登陆注册
6188900000080

第80章

HOW NAOMI TURNED MUSLIMA

What had happened to Naomi during the two months and a half while Israel lay at Shawan is this: After the first agony of their parting, in which she was driven back by the soldiers when she attempted to follow them, she sat down in a maze of pain, without any true perception of the evil which had befallen her, but with her father's warning voice and his last words in her ear:

"Stay here.Never leave this place.Whatever they say, stay here.

I will come back."

When she awoke in the morning, after a short night of broken sleep and fitful dreams, the voice and the words were with her still, and then she knew for the first time what the meaning was, and what the penalty, of this strange and dread asundering.

She was alone, and, being alone, she was helpless; she was no better than a child, without kindred to look to her and without power to look to herself, with food and drink beside her, but no skill to make and take them.

Thus her awakening sense was like that of a lamb whose mother has been swallowed up in the night by the sand-drifts of the simoom.

It was not so much love as loss.What to do, where to look, which way to turn first, she knew no longer, and could not think, for lack of the hand that had been wont to guide her.

The neighbouring Moors heard of what had happened to Naomi, and some of the women among them came to see her.They were poor farming people, oppressed by cruel taxmasters; and the first things they saw were the cattle and sheep, and the next thing was the ****** girl with the child-face, who knew nothing yet of the ways wherein a lonely woman must fend for herself.

"You cannot live here alone, my daughter," they said; "you would perish.

Then think of the danger--a child like you, with a face like a flower!

No, no, you must come to us.We will look to you like one of our own, and protect you from evil men.And as for the creatures--""But he said I was never to leave this place," said Naomi."'Stay here,'

he said; 'whatever they say, stay here.I will come back.'"The women protested that she would starve, be stolen, ruined, and murdered.It was in vain.Naomi's answer was always the same:

"He told me to stay here, and surely I must do so."Then one after another the poor folks went away in anger.

"Tut!" they thought, "what should we want with the Jew child? Allah!

Was there ever such a ******ton? The good creatures going to waste, too!

And as for her father, he'll never come back--never.Trust the Basha for that!"But when the humanity of the true souls had conquered their selfishness, they came again one by one and vied with each other in many ****** offices--milking and churning, and baking and delving--in pity of the sweet girl with the great eyes who had been left to live alone.

And Naomi, seeing her helplessness at last, put out all her powers to remedy it, so that in a little while she was able to do for herself nearly everything that her neighbours at first did for her.

Then they would say among themselves, "Allah! she's not such a baby after all; and if she wasn't quite so beautiful, poor child, or if the world wasn't so wicked--but then, God is great! God is great!"Not at first had Naomi understood them when they told her that her father had been cast into prison, and every night when she left her lamp alight by the little skin-covered window that was half-hidden under the dropping eaves, and every morning when she opened her door to the radiance of the sun she had whispered to herself and said, "He will come back, Naomi; only wait, only wait;maybe it will be tonight, maybe it will be to-day; you will see, you will see."But after the awful thought of what prison was had fully dawned upon her as last, by help of what she saw and heard of other men who had been there, her old content in her father's command that she should never leave that place was shaken and broken by a desire to go to him.

"Who's to feed him, poor soul? He will be famishing.

If the Kaid finds him in bread, it will only be so much more added to his ransom.That will come to the same thing in the end, or he'll die in prison."Thus she had heard the gossips talk among themselves when they thought she did not listen.And though it was little she understood of Kaids and ransoms, she was quick to see the nature of her father's peril, and at length she concluded that, in spite of his injunction, go to him she should and must.With that resolve, her mind, which had been the mind of a child seemed to spring up instantly and become the mind of a woman, and her heart, that had been timid, suddenly grew brave, for pity and love were born in it.

"He must be starving in prison," she thought, "and I will take him food."When her neighbours heard of her intention they lifted their hands in consternation and horror."God be gracious to my father!" they cried.

"Shawan? You? Alone? Child, you'll be lost, lost--worse, a thousand times worse! Shoof! you're only a baby still."But their protests availed as little to keep Naomi at her home now as their importunities had done before to induce her to leave it.

"He must be starving in prison," she said, "and I will take him food."Her neighbours left her to her stubborn purpose.

"Allah!" they said, "who would have believed it, that the little pink-and-white face had such a will of her own!"Without more ado Naomi set herself to prepare for her journey.

