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drove it into her snowy breast; home to the heart; and 
down she fell; and then; with cries and wailing; and 
every sound of lamentation; the pageant rolled away 
from the arena of my vision; and once more the Past 
shut to its book。

Let him who reads forgive the intrusion of a dream 
into a history of fact。 But it come so home to meI 
saw it all so clear in a moment; as it were; and; 
besides; who shall say what proportion of factpast; 
present; or to come; may lie in the imagination? What 
is imagination? Perhaps it is the shadow of the 
intangible truth; perhaps it is the soul's thought。

In an instant the whole thing had passed through my 
brain; and _i_ She _i_ was addressing me。

〃Behold the lot of man;〃 said the veiled Ayesha; as 
she drew the winding sheets back over the dead lovers; 
speaking in a solemn; thrilling voice; which accorded 
well with the dream that I had dreamed: 〃to the tomb; 
and to the forgetfulness that hides the tomb; must we 
all come at last! Ay; even I who live so long。 Even 
for me; O Holly; thousands upon thousands of years 
hence; thousands of years after thou hast gone through 
the gate and been lost in the mists; a day will dawn 
whereon I shall die; and be even as thou and these 
are。 And then what will avail that I have lived a 
little longer; holding off death by the knowledge I 
have wrung from nature; since at last I too must die? 
What is a span of ten thousand years; or ten times ten 
thousand years; in the history of time? It is as 
naughtit is as the mists that roll up in the 
sunlight; it fleeth away like an hour of sleep or a 
breath of the Eternal Spirit。 Behold the lot of man! 
Certainly it shall overtake us; and we shall sleep。 
Certainly; too; we shall awake; and live again and 
again shall sleep; and so on and on; through periods; 
spaces; and times; from aeon unto aeon; till the world 
is dead; and the worlds beyond the world are dead; and 
naught liveth save the Spirit that is Life。 But for us 
twain and for these dead ones shall the end of ends be 
Life; or shall it be Death? As yet Death is but Life's 
Night; but out of the Night is the Morrow born again; 
and both again beget the Night。 Only when Day and 
Night; and Life and Death; are ended and swallowed up 
in that from which they came; what shall be our fate; 
O Holly? Who can see so far? Not even I!〃

And then; with a sudden change of tone and manner

〃Hast thou seen enough; my stranger guest; or shall I 
show thee more of the wonders of these tombs that are 
my palace halls? If thou wilt; I can lead thee to 
where Tisno; the mightiest and most valorous King of 
Ko^r; in whose day these caves were ended; lies in a 
pomp that seems to mock at nothingness; and bid the 
empty shadows of the past do homage to his sculptured 
vanity!〃

〃I have seen enough; O queen;〃 I answered。 〃My heart 
is overwhelmed by the power of the present Death。 
Mortality is weak; and easily broken down by a sense 
of the companionship that waits upon its end。 Take me 
hence; O Ayesha!〃

CHAPTER XVII

THE BALANCE TURNS

IN a few minutes; following the lamps of the mutes; 
which; held out from the body as a bearer holds water 
in a vessel; had the appearance of floating down the 
darkness by themselves; we came to a stair which led 
us to _i_ She _i_ 's anteroom; the same that Billali 
had crept up upon all fours on the previous day。 Here 
I would have bid the queen adieu; but she would not。

〃Nay;〃 she said; 〃enter with me; O Holly; for of a 
truth thy conversation pleaseth me。 Think; O Holly: 
for two thousand years have I had none to converse 
with save slaves and my own thoughts; and though of 
all this thinking hath much wisdom come; and many 
secrets been made plain; yet am I weary of my 
thoughts; and have come to loathe mine own society; 
for surely the food that memory gives to eat is bitter 
to the taste; and it is only with the teeth of hope 
that we can bear to bite it。 Now though thy thoughts 
are green and tender; as becometh one so young; yet 
are they those of a thinking brain; and in truth thou 
dost bring back to my mind certain of those old 
philosophers with whom in days bygone I have disputed 
at Athens; and at Becca in Arabia; for thou hast the 
same crabbed air and dusty look; as though thou hadst 
passed thy days in reading ill…writ Greek; and been 
stained dark with the grime of manuscripts。 So draw 
the curtain; and sit here by my side; and we will eat 
fruit; and talk of pleasant things。 See; I will again 
unveil to thee。 Thou hast brought it on thyself; O 
Holly; fairly have I warned theeand thou shalt call 
me beautiful as even those old philosophers were wont 
to do。 Fie upon them; forgetting their philosophy!〃

