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btful whether I shall ever be able to winter again。 On this occasion my daughter Angela and I examined the mummy of the Pharaoh Meneptah; which Sir Gaston Maspero kindly caused to be removed to a private room for our inspection。 It was a strange thing to look upon the tall form and the withered countenance of the man who is generally believed to have been the Pharaoh of the Exodus; that majesty before whom; perhaps; Moses stood; and to think that that frozen countenance — it is a very impressive countenance still — may have trembled and sunk in at the announcement of the judgments of the great God of the Israelites。 One thing is clear; however: he was not drowned。 Meneptah died in old age from ossification of the arteries; there still lies the lime about the heart of Pharaoh — which it pleased God to harden!
Many question the whole Exodus story because there is no mention of it in the contemporary Egyptian records。 Personally; however; I believe it to be true in its main outlines; and that a large body of Semites did break away from Egypt about this period; although it did not suit the official scribes to make any mention of the event with its very unpleasant happenings。 One day I hope to write a romance of the time; hence my particular interest in Meneptah and in his son and heir; Seti II。
On my return to England I set to work to write a romance in the neain series。 The first of these books; “Marie;” which is dedicated to my old chief; Sir Henry Bulwer; has