702 lines
36 KiB
Plaintext
702 lines
36 KiB
Plaintext
1850
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SOME WORDS WITH A MUMMY
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by Edgar Allan Poe
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THE SYMPOSIUM of the preceding evening had been a little too much
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for my nerves. I had a wretched headache, and was desperately
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drowsy. Instead of going out therefore to spend the evening as I had
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proposed, it occurred to me that I could not do a wiser thing than
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just eat a mouthful of supper and go immediately to bed.
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A light supper of course. I am exceedingly fond of Welsh rabbit.
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More than a pound at once, however, may not at all times be advisable.
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Still, there can be no material objection to two. And really between
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two and three, there is merely a single unit of difference. I
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ventured, perhaps, upon four. My wife will have it five;- but,
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clearly, she has confounded two very distinct affairs. The abstract
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number, five, I am willing to admit; but, concretely, it has reference
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to bottles of Brown Stout, without which, in the way of condiment,
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Welsh rabbit is to be eschewed.
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Having thus concluded a frugal meal, and donned my night-cap, with
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the serene hope of enjoying it till noon the next day, I placed my
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head upon the pillow, and, through the aid of a capital conscience,
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fell into a profound slumber forthwith.
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But when were the hopes of humanity fulfilled? I could not have
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completed my third snore when there came a furious ringing at the
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street-door bell, and then an impatient thumping at the knocker, which
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awakened me at once. In a minute afterward, and while I was still
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rubbing my eyes, my wife thrust in my face a note, from my old friend,
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Doctor Ponnonner. It ran thus:
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Come to me, by all means, my dear good friend, as soon as you
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receive this. Come and help us to rejoice. At last, by long
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persevering diplomacy, I have gained the assent of the Directors of
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the City Museum, to my examination of the Mummy- you know the one I
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mean. I have permission to unswathe it and open it, if desirable. A
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few friends only will be present- you, of course. The Mummy is now
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at my house, and we shall begin to unroll it at eleven to-night.
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Yours, ever, PONNONNER.
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By the time I had reached the "Ponnonner," it struck me that I was
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as wide awake as a man need be. I leaped out of bed in an ecstacy,
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overthrowing all in my way; dressed myself with a rapidity truly
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marvellous; and set off, at the top of my speed, for the doctor's.
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There I found a very eager company assembled. They had been awaiting
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me with much impatience; the Mummy was extended upon the dining-table;
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and the moment I entered its examination was commenced.
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It was one of a pair brought, several years previously, by Captain
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Arthur Sabretash, a cousin of Ponnonner's from a tomb near
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Eleithias, in the Lybian mountains, a considerable distance above
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Thebes on the Nile. The grottoes at this point, although less
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magnificent than the Theban sepulchres, are of higher interest, on
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account of affording more numerous illustrations of the private life
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of the Egyptians. The chamber from which our specimen was taken, was
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said to be very rich in such illustrations; the walls being completely
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covered with fresco paintings and bas-reliefs, while statues, vases,
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and Mosaic work of rich patterns, indicated the vast wealth of the
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deceased.
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The treasure had been deposited in the Museum precisely in the
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same condition in which Captain Sabretash had found it;- that is to
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say, the coffin had not been disturbed. For eight years it had thus
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stood, subject only externally to public inspection. We had now,
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therefore, the complete Mummy at our disposal; and to those who are
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aware how very rarely the unransacked antique reaches our shores, it
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will be evident, at once that we had great reason to congratulate
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ourselves upon our good fortune.
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Approaching the table, I saw on it a large box, or case, nearly
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seven feet long, and perhaps three feet wide, by two feet and a half
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deep. It was oblong- not coffin-shaped. The material was at first
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supposed to be the wood of the sycamore (platanus), but, upon
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cutting into it, we found it to be pasteboard, or, more properly,
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papier mache, composed of papyrus. It was thickly ornamented with
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paintings, representing funeral scenes, and other mournful subjects-
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interspersed among which, in every variety of position, were certain
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series of hieroglyphical characters, intended, no doubt, for the
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name of the departed. By good luck, Mr. Gliddon formed one of our
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party; and he had no difficulty in translating the letters, which were
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simply phonetic, and represented the word Allamistakeo.
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We had some difficulty in getting this case open without injury; but
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having at length accomplished the task, we came to a second,
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coffin-shaped, and very considerably less in size than the exterior
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one, but resembling it precisely in every other respect. The
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interval between the two was filled with resin, which had, in some
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degree, defaced the colors of the interior box.
