things are those which delight the hearts of men by
their beauty, or bring inward joy and contentment. Also things which
bring pleasure to loved ones and things which inspire men to noble
deeds. With all the earthliness of man the things most sought and
desired are those which stir the forces within the soul, and not the
forces within the body. When it is otherwise mankind will slip
backwards towards the beasts.”
This is rewritten in our tongue, through a rethinking of the text by
Anewidowl.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
PART OF A MARRIAGE PLEDGE
My name is Farsis, from the house of Golaith and I am without wife.
These are my pledges to Awerit of Glendargi:
“Here, in the light of day, before The Supreme Spirit and before all
men, in the sight of my father Bealin and your mother Goronway, I
establish you as my wife.”
“I shall not fail to consult you before I take another wife and you
will never be other than headwife. You will never lack for food and
clothing, though the food may be uncooked and the cloth unwoven. A
roof shall always cover your head and a weapon be ever ready for
your protection. I will always be considerate of your wants and
always careful in things relating to your welfare. Whatever good
fortune comes it will be shared with you and our children.”
“I will protect you through every year of my life and shelter you
from every calamity to the best of my ability. An insult to you
shall be an insult to me and every man of my blood. As from this
day, my house is your house. What your father and your father’s
house were to you before, now am I and my house.”
“Should greater duties call me from your side, I will take every
precaution for your safety and welfare. Should I leave you, through
any change of heart or darkening of thoughts, or should I slight the
pledge given here and take to myself another woman in your stead,
then, unless you have brought shame on me and my house by committing
the great wickedness of women, I shall pay to your father’s house
twice the bridal price. I shall also bestow upon you a half share of
our property and possessions joined together since marriage. Each of
our children shall be given its proper portion of all my property
and possessions, and it shall be established in the hands of the
king’s servants.”
“Whatever comes to you as bridal gifts or is
brought with you as your own shall be yours. I shall always
safeguard and defend it. I will never take it to myself so that you
are deprived of it, unless for the one wrong which defiles my house
and mocks my name. Whatever your father gives shall be ours, after
the custom of the great laws.”
“Your infirmities are accepted, to be shared with you, and the
children you bear shall always be mine. No man shall ever mock you
or abuse you without my hand being against him. No man shall ever
wrongfully lay hands upon you, for you are mine, now and for
always.”
“I will not neglect the upbringing of our children, but they shall
be raised according to my own light. You may follow your own creed
even as I follow mine, each being tolerant towards the other.”
Those are my pledges, my hand and my token.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
THE MASIBA AMENDMENTS
These are the lawful changes witnessed before Masiba:
“No man or woman shall own a slave, and no maiden or woman shall
enter the household of another except as a wife or maidservant. To
possess a concubine is no longer lawful. A maidservant shall be
under the protection of the master of the household wherein she
serves, and he shall render her up in due time. If he lay hands on
her in anger he shall make due payment for it, and if he seduce her
he shall forfeit to her household a third part of his possessions
and may be otherwise dealt with lawfully.”
“If anyone strike a half wit or injure one in any way he shall be
severely dealt with lawfully. Courtfathers shall be appointed, who
will be protectors of widows, orphans, half wits, the afflicted by
fate and those assigned to them. The Courtfathers may be responsible
themselves or they may appoint guardians. The property and
possessions of any person may be placed in their care. If the
Courtfathers act without good faith, deceitfully or carelessly in
their trust they shall make restitution without stint and be
punished otherwise.”
“If two men fight without weapons, using their hands, without wood
or stone except that they may use staves or sticks, and one be
injured so that he keep to his bed upward of three days, the other
shall pay for his loss of time and full healing. If any man gain
deceitfully by keeping to his bed declaring himself to be hurt
sorely, he shall not keep his gains and shall be punished otherwise.
If a man fight with wood and stone in his hands, or unlawfully with
weapons, he shall be punished severely. If an armed man attack
another who is unarmed he shall pay heavy compensation and be
punished severely.”
“If, when men fight, a woman with child is hurt so that she suffer,
or if at any
time a man cause injury to a woman with child so that either die, he
shall pay
with his own life. If it can be doubted whether a man caused an
unborn child to
be stillborn he shall not die, but can be made to pay compensation
to the
husband of the woman,”
“After her punishment the life of an adulteress shall be in the
hands of her husband. If he redeem her he may deal with her as he
wish. If he redeem her but do not wish to deal with her, she shall
still be denied the status of wife.”
“If a woman use a substance so that she may not conceive, her
husband may punish her by whipping or beating, providing he does not
draw blood or maim.”
“If a woman make a substance which prevents conception, or give or
convey this substance to a woman, she shall be whipped with wands,
as before. From this time the whipping shall be done on three days
following each other and she can be made to pay compensation. If a
man make, give or convey this substance, he shall be severely dealt
with.”
“If a woman cause her unborn child to be stillborn, she shall be
secluded in a place of confinement for a month and whipped with ten
strokes of the wand every third day. If anyone supply a potion to
cause an unborn child to die, they shall be punished. If a woman,
she shall suffer double the punishment of a mother who causes her
child to be stillborn, and can be made to pay compensation. If a
man, he shall be much more severely dealt with.”
