The Beetle Richard Marsh (most romantic novels TXT) đ
- Author: Richard Marsh
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âIf you are a member of the next government you will possibly know; if you arenât you possibly wonât.â
âI suppose you have to keep this sort of thing secret?â
âI do. It seems that matters of much less moment you wish to keep secret.â
âYou mean that business of last night? If a trifle of that sort gets into the papers, or gets talked aboutâ âwhich is the same thing!â âyou have no notion how we are pestered. It becomes an almost unbearable nuisance. Jones the Unknown can commit murder with less inconvenience to himself than Jones the Notorious can have his pocket pickedâ âthere is not so much exaggeration in that as there sounds.â âGoodbyeâ âthanks for your promise.â I had given him no promise, but that was by the way. He turned as to goâ âthen stopped. âThereâs another thingâ âI believe youâre a specialist on questions of ancient superstitions and extinct religions.â
âI am interested in such subjects, but I am not a specialist.â
âCan you tell me what were the exact tenets of the worshippers of Isis?â
âNeither I nor any manâ âwith scientific certainty. As you know, she had a brother; the cult of Osiris and Isis was one and the same. What, precisely, were its dogmas, or its practices, or anything about it, none, now, can tell. The papyri, hieroglyphics, and so on, which remain are very far from being exhaustive, and our knowledge of those which do remain, is still less so.â
âI suppose that the marvels which are told of it are purely legendary?â
âTo what marvels do you particularly refer?â
âWerenât supernatural powers attributed to the priests of Isis?â
âBroadly speaking, at that time, supernatural powers were attributed to all the priests of all the creeds.â
âI see.â Presently he continued. âI presume that her cult is long since extinctâ âthat none of the worshippers of Isis exist today.â
I hesitatedâ âI was wondering why he had hit on such a subject; if he really had a reason, or if he was merely asking questions as a cover for something elseâ âyou see, I knew my Paul.
âThat is not so sure.â
He looked at me with that passionless, yet searching glance of his.
âYou think that she still is worshipped?â
âI think it possible, even probable, that, here and there, in Africaâ âAfrica is a large order!â âhomage is paid to Isis, quite in the good old way.â
âDo you know that as a fact?â
âExcuse me, but do you know it as a fact?â âAre you aware that you are treating me as if I was on the witness stand?â âHave you any special purpose in making these inquiries?â
He smiled.
âIn a kind of a way I have. I have recently come across rather a curious story; I am trying to get to the bottom of it.â
âWhat is the story?â
âI am afraid that at present I am not at liberty to tell it you; when I am I will. You will find it interestingâ âas an instance of a singular survival.â âDidnât the followers of Isis believe in transmigration?â
âSome of themâ âno doubt.â
âWhat did they understand by transmigration?â
âTransmigration.â
âYesâ âbut of the soul or of the body?â
âHow do you mean?â âtransmigration is transmigration. Are you driving at something in particular? If youâll tell me fairly and squarely what it is Iâll do my best to give you the information you require; as it is, your questions are a bit perplexing.â
âOh, it doesnât matterâ âas you say, âtransmigration is transmigration.âââ I was eyeing him keenly; I seemed to detect in his manner an odd reluctance to enlarge on the subject he himself had started. He continued to trifle with the retort upon the table. âHadnât the followers of Isis aâ âwhat shall I say?â âa sacred emblem?â
âHow?â
âHadnât they an especial regard for some sort of aâ âwasnât it some sort of aâ âbeetle?â
âYou mean Scarabaeus sacerâ âaccording to Latreille, Scarabaeus egyptiorum? Undoubtedlyâ âthe scarab was venerated throughout Egyptâ âindeed, speaking generally, most things that had life, for instance, cats; as you know, Orisis continued among men in the figure of Apis, the bull.â
âWerenât the priests of Isisâ âor some of themâ âsupposed to assume, after death, the form of aâ âscarabaeus?â
âI never heard of it.â
âAre you sure?â âthink!â
âI shouldnât like to answer such a question positively, offhand, but I donât, on the spur of the moment, recall any supposition of the kind.â
âDonât laugh at meâ âIâm not a lunatic!â âbut I understand that recent researches have shown that even in some of the most astounding of the ancient legends there was a substratum of fact. Is it absolutely certain that there could be no shred of truth in such a belief?â
âIn what belief?â
âIn the belief that a priest of Isisâ âor anyoneâ âassumed after death the form of a scarabaeus?â
âIt seems to me, Lessingham, that you have lately come across some uncommonly interesting data, of a kind, too, which it is your bounden duty to give to the worldâ âor, at any rate, to that portion of the world which is represented by me. Comeâ âtell us all about it!â âwhat are you afraid of?â
âI am afraid of nothingâ âand some day you shall be toldâ âbut not now. At present, answer my question.â
âThen repeat your questionâ âclearly.â
âIs it absolutely certain that there could be no foundation of truth in the belief that a priest of Isisâ âor anyoneâ âassumed after death the form of a beetle?â
âI know no more than the man in the moonâ âhow the dickens should I? Such a belief may have been symbolical. Christians believe that after death the body takes the shape of wormsâ âand so, in a sense, it doesâ âand, sometimes, eels.â
âThat is not what I mean.â
âThen what do you mean?â
âListen. If a person, of whose veracity there could not be a vestige of a doubt, assured you that he had seen such a transformation actually take place, could it conceivably be explained on natural grounds?â
âSeen a priest of Isis assume the form of a beetle?â
âOr a follower of Isis?â
âBefore, or after death?â
He hesitated. I had seldom seen him wear such an appearance of interestâ âto be frank, I was keenly interested too!â âbut, on a sudden there came into his eyes a glint of something that was almost terror.
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