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Upon opening this latter (which we did quite easily), we arrived
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at a third case, also coffin-shaped, and varying from the second one
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in no particular, except in that of its material, which was cedar, and
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still emitted the peculiar and highly aromatic odor of that wood.
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Between the second and the third case there was no interval- the one
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fitting accurately within the other.
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Removing the third case, we discovered and took out the body itself.
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We had expected to find it, as usual, enveloped in frequent rolls,
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or bandages, of linen; but, in place of these, we found a sort of
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sheath, made of papyrus, and coated with a layer of plaster, thickly
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gilt and painted. The paintings represented subjects connected with
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the various supposed duties of the soul, and its presentation to
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different divinities, with numerous identical human figures, intended,
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very probably, as portraits of the persons embalmed. Extending from
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head to foot was a columnar, or perpendicular, inscription, in
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phonetic hieroglyphics, giving again his name and titles, and the
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names and titles of his relations.
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Around the neck thus ensheathed, was a collar of cylindrical glass
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beads, diverse in color, and so arranged as to form images of deities,
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of the scarabaeus, etc, with the winged globe. Around the small of the
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waist was a similar collar or belt.
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Stripping off the papyrus, we found the flesh in excellent
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preservation, with no perceptible odor. The color was reddish. The
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skin was hard, smooth, and glossy. The teeth and hair were in good
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condition. The eyes (it seemed) had been removed, and glass ones
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substituted, which were very beautiful and wonderfully life-like, with
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the exception of somewhat too determined a stare. The fingers and
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the nails were brilliantly gilded.
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Mr. Gliddon was of opinion, from the redness of the epidermis,
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that the embalmment had been effected altogether by asphaltum; but, on
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scraping the surface with a steel instrument, and throwing into the
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fire some of the powder thus obtained, the flavor of camphor and other
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sweet-scented gums became apparent.
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We searched the corpse very carefully for the usual openings through
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which the entrails are extracted, but, to our surprise, we could
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discover none. No member of the party was at that period aware that
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entire or unopened mummies are not infrequently met. The brain it
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was customary to withdraw through the nose; the intestines through
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an incision in the side; the body was then shaved, washed, and salted;
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then laid aside for several weeks, when the operation of embalming,
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properly so called, began.
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As no trace of an opening could be found, Doctor Ponnonner was
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preparing his instruments for dissection, when I observed that it
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was then past two o'clock. Hereupon it was agreed to postpone the
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internal examination until the next evening; and we were about to
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separate for the present, when some one suggested an experiment or two
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with the Voltaic pile.
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The application of electricity to a mummy three or four thousand
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years old at the least, was an idea, if not very sage, still
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sufficiently original, and we all caught it at once. About one-tenth
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in earnest and nine-tenths in jest, we arranged a battery in the
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Doctor's study, and conveyed thither the Egyptian.
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It was only after much trouble that we succeeded in laying bare some
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portions of the temporal muscle which appeared of less stony
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rigidity than other parts of the frame, but which, as we had
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anticipated, of course, gave no indication of galvanic
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susceptibility when brought in contact with the wire. This, the
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first trial, indeed, seemed decisive, and, with a hearty laugh at
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our own absurdity, we were bidding each other good night, when my
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eyes, happening to fall upon those of the Mummy, were there
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immediately riveted in amazement. My brief glance, in fact, had
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sufficed to assure me that the orbs which we had all supposed to be
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glass, and which were originally noticeable for a certain wild
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stare, were now so far covered by the lids, that only a small
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portion of the tunica albuginea remained visible.
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With a shout I called attention to the fact, and it became
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immediately obvious to all.
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I cannot say that I was alarmed at the phenomenon, because "alarmed"
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is, in my case, not exactly the word. It is possible, however, that,
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but for the Brown Stout, I might have been a little nervous. As for
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the rest of the company, they really made no attempt at concealing the
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downright fright which possessed them. Doctor Ponnonner was a man to
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be pitied. Mr. Gliddon, by some peculiar process, rendered himself
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invisible. Mr. Silk Buckingham, I fancy, will scarcely be so bold as
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to deny that he made his way, upon all fours, under the table.