“If anyone poison an animal belonging to another, that person shall
pay compensation to no less three times the value.”
“The flesh of horse, squirrel and rat shall not be eaten. The badger
is a creature sacred to our fathers because it was their salvation,
and it shall not be slain.”
“When a child stands on the threshold of manhood and his manly
organs become active, he shall be made a man after the old custom.
He shall be handed over the threshold stone and welcomed as in times
past, but this shall be the new declaration: “I know without doubt
what I am. I am the seed of divinity implanted within a body of
flesh. I belong with those who walk the Great Path of the True Way
and my place is beside them. I am a man knowing manly ways and I
will do what is required of me as a man”.
“My duty is to always protect those who walk with me and never deny
my beliefs. I shall be steadfast even under persecution. The
tormentors’ instruments will not open my mouth. I undertake to bring
at least one convert into the light”.
“My duty is to take a wife and beget children who will be raised in
the light of the Great Path of the True Way. My duty is to provide
for them in every way within my power and to instruct them in the
paths of wisdom.”
“My duty is to learn a skilled craft. I will be kind to animals, to
vegetation and to the soil.
I will not wilfully harm a wild creature or a tree. My duty is to
oppose all forms of disorder and lawlessness. It is to learn the
purpose of life and to try to understand the design of The Supreme
Spirit Who laid all things out in orderliness. I know I must always
keep my thoughts clean, my words true and good and my deeds manly.”
“I know there is a path of evil. It is the way of weakness and
cowardice, which leads to self-destruction. I will fight all forms
of wickedness and evil wherever I find them and I know I cannot go
manfully through life without opposition and struggle”.
“I know that all men are born mortal and all must die in body, but I
believe I am a soul with the potentiality of everlasting life. If,
during the trials of life, I am assailed by doubt I will not remain
passive before it”.
“I promise to obey the code of manliness and to follow the paths of
wisdom. My tongue will ever speak true and my hand do good. I know
that just to do good is not sufficient, but I must attack evil. My
duty is to oppose wicked men and their ways, and I will abide in
peace with my brothers”.
“My duty is to learn and to understand the teachings of the Holy
Writ, so that I may direct my children by its light. I will uphold
and support the Brotherhood all the days of my life and expound its
teachings to others. I acknowledge that only by example can I be a
true and worthy exponent.
“I will never oppress any man for his belief, unless he first attack
mine. Even then I will bear him with tolerance, until his oppression
threatens to overwhelm me. I will never agree to the conversion of
men by force, even for their own good, for this is an evil thing. My
only arguments shall be example and commonsense”.
‘The faith I hold shall not be something imprisoned within my
thoughts, but something lived and expressed in deeds. I give thanks
for the knowledge that I am a living soul, but I know full well the
grave responsibility I bear towards my future being. I will not be a
disgrace to Earth when I pass to the greater realm beyond.”
“When I become a father of children I. shall accept responsibility
for their wrongdoing, even as credit is claimed for their goodness.
I shall not seek to blame others for my own failures. I shall be
ever mindful of the good things of life and grateful for them. I
shall suffer adversity and affliction with fortitude, rising above
them like a man and not cringing before them like a dog under the
stick of his master. Doubts, fears, unnatural desires and unmanly
urges may lurk along my path, like forest demons which waylay those
who travel, but I shall overcome them.”
“I will not hide my contempt for the workers of wickedness and
servants of evil, and though they may be in the seats of the mighty
I will accord them no respect. I will never commend that which is
wicked.”
“I recognize that my soul and body compete for the satisfaction of
their separate desires. I know that each day the body dies a little,
that every day it draws nearer to the dark shore. Therefore, I will
follow the precepts of prudence and each and every day will be a
step forward in the awakening of my soul. I shall not punish my
true-self for the sake of satisfying a decaying body”.
“I will live in the light as revealed in the Holy Writ, the Written
Light as revealed to the Brothers of the Book. I will live as a man,
acknowledging my duties and obligations as a man, and I will die as
a man.”
CHAPTER NINETEEN
THE LETTER OF MATA
A SON OF AGNER
The barbarian asks, “Who and What is The Supreme Spirit?” Say unto
him, “Conceive it as a Being even above your greatest God. If it
helps in your understanding, see The Supreme Spirit as a God
reflecting His image as yourself. It is He who fills Heaven and
Earth with His might, and His powers are displayed in the elemental
forces. He is now as in the beginning and will be no different after
the end.
He formed men by building an earthly structure around a
heavenly seed and into this he infused the vapours of life. He
maintains the order of the Heavens and stabilizes the land in the
waters. His breath is the breath of life and He causes water to fall
and greenery to live”. Say to the barbarian, “Look about you and see
God reflected as in a mirror. No mortal man has ever looked upon Him
directly, but His reflection may be seen with immunity”.
The barbarian seeks a God he can see, but try and make him
understand this is impossible, because of God’s very greatness and
the littleness of man. Take the barbarian out next time the sun
shines at its strength and ask him to gaze upon it. He will be
forced to admit that it is beyond his powers to do so. Then say unto
him,
“See, it is beyond your power to look upon even the shield
behind which Haula hides himself because of his brightness. Yet even
this great God is no more than a faint, far off reflection embodying
the ray carrying power from The Supreme Spirit. How then could you
hope to look upon the source of power itself?”
