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That, in a very general way, is what Champollion taught us after the exhausting search which killed him when he was a young man.
That too, is the reason why today we know Egyptian history better than that of any other ancient country.
THE LAND OF THE LIVING AND THE LAND OF THE DEAD
The History of Man is the record of a hungry creature in search of food.
Wherever food was plentiful and easily gathered, thither man travelled to make his home.
The fame of the Nile valley must have spread at an early date. From far and wide, wild people flocked to the banks of the river. Surrounded on all sides by desert or sea, it was not easy to reach these fertile fields and only the hardiest men and women survived.
We do not know who they were. Some came from the interior of Africa and had woolly hair and thick lips.
Others, with a yellowish skin, came from the desert of Arabia and the broad rivers of western Asia.
They fought each other for the possession of this wonderful land.
They built villages which their neighbors destroyed and they rebuilt them with the bricks they had taken from other neighbors whom they in turn had vanquished.
Gradually a new race developed. They called themselves "remi," which means simply "the Men." There was a touch of pride in this name and they used it in the same sense that we refer to America as "G.o.d's own country."
Part of the year, during the annual flood of the Nile, they lived on small islands within a country which itself was cut off from the rest of the world by the sea and the desert. No wonder that these people were what we call "insular," and had the habits of villagers who rarely come in contact with their neighbors.
They liked their own ways best. They thought their own habits and customs just a trifle better than those of anybody else. In the same way, their own G.o.ds were considered more powerful than the G.o.ds of other nations. They did not exactly despise foreigners, but they felt a mild pity for them and if possible they kept them outside of the Egyptian domains, lest their own people be corrupted by "foreign notions."
They were kind-hearted and rarely did anything that was cruel. They were patient and in business dealings they were rather indifferent Life came as an easy gift and they never became stingy and mean like northern people who have to struggle for mere existence.
When the sun arose above the blood-red horizon of the distant desert, they went forth to till their fields. When the last rays of light had disappeared beyond the mountain ridges, they went to bed.
They worked hard, they plodded and they bore whatever happened with stolid unconcern and profound patience.
They believed that this life was but a short preface to a new existence which began the moment Death had entered the house. Until at last, the life of the future came to be regarded as more important than the life of the present and the people of Egypt turned their teeming land into one vast shrine for the wors.h.i.+p of the dead.
[Ill.u.s.tration: THE LAND OF THE DEAD.]
And as most of the papyrus-rolls of the ancient valley tell stories of a religious nature we know with great accuracy just what G.o.ds the Egyptians revered and how they tried to a.s.sure all possible happiness and comfort to those who had entered upon the eternal sleep. In the beginning each little village had possessed a G.o.d of its own.
Often this G.o.d was supposed to reside in a queerly shaped stone or in the branch of a particularly large tree. It was well to be good friends with him for he could do great harm and destroy the harvest and prolong the period of drought until the people and the cattle had all died of thirst. Therefore the villages made him presents--offered him things to eat or a bunch of flowers.
When the Egyptians went forth to fight their enemies the G.o.d must needs be taken along, until he became a sort of battle flag around which the people rallied in time of danger.
But when the country grew older and better roads had been built and the Egyptians had begun to travel, the old "fetishes," as such chunks of stone and wood were called, lost their importance and were thrown away or were left in a neglected corner or were used as doorsteps or chairs.
Their place was taken by new G.o.ds who were more powerful than the old ones had been and who represented those forces of nature which influenced the lives of the Egyptians of the entire valley.
First among these was the Sun which makes all things grow.
Next came the river Nile which tempered the heat of the day and brought rich deposits of clay to refresh the fields and make them fertile.
Then there was the kindly Moon which at night rowed her little boat across the arch of heaven and there was Thunder and there was Lightning and there were any number of things which could make life happy or miserable according to their pleasure and desire.
Ancient man, entirely at the mercy of these forces of nature, could not get rid of them as easily as we do when we plant lightning rods upon our houses or build reservoirs which keep us alive during the summer months when there is no rain.
