It is to be noted, although the Omnipotent Creator might have found, had it pleased him, in the humblest of his creations, an efficient agent for his purpose, however difficult and sublime, that Divine Majesty has never thought fit to communicate except with human beings of the very highest powers. They are always men who have manifested an extraordinary apt.i.tude for great affairs, and the possession of a fervent and commanding genius. They are great legislators, or great warriors, or great poets, or orators of the most vehement and impa.s.sioned spirit.
Such were Moses, Joshua, the heroic youth of Hebron, and his magnificent son; such, too, was Isaiah, a man, humanly speaking, not inferior to Demosthenes, and struggling for a similar and as beautiful a cause, the independence of a small state, eminent for its intellectual power, against the barbarian grandeur of a military empire. All the great things have been done by the little nations. It is the Jordan and the Ilyssus that have civilised the modern races. An Arabian tribe, a clan of the aegean, have been the promulgators of all our knowledge; and we should never have heard of the Pharaohs, of Babylon the great and Nineveh the superb, of Cyrus and of Xerxes, had not it been for Athens and Jerusalem.
Tancred rose with the sun from his encampment at Hebron, to traverse, probably, the same route pursued by the spies when they entered the Land of Promise. The transition from Canaan to the stony Arabia is not abrupt. A range of hills separates Palestine from a high but level country similar to the Syrian desert, sandy in some places, but covered in all with gra.s.s and shrubs; a vast expanse of downs. Gradually the herbage disappears, and the shrubs are only found tufting the ridgy tops of low undulating sandhills. Soon the sand becomes stony, and no trace of vegetation is ever visible excepting occasionally some th.o.r.n.y plant.
Then comes a land which alternates between plains of sand and dull ranges of monotonous hills covered with loose flints; sometimes the pilgrim winds his way through their dull ravines, sometimes he mounts the heights and beholds a prospect of interminable desolation.
For three nights had Tancred encamped in this wilderness, halting at some spot where they could find some desert shrubs that might serve as food for the camels and fuel for themselves. His tent was soon pitched, the night fires soon crackling, and himself seated at one with the Sheikh and Baroni, he beheld with interest and amus.e.m.e.nt the picturesque and flashing groups around him. Their fare was scant and simple: bread baked upon the spot, the dried tongue of a gazelle, the coffee of the neighbouring Mocha, and the pipe that ever consoles, if indeed the traveller, whatever his hardships, could need any sustenance but his own high thoughts in such a scene, canopied, too, by the most beautiful sky and the most delicious climate in the world.
They were in the vicinity of Mount Seir; on the morrow they were to commence the pa.s.sage of the lofty range which stretches on to Sinai. The Sheikh, who had a feud with a neighbouring tribe, and had been anxious and vigilant while they crossed the open country, riding on with an advanced guard before his charge, reconnoitring from sandhill to sandhill, often creeping up and lying on his breast, so as not to be visible to the enemy, congratulated Tancred that all imminent danger was past.
"Not that I am afraid of them," said Ha.s.san, proudly; "but we must kill them or they will kill us." Ha.s.san, though Sheikh of his own immediate family and followers, was dependent on the great Sheikh of the Jellaheen tribe, and was bound to obey his commands in case the complete clan were summoned to congregate in any particular part of the desert.
[Ill.u.s.tration: page2-083]
On the morrow they commenced their pa.s.sage of the mountains, and, after clearing several ranges found themselves two hours after noon in a defile so strangely beautiful that to behold it would alone have repaid all the exertions and perils of the expedition. It was formed by precipitous rocks of a picturesque shape and of great height, and of colours so brilliant and so blended that to imagine them you must fancy the richest sunset you have ever witnessed, and that would be inferior, from the inevitable defect of its fleeting character. Here the tints, sometimes vivid, sometimes shadowed down, were always equally fair: light blue heights, streaked, perhaps, with scarlet and shaded off to lilac or purple; a cleft of bright orange; a broad peach-coloured expanse, veined in delicate circles and wavy lines of exquisite grace; sometimes yellow and purple stripes; sometimes an isolated steep of every hue flaming in the sun, and then, like a young queen on a gorgeous throne, from a vast rock of crimson, and gold rose a milk-white summit.
The frequent fissures of this defile were filled with rich woods of oleander and shrubs of every shade of green, from which rose acacia, and other trees unknown to Tancred. Over all this was a deep and cloudless sky, and through it a path winding amid a natural shrubbery, which princes would have built colossal conservatories to preserve.
""Tis a scene of enchantment that has risen to mock us in the middle of the desert," exclaimed the enraptured pilgrim; "surely it must vanish even as we gaze!"
About half-way up the defile, when they had traversed it for about a quarter of an hour, Sheikh Ha.s.san suddenly galloped forward and hurled his spear with great force at an isolated crag, the base of which was covered with oleanders, and then looking back he shouted to his companions. Tancred and the foremost hurried up to him.
"Here are tracks of horses and camels that have entered the valley thus far and not pa.s.sed through it. They are fresh; let all be prepared."
"We are twenty-five men well armed," said Baroni. "It is not the Tyahas that will attack such a band."
"Nor are they the Gherashi or the Mezeines," said the Sheikh, "for we know what they are after, and we are brothers."
"They must be Alouins," said an Arab.
At this moment the little caravan was apparently land-locked, the defile again winding; but presently it became quite straight, and its termination was visible, though at a considerable distance.
"I see hors.e.m.e.n," said the Sheikh; "several of them advance; they are not Alouins."
He rode forward to meet them, accompanied by Tancred and Baroni.