The barbarians are still children and these things do not easily
come within their understanding. Because of this it may be best if
they were taught by simple tales, like children, and so brought into
the high gradually. A behef in The Supreme Spirit is of no great
importance. An inquiry into His nature by the ignorant is
purposeless foolishness. It is of much more importance to men that
they believe in their own souls.
Belief in a God of any sort without
belief in the immortality of man and his Godlike-ness serves no end.
If a God existed without man deriving any benefit from his
existence, it would be better for man to ignore him. This, however,
is not the case. Man seeks unity and communion with The Supreme
Spirit only for his own benefit. Man has a destiny founded in
something greater than himself, and hence his need for that
something.
The existence of a Supreme Being is not just something to accept,
believe in and ignore. A belief, faith alone, cannot be ends in
themselves, for nothing exists without purpose. Simple belief in a
Supreme Being is not enough, we must know the purpose or intention
of the Being. If we believe this Supreme Being created us, however
this was brought about, we must seek to discover the purpose behind
our creation. If we were created to serve some purpose, to do
something we were intended to do, we must do it or earn our
Creator’s displeasure. Does the potter keep the pot useless for its
purpose, or the smith keep unwrought metal? Only things which serve
the purpose for which they were intended are kept and cherished.
Therefore, we who are brothers, were taught not only to believe in a
Supreme Being but also in our similarity to Him. The Supreme Spirit
is not a stranger beyond our ken, the powers of The Supreme Spirit
infuse every fiber of our bodies.
If we have difficulties among the barbarians, the difficulties here
are no less. The Truth we have seems not only unpalatable but also
indigestible. Men seek tastier food, even though it is less
sustaining, and few replace the brothers who depart. Would we serve
better if we presented Truth as a draught diluted with water and
honey?
The threat of the barbarian king is something upon which you shall
be counselled. If you are threatened with the alternatives of death
or transgressing our laws, you may transgress them within reason and
the bounds of conscience. If, however, you are required to deny all
that you hold to be good and true, to betray all that we hold
sacred, then you must accept death for the sake of your soul. You
will be informed about these things by Kuin of Abalon who comes
later, so only the things you enquire about are answered.
For the sake of the barbarians it is perhaps best to call The
Supreme Spirit, ‘God, The God without a Name.’ This will solve some
difficulties, and if the barbarians think themselves superior
because they contain Him within a name, let it be so and hold
yourself in peace.
Say to the barbarians,
“As the soul of man fills his body, so does
God fill His domain. As the soul surrounds and contains the body, so
is it with God and his creation. As the soul sees but cannot be
seen, so does God see without being seen. As the soul feels, so does
God. As the soul oversees the nourishment of the body, so does God revitalise the whole of His habitation. As the soul occupies an
unfindable place within the body of man, so is the residence of God
unfathomable. No man can know the seat of the soul and no man can
know the seat of God.”
The barbarians make images of God to make Him more understandable.
Are we much better who make images of Him in our likeness within our
thoughts? Not perhaps because we believe Him so, but to make Him
more understandable.
As man’s understanding of God increases, so does God recede; so that
though through the ages man comes to understand God better, He ever
keeps the same distance away. We who dwell in the light of The
Supreme Spirit have come closer to understanding, not because we are
better men but because we have devoted our lives to the search. If
any man seek carefully and diligently enough he must find whatever
it is he seeks.
The rest of this letter is missing, but on a small recovered scrap
dealing with buildings, it refers to Galheda. Elsewhere it is stated
Galheda rewrote it.
CHAPTER TWENTY
THE TEACHINGS OF SADEK
All men within the Brotherhood are to be taught to live by these
ordinances, which provide for the discipline of the spirit:
Men shall be made to abstain from all manner of wickedness and hold
fast to all that is good. They shall become speakers of Truth and
followers of uprightness, and justice shall be upheld in their
hands. The virtues are staffs which will aid man in his long journey
through life to the gate of his soul’s unfolding.
There are guides upon the path, guideposts and places of rest and
shelter for the weary. There is provender to be found by the wayside
and there are many things to be discovered along the trackways.
(About two paragraphs missing).
The Master shall admit into the Brotherhood all who have, by
diligent study and rigid self-rule, established themselves. They
shall become one with those who climb the steps, and find their
appointed place.
The Master shall instruct them in the School of Light and Life,
revealing unto them all the secrets of their nature and the manner
of the soul’s release. There shall be no unnecessary chastisements
here and no particular rewards. Austerity for its own sake shall not
be practiced.
Every man who comes under the Master’s hand, led forth by his
nominator into the presence of the acceptors, shall bring with him
all his skill, knowledge and possessions. He shall have been
properly observed, judged and questioned before coming before the
acceptors, and shall not do so until he has been here for one year.
The next symbols shown are those representing the Design and The
Law, these are the great unchanging things, lasting forever, they
were the same in the time of our first forefather, as they will be
in the time of our last descendant. (Much missing.)