On the contrary they formed an intimate part of his daily life--they accompanied him from the moment he was put into his cradle until the day that his body was prepared for eternal rest.
Neither could he imagine that such vast and powerful phenomena as a bolt of lightning or the flood of a river were mere impersonal things. Some one--somewhere--must be their master and must direct them as the engineer directs his engine or a captain steers his s.h.i.+p.
A G.o.d-in-Chief was therefore created, like the commanding general of an army.
A number of lower officers were placed at his disposal.
Within their own territory each one could act independently.
In grave matters, however, which affected the happiness of all the people, they must take orders from their master.
The Supreme Divine Ruler of the land of Egypt was called Osiris, and all the little Egyptian children knew the story of his wonderful life.
Once upon a time, in the valley of the Nile, there lived a king called Osiris.
He was a good man who taught his subjects how to till their fields and who gave his country just laws. But he had a bad brother whose name was Seth.
Now Seth envied Osiris because he was so virtuous and one day he invited him to dinner and afterwards he said that he would like to show him something. Curious Osiris asked what it was and Seth said that it was a funnily shaped coffin which fitted one like a suit of clothes. Osiris said that he would like to try it. So he lay down in the coffin but no sooner was he inside when bang!--Seth shut the lid. Then he called for his servants and ordered them to throw the coffin into the Nile.
Soon the news of his terrible deed spread throughout the land. Isis, the wife of Osiris, who had loved her husband very dearly, went at once to the banks of the Nile, and after a short while the waves threw the coffin upon the sh.o.r.e. Then she went forth to tell her son Horus, who ruled in another land, but no sooner had she left than Seth, the wicked brother, broke into the palace and cut the body of Osiris into fourteen pieces.
[Ill.u.s.tration: A PYRAMID.]
When Isis returned, she discovered what Seth had done. She took the fourteen pieces of the dead body and sewed them together and then Osiris came back to life and reigned for ever and ever as king of the lower world to which the souls of men must travel after they have left the body.
As for Seth, the Evil One, he tried to escape, but Horus, the son of Osiris and Isis, who had been warned by his mother, caught him and slew him.
This story of a faithful wife and a wicked brother and a dutiful son who avenged his father and the final victory of virtue over wickedness formed the basis of the religious life of the people of Egypt.
Osiris was regarded as the G.o.d of all living things which seemingly die in the winter and yet return to renewed existence the next spring. As ruler of the Life Hereafter, he was the final judge of the acts of men, and woe unto him who had been cruel and unjust and had oppressed the weak.
As for the world of the departed souls, it was situated beyond the high mountains of the west (which was also the home of the young Nile) and when an Egyptian wanted to say that someone had died, he said that he "had gone west."
Isis shared the honors and the duties of Osiris with him. Their son Horus, who was wors.h.i.+pped as the G.o.d of the Sun (hence the word "horizon," the place where the sun sets) became the first of a new line of Egyptian kings and all the Pharaohs of Egypt had Horus as their middle name.
Of course, each little city and every small village continued to wors.h.i.+p a few divinities of their own. But generally speaking, all the people recognized the sublime power of Osiris and tried to gain his favor.
This was no easy task, and led to many strange customs. In the first place, the Egyptians came to believe that no soul could enter into the realm of Osiris without the possession of the body which had been its place of residence in this world.
[Ill.u.s.tration: HOW THE PYRAMIDS GREW.]
Whatever happened, the body must be preserved after death, and it must be given a permanent and suitable home. Therefore as soon as a man had died, his corpse was embalmed. This was a difficult and complicated operation which was performed by an official who was half doctor and half priest, with the help of an a.s.sistant whose duty it was to make the incision through which the chest could be filled with cedar-tree pitch and myrrh and ca.s.sia. This a.s.sistant belonged to a special cla.s.s of people who were counted among the most despised of men. The Egyptians thought it a terrible thing to commit acts of violence upon a human being, whether dead or living, and only the lowest of the low could be hired to perform this unpopular task.