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After the first shock of astonishment, however, we resolved, as a
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matter of course, upon further experiment forthwith. Our operations
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were now directed against the great toe of the right foot. We made
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an incision over the outside of the exterior os sesamoideum pollicis
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pedis, and thus got at the root of the abductor muscle. Readjusting
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the battery, we now applied the fluid to the bisected nerves- when,
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with a movement of exceeding life-likeness, the Mummy first drew up
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its right knee so as to bring it nearly in contact with the abdomen,
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and then, straightening the limb with inconceivable force, bestowed
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a kick upon Doctor Ponnonner, which had the effect of discharging that
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gentleman, like an arrow from a catapult, through a window into the
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street below.
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We rushed out en masse to bring in the mangled remains of the
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victim, but had the happiness to meet him upon the staircase, coming
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up in an unaccountable hurry, brimful of the most ardent philosophy,
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and more than ever impressed with the necessity of prosecuting our
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experiment with vigor and with zeal.
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It was by his advice, accordingly, that we made, upon the spot, a
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profound incision into the tip of the subject's nose, while the Doctor
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himself, laying violent hands upon it, pulled it into vehement contact
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with the wire.
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Morally and physically- figuratively and literally- was the effect
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electric. In the first place, the corpse opened its eyes and winked
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very rapidly for several minutes, as does Mr. Barnes in the pantomime,
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in the second place, it sneezed; in the third, it sat upon end; in the
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fourth, it shook its fist in Doctor Ponnonner's face; in the fifth,
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turning to Messieurs Gliddon and Buckingham, it addressed them, in
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very capital Egyptian, thus:
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"I must say, gentlemen, that I am as much surprised as I am
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mortified at your behaviour. Of Doctor Ponnonner nothing better was to
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be expected. He is a poor little fat fool who knows no better. I
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pity and forgive him. But you, Mr. Gliddon- and you, Silk- who have
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travelled and resided in Egypt until one might imagine you to the
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manner born- you, I say who have been so much among us that you
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speak Egyptian fully as well, I think, as you write your mother
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tongue- you, whom I have always been led to regard as the firm
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friend of the mummies- I really did anticipate more gentlemanly
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conduct from you. What am I to think of your standing quietly by and
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seeing me thus unhandsomely used? What am I to suppose by your
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permitting Tom, Dick, and Harry to strip me of my coffins, and my
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clothes, in this wretchedly cold climate? In what light (to come to
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the point) am I to regard your aiding and abetting that miserable
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little villain, Doctor Ponnonner, in pulling me by the nose?"
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It will be taken for granted, no doubt, that upon hearing this
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speech under the circumstances, we all either made for the door, or
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fell into violent hysterics, or went off in a general swoon. One of
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these three things was, I say, to be expected. Indeed each and all
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of these lines of conduct might have been very plausibly pursued. And,
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upon my word, I am at a loss to know how or why it was that we pursued
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neither the one nor the other. But, perhaps, the true reason is to
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be sought in the spirit of the age, which proceeds by the rule of
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contraries altogether, and is now usually admitted as the solution
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of every thing in the way of paradox and impossibility. Or, perhaps,
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after all, it was only the Mummy's exceedingly natural and
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matter-of-course air that divested his words of the terrible.
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However this may be, the facts are clear, and no member of our party
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betrayed any very particular trepidation, or seemed to consider that
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any thing had gone very especially wrong.
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For my part I was convinced it was all right, and merely stepped
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aside, out of the range of the Egyptian's fist. Doctor Ponnonner
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thrust his hands into his breeches' pockets, looked hard at the Mummy,
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and grew excessively red in the face. Mr. Glidden stroked his whiskers
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and drew up the collar of his shirt. Mr. Buckingham hung down his
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head, and put his right thumb into the left corner of his mouth.
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The Egyptian regarded him with a severe countenance for some minutes
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and at length, with a sneer, said:
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"Why don't you speak, Mr. Buckingham? Did you hear what I asked you,
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or not? Do take your thumb out of your mouth!"
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Mr. Buckingham, hereupon, gave a slight start, took his right
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thumb out of the left corner of his mouth, and, by way of
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indemnification inserted his left thumb in the right corner of the
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aperture above-mentioned.
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Not being able to get an answer from Mr. B., the figure turned
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peevishly to Mr. Gliddon, and, in a peremptory tone, demanded in
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general terms what we all meant.
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Mr. Gliddon replied at great length, in phonetics; and but for the
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deficiency of American printing-offices in hieroglyphical type, it
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would afford me much pleasure to record here, in the original, the
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whole of his very excellent speech.
