The Ptolemies - Softcover

Sprott, Duncan

 
9781400041541: The Ptolemies

Inhaltsangabe

A dramatic fictional re-creation of the early years of the House of Ptolemy, a multigenerational dynasty of Greek pharaohs in Egypt, begins with Ptolemy Soter, a Macedonian general who, in the wake of the death of Alexander the Great, seizes control of Egypt, and continues through the reigns of his varied descendants. 30,000 first printing.

Die Inhaltsangabe kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.

Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Duncan Sprott is the author of two previous books, The Clopton Hercules and Our Lady of the Potatoes, both historical reconstructions, published in the United Kingdom. He lives in Ireland.

Auszug. © Genehmigter Nachdruck. Alle Rechte vorbehalten.

Chapter 1
1.1

The Fingers of Thoth

HO! Stranger! OHO! Ignorant One! YOU have been such a long time a-coming! You are so very late in time! YES! It is YOU I am speaking to, Reader, YOU. Because I think YOU know nothing of Ptolemaios-Ptolemy-the Greek who was Pharaoh of Egypt, or of the terrible tragedy of his House. You do not know who Ptolemy is, do you? You have never heard of him, have you? You cannot so much as pronounce his name (do not say the P, Reader!). Truly, what you deserve just now is a beating upon the soles of your feet.

Yes, I think you have forgotten every last thing about the Black Land and the Red, the Two Lands that I called Kemet-the land the Greeks are pleased to call Aigyptos, that you may have heard called Egypt. You have forgotten Ra, the Sun god. You have forgotten Anubis, the dog-headed god, who is Pharaoh of the Underworld. You have not a clue who is Sobek, the crocodile god. Your ignorance is disgraceful-disgraceful-and the only Pharaoh you have ever heard of is the feeble Tutankhamun! Truly, THOTH will have to teach you everything. But do not fear. Be not afraid. Calm yourself, Reader; we shall save up the beating for later. Thoth will be pleased to be your guide. For you must know that I am THOTH.

But, idiot that you are, you do not know who is Thoth either, do you? You have forgotten even Thoth, the Great Magician, Thoth the Ibis-headed god, Thoth the Dog-headed Baboon, Thoth the Ape, who is the Greatest of Scribes; who is the Memory of the Gods; who writes down the gods' every word.

Thoth: he knows every thing. There is not one book about Egypt that Thoth has not written himself, with his own pen. Behold, then, Thoth, the Teller of Stories, for there is no man left upon earth who could unfold for you the whole horrid story of the Ptolemies, a story that men have been afraid of, that men have wanted to forget, because of its horrors-a real donkey-upon-the-roof of a story. But Thoth-Thoth has not the ability to forget; Thoth can only remember.

For you, however, since you pray and entreat me, Thoth will tell this great forgotten story of how the Greeks were Kings and Pharaohs of Egypt for ten generations. And thou shalt weep, and thy hair shall stand up upon its ends, if thou hast any hair, Reader, for this story drips with blood from end to end: it is like a shower of blood, horrible and marvellous at the same time.

Read then, Reader, and be horrified. Read, and be delighted.

But first, before Thoth tells of Ptolemy, he must tell of Thoth. Because you, Reader, are Pupil-of-Thoth. You are He-Who-Wishes-to-Know, and you can know nothing if you do not know who and what is Thoth. For yes, I am THOTH, GREAT GREAT GREAT, THREE TIMES GREAT.

Oho! Pupil-of-Thoth, it is I who have learned the Nineteenth Instruction, the Teaching of Making the Speech Calm. I am Thoth, Cool of Speech. Sweet-of-Tongue is my name. I am Thoth, Mighty in Dread, who bathes in the blood of his enemies. I am Thoth, Great in Slaughter, god of the dead. I am One Who Knows How To Repel Evil. I am the Peaceful One.

Oho! Oho! I am the Beaked One, the one with the claws and wings. I am the Moon god. I am the Trickster. I am the Thief of Time. I am THOTH.

Know that I am Thoth who swallowed the Two Lands, who knows every thing that can be known about Egypt. I am Thoth the Pretentious, Thoth the Pedantic, Thoth of the convoluted speeches.