No man shall remain within the Brotherhood, who does not live by
these our ordinances. The man who walks in filth befouls not only
his own floor but also the thresholds of his neighbours. Unless a
man walk in cleanliness of body and purity of mind he shall not be
counted among us, and no one shall call him brother.
The soul must be wrought with the hard smiting blows of adversity
and sorrow. It must be gently moulded by the waters of humility and
charity, it must be chased by understanding and patience. These are
things which form a shape of harmonious beauty. But other things
shape it in ugliness, these are: falsehood and greed, deceit and
malice, cruelty and haughtiness, together with other evil qualities.
The just reward of those who follow the path of ease and indolence
is condemnation in the recesses of disgrace and shame. There will be
sorrowful groans and tear-shedding in the misery of soul loneliness.
These our ordinances are not made to provide for the comfort and
ease of man, not even for his bodily welfare, but for the benefit of
his eternal soul. Here his soul is to be purged and quickened to
life by the strong waters of wisdom infused with the greatest amount
of Truth he can tolerate. Only by himself submitting his soul to our
discipline can any man acquire benefit from our mode of life.
Man was raised out of the womb of Earth to rule its surface, but
here the existing powers gather into two camps of everlasting
hostility. Life opposes death, the champions of light challenge the
champions of darkness, Truth confronts falsehood. There is a leader
of light and a leader of darkness, a commander of life and a
commander of death. The legions of wickedness oppose the legions of
the upright.
At birth all are cast out upon the battlefield of life and join the
legions arrayed on one side or the other. According to his rank in
the legion of Truth, so does a man fight against falsehood. By his
standing in the eyes of the commander of light, so is a man placed
in opposition to his adversary in the legion of darkness.
The wicked will be delivered to the sharp edge of the sword, but the
good will be remembered. So it was in the first days, when our
ancestors left Kaburi and followed the Master who guided them across
the seas. They came over the pathless waters, forsaking soft living
and delusions which amused the eye.
The wicked are not only those who knowingly do wrong. An evil man is
one who seeks to justify the wickedness and weaknesses of others.
The fires kindled against them became a raging flame in which their
legions were swallowed up.
Now that you are invested with new life, open your eyes and behold
the works of The Supreme Spirit with understanding. Always follow
the path you have been shown, so that your steps lead you towards
perfection.
Never incline towards degrading thoughts or look into the eyes of
lust, for these things have led great men astray and brought down
mighty ones. Be clean in all ways. Never profane the temple of man
by lying with a woman whose flow is upon her. Be clean within and
without, in body, thought, word and deed.
Such things were done by those from whom we were divided. They lit
their temple lamps in vain and the smoke from their dark altars was
blown aside. You shall not be as those who walk in darkness. Though
we are oppressed on every side, this is the time of travail
heralding the birth of the Great Master. You are not like those who
shall be cut off from the tree of life, to fall to the ground and
return to nothingness. You shall always attend to the welfare of
your brother and not deceive your neighbour.
You are to live in dedicated communities, marrying and begetting
children. Your sons will grow up like strong oak trees and your
daughters modest like the violet. Your sons are to wear swords and
your daughters a headdress with a veil which may be drawn across the
face.
So, too, shall it be with those who are counted with us but are
faint-hearted in the performance of their obligations. They are men
who melt away in the furnace. Here we do not practice discipline and
austerity for the futile mortification of the flesh. We do these
things for the sake of our souls, even as a warrior exercises to
keep his muscles supple for the fray and so preserve his life.
Ninety-two generations have to be born. Then Gods and men
intermingled will do battle, and there will be great carnage on that
catastrophic day when war is waged in the red-hued darkness amid
mighty blast. That is the time of which it is written, ‘fire shall
leap forth from the heart of a stone’.
These things have been written about, so we concern ourselves only
with the ordinances governing the Brotherhood. This is the place to
which you belong and if you leave unsecured it will be upon your own
head.
Those who declare that beyond the gate of death there is a place of
torment where demon torturers inflict unspeakable agonies upon the
wicked, are led by a misguiding light. Certainly, there is a gloomy
place of sorrow haunted by Dark Spirits, but they do not inflict
torment by fire. They are there because they are evil and their
companionship is awful enough to bear.
Do not come to us holding heathen Gods in your heart, even though
they are within a hidden and closed recess. Purge yourself of all
false beliefs outside the gate.
Here all brothers are to practice the way to full soul realization
in common. Here Truth will bind one with the other. Humility,
modesty and justice will govern our lives. There is to be no
straying of heart and eye towards improper and unworthy things.
Every man is to command or obey according to his rank.
If anyone is found to have lied upon admittance, whether it be about
the past, the tribal allegiances or possessions, amends are to be
made by labour. No madman, no simpleton, no one who is blind, deaf
or dumb is to be admitted.
If anyone strike someone of higher rank or refuse to obey
instructions given, then if the striker have rank it is to be
lowered and amends will be made by labour and restraint of food. If
anyone strike another of equal rank, without just cause, the rank of
the striker is to be lowered and amends made by labour. If two men
fight, the ranks of both are to be lowered.
If anyone lie with intent to deceive, or if injury or sorrow be
caused to another, amends will be made by labour. If anyone cause
damage or loss to something belonging to another or to all, amends
will be made by labour. If any man expose himself improperly and
heedlessly before another he is to make amends by labour.