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I may as well take this occasion to remark, that all the
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subsequent conversation in which the Mummy took a part, was carried on
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in primitive Egyptian, through the medium (so far as concerned
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myself and other untravelled members of the company)- through the
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medium, I say, of Messieurs Gliddon and Buckingham, as interpreters.
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These gentlemen spoke the mother tongue of the Mummy with inimitable
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fluency and grace; but I could not help observing that (owing, no
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doubt, to the introduction of images entirely modern, and, of
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course, entirely novel to the stranger) the two travellers were
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reduced, occasionally, to the employment of sensible forms for the
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purpose of conveying a particular meaning. Mr. Gliddon, at one period,
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for example, could not make the Egyptian comprehend the term
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"politics," until he sketched upon the wall, with a bit of charcoal
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a little carbuncle-nosed gentleman, out at elbows, standing upon a
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stump, with his left leg drawn back, right arm thrown forward, with
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his fist shut, the eyes rolled up toward Heaven, and the mouth open at
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an angle of ninety degrees. Just in the same way Mr. Buckingham failed
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to convey the absolutely modern idea "wig," until (at Doctor
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Ponnonner's suggestion) he grew very pale in the face, and consented
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to take off his own.
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It will be readily understood that Mr. Gliddon's discourse turned
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chiefly upon the vast benefits accruing to science from the
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unrolling and disembowelling of mummies; apologizing, upon this score,
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for any disturbance that might have been occasioned him, in
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particular, the individual Mummy called Allamistakeo; and concluding
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with a mere hint (for it could scarcely be considered more) that, as
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these little matters were now explained, it might be as well to
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proceed with the investigation intended. Here Doctor Ponnonner made
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ready his instruments.
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In regard to the latter suggestions of the orator, it appears that
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Allamistakeo had certain scruples of conscience, the nature of which I
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did not distinctly learn; but he expressed himself satisfied with
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the apologies tendered, and, getting down from the table, shook
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hands with the company all round.
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When this ceremony was at an end, we immediately busied ourselves in
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repairing the damages which our subject had sustained from the
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scalpel. We sewed up the wound in his temple, bandaged his foot, and
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applied a square inch of black plaster to the tip of his nose.
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It was now observed that the Count (this was the title, it seems, of
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Allamistakeo) had a slight fit of shivering- no doubt from the cold.
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The Doctor immediately repaired to his wardrobe, and soon returned
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with a black dress coat, made in Jennings' best manner, a pair of
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sky-blue plaid pantaloons with straps, a pink gingham chemise, a
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flapped vest of brocade, a white sack overcoat, a walking cane with
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a hook, a hat with no brim, patent-leather boots, straw-colored kid
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gloves, an eye-glass, a pair of whiskers, and a waterfall cravat.
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Owing to the disparity of size between the Count and the doctor (the
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proportion being as two to one), there was some little difficulty in
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adjusting these habiliments upon the person of the Egyptian; but
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when all was arranged, he might have been said to be dressed. Mr.
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Gliddon, therefore, gave him his arm, and led him to a comfortable
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chair by the fire, while the Doctor rang the bell upon the spot and
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ordered a supply of cigars and wine.
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The conversation soon grew animated. Much curiosity was, of
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course, expressed in regard to the somewhat remarkable fact of
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Allamistakeo's still remaining alive.
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"I should have thought," observed Mr. Buckingham, "that it is high
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time you were dead."
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"Why," replied the Count, very much astonished, "I am little more
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than seven hundred years old! My father lived a thousand, and was by
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no means in his dotage when he died."
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Here ensued a brisk series of questions and computations, by means
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of which it became evident that the antiquity of the Mummy had been
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grossly misjudged. It had been five thousand and fifty years and
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some months since he had been consigned to the catacombs at Eleithias.
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"But my remark," resumed Mr. Buckingham, "had no reference to your
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age at the period of interment (I am willing to grant, in fact, that
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you are still a young man), and my illusion was to the immensity of
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time during which, by your own showing, you must have been done up
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in asphaltum."
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"In what?" said the Count.
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"In asphaltum," persisted Mr. B.
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"Ah, yes; I have some faint notion of what you mean; it might be
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made to answer, no doubt- but in my time we employed scarcely any
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thing else than the Bichloride of Mercury."
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"But what we are especially at a loss to understand," said Doctor
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Ponnonner, "is how it happens that, having been dead and buried in
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Egypt five thousand years ago, you are here to-day all alive and
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looking so delightfully well."