"Salaam," said the Sheikh, "how is it?" and then he added, aside to Baroni, "They are strangers; why are they here?"
"Aleikoum! We know where you come from," was the reply of one of the hors.e.m.e.n. "Is that the brother of the Queen of the English? Let him ride with us, and you may go on in peace."
"He is my brother," said Sheikh Ha.s.san, "and the brother of all here.
There is no feud between us. Who are you?"
"We are children of Jethro, and the great Sheikh has sent us a long way to give you salaam. Your desert here is not fit for the camel that your Prophet cursed. Come, let us finish our business, for we wish to see a place where there are palm trees."
"Are these children of Eblis?" said Sheikh Ha.s.san to Baroni.
"It is the day of judgment," said Baroni, looking pale; "such a thing has not happened in my time. I am lost."
"What do these people say?" inquired Tancred.
"There is but one G.o.d," said Sheikh Ha.s.san, whose men had now reached him, "and Mahomet is his Prophet. Stand aside, sons of Eblis, or you shall bite the earth which curses you!"
A wild shout from every height of the defile was the answer. They looked up, they looked round; the crest of every steep was covered with armed Arabs, each man with his musket levelled.
"My lord," said Baroni, "there is something hidden in all this. This is not an ordinary desert foray. You are known, and this tribe comes from a distance to plunder you;" and then he rapidly detailed what had already pa.s.sed.
"What is your force, sons of Eblis?" said the Sheikh to the hors.e.m.e.n.
"Count your men, and your muskets, and your swords, and your horses, and your camels; and if they were all double, they would not be our force.
Our great Sheikh would have come in person with ten thousand men, were not your wilderness here fit only for Giaours."
"Tell the young chief," said the Sheikh to Baroni, "that I am his brother, and will shed the last drop of my blood in his service, as I am bound to do, as much as he is bound to give me ten thousand piastres for the journey, and ask him what he wishes."
"Demand to know distinctly what these men want," said Tancred to Baroni, who then conferred with them.
"They want your lordship," said Baroni, "whom they call the brother of the Queen of the English; their business is clearly to carry you to their great Sheikh, who will release you for a large ransom."
"And they have no feud with the Jellaheens?"
"None; they are strangers; they come from a distance for this purpose; nor can it be doubted that this plan has been concocted at Jerusalem."
"Our position, I fear, is fatal in this defile," said Tancred; "it is bitter to be the cause of exposing so many brave men to almost inevitable slaughter. Tell them, Baroni, that I am not the brother of the Queen of the English; that they are ridiculously misled, and that their aim is hopeless, for all that will be ransomed will be my corpse."
Sheikh Ha.s.san sat on his horse like a statue, with his spear in his hand and his eye on his enemy; Baroni, advancing to the strange hors.e.m.e.n, who were in position about ten yards from Tancred and his guardian, was soon engaged in animated conversation. He did all that an able diplomatist could effect; told lies with admirable grace, and made a hundred propositions that did not commit his princ.i.p.al. He a.s.sured them very heartily that Tancred was not the brother of the Queen of the English; that he was only a young Sheikh, whose father was alive, and in possession of all the flocks and herds, camels and horses; that he had quarrelled with his father; that his father, perhaps, would not be sorry if he were got rid of, and would not give a hundred piastres to save his life. Then he offered, if he would let Tancred pa.s.s, himself to go with them as prisoner to their great Sheikh, and even proposed Ha.s.san and half his men for additional hostages, whilst some just and equitable arrangement could be effected. All, however, was in vain. The enemy had no discretion; dead or alive, the young Englishman must be carried to their chief.
"I can do nothing," said Baroni, returning; "there is something in all this which I do not understand. It has never happened in my time."
"There is, then, but one course to be taken," said Tancred; "we must charge through the defile. At any rate we shall have the satisfaction of dying like men. Let us each fix on our opponent. That audacious-looking Arab in a red kefia shall be my victim, or my destroyer. Speak to the Sheikh, and tell him to prepare his men. Freeman and Trueman," said Tancred, looking round to his English servants, "we are in extreme peril; I took you from your homes; if we outlive this day, and return to Montacute, you shall live on your own land."
"Never mind us, my lord: if it wern"t for those rocks we would beat these n.i.g.g.e.rs."
"Are you all ready?" said Tancred to Baroni.
"We are all ready."
"Then I commend my soul to Jesus Christ, and to the G.o.d of Sinai, in whose cause I perish." So saying, Tancred shot the Arab in the red kefia through the head, and with his remaining pistol disabled another of the enemy. This he did, while he and his band were charging, so suddenly and so boldly, that those immediately opposed to them were scattered. There was a continuous volley, however, from every part of the defile, and the scene was so involved in smoke that it was impossible for Tancred to see a yard around him; still he galloped on and felt conscious that he had companions, though the shouting was so great that it was impossible to communicate. The smoke suddenly drifting, Tancred caught a glimpse of his position; he was at the mouth of the defile, followed by several of his men, whom he had not time to distinguish, and awaited by innumerable foes.
"Let us sell our lives dearly!" was all that he could exclaim. His sword fell from his wounded arm; his horse, stabbed underneath, sank with him to the ground. He was overpowered and bound. "Every drop of his blood,"
exclaimed the leader of the strange Arabs, "is worth ten thousand piastres."
CHAPTER x.x.x.
_Plans for Rescue_
"WHERE is Besso?" said Barizy of the Tower, as the Consul Pasqualigo entered the divan of the merchant, about ten days after the departure of Tancred from Jerusalem for Mount Sinai.