If anyone defame another behind his back he is to make amends by
labour, but anyone may accuse another to his face before witnesses.
If anyone rebuke another in anger, amends will be made by labour. If
anyone bear a grudge and make it known, an apology will be given
with humility and accepted with good grace.
If anyone speak filthily to the hearing of another, amends will be
made by labour. If anyone wastes metal or cause the loss of metal,
amends will be made by labour. If anyone bathe in water used by
another or in unclean water, amends will be made by labour.
From the hour of darkness beginning the seventh day, until the hour
of darkness beginning the first day, is a time of rest and
meditation. It is to be a time of tranquility for soul communion
and sacred study. The only labour to be undertaken is the providing
of provender for animals and their care and attention. Food may be
eaten, but it is best if prepared the day before.
Decorative trees
and plants may be attended to; relaxing pastimes may be indulged in
and all essential tasks undertaken.
An essential task is one which
cannot be done on any other day or is made absolutely necessary by
circumstances. On the day of rest all are to wear clean raiment, and
the chastisement of children is to be deferred until the morrow.
The first concern of a man should be his wife and children and
anyone else under his care. He should not cause them to go unfed or
underclothed to provide for the needs of another. If anything
belonging to anyone or to all is lost or taken away and hidden so
that it is not known who has it, the thing is to be made accursed in
the hands of its possessor. If later it is found in the possession
of anyone, that person is to be expelled from the Brotherhood, not
for what has been done but for the curse.
When something is found which has no owner, it is to be taken to the
sanctuary and remain there for one month. If it remain unclaimed it
is to be restored to the finder. No one is to take anything from an
outsider except for fair and full payment, and no one is to join an
outsider in buying and selling.
We are ruled by a council and this is to be twelve men and a master.
There will be a high council of five and a low council of seven
within the full council. There will be a half council of four chosen
by the full council, to be judges in disputes and overseers of
chastisements.
The high council is to appoint headmen who will lead the brothers in
groups of twelve. The low council will appoint beadles who will
report to it. All are to obey the headmen and beadles and those of
higher rank than themselves, but they may complain to the low
council about any instruction given them.
(The larger part of this and the next chapter are lost and it has
been difficult to assign a proper place or order to anything.
Perhaps no more than a tenth of the original remains.)
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
THE LAWS OF MALFIN
May your souls be enlightened by the Central Light. May all you who
assemble between the great pillars at the appointed times be cared
for by The Supreme Spirit, as you care for His earthly affairs. May
He keep you, as you keep His laws. May you receive the grace of
enlightenment from the centre of the Sacred Circle and may an
eternal fountain open for you, from which your souls may drink and
be refreshed. May you receive the gift of everlasting regeneration.
These are the laws of the outsiders, which you have to obey, and
they can be justly added to those you have, for right recognizes no
origin. They are in two parts: those which are to be wholly yours
and those which govern you among the outsiders.
If one whose position requires him to bear witness to a transaction
give false evidence concerning it, so that an outsider is at a loss,
he is to be bound and given over to the outsiders. If an outsider
suffer loss the one causing it is to be deprived of his rights and
made to labour in the place of captivity, until the loss is made
good and twice the amount has been paid to the council. He must not
be re-established in his rights.
Only a man of good repute having no interest in the things being
judged, can witness to it with immunity. If he accept a payment his
voice is not to be heard.
No one who gambles or lends money, or who buys to sell, or collects
payments or taxes may sit in judgment. Neither may a man whose
house is in turmoil or who has been condemned in judgment.
No one may sit in judgment on a kinsman, a friend or an enemy,
unless no other judge can be found. No one may attend upon a judge
in the absence of those who oppose him, so that he may gain favour.
The words of a lying witness are to be disregarded, unless otherwise
proven.
If voices be raised in anger before the seat of judgment, or anyone
behave unseemingly, the matter is to be left until the morrow. When
sitting in judgment a judge must remember that it is more wicked
for a rich man to steal than for a poor man. Or for the wellborn to
act basely than for the lowly to act likewise. It is more wicked for
the strong to strike unjustly than for the weak to do so.
If anyone by boisterous behaviour cause damage within the grounds of
a man’s dwelling place, or injure anyone, he shall go to the place
of captivity until the damage or injury is made good, and the same
amount is to be paid to the council.
Every landowner must have his land hedged in and if it is not
hedged, or the hedges are broken, he will have no claim for any
damage caused there by strayed animals, but they must be driven out
without hurt or harm. If anyone damage a hedge or fence he will be
responsible for anything happening through the damage. If anyone
damage any property or cause harm to an animal belonging to the
outsiders, he will be handed over to them.
If a man find a beast straying upon his land, he may secure it and
demand a payment in compensation for loss or damage.
If anyone offend against the laws of the outsiders, he will be given
over to them for judgment under the laws of the outsiders. No one
is to be given over to the outsiders until he has been heard by his
own judges. If anyone is to be judged by the outsiders a man from
the council is to sit with him.