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"Had I been, as you say, dead," replied the Count, "it is more
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than probable that dead, I should still be; for I perceive you are yet
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in the infancy of Calvanism, and cannot accomplish with it what was
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a common thing among us in the old days. But the fact is, I fell
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into catalepsy, and it was considered by my best friends that I was
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either dead or should be; they accordingly embalmed me at once- I
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presume you are aware of the chief principle of the embalming
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process?"
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"Why not altogether."
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"Why, I perceive- a deplorable condition of ignorance! Well I cannot
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enter into details just now: but it is necessary to explain that to
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embalm (properly speaking), in Egypt, was to arrest indefinitely all
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the animal functions subjected to the process. I use the word 'animal'
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in its widest sense, as including the physical not more than the moral
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and vital being. I repeat that the leading principle of embalmment
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consisted, with us, in the immediately arresting, and holding in
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perpetual abeyance, all the animal functions subjected to the process.
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To be brief, in whatever condition the individual was, at the period
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of embalmment, in that condition he remained. Now, as it is my good
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fortune to be of the blood of the Scarabaeus, I was embalmed alive, as
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you see me at present."
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"The blood of the Scarabaeus!" exclaimed Doctor Ponnonner.
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"Yes. The Scarabaeus was the insignium or the 'arms,' of a very
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distinguished and very rare patrician family. To be 'of the blood of
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the Scarabaeus,' is merely to be one of that family of which the
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Scarabaeus is the insignium. I speak figuratively."
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"But what has this to do with you being alive?"
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"Why, it is the general custom in Egypt to deprive a corpse,
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before embalmment, of its bowels and brains; the race of the Scarabaei
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alone did not coincide with the custom. Had I not been a Scarabeus,
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therefore, I should have been without bowels and brains; and without
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either it is inconvenient to live."
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"I perceive that," said Mr. Buckingham, "and I presume that all
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the entire mummies that come to hand are of the race of Scarabaei."
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"Beyond doubt."
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"I thought," said Mr. Gliddon, very meekly, "that the Scarabaeus was
|
|
one of the Egyptian gods."
|
|
|
|
"One of the Egyptian what?" exclaimed the Mummy, starting to its
|
|
feet.
|
|
|
|
"Gods!" repeated the traveller.
|
|
|
|
"Mr. Gliddon, I really am astonished to hear you talk in this
|
|
style," said the Count, resuming his chair. "No nation upon the face
|
|
of the earth has ever acknowledged more than one god. The
|
|
Scarabaeus, the Ibis, etc., were with us (as similar creatures have
|
|
been with others) the symbols, or media, through which we offered
|
|
worship to the Creator too august to be more directly approached."
|
|
|
|
There was here a pause. At length the colloquy was renewed by Doctor
|
|
Ponnonner.
|
|
|
|
"It is not improbable, then, from what you have explained," said he,
|
|
"that among the catacombs near the Nile there may exist other
|
|
mummies of the Scarabaeus tribe, in a condition of vitality?"
|
|
|
|
"There can be no question of it," replied the Count; "all the
|
|
Scarabaei embalmed accidentally while alive, are alive now. Even
|
|
some of those purposely so embalmed, may have been overlooked by their
|
|
executors, and still remain in the tomb."
|
|
|
|
"Will you be kind enough to explain," I said, "what you mean by
|
|
'purposely so embalmed'?"
|
|
|
|
"With great pleasure!" answered the Mummy, after surveying me
|
|
leisurely through his eye-glass- for it was the first time I had
|
|
ventured to address him a direct question.
|
|
|
|
"With great pleasure," he said. "The usual duration of man's life,
|
|
in my time, was about eight hundred years. Few men died, unless by
|
|
most extraordinary accident, before the age of six hundred; few
|
|
lived longer than a decade of centuries; but eight were considered the
|
|
natural term. After the discovery of the embalming principle, as I
|
|
have already described it to you, it occurred to our philosophers that
|
|
a laudable curiosity might be gratified, and, at the same time, the
|
|
interests of science much advanced, by living this natural term in
|
|
installments. In the case of history, indeed, experience
|
|
demonstrated that something of this kind was indispensable. An
|
|
historian, for example, having attained the age of five hundred, would
|
|
write a book with great labor and then get himself carefully embalmed;
|
|
leaving instructions to his executors pro tem., that they should cause
|
|
him to be revivified after the lapse of a certain period- say five
|
|
or six hundred years. Resuming existence at the expiration of this
|
|
time, he would invariably find his great work converted into a species
|
|
of hap-hazard note-book- that is to say, into a kind of literary arena
|
|
for the conflicting guesses, riddles, and personal squabbles of
|
|
whole herds of exasperated commentators. These guesses, etc., which
|
|
passed under the name of annotations, or emendations, were found so
|
|
completely to have enveloped, distorted, and overwhelmed the text,
|
|
that the author had to go about with a lantern to discover his own
|
|
book. When discovered, it was never worth the trouble of the search.
