Farther up the Nile, there are two colossal figures sitting on thrones side-by-side, gazing out over the plain. Because of their colossal size, they are called the Colossi, and each one is made out of a single stone.They are weather-beaten and broken but you do not need much imagination to see in your mind's eye what they once were.
They, of course, are Egyptian kings-or rather two statues of the same king. These two also face the Sun as it rises in the east.One of them is called Mennon, though Mennon was not the king's name.The king's name was Amenhotep.
吉薩的獅身人面像和哈夫拉金字塔(攝影:加里·威肯)
We do not know the names of many of the sculptors who made ancient statues, but we do know the name of the sculptor who made these statues of Amenhotep, for he had the same name as the king. Perhaps he was a slave, as a slave was often given the name of his master.
It is believed that around 27 B. C.,an earthquake upset the
Colossi.As a result, the Mennon made sounds when the Sun rose, perhaps like the tones of a great organ or a hymn to a new day.The Mennon did not sing every morning or even every year, but when it did sing, it was thought to be a sign of something, or an omen.But an omen of what no one knows.
When a Roman emperor tried to have the Mennon repaired, it ceased its morning song. It has not sung for nearly two thousand years and some people doubt that it ever did, though people at the time used to travel long distances just to hear it sing and were disappointed if it didn't.
Many who did hear it, however, carved their names and the date on the base. So there seems to be little doubt that it did sing once upon a time.Some scientists think the Sun's rays striking the cold stone in the morning wrought some change that made the sound.It is one of the many mysteries of ancient Egypt.
It is also a bit of a mystery that one of the oldest pieces of sculpture in the world is made of wood because wood, of course, does not usually last as long as stone. It's a mystery, too, that this wood sculpture is not a statue of a king, queen, or god, for that is what the Egyptians usually made.What do you suppose it is?A schoolteacher!
The sculpture is the figure of a rather small, fat bald-
headed man carrying a tall walking stick.The statue is smaller than a real man perhaps to show that he was not a king or any important person.
Some people call him The Schoolmaster of Boulac. So you can see what a teacher may have looked like thousands of years ago.But others say there were no regular schools or teachers then, and they believe he was the chief of a tribe.Still others believe he was the boss of a group of workers that worked on the Great Pyramid.So you can take your pick, for no one knows his name or what he was or who made him.
The statue is in a museum in Cairo, the capital of Egypt. Though it was made long ago, it looks much more natural and lifelike than later Egyptian sculpture.It is said that even the old Egyptians thought it so natural that they chained its feet to keep it from walking off!
Another sculpture made about the same time is of a man seated and holding a writing tablet on his lap. It is made of stone and it was painted-guess what color?Red!He was a professional writer-that is, he was one of the few men who knew how to write and made a business of writing for those who could not write, and most people at that time could not.Think of
hiring a stranger to write your letters!Such a person was called a scribe.He was a kind of secretary who took dictation.Even kings and queens could not write and had to have scribes write for them.This figure is now in the Louvre Museum in Paris.
Often Egyptian sculptors went to the other extreme and made tiny statuettes-some only a few inches high-of their kings and queens, gods and goddesses, and sacred animals. Most of these miniature statues were cut out of the hardest kinds of stone-stone that would resist even our modem tools.We suspect that they must have been cut with flint tools instead of steel tools just as a diamond, the very hardest of all stones, has to be cut with another diamond or be shaped by rubbing it with diamond dust.
The beetle was sacred in Egypt and was called a scarab. Numerous scarabs made of clay and stone were worn suspended from the neck as a charm.So popular are these charms that they are manufactured today in great quantities and sold to travelers as real antiques.
Are there any charms or special treasures you have that you keep or maybe carry with you for good luck?If so, I'll bet it is not an insect such as a beetle!