If a man draw a weapon in an assembly of people he shall surrender
the weapon to anyone who ranks above him. If he refuse to do so he
shall be seized and brought before the judges for punishment. He may
not recover the weapon except by payment of its value. If anyone
threaten another with a weapon, it is to be taken from him and may
not be recovered without payment of its value to the council.
Men are entitled to the privacy of their wives, men to the privacy
of men and women to the privacy of women. A family is entitled to
the privacy of a family.
Anyone who commands another in his power to do a deed shall stand as
though he did it himself.
If in company with a man whom many come to take and slay or injure
unlawfully, then draw your weapon in his defense. If anyone use the
language of slaves in your presence, it is not sufficient to remain
silent. If you do not rebuke him because he is powerful, then depart
from his company. To do nothing is wrong, for men are told not to
remain passive before the face of evil.
The scandalmonger and scaremonger may both be delivered to the place
of captivity to requite the harm done. If no harm is done the liar
is still a person without repute and his punishment is that he will
not be believed even when he speaks truthfully.
Hypocrites are two-tongued loathsome creatures who, like grass
snakes, cannot be grasped in the hands. If any establish themselves
as hypocrites, drive them out and let them afflict the outsiders.
There are punishments prescribed for wrongdoing and much advice
given to prevent it. Punishment is only acknowledgement of failure.
Wrongdoing arises from failure to deal with weaknesses, failure in
upbringing, failure in teaching, failure in establishing rules of
conduct and failure in discipline, whether imposed by self or
others. When a man comes before the judges for punishment they do
more than half their duty when they condemn him. They should also
enquire within themselves, “Wherein have the people failed with this
man? Was he guided rightly or wrongly, and have we no responsibility
towards him?”
Punishing a wrongdoer without seeking out the cause of
his deeds is hypocritical justice. If a man walk in darkness and
stumble into a pit, is he to blame? If a light guide falsely or be
too feeble to keep men from stumbling, it is of no value. Therefore,
if a brother fall into a pit by the wayside the bearers of light
cannot be guiltless.
These things are recorded unto you, so that in the day of freedom
you may not be without law. That day will come as surely as the
sunrise. Never fear because your numbers diminish. One wise man is
better than a pack of fools, and a stave of solid oak better than a
pillar of reeds.
The man who supplies weapons to another who uses them in a wrongful
deed is not guiltless himself. If he knew their use he is no less
guilty. Anyone possessing things wrongfully taken is not without
guilt, and if taken knowingly is no less guilty. One who is not yet
a man in age cannot be equally guilty in robbery or violence.
Neither can a simpleton, a madman or a woman.
If anyone bind another unlawfully or cause anyone to lose his
freedom, he shall requite the harm done and may be delivered to the
place of captivity. Everyone has the right to solitude and privacy,
and those who deny him it are not without guilt. If anyone destroy
the hair of a woman he must requite the harm to the limit of
fullness.
If anyone come upon a thief in his deed, or upon someone about an
unlawful deed and slay or injure him because of his resistance, no
wrong is done. If he submit to capture and is slain or injured
unlawfully, those who do the deed must bear the guilt. If a man come
upon his wife in adultery and slay both he has done no wrong. If a
man come upon another dealing wrongfully with his son or daughter or
another child and he slay him, he has done no wrong. If a man slay a
thief in the night or one who seeks to injure him, he does no wrong.
If a man find another with his wife behind bolted doors and slay the
man, he has done no wrong. If he come upon them in a secret place
and slay the man, he has done no wrong. If a man commit a deed
unlawfully, in lust, so that he may be lawfully slain, he may be
castrated instead. If a man lay his hand in any way upon a virgin,
without her consent, he is not guiltless.
If two men quarrel and one bear insult with forbearance, the other
must requite him for the insult. A brother, a father or a son coming
upon his kinswoman in adultery or behind bolted doors, is to stand
as though he were her husband.
If a man slay another who provoked him in fair contest, he does so
in self-defense. The guilt of a deed done while drunk is not
lessened. If anyone become drunk so that he cannot stand upon a
stool, he is not guiltless.
If anyone destroy a tree belonging to the outsiders and not on
common land he must requite the outsiders its value. If anyone
destroy the tree of another he will stand as though he stole it.
The man who is betrothed to a woman, coming upon her in fornication
or behind bolted doors, is to stand as though he were her husband.
If he come upon her in a secret place he is to stand as her husband.
If anyone, knowing a woman to be unchaste, permit a man to marry her
behaving her to be chaste, he shall bear the guilt and may be called
upon to requite the husband.
At the trothing a man must pledge the father of his betrothed, or
the next of kin to her father, that he will maintain and protect
her. The bride price is to be paid seven days before the marriage
and it is to repay her father for bringing her up with all the
womanly virtues.
Marriage by deceit or force is not valid. It does not bind the
victim but binds the other in every way, as though married. If a man
marry a woman by deceit he is not guiltless and must requite the
wrong. If a man marry by force and she was a virgin, he is to stand
as though there were no marriage, but the woman has all the rights
of a wife against his possessions.
A husband may punish his wife for these things transgressing the law
without being punished by the law: Talking freely with men while her
husband is absent. Cursing her husband or his house. Cursing her own
house. Talking loudly, so that her voice carries to the habitation
of another. For slander and gossip. For lewdness or immodesty. For
betraying him in her talk. For being slothful or neglecting his
children.
