ste, who had taken his pipe out of his mouth in a controversial
manner, put it back again.
Westover added, "But there's no question but the Egyptians believed in
the life hereafter, and in future rewards and punishments for the deeds
done in the body, thousands of years before our era."
"Well, I'm dumned," said Whitwell.
Jombateeste took his pipe out again. "Hit show they got good sense. They
know--they feel it in their bone--what goin' 'appen--when you dead. Me, I
guess they got some prophet find it hout for them; then they goin' take
the credit."
"I guess that's something so, Jombateeste," said Whitwell. "It don't
stand to reason that folks without any alphabet, as you may say, and only
a lot of pictures for words, like Injuns, could figure out the
immortality of the soul. They got the idee by inspiration somehow. Why,
here! It's like this. Them Pharaohs must have always been clawin' out for
the Hebrews before they got a hold of Joseph, and when they found out the
true doctrine, they hushed up where they got it, and their priests went
on teachin' it as if it was their own."
"That's w'at I say. Got it from the 'Ebrew."
"Well, it don't matter a great deal where they got it, so they got it,"
said Jackson, as he rose.
"I believe I'll go with you," said Westover.
"All there is about it," said the sick man, solemnly, with a frail effort
to straighten himself, to which his sunken chest would not respond, "is
this: no man ever did figure that out for himself. A man sees folks die,
and as far as his senses go, they don't live again. But somehow he knows
they do; and his knowledge comes from somewhere else; it's inspired--"
"That's w'at I say," Jombateeste hastened to interpose. "Got it from the
'Ebrew. Feel it in 'is bone."
Out under the stars Jackson and Westover silently mounted the hill-side
together. At one of the thank-you-marms in the road the sick man stopped,
like a weary horse, to breathe. He took off his hat and wiped the sweat
of weakness that had gathered upon his forehead, and looked round the
sky, powdered with the constellations and the planets. "It's sightly," he
whispered.
"Yes, it is fine," Westover assented. "But the stars of our Northern
nights are nothing to what you'll see in Egypt."
Jackson repeated, vaguely: "Egypt! Where I should like to go is Mars." He
fixed his eyes on the flaming planets, in a long stare. "But I suppose
they have their own troubles, same as we do. They must
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