|
|
After re-writing it throughout, it was regarded as the bounden duty of
|
|
the historian to set himself to work immediately in correcting, from
|
|
his own private knowledge and experience, the traditions of the day
|
|
concerning the epoch at which he had originally lived. Now this
|
|
process of re-scription and personal rectification, pursued by various
|
|
individual sages from time to time, had the effect of preventing our
|
|
history from degenerating into absolute fable."
|
|
|
|
"I beg your pardon," said Doctor Ponnonner at this point, laying his
|
|
hand gently upon the arm of the Egyptian- "I beg your pardon, sir, but
|
|
may I presume to interrupt you for one moment?"
|
|
|
|
"By all means, sir," replied the Count, drawing up.
|
|
|
|
"I merely wished to ask you a question," said the Doctor. "You
|
|
mentioned the historian's personal correction of traditions respecting
|
|
his own epoch. Pray, sir, upon an average what proportion of these
|
|
Kabbala were usually found to be right?"
|
|
|
|
"The Kabbala, as you properly term them, sir, were generally
|
|
discovered to be precisely on a par with the facts recorded in the
|
|
un-re-written histories themselves;- that is to say, not one
|
|
individual iota of either was ever known, under any circumstances,
|
|
to be not totally and radically wrong."
|
|
|
|
"But since it is quite clear," resumed the Doctor, "that at least
|
|
five thousand years have elapsed since your entombment, I take it
|
|
for granted that your histories at that period, if not your traditions
|
|
were sufficiently explicit on that one topic of universal interest,
|
|
the Creation, which took place, as I presume you are aware, only about
|
|
ten centuries before."
|
|
|
|
"Sir!" said the Count Allamistakeo.
|
|
|
|
The Doctor repeated his remarks, but it was only after much
|
|
additional explanation that the foreigner could be made to
|
|
comprehend them. The latter at length said, hesitatingly:
|
|
|
|
"The ideas you have suggested are to me, I confess, utterly novel.
|
|
During my time I never knew any one to entertain so singular a fancy
|
|
as that the universe (or this world if you will have it so) ever had a
|
|
beginning at all. I remember once, and once only, hearing something
|
|
remotely hinted, by a man of many speculations, concerning the
|
|
origin of the human race; and by this individual, the very word Adam
|
|
(or Red Earth), which you make use of, was employed. He employed it,
|
|
however, in a generical sense, with reference to the spontaneous
|
|
germination from rank soil (just as a thousand of the lower genera
|
|
of creatures are germinated)- the spontaneous germination, I say, of
|
|
five vast hordes of men, simultaneously upspringing in five distinct
|
|
and nearly equal divisions of the globe."
|
|
|
|
Here, in general, the company shrugged their shoulders, and one or
|
|
two of us touched our foreheads with a very significant air. Mr.
|
|
Silk Buckingham, first glancing slightly at the occiput and then at
|
|
the sinciput of Allamistakeo, spoke as follows:
|
|
|
|
"The long duration of human life in your time, together with the
|
|
occasional practice of passing it, as you have explained, in
|
|
installments, must have had, indeed, a strong tendency to the
|
|
general development and conglomeration of knowledge. I presume,
|
|
therefore, that we are to attribute the marked inferiority of the
|
|
old Egyptians in all particulars of science, when compared with the
|
|
moderns, and more especially with the Yankees, altogether to the
|
|
superior solidity of the Egyptian skull."
|
|
|
|
"I confess again," replied the Count, with much suavity, "that I
|
|
am somewhat at a loss to comprehend you; pray, to what particulars
|
|
of science do you allude?"
|
|
|
|
Here our whole party, joining voices, detailed, at great length, the
|
|
assumptions of phrenology and the marvels of animal magnetism.