A wife is not wholly delivered into the hands of her husband and he
must provide all things for her wellbeing and treat her with
affection and consideration. He is to be tolerant of her
shortcomings and overlook her frailty as a woman. A man has a duty
to see that an adulterous wife is dealt with.
If a wife become mad or sick or injured she cannot be put aside,
even though she cannot be a wife to her husband. These things are
the dispensations of life and must be borne together.
No man may know the nakedness of his sister. No man may lie with his
wife except in a place of privacy. No one is to permit a mad man or
woman, a child or a simpleton to slay a beast, but a bird may be
slain by a woman for food. The one who permits the deed is not
guiltless.
If the head is unclean it will lead to blindness. If the garments
worn are unclean it will lead to madness. If the body is unclean it
will lead to sores and sickness.
Eat to fill a third part of the stomach. Drink to fill a third part
and leave the rest empty. Eat only when hungry and drink only when
thirsty. Always sit to eat, taking two meals each day and three on
the seventh day. Do not overeat or oversleep, for body rust is not
an unreal thing.
The threshing place is not to be less than fifty paces from a
habitation. A grave is not to be within a hundred paces, a carcass
yard within a hundred paces, or a tannery within two hundred paces.
The midden is not be within fifty paces and hogs within thirty
paces. The privy hole is to be within twenty paces and is to be
screened and covered. No beast except the dog, the cat, the horse,
the cow, the goat and the ass may come within the dwelling
enclosure. The barn must not adjoin the dwelling. Corn for eating
may be kept below ground, but corn for sowing must be kept above
ground. Water should not be drunk under a roof without herbs.
Roofs must not be thatched by bending the reeds under a lath, but by
laying them straight over an underpinning. The middle and pillarpost
should rise a third part above the crossbeam and either rest upon
itself or lie on the cumber. The outer posts should be pegged and
not bound. Inner walls should be caulked with moss and not with
grass or bark. The roof should lie down over the outer wall an
armslength and the openwork of the wall should not be left
unplastered. The foundation should go down two cubits and rise one.
The door is to turn upon itself, either to the side or upward and
should not be hung. The wall hangings within should be of fibre or
skin. Overlay outside with wands of bethom.
Stones should not be pressed without heat and their outer parts
should be kept. The herb offerings must be burnt on each day when
the sun does not show its face. Flour must not be used to purify
sharpened metal. The offering log must be burnt at its hour.
A man must teach his sons to swim, to ride and to hunt. The stranger
is not to be denied a sleeping place and food at nightfall, but he
may not remain during the day without labour. Any man who deals with
metal shall be as a brother. Anyone may come before the high council
for justice.
In all assemblies, opinions will be given first by those of lower
rank, so that their words are not influenced by those of more
knowledgeable men. In the lands of the outsiders you will abide by
their law, but you will keep your own law within theirs. Where laws
conflict, let conscience, duty and the Holy Writ be your guide.
(This is not the end, but the remaining writing on three plates
cannot be read.
It is transcribed in meaning and not in word.)
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
SALVAGED FRAGMENTS
RECONSTRUCTED - 1
If any who have joined in cause with you or become allies act
treacherously, grant them no quarter. Deal with them in such a way
that their fate will be an example restraining others from doing
likewise. Never join cause with anyone proved treacherous or
unreliable.
If any hold the same belief as you and have suffered for it, they
are your brothers. Those who fight for the betterment of mankind or
suffer for it, are your brothers. To surrender to the threats of
those who demand you abandon your beliefs or ideals, is something
which must not be done. Any man who has fought with you in battle is
bound with you in the tie of blood and becomes even as your own kin.
Though you fight in the cause of Truth and justice, be reluctant to
commence the bloodshed and never do so if any other means, except
cowardice or capitulation, lie open to your hand. If, however, you
truly believe the foe will launch an attack, you are justified in
getting in the first blow. You are answerable to your own soul. When
battle is joined, you may slay the foe wherever you find him. Never
acknowledge defeat and never submit meekly to domination. If the
battle goes against you, withdraw to fight again. The live dog eats
the dead bear.
Never fight among yourselves, for such quarrelling is worse than the
bloodshed of battle. Differences and arguments among you are to be
settled in an orderly and just manner, so that there is no severance
or weakening among people. You are the People of the Light, the Law
and the Book.
In the place of captivity men and women will be kept apart, for it
is a place of requital and retribution. They will no longer be free,
neither will they hold the rights of the free. They are to labour
according to the judgment, but the labour of their hands is to be
accounted to them. Each one must be used to get the greatest
benefits from their ability, and no one must be kept even one day
over their requital.
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
SALVAGED FRAGMENTS
RECONSTRUCTED - 2
These are the sayings of judges set down by the law scribes, and all
that remains out of nearly eight hundred:
We have learned that whatever a woman does she should not be cut off
from her household, for this leads to other wrongs. If a wife be put
aside for her wrongdoing it may be well to let her remain under the
same roof without any rights of wifehood.
We have learned that not only are there women who are unworthy to be
wives, but there are men unworthy to be husbands. If marriage remain
open to such as these, those who sit in judgment are not
unblameworthy for whatever follows. Therefore, man or woman may be
forbidden marriage.
