the GOLDEN LOTUS Seneferu, father of
the Pharaoh Khufu who built the Great Pyramid of Giza, reigned long over a
contented and peaceful Egypt. He had no foreign wars and few troubles at
home, and with so little business of state he oft6n found time hanging
heavy on his hands.
One day he wandered wearily through his palace at Memphis, seeking
for pleasures and finding none that would lighten his heart.
Then he bethought him of his Chief Magician, Zazamankh, and he said,
'If any man is able to entertain me and show me new marvels, surely it is
the wise scribe of the rolls. Bring Zazamankh before me.'
Pharaoh: "...devise something that will fill my heart
with pleasure"
| Straightway his servants went to the House of
Wisdom and brought Zazamankh to the presence of Pharaoh. And Seneferu said
to him, 'I have sought throughout all my palace for some delight, and
found none. Now of your wisdom devise something that will fill my heart
with pleasure.' Then said Zazamankh to him, 'O Pharaoh life, health,
strength be to you! - my counsel is that you go sailing upon the Nile, and
upon the lake below Memphis. This will be no common voyage, if you will
follow my advice in all things.'
'Believing that you will show me marvels, I will order out the Royal
Boat,' said Seneferu. 'Yet I am weary of sailing upon the Nile and upon
the lake.'
'This will be no common voyage,' Zazamankh assured him. 'For your
rowers will be different from any you have seen at the oars before. They
must be fair maidens from the Royal House of the King's Women: and as you
watch them rowing, and see the birds upon the lake, the sweet fields and
the green grass upon the banks, your heart will grow glad.'
'Indeed, this will be something new,' agreed Pharaoh, showing some
interest at last. 'Therefore I give you charge of this expedition. Speak
with my power, and command all that is necessary.'
Then said Zazamankh to the officers and attendants of Pharaoh Seneferu,
'Bring me twenty oars of ebony inlaid with gold, with blades of light wood
inlaid with electrum. And choose for rowers the twenty fairest maidens in
Pharaoh's household: twenty virgins slim and lovely, fair in their limbs,
beautiful, and with flowing hair. And bring me twenty nets of golden
thread, and give these nets to the fair maidens to be garments for them.
And let them wear ornaments of gold and electrum and malachite.'
All was done according to the words of Zazamankh, and presently Pharaoh
was seated in the Royal Boat while the maidens rowed him up and down the
stream and upon the shining waters of the lake. And the heart of Seneferu
was glad at the sight of the beautiful rowers at their unaccustomed task,
and he seemed to be on a voyage in the golden days that were to be when
Osiris returns to rule the earth.
But presently a mischance befell that gay and happy party upon the
lake. In the raised stern of the Royal Boat two of the maidens were
steering with great oars fastened to posts. Suddenly the handle of one of
the oars brushed against the head of the girl who was using it and swept
the golden lotus she wore on the fillet that held back her hair into the
water, where it sank out of sight.
With a little cry she leant over and gazed after it. And as she ceased
from her song, so did all the rowers on that side who were taking their
time from her.
'Why have you ceased to row?' asked Pharaoh.
And they replied, 'Our little steerer has stopped, and leads us no
longer.'
'And why have you ceased to steer and lead the rowers with your song?'
asked Seneferu.
'Forgive me, Pharaoh - life, health, strength be to you!' she sobbed.
'But the oar struck my hair and brushed from it the beautiful golden lotus
set with malachite which your majesty gave to me, and it has fallen into
the water and is lost forever.'
'Row on as before, and I will give you another,' said Seneferu.
But the girl continued to weep, saying, 'I want my golden lotus back,
and no other!'
Then said Pharaoh, 'There is only one who can find the golden lotus
that has sunk to the bottom of the lake. Bring to me Zazamankh my
magician, he who thought of this voyage. Bring him here on to the Royal
Boat before me.'
So Zazamankh was brought to where Seneferu sat in his silken pavilion
on the Royal Boat. And as he knelt, Pharaoh said to him: 'Zazamankh, my
friend and brother, I have done as you advised. My royal heart is
refreshed and my eyes are delighted at the sight of these lovely rowers
bending to their task. As we pass up and down on the waters of the lake,
and they sing to me, while on the shore I see the trees and the flowers
and the birds, I seem to be sailing into the golden days either those of
old when Re ruled on earth, or those to come when the good god Osiris
shall return from the Duat. But now a golden lotus has fallen from the
hair of one of these maidens fallen to the bottom of the lake. And she has
ceased to sing and the rowers on her side cannot keep time with their
oars. And she is not to be comforted with promises of other gifts, but
weeps for her golden lotus. Zazamankh, I wish to give back the golden
lotus to the little one here, and see the joy return to her eyes.'
'Pharaoh, my lord - life, health, strength be to you!' answered
Zazamankh the magician, 'I will do what you ask - for to one with my
knowledge it is not a great thing. Yet maybe it is an enchantment you have
never seen, and it will fill you with wonder, even as I promised, and make
your heart rejoice yet further in new things.'
"...the lake parted as if a piece had been cut out of
it with a great sword."
| Then Zazamankh stood at the stern of the Royal
Boat and began to chant great spells and words of power. And presently he
held out his wand over the water, and the lake parted as if a piece had
been cut out of it with a great sword. The lake here was twenty feet deep,
and the piece of water that the magician moved rose up and set itself upon
the surface of the lake so that there was a cliff of water on that side
forty feet high.
Now the Royal Boat slid gently down into the great cleft in the lake
until it rested on the bottom. On the side towards the forty-foot cliff of
water there was a great open space where the bottom of the lake lay
uncovered, as firm and dry as the land itself.
And there, just below the stern of the Royal Boat, lay the golden
lotus.
With a cry of joy the maiden who had lost it sprang over the side on to
the firm ground, picked it up and set it once more in her hair. Then she
climbed swiftly back into the Royal Boat and took the steering oar into
her hands once more.
Zazamankh slowly lowered his rod, and the Royal Boat slid up the side
of the water until it was level with the surface once more. Then at
another word of power, and as if drawn by the magician's rod, the great
piece of water slid back into place, and the evening breeze rippled the
still surface of the lake as if nothing out of the ordinary had happened.
But the heart of Pharaoh Seneferu rejoiced and was filled with wonder, and
he cried: 'Zazamankh, my brother, you are the greatest and wisest of
magicians! You have shown me wonders and delights this day, and your
reward shall be all that you desire, and a place next to my own in Egypt.'
Then the Royal Boat sailed gently on over the lake in the glow of the
evening, while the twenty lovely maidens in their garments of golden net,
and the jeweled lotus flowers in their hair dipped their ebony and silver
oars in the shimmering waters and sang sweetly a love song of old
Egypt:
'She stands upon the further side, Between us flows the
Nile; And in those waters deep and wide There lurks a
crocodile.
'Yet is my love so true and sweet, A word of power, a charm
- The stream is land beneath my feet And bears me without
harm.
'For I shall come to where she stands, No more be held
apart; And I shall take my darling's hands And draw her to my
heart.'
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