The Treasury of Ancient Egypt Miscellaneous Chapters on Ancient Egyptian History and Archaeology
[Illustration: FRONTISPIECE. A statue of the hawk-god Horus in front of the temple of Edfu. The author stands beside it.] [_Photo by N. Macnaghten._ The Treasury of Ancient Egypt Miscellaneous Chapters on Ancient Egyptian History and Archaeology BY ARTHUR E.P.B. WEIGALL
and walked up the hill, they came to a narrow cross-walk, a single
stone in width, and that they tried to walk upon it together, and that
his limp made him jostle her, and she said, "We mustn't do that."
"What?" he inquired.
"Oh--you know--walk on one stone. You know what it's a sign of."
"Do you believe in signs?" he asked. She kept hold of his arm, and
kept him from leaving the stone. She was taller than he by a head, and
he hated himself for it. They managed to keep together until they
crossed the street and came into the broader walk. Then she drew a
relieved breath and answered: "Oh, I don't know. Sometimes I do." They
were lagging far behind their friends, and the girl hummed a tune,
then she said, "You know I've always believed in my 'Star light--star
bright--first star I've seen to-night,' just as I believe in my
prayers." And she looked up and said, "Oh, I haven't said it yet." She
picked out her star and said the rhyme, closing with, "I wish I may, I
wish I might, have the wish I wish to-night."
And sitting on the car end in Arizona thirty years after, he tried to
find her star in the firmament above him. He was a man in his fifties
then, and the night she showed him her star was more than thirty years
gone by. But he remembered. We are curious creatures, we men, and we
remember much more than we pretend to. For our mothers in many cases
were women, and we take after them.
[Illustration: FRONTISPIECE. A statue of the hawk-god Horus in front of the temple of Edfu. The author stands beside it.] [_Photo by N. Macnaghten._ The Treasury of Ancient Egypt Miscellaneous Chapters on Ancient Egyptian History and Archaeology BY ARTHUR E.P.B. WEIGALL