[The Complete Historical Romances of Georg Ebers by Georg Ebers]@TWC D-Link book
The Complete Historical Romances of Georg Ebers

CHAPTER XXXIX
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He felt as if he had been respited on the very scaffold.

Yes; he was a man like all other men, and so he would still be.
He rejoiced in the obscurity that veiled his future, in the many weaknesses which he had in common with those whom he loved, and even in the feeling that he, under the same conditions of life as his contemporaries, had more responsibilities than they.
Shortly after his victory, after all the important passes and strongholds had been conquered by his troops, he set out for Egypt with his train and the vanquished princes.

He sent two of his sons to Bent-Anat at Megiddo, to escort her by sea to Pelusium; he knew that the commandant of the harbor of that frontier fortress, at the easternmost limit of his kingdom, was faithful to him, and he ordered that his daughter should not quit the ship till he arrived, to secure her against any attempt on the part of the Regent.

A large part of the material of war, and most of the wounded, were also sent to Egypt by sea..


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