She saved up thirty eggs, and baked as many of the round flat cakes of the country; also she churned some butter in the ****** way which the women had taught her, and put the milk that was left in a goat's-skin.In three days she was ready, and then she packed her provisions in the leaf panniers of a mule which one of the neighbours had lent to her, and got up before them on the front of the burda, after the manner of the wives whom she had seen going past to market.

When she was about to start her gossips came again, in pity of her wild errand, to bid her farewell and to see the last of her.

同类推荐
  • 佛说如意摩尼陀罗尼经

    佛说如意摩尼陀罗尼经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说八师经

    佛说八师经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 板桥杂记

    板桥杂记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 耳書

    耳書

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Kingdom of the Blind

    The Kingdom of the Blind

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 蓄势待发

    蓄势待发

    天降正义跳狙飞人火中作自己17岁的天才少年渴望在major留下自己的印记(会涉及现实人物,但请勿对号入座,故事里的人和现实里的人绝不一致)
  • 超凡里世界

    超凡里世界

    颜色有黑白,东西有正反,世界有表里。里世界,一个不为世人所知充满危险和机遇的世界....
  • 浮声弑琴之寻

    浮声弑琴之寻

    为了她,他放弃了一切为了她,他不顾生死边界为了她,他来到了这个异地没有了修为,没有了长生,再次重生的他,带着前两世记忆,多年苦寻,在这个奇异,又别样精彩的地球上,再一次展现出他那不同凡响的…才艺!他是燕长歌,他也叫白羽浠![关注本书,也请多点击起点,前部失败品《浮声弑琴》,谢谢!]
  • 四方九品鼎

    四方九品鼎

    谁不想在修行者里叱咤风云,可是咱有关系啊,独一无二的,凶残的,狡猾的,可是,诡异啊,一件一件的事弄不明白,只有去找真相,打打杀杀干什么。
  • 天泺林道

    天泺林道

    天泺,林道。一个活泼好动,一个安静如水。在江湖之中对酒当歌,在乱世之中杀伐果断。
  • 临界·爵迹Ⅱ

    临界·爵迹Ⅱ

    本书在上部出版后的三个月内,作者对原有的提纲和已有内容进行了天翻地覆式的修改,植入多重线索和多条支线,在原有创作计划的基础上增加了数章全新内容,使得下部全书无论是在容量还是在技巧上,较之上部都有令人惊喜的提升,将创意风暴愈演愈烈,将浪漫而壮阔的奇幻小说发挥到了极致。【本书出版方只授权部分章节供您免费阅读,请购买正版实体书阅读全部内容】
  • 青春学院之我们的故事

    青春学院之我们的故事

    八个人的故事,八年的回忆。不知道何时,我们已经不是当初那个样子;不知何地,我们已经离当初自己所期盼的地方渐行渐远;也不知道什么理由,我们成为了当初最不想成为的那个样子。我希望用这部小说,叙说一些故事。
  • 寻万古

    寻万古

    走出古老的森林,寻真我,悟天地,踏九天,诛仙灭佛,屠神炼妖,与魔为伍,跳出天地局。沧笙踏歌,花落成冢,千里孤坟,无处凄凉,在回眸,佳人何方。
  • 欢迎光临雅阁

    欢迎光临雅阁

    在景宿城城西,有间名为雅阁的店铺,阁内什么都有,但二楼的东西从不轻易出卖,一定要等到有缘之人才可以领走,并且还会附赠一些东西和一个故事。哎,没办法,谁让我伊悦竹公子这么爱讲故事呢?
  • 仙灵至上

    仙灵至上

    古有妖魔祸乱天下,现有圣灵横空出世*魔界凶恶的怪物妖界人形的皮囊地狱狰狞的恶鬼人间扭曲的面孔*究竟是上苍的不公,还是自我的唾弃?*古往今来各大门派只知道有三大灵体入轮回道,选天缘人,斩妖魔,修上仙。但他们不知道的是,现如今还存有世间第一个灵体,仙灵。沉睡万年的邪灵与仙灵,从古至今正与邪的殊死较量*一念成魔,一念成佛拥有凡人躯体的叶如昭,在这条注定不平凡路上该如何选择?——————————————————————一朝国破山河亡一朝亲人故离散一朝挚爱成反目一朝师友皆仇敌扭曲的人性,丑陋的面具,邪恶的灵魂,是一首首可歌可泣的悲歌,也是一段段可叹可悲的无奈。