Once fully dressed, I turned away from the sea and the sloping beach. At first I had assumed because of the presence of the Amazons that I had landed in Themiskira at the mouth of the River Thermidon. Now, with a chance to look around, I saw it was the Isle of Evening, in the swamp of Tritonis, for the place was exactly as the poets describe it. To one side there was an abundance of fruit trees, uncountable flocks of goats and sheep, and magnificent dogs. Between them and the river extended a plain as far as the sea. There two gigantic palm trees, like two pillars, flanked an enormous black stone. I was soon to learn that this was the Temple of Demeter. The sun still remained fixed to the horizon, motionless, and I realized that on this island sunset was everlasting.
As I already told you, by my side a powerful river debouched into the sea, protecting the Amazons from any flank attacks. Their land defense was a range of irregular escarpments, partly bare of vegetation, where the flat top was crowned by dense woodland. I soon discovered that on the far side of the range were sheer cliffs but right then I felt it was a weak point. Between the range, which the evening sun was staining blue, and the sea was a stretch of level land, free from undergrowth, and on it stood the gigantic palms and the black stone, the one feature that dominated all others. On the other side, the fruit trees, the herds of livestock and the mangers of the horses, marked off by bales of fodder, along with stakes and stones that functioned as corrals, acted as a complicated defensive wall for what I may call the nest of the Amazons.
The impression the place gave me was a disturbing one. Though the fruit trees and the livestock evoked a sense of peace, the absence of buildings, the force of the river, the ceaseless crashing of the waves, the movement of the mounted army like so many ants in the distance — if there were three hundred Amazons, there had to be two or three times that number of horses — all spoke of restless motion. Though the range of hills was not far from the sea, the open plain in the middle and the proximity of the sea created a sense of broad, generous space. The home of the Amazons was spacious, everything was in motion there. The island was the very opposite of a desert but it had something in common with one. I felt the desert on my skin, because it was still caked with salt, and the damp atmosphere did not dispel it. “When all is said and done,” I thought, “everything outside Alexandria is desert.” I added the words of the poet:
Alexandria is all of Earth.
All Earth is Alexandria.
The great city came back into my mind, its columned arcades, the temple of Serapis, the innumerable streets crisscrossing. . I had to get back there as fast as possible.
While I was surveying the place and sighing for my city, the elders had readied themselves to serve me. Some of them came carrying a triclinium that they set down on the sand. They placed me in it, cloak and all. Others brought over trays of fresh figs and nuts, olives, pomegranates, cheeses, bread, and dried fish from Lake Mareotis, brought here perhaps by land, perhaps by sea. They resettled the crown on my disheveled locks and served me wine. They placed a garland of wheat ears on me. The hundreds of Amazons paid us no attention, absorbed by I-don’t-know-what. The queen had disappeared from sight.
The gathering now consisted of the old men and me. I thought I recognized, under all the wrinkles, Philo, the Roman poet who frequented the palace of Pompey. I was almost certain that the first one I had identified was Acusilaus but not being wholly certain, I addressed him as “poet.”
To my astonishment, all the old men answered my call.
“Acusilaus?” I asked and he nodded. “You’re all poets?”
They nodded their heads, all except one, who came close and said in sorry voice, “I am a false poet. I am Castor, the historian. I married the daughter of King Deiotarus, whom Cicero defended. My father-in-law killed my wife and planned to assassinate me too. I escaped by leaving in my marriage bed a substitute for me. In return for my life, I offered him a night of love with my darling wife. Since I fled from my city, I have been writing verses. But I am no poet.”
“Yes, you are a poet, Castor,” another old man assured him warmly.
“No, I’m not. I sold my life in order to save it, Your Majesty. I can’t be a poet. I am what remains when all of Castor has gone. I am. .”
Another poet put his arms round his shoulders and Castor fell quiet in his grief.
“You recognized me,” Acusilaus said, interrupting the awkward moment, “though the last time you saw me you were a child.”
“And are you Philo?” I asked the other.
Philo nodded.
“What brings you here, Cleopatra?” Acusilaus asked.
“I was brought here over the seas. But not by my own choice. I was with my entourage at the gates of Pelusium when a god in the shape of a bull seduced me. My plan is to go to Ascalon. There men await me to form an army and to restore me to my throne. Surely my people are already on their way. It is suicide to remain in Pelusium without gathering reinforcements.”
“The god did not err, Cleopatra. The truth is that the Amazons do not have inspectors of public works or guardians of the State’s treasures. There are no officials charged with maintaining food supplies, no collectors of taxes, no garbage-disposal staff. There is no court. There are no nobles. There is just the queen with her warriors.”
“Well,” put in another poet, “the walls of Ascalon are something to be reckoned with. It is magnificently fortified. Its garrison consists of a cohort of infantry and a squadron of cavalry. It is not a bad refuge.”
“Thank you for your opinions, but to stick to the point, why would I choose to come to the land of the Amazons in order to restore order in Alexandria? Nobody has the right to act as he pleases, unless everything is organized in the best interests of improvement. I have two questions: Can I really ally myself with the Amazons? And what would I get out of that alliance?”
Instead of answering my questions, an aged poet, full of wrinkles, with hair as red as fire, put a question to the others. “Pardon my ignorance, but where is Ascalon?”
“Five hundred and twenty stadia from Jerusalem, which is all too short a distance, if you realize how much hatred the Jews have for its inhabitants,” Castor replied.
“It’s a lovely city. They’ve recently built an aqueduct from Laodice in the direction of the sea. The baths there are famous. There are springs and colonnades, admirable for both their architecture and their proportions.”
“Yes, it is lovely,” said Acusilaus. “But an alliance with these ferocious women warriors is better for Cleopatra.”
“They’re a bunch of bandits,” said Philo. “A roving band of female thugs who survive on what they can steal.”
“It’s also true,” said Acusilaus, “that theirs is a city without ovens. Fire is kindled here only to illuminate the night with torches or to make a bonfire to spur on tales and intimacies. They’re probably the only human beings who do not use fire for cooking or melting metals. It serves them only to flutter around, like moths.”
“That’s just silly talk,” said another. “They were the first people to use iron, and that’s why initially they won all their battles.”
“True, true, but that was centuries ago. Nowadays. .”
“Their camps have no buildings, no tents even,” said Philo. “They sleep out in the open. For a temple they have a big black rock to which they offer worship. Do you call this—” he pointed to the sky and the four cardinal points where there was no sign of a building, “a city?”