友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!阅读过程发现任何错误请告诉我们,谢谢!! 报告错误
八八书城 返回本书目录 我的书架 我的书签 TXT全本下载 进入书吧 加入书签

the days of my life-第章

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!



ughter died。 I took the board into my house。 The eyes frightened my daughter into a sickness。 I moved it to another room; and it threw down a china cabi and smashed a lot of Sevres china in it。 The cook saw it and fainted; and the other servants saw flashes of fire e from the eyes; and ran away from the house。 A friend suggested the giving it to the Museum; and; thank God! you have accepted it。 I want no thanks。 I shall be ever in your debt。” With these words he left the room and Budge saw him no more。 The board was put into the mummy room; and Douglas Murray and W。 T。 Stead came and examined it and said it possessed psychic powers — that a soul in torment was chained up in the board; and so on。 All this got into the papers; and much nonsense besides。 Budge said that the board had given them no trouble; and published it in one of his books。
A certain mummy had many weird stories attached to it。 It was bought by “Midge” Ingram of the Illustrated London News and brought to London。 Budge was sent to report upon it by his chief; Dr。 Birch; and he said it belonged to the Ptolemaic Period and came from Akhmim in Upper Egypt。 Ingram bought it in Luxor; and was said to have carried it off without paying what the native wanted for it。 The native ran after the boat along the bank for miles; and cursed Ingram with all his might in the name of Allah。 Among the inscriptions on the coffin were extracts from a funerary work; and the copy of it in the British Museum had a curse attached。 The curse declared that the man who stole the work; or burnt it; or buried it; or drowned it; should be blotted out; his body and seed destroyed for ever; etc。 During a shooting tour in Somaliland Ingram shot at a huge she…elephant with buck…shot and enraged the beast。 He fired again; and the elephant pursued him among the palms; and finally caught him with her trunk and lifted him into the air and dashed him limb from limb。 Then she found the trunk and trod it with her feet to a pulp。 Sir Henry Meux; who was of the party; collected the remains; put them in a box and buried them; but a few days later the box was washed out of its bed; and the party decided to carry it to the sea…coast。 Before Ingram left England he gave the mummy — which he had agreed to sell to the British Museum — to Lady Meux of Theobalds Park; who placed it in her Egyptian collection。 There it lay for several years; and Lady Meux used to go the museum every day and pray by the side of the case containing it。 Budge published a full description of the mummy and coffin; and a splendid collotype reproduction of the coffin; in the “Catalogue” of the Meux Collection which he made for Lady Meux。 The collection was bequeathed to the British Museum by Lady Meux; but her conditions were such that the proposed gift could not be accepted。 The collection was then sold by auction and dispersed。
I asked Budge if he believed in the efficacy of curses。 He hesitated to answer。 At length he said that in the East men believed that curses took effect; and that he had always avoided driving a native to curse him。 A curse launched into the air was bound to have an effect if coupled with the name of God; either on the person cursed or on the curser。 Budge mentioned the case of Palmer; who cursed an Arab of Sinai; and the natives turned the curse on him by throwing him and his panions down a precipice; and they were dashed to pieces。 Budge added; “I have cursed the fathers and female ancestors of many a man; but I have always feared to curse a man himself。”
Two other stories of Budge’s are worth preserving。
When he was at Cambridge Dr。 Peile of Christ’s offered him an exhibition if he would be examined in Assyrian; and as Budge’s funds were exiguous he was very anxious to get the exhibition。 An examiner; Professor Sayce of Oxford; was found to set the papers — four in all — and the days for the examination were fixed。 The night before the day of the examination Budge dreamed a dream in which he saw himself seated in a room that he had never seen before — a room rather like a shed with a skylight in it。 The tutor came in with a long envelope in his hand; and took from it a batch of green papers; and gave one of these to Budge for him to work at that morning。 The tutor locked him in and left him。 When he looked at the paper he saw it contained questions and extracts from bilingual Assyrian and Akkadian texts for translation。 The questions he could answer; but he could not translate the texts; though he knew them by sight; and his emotions were so great that he woke up in a fright。 At length he fell asleep; but the dream repeated itself twice; and he woke up in a greater fright than before。 He then got up — it was about 2 A。M。 — went downstairs to his room; lighted a fire; and; finding the texts in the second volume of Rawlinson’s great work; found the four texts and worked at them till breakfast…time; when he was able to make passable renderings of them。 He went to College at nine; and was informed that there was no room in the Hall; it being filled by a class
Chapter 14 MEXICO
J。 Gladwyn Jebb — His character — Mr。 and Mrs。 H。 R。 H。 visit him in Mexico — Death of their only son while absent — New York on way to Mexico — Reports — Their loyalty to each other — Mexico City — Don Anselmo — Golden Head of Montezuma — Treasure hunt — Zumpango — Journey to silver mine — Chiapas — Vera Cruz — Frontera — Millions of mosquitoes — A mule load of silver — Attempt of robbers to steal it — Silver mine — Tarantulas — Mishap on journey back — Return to England。
During the year 1889 I made the acquaintance of my late friend J。 Gladwyn Jebb; one of the most delightful persons whom I have ever known。 Some irony of fate brought it about that Jebb should devote his life to the pursuit of mining and mercial ventures — a career for which he was utterly unsuited。 The result may be imagined: he worked very hard in many evil climates; broke down his health; dissipated his large private means in supporting unremunerative enterprises; and died saddened and impoverished。
I have described his character in my introduction to “The Life and Adventures of J。 G。 Jebb;” by his widow; from which I q
返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0
未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!