|
|
|
|
Having heard us to an end, the Count proceeded to relate a few
|
|
anecdotes, which rendered it evident that prototypes of Gall and
|
|
Spurzheim had flourished and faded in Egypt so long ago as to have
|
|
been nearly forgotten, and that the manoeuvres of Mesmer were really
|
|
very contemptible tricks when put in collation with the positive
|
|
miracles of the Theban savans, who created lice and a great many other
|
|
similar things.
|
|
|
|
I here asked the Count if his people were able to calculate
|
|
eclipses. He smiled rather contemptuously, and said they were.
|
|
|
|
This put me a little out, but I began to make other inquiries in
|
|
regard to his astronomical knowledge, when a member of the company,
|
|
who had never as yet opened his mouth, whispered in my ear, that for
|
|
information on this head, I had better consult Ptolemy (whoever
|
|
Ptolemy is), as well as one Plutarch de facie lunae.
|
|
|
|
I then questioned the Mummy about burning-glasses and lenses, and,
|
|
in general, about the manufacture of glass; but I had not made an
|
|
end of my queries before the silent member again touched me quietly on
|
|
the elbow, and begged me for God's sake to take a peep at Diodorus
|
|
Siculus. As for the Count, he merely asked me, in the way of reply, if
|
|
we moderns possessed any such microscopes as would enable us to cut
|
|
cameos in the style of the Egyptians. While I was thinking how I
|
|
should answer this question, little Doctor Ponnonner committed himself
|
|
in a very extraordinary way.
|
|
|
|
"Look at our architecture!" he exclaimed, greatly to the indignation
|
|
of both the travellers, who pinched him black and blue to no purpose.
|
|
|
|
"Look," he cried with enthusiasm, "at the Bowling-Green Fountain
|
|
in New York! or if this be too vast a contemplation, regard for a
|
|
moment the Capitol at Washington, D. C.!"- and the good little medical
|
|
man went on to detail very minutely, the proportions of the fabric
|
|
to which he referred. He explained that the portico alone was
|
|
adorned with no less than four and twenty columns, five feet in
|
|
diameter, and ten feet apart.
|
|
|
|
The Count said that he regretted not being able to remember, just at
|
|
that moment, the precise dimensions of any one of the principal
|
|
buildings of the city of Aznac, whose foundations were laid in the
|
|
night of Time, but the ruins of which were still standing, at the
|
|
epoch of his entombment, in a vast plain of sand to the westward of
|
|
Thebes. He recollected, however, (talking of the porticoes,) that
|
|
one affixed to an inferior palace in a kind of suburb called Carnac,
|
|
consisted of a hundred and forty-four columns, thirty-seven feet in
|
|
circumference, and twenty-five feet apart. The approach to this
|
|
portico, from the Nile, was through an avenue two miles long, composed
|
|
of sphynxes, statues, and obelisks, twenty, sixty, and a hundred
|
|
feet in height. The palace itself (as well as he could remember)
|
|
was, in one direction, two miles long, and might have been
|
|
altogether about seven in circuit. Its walls were richly painted all
|
|
over, within and without, with hieroglyphics. He would not pretend
|
|
to assert that even fifty or sixty of the Doctor's Capitols might have
|
|
been built within these walls, but he was by no means sure that two or
|
|
three hundred of them might not have been squeezed in with some
|
|
trouble. That palace at Carnac was an insignificant little building
|
|
after all. He (the Count), however, could not conscientiously refuse
|
|
to admit the ingenuity, magnificence, and superiority of the
|
|
Fountain at the Bowling Green, as described by the Doctor. Nothing
|
|
like it, he was forced to allow, had ever been seen in Egypt or
|
|
elsewhere.
|
|
|
|
I here asked the Count what he had to say to our railroads.
|
|
|
|
"Nothing," he replied, "in particular." They were rather slight,
|
|
rather ill-conceived, and clumsily put together. They could not be
|
|
compared, of course, with the vast, level, direct, iron-grooved
|
|
causeways upon which the Egyptians conveyed entire temples and solid
|
|
obelisks of a hundred and fifty feet in altitude.
|
|
|
|
I spoke of our gigantic mechanical forces.
|
|
|
|
He agreed that we knew something in that way, but inquired how I
|
|
should have gone to work in getting up the imposts on the lintels of
|
|
even the little palace at Carnac.
|
|
|
|
This question I concluded not to hear, and demanded if he had any
|
|
idea of Artesian wells; but he simply raised his eyebrows; while Mr.