And without more ado she stood up and shook the white 
wrappings from her; and came forth shining and 
splendid like some glittering snake when she has cast 
her slough; ay; and fixed her wonderful eyes upon me
more deadly than any basilisk'sand pierced me 
through and through with their beauty; and sent her 
light laugh ringing through the air like chimes of 
silver bells。

A new mood was on her; and the very color of her mind 
seemed to change beneath it。 It was no longer torture…
torn and hateful; as I had seen it when she was 
cursing her dead rival by the leaping flames; no 
longer icily terrible as in the judgment…hall; no 
longer rich and sombre and splendid; like a Tyrian 
cloth; as in the dwellings of the dead。 No; her mood 
now was that of Aphrodite triumphing。 Liferadiant; 
ecstatic; wonderfulseemed to flow from her and 
around her。 Softly she laughed and sighed; and swift 
her glances flew。 _i_ She _i_ shook her heavy tresses; 
and their perfume filled the place; she struck her 
little sandalled foot upon the floor; and hummed a 
snatch of some old Greek epithalamium。 All the majesty 
was gone; or did but lurk and faintly flicker through 
her laughing eyes; like lightning seen through 
sunlight。 _i_ She _i_ had cast off the terror of the 
leaping flame; the cold power of judgment that was 
even now being done; and the wise sadness of the 
tombscast them off and put them behind her; like the 
white shroud she wore; and now stood out the 
incarnation of lovely; tempting womanhood; made more 
perfectand in a way more spiritualthan ever woman 
was before。

〃There; my Holly; sit there where thou canst see me。 
It is by thine own wish; rememberagain I say; blame 
me not if thou dost spend the rest of thy little span 
with such a sick pain at the heart that thou wouldst 
fain have died before ever thy curious eyes were set 
upon me。 There; sit so; and tell me; for in truth I am 
inclined for praisestell me; am I not beautiful? 
Nay; speak not so hastily; consider well the point; 
take me feature by feature; forgetting not my form; 
and my hands and feet; and my hair; and the whiteness 
of my skin; and then tell me truly hast thou ever 
known a woman who in aught; ay; in one little portion 
of her beauty; in the curve of an eyelash even; or the 
modelling of a shell…Iike ear; is justified to hold a 
light before my loveliness? Now; my waist! Perchance 
thou thinkest it too large; but of a truth it is not 
so; it is this golden snake that is too large; and 
doth not bind it as it should。 It is a wise snake; and 
knoweth that it is ill to tie in the waist。 But see; 
give me thy handssonow press them round me; there; 
with but a little force; thy fingers touch; O Holly。〃

I could bear it no longer。 I am but a man; and she was 
more than a woman。 Heaven knows what she wasl do 
not! But then and there I fell upon my knees before 
her; and told her in a sad mixture of languagesfor 
such moments confuse the thoughtsthat I worshipped 
her as never woman was worshipped; and that I would 
give my immortal soul to marry her; which at that time 
I certainly would have done; and so; indeed; would any 
other man; or all the race of men rolled into one。 For 
a moment she looked a little surprised; and then she 
began to laugh; and clap her hands in glee。

〃Oh; so soon; O Holly!〃 she said。 〃I wondered how many 
minutes it would need to bring thee to thy knees。 I 
have not seen a man kneel before me for so many days; 
and; believe me; to a woman's heart the sight is 
sweet; ay; wisdom and length of days take not from 
that dear pleasure which is our sex's only right。

〃What wouldst thou?what wouldst thou? Thou dost not 
know what thou doest。 Have I not told thee that I am 
not for thee? I love but one; and thou art not the 
man。 Ah; Holly; for all thy wisdom…and in a way thou 
art wisethou art but a fool running after folly。 
Thou wouldst look into mine eyesthou wouldst kiss 
me! Well; if it pleaseth thee; look;〃 and she bent 
herself towards me; and fixed her dark and thrilling 
orbs upon my own; 〃ay; and kiss too; if thou wilt; 
for; thanks be given to the scheme of things; kisses 
leave no marks; except upon the heart。 But if thou 
dost kiss; I tell thee of a surety wilt thou eat out 
thy breast with love of me; and die!〃 and she bent yet 
farther towards me till her soft hair brushed my brow; 
and her fragrant breath played upon my face; an

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