It is the law that adultery being a furtive deed done in deceit and
betrayal, if man and woman are found in a position for adultery it
would be as though they were caught committing it. This can lead to
misjudgment. Therefore, when no certainty of adultery can be seen
and the woman can only be found to be indiscreet, she is not be
dealt with as an adulteress. It is better for men to believe in the
natural goodness of woman than otherwise. Yet when a woman has
placed herself in a position where there can be no doubt, the
husband may decide to keep her or not, but he must declare himself.
If he put her aside as a wife the judges will decree whether she go
or stay. If she stay she may be bound to her husband, though no
longer his wife.
We have learned that though adultery is a loathsome deed done in
deceit while displaying a hypocritical allegiance to love, it is
often not without preventable cause. Therefore, an adulteress can
suffer a lesser punishment by being bound into the care of her
husband while ceasing to be a wife, for she is unworthy. Then she is
to remain within his household and submit to his direction. He must
maintain and protect her and not allow her to wander. If she wander
he may restrain her as he will. If she commit fornication while
bound, the man who was her husband is not blameworthy, for she is
under his restraint. The three must suffer their own punishments.
We have learned that when men fear for their safety and the sanctity
of their own wives, they are less inclined to act adulterously with
the wife of another. Therefore, if a man be found in adultery and
married he will forfeit half his possessions to the wronged husband,
and his wife will also pass into the house of the wronged husband,
or if he have neither dwelling nor land, he shall be bound into the
keeping of the wronged husband.
We have learned that the minds of men are like a maze and therefore
the rights of marriage are to stand against all others and prevail
at all times. All children born within a marriage union are equal in
rights. Their inheritance is not to be diminished, even though they
be the offspring of adultery or incest, for the wrongdoing was not
theirs. Such children should be received with mercy, for they are
helpless and will repay in full with love and devotion.
We have learned that it is unwise to give a daughter in marriage to
an outsider, for if her husband die she shall be given to his father
or his brother. Therefore, no woman may be given in marriage to an
outsider, unless the contract of marriage be heard by one of the
council and given his approval.
We have learned that these things should never be taken from a man
or shared:
His wife, excepting he commit adultery; his children, his clothes,
his nightcovering, his weapons and his tools of craft.
We have learned that it is no longer necessary to forbid the eating
of swine’s flesh in this land and its eating is allowed, but the
flesh of horse is not to be eaten except to prevent starvation.
We have learned that the soul departs with the last breath and
whatever is done to the body does not affect the soul. Therefore, a
body may be either buried or burned, but a high mound is not to be
raised over the body or the ashes. Only husband and wife, parent and
child, or brother and sister may be buried in the same grave within
a graveyard. No one may be buried within his habitation.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
THE LAST OF THE METAL PLATES
In the containers I have gathered together all the books given into
my care and I have done all the things I was instructed to do, and
the work of my father is now complete. The metal will stand the test
of age and the cutting is the finest workmanship.
The five great book-boxes contain one hundred and thirty-two scrolls
and five ring-bound volumes. There are sixty-two thousand four
hundred and eighty three words in The Greater Book of the Egyptians
and eighty-one thousand six hundred and twenty-six words in The
Lesser Book of The Egyptians, of which eight thousand nine hundred
and eleven are in The Book of The Trial of The Great God and six
thousand one hundred and thirty-four are in The Sacred Register, and
sixteen thousand and fifty-six are in The Book of Establishment.
The Book of Magical Concoctions has six thousand eight hundred and
ten words and this was the most difficult to remit, for it was a
work of mystery and hidden things.
The Book of Songs and The Book of Creation and Destruction were not
worked under my hand, but they are well constituted and will not
perish. The Book of Tribulation was beaten under my eye and there
are the books in The Great Book of The Sons of Fire which are not of
my workmanship. I helped in part where the words were marked out and
I struck them.
The Book of Secret Lore and The Book of Decrees are joined into The
Great Book of The Sons of Fire and they, too, are enabled to last
forever.
The metal is as our masters desired, made cunningly by the secret
methods of our tribe and it will never perish. The marks are cut so
that when seen to the right of the light they stand out clearly.
The bookboxes are of twinmetal founded with strength and turned with
great heat, so that there is no joint where the ends come together.
When closed and sealed water cannot enter.
When you read these things in times ahead, think of us who made the
metal so imperishable and cut the words on it with such care and
heavy labour, using such skill that in the years of rest they have
not been eaten off. Observe its brightness and wonder, for it will
never tarnish.
We are the sons of The Sons of Fire, men so called because fire was
necessary to their metalworking. Today we name our sons over the
fire and forge, as they did, and each one of us belongs to the same
fire.
Read carefully the sacred words which are written and may they be a
lodemark to a greater life.
I, Efantiglan, and my father, attended to the making of these books
and their covering containers. Those who mixed the metal and worked
it by forging and those who cut upon it are members of our tribe,
and it is well made and will last forever.
Malgwin recorded these books before they were consigned to the
future and the name by which they were called is The Living Book For
The Living’.
**** Ends at Chapter 7
Back to Contents
|