|
|
Gliddon winked at me very hard and said, in a low tone, that one had
|
|
been recently discovered by the engineers employed to bore for water
|
|
in the Great Oasis.
|
|
|
|
I then mentioned our steel; but the foreigner elevated his nose, and
|
|
asked me if our steel could have executed the sharp carved work seen
|
|
on the obelisks, and which was wrought altogether by edge-tools of
|
|
copper.
|
|
|
|
This disconcerted us so greatly that we thought it advisable to vary
|
|
the attack to Metaphysics. We sent for a copy of a book called the
|
|
"Dial," and read out of it a chapter or two about something that is
|
|
not very clear, but which the Bostonians call the Great Movement of
|
|
Progress.
|
|
|
|
The Count merely said that Great Movements were awfully common
|
|
things in his day, and as for Progress, it was at one time quite a
|
|
nuisance, but it never progressed.
|
|
|
|
We then spoke of the great beauty and importance of Democracy, and
|
|
were at much trouble in impressing the Count with a due sense of the
|
|
advantages we enjoyed in living where there was suffrage ad libitum,
|
|
and no king.
|
|
|
|
He listened with marked interest, and in fact seemed not a little
|
|
amused. When we had done, he said that, a great while ago, there had
|
|
occurred something of a very similar sort. Thirteen Egyptian provinces
|
|
determined all at once to be free, and to set a magnificent example to
|
|
the rest of mankind. They assembled their wise men, and concocted
|
|
the most ingenious constitution it is possible to conceive. For a
|
|
while they managed remarkably well; only their habit of bragging was
|
|
prodigious. The thing ended, however, in the consolidation of the
|
|
thirteen states, with some fifteen or twenty others, in the most
|
|
odious and insupportable despotism that was ever heard of upon the
|
|
face of the Earth.
|
|
|
|
I asked what was the name of the usurping tyrant.
|
|
|
|
As well as the Count could recollect, it was Mob.
|
|
|
|
Not knowing what to say to this, I raised my voice, and deplored the
|
|
Egyptian ignorance of steam.
|
|
|
|
The Count looked at me with much astonishment, but made no answer.
|
|
The silent gentleman, however, gave me a violent nudge in the ribs
|
|
with his elbows- told me I had sufficiently exposed myself for once-
|
|
and demanded if I was really such a fool as not to know that the
|
|
modern steam-engine is derived from the invention of Hero, through
|
|
Solomon de Caus.
|
|
|
|
We were now in imminent danger of being discomfited; but, as good
|
|
luck would have it, Doctor Ponnonner, having rallied, returned to
|
|
our rescue, and inquired if the people of Egypt would seriously
|
|
pretend to rival the moderns in the all- important particular of
|
|
dress.
|
|
|
|
The Count, at this, glanced downward to the straps of his
|
|
pantaloons, and then taking hold of the end of one of his
|
|
coat-tails, held it up close to his eyes for some minutes. Letting
|
|
it fall, at last, his mouth extended itself very gradually from ear to
|
|
ear; but I do not remember that he said any thing in the way of reply.
|
|
|
|
Hereupon we recovered our spirits, and the Doctor, approaching the
|
|
Mummy with great dignity, desired it to say candidly, upon its honor
|
|
as a gentleman, if the Egyptians had comprehended, at any period,
|
|
the manufacture of either Ponnonner's lozenges or Brandreth's pills.
|
|
|
|
We looked, with profound anxiety, for an answer- but in vain. It was
|
|
not forthcoming. The Egyptian blushed and hung down his head. Never
|
|
was triumph more consummate; never was defeat borne with so ill a
|
|
grace. Indeed, I could not endure the spectacle of the poor Mummy's
|
|
mortification. I reached my hat, bowed to him stiffly, and took leave.
|
|
|
|
Upon getting home I found it past four o'clock, and went immediately
|
|
to bed. It is now ten A.M. I have been up since seven, penning these
|
|
memoranda for the benefit of my family and of mankind. The former I
|
|
shall behold no more. My wife is a shrew. The truth is, I am
|
|
heartily sick of this life and of the nineteenth century in general. I
|
|
am convinced that every thing is going wrong. Besides, I am anxious to
|
|
know who will be President in 2045. As soon, therefore, as I shave and
|
|
swallow a cup of coffee, I shall just step over to Ponnonner's and get
|
|
embalmed for a couple of hundred years.
|
|
|
|
THE END
|
|
.
|