[Uarda Complete by Georg Ebers]@TWC D-Link bookUarda Complete CHAPTER XXVII 5/11
"They will scarcely notice that you are not among the school-boys, but--" "But I will not go over as the king's son, but as a gardener's boy--" interrupted the prince.
"Listen to the flourish of trumpets! the God has now passed through the gates." Rameri stepped out into the balcony, and the two women followed him, and looked down on the scene of the embarkation which they could easily see with their sharp young eyes. "It will be a thinner and poorer procession without either my father or us, that is one comfort," said Rameri.
"The chorus is magnificent; here come the plume-bearers and singers; there is the chief prophet at the great temple, old Bek-en-Chunsu.
How dignified he looks, but he will not like going.
Now the God is coming, for I, smell the incense." With these words the prince fell on his knees, and the women followed his example--when they saw first a noble bull in whose shining skin the sun was reflected, and who bore between his horns a golden disk, above which stood white ostrich-feathers; and then, divided from the bull only by a few fan-bearers, the God himself, sometimes visible, but more often hidden from sight by great semi-circular screens of black and white ostrich-feathers, which were fixed on long poles, and with which the priests shaded the God. His mode of progress was as mysterious as his name, for he seemed to float slowly on his gorgeous throne from the temple-gates towards the stream.
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