Know that it is Thoth who makes special pleading for every man with the Judges of the Dead; that it is Thoth whom you shall meet in the Afterlife, when I weigh your dead man's heart in the Scales, the Balance, against the Feather of Maat, the Feather of Truth, and that it is Thoth who shall write down the Judgement of the Gods. May your heart be light in the Balance, Reader! For it is Thoth who shall weigh YOUR heart when it is your turn. Is that enough to make you sit up and listen?

Thoth I am to the Greeks, or Taautos. To the Egyptians I am Djehuty or Djedhuti or Tehuti, author of the Forty-two Books that are called the Tehutica, and have in them All the Wisdom in the World. Some have in them Laws of Egypt, of which Thoth is the guardian. Some are books of Magic, for Thoth is the Great Magician, rivalled only by Isis, Lady of Many Names; and some are books of History, for the annals of every reign are written by Thoth. The book you are holding in your two hands, Reader, is a book of History, the Forty-third Book of Thoth. It will fix your eyes upon the page until you are done reading, Thoth promises you. Every word of it is true. There is no place for fictions in the writing of Thoth.

Thoth! Some times I take the shape of the ibis, and I fly upward. Now, though, I take the shape of the ape, and squat upon the shoulder of the writer. The Ape of Thoth chatters in every scribe's ear. The Ape of Thoth stares hard at every word. Every scribe, before he begins his daily work of writing, must pour out his drop of water upon the ground, out of the pot into which he dips his brush. It is his libation to Thoth, to me, Patron of Scribes; to Thoth, who is the greatest scribe of all.

Thoth hears you, Pupil-of-Thoth. He knows even what are your secret thoughts. You do not believe a word? Thoth waxes angry, then. May I remind you, Pupil-of-Thoth, that I am the Tongue of Ptah, the creator god, and that Ptah created every thing. I am the Master of Chronology, Thoth, who reigned seven thousand seven hundred and twenty-six years exactly. Believe me, I am the All-Knowing One. I am Lord of Khemmenu, the Most Mighty God. I am the Heart and Tongue of Ra. I am the Lord of Books. I am the Author of Time. I can read the secrets of men's hearts. I have the power to cross every barrier.

I am the very inventor of hieroglyphs, the inventor of reading and writing. I am the Lord of Kind-Heartedness. I am the Lord of the Stars. I am the Measurer of the Earth. My words take effect. I am Mighty in Speech. When I put on the mask of Thoth, I am Thoth, I am the god.

And so I begin to write. Thoth watches over me. The ape is heavy upon my shoulder. Will you not believe me? Listen, Pupil-of-Thoth, it is the truth.

Thoth beseeches you: Believe!

YEA, Thoth has written these chapters with his own fingers.



1.2

Nobody

Thoth asks, then, So who was he, this Ptolemy, this Greek, this yellow-haired Macedonian? Of what father was he the son? Where did he come from? And what did he want with Egypt?

Ptolemy: was it not the truth that he was Nobody-Nobody, from Nowhere? Was it not true that this was a man who did not so much as know the name of his grandfather?

Ptolemaios they called him, and his name meant Warlike, and there was never more fitting name for a House than the name of Ptolemaios.

From the very start there were questions asked about his parentage. Some said the father was Lagos, an army commander of King Philip of Macedon or, at least, some soldier of his, and the mother Arsinoë. Lagos, his name meant Hare, after the creature that sleeps with his eyes open and is, above all things, fast. Because of it, some have always called the House of Ptolemy the Lagids or Lagidae. As for Arsinoë, it is all Greek to Thoth, but, Reader, you must say Ar-Sin-OH-ee or Ar-ZIN-oh-ay.

Others swore, by Zeus, that Ptolemy was the son of Arsinoë but that his father was King Philip himself, and Arsinoë the victim of a rape-that rape is the privilege of kings, and Ptolemy was born a bastard.

Who was he? A boy of noble birth? Or a boy of no birth? Even Thoth shrugs his shoulders. What if he was, indeed, a peasant boy from Eordaia in Macedon, a herder of sheep and goats, the next best thing to a barbarian? What did it matter? For the fate of the boy was to be a king, and a god in his own life time, and to be called Aionobios-Living for Ever, and Son of the Sun.

At...

„Über diesen Titel“ kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.

Weitere beliebte Ausgaben desselben Titels

9781400075102: The Ptolemies

Vorgestellte Ausgabe

ISBN 10:  1400075106 ISBN 13:  9781400075102
Verlag: Vintage, 2005
Softcover